8 Friday, February 3, 1989 / University Daily Kansan SOUTH PADRE ISLAND from$199 PER PERSON (Land Only) from $419 PER PERSON (With Air and Transfers) Your Spring Break vacation includes: · 7 Nights deluxe lodging at resort properties · Famous Spring Break Parties and Contests · Volleyball competitions with prizes · Services of On-site tour directors · Many other FUN activities · Resort taxes included FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: DAVID PETRY 842-1161 Great Destinations, Inc. Because you love to love Billy Taylor with Trio "Mr. Jazz" Dr. Billy Taylor, Piano and Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series and Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival. and the University Arts Festival. 8:00 p.m. Saturday, February 11, 1989 Hoch Auditorium Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved. Public: $12 & $10; KU and K-12 Students: $6 & $5; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $11 & $9. Reservations can be made by calling 913/864-3982 (VISA/MasterCard accepted) Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts. You'll Have The Time Of Your Life! HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS --by Mary Neubauer Kansan staff writer Let Us Decorate A Giant Valentine Cookie For That Special Someone The Hawk's Nest Bakery in The Kansas Union Day care issues still concern KU We may never know the names and faces of the 20 women and four children who 17 years ago peacefully seized a campus building and held it for 13 hours until some of their demands were met. But the effects of their actions are still being noticed at the University of Kansas, Tomorrow marks the 17th anniversary of the seizure of the East Asian Studies building by the February Sisters, a women's rights group. Among the group's demands were adequate women's health care and free child-care facilities for University women. care. particularly infant day care. In commemoration of the group's stand, a forum will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. Feb. 16 at the Lawrence Public Library and will focus on day The forum is sponsored by the Graduate School and the departments of women's studies, human sciences, social work, and academic affairs. Deborah Phillips, professor of psychology and Distinguished Society for Research on Child Development Congressional Fellow at the University of Florida on the panel and discuss the national perspective on infant day care. Joy Simpson-Zinn, a graduate teaching assistant in women's studies and chairman of the forum's committee, said day care demands still had not been fully met. Simpson-Zinn said the campus had two facilities for day care; the Hilltop Child Development Center, 1314 Jayhawk Blvd., and the Bureau of "The Hilltop facility has a waiting list that is outrageous." SimpsonZinn said. "The list makes it hard for children to get in. There is no current campus infant care available, and toddler care is limited." But the facilities do not meet the demands of the increased University population, she said. Child Research in Haworth Hall A questionnaire recently circulated by the University of Kansas Classified Senate said a committee had been organized to study issues relating to day care for the children of KU employees. The questionnaire asked for the help of University employees in assessing the need for child care on campus. Simpson-Zinn said the questionnaire would be announced and discussed at the daycare forum. The Hilpitt Center accommodates 125 children, of which 50 percent must be children of students, the questionnaire said. It also said that the bureau in Haworth accommodated 80 to 100 children. "We hold this forum so we can move forward in the present," she said. "More women work now than in the 1970s, and we want to highlight the need for better publicity of great publicity for their work, such as secretaries and housekeepers." Gina Gibbs Witt, secretary for the department of women's and American studies, said yearly commemoration events that stand began two years ago with a peltch dinner at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Avead. Soviet lawyer to speak at KU today by Alan Morgan Kansan staff writer Alexander Timoshenko, a Soviet dignitary, is scheduled to talk with University of Kansas students about Soviet law today in 109 Green Hall. George Coggins, professor of law, invited Timoshenko to speak. Coggins met Timoshenko in 1983, when Coggins was a member of a U.S. delegation of environmental lawyers to the Soviet Union. Timoshenko, head of environmental law at the National Soviet Institute for State and Law, Moscow, will arrive in Lawrence at 1:10 p.m. and speak at 2:39 p.m. The talk is open to all students. ered coming to the United States last October. Coggins