6 Wednesday, March 25. 1987 / University Daily Kansan THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON The spitting cobras at home CANCELLED: Due to a tour delay the OINGO BOINGO Concert on Saturday, April 11 has been cancelled. REFUNDS: Refunds for tickets are available at the place where they were purchased. --continued from p. 1 LEON'S DOES THE SERVICE AND REPAIR WORK YOU NEED! Leon's BugBarn Offering A COMPLETE LINE OF VW ACCESSORIES STOCK • CUSTOM • COMPETITION Parts • Sales • Service LEON'S SERVICE: LEON R REPAIR WORK: • WE DO ALL EUROPEAN AND JAPANESE MAKE CARS • AND, OF COURSE, WE SERVICE ALL BUGS LEON'S REPAIR WORK: • WE DO EXCELLENT BODY WORK ON ALL MAKES OF CARS • WE DO RUST REPAIR ON ALL MAKES OF CARS • WE GIVE FREE ESTIMATES 1120 E. 23rd 749-2360 INTRODUCTORY OFFER! CLUB SANDWICH Try our newest creation. Loaded with lean ham, tasty turkey, sizzling bacon...and all kinds of other good stuff. Regular price: $2.49. LIMITED TIME ONLY! $1.99 with coupon Good at all participating Sub & Staff Sandwich Shops through April 30, 1987. Limit one sandwich per coupon. said Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Associatn. "He added the human element to both of those qualities." Mall Seymour, who had known Dr. Higuchi since 1967, said Dr. Higuchi's death was a great loss to the University and the state. lards also was interested in the Lawrence mall. Jones said that JVJ was working with a third department store and might be able to announce the store's name this spring. JVJ has proposed building a $5.57 million, 360,000-square-foot mall in the 600 block of Massachusetts and Vermont streets. The mall would feature three main department stores and a six-level parking garage. The city would pay $20.2 million of the cost. Questions No. 1 and 3 ask whether the city should prohibit the closing of streets for a mall. Question No. 2 asks whether the city should be allowed to use public money to pay for the mall. Jones said JVJ would purchase ads endorsing a "no, yes, no" vote on the referendum's three questions. If Lawrence votes against closing streets or using public money, a mail could not be developed downtown. Department stores prefer suburban, or "cornfield," malls anyway. Jones said. And several developers, including JVJ, would try to build one in Lawrence if the downtown mail is rejected. Jones said. Higuchi Kehde said, "CBD is just a group of Lawrence citizens. We don't have the money behind us that a national developer like JVJ has." Jones said he did not know how much money JVJ would spend on the campaign. "He was one of our top people in any number of ways." So George said. dr. Higuchi trained more than 200 doctorate and post-doctorate students, published about 300 articles in the field of pharmaceutical chemistry and held more than 50 patents. Jones also said city commission candidate Bob Schumm's call for building a free-standing department store rather than a mall was hopeless. Lawrence couldn't attract a quality store such as Sears or Dillards, he said. "Sears has no interest in a free-standing store in Lawrence," Jones said, quoting a letter from Sears. Continued from p. 1 ley in 1939 and his doctorate in physical and organic chemistry at the University of Wisconsin in 1943 Dr. Higuchi donated much of his own money to the University and was instrumental in engineering endowments for pharmaceutical research. He and his wife, Aya, created four Highuchi/Endowment Research Awards of $10,000 each for KU faculty members and researchers. Dr. Higuchi worked extensively with the Kansas University Endowment Association to establish the INTERx pharmaceutical research corporation. He served as president and chairman of the board from 1972 to 1980 when INTERx merged with Merck, Sharp and Dohme, an international pharmaceutical corporation. Before coming to KU in 1967, Dr. Higuchi was the Edward Kremer Professor of Pharmaceutical Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin School of Pharmacy. "He was one of those rare people who combined scientific ability and knowledge with a flair for business." He is survived by his wife, Aya; three sons and a daughter. A memorial service is tentatively scheduled for Friday. Details will be announced today. On Campus The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has scheduled enrollment card pick-up from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Ballroom. "Sudan: Contemporary Politics, a University Forum, is schedules at Union. 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. ■ "School Organization and the Myth of Exceptional Children and Youth," a Faculty Development Seminar, is scheduled at 3 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas ■ A geography department lecture is scheduled at 4 p.m. today in 412 Lindley Hall. A Campus Christians Fellowship meeting is scheduled at 6:30 p.m. today in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union. A KU Dr Who Appreciation Society meeting is scheduled at 7 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. Imelda Marcos, have we got a shoe for you. You can replace a closet full of shoes with a single pair of Kaepa athletic shoes, because a Kaepa can change its colors. Just snap out the colored logos, and snap in new colors. We have dozens—from Auntie Red to Manila Vanilla. So you can match your clothes, your school colors, or your mood. With a fraction of the money you save by not buying 12,000 pairs of shoes, you can buy Ferdinand a pair of Kaepa shoes that change colors, too. And for you too, Ferdinand. And since living well is the best revenge, Imelda, Kaepa shoes have two moving parts, each with its own separate lace. This design does for your foot what independent suspension did for your stretch Mercedes. The K-650 for women. The K-640 for men. So you two trend-setters can feel perfectly comfortable while making a perfect fashion statement. Which is maybe the only statement you and Ferdinand should make for a while, Imleda. Say "Kay-pa" In Season Sports Athlete's Foot Arensberg's Shoes J.C. Penney 1987 Kairae, Inc. San Antonio, Texas; All rights reserved. U.S. Patent #3546796. Snap-in Logos patent pending