Vote today... Polling places: •Learned Hall •Wescoe Beach •Watson Library •Kansas Union •Burge Union •Summerfield Hall Lindley Hall 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. today and tomorrow VOL.100,NO.129 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS (USPS 650-640) ADVERTISING: 864-4358 THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1990 NEWS:864-4810 Protesters descend on Strong Budig outlines steps to end racial discord By Eric Gorski and Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writers Chancellor Gene A. Budig spoke in a packed Strong Hall rotunda yesterday after about 80 students who were upset about the racial climate at KU marched to the administrative offices and demanded action. Budig, who was attending meetings at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., returned to Lawrence when he learned about the protest. He arrived at Strong about 4 p.m. About 350 people filled the room and lined the second-floor railing to hear Budig address minority issues and other student concerns. Budig 'Today, I offer the institution's apology to Ann Dean. I have asked the executive vice chancellor to take appropriate action, remembering the Street Smarts Get them at "The Brand Smart Place to Buy" PROFESSIONAL CUSTOM CAR STEREO INSTALLATION Ask About 90 DAYS INTEREST FREE with credit approval CELLULAR TELEPHONE INSTALLATION CAR ALARM INSTALLATION SANYO AM/FM CASSETTE CAR STEREO $89 E1010 New intelliTuner incorporates simple, automatic tunction functions. Auto-travel press memorizes tunctions and maintains the memory *Manual/week task* Built-in clock KENWOOD AM/FM CASSETTE CAR STEREO Audio JAVA17 102 1.4 KENWOOD "PULL-OUT" AM/FM CASSETTE $159 Quarter FLL tuning with 18 preset memory * Seal * Automatic Note Reduction Circuit (ANRP) * Loudness * Metal selector * Separate bass/stable * Loudness * Front/faster fader Video KENWOOD CAR ALARM SECURITY SYSTEM INSTALLED! $199 RtC310 Therapeutic slideout chassis with built-in handle • Quartz TLP tuning with auto-memory controle • Autoreverse • Separate bass/treble controle • Speaker/profront fader. Protect your valuable patents Keep remote control arm disarm * Glass breakage sensor check * Fault detection kit * Fall asleep manual arming KPC40 Computers OVERLAND PARK 9700 W. 87th St. (87th & Farley) 642-8100 MON-SAT 10-9 KANSAS CITY, MO. 211W. GREGORY (71st & Wornall) 363-4499 MON-FRI 10-9; Sat 10-4 INDEPENDENCE 14004 E. US 40 NIWAY (at Noland Rd.) East K-Mart 373-1199 MON-SAT 10-9 ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY 12-6 First day voters turn out in force By Matt Taylor Kansan staff writer Poll workers reported heavy turnouts yesterday during the first day of Student Senate elections, and some students complained that flyers were distributed too close to polling places. some tables were running out of Ms. for student senators, said Morris, student body vice president. Eleanor Macnish, Senate Election Committee chairman, said 2,521 students voted yesterday. Last year a total of 2,575 ballots were cast Printing Services had to more ballots because of the turnout, said Linda Weeks, her service consultant. She hat to her knowledge, the e had never had to print real ballots during an elec- more Macnish, chairman of Election Committee, said Hots for residents-at-large tone by 12:30 p.m. All the for non-traditional, law, it-at-large and engineering were gone by 3 p.m. great news," Macnish said. e are actually standing in vote." al campaigners distribu- t literature near Watson Wescoe Hall and the Union. Richard Parker in Simon, Senate candi- aid they had been hand- ing for several hours in front on. e people just laugh a little yolk walk past us," Simon ne person said he already of our flyers." er also said that during last washing visit by Soviet Minister Eduard Shevarad the Soviets indicated that a many does not necessarily neutral, but there was no has to what this would t stay sh says ly the Soviets had insisted al Germany. r raised the possibility of a amit meeting later in the discuss Germany and the urging role of NATO. adze, in a magazine arti-published next month, interest in dual NATO-tact membership for a many. ouse dependence and urged Bush to extend cognition of Landsberg's one step short of formal for more than an hour Americans represent- ests of Lithuania, Estoria, which were forcibly into the Soviet Union in if the group said they taking a meeting with mary, recognizing that looming in Lithuania's steet from the Soviet Union its refusal to let it go. jaid that the mere fact et with them would be dittic states as a positive