1. University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 4, 1988 5 MONDAY 11 a.m. — Balloon launch, Sponsored by Delta Sigma Pi. Contributions go to KU Students War Against Hunger. Buy balloons at Wesco Beach. 2:20 p. 10 — Lecture: "Sociability in Early Modern Britain." Peter Clark, Leicester University, England. Sponsored by Hall Center for the Humanities and department of history. 4012 Wescoe Hall. 6 p.m. — Entry deadline, 32nd annual Snyder Book Collecting Contest for students. Leave materials with receptionist on Spencer Research Library main floor. Call Rick Clement, 864-4334 or Rebecca Stucco-Rommeremei, or 3366. for information. 6:30 p.m. -- Silent Vigil commemo rating Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Campanile. Sponsored by the Cross-Cultural Communications Network. TUESDAY 8 p.m. — Student recital. KU Trump pet Ensemble. Swartwout Recital Hall. Murray Hall. 8 p.m. — Asian-American meeting at Hawaii night. Sponsored by the Society for East Asian Studies. Knights of Columbus, 2206 E. 23rd St. 7:30 p.m. — Architecture lecture: "Recent Works of Mayne and Rotondi." Thom Mayne, Los Angeles, 3140 Wescoe Hall. 8 a.m. — Staff development workshop: *Key People*. Jawkway Hawk, Kansas Union. Call 864-4942 for information. 1 p.m. - Art video: "Early Japan" 2 p.m. - 6 Spencer Museum of Art central court 2 p.m. — Women's tennis. KU versus Kansas State. Robinson Center courts. 3 p.m. - Softball KU versus Missouri. Jayhawk Field. 4 p.m. - Men's soccer tryout and song practice. Shen Complex. 4 p.m. — Dance films: 'Seraphic Dialogue' and 'Night Journey' 185 2 p.m. — Theatrical plays: 'The Mongolian Queen' p.m. — College Assembly, Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union. 6:30 p.m. — Hispanic American 7 p.m. — Lecture. Dick Gregory, comedian and social activist, speaking on black leadership and hunger. Sponsor of the event: Rita Vogel. Hunger Week, Kansas Union ballroom. leadership organizational meeting Daisy Hill Room, Burge Union 7 p.m. — Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center workshop: "Resume Writing and Interview Skills for Women." Pine Roof, Kansas Union. 7 p.m. - Amnesty International meeting, Browsing Room, Kansas Union. 7:30 p.m. — Linguistics colloquy: The Social Impact of Bilingualism." Graziella Corvalan, Paraguayan Sociological Studies Center. 207 Blake Halt WEDNESDAY 8 p.m. — Faculty recital. Ben Saye vich. viol. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murp Hall. 10 a.m. — Retirees Club coffee. Adam Lounge, Adams Alumni Center. 11:40 p.m. — University Forum: "PAC: Democracy's Scourge or Salvation?" Lynn Hellebust, Topeka, Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave. Call 843-4933 before noon April 5 to make lunch reservations. 1 p.m. — Macintosh workshop: "Introduction to PugeMaker." Offered by academic computing services. Call 864-0494 for information. 2:30 p.m. — Lecture: David Dillon, Hutchinson Pioneer Room, Burge Union. Sponsored by School of Business. 5 p.m. — Entry deadline, Recreation services tennis doubles. 208 Robinson Center. Play begins April 8. $4 per team. 6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians meeting. Daisy Hall Room. Burge Union. meeting. Daisy Hill Room, Burge Union 7.n.g. — Teacher In-Service Brief 3-30 p.m. — Lecture: "The English Discovery of Medieval England." Richard W. Clement, librarian. 326 Sooner Research Library. 4 p.m. — Kansas Association of Secondary School Principals conference Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Call Paul Forio. 864-3244, for informa 7 p.m. - Teacher In-Service Befiting. Karen Herman, Kansas City, Mo., teaching educators how to teach children about world hunger. Sponsored by KU Students War Against Hunger. 300 Strong Hall 7 p.m. - Baseball KU versus South University of Maryland Stadium 7 p.m. — Art lecture: "Under the Influence: Photography and the Other Visual Arts." Andy Grunderb, author of *Spencer Museum of Art* auditorium. 8 p.m. — Lecture: "Discrimination and Sexual Orientation" Sponsored by the Lawrence Tenants Association. Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union. 8 p.m. — Student recital. Phil Wizer, composition. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. THURSDAY All day — Conference:"Women and Work. A Comparative Perspective." Also all day April 8 and 9. Kansas Union. Call 842-3944 for information. All day - Teacher Placement Day. Allen Field House, second level. Open to certified teachers. Sponsored by University Placement Center. 11:30 a.m. — Brown bag lunch. Sponsored by Non-Traditional Students Organization, Alcove A, Union Square 3:30 p.m. — Career workshop for foreign students. Sponsored by foreign student services and the university placement center 149 Burge Union. Fig. 1 'Stuart Altmann, University of Chicago' 105 Hawthorn Hall. 7 p.m. — Open forum concerning the development of a Code of Conduct for the School of Business. 427 Summerfield Hall. 4 p.m. — Film: "Manner," Sponsored by the German Club, German department conference room, Wescoe Hall. 7 p.m. — Lecture: "The AIDS Virus, What It Is, How It Affects Us." Lawrence Bradford, research assistant in microbiology. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1531 Crescent Road. 4 p.m. - Michener Lecture Series Spinning Trivia! - The Monkey and the 7 p.m. — Campus Crusade for Christ meeting. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. 8 p.m. - Resident artist performance, Bob Becky, mime, Liberty Hall, 642 8 p.m. — Student recital. Janet Robinson, piano. