daily iowan (iowa city, iowa), 1990-09-06

20
, Grounded Launch scrubbed due to hydrogen leak. Page SA Minors' IDs to show full face. Page 4A Pelanie's colors give arllife. Page 9A Lendl loses in 5 sets at Open. Page 1B e . Muggy Humid, hot, humid. You know the song. Storm chances later. al THURSDAY September 6, 1990 Volume 124 No . 52 !; Saddam urges Arab holy war l:J.S. citizen in Kuwait reported shot · by Iraqi soldier By Jocelyn Noveck The Associated Press Iraqi President Saddam Hussein on Wednesday urged Arabs to rise up in a holy war against the West and former allies who turned against biro, and said world trade sanctions are imperiling the lives ofIraqi children. An American citizen, meanwhile, was reported shot in Iraqi-occupied Kuwait but details were sketchy. The State Department said Wed- I nesday night in Washington that it 200 attend silent vigil of protest By Jennifer Glynn \ The Daily Iowan r Close to 200 students, faculty and I Iowa City community members of all ages gathered for a silent vigil on the Pentacrest Wednesday night to protest U.S. military involvement in the Middle East. The vigil began with a few words from Dennis Gilbert of the Wesley I Foundation. "As a group, .. . though we were divided on many aspects of the iituation in the Middle East, we were united in thinking military • U.S. troops move; winter oil shortage. Page 11 A. received a report an Iraqi soldier fired on an American who was trying to avoid capture, adding, "We have no information on how serious his injuries might be." Iraqi troops have been rounding up Westerners in Kuwait since Iraq invaded and seized the small oil state on Aug. 2. Embassies in Kuwait have been ordered closed and diplomats transferred to Bagh- dad. Western women and children detained in Kuwait and Iraq trickled out in small groups Wed- nesday, leaving behind hundreds who lack permission to depart. Iraq, criticized for blocking releases with red tape, said it was doing everything it could to expe- dite departures. On Thursday, an Air France jet flew into Paris from Jordan carry- ing 153 Westerners allowed to leave Iraq, including three preg- nant women. Those aboard included 105 French women and children, 28 Britons and at least nine Americans. The American women had Arabic names, indicat- ing they had married Arabs. Japan and the Soviet. Union asked Iraq on Wednesday to withdraw at once from Kuwait and free all foreigners held in Iraq and Kuwait. A joint statement issued in Tokyo by Foreign Minister Taro Nakay- ama and visiting Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze was the first ever by the two See Qutf, Page 11 A Associaled Press Taleb Subh of Davenport waves to the press after arriving at Newark International Airport In Newark, N.J., on Wednesday. Subh, 15, was one of 24 American hostages who flew to the United States from Jordan on a Virgin Atlantic Airways Boeing 747. Davenport youth safe after release from Iraq The Associated Press DAVENPORT - The parents of a 15-year-old Davenport boy who spent a month in Kuwait say they are elated that their son has fmaIly made it out of Iraq. Nabil Subh said Tuesday that he and his wife, Ingrid, were notified by U.S . .state Department officials that their son Taleb is one of 138 women and children, including 26 Americans, who were allowed to leave Iraq and fly to Amman, Jordan. "He is safe, Subh said. "We're elated. Extremely elated." (Living in Kuwait) was a living hell is what it was. You woke up to bombing and you go to sleep to it. Taleb Subh Baghdad, Iraq, to say that he talked to the boy and that he looked good. solutions to conflict are no longer I Gilbert. "As a group we feel strongly about withdrawl of troops from the Per- sian Gulf. What concerns us most ---n I of all is the implication that the I military involvement has popular support - we have heard very little humanitarian concern," added Gilbert. Taleb was visiting relatives in Kuwait City when Iraqi forces invaded the country and overran it Aug. 2, three days before Taleb's 15th birthday. He has been trapped in the Middle East since then. Nabil Subh said his son told the Cable News Network that he had seen two people blindfolded, shot and "tossed in the garbage." Subh said his son is scheduled to fly from Jordan to Egypt and then to London, but he said the details of Taleb's homecoming are still being worked out. The family made dozens of calls over the past month to check on Taleb, but finally Nabil Subh asked a former college classmate who's now a member of the Pales- tine Liberation Organization to help get Taleb out of Kuwait. lb. I He closed his short speech sarcas- tically, referring to a slogan of President George Bush. "I invite you to be a part of what might become one of a thousand points of light," Gilbert said. See VIgIl, Page 11 A DeAnn Nilles and son Joel bask In the candlelight during a vigil for peace In the Middle East on the The Dally Iowan/Michael Williams Penta crest Wednesday evening. Approximately 200 people attended. Taleb said on CBS television that living in Kuwait " was a living hell is what it was. You woke up to bombing and you go to sleep to it." Subh said he hadn't talked to Taleb on Tuesday, but he said a CBS television reporter called from Subh said he's not sure what role the PLO played in the boy's depar- ture but says PLO leader Yassir Arafat wrote a letter on Taleb's behalf. De Klerk invites groups of all races to negotiate constitution By Tom Cohen The Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Mrica - . Calling South Africa's anti-apartheid course "irreversible," President F.W. de Klerk on Wednesday invited groups of all races to join negotiations on a new constitution. "Now is the time to wipe out petty differences," he said. The government and African National Congress were scheduled to continue talks Thursday, despite tension over the School board candidates discuss issues The {our candidates contending for , three 0 Iowa City School Board Beats red questions Wednes- dAy at Districtwide Parent's Organization's "Meet the Candi- dates Night .w army's involvement in a township shoot- ing that killed 11 people. An ANC spokeswoman said she knew of • no change in the plans for Thursday'S meeting. . ANC leader Nelson Mandela visited black townships near Johannesburg wracked by fighting that has killed more than 550 people since Aug. 12. Mandela repeated accusations police fueled the fighting by siding with Zulu backers of the conservative Inkatha movement against Xhosas and other blacks loyal to the ANC. Police deny the charges and say they have prevented the violence from escalating. Defense Minister Gen. Magnus Malan said black leaders appeared unable to control their followers and should stop blaming police and soldiers for the unrest. The townships were reported quiet Wed- nesday after a day in which 40 people were killed. "A momentum has begun which is mak- ing the negotiation process irreversible," de IOerk told a governing National Party congress in the central city of Bloemfon- tain. "We will not tum back, nor will we be stopped at giving every South Mrican a say in decision-making." Party accept non-whites as members, ann he says he wants a new constitution within five years that will bring blacks . into the national government. However, he has stated opposition to black majority rule and a one-person, one-vote system. Zulu leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi said a meeting with Mandela could help curb the violence, but Mandela has refused such a meeting. The government opened talks this year with the ANC, the main black opposition group, on halting anti-government vio- lence The ANC blames Inkatha for starting the recent fighting, but an Inkatha youth leader accused the ANC on Wednesday of trying to wipe out his group's members. He said all parties were welcome in talks on power-sharing between the black majority and the ruling whites. De Klerk has proposed the National Government and ANC committees were scheduled to meet Thursday to discuss the ANC's decision last month to suspend its armed struggle. War on drugs makes progress The Daily Iowan Interviews the can- didates. See page 3A. However, many battles still to be fought By Carolyn Skorneck the House Select Committee on The ASSOCiated Press NarcotiCS. Abuse and agreed Wlth Conyers' cntlclsms, WASHINGTON -President Bush saying the statistics showing said Wednesday that the United improvement primarily pertain to States "is making progress" in the the middle class. war on drugs, but two key Con- "Unfortunately, the administra- gressmen said the year-old pro- tion's anti-drug strategy has not isn't doing enough to help been responsive to the concerns of impoverished Americans. inner city and other chronic drug "Drug czar (William) Bennett and abusers, whose drug abuse is fuel- President Bush cannot deny that ing the crisis in our emergency we are losing the drug war in our rooms, in our criminal justice sys- =x.;;.., inner cities," said Rep . John Con- tern and in our treatment centers," yers, D-Mich., chairman of the said Rangel, D-N.Y. House Committee ,on Government Bush and Bennett, the president's White Paper Statistics Total Arrests for Drug Abuse Violations, 1985 and 1989 Number of arrests Source: Uniform Crime Reports, 1990 994,000 Vida Brenner, Connie Champion, Betsy Hawtrey and Sally Staley "'ere presented questions from tnoderator Debbie Sales concerning Iowa City educational problems. AUdience members were also allowed to submit written ques- tion8 to the candidates. The election will be held Sept. 11. The hot topic. {or the night's forum were the proposed changes In the exietl ng high -echool bound- ariel and the middle achooVjunior cern of the candidates was whether or not Iowa City City High and Iowa City West should have com- parable enrollments. more of a consolidated 8chool and City High is a suburban school, according to Staley. Operations. chief lieutenant in the drug war, "Prevention and education efforts emphasized the positive in directed at the educated middle speeches and a paper released claae appear to be having a dra- Wednesday, the first anniversary matic effect," Conyers said. of the preaident's announcement of i high debate. Even though high-echool bound- ariel haven't been diecuased at the IChooI board level, the main con- Staley was against the schools having similar enrollments because ahe said it would be diffi - cult to predict where new housing will be bunt in Iowa City. She alBa deecribed the schools as having diltinct personalities. West High is Hawtrey added that boundaries would have to be altered to equal- ize the size of the two schools. The candidates agreed on the basic role of a middle school as a brid,e between elementary and high schools, but they differed on the grade levels to be included , "Treatment programs have room his war on drugs. . for clients who can afford to pay. "I think America is making prog- However, the chronically addicted ress 81ainat drugs and will con· cannot pay when they are poor and tinue to do so," Buah said, but he unemployed, as i8 often the acknowledged that the war- ia far Rep. Charles Rangel, chairman of See .,.., Page SA

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, •

Grounded Launch scrubbed due to hydrogen leak. Page SA

Minors' IDs to show full face. Page 4A

Pelanie's colors give arllife. Page 9A

Lendl loses in 5 sets at Open. Page 1 B

e .

Muggy Humid, hot, humid. You know the song. Storm chances later.

al THURSDAY September 6, 1990 Volume 124 No. 52

!;Saddam urges Arab holy war l:J.S. citizen in Kuwait reported shot ·by Iraqi soldier By Jocelyn Noveck The Associated Press

Iraqi President Saddam Hussein on Wednesday urged Arabs to rise up in a holy war against the West and former allies who turned against biro, and said world trade sanctions are imperiling the lives ofIraqi children.

An American citizen, meanwhile, was reported shot in Iraqi-occupied Kuwait but details were sketchy.

The State Department said Wed­I nesday night in Washington that it

~

200 attend silent vigil of protest By Jennifer Glynn

\ The Daily Iowan r Close to 200 students, faculty and I Iowa City community members of

all ages gathered for a silent vigil

~ on the Pentacrest Wednesday night to protest U.S. military involvement in the Middle East.

The vigil began with a few words from Dennis Gilbert of the Wesley

I Foundation. "As a group, .. . though we were

divided on many aspects of the iituation in the Middle East, we were united in thinking military

• U.S. troops move; winter oil shortage. Page 11 A.

received a report an Iraqi soldier fired on an American who was trying to avoid capture, adding, "We have no information on how serious his injuries might be."

Iraqi troops have been rounding up Westerners in Kuwait since Iraq invaded and seized the small oil state on Aug. 2. Embassies in Kuwait have been ordered closed and diplomats transferred to Bagh-

dad. Western women and children

detained in Kuwait and Iraq trickled out in small groups Wed­nesday, leaving behind hundreds who lack permission to depart. Iraq, criticized for blocking releases with red tape, said it was doing everything it could to expe­dite departures.

On Thursday, an Air France jet flew into Paris from Jordan carry­ing 153 Westerners allowed to leave Iraq, including three preg­nant women. Those aboard

included 105 French women and children, 28 Britons and at least nine Americans. The American women had Arabic names, indicat­ing they had married Arabs.

Japan and the Soviet. Union asked Iraq on Wednesday to withdraw at once from Kuwait and free all foreigners held in Iraq and Kuwait. A joint statement issued in Tokyo by Foreign Minister Taro Nakay­ama and visiting Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze was the first ever by the two

See Qutf, Page 11 A

Associaled Press

Taleb Subh of Davenport waves to the press after arriving at Newark International Airport In Newark, N.J., on Wednesday. Subh, 15, was one of 24 American hostages who flew to the United States from Jordan on a Virgin Atlantic Airways Boeing 747.

Davenport youth safe after release from Iraq The Associated Press

DAVENPORT - The parents of a 15-year-old Davenport boy who spent a month in Kuwait say they are elated that their son has fmaIly made it out of Iraq.

Nabil Subh said Tuesday that he and his wife, Ingrid, were notified by U.S . .state Department officials that their son Taleb is one of 138 women and children, including 26 Americans, who were allowed to leave Iraq and fly to Amman, Jordan.

"He is safe, ~ Subh said. "We're elated. Extremely elated."

(Living in Kuwait) was a living hell is what it was. You woke up to bombing and you go to sleep to it.

Taleb Subh

Baghdad, Iraq, to say that he talked to the boy and that he looked good.

~ solutions to conflict are no longer I viable,~said Gilbert.

"As a group we feel strongly about withdrawl of troops from the Per­sian Gulf. What concerns us most ---n I of all is the implication that the

I military involvement has popular support - we have heard very little humanitarian concern," added Gilbert.

Taleb was visiting relatives in Kuwait City when Iraqi forces invaded the country and overran it Aug. 2, three days before Taleb's 15th birthday. He has been trapped in the Middle East since then.

Nabil Subh said his son told the Cable News Network that he had seen two people blindfolded, shot and "tossed in the garbage."

Subh said his son is scheduled to fly from Jordan to Egypt and then to London, but he said the details of Taleb's homecoming are still being worked out.

The family made dozens of calls over the past month to check on Taleb, but finally Nabil Subh asked a former college classmate who's now a member of the Pales­tine Liberation Organization to help get Taleb out of Kuwait.

lb. I

He closed his short speech sarcas­tically, referring to a slogan of President George Bush.

"I invite you to be a part of what might become one of a thousand points of light," Gilbert said.

See VIgIl, Page 11 A DeAnn Nilles and son Joel bask In the candlelight during a vigil for peace In the Middle East on the

The Dally Iowan/Michael Williams

Penta crest Wednesday evening. Approximately 200 people attended.

Taleb said on CBS television that living in Kuwait "was a living hell is what it was. You woke up to bombing and you go to sleep to it."

Subh said he hadn't talked to Taleb on Tuesday, but he said a CBS television reporter called from

Subh said he's not sure what role the PLO played in the boy's depar­ture but says PLO leader Yassir Arafat wrote a letter on Taleb's behalf.

De Klerk invites groups of all races to negotiate constitution By Tom Cohen The Associated Press

JOHANNESBURG, South Mrica -. Calling South Africa's anti-apartheid course "irreversible," President F.W. de Klerk on Wednesday invited groups of all races to join negotiations on a new constitution.

"Now is the time to wipe out petty differences," he said.

The government and African National Congress were scheduled to continue talks Thursday, despite tension over the

School board candidates discuss issues

The {our candidates contending for , three 0 Iowa City School Board Beats red questions Wednes-

• dAy at Districtwide Parent's Organization's "Meet the Candi­dates Night.w

army's involvement in a township shoot­ing that killed 11 people.

An ANC spokeswoman said she knew of • no change in the plans for Thursday'S meeting. .

ANC leader Nelson Mandela visited black townships near Johannesburg wracked by fighting that has killed more than 550 people since Aug. 12.

Mandela repeated accusations th~t police fueled the fighting by siding with Zulu backers of the conservative Inkatha movement against Xhosas and other blacks loyal to the ANC. Police deny the

charges and say they have prevented the violence from escalating.

Defense Minister Gen. Magnus Malan said black leaders appeared unable to control their followers and should stop blaming police and soldiers for the unrest.

The townships were reported quiet Wed­nesday after a day in which 40 people were killed.

"A momentum has begun which is mak­ing the negotiation process irreversible," de IOerk told a governing National Party congress in the central city of Bloemfon­tain. "We will not tum back, nor will we be stopped at giving every South Mrican a say in decision-making."

Party accept non-whites as members, ann he says he wants a new constitution within five years that will bring blacks

. into the national government. However, he has stated opposition to black majority rule and a one-person, one-vote system.

Zulu leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi said a meeting with Mandela could help curb the violence, but Mandela has refused such a meeting.

The government opened talks this year with the ANC, the main black opposition group, on halting anti-government vio­lence

The ANC blames Inkatha for starting the recent fighting, but an Inkatha youth leader accused the ANC on Wednesday of trying to wipe out his group's members.

He said all parties were welcome in talks on power-sharing between the black majority and the ruling whites.

De Klerk has proposed the National

Government and ANC committees were scheduled to meet Thursday to discuss the ANC's decision last month to suspend its armed struggle.

War on drugs makes progress

The Daily Iowan Interviews the can­didates. See page 3A.

However, many battles still to be fought By Carolyn Skorneck the House Select Committee on The ASSOCiated Press NarcotiCS. Abuse and ~~n.trol,

agreed Wlth Conyers' cntlclsms, WASHINGTON -President Bush saying the statistics showing

said Wednesday that the United improvement primarily pertain to States "is making progress" in the the middle class. war on drugs, but two key Con- "Unfortunately, the administra­gressmen said the year-old pro- tion's anti-drug strategy has not gr~ isn't doing enough to help been responsive to the concerns of impoverished Americans. inner city and other chronic drug

"Drug czar (William) Bennett and abusers, whose drug abuse is fuel­President Bush cannot deny that ing the crisis in our emergency we are losing the drug war in our rooms, in our criminal justice sys­=x.;;.., inner cities," said Rep. John Con- tern and in our treatment centers," yers, D-Mich., chairman of the said Rangel, D-N.Y. House Committee ,on Government Bush and Bennett, the president's

White Paper Statistics

Total Arrests for Drug Abuse Violations, 1985 and 1989 Number of arrests

Source: Uniform Crime Reports, 1990

994,000

Vida Brenner, Connie Champion, Betsy Hawtrey and Sally Staley "'ere presented questions from tnoderator Debbie Sales concerning Iowa City educational problems. AUdience members were also allowed to submit written ques­tion8 to the candidates.

The election will be held Sept. 11. The hot topic. {or the night's

forum were the proposed changes In the exietl ng high -echool bound­ariel and the middle achooVjunior

cern of the candidates was whether or not Iowa City City High and Iowa City West should have com­parable enrollments.

more of a consolidated 8chool and City High is a suburban school, according to Staley.

Operations. chief lieutenant in the drug war, "Prevention and education efforts emphasized the positive in

directed at the educated middle speeches and a paper released claae appear to be having a dra- Wednesday, the first anniversary matic effect," Conyers said. of the preaident's announcement of

i high debate. Even though high-echool bound­

ariel haven't been diecuased at the IChooI board level, the main con-

Staley was against the schools having similar enrollments because ahe said it would be diffi­cult to predict where new housing will be bunt in Iowa City. She alBa deecribed the schools as having diltinct personalities. West High is

Hawtrey added that boundaries would have to be altered to equal­ize the size of the two schools.

The candidates agreed on the basic role of a middle school as a brid,e between elementary and high schools, but they differed on the grade levels to be included ,

"Treatment programs have room his war on drugs. . for clients who can afford to pay. "I think America is making prog­However, the chronically addicted ress 81ainat drugs and will con· cannot pay when they are poor and tinue to do so," Buah said, but he unemployed, as i8 often the C8se.~ acknowledged that the war- ia far '---------Ai~:niiiiiGi;;;;

Rep. Charles Rangel, chairman of See .,.., Page SA

2A METRO/IOWA The Daily Iowan Thursday. September 6, 1990

Student political parties urge voter registration By Jennifer Glynn The Daily Iowan

Despite all their differences, members of the UI College Republicans and University Demo­crats agreed on one thing - their most important function is to get students to vote.

election day in November, and said they register both democrats and republicans.

Wilcox said the College Republicans also register voters from both parties.

said. "We also have roaming voter registration - that's when people walk around with clipboards trying to get people registered to vote,"

"I can't emphasize how important getting involved is; we try to promote awarene88 because we want 88 many people to vote 88 po88ible," Wilcox said. "The age group from 18 to 24 tends to be the age group that votes the least often, and we need to change that.'

John Rice, a UI sophomore and member of the University Democrats, said he really enjoyed campaigning.

Dana Jensen, chairwoman of the University Democrats, and Dustin Wilcox, chairman of the College Republicans, agreed that a big part of their jobs is to get more students involved and registered to vote, regardless of party affIliation.

"It makes people more aware of what is going on, and that is extremely important," Rice said.

Jensen said the University Democrats hope to register at least 10,000 people to vote before

Jensen said among the responsibilities of the University Democrats is phone canvassing for candidates.

"Every night we have about 10 people in the office phone-banking from 5 until 9 p.m.,~ she

The University Democrats have about 75 people involved in the organization, and the College Republicans have about 115 members. Both Jensen and Wilcox said the membership in their groups has been growing quickly.

Proposed grant workshops may become a reality at UI By M.re Morehou.e The Daily Iowan

Graduate and undergraduate stu­dents at the UI may fmd them­selves working and learning together if a proposed grant­writing workBhop becomes a real­ity.

"We want to improve students' confidence when they are trying to find funding .... Grant proposal writing is like a game - the better you know the

The workshop would consist of a series of "lunch and leam~ se -sions at which UI faculty and personnel from the Division of Sponsored Programs would offer tips on proposal writing.

process, the better you 'll do in the game."

Graduate and undergraduate par­ticipants would have the chance to discuss grant writing with success­ful faculty recipients about their experiences.

According to the idea's originator, UI graduate student Nancy Ander­son Mortensen, the sessions are planned to develop into a series tentatively starting Oct. 1.

"Hopefully the idea will develop into a series of workshops and we could also bring organizations from outside the university to talk to

Briefs Gov. Branstad to speak at UI

Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad will speak at the UI at 3 p.m. today in the Iowa Room of the Union. The appearance is sponsored by Stu­dents for Branstad, and the public is invited to come and meet the governor.

Branstad will face Democratic challenger Don Avenson of Oelwein in the November gubernatorial race.

Mercy hosts United Way kickoff

Mercy Hospital will host the annual United Way kickoff in conjunction with the first Mercy Well ness Warm-up for the 14th annual Hospice Road Race today.

Volunteers from the 39 local United Way agencies will run or

Courts By Aaron A. Dol.n The Daily Iowan

A Coralville woman - charged last spring with attempt to commit murder, assault with a dangerous weapon, interference with official acts causing injury, and assault -was declared competent to stand trial yesterday.

According to Johnson County Dis-

Calendar Thursdav

• "M •• I th. Gov.rnor M •• tlng," f.aturlng Iowa Gov. T.rry Bran.ted will be held by UI Students for Bran­stad at 3 p.m. in the Union, Iowa Room.

• Harldn St .. rlng Conunlttee M .. t­Ing will be held at the Iowa City Public Library. 123 S. Linn St. , in Meeting Room A at 7 p.m. All interested Harkin supporters are Invited to attend.

• A_ntry R.unlon will be spon­sored by the Study Abroad Center staff from " :30-6 p.m. in the International Center Lounge.

• Public R.latlon. Student Socl.ty of Am.rlca will hold a business meet­ing 4:30-6 p.m. in the Communications Center. Room 114.

• Wom.n'. R •• ourc. and Action Cenler. 130 N. Madison St.. will host an open house at 7 p.m.

• "Knowing God B .... r .. will be the topic of discussion for "Prime Time." sponsored by the Campus Crusede for Christ, to be held at 7 p.m. in the Union. Indiana Room.

students who want grants," Mor­tensen said.

Two organizations Mortensen mentioned as possibilities were the Gettys Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.

The workshop proposal, submitted to the ur in August, was inspired by a large grant recently awarded to UI art professor Richard DePuma by the Gettys Foundation.

"(DePuma's) grant showed that it really does happen in the humani­ties," Mortensen said. "Why shouldn't students get involved in the grants process?"

walk from agency sites to Mercy Hospital where they win be joined by more than 100 campaign volun­teers who will be assisting in raising this year's goal of $825,000.

Art fair to be held along Iowa River

Regional artisans will display and sell their works at the Riverbank Art Fair this Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The fair will be held along the riverbank behind the Union or in the Union Main Lounge in case of rain.

Events include singing by Barbara Boyle and Jeffrey Morgan, a pot­ter's wheel demonstration and art s tations where people can try painting, tie-dyeing or kite­making.

All events are free and open to the public.

trict Court records, Judith Randall, 46, 505 Seventh St., Coralville, attacked one of several officers attempting to serve arrest war­rants on her May 27.

Records state that while the officers where searching Randall's residence, she came out of hiding "intentionally lunging" at the officer with a knife before he fell backward. The records state Ran-

• UI Actu.rlal Scl.nc. Club will have an informational meeting at 6:30 p.m. In the Union. River Room 1.

• "Medical T.rmlnology: That'. a Funny Word - What Doe. It M •• n?" is the title of a speech that will be presented by Ronald Bergman. UI professor of anatomy, and sponsored by the UI History of Medicine Society at 7:30 p.m. in the Hardin Library for the Health Sciences, Room 401 .

.Job Sirategl •• S.mlnar, spon­sored by Business and Libersl Arts Placement. will be held at 4 p.m. in the Union. Indiana Room.

• Envlronm.ntal Advocat.. will hold its monthly general meeting at 7 p.m. at First Christian Church. 217 Iowa Ave.

• Luth.ran Stud.nt Mov.m.nt m •• llng. sponsored by the Lutheran Campus Ministry. will be held at 7:30 p.m. at Old Brick, corner of Clinton and Market streets.

Nancy Ander.on Morten.en UI graduate .tudent

Mortensen said one goal of the program is to create teams of graduate and undergraduate stu­dents and to begin training them to narrow the focus of written grant proposals.

"We want to improve students ' confidence when they are trying to fin d funding," Mortensen said. "Grant proposal writing is like a game - the better you know the process, the better you'll do in the game."

A major component for the success of the project will be participation from the Division of Sponsored

Hancher receives performance funding

UI's Hancher Auditorium has been awarded more than $68,000 from public funding agencies to support its 1990-91 programming season.

Hancher was awarded $51,000 by the National Endowment for the Arts, $15,472 from Arts Midwest and $2,000 from the Iowa Arts Council to fund various programs.

UI takes cancer hotline nationwide

The UI Cancer Information Ser­vice began taking its toll-free num­ber nationwide Sept. 1 to answer general questions on cancer.

The number, 1 (800) 237-1225, is available between 8 a .m. and 5 p.m. to provide information on cancer-related topics including risk factors, prevention, diet and nutri­tion, indoor/outdoor tanning,

dall "lunged" twice at the officer's upper chest while he was on the ground until she was disarmed by other officers. The victim received back injuries and puncture wounds in his left hand from the attack, according to records.

Randall med a Notice of(Insanity) Defense Aug. 6, and both Randall 's and the State's expert witnesses agree the defendant "suffers from

Radio • WSUI AM 910 - "Selected

Shorts," a celebration of the short story. features work by Flannery O'Connor and Barry Hannah at 8:30 p.m.

.KSUI 91 .7 FM - The Cleveland Orchestra presents a Blossom Music Festival Concert featuring perfor­mances of works by Honegger. lbert and Beethoven at 8 p.m.

• WMT 800 AM - No hoax. Kurt Vonnagut will be interviewed on the Larry King Show at 10:05. Following is a chat with comedian Steven Wright at 11 :05

Nightlife • Atomic Tuna leaturlng Tom K.n­

nedy performs at Gabe's OasiS. 330 E. Washington St., at 10 p.m.

AttheBijou ."La Salamandra" (Alain Tanner,

1971) - 6:45 p.m.

• "The Cook, tha Thl.f, HI. Wlf. , H.r Lov.r" (Peter Greenaway. 1990)-9 p.m.

Programs, Mortensen said. In the past, the office has run

similar programs for ur faculty seeking grant money, according to Marge Hoppin, director of the DSP. These programs have included information on how to prepare proposal budgets and locate fund­ing sources in the social sciences and the arts, she said.

"Students have expressed interest in these types of programs and we would like to help," Hoppin said. " A definite time and place stiU needs to be worked out."

smoking, and smokeless tobacco. Counselors are also available to

answer questions about specific cancers such as' breast, lung, colon, prostate and skin cancers.

The program is an educations) program of the Ul Cancer Center.

Nelson receives alumni award

The UI College of Dentistry has named Dr. Richard Nelson the 1990 Iowa Dental Alumnus of the Year.

Nelson received his D.D.S. degree from the UI in 1958. He will be honored at the 73rd annual meet­ing of the UI Dental Alumni Asso­ciation Oct. 26-27.

Though he practices dentistry in Colorado, Nelson has maintained active ties with the Ul, serving on the boards of directors of the UI Foundation and the UI Dental Alumni Association.

paranoia and is delil sional ,~ according to records. Despite this, the court found that Randall understood her situation and would be able stand trial, records state.

Randall has been returned to the Iowa Medical and Classification Center, Highway 218, Oakdale, Iowa. The trial is scheduled to begin Sept. 10.

the telephone. All submissions must Include the name and phone number. wh ich will not be publ ished. 01 a contact person in case of questions.

Notices that are commercial advertise­ments will not be accepted.

Questions regarding the Calendar column should be directed to Diana Wallace. 335-6063.

CorrectIona Tile Dally Iowan strives for accuracy and

fllrness in the reporting of news. If a report is wrong or misleading. a request for I correction or a clarification may be mad, by contacling the Editor at 335-6030. A correc­tion or I ctariflcation will be published in thll column.

Subecrlpliona 1'1Ie Daily Iowan is published by Student

Publications Inc .• l' 1 Communications Cen­ter. tOWI City. lowl 52242 dally except Saturdays. Sundays. legal holidays and unlv.rslty holidays. and university vacltionl. Second cl ... postage paid It the Iowa City Poet Office under th. Act of Congress of Mlrch 2. 1879.

SublCrlptIon r.t •• : Iowa City lind Coral· ville. S12 for one sem .. ter, $24 for two semellers. 58 for summer seulon . $30 for full year ; Out of town. $20 for one semeater. S40 for two aemeaters. S'O for summer _Ion. $SO all year.

USPS 1433-6000

RUSTIN B'-'RKE DOWNTOWN PLAZA

THE FORMER STAFF OF

AJ AUGUST MENSWEAR Is proud to announce the coming of Austin Burke Clothiers In the former 'Linen Closet' location at 116 E. /. College St. on the College St. Plaza PAUL SMITH JOHN STUART

CRAIG GUSTAVESON WUANITA TRUEBLOOD

Take a Break from Studying, to Check out

the Accessories at

LEFLER'S SCHWINN CyeJinl.Fitn_

- '

Bicycling Gloves ..... $1 O.nd up

Floor Pumps ............ $17.50 8nd up

Bottle Cages ............ $4 and up

Helmets .................... $40 and up

. And Many More Accessories

to Choose From!

I.EFI.ER'S tff\SCHtIIIINN-W CYCLING AND FITNESS

1705 FIRST A VENUE 351-RIDE (7433)

Juliet Prowse stars as the unforgettable Auntie Marne as she gallivants through a lifetime of outra­geous misadventures in one of Broadway's all-time great musicals.

