2 Thursday; March 29, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Weather TODAY Rainy HI: 53° LO:45" KEY Rain Snow Ice T-Storms Kansas Forecast Drizzle and light rain likely with snow in the northwest corner of the state. Heavier rain will develop in late afternoon. Highs will be in 40s northwest to low 50s southwest. Salina 47/42 Dodge City 46/41 Wichita 52/47 Forecast by Rick Katzfey Temperature are today's highs and tonght' to loses. 5-day Forecast KU Weather Service: 864-3300 Thursday - Rain likely with chances increasing toward evening. High: 53'. Low: 45'. Friday- Rain continuing. High: 53'. Low: 42'. Saturday - Light rain in the morning then becoming partly cloudy. High: 52', Low: 38'. Sunday - Clear and mild. High: 58'. Low: 42'. Monday - Partly cloudy. High: 60°. Low: 40°. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals period, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staffer-Fitl Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. fashion eyeland optical dispensary "the best value in sight" 600 Lawrence ave. 841-6100 Trailridge Bus To 6th & Lawrence Ave 800 Mass. 749-4333 Get your two cents in. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Opinion Page BEAU'S IMPORT AUTO SERVICE Complete Maintenance & Repair On • Japanese • Swedish • German Autos CALL 842 4329 CALL 842-4320 545 Minnesota Amoco Pepsi 12 pak $3.29 (Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, Caffeine-free Pepsi, Mountain Dow, Dr. Pepper) A discussion about sign language will be at noon today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union. Members of Canterbury House, an Episcopal church, will present the Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel. Edward Mowatt, director of the Institute of Economic and Political Studies in London, will speak at 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. After his speech, titled "The Creation of a New Europe: Linking London, Berlin and Vienna," Mowatt will meet with students interested in getting internships or studying political science or economics in France or England. On campus Gill's Amoco 23rd & Louisiana The Office of Study Abroad is sponsoring the lectures. Bud & Bud lite 12 pack $5.99 The KU Cycling Club will meet for a bike ride at 4 p.m. today at the Jayhawk statue in front of Strong Hall. - Meditative music recitals by KU organ students will begin at 4 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Governor's office. Act Up KU/Lawrence will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. - Dan Viets of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws will speak at 7 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. The speech, titled "Legalization: The Drug Policy Alternative," is sponsored by the KU Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. A meeting of the Christian Science Student Organization will be at 6:30 p. m. today at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. The Student Senate Lecture Series will present a discussion titled "Big Trouble in Red China" at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Champions Club will meet at 7 tonight at Alcoves G, H, I and J in the Kansas Union. Women's History Month continues with the program titled "Women and spirituality" at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. Some equipment will be provided and instruction will be available. Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union for about small-town gays and lesbians. Nav Nite, a meeting of The Navigators — Christians at KU, will be at 7 tonnes at Parlor C in Kansas Tanker Team and Kansas Praise for the '90s Discipline. " Local briefs COUPLE PLEDES $37,000; Alan and Susie Forker of Lincoln, Neb., pledged $37,000 to the Kansas University Endowment Association yester- John Scarffe, director of public relations for the association, said the Forkers' gift would go toward areas of need at the University of Kansas. Police report The pledge has been included in Campaign Kansas, the University's five-year, $177 million fund-raising drive. Jerry Harper, Creamer's attorney, said he had filed a motion to dismiss the case because of constitutional issues. He declined further comment. Alan Forker earned his KU liberal arts degree in 1960 and his KU medical degree in 1964. Creamer, Lawrence resident, is fighting to legalize the drug. He has said he thought that legalization would encourage those who used drugs to use marijuana rather than a more harmful drug such as cocaine. Susie Forker graduated from KU in 1969 with a personnel administration degree. She was KU homecoming queen in 1956. Creamer, 43, faces misdemeanor charges of first-time possession of marijuana. His trial is set for April 25. HEARING RESCHEDULED: A hearing on a motion to dismiss charges against Mark Creamer, who lit a marijuana