Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1990-10-08

18
Jurors discuss reasons for Barrie's acquittal. Page SA American Indian conference kicks off. Page 3A Record number of prisoners reported. Page SA Notre Dame's Irish luck hits dry spell. Page 48 aI Iowa City's Morning Newspaper ,Budget debate raises in Congress .0824 Democrats agree on modified plan By Steven Konorow reach a consensus among them- d P selves, did not send a represep.ta- I The Associate ress live to the weekend talks. WASHINGTON - House and There was no immediate reaction Senate Democrats agreed Sunday from Bush, who shut down the 1 night on a modified budget that government to pressure the Demo- they hope will pass both chambers cratic Congress to fmish a budget. , and clear the way for ending a The Senate had convened at6 p.m. I government shutdown before Tues- Sunday and adjourned 12 minutes day. later after concluding that it would The plan would ease Medicare cuts be hours, at best, before anything I and temper excise tax increases concrete would emanate from the helped lead to the defeat last House. I Friday of the budget supported by Thatmeantthere was no chance of I the congressional leadership and a final budget agreement being President Bush. It would leave the approved Sunday, but the practical j basic structure of the $500 billion impact of pushing a deCision into deficit-reduction scheme intact. Monday was marginal since that is With midnight approaching, House Columbus Day - a federal holiday. j Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash., Republicans and Democrats , maneuvered to bring the revamped meanwhile, continued to blame budget measure to a vote, but each other for the partial govern- , there was no indication how long ment shutdown that closed federal that would take, or, indeed, tourist attractions and other whether the House would actually weekend programs nationwide. agree to staying into the wee hours Foley said President Bush's veto to debate the volatile issue, which Saturday of a bill designed to keep had tempers on edge earlier in the the government operating during evening. the negotiations was "a bad mis- Although Senate Republicans take" that had slowed the talks. Foley about how the Democrats DOW needed to give Bush a spend- ing bill he could accept. "Of all the people in this House, of all the people in this country that has little claim to cooperating with his president it is the gentleman from Georgia," Foley responded, bringing loud cheers from fellow Democrats. Bush spent Sunday at his moun- taintop retreat at Camp David, Md., conferring by telephone with his chief of staff , John Sununu, and Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady, part of the administration team that negotiated the defeated budget pact. Vice President Dan Quayle, appearing OD ABC-TV's "This Week With David Brinkley" pro- gram, said Bush was not the problem, "The problem is Con- gress." Quayle predicted that 90 percent of the budget deal Bush unsuccess- fully lobbied for last week would remain and would pass with a few changes. "The new budget agreement in my view will address the problem of the overly large Medicare cuts ... and also will address the revenue declined to formally endorse the The president was "saying we I proposal Sunday night, Minority ought to rebuild the fiscal house of Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., signaled this country and (then he) sets the his support for the plan if, all house on fire for a while to get our expected, it reached that chamber attention,"'Foley said. - Monday. Tension exploded on the House part of tbe package," safd Sasser, I also appearing on ABC . "I want the process to move floor Sunday evening when Foley's ahead," he said, observing that the temper made a rare public appear- Democratic plan was "a small ance. . departure from the original budget Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., who summit." led the revolt against the Bush- House Republicans, unable to backed budget last week, lectured The draft plan circulated in the House would reduce from $60 billion to $42 billion the amount that Medicare would contribute to deficit reduction over the nert five years. Discovery flight continues flawlessly By Mlrcla Dunn The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Dis- covery's astronauts, their primary job behind them, started a small lire aboard the shuttle Sunday a8 I part of an' experiment to study the spread of flames in space. the satellite on its roundabout journey of 1.86 billion miles shortly after liftoff Saturday. The carefully controlled fire, the first test fire aboard a shuttle, burned about 70 seconds within a sealed aluminum container, as cameras record.ed the event so that it could be studied later. inches long. The cylinder was filled with equal amounts of oxygen and nitrogen. That amount of gases will vary when the experiment is repeated on future flights. Crunch time The Dally lOwanIMlchael Williams The solar probe tnysses, mean- while , sped safely toward Jupiter at a record-setting 34,130 mph. Discovery's five-man crew started The astronauts started it by acti- vating an igniter wire woven into one end of a piece of ash1ess filter paper, about an inch wide and 4 1 /2 Discovery's five creW' members arose well before dawn Em for their first full day in space Sunday. They are due to stay in orbit until Wednesday moming, when they will land at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Michigan State tailback Hyland Hk:k80n leaps Into the path 01 Iowa's Melvin Foster before being See Shuttle, Page 9A tackled toward the end of the first quarter. Foster made 20 tackles In the Hawkeyes' 12-7 vlc:tory over the Spartans Saturday at Spartan Stadium In East lansing, Mich. See story, page 1B. Program offers exposure Russian students adapt to life at UI , 8y Azlz G6kdemlr I The Dally Iowan It il! a sticky day in August. Olga Sorokoina, Russian student on exchange , at the UI for one semester, opens the door of her assigned room in Hillcreet Residence Hall. She is taken aback to see three beds in the room - she expected to have only one American roommate. Her American experience has begun. Olga is one of the 10 RU8sian students who have heen Uving in the Foreign Language House at Hillcrest since August. Their names flow like music when placed side by side. Besides Olga there are Natalia, Tatiana, Anna, Natasha, Elena, Svetlana, • Lansa, Rushana. And Kon.tantin, the only Dlale in the group, is ofl.en referred to 88 Kostya. The xchange was arranged through the Moscow Linguistic University, and this is the second year the UI has participated in the progrllm. Because Eastern Europe is not what it used to be, the U. S. government is beginning to increase its involvement in such exchange programs, according to John Rogers, a foreign 8tudent adviser at the UI International Cen- ter. "The goal is to improve (the students') English and expose them to the U.S. culture," he said. At a special orientation session, Rogera infonned the students about a range of topics - specifically, possible adjustment problems. Rogers discussed the "U-curve" - a graphic description of the process of adjustment for foreign students. The "U" stretches across the academic year; it starts with high expectations, excitement over !?aing in a new country, then descends as See Exchange, Page 9A Duke concedes defeat in race for Senate By AI." S.yre The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS - State Rep. David Duke conceded defeat Sun- day to incumbent U.S. Sen. J. Bennett Johnston, who said he .got the message" from 600,000 voters who backed Duke, a fonner Klan leader running all a Republi- can. Duk, backed offhis threat to file a lawsuit over absentee ballots cast - but not counted - for ltate Sen. Ben Bagert, the official Republican nominee. Bagert dropped out two days before Saturday's primary amid pre8lUTe from national GOP leaders who feared his presence in the r8al would help Duke forte a November runoff. "We'll help people who feel their right to vote has been abrogated," Duke said. ·We'll help them pursue that if they 80 desire, but I'm trying to do as Bennett Johns- ton ssid, and kind of heal at this point." Complete but unofficial returns gave Johnston 749,552 votes, or 54 percent, and Duke 605,681 votes, or « percent. Two minor Democra- tic candidates split the remainder. Nick Accardo had 21,709 votes and Larry Crowe had 14,472 votes. Duke's strength surprised poll- sters, as he carried 23 of the state's 64 parishes and held Johnston close in several others. Duke had campaigned on a ticket that opposed afllrmative action and proposed welfare reform and a " flat-rate federal income tax. Johnston said Duke benefited from a protest vote arising from sour economic conditions in Louisiana. "A lot of those votes were protest Johnston said. "People were sort of venting their spleen. They said, 'Well, Pm going to send old Bennett a message.' Bennett got the message." He said he would work to diversify the state's economy away from the petroleum industry's boom-and- See Dub, Page SA American · cuHure offers: excitement, no shocks By Azlz G6kdemlr The Daily Iowan The American experience is pro- ving to be eJ[citing and full of mild surprises for Russian exchange students at the UI . For the majority of them, this is the first time out of their country. This is made even more difficult by the current turmoil in the Soviet Union. And although some of them have spent time in camps away from their families, life in a residence hall with a roommate is a new experience for everyone. They aim to be teachers of Engliah in the Soviet Union and they feel the exchange is an excellent oppor- tunity for firat-hand experience with the language. "It is a good thing that we have to write almost one essay a week for our rhetoric class," Konstantin "Kostya" Kovalev said. NBack in Moscow we hardly wrote any." . The other classes are lacking in substance when compared to classes in their home country. One Russian student said she was surprised to find she speaks French, her third language, better than an American who speaks it II his second language. -And the e1l1seS are 50 minutes compared to our 90 minutes,· said Natasha Vladagina. "We might be spoiled by the time we go back." She was pleased, however, to find the professors to be much more .If informal. "I wish there was a way to com- bine our kind of courses with this kind of teacher,· she said. Rushana Abdullina has spent some of her free time watching American films at the UI Main Library. However, one American fUm has proven to be her greatest disappointment with the U.S. The movie that upset her is "Mos- cow on the Hudson," which uses immigrants to portray the Rus- sians. The Russians in the movie were almost always plump and ugly, Rushana said. "And we don't have lines for toilet paper," she added. So far, sentiments ofMcCarthyism have missed the Russian students. '"1'here is that strange look in some people's faces when they learn you are Russian, though; Natasha said. -It's 80 interesting that in this country of freedom you are not exactly granted the free- dom of being different, being your- self." The popular belief that living m: the Soviet Union is not desirable and life in the U.S. is immellll81y attractive provokes only smiles from the students. . "You've got your family there, yow: friends, all the places you love to go to; and you've got culture," Rushana said. Severe adjustment problems to U.S. culture almost never oc:curred. See 1IudenII, Page SA

Transcript of Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1990-10-08

Jurors discuss reasons for Barrie's acquittal. Page SA

American Indian conference kicks off. Page 3A

Record number of prisoners reported. Page SA

Notre Dame's Irish luck hits dry spell. Page 48

• aI

Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

,Budget debate raises ~j ,tensions in Congress .0824 Democrats agree on modified plan

By Steven Konorow reach a consensus among them-d P selves, did not send a represep.ta-

I The Associate ress live to the weekend talks. WASHINGTON - House and There was no immediate reaction

Senate Democrats agreed Sunday from Bush, who shut down the 1 night on a modified budget that government to pressure the Demo­

they hope will pass both chambers cratic Congress to fmish a budget. , and clear the way for ending a The Senate had convened at6 p.m. I government shutdown before Tues- Sunday and adjourned 12 minutes

day. later after concluding that it would • The plan would ease Medicare cuts be hours, at best, before anything I and temper excise tax increases concrete would emanate from the

~hat helped lead to the defeat last House. I Friday of the budget supported by Thatmeantthere was no chance of I the congressional leadership and a final budget agreement being

President Bush. It would leave the approved Sunday, but the practical j basic structure of the $500 billion impact of pushing a deCision into

deficit-reduction scheme intact. Monday was marginal since that is With midnight approaching, House Columbus Day - a federal holiday.

j Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash., Republicans and Democrats, maneuvered to bring the revamped meanwhile, continued to blame budget measure to a vote, but each other for the partial govern­

, there was no indication how long ment shutdown that closed federal that would take, or, indeed, tourist attractions and other whether the House would actually weekend programs nationwide. agree to staying into the wee hours Foley said President Bush's veto to debate the volatile issue, which Saturday of a bill designed to keep had tempers on edge earlier in the the government operating during evening. the negotiations was "a bad mis-

Although Senate Republicans take" that had slowed the talks.

Foley about how the Democrats DOW needed to give Bush a spend­ing bill he could accept.

"Of all the people in this House, of all the people in this country that has little claim to cooperating with his president it is the gentleman from Georgia," Foley responded, bringing loud cheers from fellow Democrats.

Bush spent Sunday at his moun­taintop retreat at Camp David, Md., conferring by telephone with his chief of staff, John Sununu, and Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady, part of the administration team that negotiated the defeated budget pact.

Vice President Dan Quayle, appearing OD ABC-TV's "This Week With David Brinkley" pro­gram, said Bush was not the problem, "The problem is Con­gress."

Quayle predicted that 90 percent of the budget deal Bush unsuccess­fully lobbied for last week would remain and would pass with a few changes.