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. All day — Conference. Kansas Academy of Science. Kansas Union. 12:30 p.m. - Worldview Brown Bag Lunchon: "Japanese Investment in Asian Countries." De-Dim Wu, professor of economics. Sponsored by center for international programs. Alcove C, Kansas Union. 1 p.m. — Macintosh workshop: "Introduction to MS-Word." Offered by academic computing services. Call 864-0949 for information. 8:30 p.m. — Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meeting, Pioneer Room, Burpee Union 9 p.m. — Concert. The Mahoots, Common Ground, and Homestead Grays Benefits Lawrence Salvation Army and Lawrence Emergency Services Council, Sponsored by KU Students War Against Hunger. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. $4; $3 with a can of food. 8 p.m. — Master's recital. Kurt Gartner, percussion. Swarthout Recital Hall. Murphy Hall. 3:30 p.m. - Aerospace colloquium. Robert Mullins, Genera Dynamics Corp. All day — Conference on Visual Communication. Sponsored by School of Journalism, Kansas Union. Call 864-7455 for information. $15 at the door. 8:45 a.m. — Phi Alpha Theta Kansas regional conference. Kansas Union. Registration required. For information call 864-3569. SATURDAY 10. a.m. - Symposium. About women in Japan. Spencer Museum of Art **Noon -- Hunger clean-up.** Donors to KU Students War Against Hunger sponsor work projects in Lawrence. For information call Catherine, 841-6574 or Elisabeth, 841-6264. 1:30 p.m. — Softball. KU versus Pittsburgh State University. Double header. Javihawk Field. 9 a.m. - Legislative update. Watkins Room, Kansas Union. auditorium. Call 864-4710 for information. 8 p.m. — Student recital. Keith Bland, euphonium. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. 1 p.m. — Exhibit opening. Student crafts scholarship show. Art and Design Building gallery. SUNDAY 2 p.m. - Exhibit opening: "Visual Ethnography. Art by Anthropologists." 1:30 p.m. - Softball, KU versus Wichita State. Doubleheader. Jayhawk Field. 10 2:30 p.m. -- Spring concert. KU Collegeum Musicum. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1531 Crescent Road. 8 p.m. - Doctoral recital, Shirley King, organ, by Lawrence Catham-Campbell HAYES HOUSE OF MUSIC 944 Mass 842-5193 8 p.m. — Student recital. Patrick Sweeten, trombone. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. Used Ludwig Drum Set Used Tama Drum Set New Pearl Drum Set Everything you expect in a good hotel except high prices! 2222 W. 6th 842-7030 Healthy Hawk PEER PRESSURE For most of us, there is nothing more important than the people in our lives. What wouldn't we do to secure their admiration and affection? PEER PRESSURE is everywhere. It is wherever we feel a need to conform to the expectations of our friends. It stimulates us to achieve, to expand the limits of our experience. It challenges us to make mature choices. Conforming to our peers' expectations may mean injuring the rights of others or violating our own sense of what is right. It also confronts us with the following question: "Can we risk not being liked by others in order to preserve our feelings of respect and admiration for ourselves?" PEER PRESSURE is inescapable -So long as we live with or around others. We must deal with it. The strength to wrest the power of decision-making over our lives from the hands of our peer groups and to return it to our own comes from within. We have the ability to judge our own conduct. We can decide if it is to our own liking. We can elect to value the regard we have for ourselves more highly than we value the regard we receive from others. In effect, we must do so if we are to be ourselves. OUR CHOICES are many. - What is truly important in living? What do we respect and admire most in ourselves? - How much of this are we willing to trade for the accolades of popularity? - Are we willing to take full responsibility for our own behavior? - Can we trust that we are strong enough to stand on our own if necessary? - Are our values and convictions as worthy of our esteem as the values and convictions of the others in our lives? - What wouldn't we do to secure their admiration and affection? For more information contact: University Counseling Center, 116 Bailey, 864-3931 Mental Health Clinic, Watkins Hospital, 864-9580 Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064 Sponsored by Student Affairs. A103 Art and reason When Mark and I decided to spend the weekend at his mother's house, I never imagined I would be walking into a mouse's nightmare. There were cats everywhere. Cat plaques, cat statues, cat clocks, even a cat mat. I couldn't begin to duplicate her collection of kitty litter if I spent a year at a garage sale. Conspicuously absent, however, was a real cat. Strange, I thought, and began to fear that a weekend with cat woman could be a lot less than purr-fect. But then she came home, and Mark introduced her. She was dressed surprisingly well—no leopard pants. In fact, you could say she was the cat's meow. She offered me a cup of Dutch Chocolate Mint. Now that was something I could relate to. Then she brought it out in the most beautiful, distinctly unfeline china I'd ever seen. As we sipped, I found out that Mrs. Campbell has my same weakness for chocolate, loves the theater as much as I do, but, incredibly, never saw "Cats." So Mark and I are taking her next month. General Foods' International Coffees Share the feeling © 1988 General Foods Corp