This delightful score includes: "Open a New Window" "We Need a Little Christmas" "If He Walked Into My Life" "Mame"

Tuesday - Saturday September 11-15 8 p.m.

Sunday Seplember 16 2 & 8 p.m.

September 14. 1 :30 p.m. Juliet Prowse will be the featured speaker at a discussion in Mabie Theatre. Free

Supported by First Nallonal Bank

UI Students receive a 20% discount on aU Hancher events and may charge to their University accounts.

For ticket information Call 335-1160 or totH," In Iowa outs,de low. en),

HOG-HANCHER

The University of Iowa Iowa City. Iowa

Hancher

The Daily Iowan Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

Business Office ................ ...... -.. .. ............ 335~5786

Circulation .............................. _ .... .. .... -.. .... 335-5783 Classified Advertising ...................... .. .. .. 335-5784 Display Advertising .................. .............. 335-5790 Newsroom .. ...... _.-... _ .................. -.... .... _.. .. 335-6063

• Hawk.ya Juggle,. will meet on the Pentacrest from 6-8 p.m. In case of rain, the meellng will be moved to the Field House.

• Smoking C .... tlon Support Group, sponsored by University Counsel ing Service. will meet at 12:30-1 :30 p.m. at Westlawn, Room 5-330. C .. ....,PoIIor Publisher .......... .. ...................... WIIII.IIIC".r Production .. ...... -.-............ .. ........ -...... -...... 335-5789

• "Zach.u.j Com. on Down" will be the subject of a Bible discu88ion sponsored by the Campus Bible Fel­lowship at 6:30 p.m. In the Union. Danfbr1h Chapel.

T1INter • Open audition. for the W." lid.

Play.r. will star! at 6:30 p.m. in the Union, Iowa Room. No theater experi­ence is needed. Both technical and acting positions are available. If unable to attend, call Lynda at 354-7515, Tasha at 336-8012 or Jacob at 338-8113.

Announcements lor this column mUlt be submlned to The D.11y lowln newsroom. 201N Communication. Center. by 1 p.m, two dlya prior to pubUClitlon. Notic .. m.y be tent through the mall. but be lure to mail early to ensure publication. All lubmlulona must be clearly printed on a Calendar column blank (whiCh &ppM" on the clu8i­fled ads peg,,' or typewritten and trip! .. apace<! on a lull lheet of PII*,

Announcemenll will not be accepted over

Editor ................... ............... .. r.La .... nlllrv FAX 319 335-6297 M.n~lng Editor .. .. .............. .. .. . J_".uh,. ......... _ .......... __ .. -.......................... -CopyDeIkEdltor ....................... .. J.k ...... ,. A Photo Editor ............................... "'ndr •• nty fo:' Graphics Editor ... .. ................... . h.rI DlGr.. , BUIII_Man.ger ........................ Dlbra .... th ~ .. d. Adv.rtiling ............................ ...... Jim Laonan! • ' 1..... ~ Clualfled Ads ........................... CrI.tln. Parrr ' _.IIK1"_/ The Dolly icMwI - ...." inII ... lIlC1l1.n~OIN"'K'~ Clrcul.tion ............................. Fr.nclall. Lalor y/- ' prinleoj on """1\OWIpIfnI. We -... _~ g. O.yProductlon .................. .IeI.nna!. HltIoln .............. ' ......... ".,..,.. ....... " •• ' .'.rM.' ••••••••• ;~ Night Production ................... ..... lIobert Foley •

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______ ~--------------------------------------------------TheDaI~~n----------------------------~--~----____ ~ ____________ ___ Metro editor Ann Marie Williams, 335-6063 Metrollowa Page 3A

Thursday, September 6,1990

Candidates debate School board aspirants discuss their views on leading issues

Tuesday, City voters

Iowa will

elect three people to serve on the 'school district's board of direc­

The tors. Below, Daily .Iowan's Cynthia Taylor asks the four candidates

two ,including incumbents about some major issues facing the board in the . upcomIng five

Overcrowding, all-day kindergar­ten, middle-school adoption and an

, instructional support levy top the agenda for four Iowa Citians vying for seats on the Iowa City school

J board this month. Voters will fill three seats on the

7·member board Sept. 11. Two ~ candidates are seeking re-election

to the board. Boardmember Jay Christensen-Szalanski, however,

! will not serve another term. Vida Brenner, 225 Linden Court,

~as been a member of the district's Language Arts Course Review Committee as a representative of the Learning Disabilities Associa· ,tion. She also helped write the minority report for the At-Risk

~ Committee. Incumbent Connie Champion, 430

S. Summit St., has been a member 'of the At-Risk and the MulticulturallNonsexist Infusion 1 Committees in addition to being a

•11 former board president, I Incumbent Betsy Hawtrey, 715 S.

Summit St., has been involved in 1 the Iowa City schools for 26 years

.and is seeking a second term on the board,

In addition to acting as the board's legislative liaison, Hawtrey has

, served on the folloWing commit­tees: MulticulturallNonsexist, Dis· trict Volunteer, Community Educa­'tion Center Advisory and Middle School.

Sally Staley, 314 Beldon Ave., is ' the immediate past president of the Districtwide Parents' Organi­zation. Her past experience

Vida Brenner

includes work with the Phase III Committee. Phase III is part of state legislation designed to encourage teachers to stay in the profession.

Below, Daily Iowan reporter Cynthia Taylor asked the four candidates to address four major issues facing the board in coming years.

DI: The current board wants to replace the enrichment tax with a four- or five-year "instructional support" levy to help fund extra-curricular pro­grams. What is your opinion on this issue and how do you think the public will react?

Brenner: I don't think people are going to understand it because people didn't understand the enrichment tax. I'm very much upset that our educational pro­grams have a lot of duplication in them - a lot of bloat in them. We could look at our own programs to get rid of the duplicat.ion, get rid of the waste, get rid of the bloat, and then we would have a much better chance of talking to the voters and saying, "Look, we have pared down our costs and gotten rid of the unessentials - the things that are duplicated - but we are still short such-and-such money." I think that would go over a lot better than saying "give us more money for these extra programs."

Champion: I think if we can correct the confusion, we won't have any trouble. I think if we would try to go for five years, people would think we were taxing them unfairly. I would be in favor of four years for that reason. I think it would be easier to explain to people, and the bottom line is -if we go four years, it will actually save them dollars. I think it's foolish to pass up state aid because they want to put another year on it.

Hawtrey: In general, I expect we could go either way. The hearing process is such that if we set the policy and then don't listen to what people say and respond to it, then

By Mike Glover

Connie C~amplon

there's no reason to have a hear­ing. I feel it isn't necessary as far as the board is concerned. We will need to renew the (enrichment) tax. This (instructional support levy) the board can pass without going to the public to vote on it. Now, the public may not want it that way - they may insist that we go to a public vote. There are lots of options that come along. Taxation is very complicated. But we will pass the tax, whether it's for four or five years. '

Staley: I don't see a problem at all, partly because I think by the time those taxes are before us, we will know if the state approach to local education is that the per­pupil allotment from the state will be at a high maintenance level. The remainder will have to be voted as a discretionary tax by the district. It is telling and significant that both the instructional levy and the framework for the 67 th-cent levy have portions that can be levied without voter approval. I think by then the public will have decided one way or another. Either they support those expenditures for the schools or they don't. I would expect Iowa City to support it.

DI: Some Iowa elementary schools have already gone to an alI-day kindergarten format. What do you feel the Iowa City district should do?

, Brenner: We don't have room as it is. We would have to add extra classrooms. And then you would have to look at what would happen as far as the instruction in the kindergarten - half the day you play and half the day you learn whatever the instructional pro­gram is. We have preschools, we have day care, even though it's inconvenient for the parents. It would be better to run a bus (to the preschools and day cares) than it would be to run an all-day kinder­garten, if that's what we need to do in order to accommodate parents. I think it would be much cheaper than adding on the cost of rooms

I Belay Hawtrey

and extra teachers to accommodate children we would simply be put­ting into a day-care program.

Champion: I really haven't made any major decision on the all-day kindergarten. It's very expensive. We would be strapped to do that in all of ow: grade schools space-wise. I would like to consider it as an option. I would hate to see it mandatory. There are a lot of parents who don't want their chil­dren in all-day kindergarten, and yet there's a tremendous amount of kids that would profit from it. 1 think we should try to work out a plan to meet all those needs. The state may not give us a choice, anyway. We may have to go to all-day kindergarten. But if we had a choice, I'd like to see it optional with a curriculum that would cover both.

Hawtrey: It would be helpful to parents who work and need child care. At the moment they have to have divided child care. It will add better education for the child who hasn't had much preschool or hasn't had much help at home. I really think it's going to be an everyday thing five to 10 years from now. It's going to be a slow start because change is traumatic to people. It's expensive. What I'd like to see is funding from grants to do a pilot program. That's what Cedar Rapids is doing. Rather than having it obligatory, they have it optional. I'm sure having it optional at first will help people realize how valuable it can be. It should be developmentally appro­priate as opposed to babysitting or stuff that's too advanced.

Staley: At this point, I think that the decision about whether or not to offer all-day kindergarten even on a trial basis has to await analysis on the demographics of enrollment. AIl-day kindergarten is not a state requirement at this point in time, and I think we have to have a long-term plan.

DI: What structural planning can the school board do to provide a quality education for

Sally Staley

middle-school-aged children? Brenner: Whether you call it

middle school or whether you call it junior high is a matter of seman­tics. It's what goes on in that school that's important. What we need to be looking at is a bridge between the elementary school and the high school. Most of these kids are not ready when they leave sixth grade to work independently on papers and projects. Many of them don't know how to study. And they do need the security of having a teacher that knows them rather well, In some respects, yes, I do think we need a change, we do need a bridge. What we're doing now is throwing them in, and I don't think that should continue.

Champion: We've made no deci­sion on the middle school. I think it's really important for people to know that. The board has not even had any serious discussion on the middle school. I like the concept of middle schools. How much of it is possible to implement, I don't know. I think children really profit from the middle-school concept, and I frankly think we're way behind. The middle-school concept is going on allover the country, and the studies have shown that it's very beneficial for kids. I don't think we can afford to implement the whole thing immediately, so it may be a progressive thing.

Hawtrey: I'd like to see the middle school happen in a year or two, after the teachers get trained and the parents have a little more understanding of the differences. It will involve a little more expense to the district, but I think it's valu­able. Kids at the junior-high level are like new people - they're starting over in their whole atti­tude. They need a lot of encourage­ment, a lot of monitoring, a lot of keeping on task. The way the junior high is set up, the children are going eight different places and nobody knows how they are doing in any other class. It fragments the child, and this is much more holistic, where you really can catch

people and help them from falling out of the system.

Staley: We have block scheduling now in some of our upper elemen­tary schools. We're really talking about some delivery kinds of changes at our seventh- and eighth- grade level. That kind of refinement in our curriculum ] think is natural and should be ongoing, and I have no problems pursuing it. I would, however, not entertain any specific grade grouping until we look at the entire demographic picture.

DI: Do you see a trend in the 'growth of the district, and what do you think are some lolufions to possible over­crowding in the next five years?

Brenner: The last board meet­ing I went to, the superintendent said growth was not as great as they expected. I don't know what the demographics are now, but it seems to me that they are reason­ably constant. I don't know how much it's going to fluctuate, but with the new developments going up I can see a possibility for growth. I can see that maybe down the line we're going to need a new elementary school.

Champion: We have a couple of grade schools that can be added on to and the physical facility ca.n handle it. We'll probably have to look at some boundary changes, although we don't have a lot of schools that can take marlY more kids than they have. Our elemen­tary schools are really getting crowded, but with some boundary changes we can alleviate some of the problem. I don't see how we can do that without building another school.

Hawtrey: The schools right now are just bursting at the seams. We have no leeway space. To be inflexible like that cuts down on educational opportunities outside the contained classroom. We really need more space. If we don't move the sixth-graders up, we will have to build at least one elementary school. We haven't asked the public for funding for a new school for 20 years, I don't think. A bond issue may not pass the first time, and it's an expensive gamble, but it can payoff.

Staley: We are going to have to make some adjustments to accom­modate the growing population. In addition to growth, we are going to have apparent pockets in existing boundaries. We are going to have some schools that are terribly ,overpopulated and some which will actually be losing enrollment. Demographic analysis is needed so we can look at a number of alterna­tives,

Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the North Lib· erty city hall, Hills fire station and the following lowa City schools: Northwest Junior High, Lincoln, Horn, Twain, Longfellow, Lemme and Mann elementary schools.

Avenson;says Branstad veto is out of touch

The Associated Press

moving toward broadening day-care services and Branstad's veto shows he's out of touch with that trend.

Backers had claimed that not only would state workers benefit, but the project would serve as a model to prod businesses into taking similar steps.

DES MOINES - Republican Gov. Terry Branstad's veto of money for a demonstration child-care project shows he's "living in the past" and doesn't under­stand modem families, Democratic candidate for governor Don Avenson said Wednesday.

"The times have changed, but he has failed to keep step with the real world," said Avenson, an Oelwein Democrat who is also Speaker of the House.

At issue was a day-care program approved by the Legislature this year but vetoed by Branstad. Tbat would have established a day-care center for th u­sands of state workers at the Capitol complex.

Branstad aides said Branstad supports expanded day-care opportunities but favors a djfferent method of giving tax breaks. That benefits not just a few state workers, but all employees, said spokesman Richard Vohs.

"'We want to encourage fair and free opportunities to use these facilities for all state employees."

Touring a day-care facility for state workers, Avenaon said businesses and federal officials are

~E~E~E~E~E~E~E~E~E~E~EUE

~ The Men of IAE ~ would like to thank all those who partied at ~ , The AirUner with Paddy Murphy last night. ~ Unfortunately, Mr. murphy is cu.rrently on ~ life-support systems due to overlntoxication. w Please send condolences, flowers and money

to 603 S. Dubuque street.

~ayon Vests $1 0 COl1l>Sre at $18 .

100% rayon oversized veet with bunDn lront & tie back. Fun batik printe in .. I, royal, Ipk:e IIId paprika.

Preferred Stock formerly Somebody Goofed Jean Shop

110 1:. College • Downtown • Iowa City M-F 10-9, SAT, 10-5:30, SUN. 12-5

rowa gym-ne.ft 354-5781

Toddler & Preschool GymnastiCS

• Specialized Instruc­tion & Equipment

• Convenient A.M. or P.M. Class Times

.• Free Door Front Parking • Iowa's Largest, and Most

Complete Gymnastic Facility

Classes start this week

DOMINO'S PIZZA WELCOMES YOU TO

University 0' Iowa There are some known facts about college studants: FACT ·Pizza becomes a primary staple 01 studenls' diels. FACT -Studanls olten run low on cash. FACT-SludanIS ihal wor!< need scheduling 10 wor!< around Iheir personal

and school schedules. FACT-When students are not in classes or studying - they want 10 have

FUN! There are also some known facls about Domino's Pizza: FACT· We offer employee pizza discounlS. FACT-Delivery Specialists have Ihe potenlial to earn $6.00·$10.00 per

hour. ' FACT·We offer flexible scheduling, whelher it's an hour a day or 40 hours

per week. FACT·Our employees wor!< as a team - and we have a BLASTI Prerequisites: Ail employees must be at least 18 years 01 age, have a valid drivers license and a good driving record. Delivery Specialists must also have aulo Insurance and a Vehicle. Here's one more FACT, qualilied applicanls will recei\'e one smalt, one topping pizza free I

~7.~NO;';~~~N'

'.

______ ---.::...:.....;.. ___ --.:..._~.:...._ __ _=_ _________ n6W01 '(1160 OOT ____ .....:......... ______ ~_. __ ...,

It."'" . At .gRq 1\1 ~M =~~T

oeer .a 1sdmslqs2 "~6be,urtT awol \01,~ IRILLI!D I> ~ ____________________________________ ~ ______________ ~~:~r

THEAMERlCAN HEART ASSOCIATION

MEMORIAL PR<ERAM.

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~~74 or see us at qort2 'P0m 242.

Nationl John K

Nort talk By Pllul Shin The AssociatE

L. S( Korea an

, South dents a ate cises with th, step towan between the r

During th between the North and So also demandl stop efforts Nations sepal

I do so would division .

·We view t very serious connected wi! tHis conferel Premier Yon stopped sh( demands a pl talks, but I Korlla might premiers' tal contact betwe since 1945.

Theprimer and opened f day. They a Friday. If all meet again N6rth Korean

Virtually a proposals m~ been issued 1 to face betwe the rival Com

• governments. "This is a h

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,,", IS audi­:>no

__ ------------________ ~ ___________________________________ TheDaI~~an--------------------------~--------__ ~~ ________________ ~

NationlWorld editor John Kenyon, 335-5864 Natiol1/World Page 5j

Thursday, September 6,1990

North and South Korea talk in historic meeting By P.ul Shin The Associated Press

SEO L, South Korea - North Korea anded Wednesday that South ea release jailed dissi-dents stop joint military exer-cises with the United States as a step toward easing tensions between the rival nations.

During the historic meeting between the prime ministers of North and South Korea, the North also demanded that South Korea stop efforts to enter the United Nations separately, saying that to do 80 would perpetuate national division.

said the South's unification minis­ter, Hong Sung-chul. "This time, responsible authorities have made proposals. From this point on, South Korea can consider North Korean proposals .in earnest.n

As Wednesday's meeting was under way, about 1,000 radical students marched through Seoul, shouting anti-U.S.,I anti­government slogans and hurling rocks and firebombs at riot police.

"No prime ministers' tal ks without release of unification prisoners!" shouted the students at Seoul National University. "U.S. troops, get out!~ they chanted.

••

I Member of Politburo ".

threatens resignation , '

By Brian Friedman The Associated Press

MOSCOW -Armenia's Commun­ist Party chief has threatened to quit the Soviet Politburo unless President Mikhail Gorbachev can restore order in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, news reports said Wednesday.

tIes between residents of the two' Caucasus republics over who should control the area have left more than 200 people dead the' past two years.

Vladimir Movsisyan, the Com­munist Party leade.r of Armenia, said in an appeal published in the republic's newspapers Wednesday that indifference and indecision on the part of the Soviet leadership have' given Azerbaijan's leaders u a free hand to pursue an antj­Armenian policy," according to the independent Interfax news service.

"We view these as very urgent, very serious matters ... di rectly connected with the future fate of this conference,~ North Korean

Riot police fired tear gas to block the students from marching off campus. Several students and police were injured and at least five students were arrested.

A South Korean plainclothes policeman pushes • North Korean TV cameraman while he films South Korean student leadera' attempts to meet the North Kore.n Premier In Seoul Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the Armenian parlia­ment passed a resolution com­plaining that citizens of the pre­dominantly Armenian territory located inside the neighboring republic of Azerbaijan are having their rights trampled upon, the Tass news agency reported.

"The Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh continues to be subject to terror on the part of Azerbaijani authoriti s, assisted by units of the Soviet army and Interior Ministry troops," Tass quoted the resolution as saying.

It quoted him as saying misinfOl;­mation circulated about Arme­nians' "aggressive activity~ in Azerbaijan bas put . the two republics on the verge of war.

Movsisyan, who as the republic's Communist Party leader is a mem­ber of the Soviet Politburo, threatened to resign unless thfl Nagorno-Karabakh issue is solved as soon as possible so that Arme­nian lives in the region are pro­tected, Tass and Interfax reported.

I Premier Yon Hyong Muk said. Yon stopped short of calling the demands a precondition for future talks, but he indicated North Kor~a might stall progress of the premiers' talks, the highest-Ieve) contact between the hostile nations since 1945.

The prime ministers met Tuesday and opened formal talks Wednes­day. They are to continue until Friday. If aU goes well, they will meet again next month in the North Korean capital.

Virtually all the demands and proposals made Wednesday have been issued before, but never face to face between representatives of the rival Communist and capitalist governments.

"This is a historic turning point,"

In addition, eight radicals were arrested for staging illegal demon­strations in front of the hotel where the prime ministers were meeting. A North Korean televi­sion cameraman trying to film the scene was roughed up by riot police trying to stop him. He was not i1'\iured.

The radical students, a small but vocal minority in South Korea, oppose the presence of the 43,000 U.S. troops in their country, saying it hinders chances for unification of North and South Korea.

South Korean officials said the demands made by North Korea were internal matters but that some might be discussed further at a closed North-South session.

South Korean Premier Kang

Young-hoon opened Wednesday's meeting with a set of proposals calling for mutual recognition of both governments and peaceful co-existence until unification is achieved.

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Kang proposed both sides initiate multilateral non-political exchanges as a first step toward building confidence. North Korea insisted that political and military matters be tackled first.

A state of emergency is in effect in the mountainous region, part of Azerbaijan since 1923. Ethnic bat-

Whend~ a date

beCome a crime?

It happens when a man forces a woman to have sex against her will.

.\

And even when it involves college srudents, it's still considered a criminal offense. A felony, Punishable by prison. So if yOl,l want to keep a good time from ruming into a bad one) try to keep this in mind. When does a date become a crime? When she says "No." And he refuses to listen.

Against her will is against the law. RAPE VlCllM ADVOCACY PROGRAM

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SA NAnoNiWORLD The Daily Iowan Thursday, September 6,1990

Briefly Secord testifies against f0rmer CIA man Assoc:lated Prell

Did you hear the one about ... POINT LOOKOUT, Mo. - So you think it's been a hot summer

where you live? Pity the folks in Nebraska, where it's been so hot. fanners have had to feed their chickens cracked ice to keep them from laying hard-boiled eggs.

Talk about hot - an Iowa fanner says the sun was so intense one day his oornfield exploded into fluffy white clouds of popoorn. His cattle thought it was snowing and froze solid on the spot.

Sure, everyone oomplains about the weather, but one man has finally done something about it.

Fred Pfister, an English professor at College of the Ourka in Point Lookout, has compiled a list of tall weather tales - he cans them "weather windies~ - that he's heard on his travels around the oountry.

Pfister, a native of Missouri's Ozarks, began jotting down outrageous weather sayings "just for kicks~ about 20 years ago. He spins the best of the 50 or 60 weather windies in his repertoire at speaking engagements around the region.

"All these sayings don't do you any good, but they're kind of nice things to know at parties,n Pfister quipped.

Rejected black veteran a legionnaire FLORENCE, S.C. - An American Legion post that rejected a

black Vietnam veteran Cor membership two months ago beca'\,se of his race has admitted the man after his second application.

The Fred H. Sexton Post 1 approved the membership of Thurman Thompson, 39, during a closed-door meeting Tuesday night. Members said the vote was 17-1. Post oommander Allen Stein said he did not know who cast the dissenting vote.

"Ijust want to go back to being Thunnan L. Thompson Jr., Who happens to be a member of the American Legion,n the U.S. Navy veteran said after the meeting. ~I just wanted to be a member and work toward helping the veterans and the community."

He said telephone calls and letters of encouragement from around the oountry persuaded him to apply again.

Thompson, a Naval Reservist waiting to see if he will be ordered to the Middle East, said he looks forward to watching and participating in the American Legion basebalJ program.

No more teachers - Just rakes - for now CHERRYFIELD, Maine - Students in two school districts

traded in their books for rakes to help harvest a bumper crop of wild blueberries, giving them a reprieve on the start oC classes.

This year's crop already exceeds the record 52.3 miUion pounds harvested in 1988, officials say. And it's more than double the 26 million pounds processed last year, they say.

As a resull, hundreds of students in the Cherryfield and Machias area in eastern Maine, who were scheduled to return to school Wednesday, won't go back to classes until Monday.

"The crop is unusually large, and the blueberry industry means a great deal to the economy of this area,n said William Clark, superintendent of School Union 102 in Machias.

The school district that serves Cherryfield and eight neighbor­ing towns agreed in late June to a request by blueberry processors to move back the start of the school year to acoommodate what was already shaping up to be a bountiful harvest.

Quoted ... The children of Iraq, before the rest of the nation, refuse th.at we beg for the milk which they need from the infidels and shamel ss.

- Saddam Hussein, Iraqi president, in a message to fellow Arab nations regarding the UN blockade against Iraq. See story, page 1A.

Drugs Continued from page 1A '- ----from won.

"There is still too much violence, too much destruction, too many innocent victims," he told a gathering of staff and reporters. "Drugs are still an international menace."

And he oommitted his administra­tion to "remain on the front lines until this scourge is licked for good," even as the government seems preoccupied with the Per­sian Gulf crisis.

"I know that other subjects preoc· cupy aU of us these days. But this one remains No. I, will continue to remain No. 1 when the interna­tional situation has calmed down,n Bush said.

The president said that signs oC progress included Afllericans' increasing hostility toward drugs, declines in casual drug use, law

enforcement successes at home and in Latin America and the reduction in cocaine supplies.

Cocaine, Bush said, is "harder to find, more expensive, less pure than it was just one year ago."

Conyers, however, urged revising the federal drug budget to spend as much on treatment and prevention as is spent on law enforcement. The current split is almost 70 percent for law enforcement with the remainder going for treatment and prevention.

Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., chair­man of the Senate Judiciary Com­mittee, released a report citing some successes of the drug war and some failures, including an increased number oC murders this year, inadequate drug education and lack. oC treatment Cor pregnant or incarcerated addicts.

By Deb Rlechmann The Associated Press

BALTIMORE - Richard Secord testified Wednesday that a Conner CIA agent shared in lran-Contra anna sale profits, but that records of the weapons deals ·were cooked" after the scandal became public.

The retired Air Force major gen­eral was the lead-{)ff witness in the government's tax case against Tho,. mas Clines, the retired CIA agent who is accused of under-reporting

Borne of his anns sale earnings on his 1985 and 1986 tax returns.

The trial in U.S. District Court focuses on profits during the Iran­Contra affair, which involved the sale of anns to Iran and efforts to supply weapons to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua at a time when Congress banned such assistance.

Clines, 62, of Middleburg, Va., also is charged with failing to tell the Internal Revenue Service about overseas financial accounts. If con­victed, he faces up to 16 years in prison and fines of up to $1 million.

Hostage Terry Anderson, confined for 2,000th day By Mohammed Salam The Associated Press

BEIRUT, Lebanon - American journalist Terry Anderson marked another grim milestone Wednesday in his 5'h years in captivity: his 2,OOOth day 88 8 hos.tage.

Anderson, 42, chieC Middle East correspondent of The Associated Press, is the longest-held of the six Americans, four Britons, two West Germans and one Italian who are caPtives in Lebanon. Most are held by pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim mili­tants.

Anderson, of Lorain, Ohio, was kidnapped in Muslim west Beirut on March 16, 1985, by Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War.

The last information on Anderson came from former Irish hostage Brian Keenan, who said after his release Aug. 24 that he had seen Anderson during his four years in captivity.

"I saw Terry Anderson some time ago. He's in good fonn," Keenan said after he was Creed by a group calling itself the Organization of Islamic Dawn.

The Irishman said he spent part of his time in captivity with Ander­son, noting they were in chains and blindfolded much of the time.

Keenan said Anderson "appreci­ates the letters that he received from his family. He has a picture of his daughter, Sulome, which is

some great companionship Cor him."

Sulome, Anderson's younger daughter, has never met her Cather. She was born nearly three months after he was kidnapped.

Lebanese newspapers have pub­lished several pictures and letters from Sulome, her Lebanese mother, Madeleine, and the hos­tage's sister, Peggy Say.

In Dublin, the papal nuncio to Ireland pleaded with Iran's outgo­ing ambassador on Wednesday to undertake all possible efforts to obtain the release of the remaining Western hostages in Lebanon.

"I am certain that you will do aU in your power to see that innocent human beings, oC no matter what nationality .. . held captive against their will, shall be enabled to regain the freedom, the dignity to which they have a right," Arch­bishop Emmanuel Gerada said during a farewell reception on Wednesday Cor Iranian Ambassa­dor Bahram Ghassemi.

Ghassemi, who is taking up a post in the Iranian Foreign Ministry, was widely credited with assisting in obtaining the release of Keenan.

Islamic Jihad and other Shiite kidnappers are linked to Hezbol­lab, or Party of God. The fun­damentalist movement is Iran's main ally in Lebanon and is closely linked with radical figures in Teh­ran.

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Announcement of Awards for Teaching AssistantS

September 1990

The University of Iowa Council on Thaching announces the fourth annual award for teaching assis­tants, The Outstanding 'leaching Assistant Award, and invites nominations for 1990. This fall the Council will administer 55 awards of $1000 each, along with a certifICate, to 'leaching Assistants who have demonstrated outstanding ability as teachers at The University of Iowa.

Teaching Assistants from all academic units may be nominated for these awards. Because of the wide diversity of teaching activities in which the Teaching Assistants engage across the University, nominees need ceni.fy only that they have formal student contact during the 1990 calendar year (Spring. Summer, FaU semesters 1990) as pan of their duties. Recipients of the 198~-90 award may not be nominated this year, however, recipients from 1988-89 may be nominated.

Nominations may be initiated by students, faculty, colleagues, departmental executive officers, or deans. The nomination must include a statement of support from the candidate's faculty supervisor and the departmental executive officer as well as statements of support from students.

Nomination forms and criteria are available from the CounciJ on Teaching (114 Jessup Hall) and must be received in that office by Friday. October 19 at 5:00 p.m Nomination fonns are also available from Health Center Infonnation and Commu­nication, 283 Med Labs. Please contact Belinda Marner (335-0048) or any member of the Council on Teaching for further w~on. .

University Council on Teaching

Secord pleaded guilty lastyeartoa procure the inCantry weapons that felony count oC making false state- were needed. n ments to the Iran-Contra congres- Clines often worked out of a sional committees. He was '-'Ien- "closet office" in Lisbon, Portugal, tenced in January to two years' he said. probation. Clines initially received 20 percent

Secord said he asked Clines in of the profits, and began receiving early 1985 to help obtain weapons 30 percent in 1986, Secord said. for the rebels fighting the Sandi- . The remaining shares went to nista government in Nicaragua. Secord, Iranian-born businessman

Secord said Clines agreed. "He Albert Hakim and various compa­m~naged the p.rocurement/ he nies, the general testified. sood. "He used hIS contacts m the Prosecutors claim Clines received Communist East Bloc of Europe about $882,000 in commissions in and western part of Europe to the arms deals.

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, Sununu advises Soviets , on free market economy

WASHINGTON - White House chief of staff John Sununu said Wednesday his behind-the-scenes view of the Kremlin convinced him there is no turning bac:k from the ~oviet Union's march to free mar­ket reforms.

"Not once 'n any of our discussions ~id the 'communism' come up. Not said Sununu, who pent five ays in Moscow and

)..eningrad advising the Soviets on how to organize their rapidly ehanging government.

"We didn't fmd anybody who wanted to turn back" from free­market reforms, Sununu said in an

• -lnterview with news agency repor­~rs, his first since returning from he late August trip. Even amid internal divisions,

"they were all looking for ways to ~ut the free market into place, ",ays to put private ownership into ,lace," he said.

'"l'bey know that they've got to go 10 a market economy. The debate was how fast," said Sununu.

Sununu, an engineer by training lDd former governor of New Hamp· ,hire, had never visited the Soviet Union before. He left with vivid impressions of a people with a wann sense of humor and anti­~uated telephones.