"The new budget agreement in my view will address the problem of the overly large Medicare cuts ... and also will address the revenue

• declined to formally endorse the The president was "saying we I proposal Sunday night, Minority ought to rebuild the fiscal house of

Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., signaled this country and (then he) sets the his support for the plan if, all house on fire for a while to get our expected, it reached that chamber attention,"'Foley said. -Monday. Tension exploded on the House

part of tbe package," safd Sasser, I ~=;;;~~; also appearing on ABC.

"I want the process to move floor Sunday evening when Foley's ahead," he said, observing that the temper made a rare public appear-Democratic plan was "a small ance. . departure from the original budget Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., who summit." led the revolt against the Bush-

House Republicans, unable to backed budget last week, lectured

The draft plan circulated in the House would reduce from $60 billion to $42 billion the amount that Medicare would contribute to deficit reduction over the nert five years.

Discovery flight continues flawlessly By Mlrcla Dunn The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Dis­covery's astronauts, their primary

• job behind them, started a small lire aboard the shuttle Sunday a8

I part of an' experiment to study the spread of flames in space.

the satellite on its roundabout journey of 1.86 billion miles shortly after liftoff Saturday.

The carefully controlled fire, the first test fire aboard a shuttle, burned about 70 seconds within a sealed aluminum container, as cameras record.ed the event so that it could be studied later.

inches long. The cylinder was filled with equal amounts of oxygen and nitrogen. That amount of gases will vary when the experiment is repeated on future flights.

Crunch time The Dally lOwanIMlchael Williams

The solar probe tnysses, mean­while, sped safely toward Jupiter at a record-setting 34,130 mph. Discovery's five-man crew started

The astronauts started it by acti­vating an igniter wire woven into one end of a piece of ash1ess filter paper, about an inch wide and 41/2

Discovery's five creW' members arose well before dawn Em for their first full day in space Sunday. They are due to stay in orbit until Wednesday moming, when they will land at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.

Michigan State tailback Hyland Hk:k80n leaps Into the path 01 Iowa's Melvin Foster before being

See Shuttle, Page 9A tackled toward the end of the first quarter. Foster

made 20 tackles In the Hawkeyes' 12-7 vlc:tory over the Spartans Saturday at Spartan Stadium In East lansing, Mich. See story, page 1B.

Program offers exposure Russian students adapt to life at UI

, 8y Azlz G6kdemlr I The Dally Iowan

It il! a sticky day in August. Olga Sorokoina, Russian student on exchange

, at the UI for one semester, opens the door of her assigned room in Hillcreet Residence Hall.

She is taken aback to see three beds in the room - she expected to have only one American roommate.

Her American experience has begun. Olga is one of the 10 RU8sian students who

have heen Uving in the Foreign Language House at Hillcrest since August.

Their names flow like music when placed side by side. Besides Olga there are Natalia, Tatiana, Anna, Natasha, Elena, Svetlana,

• Lansa, Rushana. And Kon.tantin, the only Dlale in the group, is ofl.en referred to 88 Kostya.

The xchange was arranged through the

Moscow Linguistic University, and this is the second year the UI has participated in the progrllm.

Because Eastern Europe is not what it used to be, the U.S. government is beginning to increase its involvement in such exchange programs, according to John Rogers, a foreign 8tudent adviser at the UI International Cen­ter.

"The goal is to improve (the students') English and expose them to the U.S. culture," he said.

At a special orientation session, Rogera infonned the students about a range of topics - specifically, possible adjustment problems.

Rogers discussed the "U-curve" - a graphic description of the process of adjustment for foreign students.

The "U" stretches across the academic year; it starts with high expectations, excitement over !?aing in a new country, then descends as

See Exchange, Page 9A

Duke concedes defeat in race for Senate By AI." S.yre The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS - State Rep. David Duke conceded defeat Sun­day to incumbent U.S. Sen. J . Bennett Johnston, who said he .got the message" from 600,000 voters who backed Duke, a fonner Klan leader running all a Republi­can.

Duk, backed offhis threat to file a lawsuit over absentee ballots cast - but not counted - for ltate Sen.

Ben Bagert, the official Republican nominee. Bagert dropped out two days before Saturday's primary amid pre8lUTe from national GOP leaders who feared his presence in the r8al would help Duke forte a November runoff.

"We'll help people who feel their right to vote has been abrogated," Duke said. ·We'll help them pursue that if they 80 desire, but I'm trying to do as Bennett Johns­ton ssid, and kind of heal at this point."

Complete but unofficial returns gave Johnston 749,552 votes, or 54 percent, and Duke 605,681 votes, or « percent. Two minor Democra­tic candidates split the remainder. Nick Accardo had 21,709 votes and Larry Crowe had 14,472 votes.

Duke's strength surprised poll­sters, as he carried 23 of the state's 64 parishes and held Johnston close in several others. Duke had campaigned on a ticket that opposed afllrmative action and proposed welfare reform and a

"

flat-rate federal income tax. Johnston said Duke benefited from

a protest vote arising from sour economic conditions in Louisiana.

"A lot of those votes were protest votes,~ Johnston said. "People were sort of venting their spleen. They said, 'Well, Pm going to send old Bennett a message.' Bennett got the message."

He said he would work to diversify the state's economy away from the petroleum industry's boom-and­

See Dub, Page SA

American ·cuHure offers: excitement, no shocks By Azlz G6kdemlr The Daily Iowan

The American experience is pro­ving to be eJ[citing and full of mild surprises for Russian exchange students at the UI.

For the majority of them, this is the first time out of their country. This is made even more difficult by the current turmoil in the Soviet Union.

And although some of them have spent time in camps away from their families, life in a residence hall with a roommate is a new experience for everyone.

They aim to be teachers of Engliah in the Soviet Union and they feel the exchange is an excellent oppor­tunity for firat-hand experience with the language.

"It is a good thing that we have to write almost one essay a week for our rhetoric class," Konstantin "Kostya" Kovalev said. NBack in Moscow we hardly wrote any." .

The other classes are lacking in substance when compared to classes in their home country.

One Russian student said she was surprised to find she speaks French, her third language, better than an American who speaks it II his second language.

-And the e1l1seS are 50 minutes compared to our 90 minutes,· said Natasha Vladagina. "We might be spoiled by the time we go back."

She was pleased, however, to find the professors to be much more

.If

informal. "I wish there was a way to com­

bine our kind of courses with this kind of teacher,· she said.

Rushana Abdullina has spent some of her free time watching American films at the UI Main Library. However, one American fUm has proven to be her greatest disappointment with the U.S.

The movie that upset her is "Mos­cow on the Hudson," which uses immigrants to portray the Rus­sians.

The Russians in the movie were almost always plump and ugly, Rushana said.

"And we don't have lines for toilet paper," she added.

So far, sentiments ofMcCarthyism have missed the Russian students.

'"1'here is that strange look in some people's faces when they learn you are Russian, though; Natasha said. -It's 80 interesting that in this country of freedom you are not exactly granted the free­dom of being different, being your­self."

The popular belief that living m: the Soviet Union is not desirable and life in the U.S. is immellll81y attractive provokes only smiles from the students. .

"You've got your family there, yow: friends, all the places you love to go to; and you've got culture," Rushana said.

Severe adjustment problems to U.S. culture almost never oc:curred.

See 1IudenII, Page SA

2A METRO/IOWA The Daily Iowan - Monday, October 8, 1990

Minority-rights lawyer acts as role model for Latino students Metro edil Ann Marie

By RI .. Grudene Special to The Daily Iowan

When organizers for the NACS conference in Iowa City asked Norma Cantu to come and speak this weekend, they were seeking a role model for the young female Latino students who would attend.

"How could I say no?" she said. "I'm glad I came."

Cantu works as an attorney for MALDEF, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund. In addition to serving as a -

"We just want the same level of respect and access to resources for Hispanic kids. "

lawyer for the organization, she also is director of MALDEF's edu­cational program.

By the time she was 19, Cantu had received her bachelor's degree with a double major in English and

Norma Cantu attorney

government and her secondary teaching credentials from Pan American University in Edinburg, Texas.

She was teaching ninth grade when she was awarded a SClholar-

ship to Harvard. She graduated from Harvard with a law degree in 1977.

After working briefly in the attor­ney general's office in Texas, Cantu moved to San Antonio to work in. the Texas office of MALDEF.

At MALDEF, she is involved in cases involving Hispanic education, employment, voting rights and immigration.

Currently, Cantu is working on three cases - all concerning the denial of equal rights to financial resources f~r predominantly

Meeting targets ethnic issues By Rlae Grudene

ment: Reclaiming Our Community."

Special to The Daily Iowan

This weekend scholars and students came together in Iowa City to address current problems facing Hispanic communities nation­wide.

Speilberg-Benitez addressed the welfare crisis in the Midwest - where the number of Latinos unemployed in 1987 reached 8.8 percent. He said both a decline in wages for Latinos and

• fewer federal programs have increased the percentage of Hispanics living below the poverty level.

His presentation, "Challenges Facing Latino Communities in the 21st Century," focused on the decade of the 1980s - dubbed "The Decade of the Hispanic" by politicians and the mass media.

Padilla said this wasn't authentic because it "came from the top" and was a vision of corporate America. More than 300 people participated in the

annual meeting of the National Association for Chicano Studies. Fifty of those attending were high-school students from across the Midwest, and nearly 100 were college students. The remaining participants were local community members, academics and m faculty.

Friday evening, Norma Cantu, an attorney with MALDEF, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, spoke about Hispanic gains in education and urged unity toward reaching goals.

Carolyn and Ben Barrientes, Iowa City, attended the conference to meet with other Chicanos and to discuss Chicano issues.

Ben Barrientes added they also came to "observe the intellectual climate of Latinos."

The title of this year's NACS conference was "Nuestro Futuro: Empowerment Strategies for Midwest ChicanoiLatino Communities.·

Cordelia Candelaria, associate professor of English at the University of Colorado and member of the Center for Studies of Ethnicity and Race in America, discussed the various manifestations of power in our society and advised the Latino population on how to work toward asserting its own power.

Two seniors from Chicago State University, Lorraine Campos and Carlos Rodriguez, were enthusiastic about the conference.

Campos came to learn more about Chicano history and about the community in general. The sessions focused on issues such as higher

education for Hispanics, legal concerns, social services and Chicano arts. All meetings were held at the Union.

Four keynote speakers were featured through­out the conference.

Candelaria also urged cul~urtiJ pluralism, which she defined as "ideology that espouses understanding of differences."

"A lot of people sometimes forget where their roots are from," she said.

A dance Satuday, featuring the band "La Familia Mexicana," wrapped up the weekend. Latinos who came together to learn how to address their communities' problems gathered Saturday to dance to cumbias, rancheras and corridos.

Joseph Spielberg-Benitez, professor of anthro­pology at Michigan State University, spoke Friday on "From Entitlement to Empower-

Felix Padilla, associate professor of sociology and director of the Center for Latino Research at DePaul University, Chicago, was the final speaker at the conference.

Budget stalemate' hits Iowa services hard The Associated Press

DES MOINES - The federal budget stalemate changed the plans of Iowa tourists this weekend and threatens to affect farmers, home buyers and Social Security applicants if still unresolved later in the week.

In western Iowa, visitors to the DeSoto ~ational Wildlife Refuge near Missouri Valley found the gate locked and were turned away.

"We fished here all year, caught northern (pike) and walleyes, and we had planned this trip about two weeks ago," said Joe Skoff Jr. of Bellevue, Neb., who was turned away from the refuge Saturday with his father. "We spent about $20 on minnows and tackle, but we didn't even get our lines wet."

In eastern Iowa, the annual cider pressing exhibition was canceled on Saturday and Sunday at the

Briefs UI medical school receives ALA award

m College of Medicine researchers have received two grants from the American Lung Association of Iowa to atudy pneumonia and chronic lung diseases.

Dr. Douglas Hornick, assistant professor of internal medicine, received the Edward Livingston Trudeau Scholar Award and $17,350 to study the type of bac­teria that causes pneumonia in hospitalized patients.

Dr. Michael Peterson, assistant professor of internal medicine, was also awarded $17,350 to research

Calendar

Monda, . • UI Environmental Coalltlon 's public relalions committee will meet at 5:30 p.m. in Schaeffer Hall, Room 360.