cigarette. Sept. 5 in the Douglas County Law Enforcement Center, has been set for April 20. The hearing was scheduled for yesterday but was postponed at the request of Creamer's attorney. A pair of boots valued at $99 was taken Tuesday afternoon from a car in the 700 block of West 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported. A student's KUID with bus pass and driver's license valued together at $60 were taken Monday morning from the first floor of Fraser Hall, KU police reported. A student's purse and its contents valued together at $70 were taken Tuesday morning from the Kansas Union cafeteria, KU police reported. A total of 23 students together at $255 were taken Tuesday morning from the 1800 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. ■ A student's bicycle valued at $300 was taken Monday or Tuesday from the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported. An air compressor valued at $000 was taken between March 21 and Tuesday from a garage in the 700 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. A car window was broken and a stereo valued at $250 was taken Monday or Tuesday from the 700 block of East Ninth Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage totaled $400. Stephan ordered to review bond issue By Kathryn Lancaster Kansan staff writer - The Kansas Supreme Court yesterday ordered Attorney General Robert Stephan to consider a Wyandotte County request to issue bonds to finance Sandstone amphitheater improvements. In January, Stephan refused to issue an opinion on the $4.85 million bond request after the court ruled that a similar bond issue in Douglas County was illegal. On Dec. 8, the Supreme Court rule that Douglas County illegally issued $4 million in general obligation bonds without a vote. Stephan approved the $12.6 million Douglas County bond request that included the $4 million to help finance the South Lawrence Trafficway. Although the court later withdrew its decision, Stephan refused to review any general obligation bonds without direction from the court. for Stephan to issue an opinion. The pending decision involving Douglas County will not prevent Stephan from reviewing the Wyandotte County bond issue, Keefoer said. All local and county bond issues in Kansas must be approved by the attorney general's office. Bebecca Floyd, assistant attorney general, said the ruling was a positive development that indicated the court would not apply a retroactive ruling in Douglas County. Floyd said that she still was not comfortable issuing a decision without a clearer opinion from the court and that the attorney general's staff would review the decision this week. Other attorneys familiar with the Douglas County case said the court's decision yesterday sent no clear signal about how justices would decide it. Donald Strole, the attorney representing Leslie Blevins Sr., the Lawrence resident protesting the bond issue, said the decision would have no impact on the upcoming decision. "We've always argued that Stephan had to do this," Strole said about the Wyandotte County decision. "There is no case or controversy before them." John Duma, deputy counsel for Wyandotte County, said that the court's decision yesterday was not unexpected but that he did not know how the decision would affect the Lawrence case. "I don't think this will be the final ruling on the issue coming out of Lawrence," he said. Chris McKenzie, Douglas County administrator, said he considered the decision a favorable indicator of the court's intentions. "If the court allowed Stephan to issue an opinion, it may be an indication that it will rule that the bonds were issued properly," he said. And even if you don't like condoms, using them is definitely better than that. USING IT WON'T KILL YOU, NOT USING IT MIGHT. 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A Date to Watch For Thursdays LiveWire Thinskaws LiveWire Thursdays LiveWire present: Future Your source for entertainment news THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAN The society for East Asian studies in collaboration with the Departments of East Asian Languages and Culture, History, Political Science and the Center for East Asian Studies China's Crisis Prospects for the A public lecture by Liu Binyan , China's most famous dissident journalist. Author of books such as Tell the World and People or Monsters? Liu Binyan was a reporter for China's leading paper, The People's Daily, in the 1970s and 1980s. He became famous for searing accounts of corruption in the Communist Party, from which he was expelled in 1987. He is cur- Monday, April 2 7:30pm Woodruff Auditorium open admission open admission Booksigning at Oread Bookstore Monday 3:00-4:30pm SAVE BIG BUCKS! SAVE $5.95 OFF RETAIL "THRIFTY THURSDAY!" 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