"The interesting thing about the Soviet Union to me is that they don't have push-button phones like we do. Every extension has a phone," said Sununu.

The Soviets, including Mikhail Shkabardnya, a top aide to the Soviet Council of Ministers, had !liready gotten sugges'tions from the Americans during a visit by efficiency experts to Washington in June to discuss how to organize Gorbachev's presidential office, deal with members of the legisla­ture and other matters.

Instead of plotting the best way to route memoranda, participants in Sununu's meetings in Moscow and Leningrad often turned to more philosophical discussions about the future relationship between Mos­cow and its increasingly independent-minded republics, Sununu said.

Soviet citizens are going through a debate like the one "our country went through about 2lO years as we worked from the Articles of Confederation to our own Constitu­tion."

The framers of the U.S. Constitu­tion had to go back and "convince the states that they ought to give up all the powers they had to the new central government," said Sununu, slightly overstating what the federalists actually did from 1787 to 1789 - convince people

John Sununu "Soviets won't turn back"

that the states had to yield some powers to the new central govern­ment but keep other powers for themselves.

In the Soviet Union, on the other hand, "they're trying to convince the federal government to give back all the powers to the republ­ics," Sununu said. "But the same issues are being debated: the issue of currency, the issue of the banks, the issue of who owns the resour­ces within the lands."

Sununu and his group met with Boris Yeltsin, the ex-communist party maverick and president of the Russian Republic, as well' as Yazov, Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze and other top Soviet officials.

Gainesville search continues GAINESVILLE, Fla. -A forensic

~pecialist said Wednesday that the lhree apartments where the bodies -af five college students were found fere "the most difficult" crime Scenes he has ever seen.

Dr. Michael West made the com­I V1ent after hunting for fingerprints

at the apartments with high-tech lquipment. West, a dentist and ~eputy medical examiner from Hattiesburg, Miss., said the apart­ments gave clues of a careful, cautious killer.

"I've never been associated with a trime scene that had so many violent attacks and so little evi­dence left behind," West said. Pfhis individual that perpetrated ih~s~ crimes is not your average criminal. He's very methodical, and very neat. He doesn't leave any traces of his presence in the crime scenes." , Students in Gainesville remem­bered their dead classmates at a memorial service in a lO,OOO-seat ,ports center. Also Wednesday, the University of Florida announced lcholarsnips in memory of the students.

Three of the victims were students , at the University of Florida and

FO were from Santa Fe Commu­ruty CoUege. One of the two had

! later enrolled in the university but

" "ve never been associated with a crime scene that had 50 many violent attacks and 50 little evidence left behind."

Dr. Michael WeISt forensic speclaUst

hadn't attended classes. Their bodies were found late last month.

"We are struggling with the con­flicting emotions of grief, anger and fear," college President John Lombardi told about 600 people attending the memorial service, . Larry Tyree, president of Santa Fe Community College, said. "With each horrible tragedy ... the sense of helplessness has grown in each of us."

As the grisly job of examining evidence and looking for a killer continued, investigators divulged more brief glimpses into what they have learned about the crimes.

West used an experimental reflec­tive ultraviolet imaging system that intensifies light .70,000 times to examine two of the three crime scenes Tuesday for fingerprints; he returned Wednesday to look at the

final apartment. The Miami Herald on Wednesday

quoted sources as saying the killer cruelly posed his victims for maxi­mum shock value.

The killer placed Santa Fe Com­munity College student Christa Hoyt's severed head in the direct line of vision of anyone entering the apartment and positioned a mirror in one of the apartments to show the victim's body to any passerby who happened to look in the window, the Herald reported.

The killer also reportedly poured bleach onto the genitals of the four female victims in an apparent attempt to confuse investigators about whether the women were sexually assaulted, the newspaper said. Police would not confirm the report.

Fluids removed from the murder scenes are being subjected to sophisticated DNA testing. Those tests are to be completed in a few days.

The bodies of Sonja Larson, 18, and Christina Powell , 17, were found Aug. 26. The body of Christa Hoyt, 19, was found the next day; the bodies of Tracy Paules, 23, and Manuel Taboada, 23, were found Aug. 28.

"This is the most difficult erime • I

scene I've ever seen," s81d West, who has been a medical examiner for 13 years.

~cid rain study completed

WASHINGTON - A $537 million, decade-long tudy ordered by Congress concluded Thursday that

acid rain should be "viewed as a long-term problem" requiring pollution controls but is not the environ­mental crisis some scientists have suggested.

The report by the National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program was embraced both by those

ho support steep cuts in sulfur dioxide emissions and by critics of such cuts. The critics have long claimed that severe pollution controls, costing as much 8S $5 billion a year, are an overreaction to the .cid rain problem.

In its fmal draft report, the scientific group, known 8 NAPAP, reiterated that pollution-control mea­

.ures are needed to return hundreds of lakes and ~treams - especially in the Northeast and the

mid-Atlantic states - to healthy conditions. The report also acknowledged that acid rain affects

visibility across much of the East; causes damage to some forests, particularly red spruce at higher elevations; reduces soil nutrients; kills some aquatic life; erodes buildings and statues; and poses health problems to some humans exposed to acidic aerosols.

James Mahoney, director of NAPA, outlined the draft report to a final meeting of the group and said its findings have "reduced the scientific uncertain­ties" about acid rain.

"Acid rain is correctly viewed as a long-term problem which should be resolved by permanent measures," he concluded, summarizing the findings.

Mahoney said that while the study supports many of the scientific views expressed over the years on acid rain it also rejected other, "more extreme views" such as those that consider it "a flat-out crisis" or those "who would say there's no problem at alL"

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The Daily Iowan - Thursday, September 6, 1990 NATIONIWORLD

Shuttle launch delayed again By Marcia Dunn The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -NASA scrubbed the launch of space shuttle Columbia for the third time after discovering a leak as liquid hydrogen and liquid oxy· gen were being poured into the fuel tank on Wednesday.

The decision was made after unac­ceptably high concentrations of hydrogen were found in the shut­tle's aft compartment, said space agency spokeswoman Lisa Malone.

The launch crew immediately began trying to isolate the leak. No new launch date was set.

"We will continue with loading liquid hydrogen on board the orbi­ter and to the external tank in an attempt to determine the location of the leak," Malone said.

The first launch was scrubbed in May because of a hydrogen leak; the second because of problems communicating with one of the instruments aboard . .

In the three months since the first leak was discovered, NASA has

tested and retested the lines between the fuel tank and its three shuttles. The line being used on Columbia is new, having been taken from the orbiter Endeavour, which is under construction in California.

The leak Wednesday wasn't in the area of that line, NASA said.

Columbia was to have carried an array of four telescopes into orbit. Four astronomers were in the crew of seven, The launch, with the $150 million Astro observatory aboard, had been scheduled for 1:20 a.m. EDT.

"Dozens of us are dying to see this thing get launched," said Arthur Davidsen, principal investigator of one of Astro's four telescopes.

Assigned to command the nine- to 10-day mission was veteran astro­naut Vance Brand, who at age 59 would become the oldest person to fly in space.

It was only the fifth time NASA scheduled a shuttle launch at night and the fll'st shuttle mission in five years devoted entirely to scientific research.

"The potential for discovery is tremendous," said program scien-­tist Ed Weiler.

Speaking to NASA employees via closed-circuit television from the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Vice President Dan Quayle called the mission ·cutting-edge space activity."

He said that despite its recent problems, NASA is up to doing the job it was assigned to do.

"Take it from a guy who knows a lot about unwarranted criticism," he said. "Once they pile it on, they j~st don't know when to stop."

Columbia's journey into space, which would be the 36th flight of a shuttle and the first one in more than four months, was supposed to have been in May but was delayed when hydrogen leaked during fueling. Atlantis later was found to have a similar problem.

After replacing Columbia's leaky fuel lines, NASA had to halt its second launch attempt because of communications problems with the . X-ray telescope inside the cargo bay last week.

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SA ARTS/EN i ERTAINMENT The Daily Iowan Thursday, September 6,1990

Minnesota invasion blows in this weekend to Gabe's Oasis By John Kenyon The Daily Iowan

T he Minneapolis music scene has moved in -and oh, what a joy it is to be in Iowa City to take it

all in. Now that chool across the land

are ba.ck in session, band have built-in audiences in college towns - and club Uke our own Gabe's Oasis (lOcated at 330 E. Washing­ton St., for the uninitiated) are again bringing in some quality talent. Doors to this beloved shrine open at 9 p.m., and 19- and 20-year-olds can get in - but you'd better not get caught drinkin'.

Music

Two of the most talented exports from our friends north of the border, the Jayhawks and the Magnolias, will grace Gabe's humble stage Friday and Saturday nights respectively. In a state where the lie n. e plates could read ·Iand of 10 thousand bands," a breath of fre h ir blows south in the form of these outfits.

Most refreshing of the two are the Jayhawks, a group beyond defini­tion. The term "country-rock" comes to mind, but that conjures up images of the Eagles and Pure Prairie League. Obviously we won't be using the term "country-rock."

The greate t comparison, and com­pliment, to the band is to compare it to the po t-Byrds vision of the

Flying Burrito Brothers. Making music with the same sentiment present when Hank Williams Sr. was country music, coupling that with chilling hannonies, the Burri­to ' sound was a hybrid of sorts. In much the same way, the Jayhawks take up where the Burritos left ofT - upda~ing the sound where it may seem dated.

The Jayhawks' songs, thankfully, would never make it sandwiched between offerings from Hank Williams Jr. and T.G. Sheppard.

The group's latest LP, "Blue Earth," is a seemin gly flawless masterpiece. There just doesn't seem to be anything around like it. Songs like "Dead End Angel" and "Ain't No End" seem like they were conceived for play on rural country radio, to be listened to while driving. But these songs, thankfully, would never make it sandwiched between offerings from Hank Williams Jr. and T.G. Shep­pard. They seem to be something that the band spent some time crafting - not just formulated rousing honky-tonk favorites. But they are great driving songs.

Live, the 'Hawks are stellar. It seems ama.zing that four guys and

four instruments can make music this good and seem to have so much fun. A definite must-see. Opening the show will be Iowa City's own pop-meisters, Big Citi­un.

On a louder note, the Magnolias bring their twin-guitar buzzbomb attack into town Saturday. If there were Ii typical Minneapolis sound, this is it. Soul Asylum, before assuming the position of polished corporate sellouts, is a good com­parison. The self·depreciating humor of the 'Mats and Soul Asylum is also present.

"Dime Store Dream" fi nds the Mags at the critical "third album stage" of their career. Actually there is no such stage, and it is not critical, but it is a bit more pol­ished in spots than on their last two records. Fun poUshed songs on a Mags record translate into joyous loudness live, making this the second must-see show in a row.

Another treat Saturday will be the presence of St. Louis natives Uncle Tupelo. They too draw Soul Asy­lum refences for their use of country-punk tendencies. We can use t he term "count ry-pu nk" because that doesn't conjure up images of the Eagles or Pure Prairie League (at least, it can be hoped not).

Their latest offering to the vinyl gods is "No Depression" - a fitting title for an enjoyable album. No word on their live shows, but based on their recorded output, it should be a good one.

Two great nights, many great bands - and on the same weekend as Trenchtown Rockin' 11. Better take out a student loan.

'Ghost' a surprising success By John Horn The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES - "Ghost," once considered a vanishing act next to the summer blockbusters, outlived all of them to do as the sum­mer's biggest smash and the top hit of the Labor Day weekend.

The spectral love tory starring Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore and Whoopi Goldberg took in $]0 mil­lion over the holiday weekend, Exhibitor Relations Co. reported Tuesday.

The superhero nick "Darkman" took second place over the weekend with $7.9 million, followed by the courtroom thriller "Presumed Innocent," which made $5.9 mil­lion.

"Ghost" has made more money than any other film released th.is summer, grossing $125 million ince it opened July 20. Seven films had more lucrative-

opening weeks: "Total Recall," "Die Hard 2: Die Harder," "Dick Tracy," "Back to the Future Part Ill,' "Another 48 HRS.," "Days of Thunder" and "Bird on a Wire."

But in the end, business for all seven rilins declined while "Ghost" remained relatively steady.

Overall, this summer was the second biggest in Hollywood his­tory, with North American movie­goers spending about $1.85 billion.

Box·office analyst A. D. Murphy of Daily Variety said Tuesday that the summer's gross represented a 9 percent decline from last year's record $2.04 biUion.

Among the more surprising fai­lures this season was "Days of Thunder," which scarcely broke the $80 million mark. Paramount blamed the collapse of the Tom Cruise movie on the historical unpopularity of race-car movies.

Disappointing returns were also reported by qGremlin8 2: The New Batch," "Ghost Dad ," "Quick

Change," "My Blue Heaven," "Cadillac Man," "Air America," "Fire Birds," "The Adventures of Ford Fairlane," "Betsy's Wed­ding," "The Two Jakes~ and "RoboCop 2.-

The summer's top 10 fUms, in order, were "Ghost," $125 million; "Total Recall ," $116.7 million; "Die Hard 2: Die Harder,~ $109.7 million; "Dick Tracy," $103.7 mil­lion; "Back to the Future Part III," $84.1 million; "Days of Thunder," $80.6 million; "Another 48 HRS.," $79.1 million; "Bird on a Wire," $70 miliion; "Presumed Innocent," $67.4 m.illion; and "Arachnopho­bia," $48.4 million.

"Pretty Woman" made $59.5 mil­lion during the summer but was a spring release, opening March 23.

Figures are based on a combina­tion of actual box-office receipts and studio projections where actual figures are not immediately available.

Court SUpports Mapplethorpe show The Associated Press

BOSTON - Opponents of the Robert Mapplethorpe photo exhibit lost a bid in court Wednesday to halt the show they say violates obscenity laws.

Boston Municipal Clerk Magis­trate Rosemary Carr denied three complaints against the exhibit, which would have prompted an investigation by the district attor­ney.

Carr said, "Personally, 1 wouldn't pay five cents" for the pictures, but she moved quickly to deny the request by the American Family Association.

The group had sought a rul ing that the exhibit - which includes nude photos of children - is exploitative, constitutes dissemina­tion of obscene materials and diss8-

mination of matter harmful to minors.

Lesley Pasquini, who filed the complaints against the Institute of Contemporary Art, said members of her group will discuss their next step. "We're going to keep making people aware of what's going on and what's being pushed before the public," she said.

But museum attorney Cassandra Warshowsky said the exhibit is protected.

"There is an exemption in the obscenity statutes for exhibitions in a bona fide museum, school or library," Warshowsky said. "In addition to that, this exhibit is fully protected under the Constitu­tion - the First Amendment."

The Mapplethorpe photos first went on display at the museum five weeks ago.

Seven photographs, including one of a nude boy and another of a partially nude girl, were the sub­ject of the complaint. Opponents objected to the juxtaposition of pictures of nude children next to pictures of nude men.

"They're the most bizarre, per­verted photos I have ever seen," said Evelyn Dubel of Morali ty in Media.

In Cincinnati, the Contemporary Arts Center and its director were charged with a misdemeanor count of pandering obscenity for display­ing homoerotic pictures in the exhibit, which also includes por· traits and stilJ liles of flowers.

Outrage over the photos contrib­uted to restrictions on federal funding for the arts. '

Mapplethorpe died last year at age 42 of AIDS.

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____ --------__________ ~----~~~------____ ~ ____ ~~~TheDaUy~an--~--------~--------------------------~---------------Arts/Entertainment editor Steve Cruse, 335-5851

Philharmonic thrills ·audience at Hancher By Jennifer Weglarz The Daily Iowan

~ening with the fined yet lively Viv­

aldi "Concerto for Three Violins and

Orchestra," the New York Phil­harmonic last Thursday delighted the Hancher audience in a concert surprising in its brevity and excitement.

Zubin Mehta directed a chamber group and soloists Yoko Takebe, Kerry McDermott and Fiona

, Simon in a reading of the Vivaldi that, like the ever-steady conti­nuo, ticked away like clockwork - but as seamlessly as no clock­work ever could.

Closing the short first half was Bartok's "The Miraculous Man­darin: a piece written for a pantomime in which a girl lures men into a room where her companions beat and rob them. The final victim, the Mandarin, won't die. The fantastical score

• highlights the girl's dance, the \ abortive attacks and the Manda­

rin's struggle; the Philhannonic alone painted a picture fresh and vibrant in color and tone. "The Miraculous Mandarin" show­cased all the musicians. but,

against a backdrop of plucking and glissing strings, the brass and winds got to strut their stuff as the dancing girl, attacking ruffians and the resilient Manda­rin.

With the auditorium growing warmer, the musicians returned for the Brahms in short sleeves sans jackets, prompting many in the audience to wonder aloud: "Will Zubin Mehta take his oW" But the maestro remained digni­fied for the "Symphony No. 1 in C minor," clad in suit jacket.

With lovely solos from the oboe and clarinet, the piece moved through patches of sunlight and darkness, moments of sweeping passion and pastoral calm. '

After a several-minutes-Iong standing ovation, Mehta (finally cracking a smile) led the orchestra in a spirited Strauss polka, followed by another standing ovation. During the sec­ond encore, the boisterous "Thunder and Lightning," Mehta and the principal cellist hammed for the audience. The audience, on its feet once more, would have demanded encores ad infinitum, but the visibly wilting musicians, in 8 slight lull in the ovation, made a break for the wings.

Hollywood film star Dunne 'dies of heart attack at age 88 The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES - Irene Dunne, the alluring star of Hollywood tear-jerkers, musicals and screw­ball comedies in the 1930s and '40s such as "Showboat" and "I Remember Mama," died Tuesday at age 88.

Dunne, who died of heart failure at her home, was among the most sought after and highest paid stars during her Hollywood heyday, appearing opposite such leading men as William Powell, Cary Grant and Charles Boyer.

She used her fme comic timing in Buch comedies as "The Awful Truth~ and "My Favorite Wife." She sang in such musicals as "Roberta" and "Show Boat" and acted in the tear-jerkers "Magnifi­cent Obsession" and "Back Street."

Dunne was nominated for Oscars five times, for "Cimarron," 1930, "Theodora Goes Wild," 1936, "The Awful Truth," 1937, "Love Affair," 1939, and "1 Remember Mama," 1948.

Miss Dunne married a dentist, Francis Griffm, in 1920.

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Page9A Thursday, September 6, 1990

Ie artist finds 'spirit' in color Pelanie's nonconformist art enlivens traditional media By Suaan Stapleton The Daily Iowan

O n her birth certificate, she's Mary Elizabeth Grover.

Olose friends call her Mimi

But those who follow her artwork know her simply by her spiritual name: Pelanie.

The Iowa City artist said she was told the name several years ago by a woman who spoke in a man's voice while in a trance-like state. She remembered the name and now signs all of her artwork and novels with it.

"Pelanie is supposed to be my spiritual name. Things from the heart and the hands are aU spir­itual," she said.

Described as a "colorist" by those familiar with her art, Pelanie works in watercolors and oils to create her visions of bold color statements. A friend once told her, "I wish I could can your freedom."

in painting. I'm writing a novel now and the only way I1l make

. money is if it's turned into a movie," she said.

Though she took no art classes until the eighth grade, Pelanie feels she was always an artist and stayed in the field.

"My father called me the artist as a child. He was an art collector," she said.

Pelanie received her bachelor's degree in creative arts writing from Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. Antioch provided a unique opportunity for Pelanie.

"They had a work-study program where you had to balance your work and study. It gave you free­dom to shop for a job and travel during college," she said. One of the more interesting jobs she held during her time at Antioch was as a secretary to the ambassador of Iran at the U.N.

In 1985, Pelanie received her mas­ter's degree in library science from the UI. After graduation, she

"There are more instant rewards in painting .... I get a natural high out of my own head .... Some people really like my portraits; I really get my hands into it."

Pelanl. Iowa CIty artlat

began doing research for a histori­cal novel based on the 1813 penin­sular war against Colonel Welling­ton in Spain.

The Oaily lowarvVavid Greltdy

Iowa City artist Pelanle la aurrounded In her apartment by her many wortta, Including watercolors and 011 paintings.

Recently, Pela'nie has been inducted into the 1989 edition of American Artists: An illustrated Survey of Leading Contemporaries, a national directory of artists.

She's not sure how she got into the directory, which will be sold in museums nationwide.

"I sent slides of my artwork to a group of California artists . . . , They must have sent them to the writers of the directory, because they just called for background infonnation, slides and a review of my artwork."

my youngest sends things to help inspire my art. It touches me that they're behind me," she said.

PeJanie's most recent exhibit was \allt Ju\y m the Boyd To'Wel We$\. Lobby in the U1 Hospitals and Clinics. She's anxious to exhibit on the East and West coasts, concen­trating on California, New York City and Santa Fe.

"There's more recognition of I1rt in this area," she said.

Working alone on her kitchen counter in a tiny apartment, Pela­nie doesn't always know how peo­ple will react to her artwork until it's exhibited. She gets many of her ideas through meditation, explain­ing, "I get a natural high out of my own head."

Pelanie started painting in 1986 and had her first show within a year. "Some people really like my portraits," she said. "I really get my hands into it."

"The characters in the novel have to have their story told," she said. "Originally it was a children's Pelanie, who was married for 20 novel about the Basques ... , The ' years, has five children. She adult characters took over from the describes the oldest three as "yup-children's. pies."

Pelanie's past local exhibits helve included displays at Great Mid­western, the Senior Center, The Cottage, the Hawkeye State Bank and Dick Blick Art Materials.

"There are more instant rewards

"The main character is fictional with hopefully an accurate back­drop. It's really hard to research this, ~ she said.

-The FUTURE for SOCIALISM Bush and the U.S. press declare that socialism is dead. Cap~a1ism has won. Yet the fact that millions of people have taken to the streets around the world in the past year in China. Korea, Rumania. Russia, Britain, Germany and Nicaragua shows the capacity of working people to struggle against their bosses and rulers, East and West. THAT IS THE REAL FUTURE FOR SOCIALISM.

SHARON SMITH, will speak on the continuing relevance of socialist ideas in the fight against capitalism. Come join the discussion, and help build the socialist alternative.

Friday, September 7, 7:30 pm Indiana Room, Iowa Memorial Union

-Iowa International Socialist Organization " you nsed special assistanc9 to att9nd this 9v9nt, pleSS9 call 335-1252.

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"My youngest two children are supportive of my artwork. My fourth wanted to he my agent and

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Viewpoints editor Michael Lorenger, 335-5863

SOVIET ECONOMIC REFORM

The Yeltsin plan There are additional signs of economic decay in the Soviet

dis-Union this week. Russian Federation President Boris Yelt8in's plan to provide the 15 Soviet republics with greater economic freedom by loosening restrictions on entrepreneurs and free enterprise is more evidence that President Mikhail Gorbachev's perestroika revolution-from-above is lagging. While the Yelt8in proposal is not the panacea. for the country's economic disease, it is political aspirin that could temporarily provide relief.

If such a proposal is approved, the bureaucratic beast that now restricts every move of the republics will be greatly tamed. For Gorbachev this undoubtedly will mean that his reins of power over the republics will be eliminated. Pere­stroika from the top levels of the Soviet government will have

Gorbachev is currently attempting to carry out his reforms in a bankrupt system that has been misguided by a bankrupt ideology - Marxism -- for more than 70 years.

to adjust and come from outside of Moscow. Though Gorbachev's effectiveness will be severely hampered, it is in his best interest to support his political rival's plan,

The ostensible reason for accepting the proposal is that the Soviet president is currently attempting to carry out his reforms in a bankrupt system that has been misguided by a bankrupt ideology - Marxism - for more than 70 years. Marxism was the doctrine of Lenin's revolutionary Soviet Union. The legacy of Marxism today is the long queues and housing shortages in Gorbachev's crumbling union.

Many Sovietologists have suggested that the remedy may be a loose conglomeration of republics with economic autonomy and political self-determination. Such a formation would also have weak ties to Moscow. Yeltsin's plan comes at a critical stage when the republics abroad are demanding sovereignty and when the populace at home is asking for bread. If Gorbachev is willing to compromise, the plan could hold a number of benefits for his ailing federation and his perestroika.

By allowing greater economic autonomy within the republics, the Yeltsin plan allows for perestroika to take off in the Baltic states where it already has a solid foundation. This injection of free enterprise would not only provide a model for the rest of the federatioh but would also pump badly needed capital into the ailing Soviet economy. Since Moscow is still the chief supplier of gOO<ls and materials to the Baltic Republics, this external perestroika would be in the best interest of both sides.

The Yeltsin proposal is also the first substantive step in granting all the republics greater self-determination. Soviet experts like Richard Pipes and Zbigniew Brzezinski have alleged that the Soviet Union could fragment along nationalis­tic lines in the republics. The Yeltsin plan could placate disgruntled nationalistic elements in the republics by provid­ing them with greater economic freedom and could buy Gorbachev some more time. But, once they are in control of their economic destinies, the republics will assert a greater political will on Moscow.

The 250-page Yeltsin proposal allows 500 days to switch to a free market economy. If Gorbachev and the rest of the republics make a concerted effort to implement the Yeltsin plan, they will loosen the republics' ties to the Soviet federation. A loss of power over the Soviet republics is a small price to pay for avoiding the economic and political mayhem that loom on the horizon for this once 'powerful empire.

Paul Bukta Editorial Writer

Opinions expressed on the Viewpoints page 01 The Dally Iowan are those 01 the signed author. The Dally Iowan, as a non-profit corporation, does not express opinions on these maners.

LeHers Neighborhood blues To the EdItor:

I read with interest Jim Rogers' C9lumn ["The real homeless ques­tion," A~g. 30, Dn, and I wondered what our fair city would look like if his proposal to eliminate zoning were adopted. In short, it would not be a beautiful day in the neighborhood, because the neigh­borhood would be real dumpl No matter how good your own propery looked, who knows what horror might move in next door? Zoning enables the modem city to control Mundesirable" but necessary devel­opment by shunting it into zones.

Imagine the joy of having no illdustrial zone, no commercial zone, no residential zone. Instead, imagine the entrepreneur's dream come true: each man free to use his property as he sees fit without hindrance from his neighbor.

Imagine Mr. Rogers' joy at finding his proposal adopted and the homeless "protected." How long would that joy last? No longer that it takes mp to announce plans for a four-acre meat-packing complex, complete with railhead and stock pens, right next to his house. It would be suitable justice.

Mr. Rogers' proposal woul~ do nothing to help the homeless. Zon­ing will not eliminate the free market. If a specific land use is in

,

demand, it will occur somewhere. If a use is "economically margi­nal," rational people will cease that use in favor of activities yielding greater profit. The aboli­tion of zoning would do nothing to make marginal land use feasible. It would just make the rest of society miserable.

If Mr. Rogers really wants to help the homeless by repealing laws and returning to the "good old days," he should call for refonn of the commitment laws. By eviscerating these laws, the bleeding hearts 'of society forced large numbers of people unable to care for them­seives into the streets. This was done in the name of protecting the civil liberties of the mentally ill and of ssving the states a few bucks in the process. There lies the main source of homelessness. The alleged "evils" of property law have little or nothing to do with the matter.

In short, Mr. Rogers should quit crooning to the homeless, and any other passerby, "Won't you please, won't you please, please won't you be my neighbor?"

Devlct Guerrant towa City

The record shows To the Editor:

We call upon Sen. Harkin to

Viewpoints Pagai0A Thursday, September 6, 1990

LOve thy (political) enemy In "The Concept ofthe PoJjtical" Carl Schmitt

argues that the essential political act is distinguishing between friend and enemy: You love your friend and hate your enemy. Richard Nixon lived this distinction. Watching him walk down the path with Morton Kondracke on the public television special last spring, I could not help but be struck by the ease and adroitness with which Nixon employed the distinction and by how he used it not onJy to justify his own behavior but also to under­stand, even empathize with, his enemies' behavior.

menthal can hardly stand that Nixon is pennitted even a moment's peace -let alone a presidential library. Blumenthal's rage is still so fresh . Could he really have been picking at the scab for all these years, making sure even no scar tissue fonned?

denied that liberalism actually eliminated the distinction - he thought it only hid it and that, therefore, the political became all the more treacherous in liberal societies. ;.

type political enemies, and so he ers no Nixon makes no bones about havin~chmitt.

I grew uncomfortable reading his piece. I {elt that I was intruding into a painful, ugly area of Blumenthal's sou\. He has hated Nixon for so many years, and now, decades later, he has become the thing he hates. The enemy, if not clean to begin with, has become clean over the

inconsistency between philosophy~. raxis. Ah, but Blumenthal, poor B1umen. , is a to>

good liberal, and thus suffers in a way that Nixon does not: Blumenthal denies the essence of himself in his hatred for Nixon. He can't II help it, and that's the problem.

This last point surprised me most. Nixon did not blame his enemies, as he understands their motivation, for acting as enemies. Sev­eral times he said that he would have done the same things they did if he had been in their shoes.

Jim Rogers

By getting Blumenthal to adopt his own political categories of friend and enemy, Nixon already defeated Blumenthal. For in his hatred Blumenthal aflIrms Nixon's crabbed view of the political. I think Blumenthal understands this, and he hates it and hates Nixon for making him hate, but he can't help himself.

Schmitt would have approved. In Nixon's world, political enemies are "clean." For Schmitt the political enemy "need . not be morally evil or aesthetically ugly; he need not appear as an economic competitor ... . " All that is required of the political enemy is that he be "the other, the stranger, ... something different and alien."

Nixon loved this type of politics. He had (or rather, has) a zeal for Machiavellian intrigue. AB Sidney Blumenthal wrote as a recent back-page diarist in The New Republic, "Nix­on's view of history is identical to his own view of himself, a catalog of his resentments and enemies. A Nixon without enemies would not be a Nixon at all."

decades: Nixon is enemy. The sentiment was pure and intense, exquisitely so in the Nixo· nian sense. The expression of this intense rage in his column made even the short piece exhausting to read.

It's as if Nixon and his enemies have con- " demned themselves to live in their own little ~ acoustically separated world. A world where each one's hate is nourished by the other's. And they don't understand why the outside world doesn't regard their life-and-death struggle with anything more than bemuse- , ment.

Of course, as is obvious, Nixon loves his world, Blumenthal reminded me of an unwitting

character in a Flannery O'Connor story: so twisted and ugly, he understands the effect Nixon has had on him but is unable to desire release. He's pitiful but not pitiable.

he revels in it. Blumenthal and those of similar ( ilk don't like it - are pained by it - but they don't seem to know, or desire to know, how to extricate I themselves from the Nixonian dynamic. Once inside, they don't know how to transcend Carl Schmitt's tiny, nasty political universe - a universe in which, as the , academic catechism would have it, "everything Of course, Blumenthal's observation is not ·

novel; the point has been made about Nixon time and time again. What stunned me about Blumenthal's commentary was not his hatred for Nixon, but how mu.ch in his hatred he now mirrors Nixon's philosophy and praxis.

It's almost as if Blumenthal hates Nixon for making him hate him. You see, Nixon never has had any pretense of liberal sentiment. Carl Schmitt was an antiliberal and disliked liber­alism (in the broad sense of "liberal democ­racy") because he thought it only pretended to eliminate the political.

is political." I suspect, however, that Blument-hal et al, may know how to rescue themselves, but they choke on the only solution, a solution of truly elegant simplicity: Love thy enemy.