: • "Circle. 01 the God.: Copernlcu., Kepler and the ElII",e," a colloquium given by Physics/Astronomy ProfeBBor Owen Gingerich of Harvard UniverSity, will be held at 3:30 p.m. in Van Allen Hall, Lecture Room 2. Gingerich will also deliver a public lecture titled "Let There Be light: Modern Cosmology and Biblical Creation" at 7:30 p.m. In Van Allen Hall, Lecture Room 1. Events are sponsored by the Geneva Lecture Series.

• Iowa City ZEN Cent~r holds dally meditation at 5:30 e.m., 6:20 a.m., 4:30 p.m. and 5:20 p.m. at 10 S. Gilbert St., second floor.

• Ex-CIA Agent Devld MacUle ..... will give a lecture on Central America and the Middle Eot at 7 p.m. In Macbride Hall Auditorium. Sponsors are the Central American Solidarity Committee and New Waye.

; • Cardiac Support Group will meet at 7 p.m. at Mercy Hospital, 500 E. Market St., Flret Floor Conference !\oom.

, • HOPE Cencer Support Oroup will inset et 7 p.m. at Mercy Hospital, 500 ~ . Market St.. Lower Lounge of Marcy North.

.'''''rom, Studrln, Effectlveneaa

birthplace of former President Her­bert Hoover.

Visitors could tour the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, but the visitors center, Hoover birthplace cottage, blacks­mith's shop and meeting house on the 186-acre grounds all were closed, said Bill Wilcox, the acting superintendent.

The Hoover library and museum building in West Branch remained open because the facility is under the control of the National Arc­hives and Records Administration, which has yet to order cuts. But the surrounding grounds and buildings are under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service, one of the first agencies to feel the budget pinch.

Officials said there would be more substantial problems for Iowans if the dispute is not resolved by Tuesday, when federal offices re-

factors that may contribute to chronic lung diseases such as asthma and bronchitis.

Subjects needed for hyperactivity study

Children and adolescents diag­nosed with attention deficIt hyper­activity disoder (ADHD) are needed for a study of a new medication at the m College of Medicine.

The study will evaluate the effec­tiveness of Prozac, an antidepress­ant, in treating the disorder. The medication causes fewer side effects than many prescribed for this disorder, according to UI

Serl.1 will hold a session on "Sugges­tions for Writing Papers" from 3:45-5 p.m. In the Nursing Building, Room 307.

Hancher • The Ardlttl Strlnll Quartet will

perform at 8 p.m. There will be a pre-performance discussion with members of the group at 7 p.m. in the Hancher Greenroom; the dlscuBBlon is free and tickets are requi red.

RadIo • WSUI AM 910 - "The Humanities

at Iowa" with Ray Heffner features Iraqi writer Seadi Simawe, a graduate student in the International Writing Program, discuBBing modern Arabic literature and the Islamic culture, at 8 :30 p.m.; "Iowa Connections" with Gerald Roe features Marilyn Zur­muelen, UI profellOr of Art and Art History, diacuulng the role the Irts pilY In educating children, at 9 p.m.

AMeli .... • Haydan Carruth will reid from his

poetry It 8:30 p.m. In Shambaugh Auditorium.

Art • Exhibit. at the UI MUHum of Art

Include : "In Pralle of Shadow" through Oct. 21 and "The Presence of Absence: New Installations" through Dec. 2.

• Exhlblta at The Ana Center, 129 E. Washington St., Include: "Enclosed Struc\urM," 011 paintings and mixed media aculpturn by Clndl L.aukM and

open after the observance of Columbus Day on Monday.

Without authorization to spend money, federal bureaucrats said the squeeze will be on farmers seeking to enroll in government programs, home buyers trying to arrange a federal mortgage loan and citizens seeking new Social Security benefits.

But so far, the budget dispute has not affected such essential services as operations of Veterans Adminis­tration hospitals or the National Weather Service. The Postal Ser­vice, which does not rely on tax dollars, is not affected.

At the weather service office in Des Moines, meteorologist Jerry Adams said the staff of 28 was informed by Washington that it would be spared in the shutdown. Adams said officials informed the office that its personnel are essen­tial to protect life and property.

researchers. Volunteers age 5 to 17 are needed

for the study. For more information about participating in the study, call the UI Department of Psychia­try at 353-6695.

Linguistics department holds colloquium

The m Department of Linguistics will host a colloquium Oct. 11 titled "Spontaneous and Laryngeal Voicing in Russian," presented by Rosemary Plapp, UI linguistics professor.

The event will be held in the English-Philosophy Building, Room 203. Refreshments will be

Mary Zeran; "Boundary Conditions," acrylic paintings and drawings by Alan Ross, and "Tell-Tale Signs," intaglio prints by Emily Martin .

... Ie • Alex Siobodyanlk, pianist, will

give a mini-recital at 6 p.m. in the North Lounge of Hillcrest Residence Hall.

BlJou • "Five Star Flnel" (Marvin LeRoy,

1931) - 7 p.m.

• "Rehaar .. l. for extinct Anatoml •• II'AnOS" (1988/1982) - 8:45 p.m.

C.lenar Policy Announcements lor this column must be

8ubmltted to The Dally Iowan newsroom, 201N Communications Center, by 1 p.m. two days prior to publication. Notices may be tent through the mill. but be lure to mall early to ensure publication. All submissions mUlt be clearly printed on a Calendar column blank (which appear, on the classi­lied ads pages) or typewritten and triple­spaced on a lull sheet 01 piper.

Announcements will not be accepted over the telephone. All lubmlsslons mUlt Include the name and phone number, which will nol be pubilihed, 01 a contact peraon In case ot qUlltionl.

Notices that are commarolal advertl ... mentl will not be Iccepted,

Queilions reglrdlng Iha Calendar column should be directed to Ann Marl, Williams, 335-8063.

CorNotI_ The headline on page lA 01 lhe Oct. II 0/,

"3311 Hall .. vote. approve portions 01 new

Normal operations also were con· tinued at Iowa's three VA hospi­tals.

"There will not be any layoffs or furloughs of physicians, nurses or direct medical personnel," said Richard Hodges, a spokesman at the Des Moines VA hospital.

The U.S. Department of Agricul­ture is continuing to provide meat inspectors for meatpacking plants, but programs offered by the Agri­cultural Stabilization and Conser­vation Service could be affected in each of Iowa's 99 counties.

Robert Furleigh, the Iowa ASCS executive director, said farmers seeking commodity loans or other flerviee8 could experience delays.

William Durst, Iowa district mana­ger of the Social Security Adminis­tration, said most Iowans should continue to receive benefit checks, but that there could be delays in new applications for aBBistance.

served at 4 p.m. in Room 571.

Lecture examines cancer pain, law

The Iowa Cancer Pain Relief Ini­tiative will sponsor a lecture titled "Cancer Pain, Opiates and the Law" on Oct. 10 at 7 p.m. at the Lensing Oakhill Community Room, 210 Holiday Road in Coralville.

David Joranson, associate director of the Division of Policy Services, University of Wisconsin Medical School in Madison, will present the lecture.

Call 354-4971 for more informa­tion.

budget package. " was incorrect. The House voted to epprove condllions lor lurther debate on the budget proposal lat8 Thura· day night. I.egilialora did not vote on the proposal 111811.

Also on psge 3A 01 Friday'l paper, the article titled "IC workshop tocu_ on asler teK" Inadvertently omitted the Gay People's Union 88 one 01 the event'a eponlOri.

The Dally Iowan regrets the errors. The Dally Iowan atrivII tor accurlley and

laimesa In the reporting 01 newi. " a report I, wrong or misleading. a requllt lor a correction or II clarification mllY be made by contacting the Editor at 335-6030. A correc­tion or a clsrillclltion will be published In Ihis column.

The Dally Iowan Volume 123 No. 74

TM Daily (owan II pubillhed by Student PUljlications Inc., 111 Communlcatlona Cen· ter. Iowa City. Iowa 52242 dally except Saturdays, Sundayl, legal holld.y. and university holidlYS, and university vacallons. Second ell .. pott.ge paid at Ih. lowl City Poat Office und.r the ,6.ct 01 Cong,.. 01 March 2, 1879.

lublCrIIICIon ' .... 1 lowl City .nd Corll· ville, $12 lor one .. melter. $201 lor two .. me"ers. 56 lor lummer .... Ion. S30 for lull year: Out 01 town, S20 lor on. "mealer, S40 for two .. mea"ra, $10 lor IIIm""r _Ion, $60 all VtI~.

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minority schools. One of these cases is Edgewood vs.

Curby. Edgewood is one of the poorest and least-funded schools in Texas, Cantu said. Curby, a moetly Anglo-Saxon school, was receiving more state funding than Edgew­ood. The case was brought to court, Edgewood won and more money was allotted to it.

But Cantu said the system for funding allocations remained unchanged, and the case went back to court. It is currently waiting to go before the Texas Supreme

Court. "We just want the same level of

respect and access to resources for Hispanic kids," Cantu said. '

At the NACS conference, Cantu ·' spoke mostly about Hispanic legal rights and education to the audi­ence.

"Coming to these conferences really gets me going. I find it motivating to see young peple out there," she said. "fielping just one ' kid stay in school and keeping him from dropping out m8kes a tre­mendous difference."

By Sua.n Stepl, The Daily Iowan

Arne Indi j Colum Day

openin their

Applications for the Student position of

TENANT -LANDLORD ASSOCIATION COORDINATOR

BASIC FUNCI10N AND RESPONSmILITY To plan and supervise all aspects of operations for TLA, including

staff selection, training and supervision, budget design and manage­ment, client counseling, and community interaction.

" • , enca deSIgned to I about Indian cull

"The American • I thought of ther

discovered by CI 1 bus when he lar

I I mas in 1492; Sf a spokeswoman

QUALIFICATIONS A Bachelors degree in an appropriate discipline is desired or an

equivalent combinatiOn of education and experience is necessary. Reasonable knowledge ofUniversity policies. procedures, and regu­lations is desirable.

Applications can be picked up in OCPSA, rm 145, IMU. Deadline Tuesday, October 9, 1990 at 5:00pm.

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The Daily Iowan Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

Business Office .......... " ........................... 335-5"0 Circulation ................................................ 335-5783 Classified Advertising ........................... 335-5784 Display Advertising ................................ 335-5790 Newsroom ................. , ........................... ,. 335"6063 Production .. , ........................... , .............. ,. 335-5789 FAX ...................... , ............................ 319-335-6297

A ~

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• the event.

"Indian s want uni1

to have a socially c historical consciou curriculu environrr apprecial simply to them. "

~ Stud

Educating the · , can Indian art, Il

and science, thE Education COnrE

I nistrators to exp of implementir

, Indian Studies I UI.

The AmeriC8J , Association is , administration,

the community \ culum at the !

·contribute to ar "Indian studer

I try are asking , ment in deten

education,," al I American Indial

tion. "Indian stl , to blend in at I schools which aJ

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Metro editor ...

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? Indian conference \ examines culture

By SUlan Stapleton The Daily Iowan

Arne . Indians are marking I Colum Day today with the

~ ___ ' openin their weekJong confer· , , , enee designed to educate the public

about Indian culture.

• Oct . 8 : Indian Art -The Artistic and the Func­tional: The Sacred and the Practical. Storytelling and sculpture exhibition by Steve Thunder McGuire. North Hall, 6 p.m. • Oct. 9: The Medicine of American Indians - Yester­day, Today and Tomorrow. Dr. Joe Coulter, Dr. John Kerstetter and Orrenzo Snyder discuss Indian medi­cine. Levitt Auditorium, Boyd Law Building, 7 p.m.

I "The American Indians have never thought of themselves as being

I discovered by Christopher Colum­bus when he landed in the Baha· mas in 1492," said LeAnne Howe, 8 spokeswoman and speaker for the event.

"Indian students want universities to have a more socially and historically conscious curriculum and an environment that appreciates, not simply tolerates them. "

American Indian Student Association

Educating the public about Ameri· I can Indian art, medicine, tribal law

and science, the American Indian I Education Conference urges admi. j nistrators to explore the possibility

of implementing an American 1 Indian Studies curriculum at the I ur.

The American Indian Student . Association is working with the , administration, faculty, staff and

the community to develop a curri-1 culum at the ill that they can \ ·contribute to and learn from."

