12 Friday, October 29, 1993 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Advertise in the Kansan! Nightmare Before Christmas **4*:40** ; 7:00 ; 9:30 The Fugitive **4*:11** ; 7:00 ; 9:40 Searching for Bobby Fischer **4*:35** ; 7:20 ; 9:45 The Good Son **4*:25** ; 7:00 ; 9:50 Beverly Hibbillies **4*:30** ; 7:10 ; 9:35 Melissa **4*:12** ; 7:10 ; 9:50 3 Primetime Shows / Meeting Baby Squirrel Girl Anime / Impaired Shoes Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (INITIAL TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 KASSAL HUSETS 847-5197 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5197 Demolition Man $ ^{R} $ 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 Age of Innocence PG 8,50 8,90 Cool Runnings PG 8,19 8,49 Judgment Night R 5,99 7,39 8,39 Fatal Instinct PG-13 7,39 8,49 Rudy PG 7,29 9,40 CINEMA TWIN TUJIOWA 411 STO. $1.25 1110 IOWA 843 519) $ 1.25 Rising Son R 5:00. 7:28, 9:45 Hocus Pocus PG 5:00 Needful Things R 7:28, 9:45 SATURDAY 803 MASSACHUSETTS ST. 832-0444 Daily Showing Times DRACULA FRI. & SAT. 7:00PM FRI. & SAT. 9:30PM SUN. 2:00PM EVIL DEAD 2 FRI. & SAT. MIDNIGHT ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW SATURDAY ONLY • $4.00 8:30PM AND MIDNIGHT ALL SHOWS IN WOODBRUFF AUD TICKETS $2.50, MEDNIGHTS $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVE CARD CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO Sunday morning at 2 a.m. marks the return to standard time and the end of daylight savings time. Clocks — both those on the wall and in the body — should be turned back one hour. Campus, bodies ready for time change Tick tock. It's time to change the clocks — inside and out. By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance with facilities operations, said many campus clocks would be adjusted Friday or Saturday. The whistle and clocks in Learned Hall and a few other buildings are on a computerized master clock, Porter said. Other buildings have individual clock control panels, he said. "You punch a button, and it goes to standard," he said. For humans, the change is not so simple. But the 60-minute adjustment should not cause much trouble for most students, said Charles Hallenbeck, professor of psychology. "The greatest effect is that they forget to set their clocks and miss the bus or something." he said Falling back an hour is easier on the body than springing forward, Hallenbeck said. He said a study on the human biological clock found that, if allowed, a body preferred to function on about a 25-hour cycle, rather than the conventional 24-hour day. "If you let people adapt to their own internal clocks, theywould rather get up one hour later each day," he said. "It's easier to change because it's more in the direction of making that one day 25 hours long rather than 23 hours long." Other studies have shown that the shorter days of sunlight that accompany the time change can have adverse affects, Hallenbeck said. Seasonal affective disorders, or the winter blues, can set in after the switch to standard time. However, the impact is not immediate, Hallenbeck said. The time change was a new concept for Girish Bal- lolla, Bangalore, India, junior, when he came to the United States two years ago. India and most other countries near the equator do not practice daylight savings. Balloila said the lighter mornings of standard time motivated him. "You really don't feel like getting out of bed when it's so dark outside," he said. "So an extra hour of sleep would be pretty nice, he said. But the change actually will keep Chris Frisoni Tulsa, Okla. senior, in bed. As an industrial design student, Frison said he pulled as many as three all-nighters a week. The United States has been uniformly practicing daylight savings time since 1967 when Congress mandated it. In 1972, the act was amended to allow exemptions for states split by time zones. Parts of Arizona, Hawaii and Indiana do not practice daylight savings. Daylight savings begins the first Sunday of April and ends the last Sunday of October. Haskell regents question Southwest Trafficway The Associated Press LAWRENCE — Haskell Indian Nations University's board of regents says it wants federal authorities to reevaluate a road project that it says threatens the campus. In a position paper released Wednesday, the regents said the university, including Haskell's medicine wheel and ceremonial sites, would be hurt by the proposed 14-mile Southwest Trafficway. The dispute involves about 3,000 feet of the 14-mile stretch. east-west corridor through Lawrence and link Kansas City and Clinton Lake. Hannes Combest, assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin, said the regents would complain to the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Federal Highway Administration. It will ask the agencies to delay the project until the complaints can be heard. "Historically, these things have always been shoved down our throat. It doesn't make any difference what we think, what we say; it's done anyway," said George Tiger, president of the regents. The board complains that it was not notified when an environmental impact statement was being developed and was not listed as a property owner or as owner of land adjoining the project on a permit to fill wetlands. The expressway would create an The regents also say that the expressway will have an impact on the Haskell wetlands. Combest said the board was asking that alternative routes be considered for the trafficway. John Pasley, right-of-way coordinator for Douglas County, said the $63 million project was in the final planning stages. No road construction has begun. He said the county had tried to work with Haskell in the past. "I haven't given up hope that we can work with them." he said. "The ULTIMATE PARTY MOVIE, SOCIALLY IRRESPONSIBLE AND TOTALLY IRRESISTIBLE." "The 'American Graffiti' of the next generation - smarter and tougher but just as much fun." — Dave Kehr, NEW YORK DAILY NEWS "A crushingly funny and knowing ode to misspeet youth." -Jeff Glaze, NEWSWEEK Two thumbs up!" -SISKEL & BURT Dazed and Confused R FRI (5:00),7:15,9:30/SAT-SUN(2:45,5:00),7:15,9:30 TWO WEEKS ONLY! 642 Massachusetts 749-1912 Campus Trial Paks featuring samples of products such as Close Up Toothpaste Tylenol Gelcaps, Edge Gel Care-free Gum and others Limit one per person. FREE! Offer for a limited time,only. KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students Kansas Union... 864-4640 Burge Union... 864-5697 Textbook line... 864-5285 Mt. Oread Bookshop.. 864-4431 RC's STADIUMBARBERY FOR THE BEST IN CONSERVATIVE TO WEST COAST STYLES WET CUT PRECISION CUT PRECISION CO. BLOWDRY FLATTOPS SPIKES BEARDTRIMS TOP GUN WRESTLER WEAITSELL $5.50 ALL CUTS AND STYLES coupon expires 12/31 AIR CARE PRODUCTS SELL HAIR CARE PRODUCTS HOURS Mon-Friday 8:30-5:30 Saturday 8:00-1:00 Appointments Monday after 5pm TEL.749-5363 1033 MASSACHUSETTS Lawrence, KS - LIVE BANDS THUR, FRI & SAT NIGHTS • - $5 Bud Light Pitchers with Hot Wings - BIG SCREENTVs • DARTS • POOL • 701 Mass. In the Eldridge Hotel TRICK-OR-TREAT WITH THE JAYHAWKS - IN ALLEN FIELDHOUSE - ( Trick-or-Treat With Volleyball Team After the Match ) KANSAS VOLLEYBALL VS. IOWA STATE Saturday, Oct. 30th, 7:30pm Costume Contest Five finalists selected from crowd ( Each receives a KU Gift Pack ) Grand Prize: "A Night on the Town" Dinner at Applebee's Movie passes Special KU Gift Pack - Kids in costume & families admitted free - Free Halloween candy for all kids in costume Doors open at 6:30pm. Enter through Southeast Pass Gate. All kids in costume sit in Section 6. For more information call 864-4843. 1