8 Wednesday, January 16, 1991 / University Daily Kansan SPRING BREAK in FLORIDA Panama City Beach March 9-16,1991 Seven nights on the beach in the Miracle Mile Resort, parties, tournaments and a choice of drive yourself or bus packages from $175 to $265. Information packets available January 22 in the SUA office, 4th floor Kansas Union. A $100 deposit will reserve your space. Sign-up starts Feb. 1. Limited space available. Panama City Beach March 9-16, 1991 with K-State, Wichita State and Emporia State! Sign-up Begins February 1st! $175 Drive or $265 Bus For more information call SUA: 864-3477 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN *National *State *Local *Campus Get all your news daily BRITCHES CORNER 843 Massachusetts AFTER CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE MENS * Suits from $159 * Sweaters from $29 * Knit Shirts from $14.99 * All Mens Sportswear up to 1/2 OFF LADIES * Skirts & Tops from $34 * Casual Slacks from $20 * Outerwear from $79 All Ladies Suede & Leather Skirts* Jackets* Vests 1/2 OFF In 1987, over $30\%$ of drunk drivers involved in fatal accidents were college-aged people. Don't become a statistic. Don't drink and drive. Plan for a sober friend to drive you home, so the fun never ends. BUT JUST IN CASE, Secure Cab Provides safe and free rides. New Hours 12:00-3:00am Mon.-Fri. Clip this number out and keep it with you. Just in case. Sponsored by the Student Senate Transportation Board. SECURECAB Just in case. Use is limited. Please respect this service by using it responsibly. SECURE CAB Just in case. A-1 City Cab 842-2432 (Ask for Secure Cab) START THE YEAR OFF RIGHT AT Vista 49C HAMBURGERS 100% Pure Kansas Beef served with ketchup, mustard, pickles and onions. For just a little more, top it off with cheese and bacon. Offer good for a limited time. Vista DRIVE IN 1527 W. 6th KU KARATE CLUB OKINAWAN GOJU RYU FREE demonstration and opening meeting THURSDAY, JANUARY 17. 7 p.m. Robinson Gymnasium, Room 1 Classes will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays Beginners at 5:30, Advanced at 6:30 Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130 Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130 The KU KARATE CLUB studies a traditional style of karate known as: OKINAWAN GOJI UYU KARATE TEACHES: SELF DEFENSE, SELF CONFIDENCE, SELF AWARENESS For more information contact John 843-1294 --during the Meeting for Peace was not the choice, whose choice not to return to the Soviet Union. Soviet journalist surfaces Delegate skipped flight in October A Soviet man who disappeared during the October Meeting for Peace in Lawrence is in the Washington, t. D., area and is looking for a woman to leave from a Washington based organization that assists political refuges. Kansan staff writer Bv Lara Gold Soviet journalist Maxim Kniazkov did not show for the Oct. 19 flight that took approximately 250 Soviet delegates back to the Soviet Union. "He was growing dissatisfied with the policies in the Soviet Union," said Leigh LaMora, a representative of the Jamestown Foundation. "He foresaw a crackdown coming like what is happening in Lithuania," LaMora said. "As a journalist, he did not want to be a part of reporting the policies he thought were contrary to the classless policy." LaMora said the Jamestown Foundation helped high-level defectors, such as people involved in politics and economics. The agency learns from the defectors about the inner workings of the Soviet government to increase public awareness of the need for understanding of the East, she said. Kniazkov was the chief foreign correspondent for the TASS news agency in the Soviet Union, and he also gave information from the foundation, LaMora said. The family Kniazkov stayed with "It hardly came as a surprise that he deflected," Richard Plumlee said. Worries spread to Italy, not considered a target in the crisis, where shoppers hoarded food, sugar, medicines and heating oil. Business was fast for money changers because of the rising demand for U.S. dollars, necessary to those planning to fly. It will be hours yesterdays when money changers snapped up at a Bahrain market, money changers in Manama said. The Plumlee shared their home with Kniazkov during the meeting, which was organized to help strengthen ties between U.S. and Soviet citizens. Deadline hits nervous chord in gulf region In the Saudi