"Indian students across the coun­I try are asking for more involve­

ment in determining their own I education/ .according to t~e , American indian Student AssOCI8·

tion. "Indian students do not want , to blend in at college, but go to , schools which already have a place

carved out for them, academically and socially."

"Indian students want universities to have a more socially and histori· cally conscious curriculum and an environment that appreciates, not simply tolerates them."

The conference will include lec­tures by nationally recognized American Indian scholars and m faculty from a diverse background of disciplines - including art, medicine, law and education.

Indian authors LeAnne Howe (Choctaw), Beth Brant (Mohawk) and Chrystos (Menominee) will read from their literature, and Steve Thunder McGuire (Seminole and Cherokee) will exhibit his sculptures. '

Anne Ninham Medicine, the assis· tant dean of graduate studies at Stanford University and the keyn­ote speaker, will speak Thursday, Oct. 11, on how to improve the presence of American Indians and other under-represented groups on university campuses.

All lectures are free and open to the pUblic.

The American Indian Education Conference is sponsored by the American Indian Student Associa­tion, Office of Academic Affairs, Iowa Humanities Board, WRAC, Chicano Indian American Cultural Center, Special Support Services, Lesbian Alliance, American Indian Law Student Association, College of Nursing and College of Medi­cine.

~ BURGER KING ~®

• Oct. 10: American Indian Scientists and Engineering. Deborah Horsechief will lec­ture on empowering Ameri­can Indian students. Levitt Auditorium , Boyd Law Building, 7 p.m. • Oct. 11: Recruiting , Retaining and Graduating American Indians. Keynote speaker Anne Medicine will discuss improving the pres· ence of American Indians on the UI campus. Levitt Audi­torium, Boyd Law Building, 7 p.m. • Oct . 12: This Reading Rated I - American Indian Women Authors to Read. LeAnne Howe, Beth Brant and Chrystos will read from their work. Lucas-Dodge Room, Union, 7:30 p.m. • Oct. 12: American Indian Literatu re Workshop. Two sessions from 10 a.m.-noon and from 2-4' p.m. Lucas· Dodge Room, IMU. Free to stUdents; $15 to non­students. To register call Laurie Hagg, 335·1486. Reception at WRAC for the authors at 12:30 p.m. • Oct. 13: Tribal Law from the Inside and Outside. Rob­ert Clinton, Scott Morrision and Maria Pearson will dis­cuss tribal law. Levitt Audi· torium, Boyd Law Building, 9 a.m. • Oct. 13: American Indian Dancing Exhibition from Tri­bal Groups. Union Field (in case of rain, Union Main Ballroom) 1 p.m.

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Informal meeting for alllndtviduals interested in joining a committee. Drop in at the Ohio State Room. IMU from 6:30-9:00 Thursday. October 11.

Anyone mIu1rtng special accommodations to participate In this event should call Rlverfest at 335-3273.

Page 3A :~ Monday, October 8,1990

Iowans can help Third World, according to trade specialist By Laura Fokkena The Daily Iowan

Foreign debt is the biggest prob­lem facing Third World countries - but it's a problem Iowans may be able to help the countries over­come, according to Stuart Tucker, an international trade specialist who spoke at the ill Saturday.

Tucker, head of the U.S. Overseas Development Council, was keynote speaker at a local conference addressing Iowa's ties to the Third World held this weekend. The Overseas Development Council is a think tank that contributes to U.S. foreign policy by serving as a translator between Third World researchers and policymakers in Washington, D.C.

The conference, ~Iowa and the Third World: Empowerment Strategies for the 21st Century," focused on Iowa's business, educa· tion and development connections to the Third World.

Tucker stressed that the biggest problem faCing foreign policy was the international deht crisis, which, he said, has dramatically curtailed income in the Third World.

"At the end of the '80s, Third World people were poorer than before. In sub· Saharan Africa, per·person income feU 19 percent," Tucker said.

One major cause for this, Tucker said, was that developed nations make unreasonable demands on Third World countries. Because the Third World needs money to meet its foreign debt, the countries are

"They don't see themselves as immoral; they're just dealing with an economic situation. "

Stuart Tucker International trade specialist

forced to make compromising eco­nomic decisions to meet these demands. Tucker contends that such practices overburden the countries' resources and cause destruction of the environment.

"Six out oflO of the poorest people in the Third World are pushed onto fragile lands, for instance, steeper hillsides," Tucker said . "The growth rate is also increasing among rural poor, who need the children as unpaid laborers."

Interdependence can lead to socially unacceptable behavior, Tucker said, such as narcotics production in Latin America.

"They don't see themselves as immoral; they're just dealing with an economic situation," he said.

But not all news from the Third World is bleak, Tucker said. Since the 1960s, women are participating more in government affairs, the literacy rate is up, life expectancy rates are higher and infant mor­tality rates are down, he said.

"However," he added, "the '80s put a dent in the curve."

Tucker stressed three things that Iowans could do to help progress in • the Third World. One is the trans· • fer of individual knowledge and technology, as well as monetary , support from the private sector.

"Only $l.5 billion (of governmen • • tal aid) goes to low-income Third . World countries - this is only 10 : . percent of the foreign aid budget," • Tucker said. "And that's matched by the private sector."

Another goal, he said, is to raise domestic productivity and ration- ' alize the national economy, because then the U.S. can buy more from the Third World mar­ket.

The third goal involves national policy formation.

"(Members of Congress don't) like going out on a limb unless they have public support; Tucker said. He feels it's important for the puqlic to let politicans know that they understand how international foreign aid is related to the national economy and should not be cut.

"The '80s was a lost decade in macroeconomics," Tucker said, "And this transcended into Ameri­can and Third World life. There are some big obstacles, but I per­sonally think they can be over- , come:

The conference, sponsored by the Iowa City Chapter of the Society for International Development, was held in Macbride Auditorium. There were several panels with international speakers from Uganda, Egypt, Nigeria, Peru and Sri Lanka.

CR man accidentally shoots fiancee The Associated Press

CEDAR RAPIDS - A Japanese student at an eastern Iowa commu­nity college was fatally wounded by her American fiance in what police said appears to have been an accidental shooting.

Hiroe Ito, 26, of Tokyo, was shot in the head at about 9:40 p.m. Friday. Her body was found in her Cedar

Rapids apartment after her fiance called police and said he had shot her, authorities said. The woman was pronounced dead on arrival at Mercy Medical Center, Cedar Rapids police said .

Richard Weeks, 23, the woman's fiance, was released from custody early Saturday alter questioning by police.

Detective Stan McClurg said

Weeks then was admitted to Mercy Medical Center for emotional dis· tress.

Weeks had told police he was handling a 9 mm handgun when it fired accidentally, hitting Ito above the eye, authorities said .

McClurg said police were consid­ering the death an accident, but added that the shooting remains under investigation .

M CROCOMPUTER

• Tuesday, October 9,1990 9:00 a.m. through 7:00 p.m,

• Main Lounge ·Iowa Memorial Union

Booths and representatives from Apple, IBM, Epson, Zenith, Local Computer Dealers, IMU Bookstore, ISCA Student User Group, Conduit

Balloons, Fun, Prizes All faculty, staff, and students welcome!

• Sponsored by Weeg Computing Center

4A METRO/IOWA The Daily Iowan - Monday, October 8,1990

Candid, supportive workshop addresses safe practices in healthy sex life of gays By OIana Wallace The Daily Iowan

Enlisting the help of a lO-inch dildo named Buster, Henry Schmitt showed 60 gay and bisexual men the correct way to put on a condom Friday night.

But more than that, Schmitt offered these men a chance to talk - in frank and often graphic language - about how the ons­laught of AIDS has affected their sex lives, and how they feel about the changes the disease necessi­tates.

Schmitt, a microbiologist and New Orleans native, '-1rBt came to Iowa several years ago to join a Domini­can seminary in Dubuque. But since 1986, he and his partner, Jonathan Clemmer, have hosted safer-sex worksholts in six states, spreading the gospel of safe-sex orgies and Rubberwear parties, and the message that "anything goes, as long as it's safe."

"A lot of gay men have been shutting down sexually," Schmitt said. "We've lost enough to this disease. Do you want to lose your sex life, too? We've buried peol?le we love .... We have to give these unsafe practices an appropriate burial, too, and move on."

Friday, Schmitt and Clemmer brought the message that "Safe Can Still Be Erotic" to Iowa City in a forum called "Hot, Horny and Healthy," organized by the UI Gay People's Union.

"I don't have to know your name to have sex with you. It can still be safe," Scl1mitt said. "I think we've screwed up by telling people, 'Limit your numbers.' I could go to a jack-off party with 35 people, but it can still be safe."

Friday's discussion revolved around topics including "how AIDS

"We've lost enough to this disease. Do you want to lose your sex life, too?"

Henry Schmitt

has affected your sex life," "what you like and dislike about safer sex" and "erotic but safer ways of touching."

"You have to realize that yet' biggest sex organ is between your ears, Dot between your legs, no matter how well-hung you might be," Schmitt said.

Schmitt also provided information about the safest condoms and lubricants to use and continued to try to dispel rumors about AIDS.

He said, "For those of you who are stiJJ asking if AIDS can be caught from a mosquito, the answer is yes. l{ you have unprotected anal inter­course with a mosquito then, yes, you could get it."

But beyond the joking and playful atmosphere, the group - ranging in age from late teens to early 60s - also expressed the anxiety of sexuality in the age of AIDS.

The participants categorized their feeling toward changing their sex­ual behavior by using words like fear, depression, confusion and embarrassment. They said that safer-sex practices can be awkward to negotiate with a partner and can binder passion and that many gays now associate sex with death.

"Gay men have been alienated from society more than ever since AIDS," said one participant. "We have been unfairly blamed for the spread of this fatal disease. But it's

wrnEFIGHTI>G FOl AmerleanHeari A I 'OJR UFE Association V

HARRY CONNICK JR. MO' BETTER BLUES

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rare that anybody ever stops to think of us as feeling human beings, and the way in which AIDS has affected us - not only sexually but emotionally. ,

"Programs like this give us the emotional support we need now, and, rather than dictate the changes we have to make in our sexual behavior, it gives us a chance to talk about how these changes affect UB, ~ he continued. "Programs like these are crucial."

And according to organizer Rick Graf, who fought to raise funding for the event, they are also rare.

"There's this misconception that gay men have been running around fucking our brains out and not doing a damn thing to stop the spread of AIDS," Graf said. "In actuality, we are the only ones who've put the money forth to set up educational programs. AIDS prevention programs targeted to gay and bisexual men have never been funded by our state or local

health departments." Graf said health organizations

have often been unwilling to fund workshops specifically targeted toward gays because they don't want to be seen as encouraging homosexuality.

"1 think another thing that bothers people about this workshop is that it's pro-gay," Graf said. "We're saying, 'It's OK to be gay' and not dictating that people change their lifestyle except to practice safe sex."

Along with the GPU, funding for the workshop was provided through the Iowa Center for AIDS Resources and Education with 8

grant from the Chicago Resource Center, a foundation for gays. Graf said the AIDS Coalition of Johnson County also helped promote the event but did not help fund it.

Clemmer and Schmitt presented another program on Saturday to teach others how to conduct safer­sex workshops.

Iowa fire officials enthusiastic over decreasing deaths by fire 1' ,

By M.rllyn H.uk Ellex The Associated Press

DES MOINES - As Iowa observes Fire Prevention Week, the state fire marshal's office is optimistic fewer people will die in fires this year than any other year this century.

"We're particularly interested in Fire Prevention Week in Iowa this year because right now as we stand we're at the lowest number of fire deaths ever r~corded in Iowa,' said State Fire Marshal Roy Marshall.

So far this year, 31 people have died in fires, Marshall said. The lowest recorded this centul)' is 51 in 1983; the highest 158 in 1950, when a flJ'e at St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Davenport killed 41 people.

Marshall said the state had its largest number of tire deaths in the 1980s in 1989: 88, because 38 peoDle aboard the United Airlines

DC=lO that crashed in Sioux City died of smoke inhalation or burns.

Before the 1960s, "typically 100 deaths a year was not unusual," Marshall said.

"About the time smoke detectors came into use, we started to see a decline," Marshall said, also cre­diting fire prevention programs ' and better building codes.

In the 1960s, the numbe offire deaths in Iowa exceeded only in 1962 and 1968, Marsh aid, with the numbers mostly n the 80s and 90s.

