6A Tuesday, January 23. 1996 928 Mass. Downtown DICKINSON THOMAS Dickinson 6 Sat-Sun Fr. Mon-Thurs Walking to Exhale ® 1:30 4:10 7:00 9:50 Jumanji ® 2:00 4:30 7:30 9:30 An Eye for an Eye ® 1:40 4:20 7:20 9:40 Father of the Bride II ® 1:40 4:20 7:20 9:40 BloDoma ® 1:30 4:40 7:00 9:30 Grumpler Old Men ® 1:50 4:30 7:10 9:40 50 Adults Before Heading Sneakers $3 50 ADDS Before + Meaning + Bonus 8:00 P.M. + Impaired Sleep Welcome Back Students Vintage Clothes New Sportswear Costumes for Rent 914 Mass. 927 Mass. St. 841-2451 M-Sat. 10-5:30 REFOUND SOUND 1-913-842-2555 BUY-SELL TRADE 823 MASS. LAWRENCE, KS BEDS • DESKS CHEST OF DRAWERS unclaimed freight & damaged merchandise 936 Mass. Crown Cinema Walk-ins welcome EARNCASH EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week By donating your blood plasma Lawrence Donor Center Want quick results? Use the Kansan Classifieds! WELCOME BACK EVERYTHING BUTICE BEFORE 6 P.M. ADULTS $3.00 (UNITED FOR SEAING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY HIGH MASSAGE MOONS $41,579 From Dusk Till Dawn® 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 HILLCREST 12 Monkeysn 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 Two II By Sean 5:00, 7:25, 9:40 Dunston Checks Inp 4:40, 6:15 Heatn 8:00 Toy Storyn 5:00, 7:20, 9:30 Sense & Sensibilityp 5:00, 8:00 CINEMA TWIN 1234567890 AAA-5121 $1.25 Seven² 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 Lawmower Man IP¹⁰³ 5:00, 7:25, 9:30 "NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY SHOW TIME FOR TODAY ONLY Kansas Union Level One $9.25 $11.75 $30.00 $3.50 TWO-FERS THREEEFERS PARTY "10" CARRY-OUT 2-PIZZAS 3-PIZZAS 10-PIZZAS 1-PIZZA 2-TOPPINGS 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 1-TOPPING 2-COKES 4-COKES 1-COKE DELIVERY HOURS Sun-Thurs 11am-2am Fri-Sat 11am-3am 842-1212 Lunch • Dinner • Late Night 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center • Lawrence DINE-IN AVAILABLE • WE ACCEPT CHECKS For more information call 864-3545 Bowl Around Leagues forming now Leagues begin Jan. 22 Monday Mixer Tuesday Varsity Mixer Wednesday Mixer Thursday Mixer All start at 7:00 PM Cost is $4.00 per person/per night (includes shoe rent) ANGELS IN AMERIC The Experience of a Lifetime Part I: Millennium Approaches Friday, February 2, 1996: 8:00 p.m. Saturday, February 3, 1996: 2:00 p.m. Part II. Perestroika Saturday, February 3, 1996: 8:00 p.m. Sunday, February 4, 1996: 7:00 p.m. Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); and all ticketmaster Ticket Centers or call ticketmaster at (913) 243-4545 or (816) 913-3330 Contains adult language and situations 6g & K NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Yeltsin strongly hinting at seeking second term The Associated Press MOSCOW — Russian President Boris Yeltsin yesterday gave his strongest indication yet that he will seek re-election in June. "Probably, I will agree to run in the presidential elections," Yeltsin told foreign investors at a Kremlin meeting, trying to assure them that Russia will stick to a course of free-market reforms. "I always say probably, or possibly, because I'll give the final word February 13th to 15th," he added. Yeltsin's comments came after an active few weeks during which he projected a tough image: cracking down on Chechen rebels and ousting the top reformers in his Cabinet. Those moves were widely seen as an unpopular president's efforts to court voters, who gave Communists and nationalists a majority in parliamentary elections last month. He might also be trying to dispel fears about his health, the biggest question mark in any discussion of whether he will seek a second term. Boris Yeltsin Although much can hap- how Yeltsin responds to crises like last week's standoff with Chechen hostage-takers, each event hurts him by reminding voters that Russian troops are still being killed in an unpopular war in Chechnya. pen in the five months left before the election, Yeltsin is a long way from the popular politician who won 60 percent of the vote in 1991. Communists and ultranationalists despise him for having instigated the breakup of the Soviet Union, and blame him for the hardships that market reforms have brought to many ordinary Russians. Many reformists have broken with him too, particularly over the war in Chechnya. Regardless of Yeltsin, hospitalized twice last year for heart trouble, has admitted working a full day is hard for him. But Yeltsin has looked and sounded healthier since returning to work in late December. He established a campaign committee and jettisoned two unpopular members of his Cabinet: the reformists Anatoly Chubais, who headed privatization, and Andrei Kozyrev, former foreign minister. Yesterday, Yeltsin sought to ease foreign investors' worries that his Cabinet shakeup threatens reforms. "Elections are ahead, but I can say one thing for sure: Russia will not turn from the course of democratic reforms," Yeltsin told investors. "I can guarantee this as president." Doctors still waiting on result of baboon marrow transplant The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Inside Jeff Getty's body, a biological battle is being waged that could revolutionize AIDS treatment and alter the future of organ transplants. Bone marrow cells from a baboon are struggling to plant themselves in the 3B-year-old Getty's body, where doctors hope they will begin to produce a parallel immune system to fight the AIDS virus that is killing him. Getty received the cells by injection Dec. 14, and now waits at his Oakland home to find out if he will live or die. "...if it proves not to work, at least I got off my ass and did something." "If something goes wrong, if I come down with a baboon virus, if it proves not to work, at least I got off my ass and did something." Getty said. "I didn't just lie down and die." Although it will be six months or more before all results are in, the first indication of the battle's outcome is expected by the end of the month. Jeff Getty Bone marrow recipient For reasons scientists don't understand, baboons are not infected by the AIDS virus. Researchers hope that immunity can be transferred to people. The technique, if it works, eventually could allow many other dying patients to receive organ transplants. Steven Deeks, the doctor leading the University of San Francisco team treating Getty, said Getty already has proved something by surviving, showing the experimental procedure is safe enough to be tried again. There are no signs that the transplanted immune cells attacked their host. And Getty's immune system, which was suppressed with radiation and drugs before the transplant, apparently has not rejected the baboon cells. "I'm feeling very healthy," Getty, "who has lived with AIDS for 14 years, said by telephone from his home." "I'm eating like a horse." But he admitted to mixed emotions and said he's tired of baboon-boy jokes, attacks from religious conservatives and animal-rights activists, and what he considered exaggerated fears that he might unleash some deadly new private virus on the world. "It's ugly sometimes." he said. 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