Tuesday, April 4, 1989 / University Daily Kansan BayLeaf 725 Massachusetts The unique and special in dinnerware, gifts, kitchen accessories, coffees, teas, and gourmet foods. Relay Right On Down To... Carol Lee Donuts Breakfast or Lunch It's a Real Treat! 1730 W. 23rd 842-3664 Garth Fagan bucket dance theatre Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 12,1989 Hoch Auditorium Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; all seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982. Public: $12 & $10; KU and K-12 Students: $6 & $5; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $11 & $9 "Redefine forms and space . . . dazzles with unique style!" **Clive Barnes** *The New York Post* Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through the Mid-America Arts Alliance additional funding, the KU Endowment Activity Fee. Swautht Society, and the KU Endowment Association Through the generosity of Volume Shoe Corporation, a special youth performance, for grades 8-12, will be presented at 10.30 a.m. April 11 in Hoch Auditorium. Half price for students You'll have the time of your life! Environmental activist Jeremy Rifkin steps down from the podium and approaches the audience. Rifin spoke about "The Hazards of Chlorofluorocarbons and Their Effect on the Environment" last night in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Speaker discusses warming weather by Brett Brenner Kansan staff writer Imagine the United States in the year 2030, Jeremy Rifkin asked an audience last night in Woodruff Auditorium. Rifkin, an environmental activist from Washington, D.C., spoke last night about the problems and causes of climate change. In act, Environ sponsored the speech. The world view is the attitude that society uses to view the earth, Rifkin said. The greenhouse effect is a theoretical global warming trend caused by a decrease in the ozone layer. "I truly believe that the young people in this room will be the leaders of the next century," he said. "The island of Manhattan, New York City, is partly submerged. The population has been evacuated inland," he said. "Phoenix is experiencing its seventh straight week of temperatures above 120 degrees Fahrenheit." aud. He said the world view comprised Rufin said all those catastrophes and more would take place unless the current generation developed a new world view. The picture that Rifkin sketched of the future differed radically from the Earth today. three different attitudes. The first was a period of man working with the earth. The second has been the era of isolation from and exploitation of the earth. M The third will be a new attitude that Rifkin said was developing. "The new way of thinking is that instead of control, we are empathetic with the environment," he said. "We want to live in harmony with the earth and not through control." Rifkin used the Sears Tower in Chicago as an example of the difference between old and new thinking. He said the tower was an example of the old style of thinking because it was isolated and controlled the environment. The new world view advances structures that are closer to the environment, such as passive solar homes, he said. Another concept Rifkin emphasized was that people should realize that everything was borrowed from the Earth, not separated from it "It starts as nature's resources, and we use it," he said, "The Bible says, from 'dust to dust'." Diree Goldfarb, Frankfort junior and a member of Environs, said that she thought the speech was different. "Through innovative thinking, he tied environmental issues into every day human thought," she said. --and The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents Prof. Jeffrey Lang KU faculty member Chasers Bar & Grill Hamed Ghazali Muslim Student Assoc. Central-Zone Representative in Muhammed, The Last Prophet Muhammed, The Last Prophet a lecture presenting an analysis of his life and character in reply to the fiction of the Satanic Verses. Does his teaching threaten the freedom of speech? NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing For Men & Women 820-822 Mass. 841-0100 Tuesday, April 4 at 7:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Refreshments will be provided For more information, call 841-9768 Lawrence's only late nite grill • $1.00 Pitchers on Thursdays • daily specials --of the Kansas Union...864-3477 S U A is... --of the Kansas Union...864-3477 Student Union Activities For the students, done by the students Travel• Forums• Recreation• Fine Arts Marketing & Promotions Ad Spectrum Films Special Events Feature Films Get Involved...Join a committee Applications available at the SUA office located on level 4 $ save money $ CLIP COUPONS MEN'S SPRING FORMAL RUSH APRIL 14-16 REGISTER APRIL 1-12 IN THE I.F.C. OFFICE, ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES CENTER ROOM 424, KANSAS UNION THERE WILL BE A $10.00 REGISTRATION FEE All You Need To Know About Pizza! 1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Mall 842-1212 "NO COUPON SPECIALS" Prime Time Special 3—Pizzas 1—Topping 4—Cokes $10.00 Everyday Two-Fers 2—Pizzas 2—Toppings 2—Cokes $8.00 Special Offer 10-Pizzas 1-Topping $25.00 $1.00 OFF ANY PIZZA ORDERED 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 842-1212 NAME ADDRESS DATE EXPIRES 6-30-89 --- $.50 OFF ANY PIZZA 842-1212 NAME___ ADDRESS___ DATE___ EXPIRES 6-30-89 WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH!