Wednesday, March 27, 1991 / University Dailv Kansan EASY DISCREET RENTING Must be 21. I.D. Required XXX VIDEO - 1420 W, 23rd DON'S AUTO CENTER "For All Your Repair Needs" 841-4833 920 E.11th Street - Complete Auto Repair * Machine Shop Service * Parts Department Crown Cinema BEFORE & PM-ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 VARSITY 2015 MASSA VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 THE DOORS (R) SAT, SUN 2:15 EYE:4.45;7:15;9:45 HILLCREST 925 IOWA SLEEPING WITH SAT 9:00 AU/35 WED 9:15 AU/35 THUR 9:20 AU/35 THE HARD WAY (P.1) SAT 9:00 AU/35 WED 9:15 AU/35 THUR 9:20 AU/35 GOLBY BY SUBSCHED (P.1, 1) SAT 9:00 AU/35 WED 9:15 AU/35 THUR 9:20 AU/35 WOLVES (P.1, 3) SAT 9:00 AU/35 WED 9:15 AU/35 THUR 9:20 AU/35 SILENCE BY SUBSCHED (P.1, 1) SAT 9:00 AU/35 WED 9:15 AU/35 THUR 9:20 AU/35 CINEMA TWIN 11/10 IOWA TEERMAGE MUTANT (PR) SAT MATHEMS NINJA TURTLES 10:30 AM 10:30 AM (SECRET OF THE DOZEN) SUN MATHEMS DAYLY 10:30 AM 10:30 AM DAILY 5:00 AM 5:00 AM SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Dickinson 23rd & 10WA 841-8600 $300 PRIME TIME SHOW & SEN. CITIZENS ANYTIME NEW JACK CITY (R) 5:10, 7:25, 9:45 SHIPWRECKED (PG) 6.007.150.25 PERFECT WEAPON (R) 4:45 7:10 9:20 KING RALPH (PG) CLASS ACTION (R) 1:35 7:20 9:40 HOME ALONE (PG) 4.50, 7:00, 9:25 Give A Garden In A Basket. Blooming flowers, fed by springtime showers. Always a special gift. Present the bouquet in a lovely, white hand-woven Victorian basket, and the remembrance is even sweeter. To send one anywhere in the U.S. or Canada, call or visit our shop today. Teleflora Owens Flower Shop 9th & Indiana • 843-6111 TINPAN ALLEY ETONIC The ST Series is "Stabilizer Technology." A high tech outsole-incorporates the unique stabilizer spike placement to promote maximum stability. Revolutionary pyramid-shapes turf grips give the shoe the added traction a golfer needs during a swing $10 OFF ALL MEN'S & WOMEN'S GOLF SHOES. THE MALLS 23rd & LIQUISIAA 749-5332 - PRIME TIME - SPORTS Careless behavior helps AIDS spread Kansan staff writer By Benjamin W. Allen Even though many college students know about AIDS and how to prevent it, few actually take necessary precautions, a national authority on HIV infection said last night. Richard Keeling, chairperson of the American College Health Association's Task Force on HIV Infection, spoke to more than 150 people last night in the ballroom of the Kansas Union. He said self-esteem and communication skills in intimate situations were necessary to change students' sexual behavior. His main point was to go beyond merely educating students about the use of condoms to a more fundamental solution: modifying sexual behavior. "We need students to be able to say, 'My life, my health, my future are more important than what will happen in the next 15 minutes,' " he said. His speech mapped the progress of his ADHD and engaged in conversations toward the disease. He said that the idea that the disease was an urgent and immediate crisis had largely passed and that he believed it would be a corrierment was just around the corner. Although he said AIDS now was perceived as a manageable chronic disease, he said that about 180,000 people now had AIDS and that by the end of the decade 1 million people Keeling said 40 to 50 people now at the University of Kansas probably could not wait for a vaccine. would be infected with HIV. He said one of the reasons students did not take precautions was that they did not think they were in a high-risk group. "We are so good at stereotyping groups at risk, we think we can't get it since we're not part of that group." he said. Keeling used a slide show to display advertisements indicative of how sex and alcohol often are linked and how the messages the ads sent were ones of promiscuity without consequence. He said that the drive to be accepted in society pushed students to conform to the messages they were receiving from advertisements and popular culture. "Did you ever hear of Tom Cruise stopping and debating about safe sex with his potential sex partner?" he said. Patrick Dilley, Oklahoma City, Okla., graduate student and a member of the HIV-STD Education Committee, said the speech matched the committee's peer education program, which is designed to educate students so they will change their sexual behavior. "It was a good lecture because the educators learned as much as students about what was the real problem; behavior," Dilley said. Richard Keeling discusses how ads affect attitudes about AIDS. Michelle L. MyersiKANSAN Editor in chief. With Call Blocker from Southwestern Bell Telephone, you can edit out annoying, frustrating, upsetting calls. Calls we're all confronted with more often than we'd like. Call Blocker enables your phone to block the numbers of any three callers you'd rather avoid. All you do is hit *60 on* your touchpad and program in the problem numbers. These can include the number of your last incoming call, whether you know that number or not. The designated callers get a recorded message saying you're not accepting calls. And you get a well-deserved break from noise pollution. Subscribe to Call Blocker for only $3 a month. When you do, you can subscribe to another of Southwestern Bell Telephone's convenient calling options—Priority Call—for just $1. Contact your Southwestern Bell Telephone business office for details. Call Blocker. When your phone's equipped with it, it's no problem to delete problem callers. Southwestern Bell Telephone The one to call on. Installation free for a limited time. Not available in all areas or to party-line customers. Some telephones may not be compatible with some calling options.