Blumenthal feels for Nixon nothing but clear, utter hatred: Nixon is the enemy, and Blu-

That ill, liberalism claims to eschew the political distinction between friend and enemy; it professes to be an inclusive faith. Schmitt

Jim Rogers' column appears Thursdays on the Viewpoints page.

Backpacks: A tale ' of two straps The other day, I was wandering around campus desperately searching

for something with which to avoid my homework. I spied this friend of mine. I said hello, but he simply stood there and stared at me like there was a cockroach leg dangling from between my teeth., (There wasn't.)

Finally he said, "You know, you look like a real geek with those things." Then he gave the two backpack straps I had jauntily thrown over my shoulders a condescending tug. Now I don't mind being called a geek, but when someone starts making fun of my backpack, he's gone too far.

There is something that needs straightening out. Contrary to popular opinion, people who wear onJy one backpack strap are in no way more

cultivated, suave or in any way superior to those of us who wear both. I will go further than that. We double-strappers rule over one-strappers

much in the same way Bactrian camels (from the Latin root baccos, meaning "two humps, stupid") rule over the far less-practical dromedary camels. People who wear both straps, as a matter of fact, have experienced such tremendous amounts of "way" coolness that it has actually produced nausea, sickness, suffering and death. You can't do much better than that. One-strappers walk around steeped in their own smugness, awash in the mistaken idea that wearing but one strap of your backpack is really hip or something. Little do they 'suspect that they are nowhere near the cutting edge of academic accessories.

In general, my fashion sense is maybe one notch above Cher's, but you don't have to be named Sergio to figure out. the basic principle behind coolness. Coolness, as you may remember from the third grade, is based on separating oneself from the masses. Why, I could name 15 or 20 highly ritualistic organizations right off the top of my head that spend vast quantities of their disposable time and income on separating themselves from the crowd, thereby hoping to achieve wheelbarrows full of coolness. (AB far as I can tell, they demark this class division chiefly in two ways: 1. The ability to summon from their minds extraordinarily catchy slogans derived from the rhyming dictionary: "WE ARE A SORORITY; WE'RE BASED ON SUPERIORITY." 2. The full utilization of the tanning triad: The tanning booth, the "like actual

pubHcly admit that he voted in 1988 to require Catholic hospitals to perfonn abortions.

The senator denied this during his August abortion debate with Con­gressman Tauke. Yet, the senator's voting record shows that on Jan. 28, 1988, the senator voted against the Danforth abortion-neutral amendment to the Civil Rights Restoration Act. The Danforth amendment was supported by the American Hospital Association, the Catholic Health Association and hundreds of Catholic and indepen­dent hospitals because it permitted private hospitals - such as Mercy hospital here in Iowa City - to decide for themselves whether they would or would not perfonn abor­tions.

The senator's voting record demon­strates that he is not pro-choice, but is a pro-abortion extremist at the beck and call of Molly Yard­style feminists. His misstatements - about his vote OD the Danforth amendment, his votes in favor of experiruentation on live fetuses and his disregard for women exploited by abortion - represent a willful attempt to deceive.

Chrll Miller Pat MeTallPrt and 17 oth ....

Iowa City

It's only oil To the Editor:

I wish to respond to Michael Lorenger's comments ["More than oil,· Aug. 21, DIl concerning U.S. intervention in the Middle East. While I agree that the Iraqi c.risis certainly has an impact on the new world order, I fmd much of Loren­ger's argument illogical. First of all, he attempts to prove that the current U.S. military build-up is not about this country's economic oil interests by claiming that there was no U.S. military response to the oil crisis of the 1970s. The comparilOn does not hold, for he is comparing apples and oranges. The oil crisis of the '70s involved no

_Arab military operations like Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, so it could be argued that the U.S. had no excuse to protect its economic interests militarily. The current situation gives Bush a reason to send in the troops (as did Ronald Reagan when he protected Kuwaiti tankers dur­ing the Iran-Iraq war). In recent years, there have been many mm; tary invasions abroad that threatened world peace to which the U.S. did not respond militarily. Thus, since this current monstrous military responSe occurs in a place where our addiction to oil is acutely threatened, it is much more ~ikely that our presence in

sun, you guys" and the ever-helpful bronzing cream.) One-strappers are by far the majority on campus. They think that this

is, therefore, the way to be. Well, the five most popular dollops of cuteness in the whole world are the New Kids on the Block. These are individuals who spend frightening amounts of time spinning on their heads, leaving pools of mousse everywhere. AB my mother would say, "Is that what you really want?" For another example, keep in mind that Richard Nixon won one of the biggest landslides in presidential history. He had all the personal appeal of a papercut.

But this is not simply about popularity, ladies and gentlemen. This is about plain old common sense. This university, as it stands, is a chiropractic gold mine. It may seem wise to walk around like a palm tree in a hurricane for some misbegotten sense of couth. However, we few, we lucky few, who don't bow down to social convention will not have to worry about self-inflicted scoliosis in our old age. Also, we have two free hands with which to make obscene gestures behind the misshapen backs.of all tbe Quasimodos-in-the-making.

And that's not all. People who wear both straps of their backpacks have the sort of supercharged sexual virility that is often mistakenly attributed to those BIG guys on ninja motorcycles. Double-strappers are the type of people who can long divide without benifit of paper or pencil. We not only know all the words to "American Pie" and "Stairway to Heaven," we know exactly what they are about (in both cases, a guy named Frank). We can pronounce the word legume. We do crossword puzzles with pens. - I do not want everyone to get the idea that just because the two-strap packer is in every way superior to the one-strapper, we can't find some common ground. After all , one-strappers may look pretty silly, but at least they don't go walking around with th~se CIAO! bags on. Those who don't even wear backpacks are showing the sort of moral courage your average U.S. Senator will display on the subject of abortion.

Even these shoulder bag wearing issue-duckers aren't the worst, however. The worst are those who walk around with Day-Glo protrusions wrapped around their waists. These individual!\ look Hke they have lost the use of a major organ lind are being fed vital fluids intravenously. This is fme when one of our organs is indeed not functioning, but the vast majority are just looking for an athletic­looking holder for their cigarettes.

I could talk about backpacks all day, except I'm afraid somebody would punch me in the nose if I did. The real question may be not how or what kind of backpack to wear. For all of us guys, what are we going to do when we don't have the excuse academics provide for carrying around a thinly disguised purse? I'm not getting a briefcase. Those are for geeks.

Mitch Martin 's column appears Thursdays on the Viewpoints page.

needs to be re-emphasized as an adequate blood supply is crucial to

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the Middle East is motivated more by economic than by ideOlogical concerns. our delivery of health care. p

Also, while Lorenger's reasoning is confusing regarding the relation­ship between this event and the end of the Cold War, his basic point that the Cold War has been a defining factor in everYbody else's foreign policy and that the U.S. has an obligation to "lead the charge" in world peace is merely an exam­ple of American arrogance and . naivete. The fact that most of the Arab world snubs its nose at U.S. self-importance shows that the reet of the world does not define itself in terms of the United States.

AIDS truth To the EdItor:

Thom .. De.n Coralville

In order to leave readers with 0 percent doubt on issues regarding , HIVI AIDS transmission, I would like to clarify !lOme information printed in The Daily Iowan [-Survey: Johnson County. citizens still harbor misconceptions about casual contact, AIDS," Aug. '291. There is absolutely no risk of acquiring HIV infection or AIDS from donati1lll bJood. There Is no sharing of Qlood or blood-drawing apparatu8 during the time of blood donstion. This very important faCt

There is a 0 percent risk in any of the other "casual contact" issues • addressed in 'the article as well. Those included were "working, going to school, shaking hands or , being coughed or sneezed upon by someone with HIV." HN is very I specificaUy transmitted through sexual intercourse and direct blood-to-blood contact. It is not i transmitted by air, insects, skin- .. to-skin contact or other types of activities that take place in the typical workplace or schoo tting, I hope that we can mo yond these fears to the it of HIVI AIDS prevention , treatment and service.

Ellen Van L .. r. AtDS educator

Johnson County Health Dept.

Letters polley Letters to the editor moat be typed and signed and must include the writer's address and phone number for verification. Letters 8hould be no longer than one double-spaced page in length. The Daily Iowan reserves the right to edit for length and clarity.

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, .U.S. forces ·reinforced by missiles By John King The Associated Press

DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia - The United States is using night con­voys and desert airstrips to deploy

J missiles to bolster its forces in lSaudi bia's northern desert, military I': ials say.

In t t two days, Patriot , missile b ries designed to shoot down incoming missiles and multi­

I ' pie rocket launchers used to smash troop buildups have been brought in to reinforce U.s. positions clos­est to the Kuwaiti border.

The weapons have been trans­' ported north in huge convoys that also carried hundreds of troops to forward camps the past week.

I , The deployments will help the United States improve its ground­based fighting capabilities after relying on air power for defense in the weeks following the Aug. 2

"Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. , Commanders .say that in about a month the buildup will offer enough firepower to make them comfortable about offensive opera­tions if they are ordered to attack.

They appear to be growing more ) confident every day as slow-moving

I ships carrying the heavy U.S. ground power arrive in the region.

A cluster of shi ps carrying Marine amphibious forces are now a few

• ' days from the Persian Gulf. The truck convoys include double­

I decker buses carrying hundreds of soldiers and dozens of transport trucks carrying tanks, artillery and

I ' other heavy equipment. There also are scores of refueling and other support vehicles for the tanks and

Associated Press

Two .oldler •• tand next to an M-1 tank a. the .un rI ... somewhere In the de.ert of Saudi Arabia. The soldle,. and equipment are part of Desert Shield and are from the 24th Infantry Division.

infantry carriel'S. An Army official said troop and

equipment movements were not being made at night to hide them, but because of the cooler tempera­tures and to avoid raising fears among Saudis.

"Driving through towns in the middle of the day with a half­mile-long row of tanks and rockets isn't a particularly good idea," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Most of the gear transported north the past few days belongs to the 24th Mechanized Infantry Divi­sion, a Georgia-based unit armed with fast-moving M-I tanks and Bradley Armored Fighting Vehi­cles, or AFVs.

Still being unloaded at a Saudi port is similar heavy equipment for the 197th Infantry, which will join the 24th in the forward most U.S. positions in Saudi Arabia. These soldiers are behind Arab forces manning the front line just south of Kuwait.

Marines from the 7th Marine Expeditionary Brigade also are stationed in the northeastern desert, within 40 miles of Kuwait. They've spent the last few days preparing to mine north-south highways from Kuwait into Saudi Arabia in case Iraqi forces strike.

A Marine gunnery sergeant taking part in that operation pointed out a small bridge connecting a highway that runs through rough terrain.

If the United States gets wind of a possible Iraqi attack, "that'll be gone," he said.

In the early days of the U.S. deployment, most of the troops and supplies were flown into a Saudi airbase more than 200 miles south of the border.

Traffic at that a.irbase is still heavy, but the tarmacs are far less crowded than they were three weeks ago, and there is speculation the U.S. airlift is nearly completed.

But an Air Force official said Wednesday, "We've got ,Borne peo­ple fooled pretty good."

The Daily Iowan - Thursday, September 6.1990 NAnONIWORLD 11 A

Winter oil shortages are likely By Ma" Yancey The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Oil shortages from the embargo against Iraq and Kuwait may develop late this year, Bush administration officials said Wednesday.

"The last half of the fourth quarter gives us concern," Assistant Energy Secretary John Easton told the House Government Operations Committee. "We see the potential for greater uncertainty IlS winter develops."

Despite record high inventories and commitments by OPEC pro­ducers to make up much of the Iraqi-Kuwaiti production, both gov­ernment and private analysts said they expect a world shortage to develop by late November or early December.

The 21-nation International Energy Agency estimates a shor­tage of 500,000 barrels a day could develop by December.

But private analysts say the shor­tage could be worse because demand for oil is expected to increase by several million barrels

a day with cold weather. "We are convinced that usable

commercial crude oil stocks will be depleted by the end of October," said Edward Krapels, president of Energy Security Analysis Inc. of Washington.

Krapels, whose company tracks world oil supplies, said the short­fall "could easily" reach up to 2 million barrels a day, possibly sending oil prices to above $40 a barrel.

"Anticipation of the shortage will result in a run-up of crude oil prices that will be translated into higher heating oil prices as the winter develops," he said.

If so, consumers can expect a repeat of last winter when an early, severe cold snap and trans­portation bottlenecks doubled home heating oil prices in some regions and tripled propane prices.

Krapels said the government could pre-empt a spiraling of home heat­ing oil prices by immediately drafling a contingency plan to begin drawing down the nation's 590-million-barrel Strategic Petro­leum Reserve in November.

"A reasonable, organized, modest drawdown will send a signal not " only to the oil industry and to consumers but also to the financial markets that the winter will be a difficult one, hut not an economy­breaking one," he said.

Administration officials have said they will tap the stockpile only if a real shortage occurs and not as a "price mechanism."

Calvin Kent, director of the gov­ernment's Energy Information Administration, said a slight, brief shortfall might develop later this month, reflecting the gap between when the embargo began and when the increased OPEC production came on line.

"Oil now coming on the market is going to take awhile to get here," he said, referring to commitments by Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and the United Arab Emirates to increase production by a total of slightly more than 3 million bar­rels a day. "Commercial stocks are going to have to be drawn down some ... and that's reflected in the price today."

' 'lbe Current State of Sexual Orientation law" ( and the role of the law in the lives of non-traditional families).

Rhonda R. Rivera Professor of Law, Ohio State University

12:40 pm, Friday, Sept. 7 Rm 295 Boyd law Building

Dolphin switch causes protest The lecture is being co-sponsored by the Iowa law School's AIDS clinic and the Iowa Olapter

oftbe National Lesbian and Gay Law Association. .

By Arlene Levinson ,The Associated Press

BOSTON - An aquarium director was reconsidering plans to trade an aggressive, unsociable show dolphin to the Navy after news of the deal set off a wave of protests from animal-rights activists.

The New England Aquarium and the Navy worked out the swap,

' which would have enlisted Rain­bow, an ll-year-old male, in the secret underwater mammal pro­

'gram at the Naval Ocean Systems Center in San Diego.

Aquarium director John Prescott lsaid Wednesday that the angry public reaction prompted him to rethink the trade.

"I think the decision is good for , tbe animals concerned," Prescott said. "(But) if it's causing public concern, I must pay attention. It's not a closed issue."

Rainbow, 8-foot-2 and 450 pounds, is a blue-gray bottlenose dolphin. One of three show dolphins at the aquarium, it became cantankerous as it matured.

~ . nations on an international issue,

I ' Foreign Ministry officials there said.

As a multinational armada grew in \the Persian Gulf, U.S. Army offi­cials in Saudi Arabia said the military was using night convoys to move heavy firepower - including ground-to-air missiles and rocket launchers - into the northern Saudi desert.

Although Washington says its troops are deployed to defend the Saudis, the recent moves increase the offensive capabilities of U.S. forces .

President Bush indicated Wednes­day the United States has not ruled out an offensive role, telling lawmakers back from the gulf that if sanctions do not succeed, "we will review our options."

Secretary of State James Baker

Vigil_'-"--'--Continued from page 1 A

Antonia Russo, another of the vigil's organizers, said the event "makes a statement and sends a message that there is concern

'about our involvement in the ,Middle East."

.ChildM adults, old people, / VietnarJ s, students and clergy

I are joine ere tonight to profess What they believe and to stand up

, for peace," Russo said. The Young Americans for Freedom

I eat quietly along the side of the vigil holding signs to present a different point of view on the crisis.

. "We are just here to show our aupport for our troops oversellS," eaid Kurt Adams, Y AF member. "We too would favor a non-military SOlution but at the same time we are behind our troops; we don't think it is right for Saddam to send troops Into Kuwait."

I Asked if YAF advocates war, Adams said, "No, but if it comes down to it, we advocate the U.s.

, POlicy of using strength to main­tain peace."

Prescott sought a swap: Rainbow for a female.

Other aquariums refused. But the Navy center, which looks after, studies and trains 142 marine mammals including 109 dolphins, eventually agreed to take Rainbow in exchange for a partly deaf female.

The center trains dolphins in underwater surveillance and detecting, locating and marking objects for recovery. Other details are classified, said Tom LaPuzza, a spokesman at the San Diego cen­ter.

The trade was delayed because the military buildup in the Pel'Sian Gulf took Navy planes that could have been used to transport Rain­bow.

News of the deal got out Thursday, and animal rights activista raised an outcry.

"We have been attempting to persuade the aquarium not to capture wild dolphins and whales. . .. Our efforts are more urgent now that we learn that the aquar­ium is acting as a clearinghouse for

was headed for the Middle East, where he said he planned to dis­cuss with U.S. allies a proposed new regional security structure for the Persian Gulf.

In the Gulf of Oman, U.S. forces released an Iraqi-flagged freighter they intercepted and boarded Tues­day as it headed for Iraq with a cargo of tea.

The Navy said the ship was allowed to proceed to an unspeci­fied port after a 30-hour search. Shipping sources said it headed for Yemen.

animals for the military," the Boston Marine Mammal Coalition said in a statement.

A protest at the aquarium was set for Saturday.

The aquarium got so many calls it recorded a message to intercept them, inviting anyone concerned about Rainbow to send a letter.

National interest in the Navy dolphins was galvanized by reports in 1988 that 13 dolphins in Navy training had died between 1986 and 1988. Nearly half the animals suffered from lack of appetite or stomach ulcel'S before their deaths, the report said. Other causes were hepatitis and pneumonia.

A federal Marine Mammal Com­mission probe found no major problems in the program.

Then in May, a former trainer told the media that bottlenose dolphins with ,45-caliber guns mounted on their snouts were being trained by the Navy to kill enemy frogmen.

LaPuzza denies such claims. The Navy has "never trained

marine mammals to kill people and will never do so," LaPuzza said.

Continued from page lA

. . . and fight the presence in the Holy Land (of the Western force).

He said in his speech, "Have you, o brothel'S, known throughout the history that you have come across that anyone tried to starve a nation to death by depriving it of food?

"And have you witnessed in the history that is known to you that some children should die because of a premeditated decision to deprive them of milk?

An earlier translation from Sad­dam's Arabic speech, which was carried by The Associated Press, incorrectly quoted Saddam as say­ing some children were dying as a result of the sanctions.

Saddam reiterated that his people would defy the boycott and emerge

IMU ARTS & CRAFT CENTER

A SALE OF ORIGINAL ARTS & CRAFTS

Featuring Acoustic Music by • Barbara Boyle & Jeffrey Morgan IOWAMEMORIALUNION

1 00 4 00 --t-' THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA : p.m. -: p.m. IOWA CITY

ATTENTION U OF I STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS The following represents very important information regarding your Funding from UISA Student Govemment and authorized signatures for your liZ' accounts regardess of your f1J1dng base.

Workshops for Funding for the Fall 90 and Sping 91 will be conducted on the dates below. Qog of the workshops listed below are mandatory for both of your authorization signees on your University '7:' account H you plan to request UISA Funding, both slgnees MUST attend either the Sept 11 or Sept 12 workshop.

DatI Tuesday, Se~. 11 Wecilesday, Sept. 12

Tuesday, Se~. 18 Weci1esday, Sept. 19

Tuesday, Oct. 2 Wednesday, Oct.3

llmi 6:30-8:30 6:30-8:30

6:30-8:30 6:30-8:30

6:30-8:30 6:30-8:30

fig 121 Schaeffer Hall 121 Schaeffer Hall

121 Schaeffer Hall 121 Schaeffer Hall

Illinois Rm (348) IMU 121 Schaeffer Hall

Saddam has promised to free all foreign women and children but to keep the men as human shields against attack at strategic sites. In another attempt to play on West­ern anxiety about the captives, he released messages Tuesday pur­ported to be from seven such hostages, including an American.

victorious. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A group of Americans who reached r-Jordan on Tuesday were treated to a free ride home by British tycoon Richard Branson, who flew them to London and then Newark, N.J.

Addressing the people of those countries, he said, "We call on them to revolt against the traitors

Newlyweds? About to be? Celebr~tlng your 25th? 50th? Visit us for the friendliest diamond prices In town.

HERTEEH & STOCKER

DOWNTOWN 101 S. Dubuque

JEWELERS 338·4212

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AN ARMY SCHOLARSHIP COULD HELP YOU THROUGH MEDICAL SCHOOL •

The u.s. Army Health Professions Scholarship Program offers a unique opportunity for financial support to med, ical or osteopathy students. Financial support includes tuition, books, and other expenses required in a particular course.

For infonnation concerning eHgibH, ity, pay, service obligation and application procedure, contact the Army Medical Department Personnel Counselor:

Maj. James D. Johnson AMEDD Personnel Counselor 10920 Ambassador, Suite 422 Kansas City, MO 64153-1235

Phone 1·800-347·2633

ARMY MEDICIME. BE ALL YOU CAM BE.

i

iii The Daily Iowan - Thursday, September 6, 1990

f

• • Ie e Winners • • •

Each Monday in The Daily Iowan you'll find your entry blank for On The Line. Pick the winners of the 10 top college football games, plus the tie­breaker, and you could be one of eleven weekly winners.

of" •

Each weekly winner will receive' an exclusive On The Line T-shirt, available only to On The Line winners. The top picker of the week will also receive a $25 gift certificate from a local merchant.

••

Test your picking skills against The Dally Iowan sports staff and our weekly guest picker.

,. ' On The Line entry blanks will be in The Dally Iowan each Monday through Thursday. Entries must be submitted to The Dally Iowan, Room 111 or 201 Communications Center, by noon Thursday.

So come on all you arm-chair quarterbacks - Start Picking!

0.1'" , ~ .

. /'

". . .

lo~a City's Morning Newspaper

..----~-

:Penn St. dumps Irish to make room for Hawkeyes The Associated Press

~. STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - Penn State > will break off ita football series with Notre

Dame two years early to schedule Iowa in 1993-94, ita first Big Ten opponent since joining the conference.

The games with Iowa are on Sept. 18, 1993 at Iowa City and Sept. 17, 1994 at Beaver Stadium.

"We are looking at the rapid integration of a number of our athletic teams in 1991-2 and, while the football process is more complex, want to avail ourselves of as many Big Ten opportunities as we can."

duling of a Big Ten opponent by seeking another rival for 1993-94," Tarman said.

"Since our current Notre Dame series was scheduled to end following the 1994 game and, given the prospect future contests with the Irish would be difficult to arrange once full conference integra­tion is complete, we elected to take advantage of the chance to get an early start in the Big Ten," Tarman said.

last game 20-17 in 1984 at Iowa City. The, Hawkeye8 beat Penn State 42-34 in 1983.,

Paterno said he was "excited about the Penn State is not expected to playa full

Big Ten football schedule until the mid-l990s because schedules are made up many years in advance. Penn State had games with Notre Dame

scheduled through 1994.

prospect" of playing Iowa. . "We indicated at the Big Ten kickoff'

luncheon in Chicago we were anxious to get started in conference play right away," Paterno said in the release. "We're delighted it was possible to work out these early dates with Iowa and hope to be able to pursue other scheduling of conference opponents."

"We had a great series with Notre Dame but, as I've said on numerou8 occasions, the face of our football schedule is chang­ing with the move to the Big Ten," Penn

" State coach Joe Paterno said Wednesday.

"As members of the Big Ten conference, our goal is to become as heavily involved in conference playas quickly as possible," athletic director Jim Tarman said in a statement .

"When the possibility arose, we had conversations with Notre Dame and the athletic administration there expressed a willingness to help us expedite the sche-

Penn State leads the series with Iowa 6-3, with the NittBDy Lions winning the .

_________________ ~------------11le Dally Iowan ______________________________ _

." Sports editor Erica Weiland, 335-5848 Sports Page 18

Thursday, September 6,1990

. ,

,

:McEnroe dominates, 'Lendl falters at Open

By Steve WII.teln I The Associated Press

I John McEnroe, 31, played like the master of old in a 6-1,6-4, 6-4 U.S. Open victory Wednesday night

• over David Wheaton, a 21-year-old j giant with a blazing serve, while

third-seeded Ivan Lendl lost a • five-set match to American Pete ~ Sampras, 6-4, 7-6 (7-4), 3-6, 4-6,

6-2. 1 The unseeded McEnroe, who

hadn't reached the semifmals here · since he was runnerup in 1985,

will next take on Sampras, a , 19-year-old who serves as hard as

Wheaton but also has many of the ' touch shots and ground strokes · that have been McEnroe's trade­mark.

• Sampras, touted as one of the best , young American power hitters in tennis, blasted 24 aces and 27

, service winners at up to 120 mph and broke through to the top rank with a victory over Lendl, a three· time champion.

The slim, slope-shouldered 19-year-old from Rancho Palos Ver­

, des, Calif. ended LendI's streak of • eight straight appearances in the

finals . LendI was tied for the , record with Bill Tilden, who , reached the finals every year from

1918-1925. "I don't believe what's happening

now. It's a dream come true,"

Sampras said after the 4-hour, 5-minute match. "This is what I've been working for all summer. This is the reward right now."

Sampras' first victory over one of the top three-ranked players is sure to boost his No. 12 ranking. It also added to his growing list of big-name victims. Last year in the Open, he beat the defending cham­pion, Mats Wilander, and beat John McEnroe in the Canadian Open last month.

Lendl acknowledged that he was still held hostage by his prepara­tion for Wimbledon, in which he spent three months training on grass. The effort was in vain, since LendI lost in the semifinals to eventual winner Stefan Edberg.

"I haven't had enough play and I haven't felt as comfortable on my groundstrokes. "

Ivan Lendl

"I haven't played that well the whole summer, and I still felt today that lack of match play was the problem," Lendl said. "I- paid for the preparation for Wimbledon. I haven't had enough play and I

Associated Press O.kland A', flrat bat.m.n M.rk McGwlr. Is congratulated by new te.mm." Harold Bllne, aft.r hitting a two-run homer In the third Inning of the A',' 11).0 pe,tlng 0' the Red Sox In Boston Wednesday night.

Pirates dominate Mets in key doubleheader

. The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH - The Pittsburgh Pirate continued their double-head ominance Wednesday nigh eeping the New York Mets 1- on Zane Smith's career­beat one-hitter and 3-1 on Jeff King's first two-homer game.

The Pirates have swept all five doubleheadere thi, season and took a 21h-game lead over the

- Mets in the National League East. The teams meet again

; Thursday night and will then have five head-to-head confronta­tions left.

Smith yielded a single to Keith Miller leading off the game and permitted only one more base­l'Unner the rest. of the way - a two-out walk to Miller in the ~. He retired the last 19 batters.

The Pirates won it in the bottom of the ninth when Barry Bonds hit a bases-loaded one-out single off Mets relief ace John Franco (4-1) for his lOOth RBI.

King drove in all the Pitsburgh runs in the nightcap with a solo homer in the (11'st inning and a two-run shot in the third off Bob Ojeda (7-6), getting a start for the first time in more than a month.

Neal Heaton (12-8), making his first start since Aug. 20, went five innings and gave up Darryl Strawberry's 31st homer in the fourth. It was the first run in 21 innings for the Mets, who lost 1-0 in S1. Louis on Tuesday night. Athletic, 10, Red Sol: 0

BOSTON - Bob Welch scattered five bits in eight inni.ngs for hi' major league-leading 23rd victory Wednesday night as the Oakland

See... "I, Page 28

haven't felt as comfortable on my groundstrokes." .

On the women's side, speed tennis, Steffi Graf style, is in vogue.

Graf, who has ticked off five victories in a total of 5 hours, 1 -,ninute, reached the semifinals with a 6-3, 6-1 romp over Jana Novotna in 54 minutes on Wednes­day, a minute more than it took to beat Jennifer Capriati in the fourth round.

Arantxa Sanchez Vicario took a little longer, 67 minutes, before winning 6-2, 6-2, against Zina Garrison, who was slowed to half­speed and unable to charge the net because of a sore right ankle that has bothered her all week.

Grafwasn't satisfied with berplay in the opening set, when she W8S

broken in the first and seventh games.

Thlrd-.eed Ivan Lendl ftlps his racket etter losln9 8

poI"t In the n9th .et of his quartertln.1 loss to Pete

Associated Press Sempe,.. ai ibe U.S. O~" WMI" •• <.t_V tn New York. Lendl Jolt the match 6-4, Ni, 3-6, 4-6, ~2.

"I didn't have the best start, that's for sure," Graf said. "I don't think I played too badly in the second set. I played the right way. I came in when I needed to. My (back· hand) slice was very effective today. Especially in the second set it was very low.

Graf has won seven of eight matches against Sanchez Vicario, including the last four. But the one Graf lost was costly, a tbree-setter in the French Open final last year - the only Grand Slam loss of the year by Graf.

matchup, even if the hard courts here favor Grafs style.

"She knows I'm tough and I know she's No. 1," said the 18-year-old from Spain.

Sanchez Vicario played steadily, if not spectacularly, and the grounds­troking game suited her perfectly. In an unusual switch, she came to the net 37 times compared to Garrison's 15, but those approaches were made easy by Garriaon's retreat beyond the baseline.

tina Navratilova in the Wimbledon fmal, said she wouldn't have been able to play the match at all if she hadn't had a day off on Tuesday.

"I just decided to go out there and try," she said. "I like playing and I have a high tolerance of pain. I wanted to get out there and make her work for her money. She wasn't playing that good. She was letting me play. I don't think this is going to help her in her match against Steffi that she played so tenta­tively against someone who couldn't move."

"I'm satisfied with the way things are going right now. With those matches (Capriati and Novotna), theire not easy .ones. Novotna's playing well this year, especially this tournament. I was glad to get that match over."

Though Graf has been playing well, she's not acting overconfident about beating Sanchez Vicario.

"She'll fight every pOint. She won't give it to me," Graf said. "I feel I'm in a perfect,j>Osition, but I'm not going to underestimate any of the other players." Garrison, who beat Graf and

Monica Seles before losing to Mar-Sanchez Vicario isn't afraid of the

Sore shoulder hinders Clemens NFL denies giving Kay a break

The Associated Press

BOSTON - Two-time Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens of the Boston Red Sox was stricken with a sore right shoulder Wednesday less than 24 hours after he had a an eight-game winning streak snapped by Oakland.

"Roger Clemens has a very sore shoulder," Dr. Arthur Pappas, the Red Sox' team physician and an orthopedic specialist, told a news conference during a night game with Oakland.

Pappas said he postponed tests until today because "he was too sensitive today and I felt that it was more important that he rest for the day."

"Roger is experiencing pain and swelling in the front part of his shoulder," Pappas said. "All we know now is that it hurts. We1l start some tests tomorrow, but I don't know how much information I'll have until Friday."

Pappas said the trouble is different from a shoulder problem that bothered Clemens in July.

"The problem then was entirely in the back of his shoulder," the doctor said. "This is entirely in the front of his shoulder.

"The pain is localized in the tendons or muscles of the front of the shoul!ier."

Pappas said that Clemens "realized his ann did not feel right" when he began to warm up for Tuesday night's game with Oakland.

