6 Monday, February 5, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Permanent Hair Removal The Electrolysis Studio Free Consultations 15 East 7th 841-5796 SPRING BREAK SPECIALS Hurry, these packages are selling out fast! are selling out fast! BREAK FOR THE BEACH Hilton Head $137 Fort Lauderdale $142 Daytona Beach $149 Padre Island $149 Mustang Island $179 * 7 Night Hotel Accommodations HAWAII ORLANDO Includes: * 7 Night Hotel * Round Trip Air from Kansas City * Airport/Hotel Transport, $585 Per Person Based on Quad Occupancy Call NOW for Details! March 10-17 • Roundtrip air from KC • 7 Nights Hotel AS LOW AS $299 (Mexico Packages Also Available) BREAK FOR THE SLOPES! Includes: • 5 Days Lodging • 4 Day Lift Ticket March 11-16 Other Packages Available: Keystone, Winter Park LOWEST FARES & LIVES PROTECTED. AND MORE...AND MORE... Perfect Date Drawing Date's Name Enter at the Kansas and Burge Union Information Counters before Friday, February 9. Winner will be announced on Wednesday, February 14 in the UDK. The Kansas and Burge Unions KAPPA DELTA IS COMING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Kappa Delta...A unique experience to share in a new and exciting sisterhood! The opportunity to enrich your college years through leadership, close friends, and campus involvement. Rush Registration will take place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Jan. 26 to Feb. 8 in the Kansas Union. For more information call the Panhellenic Office at 864-4643 or Valerie and Leta at 843-6047, National Collegiate Advisors, Kappa Delta Come Join the Fun! --and were released. Now You Have A New Lunch Partner ... The Zenith MinisPort $ ^{\mathrm{TM}}$ At 5.9 lbs. the Zenith MinisPort™ goes anywhere you want to go. The DayBright™ backlit screen gives you sharp readable text indoors or out. This powerful portable will operate up to 3 hours on its rechargeable battery. The MiniPort™ also uses removable disks to store all the data you need for easy access, Don't forget to ask about Zenith Data System's Loaware Program. - MiniPort and DayHeight are registered trademarks of Zanttish Data Systems For more information, please call: EZ Comp Computer Center 841-5715 Gayla ↑ ↓ Nine caught by INS Operation stings local restaurants By Chris Siron Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer Nine people were arrested Wednesday at two Lawrence Chinese restaurants for violating immigrant work laws, an Immigration and Naturalization Service official said. One KU student and three KU students' spouses were among those arrested at the Panda Garden and Plum Tree restaurants, said Lucy Pang, Plum Tree emplowe. Panda Garden, Inc., a family-owned company, owns the Plum Tree, 2620 Iowa St., and Panda Garden, 1500 W. Sixth St. Ron Sanders, INS district director, said four Taiwanese, four Mexicans and one Indonesian were charged with working illegally in the country. The suspects also were charged with illegally entering the United States. Four of those arrested were still held Friday in Kansas City, Mo., after they failed to post $1,000 bond. The other five posted bond. Pang said the KU student and the spouses of students were among those released. Sanders said the INS investigated the restaurants after it had received a number of anonymous complaints. Britt Hammon, Plum Tree employee, said she suspected the complaints came from "ex-employees trying to get revenge." She said there had been personal attacks on her and the restaurant's management. Sanders said the restaurants faced up to $1,000 in fines for each employee it failed to verify as a supervisor and worker up to 85% or illiterate. Sanders said hearings would be held for the people in custody within two weeks and within 60 days for those released on bond. He said the hearings, before an immigration judge, would determine whether the people could be deported. She said restaurant managers had "misunderstood the instructions for procedures and proper regulations." The INS gave them no warning before the arrests. Lawrence Police spokesman Chris Mulvenon said Fridav that illegal work problems are not recurrent in Lawrence, but there have been other incidents, some of which have involved foreign KU students. Ron Sanders INS district director police had assisted INS officials in the arrests. Sanders said Lawrence police had been "standing by, but it was our operation." He said that illegal work problems were not recurrent in Lawrence, but that there had been other incidents, some of which had involved foreign KU students. Sanders said the Magic Wok restaurant, 1700 W. 23rd St., was fined in August for illegal immigrant work violations. Grace Low, a Magic Wok employee, said that the restaurant had been fined but that it happened "two or three years ago." Series addresses environment "It is history." she said. Kansan staff writer By Eric Gorski Greenpeace spokesman Christopher Childs will speak tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom, opening Student Union Activities' five-part "Environment in Crisis" lecture series. Childs' speech begins at 8 p.m. and is titled "Greenpeace: Past, Present and Future." Greenpeace is a 15-year-old international organization devoted to environment preservation. idea of an environmental lecture series. The lecture series is a joint effort between SUA and the Environmental Studies program, said Dave Frey, SUA Forums chairman. Frey said he contacted Steven Hamburg, assistant professor of environmental studies, systematics and ecology, in Spring 1989 with the Frey said the total cost of the month-long series was more than $10,000 and was financed by SUA Forums, the Environmental Studies program, Environ, Student Senate, the Humanities Lecture Series, the Humanities College for the Humans, and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Hamburg said he also was interested in such a series, and the two have worked together. Frey said SUA covered about half of the cost. He did not itemize it. The timing of the series is perfect, Frey said. "People are calling the '90s 'The Decade of the Environment,'" Frey said. "It's appropriate for this series to be two months into the decade." Hamburg called Childs was selected as the series' first speaker because environmental groups played an important role in environmental issues. He also said students were familiar with Greenspace. Future speakers include S. Ahmed Meer of the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Oceans, International Environmental and Scientific Affairs; William Cronon, associate professor of history at Yale University; George M. Woodwell, director of the Woods Hole Research Center in Woods Hole, Mass.; and Wes Jackson, director of The Land Institute in Salina. Hamburg said the speakers were chosen to present a wide range of views on environmental issues. Environment in Crisis Series SUA Forums and the Environmental Studies Program present Christopher Childs Greenpeace national spokesperson Green peace Past, Present & Future Tuesday, February 6,1990 8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom Funded by Environs and Student Senate No Admission Charge 4