"We stayed in the 80s and 90s per year through most of the 1970s. But by 1979, we'd dropped down to 65," Marshall said.

With the exception of 1988, "we've stayed in the 50s and 60s throughout the '80s,· he said.

From 1985 through 1989, Mar­shall said 314 people died in fires in Iowa; 19 percent were 10 or younger.

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The Daily Iowan Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

~----

Nationl John ~

:Art ; The Assoclal

\ CINCINN I aCQuitted al director of I

• that althol • found some

pe's photog! 4 di~stefr1!\ ~ senous r j

"TheM I doubt aboul , told TM Oil

story pub1ial , was brought art it doesn'l

• The jury • Friday befol

rie and th, 'Center of m ' obscenity ar in the first I

, an art instil • Three ju~

NEW 0 representil teachers employees agreement

• could end Louisiana'i district.

Nat La( United Tel and Franl tiator for School Bo!

• reached or but refusel

LaCour the offer t day night vote to a

~ return to I

LaCour "win-win I said, "Quit some cutb shape and

Since th many tea 27th largE crossed pi, cials said·

, ers were pared witl 36 percent

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tions seek I board prt

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' _____________________________________________________________ TheD8I~~an------------------------~~~~~ __ ~ __ ~~~~~~~~~~~

Nation/World editor John Kenyon, 335-5864 Nation/World, Peg. SA .

Monday, October 8,1990

:Art gallery, director acquitted of obscenity charges • The Associated Press

CINCINNATI - Jurors who I acquitted an art gallery and its director of obscenity charges say

• that although they personally • found some of Robert Mapplethor­pe'. photographs to be lewd and

4 diBtastefl'1t\ all agreed they are • ~rious r - ls of art.

'"l'he p\.rures were not pretty. No , doubt about it," juror James Jones ~ told TM Cincinnati Enquirer in a

story published Sunday. "But, as it ., was brought up in the trial, to be

art it doesn't have to be pretty." , The jury deliberated two hours , Friday before clearing Dennis Bar­

rie and the Contemporary Arts ' Center of misdemeanor pandering \ obscenity and child-nudity charges in the first case of its ki nd against

, an art institution. • Three jurors interviewed by the

· New contract may end strike

~ for teachers By Chevel John.on The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS - A union representing more than 5,000 teachers and other school

• employees reached a tentative agreement Saturday night that could end a three-week strike in

I Louisiana's largest public school district.

Nat LaCour, president of the • United Teachers of New Orleans,

and Frank Fudesco, chief nego­tiator for the Orleans Parish School Board, said an accord was reached on a three-year contract,

• but refused to release details. LaCour said he would explain

the offer to union members Sun­, day night and recommend they

vote to approve it in time - to • return to work Monday.

LaCour described the deal as a "win-win situation." But Fudesco said, "Quite frankly, there will be some cutbacks in some manner, shape and form."

Since the strike began Sept. 17, many teachers in the nation's 27th largest school district have crossed picket lines. District offi­cials said 41 percent of the teach-

• ers were at work Friday, com­pared with union estimates that 36 percent had broken the strike.

Striking teachers sought support Saturday afternoon near some polling places as primary elec-

• tions were being held statewide. Voters were asked to sign peti-

tions seeking the recall of school • board president Carl Robinson

and three other board members. Union members accused them of

, failing to negotiate in good faith.

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newspaper said they were sur­prised by the swift verdict. On both charges, the first jury vote was 7-1 in favor of acquittal. They did not say who voted to convict.

·We felt that the prosecution did not prove its case," said Jones, a warehouse manager.

Five of the pictures in the 175-picture exhibition, "Robert Mapplethorpe: The Perfect Moment," depict sexually explicit acts involving men; two others showed children with their genitals exposed.

The jurors told the Enquirer they believed the five pictures of sex acts to he offensive and designed to appeal to prurient interests. But they said expert witnesses con­vinced them the photographs had artistic value.

To be considered obscene under Supreme Court guidelines, photo-

"I think there's something to be learned by these pictures."

graphs must depict patently offen­sive sexual conduct and otTend the average member of the community. They also must have no literary, artistic, political, scientific or social value.

"I think there's something to be learned by these pictures," said forewoman Stacey Burton, a sec­retary.

"I learned more about that type of lifestyle than 1 ever thought I could possibly know," said Jennifer Loesing, a hospital supervisor.

Six art experts and museum direc­tors testified that the photos were

Stacey Burton Jury forewoman

important work by a respected artist. One prosecution witness testified that the pictures had no redeeming value.

Loesing said that during delibera­tions she kept thinking of defense lawyer H. Louis Sirkin's "apple pie" analogy: that without meeting each requirement of the Supreme Court test, the photographs were not obscene - just as a pie without apples isn't an apple pie.

"That stuck in a lot of our minds," she said.

Burton said prosecutors failed to prove their case.

"I think they could have called in a sociologist or psychologist," she said. "Somebody who could have said, 'This is not art because .. .' •

The jurors said they relied on the opinions of the expert witnesses.

Jurors came from conventional backgrounds. None was among the 81,000 people who saw the exhibit. Three of the eight had been to college, six lived in the suburbs and all held jobs. There were four men, four women.

Sirkin and fellow defense lawyer Marc Mezibov staked their case on testimony by their expert witnes­ses. Prosecutor Frank Prouty said the seven photographs were his case.

Much of the art world was willing to testify for the defense, and Sirkin said he and Mezibov chose their witnesses carefully. They ruled out an expert from Dayton

Dennl. Bame

because of its progressive reputa­tion in Cincinnati, and experts from Cleveland and Columbus because of the hostility some Cin­cinnatians feel toward those cities, Sirkin said.

Prison population at record high STATISTICAL CONSULTING By Jame. Rowley The Associated Press

W ASHlNGTON - The number 'of inmates in state and federal pris­ons jumped 42,862 during the first half of 1990 as the nation's pris­oner population reached a record 755,425, the Justice Department said Sunday.

The 6 percent increase during the six-month period was only slightly less than the record 46,000 jump during the first half of 1989, said a Bureau of Justice Statistics study of state and federal prison popula­tions.

It helped pace a record annual increase of 80,000 prisoners from

"You will hate yourselves for missing them." - Chicago Tribune

Arditti String Qye:I!;et

One of Europe's leading string quartets

"It is not easy to recall a more impressive evening of quartet playing, in whatever repertory." - New York Tlmn

Monday October 8 Sp.rn. ••••••

I ,

Featuring a diverse program of new music from Euroj' highlighted by the worl premIere of a Hancher­commIssioned piece by Alexander Goehr.

Pre-performance discussion with members of the quartet, Hancher greenroom, 7 p.m. Free tickets required.

Youth discount

UI Students receive a 20% discount on all Hancher events and may charge to tlll!lr University acoounts.

HANCHER For ticket Information Call 335-1160 or toHMI" 10Wi outside Iowa City

1·80o·HANCHER The Unlvera~y of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa

new beds for inmates, the study found. CENTER June 1989 to June of this year that

Stephen Dillingham, the bureau's director, called "the largest growth in 65 years of prison population statistics."

The already overcrowded federal prison population grew by 8 per­cent during the first six months of the year while the number of state prison inmates increased 5.8 per­cent, the study said.

The growth in the number of women prisoners continued to out­pace the increase in male inmates.

The number of women prisoners jumped 7.1 percent during the six-month period, compared to a 5.9 percent increase in the male inmates.

Staffed by statistics and advanced graduate students, we offer limited but free statistical consultation for graduate thesis projects and

unsponsored faculty and staff research. More extensive consultation is also available.

Call for details. Federal prisons hold nearly 60,000 inmates. The enactment of manda­tory minimum sentences, particu­larly for drug crimes and repeat offenders, have helped swell the ranks of federal prisons.

The prison population growth created a weekly demand of 1,650

At midyear, there were 43,541 women and 711,884 men in state or federal prisons.

Illinois posted a 10.5 percent increase in its prison population, the largest percentage increase of the 50 states, followed by New Hampshire'S increase of 10.3 per­cent.

Drop in hours: 9:30 - 11:30 Daily

615 Jefferson Building 335-0827 or 335-0799

There must be some way to avoid doing the same tling for the next forty year&

Life's been pretty good so far. You've kept moving-taken all the right steps along the way (for the most part). And now you're ready for the biggest step.

You'll be getting your degree from a top school. You're about to 'find a great job.

The question is: which Job? And will it have the potential to interest you for a whole career?

You've probably heard the story of the job applicant who said he was a shoe salesman with fifteen years expe­rience. "No;' corrected ,he recruiter interviewing him, "you've had six months experience thirty times."

Isn't there some way to keep challenging yourself In new and

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Where we go from hen('

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Interviews to be held on October 25th & 26th. '"

Please see the Business & Engineering Placement Offir.e for details.

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8A NAnONIWORLD The Daily Iowan - Monday, October 8, 1990

By Sidney S. Feingold The Associated Press

Hundreds of Kuwaitis crossed into Saudi Arabia on Sunday after Iraq suddenly relaxed restrictions on Kuwaitis leaving the occupied emi­rate. Some refugees said it was the latest move in an Iraqi campaign to depopulate Kuwait, isolate the resistance movement and prepare for war.

World leaders kept up diplomatic efforts to achieve a peaceful solu­tion to the crisis that arose with Iraq's invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2.

Japan's Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu traveled to Oman after a two-day visit with King Faud in Saudi Arabia.

PLO leader Ya88er Arafat met King Hussein in Jordan and said a peace initiative on the gulf crisis was being formulated according to the plan proposed by Iraqi Presi­dent Sad dam Hussein.

OnAug. 12, Saddam said he would discuss withdrawing from Kuwait if the Israelis also withdrew from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Arafat said Saddam's proposal Mhas brought about an interna­tional consensus for the need to solve the Palestinian problem." ~e linkage is becoming possible

now. Those who beHeve otherwise, let them submit their own propo­sals to solve the Middle East problems," he said.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismat Abdul-Maguid, meanwhile, arrived in Damascus for talks with Syrian President Hafez Assad. He indi­cated he was making the visit to increase cooperation in forcing Iraq out of Kuwait.

Kaifu arrived in the Mideast last week to offer financial help to front-line states Turkey, Jordan and Egypt and to seek a political solution. He has referred to a new world order after the crisis is solved in which Japan was eager to playa role.

Kaifu spokesman Shigeo Takaneka said Fahd urged Tokyo to spread its fmancial aid to other nations hit by the U.N.-imposed

A8SclClat,ed Prese An Ilraell IOIdler shows an elderly couple how to test their personal gas masks shortly after they received them Sunday In Kfar Yona, north of Tel Aviv. The army distributed the maskl to civilians.

economic blockade of Iraq, such as Syria and Bangladesh.

Takaneka said Japan reiterated its call for Iraq's complete and uncon­ditional withdrawal from Kuwait, restoration of the emirate's leader­ship and release of all foreigners detained by Iraq after its attack on Kuwait.

Kuwaiti refugees at the Khaiji border crossing in Saudi Arabia said the border opened on Friday following intensified night searches in Kuwait City that prompted many of them to leave out of fear. They said Iraqi troops were confis­cating all identification papers in Kuwait.

That raised Saudi fears that the Iraqis planned to try to infiltrate agents into the kingdom.

About 1,000 people arrived from Kuwait over the weekend, most lacking any identification, Saudi border officials said. The influx was the largest since mid­September, when 7,000 Kuwaitis poured through in a three-day frenzy.

U.S. military officials in Washing­ton and Saudi Arabia meanwhile

reported the American troop buil­dup in the crisis area was nearly complete, with almost 200,000 U.S. soldiers deployed there. U.S. troops lead a multinational force arrayed in the Saudi desert to forestall any further Iraqi military thrust.

Iraq controls 20 percent of world oil reserves with its takeover of Kuwait. Saudi Arabia, which adjoins Kuwait, is the world's biggest oil exporter. .

In other developments: • Soldiers in Israel began handing

out gas masks to civilians in a nationwide drive to guard Israelis from a possible Iraqi chemical arms attack. Military officials called it just a preventive measure. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said in a speech Israel "has no intentions to attack Iraq," although it takes ~aghdad's chemi­cal attack threats seriously, Israel radio said.