Clemens, who has a 20-6 record, tried unsuccess­fully to pitch through his problem. He visited Pappas at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center in Worcester Wednesday.

"I spoke to Dr. Pappas at 4 p.m. and he said that Roger has some soreness and stiffness in his shoulder, and that's all he knows," Boston general manager Lou Gorman said earlier that evening.

"Roger has had some soreness before. It . may be serious, it may be nothing. Of course, it concerns . Roger," Gorman said.

"How can you replace him? How can you replace a 20-6 pitcher? You can't."

Clemens, who leads the major leagues with a 1.98 earned run average and 204 strikeouts, allowed five hits, six walks and four runs, two unearned, in 5'13 innings against Oakland Tuesday night.

He was outpitched for the sixth time in a row, since See a.n. .. Page 28

WASHINGTON (AP) - The National Football League denied a television report on Wednesday tbat said it agreed not to ban Denver Bronco tight end Clar­ence Kay for life on the condition he not discuBB his drug test results.

"No decision has been made on Clarence's case status," NFL spokesman Joe Browne said. "No deal has been made with Clar­ence or his attorney."

WJLA-TV of Washington said Kay's attorney, Bruce Brown, told the station Kay canCeled an on-camera intervieW' about prob-

See KIIr, Page 2B

L T back in New York with Giant -new deal By Tom Cannan The Associated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. - Bill Parcells didn't mind being upstaged at bis own news conference, especially when Lawrence Taylor was doing the upstaging.

"I'm home," Taylor said Wednesday as he interrupted the Giants' coach in mid-conference.

With those words, the Giants' All-Pro linebacker was back with the team he refused to report to during the preseason because of a contract dispute. The holdout ended when Taylor signed a three-year contract that made him the highest paid defensive player in the NFL.

Taylor promises to be ready for Sunday's opener against the Philadelphia Eagles but added, "I would have liked a little contact before the first game. •

"One thing I do have and I think it's to my advantage is that I do have heart, I do have desire and enthusiasm. I'd guess you'd have to say I also have the false belief that I can't be beaten and I can't be stopped. Hopefully that will take me on into Sunday."

Parcells said he would seek a two-week roster exemption for Taylor, who reportedly will be paid more than $1.6 million per year. The 3l-year-old Taylor was in the fmal year of his contract, which would have paid him $1.21 million, but he and his agent, Joe Courrege, wanted to renegotiate and asked for $2 million per year. The Giants reportedly had offered $1.4 million.

Although contract tenns were not disclosed, Taylor would have to make more than $1.6 million this season to do better than Minnesota defensive end Chris Doleman, reportedly set to Bign for $1.6 million a year.

Before the Taylor deal, the Eagles' Reggie White was the highest paid defensive player at $1.51 million, with Buffalo's Bruce Smith next at $1.5 million.

Vete,.n All-Pro IIneb.cke' LAwrenc. Taylo" • holdout until Wedne. d." will s .. rt Sund.y·s g.me 'gIIlntl the E.gl., after tlgnlna a three-y •• r de.1 th.t m.ke. him the hlgh.stop.1eI defensive pI.,er In the NFl.

"There wasn't a great deal of movement to get the contract d<.tue,· Giants general manager George Young said. "It was the profe8slonal­ism of the player. Lawrence Taylor wanted to play against the Eagles."'

While Courrege and Young negotiated, though, Philadelphia and the See T .... , Page 2B

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91

2B SCOREBOARD The Daily Iowan - Thursday, September 6, 1990

Major League ;Baseball Standings I AIIERICAN LEAGUE bat 01 ..... W L Pe~ Boslon _. --- 18 80 .559 J"oronto 7' 66 518 "Detroit _" .• 66 11 482 'AIM,uk .. &I 12 ,471 J!liJurnor. 80 74 U8 Clevellnd ... 110 78 44' NowYorl< _ 57 78 422 W.,t 01.1010. W L Pel pakland IJ6 50 832 ChicagO.. __ .... 19 66 5115 Teus , .. " .. &9 61 501 Cahfo,-nlll ___ .•. _ .... __ •. 68 68 .500

~"Ie - - 67 &9 493 sasCny ... ... 68 10 485

Minnesota . 63 75 _51

TuesUy'sGam •• Seanle 7. Baltimore 2 Oakland 6. aoston 2 ~tr~t 3. Toronto 1

hlcago 6. Kansas Cny 3 Mlnntt50la 7, Mllwluk" 1 C ..... eland 7, Tlilas 5 Only games scheduled

Wed ..... , ' , GarMs LI'. Game N01 Included New York 2. california 1

Gil

5', 10', '2 '5 16 18'? OR

S', 11 18 19 20 24

Oaklllncl 10. Boolon f) Toronto 7. OetrQ.It 3 ChlClgo 3. Kansas eny 0 Mllwauk .. l , Mlnne.sota'" T .... 3. C ...... 1IncI 2 s..ttIe ., Baltimore. (n)

Todey',_ Cleveland (Candoo", '3-10) .t De\rolt (N_k

1~) . 6:05 pm " Coblarn;' (Langston 8-16) .t Now York (Cory

5-9). 6:30 P m Kansas Cny (GorcIon 10-9) It T .... (Witll4-6).

1'35 p m Only games scheduled

NATIONAL LEAGUE &.tOl..... W L Pittsburgh 80 5fI NowYort< .... .... _ n 56 Montr •• 1 . _ 71 6A Chocogo .. 63 12 _ph,. _" 63 72 $, Lou ....... "_ ... ___ ... 81 75 W"IDI.I... W l elrlClnn&U 71 51 Los Mgelos"_.... _.. 11 &I San FranCiSCO 89 &6 Houslon 62 13 San Ooego 61 13 Allan \I 55 110

TueSdar' , G ...... AUanti 7. C,nctnna,i • Chlcego 3. Montreal 1 PittsbUrgh 11 , Philadelphia 1 51 louIS 1. Now York 0

Pet. 011 568 570 2'~

.526 8'. 0\67 16\>

.0\61 18' ,

.U9 '9 Pet. Gil .575 .526 6', 511 8 l J

.459 15\, . 455 16 407 22 1,

San FrancISCO 6. San OJego 4 Houslon 10. Los Mg_ 8

Wedno .. ,..O ...... late Games Not Included Pittsburgh I. New York O. lSI game PIII5bu'1jh 3. Now Yor. 1. 2nd game Phil_'pllia 4. Chicago 1 Monlreal 6. 51. Louis 2 Houslon 81 San Diego. (n) Cincinnati at San Francisco, (n) Atlanta al los Angeles, (n)

Tact.y·.O ...... Mont ... 1 (Gardner 7-6) ., SI. Louis (Hill 4-3).

' 235 p.m. Cincinnati (Mahlar 1·5) at San Fronclsco (Gar­

relts 10-10). 2;35 p.m Ch'cago (Nunel 1-6) II Philadelphia (Grimsley

1~). 6 05 p.m. Now York (VoI.r. I~) .t P'l1sburgh (Tomlin

'·2). 8 '35 p.m. Houslon (Deshaies 6-11) al Son Diego (Hurs,

8-9). 905 p.m. AUon,. (M.rok 0-0) II Los AngetH (Hartley 5-2) •

935pm

Major League Baseball Unescores

AIIERICAN LEAOUE 111 ... 00 ....... _ ... _ ......... ... 201 000 001--4 13 0 1I11w.ukee ......................... 001 001 950-1 11 1

R.Smlth. Baronguor (7). Wlyne (8). Agullora (8) .nd H.~r; R.Roblnson. Crim (9) and Surhotf. W-R Robinson , 9 ... L-W'-Wn •• ().1. HR5-Mllwluk ... Vlughn (13). Mol~or (11). Ct .. e1.nd ........................... 000 000 002-2 10 0 T ...................................... 000 001 002-3 • 0

Swind"l. Olin (8). O.Jon .. (9) and "tamar: Chlamparino. Jeffcoat (8). Amsberg (7). Rogers (8) and Stlnley. Petralli (8). W- Rogers. 8-5. L -n.Jon ... 4-5. O.k .. nd ............................ ..,. 011 -...10 15 0 eo.ton .............................. 000 000 __ 0 5 S

Welch, Chit reo (9) and Hassey; G.Harri •• Irvin. (6). Murphy (9). GIrdner (9) Ind Pon • . W- WoICh. 23·5. L- O.Harrl •. 12-6. HRs-Oa~land. MeOwlr. (34). Jennings (2). C.IIfomI ............................ 100 000 __ 1 5 1 N.wyorio ............................ 000 000 0211-2 • 2

J .Abbon. Harvey (8) and Parrish : LaP..,lnt. Rlgh.tt i (9) .nd Ooron . W-LoPoint. 7.10. L-Harvey. 3-3. SY-Rlghottl (30) HR-.-Now Yorl<. Je.Barfield (21). Toronto ............................... 102 020 110-1 11 0 Detroit ................................ 010 002 000.-" 7 2

W.lls. Ackor (6) . H.nko (9) end My .. s; C.Por'er. Searcy (3). Gibson (5) . Nunez (7) and HOlth. W-Wells. 10-4. L- C.Porkor. 3-2. HRs­Toronlo. Mulllniko (2). McGriff (32). Delroit . Fielder (<<). K.n ... Clly ..... ................... 000 000 000-0 4 0 Chlc_ .............................. 000 000 03.-3 3 0

M.Slottlemyro. F." (8) .nd Boono: Hibbard and Fisk W-Hibblrd. 12-6. L- Fa". 10·6.

NATIONAL LEAOUE FInIO .....

c:1~11ti~ _________________________ ~_n_tin_U~_f_rom __ ~ __ 1B

N .. yorio ............................ 000 000 000-0 1 2 Pltbburgh .......................... 000 000 001-1 8 0

Viola, Franco (9) and O'Brien; l .Smlth and LaValiler •. W-Z.Smith. 10-1. L- Franco. 4-t .

~O."'. 986, by Dave Stewart and his career record dropped

.., 3-9 against the A's. Clemens was bothered on the mound by a blister on

llie inside of the right thumb. However, he said only

Clemens visited Pappas while it was being announced that he had been named the AVa Pitcher of the Month for August. It was the fourth time in his career he has received the honor.

N •• York ............................ ooo 100 __ 1 7 0 Pitt ..... h ............................ 102 000 00.-3 • 0

Ojeda. Darling (5). Pona (7) and O'Brion ; H.alon. Kipper (6). Po".r (8) Ind Siaughl. W-Hea,on. 12-8. L-QJed • . 7·6. S ..... Pow.r (7). HRs-liew York. Sirawberry (3 t) . Pitt.burgh. King 2 (12). pitched pooily" before leaving the park Tuesday

'ftight. "I think he complained a little bit when the game as over about 80me soreness," Gorman said. "This orning be had some soreness, so he called Dr. ppas."

Clemens complained of a "tired and heavy ann" after the All-Star Game break in July. However, tests indicated only a muscle strain behind the right shoulder and, after a loss in Kansas City July 20, he began an eight-game winning streak in Milwaukee on July 25.

lion .............. .................... 220 020 ~ • 1 StLoul . ............................... 100 100 000-2 • 7 0

N.bholl. Rojas (6). Burke (8) and Go" , Ooleon. Terry (8). Porez (8) and Pagnoul. W-lilbholz. 4-0. L-{)OLoon. 7·15. 5 ..... Burk. (16). HAs­Mon, .. al. Waillch lI9). Walk.r (17). SI. Louis. Hudler (1).

kay ~ntinu~ from page 1 B

-----------ms with a July 1988 drug test

'last week in exchange for the ~ague's agreement not to bar lUm from football .

The station said confidential ftague records it obtained said 'Kay tested positive for cocaine .use in both 1986 and 1988. In ~une, he was convicted of driving ~nder the influence of alcohol.

Three violationa of league drug ot'Ules require a player to be :banned from the game. But con­

sion over the processing of a

urine sample in July 1988 prompted Commissioner Pete Rozelle to write Kay a letter the following August, saying he would not take action against him.

"By virtue of the positive test result this summer and your prior problems, you are now, by any reckoning, at Step 2 of the league's three-step program," said the letter, which was made public by WJLA.

"Only my dissatisfaction with the administrative handling of

certain matters relating to your recent positive testing has led me to refrain from removing you, based on that testing, for a minimum of 30 days from the Broncos' roster - a consequence normally called for in Step 2 under league policy at this time of year; Rozelle wrote.

WJLA. said, according to confi­dential NFL records, the sample sat 12 days before it was tested. Despite a negative result after testing, NFL Drug Advisor Forest Tennant ordered a retest in

another lab. Eventually, the sample produced

a positive result, the station said. Rozelle's letter also said Kay's

next offense would result in a lifetime ban.

"But above all else, you must stay rclean' from now on," it said. "Clarence, this is your last warning, and your last chance. I urge you as strongly as 1 can to take the necessary steps to remain drug-free 80 that you can continue your NFL career and enjoy a vigorous, healthy life.»

~il1fIClHr _________________________________________________ ~_n_~n_~_'_r~_~ ___ 1B

Houston Oilers expressed interest in trading for Taylor. Courrege said the Giants had given him permission to seek a deal while negotiations went on. But Giants owner Wellington Mara said Wednesday he never would have approved a trade.

• "I asked the Eagles to put it on the table in writing or they'd play ,against Taylor rather than with him,» Courrege said, noting that the team refused.

, When negotiations began, both sides knew it'd take a while to work out ;a deal. , "You have to start somewhere. The fact is we settled on an agreeable 'contract," Courrege said. "It's been a hard drive." ; Taylor said now was the time to put his pride aside, get ready for the :Eagles and do the best he can for his teammates and fans. : "There is no sense being bitter; Taylor said. "It does not benefit them ' to be bitter toward me. It doesn't benefit me to be bitter toward them.

"We're all here for the same reason. That's to win football games. I'm ..not going to mope or groan or say I'm not going to do this or that. It ~ould be stupid. The contract is settled. It's signed. Now it's time to

lay football . That's what I do best.» His teammates welcomed him back.

thletics routed the Boston Red -SOx 10-0 for a sweep of the

hree-game series between divi­.Ilion leaders.

Mark McGwire hit a two-run homer, his 34th, and a two-run double and Doug Jennings, filling in for Jose CanBeco, also homered jUld doubled in powering Oakland to its fourth straight victory and

ixth in seven games. The AthJe­'cs began the night with a

61f2-game lead in the American League West, the same margin Boston held in the AL East.

Welch (23-5) struck out four and didn't issue a walk. Only two Boston runners reached second base against him. Blue Jay. 7, Ti,e1'8 3

DETROIT - Rance Mulliniks and Fred McGriff homered for Toronto, offsetting Cecil Fielder's 44th home run for Detroit, as the Blue Jays beat the Tigers 7-3 Wednesday night and averted a sweep in the three-game series.

Rob Ducey, making his first start . since the Blue Jays called him up a day ear]jer, had three hits and

- two RBIs in five at-bats. David Wells (10-4), who has

three wins over the Tigers this

season, gave up three runs on four hits in seven innings. He struck out six, walked two and retired 13 consecutive batters.

Phillies 4, Cubs 1 PHILADELPHIA - The Phi­

ladelphia Phillies, shut out on one hit by Chicago's Mike Harkey until he experienced stiffness in his pitching shoulder in the seventh inning, scored four times in the eighth and beat the Chi­cago Cubs 4-1 Wednesday night.

Lenny Dykstra singled home the tying run, Darren Daulton's RBI double put the Phillies ahead and Charlie Hayes capped the rally with a two-run single.

Winner Terry Mulholland (8-8) gave up four hits in eight innings and won for the first time since his no-hitter against San Fran .. cisco on Aug. 15. Roger McDowell pitched the ninth for his 19th save.

Yankees 2, Angels 1 NEW YORK-Jesse Barfield hit

a two-run homer with two outs in the eighth inning Wednesday night, rallying New York over the California Angels 2-1 and ending the Yankees' five-game losing

"He can suck it up for the game," linebacker Steve DeOssie said. "Hitting is the thing you have to adjust to most in camp and with L T it should be a lot easier because he's the one usually doing the hitting.»

"He is a special case," Gary Reasons said. "You have to handle him differently. He is the defensive player of all time."

The major concern for the Giants is Taylor's substance abuse problems. If he violates the NFL's drug policy one more time, he could be banned for life.

Taylor has actually violated the policy three times. The first came when he went into rehabilitation in 1985, but since league policy was not in effect, it didn't count.

His first official violation has never been disclosed while the second was discovered prior to the 1988 season. Taylor was suspended for the first four regular season games that year but had 73 total tackles and 151/. sacks after he returned.

Taylor was voted the best NFL defensive player of the 198Os, and has been the league's prototype linebacker since joining the Giants in 1981. Last season, he suffered a cracked bone in his right foot in November but missed one game the rest of the season, finishing with a club-leading 15 sacks.

streak. Barfield's 21st home run came on

a 2 .. 0 pitch from Bryan Harvey (3-3), who relieved starter Jim Abbott after a one .. out walk to Kevin Maas. Abbott matched a career-high with nine strikeouts.

Dave LaPoint (7-10) gave up five bits in 8 1-3 innings. Dave Righ­etti worked around an error by shortstop Alvaro Espinoza and got his 30th save, the fourth time he's reached the mark. Expos 6, Cardinals 2

ST. WUIS - Montreal rookie Chris Nabholz raised his record to 4-0 and Tim Wallach and Larry Walker hit two-run homers.

Nabholz started the season in Class AA and was 0-6 with a 4.83 ERA at Triple A Indianapolis but has a 2.78 ERA in two stints with the Expos. He went 51f3 innings, giving up two runs and five hits. Mel Rojas pitched two innings and Tim Burke went lo/a for his 16th save.

Cardinals starter Jose DeLeon (7-15) has lost 10 of his last 11 decisions. White Sox 8, Royals 0

CHICAGO - Greg Hibbard

~ntin~ from page 18

pitched a four-hitter for his irrst major-league shutout and Robin Ventura's bases-loaded single broke open a scoreless game in the eighth inning Wednesday night as the Chicago White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 3-0.

Hibbard (12-8) walked five, struck out six and worked out of bases-loaded jams in the seventh and eighth innings. Mel StotUe­myre Jr. made his first big-league start and shut out Chicago on one hit for seven innings.

Brewe1'8 7, Twins 4 MILWAUKEE - Paul Molitor's

three-run homer capped a five­run rally in the eighth inning Wednesday night and led the Milwaukee Brewers over the Minnesota Twins 7-4.

The Brewers trailed 3-2 before bouncing back against three pitchers. Greg Vaughn singled home the tying run, Rick Aguiler­a's wild pitch enabled Milwaukee to take the lead and Molitor hit his 11th home run.

Gary Wayne (0-1) got the loss. Ron Robinson (9-3) was the win­ner and reliever Chuck erim gave up a run in the ninth.

Missouri tight end regains eligibility 01 wire services

COLUMBlA, Mo. - The University of Mis­souri reversed an earHer decision Wednesday and declared tight end Tim Bruton eligible to play football this season after reviewing his transcript.

Bruton, a senior from Houston, Texas, was ruled ineligible last week because school officials said his grades did not meet Big Eight Conference requirements.

Sportsbriefs Bruton asked Ted Tarkow, associate dean of

the College of Arts and Sciences, to review his tran scri pt.

Tarkow said a course that Bruton had taken on a pass-fail basis was inappropriately included in the calculation of his grade point average, causing him to fall below Big Eight

_ standards.

"I'm just ready to put it behind me and play football," Bruton said.

Tigers' football coach Bob Stull said Bruton would play in Missouri's season-opener Satur­day in Columbia against Texas Christian.

National League conftrms applicatioaa NEW YORK - The National League con­

firmed Wednesday that 10 cities submiijed bids for the two expansion franchises that will start play in 1993.

Cities that handed in proposals along with $100,000 checks before Tuesday's 11 a.m. CDT deadline were Buffalo, N.Y.; Charlotte, N.C.; Denver;. Miami; Nashville, Tenn.; Orlando, Fla.; Phoenix; Sacramento, Calif.; St. Peters­burg, Fla., and Washington.

Vancouver, British Columbia, did not make a bid but asked for a 3O-day extension.

"We've faxed our extension request to (NL president) Bill White's office," Canadian Sena­tor Ray Perreault said. "We've explained that, because of the huge amount of money involved, we need more time."

According to a survey by The Associated Press, a total of 18 groups from the 10 cities bid for the new clubs.

The NL will select a short list of contender cities by Dec. 31 and pick the new clubs by Sept. 30, 1991. The new teams will cost $95 million each.

Orioletl groundlkeeper coDaples BALTIMORE - A 17-year-old groundskeeper

went into cardiac arrest while removing a tarpaulin Wednesday night and was rushed to a hospital, officials said.

John Soper collapsed as he was helping the grounds crew lift the tarp off the field after a short rain delay during the game between the Baltimore Orioles and Seattle Mariners.

Soper received CPR on the IlCene before being put on a stretcher and taken to a waiting ambulance. He w~ transported to Union Memorial Hospital.

Officials said he was alive and his condition had stabilized by the time he was placed in the ambulance.

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I I • COAL VALLEY, III . - It features big names and big money. And

~ organizers of Hardee's 20th annual Golf Classic tournament, which gets under way today, tout it as

'" bigger and better than before. "This is our top field - the first

J[ear we've had such good players," Ii said tournament spokeswoman

Julie Johnson. "The golf course is to good shape.

• . ·We had a lot of rain earlier in the lI'lmme d rainfall has been

I I tlOrm then. There are few ~ dry spo ' ,and generally, the course

a.looking very good." \I Defending champion Curt Byrum ~ds himself sandwiched between

I !lOme big names from the PGA tour oompeting for the new $1 million

; purse. ~ Hardee's has taken the tourna­Vlent from the brink of bankruptcy lind in short order turned it into a

) j .nationally televised event of PGA • ~ 'Significance.

• The four-day Hardee's Classic ' I I <boasts a list of heavy hitters. Take

l;urtis Strange, winner of 17 PGA

events, including two U.S. Opens, and more than $5 miJIion during his 14 years on the tour.

Byrum also faces eight other past Hardee's champions.

The Hardee's field is full of well­known golfers, thanks to a new date that took the tournament out of competition with the British Open in July.

A hefty $300,000 increase in the purse also made the Hardee's Classic more attractive to the headliners, as well as a commit­ment from ESPN to nationally televise the final two rounds Satur­day and Sunday.

In fact, it attracted 36 more golfers than it has room for. The tourna­ment had a full field of 156 only twice in the previous 19 years. Money probably was the key to the surge in interest.

The 1990 winner's share of $180,000 is five times greater than in 1984, the year before Hardee's assumed sponsorship of the tour­nament.

Johnson said tournament officials are optimistic crowds will surpass the record 60,000 who watched the

1988 event. . "We have our best field ever, and we're expecting our best gate,· she said.

Other PGA stars making the trip to Oakwood Country Club include:

-Wayne Levi, who lists the West­ern Open among his three 1990 victories. Levi has 11 PGA victories and $2.4 million earnings in 14 years of touring.

-Payne Stewart, whose seven career PGA wins includes a 1982 victory in Coal Valley. Stewart ranks second in earnings this year with $826,063 and has won $4.4 million with seven victories during 10 years on the tour. He won the 1989 PGA Championship and fin­ished second this year in the Western Open and British Open.

- Hal Sutton, who won the 1983 PGA Championship. He also has won six other tOur tournaments in his nine-year career, 'and has amassed $2.9 million in earnings.

-Mark Calcaveochia, who has five PGA victories and $3 million in career earrungs. He won the 1989 British Open and ranks fourth i.n earnings this year with $729,754.

~: .Fay beats Yanks' injunction, again ,

By Ronald Blum The Associated Press

NEW YORK - A federal judge upheld the authority of Fay Vin­cent for the second time in 21/2 weeks on Wednesday, forcing a top New York Yankees official to appear at a disciplinary hearing Thursday before the baseball commissioner.

Following a two-hour hearing in Manhattan federal court, U.S. District Judge Leonard B. Sand rejected a request from Yankees executive vice president Leonard L. Kleinman for a temporary restraining order.

Kleinman wanted to stop Vin­cent's hearing on his relationship with gambler Howard Spira and his role in a $40,000 payment

• ~Twelve linemen named finalists 'for Lombardi

~ NEW YORK (AP) - Twelve coi­l .. lege football linemen were nomi­

'nated Wednesday for the Lombardi l Award, presented annually by the

Rotary Club of Houston. The award goes to the offensive or

~ J defensive lineman who. in addition to outstanding perfonnance and abUity , best exemplifies the charac­teristics and discipline of Vince

' Lombardi, the legendary coach of • the Green Bay Packers.

The 1990 nominees are center John Flannery, Syracuse; nose tackle Moe Gardner, Illinois; guard Joe Garten, Colorado; guard Ed King, Auburn ; tackle Russell

' Maryland , Miami; linebacker , :;Kanavis McGhee, Colorado; end

.Ruey Richardson, Florida; tackle David Rocker, Auburn; nose tackle

• 1 :'Esera Tuaolo, Oregon State; guard ,Mark Tucker, USC; linebacker

~ "Alfred Williams, Colorado; and ~ : tackle Chris Zorich, Notre Dame.

: The players were selected by a 1 ' nationwide committee.

made by the Yankees and George Steinbrenner to Spira last Janu­ary.

Steinbrenner resigned as man­aging general partner of the team on Aug. 20 because of the charges. U.S. District Judge Alice M. Batchelder that day refused to issue a temporary restraining order against Vincent that would have kept Steinbrenner in power.

Kleinman, who med the $22 million suit Tuesday, claimed Vincent's hearing would be a sham because the commissioner was biased against him and had prejudged his case.

Kleinman also claimed the com­missioner did not have technical jurisdiction over him because his contract did not contain a specific clause agreeing to submit to the

power of the commissioner. Sand rejected the first argument

as premature and gave little credence to the second.

"We feel that the plaintiff has not in any fashion sustained his burden of irreparable injury if the hearing scheduled for tomor­row indeed goes forward,· Sand said, dictating his decision in open court for 25 mil)utes.

Kleinman's lawyers said they would decide later if Kleinman would attend Vincent's hearing. Dominic F. Amorosa, one of Kleinman's lawyers, said his client probably would attend.

Vincent said in a statement he was gratified with the decision and later said he expected Klein­man would appear before him.

Axn Axn Axn Axn Axn Axn Axn AXn a ~ ~ Congratulations to our 0 a , Alpha Chi Omega g ~ a Pledges 1990 ~ ~ 0 a Jennifer Berlcman Tracy Hansberger Heather RobertSOl) > ~ Jennifer Benhe Melissa Heaton Ann Schwnacher ~

Lanette Bosch Heather Hudson Jody Shields 0 a Charlotte Brekke Sheri Hurd . Laura Smith >. ~ Nicole Carr Melissa Keith Tricia Sprick ~ a Melissa Chatfield Nicole Klemme Jennifer Stansbeny

~ ~ Beth DuBrock Kathleen MacFeelf Michelle Stein Hillary Ellswonh Stacie Mitchell Justine Strar1<lbttg

a Amy Forbes Christine Newton Heidi SIrauSS > ~ Deborah Gaffney Karen Noesen Amy Stroh ~

Marcia Gammon Melissa Otterbacher Michelle Tentinger 0 a Jill Ginger Marcy Ring Kristin Wheeler ~ ~

~ We Love You, The Actives >. ~ 0

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The Daily Iowan - Thursday , September 6,1990 SPORTS 38

BASKETBALL TRYOUTS All eligible student-athletes intending to try out for the gray team are

required to sign up at a meeting in the Big Ten Room of Carver . Hawkeye Arena (3rd floor) on Wednesday, September 12, 1990 at 1:00 p.m.

The gray, or walk-on team, has been a tradition that originated during Coach Davis' days at Lafayette and was continued at Boston College, Stanford and now Iowa It is probably the only situation of its kind in major college basketball today and will provide a unique opportunity for those who participate.

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48 SPORTS The Daily Iowan Thursday. September 6,1990

I Sealed with a 'kiss

I

Arenae Sanch.z VIcario bend. and kl .... the net on .tadlum court at the U.S, Open Wednelday during the aecond •• t of her winning match. She def.ated fourth Hed Zina GarrilOn.

No. 1 Steeler pick could sit year out The Associated Press small school and is not really a No.

1 pick," he said. "lC you took all PITTSBURGH - Eric Green, the the guys out of the Hall of Fame

NFL's only unsigned first-round from Division I-M, II and III, draft pick, said he would rather sit you'd have to clear out a bunch of out the season than accept the them." Pittsburgh Steelers' reduced con- Rutigliano also said Noll's tract otTer. repeated criticism of Green is out

Green is finishing work on a of line. finance degree at Liberty Univer- "He drafted the kid," Rutigliano sity this semester and said he is told The Pittsburgh Press . "Eric's "not frustrated at an" by his looking for reinforcement, not seven-week holdout. someone to knock him down.

Green said he would accept the "You build more on positive notes Steelers' Aug. 11 otTer of $2.36 than negative notes. He can help million for four years but it was the Pittsburgh Steelllrs win and pulled off the table. The Steelers that's the bottom line." substantially reduced a $900,000 Noll, at his weekly news confer­signing bonus in their latest offer, enee, questioned Green's desire to because Green would be of little play. help this season. "Maybe you get some people who

"He's of no use to me,' Coach are trying to get drafted No.1 who Chuck Noll said. realJy aren't interested in playing

Green's agent, Pittsburgh attorney professional football," Noll said. Ralph Cindrich, said the tight end "They are more interested in get­isn't worried by the contract stale- ting a political base to get as much mate and rarely talks to him about money as they can. I'd just as soon the negotiations. not have people like that around, if

Liberty coach Sam Rutisliano said it's a first-round choice or what­the Steelers "aren't going to scare" ever. Maybe we put too much value Green by pulling their last offer off on first-round choices." the table. Green's 49-day holdout is the

"He just wants to be treated fairly third-longest among Steelers' No. 1 and like a guy selected in the first picks. Keith Gary spent two years round with the 21st pick," said in the Canadian Football League Rutigliano, the former Cleveland before signing in 1983, and Rod Browns coach. Woodson had a 95-day holdout in

"The Steelers say he's from a 1987.

Eagles sign 'replacement' for Jackson The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA - After coming to terms with former New York Jets tight end Mickey S~uler, Eagles owner Norman Braman said the team is ready to play the 1990 season without All-Pro Keith Jackson.

"We're not going to renegotiate his contract, I can ten you that categorically," Braman told the Philadelphia Inquirer Tuesday in a tele­phone interview from his summer home in France.

Jackson has refused to report to work with the Eagles without a new contract.

"We're prepared to go into the season without him," said Braman in his first public com­ments on the contract dispute with Jackson.

The Eagles also signed contract holdout Anthony Toney to a series of three-year contracts on Tuesday. They also signed free agent quarterback Ben Brown to a one-year deal and claimed former San Francisco 4ger guard-tackle Bruce Collie ofT waivers.

Toney, 27, started 14 games last season, ru hing for 582 yards and three touchdowns.

