6 Wednesdav. July 3. 1991 / University Daily Kansan Dickinson 23rd & IOWA 841-8600 $300 PRIME-TIMER SHOW!+ SEN. CITIZENS ANYTIME ROCKETEER (PG) *(2'20, 1'20, 7'25, 9:45) PROBLEM CHILD 2 (PG-13) *(2'10, 4'10, 7'25, 9:30) DON'T TELL MOM THE (PG-13) BABYSITTER'S DEAD *(2'05, 5'00) TERMINATOR 2 (R) *(4'30, 1'30, 7'50, 9:40) CITY SLICKERS (PG-13) *(2'25, 4'50, 7'00, 9:25) SOAP DISH (PG-13) *(2'15, 4'15, 7'10, 9:20) We still offer students the $1.50 price for evening shows. Movie times effective 7/21 9:11 thru 7/21 9:01 Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 ROBIN HOOD (PG 11): SAT, SUN 1:30 HILLCREST 925 IOWA THELMA AND LOUISE (R) SAT. SUN 2:30 EVS EES 5:00, 7:15, 9:45 THEMA AND LOUISIE (PG) EVERY 6:00, 7:15, 8:45 DANCE WITH DUSSE (PG) SAT TRUNK 10:30 WOLVES (BG) EVERY 6:00, 7:15, 8:45 WHAT ABOUT PG? (PG) SAT TRUNK 10:30 BACKDRIFT (R) EVERY 6:00, 7:15, 8:45 DYING YOUNG (R) EVERY 6:00, 7:15, 8:45 CINEMA TWIN 3110 IOWA 842-6400 NAKED GUN 2(%)PG-13) SAT, SUV EVS 5.30, 7.30, 9.30 The Love Garden not only has Lawrence's finest selection of used CD's, LP's, & tapes but we also carry selected new releases of rock, alternative, imports, folk, bluegrass and more! Love Garden Sounds 936 172 71 St. Mass. St. Upper East Side 843-1551 "in the heart of downtown" Bottleneck 913.841 LIVE 737 New Hampshire Lawrence Kansas July 3rd, 4th &5th Closed Happy 4th of July! Saturday July 6th L.A. Ramblers Read Partu Headmasters 809 Vermont 843-8808 Source Int'l. Assoc. Athletic Shoe Store — Now Open — in L.A. GEAR SAC's 2525 Iowa Jazz Jam Coming Soon: Ian Moore The Urge Peter Holsapple & Chris Stamey Featureting Low, Low Prices on Nike, Reebok and L.A. Gear Shoes, Hats and Apparel Open 12-8 M-Sat. 12-6 Sunday Raebok such as the Good Samaritan Project in Kansas City, Mo. A two-day program provides information about AIDS, health care and hygiene, and the volunteers discuss issues related to death and dying. Local group fights AIDS biases By Alexander Bloemhof Seven volunteers are working with patients, and 18 are waiting to be assigned. Volunteer Arthur Satterfield, Stillwater, Okla., graduate student, was assigned to one buddy last year who died the same day Satterfield met him. He worked with another patient who died after three months. Special to the Kansan "I saw him once a week, talked to him, took him out and gave him massage, and so I got to know him," Satterfield said. Fear of discrimination and lack of medical expertise in Lawrence cause many who have AIDS or are HIV-positive to turn elsewhere for treatment and support, local AIDS project leaders said. "This is a small Midwestern town," said Donna Flory, co-chairperson of the Douglas County AIDS Project. "Most of the people with AIDS will not seek help here because they are afraid people will find out that they have AIDS, are homosexuals or drug-users. "Besides that, there is no specialist for AIDS in Lawrence." and their relatives. The project, a community-based volunteer organization established in 1989, cooperates with other organizations and complements their services financed through donations and was approved by United Way this year. Flory said the Douglas County AIDS Project was an attempt to reach people in need of care in the community about the disease and providing services to AIDS patients Allen Omoto, chairperson of the project, said that members had assessed the available Lawrence services for people diagnosed as HIV-positive and that they had found that gaps needed to be filled. People with questions about AIDS or the Douglas County AIDS Project can call 843-0040 for more information. "Whereas the Health Department's information deals primarily with HIV transmission, our education focuses on issues related to prejudices and discrimination." Providers also provide psychological support and living assistance to AIDS patients that is unavailable in other services." Client services include support groups for HIV-positive people and their relatives, limited financial aid emergencies and a buddy program. The buddy program matches AIDS patients with trained volunteers who give emotional support and help the patients in their daily lives. Flory said the project supported patients financially if they needed care. "I will use up every other resource first," she said. "If there's nothing available, no insurance or public assistance, I'll first pay their medical bills. Then I'll pay rent, electric bills and water, and sometimes I'll pay travel expenses for visits of relatives." Volunteers for the buddy program are trained by other organizations, New scholarship hall could open in '92 Bv Eric Swanson Kansan staff writer The University's plan to build a new scholarship hall is one step closer to becoming a reality. Last night, the Lawrence City Commission authorized its staff to set a public hearing date for an order to accute him on the 1300 block W. Avenue Street. The order, if granted, would give the University of Kansas permission to remove two vacant houses on the east side of Louisiana Street between 15th and 20th streets make way for the new scholarship hall The University and the Kansas University Endowment Association WLIP the University Greg Wade, site and landscape designer for facilities planning, presented a model of the renovated block at last night's meeting. The model included a replica of two scholarship halls and a parking garage that are planned for construction within the next 10 years. Wade said the department of student housing proposed closing the 1300 block of Louisiana Street to allow students the second scholarship hall was built. arship hall will begin in the fall, and students should be able to move into it in Fall 1992, said Nadia Zhiri, a project director with Gould Evans, the architectural firm in Lawrence designing the hall. Construction of the first new schol- The hall will cost about $1.5 million to build. K. K. and Margaret Amini, KU alumni of San Antonio, Texas, donated the money. 24th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS (913) 842-1811