• The British newspaper Indepen­dent identified a Chinese company it said supplied Iraq with a rare chemical used to make nuclear weapons, missile fuel and nerve gas.

THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY.

And they're both repre­sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you're part ofa health care system in which educational and career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar

on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you're earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.o. Box 7713, Clifton, NJ 07015. Or call toll free: 1-800-USA-ARMY, ext. 438.

ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE:

THE GENEVA LECTURE SERIES

WORKSHOP COLLOQUIUM PUBLIC LECTURE Faculty, Staff, and Students "A Christian Approach "Circles of the Gods: "Let There be Light: to Science in the Copernicus, Kepler Modern Cosmology Secular University" and the Ellipse" and Biblical Creation"

9:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m., Monday 7:30 p.m., Monday Saturday, October 6, 1990 October 8, 1990 October 8; 1990

101 Communication Lecture Room #2 Lecture Room #1 Studies Building Van Allen Hall VanAllen Hall

(Registrlltion rtqulrtd for t"l1 tvent) (Cusponsortd !Iy the DtpIlrtment of Physics and Astronomy. DtpIIrtmtnt of For more infonnation, Hilrory and the !.SA Interdisciplinary

call 338-1179 Program)

Owen Gingerich COpemiCUI. He wu awarded the Polish more J:ularly on utronomy In lIt!Yerll la l.mor ulron- government'. Order of Merilln 1981. ency opedlu and joumala. At Hvvard, OGler el the Smith- and more recently an uterold hal been he teachea ihe AlttonOm1caI i'ft'-IOIIlan Altrophy- named In hit honor. spectlve: a core scienCle COUl'le for non-tlaI 0bRrv1~ Profeuor Clnpich has been the vice IClenIlaIl, and In 1984. he won the Har-and Proleuor 0 ~ent of the American Phlloeophbl vard-Radcliffe PII1 Bete Kappa priu for Astronomy and of ty and he hal eerved u the chair- excellence In teech1n~tl~ the Hillory of man of the U.s. National Committee of feNOl Gin er1ah hal wor on I ScIence It Harvard the lntematlonei Altronomlcal Union. six-part ~ eerI. on the nature 0 Id· Univen!ty. He hu been. councillor of the American ence from e Judelo-CluUtIan perlp«-

In the put two Astronomical Society. and helped organ- live lor the PubUc Broedcullng Sy.tem decadel ~r Gtnaer1ch hu become lze Ita Hlatorical Altronomy Divlalon. with the American Sclenllflc AlIW.tIon. IleedIns authority on the German u- hid. OWl' 300 technlcalartlc1. and tronomen JohanIw Kepler and Nicholu review.. ProIeNor Ginprich hal written

/

The University of Iowa

WOMEN'S RESOURCE AND ACTION CENTER

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SWEET HONEY in the ROCK

in concert at the

PARAMOUNT THEATRE 123 Third Avenue NE Tickets: Cedar Rapids, Iowa (sliding scale)

Tickets Available at: Sunday, October 14 Women', Raeourc8 and Ac:Iion Center

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, Arts/Entertainment editor • : Steve Cruse, 335-5851 Arts/Entertainment Page 7A

Monday, October 8,1990

: Varied rhythms mark : Carruth's latest poems · . • B; Mlcha.1 Mor ••

Special to, The Dally Iowan · . I na recent interview Hayden

• C th related a childhood , ry of his father, tbe

e ror of a daily newspaper, ~ ttping something in his office, ;. Suddenly, the elder Carruth looked

up and said to the boy, "Don't ever j tl(ke any job that isn't a service to • the community." Tonight at 8:30,

Hayden Carruth brings his gener­I ous services to Shambaugh Audi­

torium, where he'll share his I pOetry with the Iowa City commu-

• nity. Carruth has published 27 books-

i chiefly of poetry but including a novel - three books of criticism aM two anthologies. His most

, recent books are "Tell Me Again • How the White Heron Rises and

Flies Across the Nacreous River at 'Twilight Toward the Distant

Islands" (1989) and "The Sleeping • Beauty," revised edition (1990). ~ Carruth's poetry displays dazzling · range and varied rhythms and • manages to be direct, lucid and ~ lyrical in execution. His work runs

the form's gamut, from the elegiac, ., narrative lines that fill his persona • poems to the colloquial speech of

upstate New York, from jazzy , rhythms (which pepper his work in , poems like "A Little Old Funky

Homeric blues for Herm") to syl-~ labics, from strict meters to longer,

free-flowing lines. Throughout his collections, Car­

ruth addresses the claims of expe­rience and imagination: "Somewhere/in the trees ahead a Raven rises and moves away and at once in my mind dark wings labor ... ./a voice is there, gutteral bad news penetrating/the thick­ness of spruce trees." In this poem, "Mild Winter," Carruth weaves a tapestry complete with snowfall, ravens, Ligeia· and a United Farm Workers Milk Truck.

"The Sleeping Beauty," Carruth's latest book. is a revised edition of his 1982 classic - a minor epic made up of 15-line constructs of his own invention, called "para­graphs,' The poem is a long medi­tation on the exploitation of women and nature and explores the com­mon Carruth theme of building relationships in the world -focusing on what he has called "the numinous aspects of the world around us."

Such a transformation involves, as critic Allen Grossman has said, "speaking to history words other thaD those which history can speak." Like the jazz he loves so well, Carruth's poetry is full of improvisation, stemming from the established rhythms of meter, per­ception and community. "In the mind's house of heaven, the great night never/ends,' begins one sec­tion of "The Sleeping Beauty,"

Hayden Carruth

referring to a gathering of jazz greats including Pee Wee Russell and Coleman Hawkins. • And oh they play, they/jam forever .. ./always they strained on earth! for this thing, skin and soul to merge, to disappear/in howling sound./God, but it would be worth! Dying, if it could be donelto be there with them and to hear, to hear." While perception here is subjective, the voice is never solip­sistic and strives to forge connec­tion.

Carruth bas won numerous awards and feUowships, has been editor of Poetry magazine, and for 20 years has been an advisOry editor of The Hudson Review. He is a professor in the Graduate Cre­ative Writing Program at Syracuse University ..

: George Michael tops music charts •

The Associated Press 4."Ice Ice Baby" Vanilla Ice (SBK) tic) 1 5."Black Cat" Janet Jackson (A& 14."My, My, My" Johnny Gill

The following are the top record M) (Motown) • hits and leading popular compact 6."Love and Affection" Nelson 15."Unchained Melody' The .. discs as they appear in next week's (DGC) Righteous Bros. (Verve)

issue of Billboard magazine. 7."Romeo· Dino (Island) 16."Blaze of Glory" Jon Bon Jovi • Copyright 1990, Billboard Publica- 8."Something Happened on the (Mercury) ~ tions, Inc. Reprinted with permis- Way to Heaven" Phil Collins 17."Do Me" Bell Biv Devoe (MCA)

sion. (Atlantic) 18."Policy of Truth" Depeche

TOP SINGLES 1. "Praying for Time" George

I Michael (Columbia) 2."Close to You· Maxi Priest

(Charisma) • 3:1 Don't Have the Heart" James

Ingram (Warner Bros.) •

9."Everybody Everybody" Black Mode (Sire) Box (RCA)

10."Oh Girl" Paul Young (Colum­bia)

H."Can't Stop" After 7 (Virgin) 12."Giving You the Benefit" Peb­

bles (MCA) 13."Suicide Blonde" INXS (Atlan-

Arditti quartet plays Hancher The Daily Iowan

England's Arditti String Quartet will present an alI-contemporary program, featuring the world pre­miere of "Quartet No. 4" by Brit. ish composer Alexander Goebr, at 8 tonight in Hancher Auditorium.

The oldest work in the program is "Ainsi la Nuit," composed by Henri Dutillieux in 1976. The other quartets, all composed within the last three years, are "La Souris sans Sourire" by Franco Donatoni, "Quartet No. 3" by Sofia Gubaidu­lina and Gyorgy Kurtag's ·Offi­cium Breve" in memory of Andraea Szervansky.

The Arditti String Quartet -Irvine Arditti and David Alber­man, violins; Garth Knox. viola; and Rohan de Saram. cello - has become Europe's leading proponent of new music for the string quartet. The group has performed exten­sively throughout Europe and the Far East, becoming a favorite at major music festivals, and made its critically acclaimed American debut in 1988.

Of the Arditti Quartet's New York debut, Will Crutchfield wrote, "It is not easy to recall a more impres­sive evening of quartet playing. in whatever repertory," and Andrew Porter wrote in The New Yorker, "The Arditti players command musical distinction, technical vir­tuosity, tonal beauty, and stylistic perception of a superior order."

The list of Arditti recordings is ever increasing and includes recordings that have been honored with many of Europe's most coveted awards: Germany's Schall­plattenpreis, Italy's Premio Ahbiati and "Best Contemporary Record of the Year" from England's Gram­mophone Magazine.

The Arditti repertoire includes a vast and varied selection of works in all styles, including many works that were written for or premiered by the quartet. Like America's Kronos Quartet, the Arditti Quar­tet actively encourages young com­posers to write for the string

USpecia/ of the Week"

Th. ArdIttI String Quartet

quartet, and each season the group presents 30 or more world pre­mieres.

The world premiere on the Oct. 8 concert was commissioned by Hancher Auditorium from Alexan­der Goehr, who is on the music faculty of Cambridge University. In a composing career spanning four decades, Goehr has developed a personal style for which the conventional labels of new music prove inadequate.

Wben he was still in his early 20s, he emerged as a key figure in the "Manchester School" of post-World War II composers. After studying with the great French composer Olivier Messiaen in the mid-1950s, Goelu was a BBC broadcaster and producer and was the director of the Music Theatre Ensemble. He has been a teacher of music since the early 1970s, first at Leeds University and then at Cambridge, and in 1989 his contributions to contemporary music were recog­nized with election to honorary membership in the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters.

Masaml Holta

Goehr wrote his ·Qu~ No. 4" this summer as a memoriai t-!l his friend, pianist and composer JdlO Ogdon. Of Ogdon, Goehr writes, "his life was the most tragic I have witnessed."

Program notes on Goeltr's quartet, as well as the other works on the Arditti program, will be provided in advance to all ticket holders. Members of the quartet will also meet with the audience in a pre­performance discussion at 7 p.m. in the Hancher Greenroom.

Tickets for the Oct. 8 concert of the Arditti String Quartet are $17 and $15 for the general public. Ul students qualify for a 20 percent discount, and tickets for people IB and under are half price. The pre-performance discussion is free. but a free discu$sion ticket should be obtained to ensure seating.

Hancher Box Office is open 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. weekdays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and 1-3 p.m. Sunday. To order by phone, dial (319) 335-1160 or toll-free in Iowa. 1-BOO-HANCHER. VI$A, Master­Card and American Express are accepted.

• •

)

• I

. .

The CIA, Human Rights, and American Democracy

Former CIA officer David MacMichael will speak about the Middle East Crisis, Latin America, and covert operations. MacMichael will replace

Philip Agee, a former CIA officer whose passport was revoked under pressure by the U.S . Government.

Monday, October 8, 7;OOpm Mac Bride Auditorium -

Sponsored by Central America Solidarity Committee & New Wave Endorsed by Operation U.S. Out

Call 335-3269 for assistance attending

See your future in Critical Care Nursing at Mayo

Critical Care PfRSPfCTIVES You're invited to attend a special program at Mayo Medical Center on Saturday, November 3, 1990

This free program is designed for a select group of nursing students and faculty members. It includes Friday night lodging for out-of-town participants and lunch' on Saturday.

Program features: ) 'Nursing Service Overview ~Ojnformation on our Critical Care Nurse

Internship Program • Tours of Critical Care Units and Heliport • Interviews--optional

Call collect 507-286-7030 for registration information and brochure. Enrollment is limited - resistration deadline is October 22.

~ Mayo Medical Center \:{)J Rochester, Minnesota 55~03-60S7

An Afflrmalive ActlO!V'Equal Opportunity Employer

with Chips & Pickle

DANCE

FRO M BRA ZI L

Ballet that is classical in its vocabulary, but contemporary in feeling and look. Breathtakingly beautiful and amazingly sensuous; both soothing and powerful.