He also caught 19 passes for 124 yards. • the Eagles placed wide receiver Anthony Because of a two-week roster exemption EdwArds on injured reserve with a knee injury.

granted by the NFL, Toney does not yet count Collie played in all 16 games forSan Francisco on the Eagles 47-man roster. last year, starting 15 games at right guard. He

"I like Keith Jackson personally. I think that he's making a personal mistake that's tragic for him."

Norman Bramen Philadelphia Eagle. owner

Brown had been placed on waivers last week in order to reduce the roster to league standards.

He played in the Eagles fi.rst preseason game against the Jets, completing three of seven passes for 39 yards. He also threw one interception.

In order to make room for Brown on the roster,

has played on two of the 4gers Super Bowl teams. .

Shuler, 34, agreed to a one-year contract. In 12 seasons with the Jets, Shuler caught 438

passes for 4,819 yards and 37 touchdowns. He was named to the Pro Bowl twice.

"We feel ecstatic over signing Shuler, the coaches are ecstatic, we all are," Braman said.

"I've watched a lot of film of him and he's a good player," Ryan said. "He's been to the Pro Bowl, and right now we're very fortunate to have a guy of that caliber playing tight end for us."

Braman took a conciliatory tone toward Jack­son but delivered several backhanded slaps at the player's agent, Gary Wichard.

"I like Keith Jackson personally. I have no problem with him. 1 think that he is the recipient of bad information and that he's making a personal mistake that's tragic for him."

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The Daily Iowan - Thursday, September 6,1990 SPORTS 58

National League Race The Daily Iowan fleds comfortable atop West DI Classifieds , Jr Jim Donlghy The Associated Press

It a1J seemed so simple way back 1JI June when the Cincinnati Reds were on their way to building a double-digit lead over San Fran­~i8CO and Los Angeles in the ~8tional e West.

That's the Reds' had a \ealthy starting rotation led by 'ack Armstrong. Armstrong, the fiL starter in the All-Star game, ~8d been healthy in the second ~8lf. He just wasn't very good. Now >e'8 hurting, too. . The rest of Annstrong's team­

'1nates have either been hurting or 'oconsistent since thoughts of F,lther "Big Red Machine" were quickly dismissed.

'The start we got clff to has given '. some room going into the last month of the season," Reds mana-4tr Lou Piniella said. "I'll take our aeason every year. Who wouldn't "!rant a five- or six-game lead at the 4tart of September?"

Oh, perhaps someone who had an Ill-game lead on July 23. w TIle Reds were 13-3 at the end of April and 31-12 on May 31. That's ojfhen Armstrong, Tom Browning, panny Jackson and Jose Rijo were

winning with lots of help from nasty relievers Rob Dibble, Randy Myers and Nonn Charlton. Since then, Jackson, Browning and Rijo have all had injuries. With the starters slumping, the "Bad Boys" have spent a lot more time in the comer of the bullpen.

Piniella was forced to weaken his pen by making Charlton a starter and had to use the inexperienced Scott Scudder and Chris Hammond in the rotation.

"It wasn't a time for inconsis­tency," Piniella said. "We had no choice, though."

Late Friday, the Reds got more bad news when they learned Arms­trong had to go on the 15-day disabled list with a sore elbow.

Roger Craig and Tommy LaBorda aren't exactly crying for Piniella, though. They've had their own problems since opening day.

Entering the final month of the season, the longest San Francisco's 25-man roster had remained unchanged was 15 days (May 8-23). Because of injuries, Craig has been forced to rebuild his starting rotation almost every month and think about it nearly every day.

Remember Russ Swan, Eric Gun-

Sues, Mets set for final series clash t From the very start, the Pitts-1IIrgh Pirates and New York Mets bad a pretty good idea where they might finish .

TIlree games between the Mets p1d Pirates scheduled in Pitts­burgh the first week of the season Ift'ere postponed until the last three ~ays of the year because of the 1ockout. At the time, it didn't seem like a big deal.

After all, the Pirates were coming off a disappointing 74-88 record in t989 and their pitching staff didn't look very strong compared to bwight Gooden, Frank Viola, ,;lavid Cone, Sid Fernandez and Ron Darling. ~ On opening day at Shea Stadium, ,Pittsburgh routed Gooden and the Mets 12-3 behind two home runs

1>y Bobby Bonilla. In this case, it Jeally was a sign of things to come.

The Pirates have held on to first , ~lace in the National League East

jor most of the season and now they're heading for a September lIhowdown with the Mets neck­and-neck. They will play each other eight times in the next 4nonth, including six games at ~ Rivers Stadium. In between, !he Expos, Phillies, Cubs and Car­'dinals will play the role of spoiler.

Pittsburgh built a four-game lead over the Mets on Aug. 23 before hitting a snag and losing foU! straight, including three to Cincin­nati.

·We've played pretty good," Pirates manager Jim Leyland said. "If we play like we have this year for the rest of the season, we'll be OK. If not, we won't. It's as simple that."

The Pirates hadn't led the East this late in the season since 1983, when they finished second to Phi­ladelphia. They challenged the Mets for two-thirds of the 1988 season, but faltered in August and f!Dished 15 games back.

"That wasn't a real race," Leyland said. "We weren't good enough to keep up with the Mets in 1988." -

Barry Bonds and Bonilla are hav­ing MVP-type seaSOIlB for the Pirates. Bonds has 25 homers, 97 RBIs and 43 stolen bases. Bonilla has been a little streaky, but is among the league leaders with 30 homers and 91 RBIs.

"Barry is going to have more than 30 homers, 100 RBIs, 50 stolen bases," center fielder Andy Van Slyke said. "I p1ayed with Willie McGee when be had his MVP year in St. Louis and his numbers don't even compare to Barry's."

The Mets f1red manager Davey Johnson on May 29 and got them­selves into a position to challenge the Pirates by going 21-7 in June to move from 9112 games out on June 7 to first place on June 29.

derson, Francisco Oliveras and Rafael Novoa? They all started games for the Giants this season as have Rick Reuschel, Mike LaCoss, Scott Garrelts, Atlee Hammaker, John Burkett, Bob Knepper, Don Robinson, Trevor Wilson and Kelly Downs.

"Our biggest concern right now is starting pitching," Craig said. "Mark Thunnond and Scott Gar­relts are hurting. laCoss will stay in the rotation; there's not much choice, we have so many injuries."

While the Giants seem to be fading fast in their adhesive tape, the Dodgers are healthy and treating the Reds' once formidable lead as if it was the Maginot Line.

Los Angeles was 39-43 at the All-Star break and trailed Cincin­nati by 12112 games. The postseason-tested Dodgers beat Philadelphia Thursday night to move 10 games over .500 (70-60) for the first time this year.

"I've said all along we had to get within five or six games going into September,· explained Lasorda, the master of motivation.

Los Angeles' comeback has been fueled by veterans Eddie Murray and Kirk Gibson, who missed much of the first half with leg injuries.

Like Craig, Lasorda had to rebuild his starting rotation after 10sing ace Orel Hershiser after only four starts with an arm injury.

Heading into the final month, however, Lasorda has the best rotation in the West with Ramon Martinez (16-6), Fernando Valen­zuela, Mike Morgan and impres­sive rookies Jim Neidlinger and Mike Hartley.

Just how much of a race there is in the West could very well be deter­mined by the end of the week. The Reds play the Giants at Candles­tick Park on Wednesday and Thursday before meeting Los Angeles in a three-game showdown series at Dodger Stadium.

The Reds are an amazing 0-7 at San Francisco this season, having been swept in June and July. Garrelts finished off a four-game sweep for the Giants on July 29 when he came within one out of a no-hitter.

The Giants visited Cincinnati in mid August and lost three of four, including a game Piniella "guaran­teed" the Reds would win. That led to some heated words through the media between Piniella and Craig.

"You say stuff like that, it comes back to haunt you," Craig said.

Associated Press

Pittsburgh left·hander Doug Orabeck has anchored the Pirates' suprlslng r~tation, going 8-1 since the All-Star break and 11'() against the NL Wel~ and Is a leading candidate .or the National League Cy Young Award.

take advantage of it. If it comes down to three games, Leyland might have left-handers Smith and John Smiley and ace Doug Drabek (17 -5) ready to go.

keeper and I'd hang him above my mantle," Leyland said.

Said Drabek, "The only thing I know about Cy Young is he's dead. Let's win the thing first. If you win, good things happen."

~ "We can't be in the position where we have to win six or seven games -&om the Pirates," Mets left fielder Kevin McReynolds said. "They're a letter team than the last couple of ;years. They're not inimidated by us anymore and they're not going away."

The Mets have proved they have a weakness against left-handed star­ters, going 21-22, and the Pirates added southpaw Zane Smith to

Drabek, the front-runner for the Cy Young Award, is 8-1 since the All-Star break an 11-0 against the Nt West.

"If Doug was a fish he'd be a

The Mets and Pirate~ are a fairly even match on offense, so the team that gets the better pitching should win the division.

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Even if bankrupt or bad credit! We glUrantee you • card or lI2II.bk your money back. Call (805) 682-7555 Ex1. M-1463.

351-85tl .

• lMI~ .-Alii * NORTH UBERTY LIlnty oIlnItnIIIIItII III U.,. - *&:30 PM FrH1~ September 21* II.,.. *The Night B8IOfe lowa-ISU*

0nI0r CII.IIog Today witlI YlulIIC 01 coo * * * * * * * * * * ~ IC!1.!J.;f!.U 0.._'2.0010: __ ADOPTION tll22_ Aw. _A, 101 ....... CA_

SECULAR Organizations tor Sob,iety (SOS) NonreligiOUS all8rnative 10 A.A. Sobriety meetings: Tuesdays 8pm. Fridays noon. UUS. 10 S. Gilbert. 337-8569

ART! CRAFT CLASSES Evening and non·credlt: Photogrophy- beginning, intermediate: and Audubon draWing, watercolor, batik, calligraphy. bead work. bookbinding, mailing and framing, chess , flellon wr iting, Macincosh pubhshing and a class in manners Arts & Craft Center. IMU. 335-3399

ART CLASSES FOR CHILDREN Pllntlng , Ch inese painting, drawing and pnnt making. computer ar1, needlecratt, chHS, Audubon drawing. Art for the Vo", Young and Social Skills & Manners Arts & Cr.ft Center. IMU. 335-3399

ADOPTED two yea' old seek' bab) brother or siSler. Please help our daughter', dream come true' Expenses paid , Everything legal! confidential Call DebbyJ Josh collect 914-762·5536.

Happily married couple with lova and l8(urlty wish .. 10

adopt newbom. IAgSUconftclentiel. Call col1ec1

3191373-2258 or Lynn HarlrrWln (Lawy ... ) 319/364-0900 (dily) 0( 319/362-6950

(nlghQ.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

HOME REsTORATION

REMODELING • CARPENTRY FINISH CARPENTRY

Over 40 yesrs' combined experience References available

RON KNIGHT (319) 723-3140

PETER EWALD (319) 337-7324

PEOPLE MEETING HELP WANTED PEOPLE

BI/GAY Personals Find a pen pal fne"d or mate

SASE: R&M Club PO Bo, 1772

lowe City IA 52244

SWF, 27, prQfesslonal, attractive.

NOW HIRING at Golden Corral Family Steak House. Part time and full time positions available.

"Flexible SChedulIng. -"art elme vaCltion pay.

'Meal baneli18, "Fun work conditions .

"A,k about scholarship program.

Apply at your c:onvenlenea . 62t S. Rlvelslde

Seek. outgo,no man lor dating GOVERNMENT JOBS $t8.412. and romance. Must be funny, S59,9321 year How hiring. Your romantic, sincere, ambitiOUS and .rea CaU (1)805-687.06000 Ext. ~~~Ie PO Bo' 3251 . Iowa City I~ ;.;,R-.:;96:.:,1:..2 :;:Io:..;r 1;,::lst:;;,inC.!,g ____ _

INTELLIGENT, caring , overweight (I admit It I) OWM. 42. seeks person(,) lor sharrng walking (town or counlry), Intelligent conversation; movies, live theatar pertolmances. Write The Daily Iowan, Box 041, Room 111 ec, Iowa City. IA 52242:... ___ _

POSTAL JOII $18.392- $67,1251 year. Now hiring Call (1)80s.68NlOOO E'I. P·9612 lor current list.

PART TIME Janilo,lal help n""dad. A.M. and P.M Apply 3:30pm-5 '30prn, Monday· Friday.

Mldwesl Janitorial Service 510 E. Burlinglon

Iowa CilY. Iowa

• II lllere lOIII_e 70\1 Deed to let S 111_" to 7 • Do 7011 "'1,,1 to arrl"a' I .eetl"l dille Ind .... ed • Do 1011 need to lpolotbe to __ 7 • Do 1011 "'1,,1 to willi l0III_ IIlpp" blrtIIda,.,

IIlpp" I"nlvena", or ,ood luc:k7 • II there lDIII_e tIIIt 1011 "uuklilke to "In with? • Do 1011 "1,,1 to II,. eonarltulltloal' • Do 1011 ".,,1 to .... n 1 F.A.C. with 7011f rr~.7 ,

One ,day $5 (up to) 24 words. 1 2 3 4 __ _ 5 6 7 8 ___ _ 9 ____ ~10 ______ 11 ______ 12 ____ __

13 14 15 16 ___ _

17 18 19 20 ___ _ 21 22 23 24 ___ _

Print name & phone number below. NMM ____________________ p~ ______ _

Send oomplel8d lid blank with check or money order, or etop by our office:

The OtlPy low .. 111 Communlc8l1oM c.n.., oomer 01 College .. IIIcIIeon Iowa City, 52242 • 33506714

" I

sa The Oaily Iowan - Thursday. September 6. 1990

HELP WANTED HELP WAIITED . HELP WAITED

STUDENTS: Elm .. ttl money EARN IIOMn tyP"'9 doong .".homo dar car. FT. PT. MEOlA RELAT10NS Supporl ... 11 WOfOpfOC.SSing pe:rson.al wMkendS CaU Laore4 s Relerral, po.mons wnh UOIYef"ty News computing Al t\ome Full Of XJ8..2030 SefvM:es As,.st With news release part· hme $35.000 yell Income producttot\ and ",torfTll:Uon potonlla' HIO~;'liII7-«lOO ATTfIlTlON Poslol Job • SUlrI ""'_ and ,,'r_al Typ"'ll and c:.u....;I_B-86::...:::.:'c::2 _______ � SI'.' '-or' For IIPphcallOn ,nfo oeIephone .~II". plus MUST . c n 1-602.-..eas In 101-340 QUALIFY FOR ~K STUDY C.II

CIIAs. MA, Full or pAI1. ltme pos.hon.5 6am-=~I~Opm=....;7....;d:.:ays!:_ _____ II(ey'" Of Dab II 33S03901

... ,lMN Compe1l1lYe sa .. ry end Mf\eillS WHlStde Iocahon on CNAl t HAs __ Apply ot -tr loll_ FuU or Plrt """, .,.,.II.on, 805 Groen"GOd Or,... EOE .v"I'" CompoIJ"VI salary and =~===:':':;:':";:::;=---I ::=:.::.:.::::..-------'--1 benellts W .. ,.idllocll.on. on

NANNY S busflne ApPtr •• Grtenv.ooCl Has mot.het', helper ,101» Manor, 605 Green ... ood Onve Spend .n I.Clllng )'Nt on l/1e EOE. coast lI,au love Children. would Itk. '0 _ anolher pari of Ihe ASSISTANCE needed lor ~.m .... country shll. tam1ty e.pet'.ences Befor. 1M Attar School Program and mak. new frMtnds caM E1efne,nUlry educatK>n m,pr. Of 20' .740-0204 Of wn 80w 825 nt£ NEW Hurd.net Inn lS now ."pen.nee In ctuld relaled t'-Jd

07038 hu'ng for tht folloWIng posoloon. pret.rred Selary be5ed on ---=.=....;....;=='-----1 part 11.",,- Nghl audllOf FrK1aY.nd eXp8r.ence HoUIS 7~ 308m Ind THE OA'L Y IOWAN CUoSSIFlED SalurdlY. rnodn.gh •• 110m. pari tune J.S 3Opm. IA.T.W.F Thur$d.,. AD OFFICE IS LOCAT£D IN _k http AlSO pari um. HI 300m end 2 JO.S.3Opm. CON

HELP WANTED l!XP£RIENCI!D p.rlllm. 111m help wanted 351-7578

PART· TIME DESKTOP PUIILlSHER

If rou are I responSible. Intelligent end liable _It Of of dalklop pubhst\lng software k)ok'ng 101 I pirt-llme POSlltO,... TECHNtGRAPHICS has the posilion tor you We requue help In ,..lrsfylng our customers" compoSition nMds uSing V8:f'1tu1. and Pag&maker software MUSt be experienced Prl'.r someone aVlllable noon. Spm. Mond.y­Fnday Subl'T'lit rlSUme or Ipphc.hon to James Yardley. TECHNtGRAPHICS. PO 80.,846. Iowa Clly. I~ 522" EOE

LOTITO'S PIU • • Now I.k,ng appltcahons Must ha", own cat Apply ,n ""rson aftor 4pm 321 S Gilbert. low, City

Il00II'11 . CDllIlUNICAT10NS houHl<eopong and pattl.me 354-1819 CENTER. (ACROSS FROM ntE _""onanco Soma hours w.N be CHILD car. jobl .vIII.b~ MAIN UNIVERSITY OF IOWA at The Abbey R Ir,,' Apply m GENERAL clNnlng help wanted OccastOna' $ttters wanted 56 00 ~~~~ _______ I pIlSOn. ,.".. Sc>m 81 50c0nd St • JO. 9 JOpm. Sundey· Thurod., 10 1t51 w,'h the • C' , - ~eo~ .. ~Iv~., .. ~ _______ 1 eorefvl.1e .... C." 35 • .QoI68 338·7684 'NTElllGE~ JOB$. CIA. US CU.5toms. DE". etc Now hlllng CO~ ('~l-«lOO • ., K-96.2

_EKEND -._.,... wanled IIUS OIIIVEJI HOUSEKEEPING ~"'"~ .. :! • .::Po!:r::k~ln.::.n:...::33::;1.::-=::...... __ 1 .ftp/"""med ... I ..... ocra....(Eoellientwages'at.maliermolel

E.A"N MON£Y 'MC1lRg booksl - ..... , ", ... Enjoy working In an llmosphere

Ok.rb4trg. Superintendent, that .5 very Irlend~ and helpful $30.0001 ye.r u-.c;ome potential IOWA CITY Gutl., ..-..cIs part time Now hKlng P~l~ Install., No 'lCpe'tMtce n.cHAr)' ,al y.ge1' Flexlbl. hOu,S 337-M~ .:...c--=c:..: ____ · __ 1 SH'FT luparvllOr at YOUlh

WE NtED r.""bIe. COring peopl. Eme.g<tn<y .hel .... Full limo 10 _til ","h dewlopnwntafly _""'" Retated edUcallon end dINbiad adul .nd dukhtfl l(I OUf 'Ipenenc. required Send ,esume _ 01)' group ho",.. F .... ble anG ".Ulr by SaPL 7 10 You.h hours Includ. overntgnl. and Homes tnt PO BOl 32., lowi CIIY __ 53 90 10 $IOr1. S4 I~ IA 522« EOE ..... II.bIe In 90 days H you "1 • h'Uh tchooJ gladu.'e 18 ye.,., otd VOUTH ~r. work" Joba thlt and art ,"'""ted. please Ittend make a dltiefenca Pin IJrnt up to appIocanl or""'llIlOn Mond.y ., 40 hour. 3prn- 11 pm .nd I. pm-:!pm, WednasdlY II 100m or '.m Send r .. u .... and leller by Thuradr/ ., 2pm S,.,...... Sepl 7 10 Youlh -..e. 'nc . PO Unllmlled. 1000 W.II,"ms St . Bo. 32~. tow. C'ly IA 52244 EOE

1_. Cny 338·9212 EOE M ROSSlE'S CAFt. Help wonled . lull

CIMr CrH" Community Schoo". Bonusel for .MperJenc.d wo,kers PO SOli 487. allorellA 52322. or Shilts availlbit are ' one lulHIm6 ;...CI_'I_62_S.4_5;..1.;:.0 _______ 1 or pan·llme. Monday· Frld.y wllh OAI[AT opportunity 10 work oecaSional weekends; one outGoof.1 Ou.llty car •• I "wo Ind wMkend. Saturday· Sunday, S.m­landscape mlmtlnanc;e compeny 4pm Apply In person at thl Alamo has poIoItlon.IVIJlabJa now Molor Inn Of tall between 7am· through November or poSSible ;)pm. Monday· Friday 337·9888 ,...,. round car .. , Sludents can scheduJa work on days without an)

C01l3Sol-3108 fOf mora SPRING BREAK.

S!ll AVON or parium. 329 S G,I".rt "RN EWTR- $IS :'-':::'.!:::':':::':'::"=:"'::'''':::::::::':''''- I DtPP£RS ","ntlld 10. flexible nigh I ~ "~. ,.'RT TI- " ••• ..,. II~' "lerk Up to ~ ,. ~ .. a11 ,.... and weekend naurs Apply Within

Otmtmas, summer travel FREE. Air couriers

needed and cruilCsnip jobs. CaU (80S) 682·7555

Exl. f.1385

Call Mary. J38..7823 15--20 hours a week R.lall cklthlAO Cllfford-, Frozen Yogurt and Ice Brendl. ~S.2276 I.pe""ce hetplul 0' (t'aln fight Cream. City Center Piau.

pa""n Apply II Fin & Fealher. 943 Coralville 337.3'38 I(EKING husband Ind Wile 01 lwo R.ver.tdt Of,.,. Aak 'or Todd nu, .. ng Ituct.nts 10 help ea,. lor diUbI~ '""ttem." .t night l 1Y1rw.J quartet. Will be 't.lrnlshed ClJII 337-5158. be._ 8.m. 9pm

WANT COUPLE: to manage 75 unit motet apartment c:omp4eK In fall· Irn 10.,..1 Should hoi.,. good peopIl. bookkeepIng Ind mamtenlnca ,kIn, Please send 'Hum. Includmg th,M JOb ,.I"lncH to . PO BOil 1~ R R a. 10... 01)' IA S2?40

PART TIMe euh..,S Two Ot thr ..

ARCHITECTURAl DIIAFTS,.ERSON

MecnanicI' IllCIfM:al 'notneenng firm 01f..,11 tle.lble achtdu" for tun pan time permanent positIon Minimum 0118 hours.' wMk Pr..,lou, lllpefttnCI reqUired Submit resum. w.th ar.ftlng IImplHIO

Gene O...".,r Inc 123 N linn 51 Sto 2E

low. CIIY IA 52245

8·hour ,''''" pO. week Hourly GOOD PAYt "'ega bonus Apply PI ... u,. E.""".nced cook needed APply Pallce, 315 KlfkwOod In PlrlOn betWHn 2.-.4pm Monday-

HANDS .w..,"" ., ., .... ,. took'ng F.i<lar II S o..buqu. tor qu.t1fled Nles people bu)'ttr. Why not call Linda HiCkin today to( .nform.hon'13S1~

BltND con.go ,'uden' need •• read , and WrHlf 'or calculus 35' ·'54' O. 3!>1 .'."

LOCAL competltlVI ail/1m club " ,..klng two lUll lint a)ac~. for thl fill Wln!1f Mason Must h.~ competltl .... 'wlmm~ng b.Cli(ground and 10 .... to work wl1h kldL Intlrelted. ClllloWI City S,*lm Club ..... d Coech 0 ... IInderson. 33~~

f AAN 1100. wMlr;ly wOr kJng at homl In IPIr. tlml hnd "11 .. CSdf~ I t.mped Invelope to W.I"."ca, Sox 313. toWI C.ly IA 61244

WANTED' Food wo.k .. , .nd cook. UnfYtr54ty 01 lowl Hospr' II Ind ClinIC., O .. tary Oeplrtmertt Stlrtlng Wive ~ 50 hour 1~20 hou ,... per 'Week Contact Joan Oolelll, Alit O"ttto, Food Servlc,. Oillary Depl C· I. 7. UnI .... r"ty of lowl Hospitals Ind CliniCS. low. City IA ~2242 The Unlv8f" ty ot lowl IS an Equal OpponunllY AffirmltlVe Action Fmplo~.r

ADULT cam.r nHdeel downtown If" Ide.1 tOf student. Profit mlklng oppon-unlly Cali Tertia r ..... , 337-3181 .. , n

LOOKING tor I u les oriented . tudtnt to Mil promotional and tund raIling Itams Great wly to help PIi"llor IChool wllh low hourly Inpul C.II Grephlcs Plus 51~8·25e3. a,k lor Scott

READ BOOKS I $1001 t.llo ' Fr .. 2.·hour reeo,G,ng 416-289-9690

UNEMPLOY£D? Cambridge TFUPo&Itlon5 has Immediate opening. 10'

P.cke'. MoY,rs

Food SeNICAt Workers Con"I'"

CaU 382·9555

LITTLE CAESAR'S Now Iccepllng Ippl.cltIOI1. for drl'lv', S.o4 hour plu. gas allOWlnce and tiPS Apply It litlle e.tsar'l. Pepperwood Place. 2 ... d.lly

WANTED F.mll. 10 hliP d..ablod wom,n wit'" pe,sonal care Elfly mo'nlng' C.1t Barb 1\ 337·~568

Our retirement centBr Is taking ap· pllcatlons for host· ess/hosUcook. Full &/or part time. Evenings. nights & every other weekBnd days. ~ you enjoy cooking. pleasant surroundings and time to study. please apply at:

603 Greenwood Dr. between 8:30·4pm

weekday •.

Do you have asthma?

00 YOU loY. smlll chlld,en? If you arl highly enefgeue and ha~ a sunny outlook. this part timl job II 10' youl My,t h.ve ~r, 337""00 days. 354-41 11 evening.

Hiring all poalUon. Stan part·lime $3.85

IuM lime $4.00 • Flexible houI., i .m·l t pm • Fat MYwament

opportunIlieI • Free unilarm • DiscounI8d empIov ..

rMaII.

.~ . e W .. t 338-1145

YIRY COMPETITIVE STARTING WAGE

DAYS-NIGHTS-WEEKENDS Now accepdng appllcationl

for all shifts, tuU or part· arne. Apply In person.

7·108m or 2·1 Opm. At

aU'IIer King 1445 Boyrum 51 . • 124 S. Dubuque St.

BOOKKEEPER

Country Kitchen of Coralville is now hiring parVtull time line cooks lor second and third shifts. Starting salary

$4.50 per hour or commensurate with

experience. Apply at 1 st Ave., Coralville, IA.

SCHOOL BUS

DRIVERS We would like (0 InlOrvlew people Interes(ed In sup­plementing their regular income appro~lmalely $400-$500 or more per month for driving 2-3 hours daily. 5 days a week.

School slarts Augu5127.

Apply now

IOWA CITY COACH CO. 1515 Willow Cr.ek Drive lu.1 off Highway 1 W.,t

A SALES

NeJone/ __ In

leiematUtlng Indu,,,y ..... anleulerl, .... 1"00 ..... '" ,_ .... You will be

rap_,ing Fortune 500 tempen ..... ling various

pmducr. and .. rva •. W. .ra offering FT/PT pooIlone with

lIo.lbIe hoIJ,.. E.ce4t.n1 .. aning IIIary .5.25 per hour

plus bonu_. For tcnaldoratlon. call 1.eoo.122·2722

MIl tor .... Norrie

HELP WANTED HE4LTHY female volun' .. rs 18-35 r"" old wanted lor ANONYMOUS oocy11 (egg) donahons to In tertII. coupJes Must heve finished planned clutdbe.nng .nd complete screening proc.durn Compensation Ol'lln For turther Inlorm.tlon call Cyndy .t 35&-8A83 between 9.m to nooh .nd 2pm to .pm. M·F

DtRECT mar"",e, n8ldeo '0' Des MOines Register and Chicago T ubunt 10 downtown lrea_ Great elrnlng potential Phone Dave. 337·2289.

DES MOINES RECISTER needs carnlrs

Muscallne & 71h IIv. Sf45 Iowa a Jefferson $140 Towncrast arel $150 Seaton's Irea $125

Summit & eUrlinglon SilO West Benton area $115 (II most no collecting)

Washing Ion & Scott SIlO

Earning. based on four week potentlll

Phon. 337·2289

Help wanted, aU shifts needed full or part time. Starting $4.00 an hour. Apply 81230 Kirkwood Ave.

Immediate openings for full or part time deliWIt}' drivers. Earn $6-$8 per hour with tiP'

and mileage allowance.

WeoHer: - Paid Training - Free Shift Meals - Food Discounts - Health Insurance Plan • Flexible SctIeduling • Paid Vacations • Paid Holidays aher

6 months Applicants must be at least 18 years of age. ONn car a

musl. Apply at

PIZZA PIT 214 E. Matllet St. , Iowa City

3pm.9pm, Mon .·Sun. .on

ORIENTATION INTERVIEW

System8 Unlimited. lne. is oonductihg a general orientation interview for people interested in finding out more about the agency and working with developmentally disabled individuals. FUll-time and part·time positions are currently available. We will meet at the Robert A. lee Community ReCf9ation Center, meeting toom A at 7:00pm. September 6.

EOE/M

WANTED SINCLAIR on N Dodge 15 now accepting applications for part time shim and some weekends Good stlrtmg wage With regular incr ..... Apply 7·3pm d.lty EOE

¥If NEI!.O someone to work each dar flom 1 I 15 10 12 30. PlY $A 50 hoUf Duties Include supefYI$K)n 01 children. bOth on pfayground and lunch,oom MOflday· Friday. Interested people shoulG calt 33&-6864

RELIABLE pOrson needed 10< housekeeping and chlldcare Monday- Frldar. 3 .3Q.5.3O Musl have caf One year commiUment desired can 354·1351 after 5:30

STUDENT TECHNICIAN The Health Protection Office il seeking I student 10 d.Ii'll8f packages 01 tadloaellve malsrials 10 reselrch labs on campus. Must be aYlilable Monda), through Fllday 10' 2.;3 hours between 9am and noon $5 50 per hour Contact Gary Richmond or Tom Lonergan "335-8501

ftSrud N_ houn wanled

10 am·S pm Full or part. lime. Great Locallon.

Appl), In .--. Old Capitol Cen ttl"

HELP WANTED PAPER CARRIERS

IN FOUOWlNG AREAS:

- Morningside, WilaDn, College, High, LOWell. S. 7th Ave.

, Prentiss. Clinton, Dubuque, Linn

• Church, Ronalds. Brown, Van Buren. Gilbert

Apply: niE DAILY IOWAN

CIRCULATION Ph_ 335-5782

$4.75/hour IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

WE ARE LOOKING FOR FRIENDLY FACESI

Now hiring for full·lime days and closing shilts. $4.7515.00 hr 10 8tart. Other part·time shilts starting at $4.5OIhr.

Also have openings for shill managers starting at $S.SO/hour.

We offer:

• Free uniforma

• Very flexible schedule.

• Discounted meals policy

• Paid breaks

• Clean modem environment

Apply today at:

618 Firat Ava, Coralville, 804 S. Rlvtrllda Dr. LC.

or Sycamore Mall.

