This image contains text that is too small to accurately recognize and convert into Markdown format. Therefore, it cannot be converted to Markdown. Wednesday, February 21, 1996 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Applications are available for 1996-97 Owl Junior Honor Society and Lambda Sigma Sophomore Honor Society Applications available at Nunemaker Center & the Organizations and Activities Center Owl applications due March 8 Lambda Sigma applications due March 1 COUPON FREE: 3 MINI CINNAMON ROLLS WITHANY PURCHASE OR 10% OFF ANY PURCHASE (with the exception of any decorated cakes.) OPEN 24 HOURS 7 Days a week Munchers Bakery One coupon per visit Hilicrest Shopping Center – Across from Royal Crest Lanes Coupon expires 3/6/96 COUPON Sanders says football is his game in 1996 DALLAS — Deion Sanders isn't going to be a two-sport star in 1996. The Associated Press Sanders has decided to shelve baseball for at least one season while he devotes his energies to becoming the NFL's only full-time two-way player. "Now, we'll see how good I can be," said the Dallas Cowboys cornerback-wide receiver-kick returner. "I want to have an impact on both sides of the ball." NFL Sanders is so serious about becoming a great receiver that he will attend his first full training camp in July. He once spent two weeks in camp with the Atlanta Falcons. "I'm looking forward to mixing it up in camp, working with Troy (Aikman) and Michael (Irvin) and all the guys," said Sanders, who made the announcement yesterday from his posh Primetime 21 nightclub in north Dallas. "I'm a football player now," he said. "I'll go over the middle, do whatever I have to do to become a great receiver. I think I'm going to have an impact. I have high expectations. I think this team is going to win a lot of Super Bowls in the next five years." Sanders said that he also wanted to spend more time with his family. He just returned from Florida from the first vacation he'd ever had with his wife, Caroline, and two children. "Normally, I would be leaving for (baseball) training camp right now and be gone from my family for six weeks," he said. "It's great just being here and dropping my kids off to school every day." Coach Barry Switzer kiddingly asked Sanders, who got a $13 million bonus in September, if he had coaxed more money out of owner Jerry Jones to make the decision. Sanders just grinned. Jones didn't. "We know what kind of package Deion brings to defense and now he's given up another sport to see how good he can be on offense," Switzer said. "He will really earn his money now. We expect him to be the best." Jones and Switzer have been trying for months to persuade Sanders to give up baseball to let his ankle heal properly. His Dallas debut was delayed last fall because of surgery to repair an ankle injury sustained while playing baseball. "My ankle still gives me trouble, and this will give it time to heal up." Sanders said. "I can get in a lot of fishing while it heals." Charges against Dean Smith under investigation The Associated Press GREENSBORO, N.C. — The Atlantic Coast Conference will investigate charges that North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith directed derisive language toward a Clemson player during a game last week, league officials said. ACC commissioner Gene Corrigan will begin to interview the principal parties this week before deciding on what form of punishment, if any, will be meted out, a conference representative said Monday. that he spoke to Clemson guard Bill Harder with 8:22 left in the Tar Heels' 53-48 victory. The latest in a well-documented series of disagreements between North Carolina and Clemson took place Wednesday after Smith admitted Smith, who accused Harder of grabbing the jerseys of North Carolina players on defense, said he told Harder, "You're a better player than that, move your feet," a Raleigh, N.C., newspaper reported yesterday. Dean Smith The next day, however, Harder disputed Smith's account of the exchange and said Smith had called him a dirty player, an accusation the coach has denied. NCAA rules stipulate that a technical foul shall be assessed for violation of bench decorum if a coach uses disrespectful language or actions toward an opposing player or coach. The ACC's Sportsmanlike Code has similar provisions, which could subject the coach to a reprimand or suspension by league officials. Last season, Smith complained of Clemson's physical play and warned his team about the rough style of forward Iker Iturbe. Then, at the ACC tournament in March, Smith shouted for Iturbe to ease up. That triggered a confrontation between Clemson coach Rick Barnes and Smith. Each was fined $2,500 by the league. ECUMENICAL ASH WEDNESDAY SERVICES February 21 Danforth Chapel 8:30 am 12:30 pm 11:30 am 4:30 pm IMPOSITION OF ASHES WILL BE OFFERED This ecumenical service is sponsored by: Canterbury House (Episcopal), Ecumenical Christian Ministries, Peace Mennonite Church, Lutheran Campus Ministry, United Methodist Campus Ministry. We Buy, Sell, Trade & Consign USED & New Sports Equipment 841-PLAY 1029 Massachusetts Midweek Lenten Worship Services - Wednesday evenings at 7:30pm. Beginning on February 21, Ash Wednesday Immanuel Lutheran Church & University Student Center -- 15th & Iowa Anxiety Anxiety is the most common mental health problem. About one in four people suffer from one or more anxiety disorders, many beginning in the teens and twenties. Common symptoms include nausea; pounding heart; trembling; feelings of unreality; chest pain; shortness of breath; dizzyness; and fear of losing control, going crazy, or dying. Such symptoms may be predictable (phobias) or may seem to come out of nowhere (panic disorder). Left untreated, anxiety disorders tend to become chronic, but effective treatments are available, including both behavioral and drug therapies. KU Psychological Clinic 315 Fraser Hall 864-4121