Monday October 22 8p.m.

Senior Citizen and Youth discounts

A program of masterpieces to music by Chopin. Richard Strauss, and Mozart

Pre-performance discussion with Walter Santos, representative of Grupo Corpo, Hancher greenroom, 7 p.m. Free tickets required.

Supported by the National Endowment for the Arts

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

HANCHER For ticket Information Call 335-1160 or loll·free in Iowa oulslde Iowa Cily 1-800-HANCHER

The University of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa

"Dresher's music and Eckert's caged heat IntenSity make SlowFlre an engrossing piece 01 performance art. ". Variety

Featuring Rinde Eckert as Bob, Tuesday and Wednesday an eclectic Everyman for the October 16 and 17 Nuclear Age trying desperately 8 p.m. to cope with the emotional and informational overload of contemporary life.

Senior Citizen and Youth discounts Pre-performance discussion with Paul Dresher, Hancher greenroom, October 16. 7 p.m. Free tickets required. Supported by The National Endowment for the Arts UI Students receive a 20'Y. discount on all Hancher events and may charge to their University accounts.

HANCHER For ticket Information Call 335-1160 or loll·',., 1ft 10WI Dutsld, 10_ Cily

1-800·HANCHER

The University of Iowa Iowa City. Iowa

_____________ ..,..-....;;"...'---___ ----";;;;.... ___ --'---'---'-___ -"-1lle Dally lOwan ____________________________ _

Viewpoints editor Michael Lorenger, 335-5863

Editor's note: The (o!kJwing editorial contains material that may be considered offensive by BOme indivicUuJls. The material is included w enhance reader understanding of the issue.

OBSCENITY CONVICTION

Witch hunt The first domino in the wave of censorship has fallen. Wednesday, Charles Freeman was convicted of obscenity for

selling a copy of 2 Live Crew's album "As Nasty As They Wanna Be." His conviction paves the way for a censorship movement of grand proportions.

This week, three members of 2 Live Crew go on trial. The Freeman decision will no doubt have some effect on the outcome of the ease, as will U.S. Judge Jose Gonzalez's ruling during the summer that their album is obscene. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that material can be found obscene - and thus enjoy no First Amendment protection - if it has no artistic merit and appeals solely to prurient interests. For the , y person, "prurient" means "characterized by or are . g an interest in sexual matters."

FollOwing this guideline, the record, taJren as a whole, should not be found obscene. It does arouse interest in sexual matters. Lines such as "I'll break ya down and dick ya long" and "suck my dick,' bitch, it makes you puke" arouse little else . (except perhaps nausea). But when one takes these lyrics in context with the rest of the album, the record as a whole can be considered humorous. It is sick humor, but it is humor nonetheless. The record actually makes some people laugh. ~d humor, even in its most vulgar and raw form, is art. Case closed.

One need not agree with what is being said or shown in all art for it to benefit from constitutional protection. Most works in the vein being questioned are purposefully controversial; they are created to provoke thought. What 2 Live Crew says is hard to agree with, but it's not meant to reflect societal norms. It's to be taken as humor, as weD as social commentary.

The humor is distasteful, but the commentary isn't - it's horrifying. It shows listeners that these attitudes do exist. By exaggerating to the point of silliness, maybe 2 Live Crew can show listeners how repulsive these attitudes are. How they approach this m. the future is up to them - and the court. But ifthey are allowed to continue, and to take some responsibility for their statements, they can show youth that all is not love and happiness - that society does have some real problems.

Lawmakers can reinterpret the First Amendment as many times as they like, trying to rid the country of "perverted" music. But the things these groups are addressing will remain. If grolJ.PS like 2 Live Crew and Public Enemy serve a purpose, it is to make sure that society's trouble stays in the public eye. 2 Live Crew 'proved that the public is paying attention.

But the ensuing series of lawsuits means that artists in every field will have to watch what they say for fear of prosecution. This "chilling effect" - artists placing restrictions upon their own work in order to please fringe groups - constitutes censorship. Luther Campbell voluntarily printed a warning directly on the cover of 2 Live Crew's questionable album stating that the enclosed lyrics could be deemed offensive and not suited for those under 18. 2 Live Crew members also place restrictions on who can see their performances - correlating age with the content of the show. But these artists are still prosecuted. Where will it end?

Offensiveness is not a valid relUKln for trying to abolish something. Even if no one ever listened to 2 Live Crew, the group still has a right to release records. The fact that many consenting adults choose to listen to this music means that the band should be able to continue, without legal constraint. Those who choose to listen to 2 Live Crew in their cars or homes, or to watch them in a club, should similarly be without constraint. Those whose livelihood it ja to sell these records should also be free from persecution. Are the organizations condemning 2 Live Crew really concerned about repressing sex and violence, or repressing political and social views outside the "acceptable spectrum"? ~

Americans ougbt . to be more concerned about artistic censorship. A handful of people are taking away the First . Amendment rights of II nation. This McCarthyesque ultra­conservative ~tchhunt must be shut down.

John Kenyon Nationl World Editor

Opinions expressed on the Viewpoints page of The Dally Iowan are lhose of lhe signed author. The Dally Iowan, as a non-profit corporation, does not express opinions on these malters,

Even more To the Editor:

John Kenyon's editorial [MEnough," Sept. 24, Dl], seriously misjudges the role of activist groups such as New Wave on campus. A number of wrong ideas appear in Kenyon's piece, but one especially deeerves strong rebuttal. The suggestion the spirited pro­choice demonstrations, like the one against Justice Antonin Scalia, can have no impact on the Supreme Court decisions simply does not match the facta.

Ronald Reagan changed the politi­cal complexion of the Supreme Court with his three conservative appointments, but U.S. presidents have not alwaya had their way with court decisions. Richard Nixon also tried to stack the court with right-wing justices, and yet it wu one of his own appointees, Ju.tice Harry Blackmun, who wrote the Roe vs. Wade dedlion. - -

It was not the party affiliations of the justices, nor was it their legal and ideological backgrounds, that made possible the Roe decision. After all, the justice with the most consistently 'liberal voting record, William Brennan, W81 an Eisen­hower appointee, and Democrat Byron White has joined the conser­vative wing of the court.

Rather, the Roe decision came about becauae of the pre.sure felt

Tempered response not so loving and compassionate

It is higbly commendable that when Richard Weikart, in a letter to the editor ["Different reasons," Sept. 26, DI], added his voice to the heated campus controversy concerning homosexuality, he did so with no intentions of fanning the flames. This is especially so considering that the dispute involved a display by the Campus Review. How much easier it would have been to just reach into that tired old bag of tired old slogans and come up ,with something really emotional, something marked more by its hatred and bigotry than by its collected, fair thought.

I would, however, like to take issue with two points in Weikart's letter: First, that "Christianity ... does not heap ridicule and scorn on those who, after all , are no greater sinners than we ourselves have been"; and second, that homosexuality ought to be opposed on the basis of Christian morality.

This whole issue takes me back a year, when, while working for my high-school newpaper, I happened to read an opinion piece in a nearby school's publica­tion concerning homosexuality. Headed "Gays and straights can be friends, but . . . Homosexuality is still wrong," the article was a newspaper's reaction to an advertisement for a lesbian and gay youth

Guest Opinion

Brendan Wolfe

group that appeared in West Des Moines Valley High School's student newspaper.

Part of the article ran as follows: "The Gay Liberation Movement and other pro-homosexual organizations continue to activelY 'and publicly claim that homosexuality is merely a lifestyle choice and should not only be tolerated by society at large but that homosexual 'rights' should be protected in the same manner that the rights of racial minorities are protected .. ..

"Is this the course America should follow? "No." The article went on to say, "We should treat all

people with dignity and respect, but we should not be misled into believing that such a noble objective can be achieved by elevating homosexuality from the aberration that it is ... ."

Perhaps this example is more extreme than the views of Weikart, yet both positions have two things in common: They both label homosexuality as immoral and they both more-or-less use the Bible to defend their positions.

It was stated in the high-school editorial that "moral fundamentals do not change, regardless of the meanderings of public opinion." The immorality of homosexuality was then compared to the immor· ality of holding other humans in bondage - both were immoral in biblical times, both are immoral now and both will always be immoral. It is ironic, though, that southern slaveholders during the Civil War used the Bible in defense of their peculiar institution. Quick off their tongues were such quotes as this one from Leviticus 25:44-46: "Such slaves as you have, male or female, shall come from the nations around you; from them, you may buy slaves. You may also buy the children of those who have settled and lodge with you and such of their family

as are born in the land. These may become your property and you may leave them to your sons after you; you may use them as slaves permanently." It is clear that the Bible, in this instance ,anyway, advocates slavery. It has been only through the "meanderings of public opinion" - or perhaps the personal and free choices of individuals - that our society has divorced itself from this immorality.

When we treat people with love and compassion, and with dignity and respect, we must respect foremost their minds aAd their right to think for themselves - and we must respect their individuality and their right to be themselves.

Weikart, in his letter, suggests that homosexuality is immoral. He verifies this biblically in St. Paul's Letter to the Romans 1:26 where he refers to "shameful passions" and "males behaving indecen­tly with males." Weikart writes, though, that "Christianity . . . does not heap ridicule and scorn on those who, after all, are no greater sinners than we ourselves have been." But St. Paul himself, the greatest of al\ Christians, indulges in nothing but ridicule and scorn a few versus later in his letter, calling homosexuals "whisperers and scandal­mongers, hateful to God, insolent, arrogant, and boastful."

Of course, it could be argued that I am dodging the issues and hiding behind the Bible's infamous ambiguity, so allow me to state up front that I am offended Weikart should label homosexuality "mor­ally repugnant" while he still claims to be loving and compassionate. When we treat people with love and compassion, and with dignity and respect (remember the goal of the high-school opinion writer), we must respect foremost their minds and their right to think for themselves - and we must respect their individuality and their right to be themselves. While man is a ·social animal," according to Aristotle, his first instinct is freedom and individuality. When society prevents the growth of individuality not in harmony with its traditions and forces all its members to fashion themselves upon its model, that society has becom tyrannous. According to 19th century philosopher John Stuart Mill, such a society "enslaves the soul itself." It is in this type of society we are asked to live if homosexuality is branded "immoral."

Again, it most commendable that Weikart refrained from using the Review's signature hate tactics in presenting his argument, but I would hardly agree that his convictions are tempered with the love and compassion he contends. A person with such convic­tions would not indulge in coverting other people's free and constitutionally protected lifestyles.

Br8f1dan Wolfe is a freshman majoring In English.

by the justices from the women's liberation movement and the left­leaning political climate in general.

are some campus groups allowed to exist?"

these cute, little wiggly creatu.res perish. These practices must be stoppedl All men, by law, must be required to preserve their sperm in freezers especially designed for this purpose. All Sexual practices that do not allow for the preservation of life of even one spermatozoon must be outlawed. Only then will our society truly be pro-life.

Groups like New Wave should be praised for thinking that public officials, including Justice Scalia, must be accessible and account· able. They and their supporters were right to send the message to Scalia that he cannot hide when he comes to Iowa City.

Kenyon says the campus protes· ters may be "interesting" but that they are also "inconvenient." He thinks they raise "eyebrows" but not "consciousn88S." The point, of course, is that effective protests do raise consciousness precisely by inconveniencing thoae who hold anti·democratic views on such ilsues as women's right to choose.

It is clear that Kenyon himself was inconvenienced by the Scalia demonstration led by New Wave. Which il why it is acary to lee that he starts his editorial with the anti-democratic question, "Why

Consistency To the Editor:

Pat Gallagher Iowa City

I would like to thank Mike Bunge ["Central issue," Oct. 4, Dl] for informing us that the central issue in the abortion debate is whether or not a fetus is alive. Since the fetus is surely alive, Bunge invites us to reason, it must have rights that must be protected by law. But why stop here? Vegetables and animals are no less surely alive. Let us have laws that protect their rights, too. True, Iowa agriculture would suffer, but "tnat'. life." So, too, care must be taken to protect the billions of sperm that are · massacred daily at the whims of adolescent male fanta.y. Even when sell is performed with the

Gordon Patrick Knight Iowa City

Letters polley Letters to the editor mut be typed and signed and must Include the writer's addresl and phone number for verillcation. Lettel'll Ihould be no longer than one double-8paced page In length. Tilt Daily Iowa" 'reserves the right to edit for length and clarity.

aim of reproduction, billions of ' _________ ~~-

Peg. SA Monday, October 8, 1990

Complete disclosure sought An open letter to UI Hunter Rawlil1l8:

The issue of animal research has now been put squ/,lrely on your desk. I wish I could say it was th efforts of Iowans for Animal Rights that put it there rather than the revelation of 900 barrels of decomposing, radioactive ani­mal caracsses at the Oakdale campus. But, nevertheless, the UI's incineration plan has offered

Guest Opinion Jim Walters

a rare glimpse inside the animal research system. If the UI has nothing to hide, why then must the research community remain so closed to scrutiny?

