12 Friday, November 30, 1990 / University Daily Kansan TIE-DYE • BATIK Unique IMPORTS JEWELRY SILKSCREEN AIRBRUSH CREATION STATION 730 Massachusetts TIN PAN ALLEY SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED You are cordially invited to attend SCENOGRAPHY, LIGHTING AND COSTUMES by Costa Rican set designer David Vargas, M.A. Saturday, December 1 2:00 p.m. Cora Downs Auditorium Dyche Hall (Natural History Museum) Theatre, Operas, Modern Dance "DTK ... NEWS and REVIEWS" The KEEN-2503...A good choice for anyone looking for an inexpensive high-performance 25MHz 80386 machine." MIPS (Personal Workstation) Magazine DIXS PEM-250 finished number one "BYTE, April 1990 NOVELL LABS ANDROID APPROVED NewWare Compatible NOVELL Certifield File Server & Workstation Now get the Best System at the Best Price! DTK-KEEN 2503 Complete System $2499 In the Sep 25,1990 PC Magazine's service and reliability survey, of the 19 non-mail order companies, only DTK scored average or above average in ALL FOUR categories. MICROTECH 841-9513 2329 Iowa Corporate volume buyers choose DTK as first choice in Infoworld survey. The survey indicated a significantly lower incidence of problems; 31% as compared to 41% overall and, "DTK's rating for problem severity was a low 37% as compared to an average of 45%." PC Magazine 25MHz 386, 4K cache memory, 2BM RAM 18b, 1.21 & 1.44m lompry drives, 40mb hard disk, 512K SVGA card, Panasonic Multisync monitor, 726*108 res 282 fig. 2-D, s-2Paraser/Gate ports 101-key keyboard, MS-DOS 4.01 Vertical Case. 1-year warranty. DTK Computer, Inc. KEEN-2503/386-25 Cache BE A HOT SHOT & PASS THE KEYS TO A SOBER FRIEND $500 per dozen While Supplies Last! Roses Every Color! - Bouquets $1.00 Taco Bar Live Music Starting at 5:00pm Complete Line of Indoor Games - Carnations Vazquez said the Douglas County chapter of MADD started its campaign after Thanksgiving when stores were not as crowded. $1 99 The kickoff yesterday was a media event to let the public know about the red ribbons, Vazquez said. - Poinsettias 5 per doz $ 495 Southern Hills Mall 1601 West 23rd Street This year's theme for the red ribbon project is "Tie One On," she said, to emphasize the tying of the ribbons onto cars or other vehicles. - Arrangements Vazquez said MADD also was trying to change the implication behind the expression "tie one on." Most people relate that expression to 4 & up MADD starts the nationwide ribbon campaign each year around Thanksgiving as a reminder to the team and drive during the holiday season. $495. Long Week? $9^{95} & up Suzanna Vazquez, president of the MADD Douglas County chapter, said each person attending the event was given a strip of red ribbon from a 3-inch-wide, 1-mile-long stretch of red ribbon. About 60 people gathered at the west end of the Dillon's parking lot at 3000 W. Sixth St., yesterday to kick off the second annual red ribbon project of the Mothers Against Drunk Driving Douglas County chapter. FLOWERS 4 LESS WE DELIVER! Never Pay Retail Again He said people could have a happy and fairly safe holiday season if they were committed to that principle. Douglas County Sheriff Loren Anderson, who also was present at the kickoff, said he felt public awareness programs such as the red ribbon project already were having an impact on drunk driving. Floy said he hoped that campaigns such as the red ribbon project would make people more conscious about not driving after drinking. Ribbons remind people not to drink and drive Lawrence 1901A Massachusetts 832 0766 "There's an increase of DWIs during the holiday season," he said. 832-0700 Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory attended the kickoff and said it was an excellent way to raise awareness about the problem of drinking and driving. T. G.I.F WITH BACKSLIDERS M-F 9-8 Sat. 9-5 Sun. 1-5 All Major Ursula Cards Presented People who place red ribbons on their cars are showing their support and commitment to not drink and be during the holiday season, she said. Anderson said that last year when he would hand a ribbon to a person, he would Vazquez said incidents of crashes involving intoxicated drivers increased during the holiday season. "This year people are asking for extras," he said. Kansan staff writer drinking, she said. By Wes Denton Accepted Commuter's Club working to increase car pools to KU "Hopefully, we will be able to build up the bigger data base." she said. Before the Commuter's Club set up the program in April 1989, commuters had been using a car pool exchange board in the Kansas Union Elizabeth Nevers, president of the Electmate Club, said, "If we could get a thousand names in there, there would be hundreds who would ever have to ride alone." Kansan staff writer The KU Commuter's Club has taken steps to send letters to all commuting students before the semester ends, encouraging them to join its computer-matching car pool program, which began last year. By Tatsuya Shimizu Dori Triplett, treasurer of the Commuter's Club, said about 60 students in the Kansas City area joined the program this semester. Triplet said about 2,000 students commuted from the Kansas City area, which includes Kansas City, Kan.; Kansas City, Mo.; Lenexa; Merriam; Olathe; Overland Park; and Shawnee. Having somebody to talk to while driving is another reason to car pool, she said. Students who are interested in the computer-matching car pool program need to submit their class schedules to Triplett, she said. The computer matches students who have similar schedules. The students are required to make arrangements for the car pools by themselves. The most important purpose of the car pools is saving money, Trippet said. This semester she rides with another student two days a week and visits an outing gas she said. She would pay about $60 a month if she drove alone. "It's really hard to stay awake sometimes," she said. to find people who could share rides. However, Nevers was concerned about her privacy because people looking for a car pool needed to leave their names and schedules where anybody could look at them, she said. Triplett said the computer matching was an easier and faster way to find a car pool. South Africa Beyond Apartheid Kansas Union 8. 30-10:15 First Session: The Anatomy of the Liberation *40 Years of Aparheid: The Crisis within the Crisis* Bernard Magubane (University of Connecticut-Storrs) *Media and Struggle: Carving Democratic Spaces* Keyan Tomaselli (University of Natal) "Nationalism and Gender Issues in Anti-colonial Strugles in Southern Africa" Patricia McFadden (Dakar, Senegal) 10:30-12:00 noon Second Session: The Dynamics of the "Deklerk." Part of the Solution or Part of the Problem" Daniel Kinuele (University of Wisconsin-Madison) "Challenging Legacies from Southern Africa for the 1990s" Willard Johnson (MIT) "An Analysis of the Present Situation in the National Liberation Strugge" Lesaona Nakhanda (PAC Representative to the USA) 1:45-3:15 Fourth Session:South Africa Beyond Apartheid I "Education for a Democratic South Africa" Neville Alexander (University of Cape Town) "Cultural Workers: thier Contribution to a Post-Apartheid South Africa" Cosmo Pieterse (Ohio State University) 'The University and University Education after Aparheid' Ratnamal Singh (University of Durban-Westville) Sponsored by 3:30-5:00 Final Session:South Africa Beyond Apartheid II "Agricultural Productivity and the Question of the Redistribution of Land in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Political Economy" Tetteh Kofi (University of San Francisco) Saturday, December 1 Randal Robinson Director, TransAfrica Forum Co-Founder Free South African Movement 12:00-1:30 Robinson has become the USA's most visible spokesman against apartheid--South Africa's racial policy that lets 5 million whites rule 24 million voteless blacks. On Mandela's prison release: "He only left a small prison to go to a larger one...and of course Mandela can't vote." SUA 864-3477