6 Thursday, April.12, 1990 / University Daily Kansan NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing and Body Care 820-832 Mass. St. Downtown 841-0100 All Spring And Summer Merchandise 20% OFF! Thursday April 12th-Saturday April 14th KING of Jeans 843-3933 Continued from p. 1 Budig Budig also addressed the March 30 incident at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. According to police reports, a member of the fraternity struck and uttered a racial insult to Ann Dean, St. Louis sophomore, who was delivering pizzas to the SAE house, 1301 West Campus Road. About 80 students sit in front of Budiq's office in Strong Hall. "Today, I offer the institution's apology to Ann Dean," Budig said. "I have asked the executive vice chancellor to take appropriate action to remind me the importance of due process, and rules and regulations." He said the University was cooperating fully with Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory in pursuing the Dean case. 740 Massachusetts Earlier yesterday, about 70 students, many of them arm in arm. McCormick said he wanted the fraternity member and the people who watched the incident expelled from SAE fraternity kicked off campus. Dean spoke to the crowd and thanked faculty and students for their support. Afterward, she said, "I think (today) was the best possible thing. It brought attention to these kinds of problems on campus, and now the administration is aware of it." Andrea Katzman, facilitator for Students Concerned About Discrimination and member of the student panel, said the protest proved that the administration should address minority concerns immediately. Cara Gannon, Western Springs, Ill., sophomore, spent the entire day in Strong. She said that she was glad that students acted together and that Budig's statements were a step in the right direction. marched from Strong to the SAE house. Toni Lawhorn, Grandview, Mo., senior, handled a get-well card to Bryce Petty, SAE president. McCormick said, "We delivered a get-well car to the SAE house because they're sick. I don't know if I work. I don't know if cards work." Petty could not be reached for comment. After the card was delivered, the crowd attempted to block Jayhawk Boulevard. "The mentality behind what (the police) did was that they thought they could diffuse our protest," McCormick said. "They thought they could hold us off, and it made all of us angry." Condom delivery postponed By Carol B. Shiney By Carol B. Shiney Kansan staff writer Because of a student protest in Strong Hall yesterday, a group of students concerned about AIDS awareness decided not to follow through with plans to deliver condoms to Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor. "We decided we should wait with the condoms until there was another time when there wasn't so much going on on campus," said Greg Hoyt, Mission sophomore. "We didn't want to detract from what was going on today." the group decided to deliver about 2,000 Lifestyle condoms left over from Condom Sense Week, sponsored by the Student Senate AIDS task force. The condoms, dated July 1993, still are usable. The group had planned to hand-deliver the condoms to Ramaley yesterday afternoon but decided instead to go to Strong about 1 p.m. to support a group of about 80 who were protesting the climate campus for minorities. "We want to get across to the administration that we still want condom vending machines on campus," Hoyt The group of students concerned about AIDS awareness had met March 29 to discuss the longevity of AIDS education at the University of Kansas. At the meeting, In the 1989 Senate election, 2,007 students voted yes in a referendum asking whether students supported condom vending machines; 538 students voted no. The group set up a table yesterday next to a Senate election polling table in front of Wescoe Hall where students could pick up pamphlets about AIDS and birth control. At the table, a large sign read, "Send a condom to Judith." Students signed mailing labels with their names, attached the labels to the condoms and dropped them into a mock cardboard condom vending machine. PETER STALEY, ACT-UP, NEW YORK former New York Stock Exchange trader, now AIDS activist 8 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union reception following Tuesday, April 17 SUE HYDE, NATIONAL GAY AND LESBIAN TASK FORCE, WASHINGTON, D.C. coordinator for privacy and military issues 7 p.m., Pioneer Room, Burge Union CANDLELIGHT VIGIL protesting gay and lesbian oppression 9:30 p.m., City Hall, 6th and Massachusetts Wednesday, April 18 "WEAR BLUE JEANS IF YOU'RE GAY" DAY PANEL DISCUSSION "Myths and Realities of Being Gay or Lesbian" 7 p.m., Kansas Room, Kansas Union MOVIE: "Torch Song Trilogy" 9 p.m., Centennial Room, Kansas Union Thursday, April 19 ERIC MAINARD, M.Ed., MADISON, WISCONSIN counselor and authority on gay and lesbian relationships 7 p.m., Big 8 Room, Kansas Union Friday, April 20 READER'S THEATRE "Being Gay and Lesbian: From the '50s Into the '90s" chronicles the history of the gay and lesbian rights movement 7:30 p.m., Smith Hall, Room 100 Saturday, April 21 GAY PRIDE MARCH AND RALLY 3 p.m., from City Hall, 6th and Massachusetts, to South Park Gazebo 21ST ANNIVERSARY DANCE 10 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom Presented by: Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas (GLSOK) 410 Kansas Union, Lawrence, Kansas, 66045. (913) 864-3091 APRIL 16-21 1.