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The more complete it is, the better you can respond to your request. (Authority: 10.035.001) Graffiti incidents rise after gulf war begins Messages vary on war stance By Mike I. Vargas Kansan staff writer Since then, there has been an increase in the frequency of reported graffit on campus, said KU police. 1. John Mullens. It began the morning after the onset of the Persian Gulf War when someone spray painted peace symbols on walls in Strong Hall and anti war graffiti on the west doors of Bailey Annex. KU police have had about two reported cases a week of graffiti advocating different positions on the gulf war, Mullens said. "Periodically, we'll catch someone," Mullens said. "You virtually have to catch them in the act." Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police representative, said the city had ordinances against defacing public and private property. But Mullens said the way people expressed their causes through gratifi had changed. Despite the first cases after the war began, the majority of the cases since then have involved chalk and soap instead of spray paint, he said. In past years, people have used spray paint to express their ideas, Mullens said. Now people are aware of the clean-up and criminal problems associated with paint and are making a conscious effort not to use Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said the use of soap "It doesn't matter what it says," Richardson said. "Our policy is to remove it as it's found." More graffiti has been drawn on the sidewalks between Strong Hall and the Kansas Union along Jayhawk Boulevard, Richardson said. Another way people are expressing their feelings is at the Graffiti Exhibit in the Kansas Union, where students can draw graffiti with markers on sheets of paper covering walls. Brett Riggs, Benton sophomore, walks past a spray-painted message that reads, 'Blind Faith Will Kill You.' The graffiti was painted on the bridge next to Potter Lake. Alan Scott, representative of the fine arts committee of Student Union Activities, said the exhibit allowed students to vent their ideas legally. Scoffed the exhibit was an informal forum that had political and non-political comments, as well as nonsense phrases and jokes. One of country music's hottest new bands, Pirates of the Mississippi, is as close to live as you're ever going to hear coming out of a Nashville studio. Strictly a guitar and drum band, Pat Severs, Rich Alves, Dean Townson, Jimmy Lowe and Bill McCorvey have a spontaneous chemistry you have to hear to believe. Their music is raw and driving, with the rough charm of great garage bands. SELL IT,BUY IT,FIND IT...KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Kwame Touré (formerly Stokely Carmichael) Head of the All African Peoples Revolutionary Party co-author BLACK POWER, and author of STOKELY SPEAKS: FROM BLACK POWER BACK TO PAN AFRICANISM From the '60s to the '90s; Black Power to Pan-Africanism Friday, February 22, 1991 at 7:00 pm Kansas Union Ballroom Free Admission Sponsored by Black Student Union, Black Men of Today, Office of Minority Affairs. Student Senate, SUA, Department of History & Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc.