10 Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan No One Fits You Like Bianchi. Main Street $284 Finally, a bicycle that's made for a variety of terrains, the Cross-Terrain™ fitness bicycle. If you're more interested in having fun than being the fastest or climbing the highest, the Bianchi Cross-Terrain fitness bicycle is for you. Stop by and test ride, see for yourself! SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, 843-5000 The governing body of KU graduate students voted by acclamation Friday to support the proposed restructuring of graduate governance in Student Senate. Graduates want a restructured Senate Kansan staff writer By Michael Christie About 20 people voted, and two graduate programs sent letters approving the bill. Senate is scheduled to vote on the bill tomorrow, as it would have even if the Graduate Representative did not. The proposed bill calls for the graduate affairs committee to be dissolved and for the graduate assembly to act in its place. The approval came after the bill was changed to establish the graduate assembly as the head body for graduate students. The original bill proposed a separate University Committee head graduate student governance. "This is now phasing from primarily an advisable body to an actual legislative, decision-making and, in my interpretation, powerful body," said Ruth Lentz, extrah, chairperson of the graduate assembly. If the bill is passed, the Graduate Representative Assembly would be the only Senate body that had its own membership determined outside Senate domain. Each graduate department may have a representative in the assembly. Arlan Maltyb, chairperson of the senate graduate affairs committee, said that if the graduate assembly were the Senate committee for graduate concerns, graduate students would have a larger voice in Senate because graduate senators could sit on other Senate committees. This is different from other organisations' budgets, which the finance committee has the power to change. Also, if the bill is approved in Senate, the graduate assembly would have authority to determine the budgets of graduate organizations. It would present the total budgets to the finance committee, which could approve the budgets in total or make recommendations for change. Maltby said that although the finance committee and Senate could reject budget requests, change requirements would not be necessary. Popularity of organically grown foods on rise By Katie Chipman Kansan staff writer A trend in health awareness has caused a boost in business for natural food retailers in Lawrence. store opened in 1974. in business for natural food retailers in Lawrence. Oread Organics, 622 W. 12th St., a grocery store that opens today, specializes in organic food and products. Linda Gwaltney, manager of Community Mercantile, a natural food grocery store at 700 Maine St., said business had been expanding since the Kristi Adrian, store manager, said. "There's a kristi for awareness. People need to know that" Community Mercantile carries organically grown fruits, vegetables and meat. "When we started, organic foods were hard to come by," she said. "Most of our produce came from California. We could only buy produce that could make the trip because organic foods are grown to eat, not to ship." growing process to prevent insects from destroying the crops. Some foods that are grown using inorganic methods are sprayed with preservatives before shipping to prevent dehydration. Many fruits and vegetables are sprayed with pesticides during the Gwaltney said many people who shopping at Community Mercantile considered chemically treated agricultural products harmful to their health. "Now 75 percent of all of our produce is organically grown," she said. "In the summer we get things from local farmers, and in the winter we still depend on the West Coast. There are some greenhouses in the area that are beginning to grow organic, so we could buy from them in the winter." MARCH Every Wednesday 75¢ 14oz. Draws 2 Burger baskets Southern Hills Mall 1601 West 23rd 841-9111 6 Acoustic and Electric Jam Night Friday Every Thursday $1.25 longnecks and $1 Chicago-style Hot Dogs 13 Mark Selby & The Sluggers Big 8 Tourney Saturday CLOSED $ ^{1 4} $NCAA TOURNAMENT BEGINS $ ^{1 6} $ 20 Acoustic and Electric Jam Night INTERFACE Acoustic and Electric Jam Night New! S U N D A Y ribs & jazz (ask for details) 28 Nick Cosmos That Statue Moved 29 SDI LIVERPOOL BEATLES? The Urge $ ^{30} $ Now KU can afford to dream in color. If you thought that finding a color Macintosh system you could afford was just a dream, then the new, affordable Macintosh LC is a dream come true. The Macintosh LC is rich in color. Unlike many computers that can display only 16 colors at once, the Macintosh LC expands your palette to 256 colors. It also comes with a microphone and new sound-input technology that lets you personalize your work by adding voice or other sounds Like every Macintosh computer, the LC is easy to set up and easy to master. And it runs thousands of available applications that all work in the same consistent way-so once you've learned one program, you're well on your way to learning them all. The Macintosh LC even lets you share information with someone who uses a different type of computer-thanks to the versatile Apple SuperDrive, which can read from and write to Macintosh, MS-DOS, OS/2, and Apple II floppy disks. Low-cost color Macintosh LC's now available at the KU Bookstore. Take a look at the Macintosh LC and see what it gives you. Then pinch yourself. Apple introduces the Macintosh LC. It's better than a dream- it's a Macintosh. KU Bookstores Computer Store Burge Union, Level 2 864-5697 The power to be your best. © 1990 Apple Computer Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. Super-Suite II and "The printer to your best feet," trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. MIS DCS is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation. This is not a trademark of international business Machinery Corporation