University Daily Kansan / Monday, February 1, 1988 5 MONDAY 9 a.m. - Print sale at the Kansas Union Gallery. Also 9 a.m., Feb. 2-5. 1 p.m. - Mainframe seminars "Introduction to VAXVMS" and "Intermediate VAXVMS" at 3 p.m. Offered by Academic Computing Services. Call 864-0100 for locations and registration information. 4:30 p.m. - Balloon launch kickoff for "Bust MS Month." Sponsored by 7:30 p.m. — SUA Forum Victims of AIDS and their relatives discuss their experiences in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Students Against Multiple Sclerosis on the lawn in front of Allen Field House. 7 p.m. - Water safety instruction class second of nine sessions at Lawrence High School. TUESDAY 10 a.m. — Mainframe seminars "Introduction to IBM VM/CMS at 1 p.m. Intermediate IBM VM/CMS at 3 p.m. Call 864-0100 for locations and registration 8 a.m. — Staff training and development "Communication." Offered by department of personnel services in 102 CLeary Hall. Call 864-4946 to register 2 p.m. — Art lecture Fay Jones, Seattle, talks about her work in the Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. 4:30 p.m. Christian Faith as implied by the manuscript cultural Museum, 1204 Street the study abroad program in 315 Art and Design Building. 7 p.m. — "Studying a Foreign Language," a study skills workshop presented by the Student Assistance Center in 300 Strong Hall. No registration required. 2:30 p.m. — Art and graphic design presentation David Chapman of Brighton Polytechnic, England will speak about 7 p.m. Amnesty International the Browsing Room at the U.S. Embassy, London. 7 p.m. — "Anger: Getting It Out in the Open" in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. Sponsored the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. WEDNESDAY 9 a.m. — Microcomputer workshop "Introduction to MS-DOS." Call 864 404 for more information. 11:40 a.m. — University forum "The Haitian Election and its Historical and Cultural Background" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Call 843-4933 by noon Feb. 2 to make jucheon reservations. Co., Kansas City, Mo. in the Pioneer Boom at the Burge Union 2 p.m. - Executive lecture series Thomas Buningham, Missouri Bank & Trust 6:30 p.m. - Campus Christians meeting in Daisy Hill Room at the 7:30 p.m. — Sierra Club meeting at the Lawrence Public Library Auditorium. Non-members welcome. Presentation by Nuclear Awareness Network. 8:05 p.m. - Mona's basketball KU versus OQLAmen at Allen Field House THURSDAY 12:30 p.m. — "Function and Inhibition of Carbonic Anhydrase: A Molecular Modeling Approach" a microbiology seminar in 6031 Haworth Hall. the Kansas Union. 7 p.m. -- Campus Crusade for Christ meeting in the Jayhawk Room of 1 p.m. — Mainframe seminars "Introduction to the MIDnet and NSFNET." Using the NCSA CRAY from KU at 3 p.m. Call 864-010 for informa- 3:30 p.m. — Geography department lecture "Tourism Revisited" with CharlesDoods of Platt College in 317 Lindley Hall. 7 p.m. — "Reading for Comprehension and Speed" a three-part workshop also Feb.11 and 18. Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center. $15 for materials. 7 p.m. — "Effective Teaching in an Administrator's Eyes" a panel discussion with Barbara Coughenhorn, Wellsville; Harold Vestal, De Soto; and Harold Ohmart, Lawrence, in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union. Sponsored by the school of education student organization 7 p.m. - The American Past with Caldick Picket on KANU 91.5 FM. FRIDAY All day — Men's and women's indoor track and field Jayhawk Invitational at the Anschutz Pavilion. 9 a.m. - Microcomputer workshop "Introduction to Lotus." Offered by Academic Computing Services. Call 864-0494 for information. 10 a.m. — Staff training and development New employee orientation. Offered by department of personnel to John O'Leary Hall. Call 864-9448 to register. Noon — Sign-up deadline SUA allcampus pool and foothall tournament. Sign up at SAU office, Kansas Union. Tournament begins 1:30 p.m., Feb. 7. $5 3:30 p.m. - Anthropology lecture "Cannibalism in the Stone Age." Paola Villa, University of Colorado, Boulder. Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union. 7 p.m. — Opera is My Hobby with James Seaver on KANU 91.5 FM. 7:30 p.m. — "Radio Days" free movie at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. 8 p.m. — Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival with James Moody, Woodwinds, and the KU Jazz Ensemble I and Jazz Singers. Crafton-Preyron Theatre, Murphy Hall. tickets on sale at the door. KU students $4, senior citizens $6, public and other students $8. 8 p.m. - Observatory Open House if the sky is clear. Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-3164 for information. SATURDAY 9:30 a.m. — "More Monkey Business" a museum workshop at the Museum of Natural History. Ages 7-13. For information call 864-4173. All day — Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival. High school and college jazz bands and jazz choirs. Paris Rutherford and Valerie Lippold-Maint, guest clinicians. Swarthout Hall and Craffon-Prever Theatre, Murphy Hall. 9 a.m. — Vintage Jazz Show with Michael Maher on KANU 91.5 FM. 10 a.m. — The Jazz Scene with Dick Wright on KANU 91.5 FM. 6 p.m. "Rice and the Guiper and speaker 'The Central American Peace Process'" with Charles Stansifer. Sponsored by Latin American Solidarity. Eucultural Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. SUNDAY 3:05 p.m. — Men's basketball KU versus Colorado at Allen Field House. Noon Women's basketball KU versus University of Colorado at Allen Field House. 2 p.m. — Children's art class "Fantasy Gardens." Laura Allen and Dianne Whittier. Ages 7-12. Spencer Museum of Art, Call 864-4710 for information. 3 p.m. — Black Student Union Guild Choir Extravaganza concert 7 p.m. — Black Student Union Pageant to choose Mr. Ebony and Ms. Essence at the Kansas Ballroom. 