~on 'Melon;" .. ATTENTION STUDENTSI Workers needed Immed· iately for euy, temporary

Volunteers with asthma. ages 15 to 50, are needed to participate in a University of Iowa study of investi­gational medication, Compensation for qualifying subjects.

We have an immeciate opening for the position of bookkeeper at the Nelson Center, Respon8ibililiee include maintaining accounling recorda, prooeIIaing pay­roll, receptionist dutiell and other gen9f'al office work. Minimum require­ments include a combin­ation 01 2 ye8I'B 01 Ic:c:ountlnglbookkaeping experience and educa­tion in the accounling field Lotus 1-2-3 experi­ence preferred. Thia is a lull·time pollition with benefits. " Intsl'9B1ed, Send resume to:

Now hiring food servers for fall.

assignment in a clean production environment

SHIFTS AVAIL: 6 am-2:30 pm, 2:30 pm· l :00 am. ~. Dr the same 8hlltl TTH. Call today tor an Call 356-7883 or 335-7555.

Leave name and number.

RAINBOW CLEANERS

" DUTCH WAY LAUNDRY

• Paid vacations • Variable hours;

days. nights & weekeflds

• Ful & part time

Apply in peflOl'l between Sam·2pm

daily Men-Fri.

101 E. Hwy • aypa .. (".11110 Yen Ching)

HUMAN SERVICES The NeI80n Center, a

'IOC8tional rehabilitation center 88IVing the needs ol"'e developmentally dilabled. has the loIlow· ing job opportunities.

• AMIeI8nIa: lionel a,· Friday, ..".-3:30pm 35 hour. per __

- AId .. : Monell,· . Friday. 11.m-1pm

hour. per WMk.

" you haw a geniune int8rellt in people, attend one 01 our appI"lC8f1t or­ientation _ionII Mon. 3pm. Wedneeday lOam. or Th~ 2pm al:

SYSTEMS UNUIlITED 1M! Wlllr.m St Iowa City, 1_.

EOEIM

How would you ~ke lua-time pay. lor part·lime work?

How would you like working lor • goodcaUl8?

Also, get that sun tan you always wanllldl

If this SOIniI inIaresIing ... C.II

Youth C._Inc. (31') 351·170

A,k tor sn .. '"" .... '·FlldIt'

HELP WANTED

SUBSTITUTE PAPER CARRIERS

NEEDED IN IOWA CITY. CORALVILLE

Apply: THE DAILY IOWAN

CIRCULATION Ph. 335-5782

Must have some lunch availability.

Bev,rly Tlylor. Syet'lIIt Unlimited, Inc. 11140 Wllllim 51.

Apply between 2 and 4 Monday through Thursday. appointment,

337-3002 Wy'"-"'Yaem­

Commerce Center 325 E. Wllhlngton

No! an IigInO)' • Nwor a r ...

The Iowa River Power Company. EOE

lowl City, IA 52240

EOEIM

Asthma? Seeking volunteers \Wh asthma, ages 12 to 65, non-smokers, for upcoming research studies. Compensation avail­able. Phone weekdays, 319- 3$.1659. 9am-4pm. (Allergy Division/University of Iowa Hospitals).

NEEDED For 12 week acne study.

Male Volunteers, minimum age 13 with moderate facial acne.

Compensation

356·2274

Now hiring part time bUllpersona & dish­waahers lor evening shifts. Starting wage

$5lhour. ApplY In person Mon-Thurs 2-4pm. The Iowa RIv.r Power company

501111

EOE MlFAW

Now hiring night cooks & prep cooks. Apply in person 2-4 pm. Mon.-Thurs.

The Iowa River Power Company 5011s1 Ave. Coralville EOE

Breekf .. t with the Preeldent. lunch .ith The Jolfery Banet,

cUnner .ith Spike Lee bllCkatap perU .. with Tom Pelly "

New Klda on the Block " myth p!!ch more .•.

THE IMU CATERING SERVICE Ia now hirinll'eliMrecI

Unlvenlty orlo •• audonla .ian up for .. inlel-#iew al:

Campu Info. CeDter 10". Mllmorial Union

. H*LL RAISER STOP INDUSTRIAL POU.UTlON

...... Tt".lI e ....,. FIll hit 11me

MJUCE HEALTH CARE A RIGHT, 'NOT A PRIVILEGE

ICAN

HELP WANTED

HAWKEYE FOOTBIILl (KINNICK) STAOtUM maintenance WOrkers needed Registe ,ed studenls need to hlye aVIIUabJa mornings or afternoons plus an football Salurd.,. and the next Sunday morning Starting wage $4 60 per hour Apply 10 Bill Ne.l. SW stadium shop area or phone 3310-9461.

PART T'ME help wanled for Feed Warehouse and Fen,hzl' Plant. FUll d.,. .nd IIg beckground pref.rred Stutsman'. Ine .• HillS. Iowa. 679-228 I.

Hardl.li: REWARD

Reward yourself with a growth oppoounity Earn $1600 this se­mester working part time!

We offer • $50 hiring bonus • Discount meals • Employee Atten­dance program

• Day care referral also available Please apply at: HARDEE'S

107 2nd Sl.Coraiville Any hours other than llam-2pm.Ask forJulie, Mike.leff or Rob.

EOE

~ . NOW HIRING

PIZZA DEUVERY PERSONS

-FUN • FAST PACED - FLEXiBlE HOURS • EARN UP TO $8IHOUR (11-...,_,.. .... ,.. ..... ""'1 - FULL OR PART-TIME

QUALifICATIONS: • 18 years 01 age • Own car and Insurance • Good driving record

AIIo Insld. counter hllp nttdtd Apply In perlOn

DOMINO'S PIZZA 529 S. RlYarlidl Drill •• I.C.

Hwy 6 & 22nd AYe .. COIaIv .,"

338-0030

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED

WANTED : Nlghl d.sk .'erk. Ih,.. ~ I THE UI Division of Recreational nlghtl pet WHk Welkend Pilit 5ervic" is Icceptlng applications time des" clerk Waltrell or WIIt,r .. fa, gymnaslic instructors for brlak'ast meal and tvtning Gymnastic experience and natural meal Apply in person Presidential "'I aptitude for teaching children a,e Motor Inn., 843-2528 ~ nectlsary Appl le.tions 111 being laken in E216 Fl,ld Hou ... For 'nfc c::a::.:"..:33:::5-~9::;2;:.89=_______ BO.JAMES Full or part tome

SUBWA Y counler help needed Apply In person at downtown Iowa City or CoralVille location

FULL AND PART tim. kllchen h.,p. Apply In person betwe.n 1I).113Oom

THE FIElDHOUSE ," E COLlEGE ST.

WANTED: Child cer. aide. 3:3Q. 6prtt. MondllY· Frld.y Also subolilul .. n.eded Call 337-5843.

I{pbIcky IkW CbIcaD. Pleasa~ people wanted for easy

wort<. Please caU: 351-5028

dishwasher Apply 2·4pm. tl8 • E Washington "'I

MAKE OVER 1251 HOUR Sell T·shlrll In dorms and apartments with absolu lely no financial obligation Call 351 ·7834.

WORK STUDY offlc. a .. I".nl. 20 hour" week at 54 251 hour, Otllce ,kitts necessary Confidentiality a must Typing skills necIsiary. Call limy al 335-6001 , Th. Aope Victim Advocacy Program.

FULL TIME P. Requires Mast equivalent combl"" n 01 experience and education 5alal')' ronge. S26.251). S3 1.165 C." 319-335-7006 lor additional Inlormatlon. Submit rB,ume to PII.1OO8. Room 101W Nursing Budding, The Unlll.rsity 01 low., Iowa City III S22~2. Th. Unlv. rsol, is an Affirmative Atllon, Equal Opportunity Employer.

RN & LPNs FULL TIME OR PART TIME RESTORATIVE NURSING

JOIN OUR TEAM Competitive wages • Free Uniforms Benefit package • Westside location

Call or come in Monday-Friday ~ GREENWOOD MANOR

8015 Greenwood Orin low. City

838-'7912 EOE

i"~~--:'f~~~:~ ;

. ..:J.~

I IMUFOOD ~1 I SERVICE I; ~,~w.~' ' Is now accepting student ~ .. ' ~1

applications: ~

• Pantry • Union Station ~ • Catering • Filling Station ~:~ • River Room • Kitchen

t - : Sign up for an interview at:

~• t Iowa Mamorlal Union . 3~3105

~~>~~~~~~

The Sky's the limit &m $6 to $101 hOur

• R.F.XIBI! RJIl & PAKfTIME HOURS e TFAMATMOSPHERE

~\.. • WE WDL TFAOIYOUTO ,..f~-~ 1:\\ SEllLIKEAPRO ( _ _ 5 AppyM p.m. M-f r 5§.~ " CaDJdftoday'~ \ 1~1 =' - l07Ar~~r~~ FE ..., J ftO~OH'

_ '. i:-:-_~ ~ .•

.~ ~".:r:- e"::' zt

~a=--~~ ..... ~ 209 E. Washington Ste 303

(Above Godfathers) EOE 339-9900

IOWA · MfMOAIAl

The IMU River Room Is now taking student applications for salad workers, stir fry cooks, foodservers, dishwashers and busers. • Flexible hours-choose your own hours around

your classes. Work as much or as little as you want.

• Extra spending money

• Meal and break benefits

I Meet friends in an easy an~ relaxed atmosphere.

• We can guarantee you a job .

Sign up for an interview at:

Campus Information Center Iowa Memorial Union

335·3105

J-----~HELP WANTE

DISPATCHtR Full II",. position In She ~plrtment communlcal eente,. Contact JohnlOr SIIar"f, Departmenl. 51 -

, S. Capitol lor lurther Int. end appllcallon by Sept ..

.II EOE MJF

WORK·STUDY tab assllt , Pharma.ology. $4 50 pe' ~I or stop In 10 2, 2·232 Bo ..... n Science

GARDENER'S helper. 7· ' W'! or work! week , Mostly or

weekends 511 hour. 351 ·

~ STUOENTS: Work at hon ,.11· p.ced malting our. Ilteratur. For details, cal loti· fre. H!()t).755-23~ .

.. UI SOCIAL Science Inst, SCudents to c uel lelsi

,J Interviews. 1m Musl spe.k glls' 30 WPM. I rs pe' Flexible scheduling. S4 2 slarl . C.II 335-23117. 9-lp

lEST WESTERN W.sttl ~ now taking applicatlon. i

and pert lIme Walterll W Banquel Set·uP. Host! lit Busperson. and Salad fli t, apply in person al Best V

i Weslfi.,d Inn. In torSI ... , ~ighw.1196. E.1t 240. Q .. .

'ART· TIME studenl po hours weekly E-.per18n

~rodUCtiOn and stll! pho

• ply in pelson to Medi 277. Unlv.ralty HO$plt

IUSINESS opportunili .. ) lnlomarketlno for amblli . Irt'!ividuals. S. your own

IQr more Information. 33

- "'AnBOARD RETAIL ~ lnexpensivi downt .iocatoon. COif 337-4820

COMPACT r.frig.,ltor, I Thr .. slles ayallable. Lo

• tern .. lar rat ... Microwa $39I..."..,er. F, .. defl

• Ton Renlal, Inc. 337·REN

Bardcoyer $ WHEN: Sat., ~: Llb ,.,~:

or F Bring this

Mail or bring to The IItma 10 the "C lien . , Ir1d In ginit'll IdvtrtiHmlllll wll n

The Daily Iowan - Thursday. September 6.1 990 7B 1 r TED ._ ~ HELP WANTED USED CLOTHING BOOKS THERAPEUTIC

MASSAGE . MOVING WORD

PROCESSING AUTO DOMESTIC MOTORCYCLE APARTMENT

FOR RENT ~ ,elerk. Ih, .. k.nd po'!

tress 01 wait't d ,v'nlng

n Pr'Sldtnllll r--__

: ~_rt lime ... pm. 118

51 HOU" , and D'ut.,y no

.1 I

~

I ,

Call 351.78~ . ,

"""ston':/O I hour. Olfle.

Ild.nUolltv a ~ ~e.s .. ry. C.II ~ R.pe VicUm ,

~~soel.te I. .. ",

n 01 alion. Salary , 65. Call Itional resume to Nursing

~:ly 01 10.... \ h, UniverSltv ,

I~n. Equal ) I

forms cation day

on !on

.

A

DISPATCHER FUll 11m. position In Shorlll ·.

~ Ottpartment communication center. Contact Johnson County Sherill', Depertment, 511

0/ 5 Capitol lor lur1her Inlormatlon and application by September 12

JI EOE !A/F.

WORK·STUDY lab ... Istant In , Phafmacok>Qy. $4 50 per hour Call

335-8331 or stop In 10 2-351 Or .. 2-232 Bowen Science

OARDENER'S h.'per 7.10 hours

SHOP THE BUDGET SHOP. 2121 South Rlver.lde Drlv • • lor good uled clothing, small kitchen nems. etc. Open "".'Y day. 8'45-5:00 338-3"8

NEED CASH? Make money seilIng your clothes.

TH! S!COND ACT RESAlE SHOP oilers top dollars for your

laU end winter clothes. Open ,I noon. Call firsl.

2203 F S"OOI (eCrOSS from Senor Pablos).

338'8'54

" 01 work! woek Mostly on

:::_:;::k'::;,:nds:.:$7;;.,;/ h:.=,:ou:;;,.:r. 3::.,:51....:.:.138;.::6:...-. _ I YARD/RUMMAGE/ 10/ STUDENTS: Wo,k at hom.

"II· p.ced m.lllng au' .. Ie. GARAGE SALE · :~~:al;~~i~~~;~~~j:'"

rrFre r.Boo~ry hu moved to 523 Iowa

~~A lOam . D I I

5:30 pm .

BOOK SALE ~----------I DONATIONS NEEDED, Benellt TH IVE .... aRY UI SOCIAL Scl.nc. Institute seeks ",I. Saturday. Sepl. 8. 1!-2pm Old 10 ANN n-. • 'udenlS to c uct 1.I.phon. Brick. Clln lon & Markel Slree... ....., off aU "-rdba.-l.-interviews. involved. Benefit ISASI, South Afrken ~.,. ,. ~ MuS! ap.ak gllsh .nd type Sludants at lJl 338·2618. 354·2222 . 30 WP!A. I " per week Fr .. pe'~I"!I Murphy Brookfield

W FI.xlbl. SCheduling $4 251 hour to -sllrt. C.II 335-2367. 9· 1pm M·F BENEFIT Ga .. g. Sala. F'lday. Books

EFF£CTIVE pain and I lresS redu ction, dMply retaxing and nurturlno. AMTA certilled m .... g. the,apv 354·t132. Kevin PIX. Egger •.

THE SHIATBU CLINIC Acupressure tor therapeutic nalural p.in and strell relief. By appolntmenl

Tuesday· Selurd.y!l-7 338-t300

CLOUD HANDS

Tt\erapeutlc massage. By appointment

35'·6380

NEW ADS START AT THE BOTTOM OF THE COLUMN AND WORK THEIR WAY TO THE TOP.

WHO DOES IT? 5·8pm; Salurdey, 8-3pm. 521 & 521

lEST WESURN W.stfield Inn Is E Washing Ion SI. AIII.nce lor Ihe 219 N. Gilbert CHIPPER'S T.llor Shop. men'. now tlklng applications tor full M."laUy III· Johnson County. and women', alterations

ond perl time W.II.r'" Waitresses. Clothing. dish .. , pots & p.n.. ~==========~ 1'28 112 Easl Washlnglon S.,ee .. Banquet Sat-up. HosU Hostess, furnitu re, books, glassware, lois • 018135141229 BusperlOn, and Salad Prep. Please ;;,m;;;o,;;re;;· __________ 1 REASONABLY pficed custom

~ appty In person 11 Best Western RECORDS framing. Posters. original art Westfield Inn, Interstate eo and HOUSEHOLD Browsers welcome The Frame Highw.y 196. Exit 240. Coralvili' House and Gallorj. 211 N Linn

.. ~ ITEMS CASH PAID for qualll), used rock . (across t,om Hamburg Inn' lau and blues albums. cassettes

~"!NTIONI III and CD's large quanll tl .. w.nted HOUSE 01 Sewing . Over 20 yee"

~ALEIFEMALElHOlJSEWIFE/ ------------1 will travel II noc .... 'Y. RECORD .xperi.nc • . Altor.tlon •• clOlhlng. J TUDENTS FUTONS .nd Irame • . Things & COLLECTOR. 4 1/2 SOUlh linn. brid.,. uniform. coslUme. dr.p ••

• need I.n ENTHUSIASTIC Things & Things. 130 Soulh 337.5029 .338~.()4~63~. _______ _ ,persons to earn up to $10 per houl Clinton. 337-9641 . _

>/ ~Iking ORDERS in our ollice. WDWt Iowa City'. newe.tJ oldesl PORTRAITS by T.N.R. Rag." . GUARANTEED •• la'Y. LOW SEMESTER r.les. Compaci record album swap shop ; J.zz. 011 on c.nvas. 1100 .nd up. licommi5lions. and CASH refrigerators. microwaves, TVs, blues, classical STORM CELLAR Satisfaction guaranteed 338~. BONUSES!I Day and eyening shi ft! camcorders, freezers. MUSIC, 521 e. Washington.

J WlllI.ble. NO eMpertenCe dishwashers. washers and dryers E . gs S t da"" 354-4118 DO YOU need a refrigerator, - , .- Free dellverv on mosl items. Big Venin, a ur , - . microwave, TV or washer and

ptC.S58ry; will train We also Ten Ae"ta l~/lnc. 337. AENT. Bring your stuff. dryer? Big Ten Rentals has low ~EED local delivery driver. to earr semester rates 337.AENT.

~ up 10 S70 a day. Call Len al LOFT new. single, Iree-slanding MUSICAL ~IH0&4 or opply In pe,son 10 lolt Inslalled. $85. 354.9505 0' STUDENT HEALTH Globli Mark.llng .1 2054 81h 51. 338.7774. PRESCRIPTIONS? (ntICt to Target) In Coralville Mon. =:..;.:.:...;"---------1 INSTRUMENT Have your dbctor cal l it In. fri o, 9am·1pm. or S.t 9am-3pm. REFRIGERATOR. Dorm room size. Low prico.' w. d.llver FREE

- Manager trainee positions also Like new. 351-6534 UPS SHIPPING .. all.ble. ::;;:.:..;;=:..:::..:....:=-----1 76 YIOllIIS. GUITARS. banjos. FEDERAL EXPRESS

~ :::::::::::..---------1 8EO. Elltra long maUress, mandolins, ceUos, ylolas, piano, Six blocks trom Clinton SI. dorms IDLID Gold Diner now acc.ptlng box spring. lrame. $751 best oller. .Horns, harmonicas • • ccordlons. CENTRAL REXALL PHARMACY applications lor wa lter! waItress, 338..()327, leave message. strings, picks. supplies. Furniture. Dodge at Davenpon

.. cook, di shwashers. Full and part anliquN. Storm Cell.r Music. 521 338-3078 "",.. Apply In person: 130 Suger BOOKCASE. 519.95; 4·draw.r E. Weshlngton. 354.4118

~' .C::,:rn:::k::..:::la:;.no:::'e,:N.::o::.rt:;.hc..::li.=be:::'IV=. ___ I ch.sl. 559.95; tabl .. dosk. $34 .95; WOODBURN ELECTRONICS - 10v .... I. 599; luions. 569.95 ; EXPERT GUITAR REPAIR .011. and •• ",ic .. TV. VCR. 8t.,eo,

" CHILD care aide and substitutes mattresses, $6995; chairs, $14.95; Setups, neck sets, auto sound anct commercial sound ]II lIItded three to eight hours dally. lamps, etc. WOODSTOCK refrettlnO, restora tion Sllles and 58rvlce. 400 Highland

~rt.lmml>dlateIY or In FlJRNITlJRE. 532 North Dodga. THE GUITAR FOUNDATION ,C~o~u:!rt!..:, 338~::.7,-,54=.:.7.,-_____ _ pttmber. Need to have Open Ham-5:15pm 8V.'Y d.Y. AUlhorized Gibson R.pa ir -

~- ~~~n,C:;oA~~!~ :~:'Iay School WANT A so'a ? Desk? Table? 514 E. Fairchild 351-0932 ~~~~:~~PI~~~~k:;:~~~~' ;;;=...:....-'---------1 Rock.r? Visil HOUSEWORKS. NEW .nd USED PIANOS hom. neat and cl.an? Call

, WoRK STUDY poSItions. Old We've got. store lull 01 clean used J HALL KEYBOARDS 351-8340 References available. a.CIplto l Museum tour guide' furniture plus dishes. drapes, 1851 lower Muscaline Rd.

.J tnterpretar. 10-20 hoursl WMk lamps and other household Items 333-4500 SEWING with) without panems. ' 54.2& hour. Moal weekends All It reasonable prices. Now - ___ ...:::::...~=_ ____ I AlteraUons. Se'ling prom dresses,

'( "rlquired Publ ic relations accepting new consignments. GUITAR EFFECTS' BOSI j:telays, silks. .xptoence. good communlcallon HOUSEWORKS 609 Hollywood. chorus, exciter . EO tube dIstortion, GANOAS'S BRIDAL BOUTIQUE

• skills, and In'ereal in Iowa history Iowa City. 338-"4351. pedal board. Call for prices. 826-2.22

nocossa'Y. Call 335-054810r FOR So\LE: Apartm.nt sizo ~33::7:..·.:::58::0:.:1::.. _________ 1 CUSTOM Window T'.alments. ::!.,~poI=n~tme=n:.:I ________ 1 refrlg.r.tor. Basi ollar. 337·7595. YAMAHA t.no, .axophone. $650/ Drape'Y. shade., v.rtlcal blinds.

PART TIME h.,p n .. d.d fo' GOOD OU'LITY go..., twood OBO. C.II Brian. 351-3702. Competitiv. poiclng. Many sampl •• .. kends. 9-18 hours per w"k. ,.. , to choose tram. 337-3376.

• fair starting wage with regUlar sofabed. $125. End tables. $25. FOR SALE: Peavey SPU speakers.

r iftCr.aS8s. Apply betwHn 71m· Will deliver. Gall 351--5733, after 900 watt Cerwin Vega amp and a !pm. Mondey· Friday. Sinclair. 5pm. c,o.so •• r. 512001 OBO lor all ; will

• Coralvillo EDE. FOR SALE: Ap.rtm.nt siz. soli sopa .. tely. 353-0481. - CHILD CARE CERTIFIED Nursing Assistlnt fOIition avaIlable. Full- time days Ifld every weekend days al O.knoll Retiremenl Residence Call 351-1720 lor interview

~ .ppoinlmttnt.

<4OIEPHSON'S J.w.lers I. looking ~ 'too I part time employee Must be

mit to work mornmgs and weeltends Please apply In person. Iriond.y· Friday

.'AT· TIME sludent pOSition 14 hours weekly EMp8flenCe In video

;uctton and 'hU photography.

• pply in pel$on to Medl. Servf~. 211 . UnMl,.'1Y Hosplt.1 SChOOl

.. M

IItOFESSIONAL cosmelologist .. eeded 10 1111 tull tim. position,. .er.at pay; paid vacations, ","surance and more beneUts, Cali

l~.1 Cutt.,s at 338·5111 or "'Je6.8180.

refrigeralor. Best offer 337-7595. SELMER Mark VII Tenor

USED vacuum cleaners. sallophone. Great condition. r.asonably prlc.d. 510001 OBO. 353-0061

__ B_R_AN..::g5:.:.Y;~..:..:t:=5~::....cU_UM_· __ 1 COMPUTER ELECTR'C dryer tor sale. Uke new. 5170 or besl oll.r. Call 337·9054. MACINTOSH too p,lcoy? At."

AIR CONDITIONER. Good 520ST colo, compul. r with condition. 5000 Btu $ 100 CaU high·res monitor runa like a Mac. 35+7055. $275 with software. Panasonic :':'~:'::::"--------- I printer, includes tractor drive,

4-(;' , CHILOCARE REFERRAL COMPlJTERIZED CHILD CARE

REFERRAL AND INFORMATION SERVICES.

United Way Agoncy. Day care homes, centers,

preschool listings, occasional sittlt's.

FREE-OF-CHARGE to Unlv.,.,ty sludents, faculty and staff

M-F. 338·7684.

AIR CONDITIONERS: Amana. 5125. 338·1222 . ..... nlng • . Klnmor • . 24.000. 5000 Btu' • . $1()(). :::;;::::'':::::::''':::::;:':::':':':::.:.!!:::..---I CHERCHONS Ir.ncais(o) pour S2OO; Kenmore washer, $100, TANDY 2000, word processing parlerl jouer avec nos enlants dehumidifier. S75. 351·5007. sotlware, DOS, Basic. printer. francophones. 354-0566.

5400. 354-7240.

NEED TO PLACE AN AD? COME PRE·SCHOOL and p.rt 11m. TO ROOll111 COMMUNICATIONS openings now available. Lunch

option. OegrHd, cartllied =C::E:::N:.:T.:E:::R:..:F:..:O:.:R.:..:D.:ET~A:.:IL:,:S:"'-___ I I •• ch .... Coral D.y Co .. Cantar •

FOR SALE: N.w Equity ie. 640k. 354-5650.

IWO 3.5 disk drives with CHILD car. nooded lor loddl.r. monochrome display monlto, and Halt lime, In our home, mornings Wordp.rtoci 5.0. $850. 354·6709. p .. la"ed (lIexlbl.). Sal.'Y afte r 6pm. negot iable. Begin September. Call

\ 1 " "EAOBIC Instructor workshops. ~tekly. Minimal coat Call

RIBBONS. AND SUPPliESll1I 337-8453. ev.nlng •. Come to Computer Solutions for EXPERIENCED person to ca re for _

____________ 1 all of your printer nbbons, disk.tts, infant In our home, 2:30- 7:30, M.F. , I ~574 or 3&4-8979.

~ DRIV!R WANTED .,!:I:I 1, l Dan lime e.enings. lIghl deh.e'Y.

~ ,-.

. guaranteed base, commtsstOn 111 . J Must ba 18 y.ars of ag • • heve

proof 0' Insuranot and economy

paper and other related supplies. Transportation and references We carry the widest variety of required. Cell mornings. 338-2699. oliginal manufacturer ribbons like WANTED TO BUY Apple, NEC. HP. Epson .nd much FAMILY noods aH.r school

