Thursday, April 20, 1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Congratulations Graduates! Come celebrate your success at Restaurant May 13 & 14 lunch and dinner available y 13 & 14 lunch and dinner available Special hours 11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Call in reservations for 5 or more 925 IOWA Now that you are searching for the perfect job, shouldn't you be looking for the perfect salary too? There are techniques you can use to negotiate the salary and benefits you deserve. Join us to learn negotiation skills which allow you to bargain effectively. Wednesday, April 26, 1995 Pine Room, Kansas Union 7:00 p.m.- 9:00 p.m. Facilitator: Renée Speicher, Graduate Assistant Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall, University of Kansas. For more information, contact Renée Speicher at 864-3524. CALL Topeka and Kansas City An Exaggeration? Not if you're spending more than $20 a month to call Topeka and/or Lawrence. If you have a touch tone phone and regular phone service now you can make unlimited calls from Kansas City to Topeka and Lawrence for a fixed flat monthly rate no matter how many calls you make. Call anyone in Topeka and Lawrence, anytime and talk as long as you want for the same dirt cheap cost monthly!* DIGILINK From anywhere call 1/800-530-2606 (*Dirt cheap service from Topeka and Lawrence to Kansas City also available!*) A lecture by Humanizing Medicine: The Historical Legacy of Women Physicians Regina Morantz-Sanchez Professor of History University of Michigan Tonight 8:00 p.m. Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union Dr. Morantz-Sanchez's teaching interests include the History of the Family, Childhood and Youth; History of American Women; Social History of American Medicine; Ethnicity and Assimilation, History of Sexuality, Gender and Science. She is a 1995 Senior Fellow for NEH and a 1993 ACOG Fellow. She received the Outstanding Woman Teacher Award from the University of Kansas in 1986. Professor Morantz-Sanchez has published many articles and reviews on the American Family, Women, Reform, and the History of Medicine of Women Physicians. BikeSource knows that when you've got your heart set on one of the finest bicycles in the world, you want to ride it, not wait for it to come in from the factory. That's why we stock more Cannondale bicycles than anyone else in town. When you want your bike and you want it now, BikeSource is your source for Cannondale. TOLL FREE 1-800-728-8782 WESTPORT (816) 756-3400 4118 Pennsylvania LEE'S SUMMIT (816) 525-6000 231 S.E. Main OVERLAND PARK (913) 451-1513 11912 W. 119th St. The Apartment Guide will run on Thursday, April 27. Deadline for the Apartment Guide is Tuesday, April 25 at 4:00. Where are you going to live? Student price: 1x2-$12 1x3-$20 Business price: 1x6 blocks-$42 It's that time of year when students are thinking about moving and subleasing. The Kansan can help ease your Summer and Fall leasing and subleasing worries with the Apartment Guide '95. Contact the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint,864-4358 fax:864-5261,or visit our table at the Union. The Associated Press Sources speaking on condition of anonymity told The Associated Press that Lightfoot, 24, was being held at the state mental hospital in Concord to determine if he is competent to be charged. The FBI said Lightfoot had been in state custody for five days but had not been arrested or arraigned. Under state law, people can be held for their own safety. Mrs. Lightfoot, a 48-year-old paralegal, described her son as a conservative. He contributed articles to The Dartmouth Review, a conservative student newspaper, and to the Dartmouth alumni magazine. CONCORD, N.H. — A Dartmouth College senior was being held for psychiatric evaluation yesterday after allegedly threatening to lynch an alumni official and rape his wife. The federal court documents accuse Lightfoot of "knowingly depositing in the United States mails a written communication which contained threats to injure FBI spokesman Peter Ginieres said Lightfoot would be arrested on a federal complaint if the state releases him. Lightfoot, a history and political science student, entered Dartmouth in 1888 and took 2 1/2 years off to serve in the Army. FBI documents filed in federal court said Anthony Lightfoot told officers who took him into custody in Hanover, home of the Ivy League college, that he had written and mailed a letter to the treasurer of the Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association. Disturbing note linked to Dartmouth student The three-paragraph, hand-printed letter, on file in federal court, uses racial and ethnic epithets and sexual vulgarities, complains of letters received from the association and threatens to lynch Morris Whitaker and rape and kill his wife. Matt Kelly, president of The Dartmouth Review, said that "most people who write here are conservative," adding that Lightfoot was an occasional contributor to the weekly off-campus newspaper. Lightfoot, scheduled to graduate this spring, was suspended temporarily and banned from the campus when the college learned of the FBI's allegation, the school said. She said she hadn't heard from her son in about two weeks. Her son, she said, never had been in trouble before, and the letter "was an idle threat. I don't think he intended any harm. I see a life being destroyed for a relatively minor offense." Court documents show the letter was postmarked Nov. 2 in White River Junction, Vt. It bore a Dartmouth return address, which the FBI said was fictitious. The Associated Press Whitaker declined to comment on the incident, and calls yesterday to his Charlotte, N.C., home were not answered. Calls to the association yesterday also were not answered. Former guard agrees to stand trial two individuals." MUNICH, Germany — A Bosnian Serb accused of atrocities against Muslims agreed yesterday to stand trial at the Yugoslav War Crimes Tribunal in the Netherlands. Dusan Tadic, 39, was being held for alleged crimes against humanity in the former Yugoslav Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina. In a Munich court yesterday, Tadic agreed not to fight extradition, said court snokman Heriberit Pongratz. Muslims in Bosnia. He is the only one in custody and this will be the first international war crimes trial since the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials after World War II. Tadic is one of 22 Serbs indicted by the tribunal for crimes against Tadic was arrested in Germany in February 1994 and was charged with genocide. Witnesses said he killed and maimed Muslim prisoners when he was a guard at Bosnian Serb-run concentration camps. He is accused of 13 murders inside and outside Camp Omarska, one rape and multiple counts of torture. Tadic denies ever being in the camps. The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Series Presents