said he invited Timoshenko to visit him in Lawrence when Timoshenko had first consid- "I have told him several times that the Soviets who only go to American cities such as New York are getting an account from us," Coppe said to him told him that he should come to the Midwest, where real people live." Timoshenko spoke yesterday about international environmental law at the University of Colorado, Coggins said. He said that Timoshenko's three-day trip would be a rest period from his speaking schedule. "I'm not going to parade him around while he's "here." Coggins said. "I just want him to relax and have a good time. I want to take him to a sports bar. I want him to have a slice of how things are in the Midwest." some of his law students and other law school faculty. are in the middle Coggins said that he wanted Timoshenko to meet Bob Widner, Denver third-year law student, is one of the students in Coggins' seminar class. “It's my understanding that there is a wave of environmentalism going through the Soviet Union now.” Widner said. “I’m hoping to gain a better understanding of what measures the Soviets are taking and what kind of technologies they will employ to protect the environment.” Widner said that he also hoped to learn what steps were being taken by the Soviet Union to protect endangered species. Caring makes health-care agency work "I'm mainly concerned with the environmental issues, but there are some people in the class who are planning on asking politically oriented questions also." Widner said. by Angela Clark Kansan staff writer When a mother was unable to care for her sick six-year-old child, the Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association was there. Last night, mother and child returned the favor and attended an open house celebrating the association's 20th anniversary. The association, 336 Missouri St. since 1968 has been a non-profit home health care agency for those who cannot care for themselves. "I don't know what I'd have done without them," said Audrey Galloway, mother of six-year old Rynheshia. ate" "They came every day at 5:30 p.m. to give her the shot I couldn't give her," Galloway said. "It was heaven. They are so caring and compassion- Rhynesia was diagnosed last year with diabetes, which requires daily insulin shots. But her mother was going to school during these times. Compassion is what makes the association work, said Marceil Laupe, director of the association. "Our staff has a special touch of caring and nurturing." Lauppe said. "It's something ingrained. "We help people who would rather stay at home than in a nursing home or hospital. People are more comfortable at home, and hospitalization has become too expensive. "Twenty years ago, the things we do could only be done at hospitals. But there has been a tremendous change in health-care technology. The care has revolved back home. Meanwhile, the Douglas County chapter has grown from providing 257 visits in 1989 to more than 32,000 in 1988. Apart from Kansas City's association, the county chapter is the largest in Kansas. "Few people realize how large a part of the health care system the VNA is." Laupe said. TENSION HEADACHE ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM A NOW? Call Kathy Gorman immediately at Watkins Memorial Health Center (913) 864-9595 to see if you qualify for a medication study. FINANCIAL INCENTIVE PROVIDED BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP KU RUGBY CLUB'S Annual Chili Contest Sunday, Feb. 5, 4 p.m. At: Johnny's 401 N. 2nd Best Chili Wins $50 second place $25 third place $10 $5 Donation for Unlimited Chili and Free entrance with a pot of chili Beverages New members always welcome. New members always welcome Practice: Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, *If temp. is 35 or below meet For more info,call Pat 843-1223 RED BELLY BOYS with Tonight & Saturday Night February 3 & 4 Hot Rock n' Roll "Red Belly Boys planted firmly in the Twilley/Crenshaw territory of country-influenced, post-Buddy Holly guitar rock. Strummed guitars, tight combo drumming, clean harmonies and plenty of hooks. Great interplay between the lead vocalist and rhythm section." -Option Magazine The Jazzhaus Rocks UNLIMITED TANNING $35 for one month 35 for one month $60 for two months (saves $10) HAIR GALLERY 842-8372 3109 W. 6th suite A Suzy Sidor CHEMICAL SERVICES $15 OFF Perms and Color HAIRCUT BLOWDRY & STYLE $8 reg. 316 Chris Rogers PERMANENT WAVE SPECIAL RENT WAVE SPECIAL $4750 HAIRCUT & STYLE INCLUDED Shampoo, cut, and style for men $10 HAIR GALLERY 3109 W. 6th suite A Shampoo, cut, and style HAIR GALLERY 3109 W.6th suite A Teresa Brightup NAIL SPECIAL NEW FIBERGLASS NAILS $30 reg. $37.50 SUNGLITZING starting from $10 HAIR GALLERY 3109 W. 6th 842-8372