Performing arts center on the way Should alleviate crowds at Murphy by Merceda Ares Kansan staff writer Plans for the new Ernest F. Lied Performing Arts Center are in the preliminary planning stages, a facilities planning official said yesterday. Dave Schaecher, assistant director of facilities planning, said the center will be located on West Campus at the southwest corner of 15th and 18th streets. It will contain a main perimeter administration offices and a box office. "There is hope in the future that more performance space will be added." Schaecher said. There also will be dressing rooms, storage space and a performance warm-up area. But it may not end there. The center is named in honor of Ernst F. Lied, who established the Lied Foundation in Omaha, Neb. The foundation donated $10 million for the Peter Thompson, dean of fine arts, said construction probably would begin in January 1990 and the center would be ready for use by fall 1992. Thompson said the main box office would be operated from the new center and extra box offices would be opened from Murphy Hall when needed. The new center will seat approximately 2,200, he said. This would relieve overuse of the 395-seat Swarthout Recital Hall and the 11,056-seat Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Both are located in Murphy Hall. Thompson said Murphy had terrible space and parking problems. "We do have some situations where we sell out performances because the space wasn't large enough," he said. "We have a very easy show; now and there are so many demands on the spaces we have." Thompson said the location of the new center would help alleviate parking problems. He said it was difficult to get students to come up on campus for performances when they knew where a place was, a difficult time finding a parking place. Three large service parking lots will be available at the center, he said. A circulation road also will be built to avoid traffic congestion. Schaefer, who is helping design the center, said the parking lots probably would not contain parking meters. Part of the parking, located across the bridge off Irving Hill Road, will be used for residence hall students to park. The rest would be used for patron parking. E. Joseph Zurga/KANSAN Performance practice Before her recital, Michelle Adams, Danville, Va., senior, takes a moment to practice her music. Adams performed compositions by J.S. Bach, Francois Devienne, Eugene Bozza, Philippe Gaubert and Theobald Boehm last night at Swarthout Recital Hall to fulfill a requirement for her bachelor of music degree. Bull moose now closer to home Sublette woman finds more natural habitat for traveler The Associated Press GARDEN CITY — A moose that made news for several weeks as it traveled across southwest Kansas has been returned to an area closer to its natural habitat. Shor Eisele, a Sublette woman who captured the moose last week to treat it for malnutrition and a parasitic infection, said the animal was released over the weekend on nationally protected land in another state. Eisele declined to name the state where the moose was taken but said it was released in an isolated area that is not within the state. "He knew he was home and he was safe," she said. Bob Mathws, a spokesman for the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, said state officials also didn't know where the moose was released but believed it was probably somewhere in Colorado. experience working with moose in other states, gained permission from Kansas officials last week to capture the moose, which had wandered into an area near Copeland, located about 12 miles east of Sublette. The moose had been spotted in several areas of southwest Kansas in recent weeks. It was first seen in Kansas in October in Pawnee County, Kansas wildlife officials said, and the moose wandered into the state so far from its natural habitat. Eisele, who said she was a wildlife specialist with The animal was in poor condition and would not have survived much longer. Eisele said. The wheat and milo fields of Kansas are a poor substitute for the animal's natural diet of marsh and pond grasses and willow, she said. Eisele said she watched the animal after its release and was happy to see that it soon began grazing and eating. "That was the best sign of all," she said. Mob on reservations, Indian says behind a screen in his appearance Wednesday before a special investigative unit of the Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs. "The FBI is wrong," the witness said. He said he knew from meetings with organized crime members and operators of other Indian gaming operations that Mafia infiltration of the reservations is widespread and growing. The Associated Press "In 10 years it will be totally out of hand," he said. Anthony Daniels, deputy assistant director of the criminal investigation or the FBI, had told the panel earlier this week that he'd been met sometimes ever asked "a lot." University Daily Kansan / Fridav February 10, 1989 TAE KWON DO Smaller Classes offering More Personalized Instruction! STUDENT INTRO SPECIAL $75.00 (entire semester) • Self Defense • Self Discipline • Self confidence • Fitness & Coordination • Fitness & Weight Control WASHINGTON — Organized crime will dominate all gambling on Indian reservations in 10 years unless the federal government acts swiftly, a former Mafia figure who ran tribal bingo games contends. "Anytime there's easy money, the mob will jump in," said the witness, who wore a gray hood and testified FEBRUARY FRENZY Mr. D. 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