------------1 more. We are easy to find at 321 childcar • . Must drive. May be BUYING class rings and other gold Ktrkwood Ave., Iowa City (jUSI off shared. Call 354·5256. References. and sliver. STEPH'S STAMPS • Gilbert n.ar Audio Odyssey. COINS, 107 5 Dubuque. 354· 1958. pa,klng in I'ont). 351.7549.

~~~.e , car. C.II John loday. 4-9pm al ~ • 137-6365.

.= .. -BU-SI-NE-S-S--I _US_E_D_FU_R_NI_TU_R_E

- a I; OPPORTUNITY

NEW IBM PS2/30. 30 meg HD. 1.4 meg 3.5. VGA gr.phics. VGA monitor, modem. $2000, "39-0388.

INSTRUCTION SCUBA I.sson •. PADI open w.t.r cert ification In four days (two woekand.). 886-2946.

t:= IlISINESS opponunitles In )- IntomarkeUng fOI ambItious · rulivlduals S. your own boss Call

IQ{ more information. 337.9054

~"ATEBOARD RETAIL SHOP foo ~ Inexpensive downtown · location. Call 337-4820

QUEEN wal&rbed : Padded rails. acceSSOrtes. $125/ oeo. Leave m .... g •• 338-5944.

LARGE olllee desk. Wood top. melal drawers Good condition Price negotllble. Best offer. Call J5.4-3278

PETS

TOSHIBA l000SE with Mac/PC link. like new. 51 100. C.II 351-3474.

EPSON IE compuler. 2OMHD. 640~ RAM. Call 351 ·5113 .nd ask lor Ry.n.

CLASSES In Yoga (Hatha. Classicall. Weekday evenIngs. Dalienne Majors, 33s-.o535.

TUTORING ~ ; A ~ : I " .,;--

MACINTOSH SE. :/0 megabyte hard drive. 2.5 mogabyt .. RAM. Powerful end easy 10 use S1800. 351-8423.

BRENNEMAN SEED FOR SALE: Commodor. 128. 1571

PIANO lessons- Quality lessons for beginning to intermed iate players by .'pe,lenced leacher. 35J.4958.

• PET CENTER disk driv • • Commodor. 1702 T'op,cal "'h. pet. and pet m9nllor. TAC 2 joystick. Star suppll.s. pet grooming. 1500 1st SG.l0 prlnle,. 25 disk .. gamos. Ayenue Soulh 338-6501. EPYX last load camldg • . S850I

HORSE boarding . Reasonable OBO. 354-9402. altor 6

I ! I ~ REPOSSESSED V A & " 1 '. HUDHOMES

It· .i Ivoilabie from ao_t • from $1 "ithout credit chock.

~ t ( YouJq>&ir. Alao,.! ... 'I •••• ' . deIinq-' (0"",100""" CIU.J .. 11 { (805) 612·7555!!xt H· 3322

i f for...,., liII in yOW' 11U.

r8tltS ~ quality care . ElJeninQs NEC LAPTOP, color monitor, ~82::6-:..:2.::13:.:1::.. ;:K::ee:,P:...::t'Y!..:I:..:n~g·:"'-____ II200B modem. mouso, c. r'Ylng

FOR SALE: Dalm.Uon puppy. 51. ca ... 628·H85

s, ers

monlhs o ld. AKC. $80. 337·942~ . NCR SYSTEM Wordsl.r Basic. 128k Epson prlnl.r. $300/ OBO.

SPORTING GOODS 335-0923. 337-6~95. i! ,i:' ~~==;;;:,I

I~ I • .

I!) - Ii

:: 11\ J j

~ I ~

f

I I;

HAIR CARE . HAlF-PIIIC! hllr·culS lor n ....

____________ 1 APPlE IIc Imagewrlter printer. Joystick. and load. 01 soltware. 1900 Ca" 35J.0481 . SAILBOARD. B,c . Beginner/

Inlermedlate. Two sai ls, • cc ..... ri .. S800I OBO. 626-e507.

clients Hairele. 51 1 Iowa A'it. STEREO • 351-7525 --------1 ANTIQUES 0101( INFINITY Kappa-6 speak.,.

: MISC. FOR SALE . --------1

COMPACT r.trtge,atDts for r.nt Th,ee sizes available. low

• IImeIl.r rates Microwaves only S39I """ ...... F r .. delivery Big

• Tan Rent.ls Inc. 337·RENT

YAMAHA CD play.r Four yoo,. old Exc.llent condition $1<0. 351-688t •• It.r 5pm.

• IMA"P Intllllwrlltr corractlng typewrlt.r $75. 351-8393. oltar

• 5pm.

--F-U-R-N-IT-U-R-E- G- A-L-O-R-e-II-II-- I with podestal • . Musl h.ar. $290

AnUque desks. round o.k tabl... .ach Sony 0-15 Dlseman. Ilk. dr.sse,. 01." sort •• book c.... new. $190 wllh s-y •• r',338.3344

and neal aeoesserles. DUAL TURNTABLE, belt drive. OrtolOfl cartridge. $75 Marantz

Open 1 ().5pm, seven d.ys a wee~. racel.lr. 26 waltsl ch.nn.' . 575. TH! ANTIQUE MALL 354.()53() • • lter 5pm.

(betWHn The Vine .nd Th. SanctuI'Y) CD PLAYER. Sharp basic mod.l .

at 175. Technics receiver, 30 watts! ____ 50::;;;,7.,;S;;, . .:G;;;";;;be:;,;r.:.,t ___ I channel. digital tun.r . 16 .. aUon

presels. 1125. 354'()530. alt.r 5pm.

BOOKS CAR STEREO. Pioneer AM/Ft. I calHUt, thrft way mount .peak.,. 354·0505.

4. • • • • • •• C()(JP()N t • • • • • • • • JYC CD pl.yer. Look •• nd work. gr.at. $150. Sony dual cassette

FRIENDS OF THE IOWA CITY PUBUC LIBRARY

BOOK SALE Rardcoyer $1.00 • Paperbacu 50~ WHEN: Sat .. Sept. 8. 1990. 10 am·4 pm

I deck, like new, 5100. 35.f.6418.

I RENT TO OWN I • TV, VCR. slereo

400 Highland Court 338-7547. ~

WOODBURN EL!CTRONICS

TUTORING Computer clasHs incl uding. 6K:70. 22C:OOI . 22C:OOI . 220 :009. 22C:016. 22C:017. call D.en 33!l-1879.

TUTORING core courses In:

Mathematics Slatl.tlcs Physic.

Chemistry Pr&-Business Engineering

351 · 1868

COUPLE seeks natl.e tUlor 01 Demoti". C.II 338-3378 .ft., 5.

ALGEBRA th'ough C.lculul. All physics courses. 338-8568. evenings.

GRE a GMAT MATH REVIEWII

$40 BEGINNING OCT I CALL MARK JONES

354-0316

FOREIGN student .... k. English writing tu lor. Orad II terawre major pr.l.rred. 339-0759.

TUTORING el.m.nt.'Y cou 's.' In French. italian, psychology, sociology. logic •• stronomy. geography. ttc. 351·1868.

ACTUARIAL Ex.ms 1()(). 110. GRE. GMAT. qu.ntlt.tlve/ .n.'ytlcal review, 351 ·1868.

ENTERTAINMENT P.A. MOS. Parly m'J.'c .nd Ilghlo. Ed. 351·5639

MODERN METRO SOUND PREMIUM SOlJND

AFFORDABLE PRICE 354-6526 DAVE 3»0606

I WILL MOVE YOU COMPANY Help moving end Ihe truck . $30 load Offering loadmg and uoloadlng of your rental trucks Monday through Friday Bam·5pm Saturday 8am-noon John,

683-2103

ONE-LOAD MOVE: PrOYldlng encloSEJd truck plus manpower \lIsa Mastercard acceptad 351 ·59~3

TRANSPORT EXPRESS Guaranteed LoweSt Ratesl

DON T LEAVE HOME WITHOUT US 354-3526 330·0606

THE EXPERIENCED MOYERS CO.: Quality mowing! reasonable ra les.

Jan Kidw.II 354-7918,

PROFESSIONAL RESULTS Accurate. fast and r.asonable word processIng Papers, thells. lellers, resumes. manUSC,lpts Tr.cy 35f.8992

LOST & FOUND LOST Man ', solid 14k gold dome top wedding ring with diamond Inset In top Reward $100 If found call 712·262·35430' 703·503·9365. co llect

MY GREAT·Grandmother s Silver watch. near Jefferson SI. Sliver stretch band , pearl lace Reward

__________________ ~ ;354~.4~'80~ ____________ __

MOVING/HAULING All krnd • CHEAP. courteous, I.st . 337·7329

STORAGE

STORAGE' STORAGE Mini-warehouse units Irom 5 xl0'. U·Slor .. AII Dial 337·3506

MINI· PRICE MINI· STORAGE

Starts at $ 15 Sizes up to 10.20 also ayallable

338-6155. 337·554~

THE DAILY IOWAN CLASSIFIED AD OFFICE IS OPEN 8.m·5pm. MDN·THU AND 8am-4pm FRIOAYS.

TYPING PHYL'S TYPING

15 years e"pe flence

TICKETS

•••••••••• ~ RIIlIIMfI T1CItET IBMCE • ~ catI ...... .".. __ '.

~ CIndmot. ISU. Hontocanir1I. • « ConconI. w. .... 1n - .c." • ~ Clil :'ttoday 351-0037 • ~ IUY • sal • ~OOIIAD£ •

•••••••••• IPORTIlAN'I TICKET IEJlVlCE

Stud8l11 Special EU ItiJ 10 Chicago Clba- St Louis CatdinIJI. Sept 7. $CO

i1c1udn: Glme ticMl Irwponation.1l1111e bMI

~=7 _ _ IBM..:..::Cc;..0,--"'c;.;cli...;;..ng",-s.=le=CIO_,c_

1 GOOD THINGS TO Typewriter. 338-8996.

COLONIAL PARK EAT & DRINK BUSINESS SERVICES 1901 BROADWAY. 338·8100

ROSSIE'S CAFE AN OLDIE BUT GOODIE Come bacl( and see us!!

329 S Gilbert

SALE : 1976 Chevy Nov. Run. woll $450 OBO 339·1918

1"2 DODOE Omnl 024. 2-door hitch Air , crUIN. very clean

·51200 OBO 353-4298

'II FORD F150 A.C, PS. PB. 10 .. mllos 52500 OBO 351·5628

AUTO FOREIGN " 3 VW Jetta. Eltcetlent condition. no rust Ask for Mike. 337-3662

',8 VW Kermann Ghle Engine r.bullt. Needs work. 5450. 354·2654

WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE I JUNK CARS' W. p.y cash 510 10 $100 338·2523

1883 NISSAN Sianza 5·speed. 2-door. hatchback, sunroof 52200. negotIable 627-6577. after Spm

NEED TO PLACE AN AD? COME TO ROOM 111 COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR DETAILS

HONDA 87 Accord LJ<. Fully load.d 5·.peed. 4-door. $8500 OBO. 35t -81 21. leave message

1.71 HONDA Civic. 5-spoed 125,000 miles. Auns great. Rebuilt • nglno. $1000. Call 331!-9124 .

CUSTOMIZED H."ey Da",d.on 1988 Sportsler Cuslom palOt. exualarge tank and lender, king­qu"n hlghback and more A must 10 see, a must to selt Askmg $3000 OBO 626-6356. I.a"" message

'"' Ylmaha 2SOcc 7K Runs greatl Clean S67S ChriS. 338·2826

1"7 HONOA Spree 2200 mil ... good condilion 1250 OBO Phone: 351·3252

1878 HONDA 750 SuperspO'l Fating crash bars $485 aBO 354·2922

1911 YAMAHA ~oo Special II. JUSI luned up. Runs g'eat 20k 54001 DBO 339-1359.

GARAGE/PARKING GARAGE .pac • . 300 block 01 Soulh Goyernor $65. month 35 .... t488 .<' WA,·nED: Parking space or garBgt to rent Preferably near Mayflower Of Iny bus route. 353·1161

LOCKING g.'.g. 218 N lucas. $45,. month 338·6850. evenings

1.10 vw Jella. 4-door. AlC. ROOMMATE .unrool. AM,FM casselle 517501

::.:OBO:::::...::. C::::;.II..::354::....58:::88=-___ 1 WANTED '76 VOL YO 245 DL wlgon EKe,llent condItion aulo. Ale. Alpin. sl.reo.' c •• seno 72.000 ROOMMATES: We hoye rosid.nts orIginal miles. $3995 Carl who need roommales for one, two 354-1641 , and three bedroom apartments. ::.:...:.:.:.::---------llnlormation Is POSlad on door at 1110 NISSAN 280ZX. 2 pius 2. new 414 East Market lor you to pick up red paInt, new wheels. PW. PS, PB, cruise, rear defog, 5-speed, NEW ADS START AT THE ,u.t.h .. 53100 337.9795. I.... BOTTOM OF THE COLUMN AND mess.ge. WORK THEIR WAY TO THE TOP. ::=:::::..-----1 AUTO SERVICE

SHARE hourse near arena. Two la lge HYing areas. Two bathrooms, I.rge bedroom • . 351·3328.

----M-I-K-E-M-.-N-,-E-L---- I WANTED: Two male non5mokers AUTO REPAIR for three bedroom apartment. HJW

has moved to 1949 Waterfront paid Available nowl Llave Drive . message. 35t·5165.

NEED TO PLACE AN AD? COME 'PO ROOM 1 11 COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR DETAILS

LARGE basemenl .panmenl Clo.e In_ Availabte Immediately. 351-38~9

FALL OCCUPANCY. LeISing for tali. Efflcl.n!es and two-bedroom townhouSls. For summer enloy our pool and tenn is courts On bushn • . Laundry 'acUllles

lek.lkIe 337·3103

IMMEDIATE openings' Furn ished apartments, Ulilltl8S paid. One or two bedroom Near campus. on Dubuque ComBet Malk, 351-0303.

EFFICIENCY. AoC. cl.an. cia ... $265' monlh. M.llabla Immediltely. liz. 337-~.

EFF1CIENCY apat1ment eastside. parking, bus, no pelS. $260' Includes utilities. 351-2415.

ONE AND TWO bedroom apartments, CoralYllle. Pool, central air. laundry. bus, parking. $36(l.. 5450, includes water. 351·2415.

BEAUTIFUL .fficlency apenmenl. Excellent downtown location . 5375. Available immedl.,ely. Call 339'()122.

LARGE single In an unusually beautiful setting. Complete privacy WID. garage MUlt be quiet, neat, nonsmoker, 351-0519.

OUAINT ono bedroom. Wood 1l00fS, Windows. parking wllh backyard . wa lking distance to campus. Pets welcome' Sublet through December. oplion to lea58. 53251 montn. available Imm.dlately. 354·1771 .

HOUSE FOR RENT Typlno. word proce5slng. letters,

resumes, bOokkHplng, whalever you need Also. regular and mlcrocasset1e transcription . Equlpmenl, IBM OlSplaywriter. Fax service Fast. efficient. reasonable

351 -1130 FEMALE nonsmoker Own room In ------------1 -----=::.:..:...:::::..----1 two bedroom apartment on South

HOME. Needs work. TLC One bedroom plua slorage, S350. 35',8162.

TYPINO: Experienced, accurate, fast. Reasonable ratas l Call Marl.n • • 337·9339.

PROFESSIONAL Inexpenslye: papers. manuscripts.

APA Resumes, applIcations

Emergencies 35~·1982 7.m·l0pm

TYPING and WORD PROCESSING " Your Personal Assistant"

MAIL BOXES. ETC USA 35'·2113

FAST. D.pendabl •. B.sl quality daisywheel prtnttng. Ted's Typing 354·2518. I.ave m .... g • .

NANCY'S PERFECTWORD PROCESSING

Quality work WIth laser pnnt for resumes. cover letters envelopes, student papets, and business forms. Rush Jobs Close to Law School

354-t671.

THE ENGLISH MAJOR Word Processing

with speed, accuracy and style 351·3122

RESUME

RECREATION THE DAILY IOWAN CLASSIFIEO AD OFFICE IS OPEN hm·5pm, MON·THU AND lam",pm FRIDAYS.

HUCK FINN CANOE RENTALS 5181 per dey. 319·643·2669.

MIND/BODY IOWA CITY YOGA CENTER

e51ablished 1975 Hatha yoga emphaSizing bre.thlng. alignment, stretching Enhances .xporience of BEING· in- the-body Classes begIn S.pt. 10 Infonma.,on. c.II Barbera Welch Bfeder, PhD 19 years experl.nced Instruction. 354·9794

HEALTH & FITNESS WE'LL pay you to lose w.~ght Guaranteed doctor recommended 354-0974.

SOUTH SIDE IMPORT AUTO SERVICE

804 MAIDEN LANE 338-3554

Repair specialists SwedIsh, German, Japanese, Italtan.

FREE ESTIMATES ON AUTO REPAIRS

at Curt Black Auto Repairs Also, tUlon beds In stOCk. ready to go.

1510 Willowcreek Drive 354-D060

TRUCK '84 FORD Ranger. Look. good 2WD. Musl s.II. $2500. Go'Y. 351 ·9246. leave m .... g • .

MOTORCYCLE HAS MOYING LEFT YOU WITH TOO MANY THINGS AND NOT ENOUGH SPACE? TRY SELLING SOME OF YOUR UNNEEDED ITEMS IN THE DAILY IOWAN.

Johnson. Good location, free parking. HIW paid C.II 337·9118. please leave message

MALE nonsmoker roommale to share five bedroom! three bath house with four others. eeautlful location. On bushne, nellt to park. $1901 month plus 115 utlllll.s. 339-1274. anyllme

MALE roommate. Own room 510 S. Johnson 339·0142. ask for Kent.

TWO BEDROOM hou ... Eight blocks from unl'o'ersity. $8501 monlh. 354-9088.

HOUSING WANTED VISITING I.culty. Spring '91. one person. Furnished apartment or house Call 8lJenlngs, 303·443-0104.

LAW STUDENT. female. smoke' seeks shared hOUSing 335·9023 weekdeys: 351·5153.

ROOMMATE w.nted. On bus"ne Ask for Maureen, 338-8146 or 883-2552.

COUPLE seeking one bedroom REAL HICE place on busllne. $185 houla Clean, conscientious pIuS half utIlIties. 337-3366 siudents. Bill Or Julie at 354-5943.

FEMALE, own room. own bath, parking Two bedroom apartment near Econofood5 Available Sept 1. 51851 monlh 339·0495.

FEMALE, share Ihree room effiCIency. Utilities paid, prelsf graduate sludent. MUST LIKE CATS. 339. t 250.

OWN BEDROOM In two bed,oom apanment on Oakcrest. On buslina. Call Kari 338-2798.

FEMALE nonsmoker tor spnng semester. Furnished: apartment. HW paid. A...C Pentacrest Apartments (across from Old Capitol .... all) Tracy or Stacey 354-1904

ROOMMATE wonted 10 .ha,a Iwo bedroom apartment with Quiet. studious medical student CRUI location Near bus. $1751 month plus utilIties. Call 338-5725.

CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE SPACIOUS, quiet, luxury condos you can afford. One. two or three bedrooms with 811 amenities. Come and see our newly renovated units.

O.kwood Village Between Target and K Mart

702 21 st Ave Place Co,alvill. 354-3-412

HOUSE FOR SALE GOYERNMENT HOMU f,om 51 (U repair) Delinquent tax property Repossessions. Your area (1)805-387·6000 Ext. GH·9612 lor current repo It&t.

HAS MOVING LEFT YOU WITH TOO MANY THINGS AND NOT ENOUGH SPACE? TRY SELLING SOME OF YOUR UNNEEDED ITEMS IN THE DAILY IOWAN. CALL OUR OFFICE TODAY FOR DETAILS AT 335-578'. 335·5785.

CALL OUR OFFICE TODAY FOR ___________ 1 DETAILS AT 335-578'. 335-5785. FEMALE ,grad. no"smoker,~seeks !lame for Iwo bedroom, 1 112 bath, WID. AlC. pool. d.ck 354·7231 .

GOVERNMENT HOMES Irom 51 (U repair) . Oellnquent IS)! property, Repossessions. Your area 1-305-687·8000 E.l . GH·9612 lor current repo /1st.

QUALITY WORD PROCESSING

329 E. Court

Expert resume preparation

Entry- level Ihrough executive.

Upd.,es by FAX

354 · 7122

RESUMES p,epored at • low and aflordable cost Send $1 for samples and ordering Informaton to : K. Clark. Box 5167. Cedar Rapids. IA 52406·5167.

RESUM~S THAT GET THE INTERVIEW

MAil BOXES. ETC. lJSA 221 East Market

354-2113

PECHMAN RESUME SERVICES

We do It alt lor you. -personal int8IView

·consultation -write the resume for you

·llser print the resume for you 351-8523

WORD PROCESSING

BICYCLE · PEDDLE" YOUR BIKE IN THE DAILY IOWAN. 335·5784. 335-5715.

GUERCIOTTI cycloc'oss bike 52cm (21 ") AlmOSI n.w $700. Ask 10' Mike. 337·3882.

CHECK IT OUTI New Giant Mountain bike Cr Mo Ira me, Suntour XC groupo Odessy seat pump. great wheels $1000 ,et.1I •• ,uo. $8501 OBO. 353-0257.

HOT PINK T,.k 770 With Shlmano 600 compononts. Odglnally $750; will sell .t $575/ OBO. Days: 335·7500 (ask for Ren6). Nlghls' 338.()375.

RAelHOI touring bike, with many new componenls. 5150/ OBO 351-8361.

BIKES for men and women. Excellent condItion. Bes1 olfer. Call 33!l-1142.

AUTO DOMESTIC CASH FOR CARSI TRUCKS.

We need cars buy/ selll trade. WEST PORT MOTORS

1640Hwy 1.. Iowa CIIY 337·7799

CALIFORNIA Chevrolet, 1974. Dan, Mark McGuire's family car 335-1890. weekday • .

WANT TO buy wrocked or unwAnled cars and trucks. Toll Ire. 628·4971 .

GOVIRNMENT SEIZED .ehlcl.s from $100. Fords. Mercedes Corvettes. Cheyys. Surplus. Your aroa. 1-805-687·6000 E.t. 5·9612 .

BUICK '81 Skyl.rk. A.r. AM!FM. 4·door PBI PS (1111). BO 337·5326

1879 DODGE Diplomat. New eV.'Yth lng $1000/ oll.rl t'ad. 351·4155.

1.91 MUSTANG LX. Good condition Pioneer stereo, l00w speakers. 537001 oller. 337·2026

1979 FORD Flesl • . Runs w.II. Needs cosmetic Improvements. Call Robe,.. 337·2540.

'77 PONTIAC G,.nd Prl • . Run. wall . Good brakes Bnd Ilro • . 55001 OBO. 354·7034. le.ve messaga.

CASH TODA YI 5611 your lorolgn or domestic auto fast and easy. Westwood Motors. 354-4445

1184 Ch.vy Cav.lier. Good condition. 52400 354-5962

187. OLDS Toronado. Reliable luxury Clr. AlC. sunrool. leather seats, crul.e. PW. PL • • tc. $1500 OBO. 335-1009. 353·4308.

ALOHA. 1178 Granada. 3-speed. 6·cyllnder New brakes. tires.

BEST OFFiCe SERVICES •• hau ... Run •• moolh BounUlul OU.hlY Work In I.th.tlc quall"es. $550.

Short turn around 338·5862. la.ve m.s •• ge. 338·1572

HONDA 1981 CB 750K. Excellent conditIon. 9200 miles Very clean and fast 354·7564.

FEMALE. Own room In three bedroom, Cheap. busline.

1982820 Virago digItal dash Greai 354-8937. call after 5 cruiSing bike. 51050. 351·5185. FEMALE roommate needed to

ve5 HONDA M.gna. Grey. good condIt ion. low mileage Call after 5pm. 351-1780 $1700

1913 HONDA Shadow VT5OOC. 6400 miles. Shaft. electriC. $900. 338·2608.

share two bedroom apanmen1 on Myrtle 338-3882. 338.()242 •• lta' 6pm.

ROOM FOR RENT

FOUR Bedroom hom • . Welking d,slance Woodwork, no yard $89.900. 35'·9162

SMALL lour bedroom house Needs work T.rms $49,500. Horace Mann 35 .... 9162 .

NINE ROOMS plus two lull baths Extra lafge 101 $79,000 cash. 338-4070. mornings.

'82 KAWASAKI 750 CSR •• xcollonl condition. Only 3900 miles $9so. OBO 354·7021

FALL: Small singie In qUiet 0 graduate bUIlding near Art MOBILE H ME Museum. 1165 uillities included;

'85 SUZUKI GS55OEF. 10,300 mil ... Whil.' red. 51595' OBO. 335-6790 day. 338·5046 nlghl' Kwang.

1915 Yamaha M.xlm~ . Sport engine. street looks Powerful, ye,satile, sharp-looking. $1700 351-4889

'81 KAWASAKI 250 Needs sam. TLC Runs greal. 5250 338·3308

YAMAHA OT·5O Moped '87. Gre., cond~tion $350 oeo Tracey, 338",332.

1911 K.wasakl 440 LTD Low mIles Good condition $550/ 0BO. Call Greg 353·3832.

'10 YAMAHA 400 Sp.cl., Red . mag wheels 12,900 miles Verv clean. 1575. 354-3122 or 331~IH .

YAMAHA 1983750 M.xim Good condition. lots 01 extras. $l 200f OBO. 339-0084.

~33:..::7-4.:..:::785:::.... _____ 1 FOR SALE FALU summer. Large single in quiet environment; excellent l.c,IItl •• ; cat welcome. 5190 S QUALITYI Lowest Prices I $ ulilltles InCluded : references 10% down 11.5 APR fixed. requ ired. 337",785. New '90. 16' wide. Ih,.. bedroom.

$15.887. ONE ROOM in partially furnIshed Large selection . Free delivery. sel apartment lor female . $215 per up and bank financing. month plus utilities 706 Horkheimer Enterprises Inc. E. W.shinglon. Call Jenny. 1-8()()'632.5985. 351·3076 H.z.llon. Iowa

VERY LARGE room with Ii'eplac. 1980 PATRIOT H.6O. Iwo on Clinton ; $250, utilitl8S Included; bedrooms. refrigerator, slove, References required; 337-"785 washer, dryer, air, new ca rpet and

shed. $8800 or best offer. 338·7078 ROOM for rent In qUiet house or 338-7394. Reasonably close to campus 1 112 ~=::.;.",,-;c.. ______ _

b.lh'ooms and own 'oom. 51551 WESTERN HilLS. 1977 14.70. IWO month plus utilities 338-8395 after bedrooms. Includes range, 6pm, refrlgeralor. washerl d ryer CIA,

huge deck and shed, By Owner. FEMALE: Own room in Ih,.. Only 112,750. Call .nyUme. keep bedroom apartment. Close trying. 337·7424. Available immediately. Call M.'anie. 351·5828. WHY PAY high r.nt ? Go togelhe,

FEMALE. Furnished, close in. AIC, NIGHT HAWK S. Runs gre.t. Must COOking privileges. 337.2573. see. Red! bleck. $1700 OBO

and buy B mobile home 1972 12x65 three bedroom mobile home. Oeck. W D. Ale. storage sheet. Reasonable low rent. low ulllille. Ca ll 338-5917 or 351-&459 al1.r 5pm .

351 ·2304

1115 no Magn. Honda Immaculate condItion . Burgund~ . Low miles. Cruise control, recenU\ tuned $150010BO 354-8385 MuS!

APARTMENT FOR RENT

.eo at 2354 J.ssup Circle. IC. ----,-O-W-"-L-o-oa--e----

DEALS, DEALS We have efficiency apartments. BMW motorcycle sales and Available now and for faU leasing. service Used parts for .11 makes Call 354,.()617 for more Ned's Aula and Cycle. at Rlyerside Information.

Phone 648·3241 loll I re • . 12 miles THE DAILY IOWAN CLASSIFIED :so::::U::::t::,;h,.;O:.;I.:;lo::::W:::a:...::C:;.if\<:!.-_____ 1 AD OFFICE IS OPEN 8 .... 5pm.

'77 HONDA 400 Runs good. MON·THU AND 8.m",pm R.llebl. $250' OBO. 335-4165. FRIDAYS.

3-1 tpm only SHORT lerm I •• ses .v.II.ble. KAWASAKI '90 street motorcycle. Efficiency apartments in Coralville.

354-0677.

'83 Nighthawk 850. bOlh mini VERY NICE On. bed,oom condition. 337·9322. .ubl ..... 5365. Co,.'ville. Fourth

1878 YAMAHA 650 Aw.some Avonu. bus. Con .... Conlact D.H. condi tion I $500. Must se ll. Kim, Room W32 Seashore Hall, Gr.ham. 351-3944. 335-2505.

1812 COMMODORE 14.70. IWO bedroom, one bath. Appliances. wood Siding, wood sheet newly refurbished Lot 21 B Weslern Hills. 354·1342.

SU50. 10,80. Throe bedrooms • f1eW water heate' , skirting . Solid condilion 338-1725.

TWO BEDROOM. r.frigerator. stove, deck. low lot re nt, busllne. 52000. 351·5912.

DUPLEX BEAUTIFUL two Dedroom dupl.x. Cor.lville AlC. patio. flreplac • . gar.g • . $800/ month. 351·2873 best alter 6pm

01 Classified Ad Blank Write ad below using one word per blank

~: LIbrary Garage. 123 S. Linn

EW: 9 am to 10 am for $2.00

APPLIANCE I RENTAL Monday through Sunday CHEVY V.n. '77 Good cond ition

• MURPHY Sound and .lIghting OJ 8am to 10pm 81 .000 mile • . Fully c.rpeled. little ____________ 1 .. rvlce tor your Darty. 351 ·3719 ___ ....::::;;:...::'-=:.:::::::..-___ 1 tust $800, OBO. L.ave mes.age.

1

5

9

2

e 10

3

7

11

13 - 14 15

.. 8

12

U, 20

I

ere.

or Free for FRIENDS • BIG Tl!N Rlnlal. ha. lhr .. slz •• 01 compact retrlgerator, to ChOose Bring this couponjor FREE BOOK I Irorn. Delivo,.d tod.y Irom only $3gl schOOl year 337·nENT. .. . . . . . - COUPON· •• - •••• -.

CALENDAR BLANK MIll Of bring 10 TIw 0..., Ionn. Communicadona CentBr Room 201 . OeIdHne kif .ubmltllng _ 10 1ht "Cllendlr" column ill p.m. two day. prior to pubHcadon. hIma may be ediled lor length. and In gener.r wil not be publjlhed 111018 !han 01108. NoIica. which 11" c:omtneIdal lMniHmenli will nOI be aocepttd. PI .... prlnl dea~y.

Evtnl ____________ ---, ________ _

~--------~~,~~' --~~~~~~,'~~.--~---~ . y~ ...,._ .• m. ___________ ---:;....:...,~ , -:--.,.__---. l~Uoo _____________ ~ __________________ ~.-__

~~~.--------------------------~--~

· _. -

__________ 1 0 U A LIT Y c33.:..:8..;..1.;..D4.;..4.;..' ______ _ WORD PROCUSING - 17 18 19

--. '

MOVING

MAN. TRUCK From $3D Ptr lo.d and from S15 lor Iinglo lI.m, 337·5260

329 E. Court

M.cln to.h & L.ser Prlnllng

'FA)( ' Free Pal'klng 'Same D.y Service • Appllco"ons Forms 'APA logal Med'col 'Self Servo MaChine.

OFFICE HOURS ' 9am-5pm M·F PHONE HOURS . Anytime

36. · 7822

EXCELL!NCE GUARANT!! D

NANCY'S PERF!CTWORD PROC!SSING

Quality work wllh laser print for rflsumes. COlier latter! e"Vttlopes, Ifudenl pap.", and buolnesl lorms nush Job. CIOlfi to Low

• School 354·1871

.. - - _. - - - .- -- • - _ •. - _. - .• --, 0- - _

1115 FORD Escort. High miles bul gOOd condition $1800 Alter 6pm. 21 22 23 24 683-2474. =:.:.:.:=-----------. Print name, address & phone number below . 1184 RENAULT 2·door.4·.peed. Ona o wner Excell.nt. Must .all Name Phone _________ _ 338-5024.

'71 GRAND PIIIX Rebuilt .ng,n. With 28.000 mil .. $700 Alter 5pm. 351-4048

FOR SALE; 8' Ford Bronco II XLT Groal condillon. Fully loaded. Asking $4500 OBO. 337·3837 or 84~2308

SEIZED CARS. IrUCJcs.

boa .... 4-wheelel'l, molOrhomel. by FBI, IRS, DBA. Available your area now. Call

(80S) 682.7SSS Exl. C·2796.

Addresa City No. Days Heading Zip

To figure co .. multiply the number of word8 (Including address and/or phone number) times the appropriate rate given below. Coat equal. (number of words) x (rate per word). Minimum ad Is 10 word •. No refundl. De8dllne II 11 am prevloul working day. 1 - 3 day . .. ..... 84'word ($8.40 min.) .. - 5 dIya ....... 70ctw0rd ($7.00 min., Send completad ad blank with check or money order, or .top by our office:

-

e - 10 day . ..... g()¢/woId ($a.00 min.) 30 days ..... ... 1. 7QJword ($ 17.ao min.)

.. -

The Dtllly iowan 111 Communlcallont c.n.., comer 01 CoIete • Medlaon

Iowa CtIy IZ242 UW1M

-~

88 SPORTS The Daily Iowan - Thursday, September 6, 1990

Missing links Associated Preu

If you're a golf enthuala.t atuck In Saudi Arabia wortdng for the Aremco 011 Co. In Dhahren, the IInka are aomewhat available. Thl. 27-1\01, courae

I. mad, up 01 u nd, rock. and gravel. St Andrew'. It ain't, but It'll have to do In a region that ge .. lour Inche. 01 rain a year.

CFA's TV contracts attacked The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The Federal Trade Commission filed an admini­strative complaint against the Col­lege Football Association and Capi­tal Cities-ABC Inc. on Wednesday, saying their national television contracts are anti-competitive.

The five-page complaint, a copy of which was obtained by The Asso­ciated Press, said competition among schools and networks for college football games has been hindered and that ·consumers have been deprived of the selection of college football games that would otherwise have been tele­vised in a competitive environ­ment."

The YrC asked that the CFA and Capital Cities appear before an administrative law judge on Nov. 13 in Washington. The FrC could void the national television con­tracts and prohibit the CFA from negotiating new deals for a\l its

members. ABC currently televises games

under a contract with the Big Ten and Pacific-lO conferences. The CFA's $64 million four-year con­tract with CBS expires after this season and it is scheduled to begin a $210 million, five-year deal with ABC in 1991.

In addition, the CFA has a deal with ESPN that expires after this season and a $125 million, five­year renewal with ESPN that begins in 1991. Capital Cities owns 80 percent of ESPN and the other 20 percent is owned by RJR Nabisco Inc.

The CFA is comprised of64 schools from all major conferences except the Big Ten and Pac-lO. The association announced the filing of the complaint at its Boulder, Colo., office after Lew Engman, its Washington lawyer, received the papers.

"We are disappointed that the FrC has decided to file a complaint

against the CF A," the association said in a statement. ·Such action, however, should not be construed as a finding that the CFA haa acted unlawfully, but rather as an initiation of the formal hearing process."

ABC Sports spokesman Mark Mandel said the network did not have a comment since it had not yet seen the complaint.

Engman said the Fl'C did not take the more drastic step of going to federal district court for an injunc­tion against the contracts. Mary L. Azcuenaga, one of the commission­ers, dissented from the complaint.

After the administrative law judge makes a ruling, either side can appeal to the five commissioners of the Fl'C. If the full commission rules against the CFA, the associa­tion can appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals.

The FTC scheduled a news confer­ence for today to discuss the com­plaint.

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