8 p.m. — Jayhawk Invitation Jazz Festival concert The Four Freshmen with KU Jazz Ensemble I and Jazz Singers. Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall. Tickets on sale at the door. KU students $4, senior citizens $6, public and other students $8. 8 p.m. — Student recital with the Full House Woodwind Quintet, Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. 3:30 p.m. Student recital with cooe Swarthout Recital Mhrowl Myrwell Kansas University 3 n.m. — The KU Concerts on KANU 91. 5 FM. Student Discounts / Free Ticket Delivery CALL 841-7800 2721 West Sixth St Suite C Permanent Hair Removal The Electrolysis Studio Free Consultations 15 East 7th 841-5796 Permanent Hair Removal Story Idea? Call 864-4810 Anti-abortion clause may defeat bill WASHINGTON — Feminists who worked for years to win passage of a broad civil rights bill are trying to decide if they still want it, now that the Senate has added an anti-abortion amendment likely to stick. The Associated Press elsewhere in the Civil Rights Restoration Act the Senate passed 75-14 Thursday. "I think it has the potential for really allowing institutions to discriminate against women and girls" for having had an abortion, said Judith Lichtman, executive director of the Defense Fund. "There is no way to describe the Danforth amendment but as a devastating defeat." Legal experts say the amendment, sponsored by Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., has far-reaching implications that could outweigh the protections women would gain requires that nothing in the civil rights bill or the 12-year-old civil rights law's Title IX, which bars sexual discrimination in education, can be interpreted to require institutions to provide or pay for abortions. The Danforth amendment About 20 women's groups in the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, the driving force behind the restoration act, are trying to decide whether to support the bill when the House votes. Among the things they must consider is the importance of the bill to minorities, the elderly and the disabled, who also would benefit from its wide protections against discrimination by federal aid recipients. The restoration act is intended to reverse the effect of a 1984 Supreme Court ruling that Title IX applied only to specific programs or activities receiving federal aid rather than to entire institutions. Calgary wants to help defectors, Soviets say The Associated Press MOSCOW — A Soviet newspaper said yesterday that organizers of the Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, created a special hotline and a protected holding area for athletes who want to defect. Canada's sports minister denied it. cation of the USSR Sports Committee and the nation's main sports periodical, said that a red telephone installed in the athletes' living quarters and a special quarantine section at Foothills Hospital were intended to lure athletes into defection. It said the actions violated the Olympic charter prohibiting political propaganda. But Canadian Sports Minister Otto Jelinek said that the 24-hour hotline would be set up for regular immigration emergencies and not to help prospective defectors at the Games. Sovietsky Sport, the official publi- "It would ruin everything if anyone was stupid enough to try and put in a Valentine's Day At a loss for words? Listen here. The University Daily Kansan is proud to announce our annual "Valentine's Day Classified Section" on Friday Feb. 12th. It's the perfect way to say it all to your Valentine. He said the hotline simply was to help in such emergencies as lost passports or visitors having difficulty entering Canada. hotline for defectors." Jelinek said. "They wouldn't have the authority from the immigration minister or myself to do it." - Kansan Valentine's Day Special * Friday Feb. 12th * Deadline Wednesday Feb. 10th Here's how it works. For the very special price of five dollars you can send a one of a kind personal ad to your Valentine. The special section will feature a colorful red heart border. All you have to do is fill out the form below and drop it by or mail it to the Kansan. We'll do the rest. On Friday Feb. 12th they'll be no guessing about how you - Deadline Wednesday Feb. 10th $3726 WORDS IN ANHILIM. JOSTENS Phone no. Valentine's Day Classified Form Name Phone no Please print your ad one word per box, 20 words maximum. | | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Ads must be prepaid and must follow Kansan Policy. Make checks payable to: University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, KS 66045 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Address JOSTENS The losen selections will be on display Monday, Feb. 1 through Friday, Feb. 5, from 10am to 4pm. The deposit is $20 and can only be found at your KU Bookstore located in the Union. KUBookstores Kansas Union A102 Intro. to The Short Story When Carla told me that my date was a little short, I thought she was talking dollars and cents, not feet and inches. So there I was at the door, in my spiked heels, staring at the top of my date's head. All I could think was, how do I get myself out of this? I could imagine how my legs would ache if I had to walk around with my knees bent all evening. So to stall for time, while figuring out how to fake malaria, I made us some Double Dutch Chocolate. When I brought it into the living room, I discovered that Gary was a chocolate lover too. Ahh, a man after my own heart. Okay, I decided I'd give him a chance. So we sat down and saw each other face-to-face for the first time. He had a nice smile. After some small talk-I mean conversation-I discovered that we both love Updike, hate the winter weather, and both have miniature schnauzers. So, we made a date to introduce Shadow and Schatzi next week. General Foods' International Coffees. Share the feeling.