capital of Riyadh, shoppers vied for bottled water, canned food, batteries and other essentials. "He spoke quite a bit of his dissatisfaction with the economic policies," Plumlee said. "He also expressed concern about his 9-year-old son, who is still in the Soviet Union with his ex-wife." The Associated Press MANAMA, Bahrain — Shoppers from Riyadh to Rome emptied supermarket shelves, radicals vowed to attack U.S. citizens and money changers profited yesterday as the threat of war loomed in the Persian Gulf At Bahrain's international airport, those who were remaining bid tearful farewells to relatives boarding this island 300 miles south of Iraq. Airport officials said they expected more cancellations as airlines continued to cut flights because of soaring prices and the threat of terrorist attack. Kniazkov currently is working on an outline for a book and is looking for work as a journalist, LaMora said. Across the region, people prepared for a possible chemical weapons attack by Iraq. seal windows with air ducts and duct tape and buying gas masks. The U.N. deadline for Iraq to leave Kuwait ran out at midnight EST Tuesday, which was 8 a.m. in the gulf region. Since Iraq failed to withdraw, it will be open to possible attack by ISIS or multinational forces in Saudi Arabia. Owen faces state's appeal for charges The Associated Press TOPEKA — A special prosecutor argued yesterday that a district court judge prematurely dismissed criminal charges against the police in a year ago. He urged state Supreme Court justices to reinstate them. Michael Barbara, a former district court judge himself and now a law professor at Washburn University, told the court that Judge G. Joseph Pierron of Johnson County was wrong to conclude that the two-year statute of limitations had expired before Barbara and another special prosecutor brought the charges. Owen was charged in October 1989 with 18 counts of making illegal, excessive contributions to the 1986 election campaign of former Gov. Mike Hayden. Pierron dismissed the charges last January, and the state appealed. Barbara argued that Owen's manipulation of the records of companies he controlled constituted concealment of the alleged crimes. He said the statute of limitations should not have been counted from the October 1980 case in the United States, from the December 1988 disclosure by a news reporter of the alleged acts. However, Owen's attorney, James Eisenbrand of Overland Park, contended that Pierron was failing by dismissing the charges. Gulf standoff continues Continued from Page 1 toward to avoid war drew a blank. "There is a fatal moment where one must act," French Prime Minister Michel Rocard said last night. "This moment has arrived after we have done everything to avoid it." In Washington, White House Press Secretary Martin Fitzwater said a decision to launch an attack against Iraq like it would come sooner rather than later. Iran's Islamic Republic News Agency said the Teheran, Iran, government was in touch with a number of countries, trying to stave off war. In Egypt, President Hosni Mubarak urged Saddam to leave the ravaged emirate, "I call upon him. I plead to him, in the name of every father and mother, every child in Egypt, to forget subjective needs and desires and to think about the time when he faces his God." he said. Some Pentagon and administration a officials have privately predicted Bush would wait several days after the deadline before making a military move. But the White House said publicly that Iraq would be on borrowed time from the moment the deadline expired. Table Tops, Mirrors, Flexiglas Auto Glass Replacement 730 NEW JERSEY 843-4416 Prompt, Professional Service AND DIRT CHEAP RECORDS KANSAS UNION GALLERY ROCK POSTER SALE JANUARY 14-18. (M-F). --to receive a 1/2 price entree with the purchase COFFEE CALL AND CAJUN FOOD Step off 23rd St. into the New Orleans French Quarter... Now Serving Authentic Caiun* Lunches & Dinners! Cajun* Lunches & Dinners! 10% **off** gourmet coffees & beignets Bring your KU I.D. to receive (hot French donuts) 8:30 p.m.-midnight. During lunch or dinner, show your KU I.D. of a regular price entree. - We've added a piano to our dining room, & scheduled live jazz. - Live Dixieland Jazz Quartet coming soon. Call ahead (832-CALL) for "To Go" orders of eight or more In the Louisiana Purchase, 23rd & Louisiana *832--CALL