It was surprising to hear Health Protection Director William Twaler assert that there was nothing ·clandestine" about the disposal operation at Oakdale. In a television interview he decried the protests, saying no one had come to talk with him about it or to offer solutions. I guess we missed the earlier · public appe­als" for help. Perbaps we should have assumed that every mlijor university has warehouses full of decaying animals.

Animal research is carried out very quietly - far away from public view, hidden behind closed doors and soothing assurances.

Animal research is carried out very quietly - far away from public vi.ew, hidden behind closed doors and soothing assurances. Most of us have little or no opportunity to evaluate for our­selves the ethics, nece ity or appropriateness of the experi ­ments. If we cannot look behind the doors, then we mu t depend upon the voices thllt speak of great advances in medical care, assuring us that our trust in the experimenters' experti and pro­fessionali sm are not misplaced, that the experiments are decent and humane, and that the ends justify the means.

The membership of the m's Animal Care and Use Committee - which meets in private - is dominated by individuals from the research communit.y. This may be the Ul's only working committee to reject. vol un rI from the faculty and taff and search instead for its own, hand­picked choices. Over the years, individuaJs who hav applied for the community-at-large seat (cur­rently occupied by an Iowa City Animal Control offie r), hay been rejected without even th courte y of r ply. Why i8 this 1 cit of diversity actively perpetuated?

The cornerstone of any unlv r· sity need to be commitment to a free and open exchang of id as. Strangely enough, discour. about animal re arch 8 m almost taboo in Iowa City. Thi ethically charged is u hould no longer be avoided.

Our challenge to you, President Rawlings, is to facilitate an open dialogue on this campus regard­ing animal re arch. M mbers of the faculty, staff and community, aa w 11 as stud nt.B must be allowed to participate in this dialogue. W und r land that this will be 8 difficult, tirne­consuming task compound d by powerful interest! who k to derail such proc edi wit.h threats or clijolery. But tmg a. the VI hal nothing to hide -nothing for which it hould be ashamed - we hould be able to expect open lab , open record. and open m tinga.

1 reiterate our call for a public hearing regarding the Incinera­tion of radioactiv carcal s at Oakdale and J am hopeful that you will help bring about an open dialogue regarding animal research .

Jim Walters Is a member 01 Iowans for Animal Rights.

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of ¥roblems arise. The bottom coin­ror cSdes with the winter break -

.,hlch is when the Russian stu­dents will be leaving.

Rogers said the semesterlong pro­film is too short, and many Rus­sian students agree.

But a yearlong program would l!av.e disadvantages for the stu­dents as well, such as feeling )omesick and falling behind in their rigorous curriculum at home. 1 The Russian exchange program is _ill in its early stages of develop­ment, an~ UI is learning from As mist

188t ye s group was placed in Mayflower Residence Hall, a choice ~a.t caused some headaches, ,ccording to Rogers.

Mayflower used to be an apart­~er:it building, and many students \hink a residence hall ambience is kill missing there. • Another prohlem was the arbitrary toommate selection; some Ameri­Can students weren't eager to have j)reign roommates. Cross-cultural misunderstandings often arose.

Thus emerged the Foreign Lan­SURge House as a better choice: Residents are there because they lave a pronounced interest in ~ign cultures. J

Did that eliminate prohlems? Not exactly, according to some

~erican students at the FLH. "I wish (the Russians) would inter­

t;t more," said Loan Kammerer, Tho rooms with a Russian student.

Though the ice is hreaking away pi/y through small talk and Ihared social events, this is not Inough in the eyes of many Ameri­f'I\ students in the FLH - the word is that you can never be too ~i8ble . .

eo "The FLH is a funny place in that sense," said Jolene Holter, a gra­.uate assistant in the Russian Department who acts as Soviet !ai~on. ! Some American students were dis­appointed that the Russian stu-

o dents usually ate dinner in a group fparated from the others.

The Russians say dinner is often ~e best time for them to discuss a,roblems, and it is natural for them to congregate there.

But overall, the Russian students ~ becoming more comfortable witb life in America.

Olga is glad to have two American ronimates to talk to now, by the !lay.

~ Continued from page 1 A

"I heard from friends who had Jeen bere," Kostya said. "There is ~ways some surprise, but not enough to stop me dead in my tracks in front of every shop win­;>w."

One pleasant surprise for the ludents was the VI Main Library ~d its easy access system.

Speaking of surprises, what about Alotball home game weekends? .1. 'Oh, no. I come from Moscow,~ J'latasha said. ·So a crowded town i not new to me."

Kostya said he was.amazed by the openness with which even the most lhtimate topics are discussed by ~ericans.

"Russians are a reserved people, ~ fte said.

"Maybe this (American) approach is a better one,~ he added, after a ~use. I Rushana expected American stu­dents to be much more indepen­dent than she found them to be.

And why do girls insist on swear­W pointlessly in the presence of inaJes? Interesting, said one Rus­.tan student. • But the Russians expect Ameri­£illS to hold different opinions and Jebave in a way that seems arange to them. -j '1'hey were raised that way,' was • frequent comment. ) Despite these cultural differences, 'Pe Russian students are getting to In\lw their American roommates in~ host families, and close friend­~ps are gradually forming.

Ouke '------'-, tinued from page 1A

lISt cycles. Under Louisiana's unusual open

P~ary system, aU candidates run ~iDst each other in the primary, tegardles8 of party. A runoff would ~~ve been held Nov. 6 if Johnston

010 ad failed to receive a majority DSturday.

Bagert withdrew too late to get his tllllle off the ballo~. Under a 1981 L w, Ba 's votes could not be lIIunted. ~me w ' , however, because it '\8 too late to change computer

l"Ograms or courthouse operations. l'l\oae reported to the Associated tress gave Bagert 10,636 votes -.. than, 1 percent of the 1.4 r,llon cast.

Puke said ·political deals" were ,ponsible for Bagert's with-

tawal. Johnston drew the unpre­ented cross-party endorsement

, : eight Senate Republicans and t1ICk Kemp, secretary of Housing ."d Urban Development. 1 Johnston said his 10 percent vic-1011)' margin would have been con-

4ered a landslide had it not been Duke', preNnce in the race.

The Daily Iowan - MOnday. October 8.1990 NAnONIWORLD itA

Shuttle~ ______________ ~ __ ~_ti~ __ '~_~_lA

Associated Pretlll

Dlecovery 11th off the launch pad early Saturday morning with a c/1tw of five and the Ulyssea lalellite al Ita cargo. The aateliite waa auccellfully launched laler thai day.

Saturday's launch marked the end of months of frustration for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, which has suffered through problems with its shuttle fleet and the flawed Hubhle Space Telescope. Columbia and Atlantis have been grounded hy hydrogen leaks since early summer.

Discovery's smooth liftoff, NASA's first shuttle launch in nearly six months, was followed by successful deployment of the sun probe Ulys­ses.

The $250 million European space­craft is expected to arrive at·Jupi­ter in February 1992. The giant planet will provide a gravity assist to Ulysses, shoving it out of the ecliptic plane and under the sun.

Ulysses is to pass over the sun's south pole in 1994 and the north pole in 1995. It will be the first spacecraft to orbit over the solar poles.

Sunday's fire experiment ·was designed from the beginning knowing what we were doing" and its design was carefully reviewed by safety experts, said Louis Ignac­zak, the project's supervisor.

Coincidentally, Discovery com­mander Richard Richards had a fire scare during his first space flight in August 1989. A short circuit sent smoke and sparks into the cabin of the shuttle Columbia; NASA said the crew was never in danger.

"We can never learn enough about fire safety, as far as I'm concerned, ahoard the orbiter," Richards said

------------ $400 million in damages. "We can never Earlier Sunday, astronauta Bill learn enough Shepherd and Bruce Melnick

reported only limited succaaa with about fire safety' , an experiment to control TV

cameras with voice commands. as far as I'm Their voices were recorded prior to concerned, aboard the mission onto computer chips

that the system was suppoeed to the orbiter." recognize in space.

The system is designed to free astronauts of manual camera oper­ationa and thus let them do more than one thing at a time.

Richard Richardt ahutlfe commander

before Discovery's flight. Shepherd and Melnick tried mov-As part of another experiment ing the cameras by speaking such

S~day, !he astronauts extended words as "up,~ Mdown" and ·zoom Discovery a 50-foot-Iong robot arm .. out." Melnick bad hetter luck than Attached to the boom are two Shepherd. who /f'eprogrammed the patches of material iden5ical to system with the sound of his voice that used on solar panels of a in apace but still achieved little communications satellite stranded success. in a uselessly low orbit. The two planned to repeat the

Intelaat, an organization of coun- experiment Monday and again tries that owns the satellite, wants Tuesday . to measure how much the same Kathy Thornton ofMisaion Control kind of material on the satellite in Houston told crew members will decay in space before NASA before they went to sleep Sunday sends up astronauts in early 1992 that Ulysses was slightly cooler to repair the craft. than expected but within its temp-

"Provided the results from this erature limits. experiment are not wildly different Preliminary data show Ulysses from what we expect, it will be the will spend 231 days above 71 ('mal piece of data that gives us the degrees solar latitude, seven or confidence to go ahead and rescue eight daYB more than if Discovery the spacecraft," said Intelsat scien- had gone up Friday, the earliest tiet Andrew Dunnet. possible launch date for the mis-

The $167 million satellite failed to sion, Thornton said. NASA had to separate properly from an delay the launch for a day. unmanned Titan rocket in March. "This is another space first - a Intelsat is suing rocket maker customer who's happy with a Martin Marietta Corp. for at least launch delay,· Thornton said.

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Khmer Rouge prepares for attack 8y Nate Thayer The Associated Press

SIEM REAP PROVINCE, Cambo­dia - Bolstered by their first shipments of Chinese tanks, Khmer Rouge guerrillas are pre­paring a major attack to seize an area considered Cambodia's most important cultural and historic region.

After making major gains in rural areas in the past year, the Khmer Rouge now is shifting to conven­tional military tactics to seize cities and key economic regions, Western military analysts say.

The rebels recenUy took the key government artillery base at Sre Noi, and now say they are prepar­ing to attack Bantei Srei, the last major government position defending the provincial capital of Siem Reap and the nearby Angkor Wat temples, the symbol ofCambo­dian civilization.

The rebels have massed tanks, heavy guns and troops to attack government defenses in this north­western province. according to field commanders and Khmer Rouge fighters interviewed in the guer­rilla zone.

A recent lO-day, 1OO-mile trek through guerrilla-held area near Angkor Wat showed the rebels had overrun important positions and

Report says Waite to be freed soon 8y Mohemmed Salam The Associated Press

BEIRUT, Lebanon - A newspaper reported Sunday that an Iranian envoy has arrived in Beirut to prepare for the release of Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite am the next few days."

The report by the conservative ad-Diyar could not be confirmed. The paper is not known to have had special insight into the hostage issue.

But the report came amid mount­ing speculation that one or more of the four Britons missing in Leba­non could be freed soon. Iran and Britain restored diplomatic rela­tions on Sept. 27.

On Saturday, Lebanon's leading newspaper, the independent an­Nahar daily, said that Waite and "a number of foreign hostages" were expected to be released this week.

Arab sources in Damascus, Syria's capital, said Sunday that the Syr­ians are making strenuous efforts to free some of the 13 Westerners missing in Lebanon. Most are believed held by pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim militants.

moved freely through villages le88 than an hour's drive from the Siem Reap provincial capital.

-We were ordered to attack Bantei Srei this month and then we will attack Siem Reap,"said Bong Thieun, a young Khmer Rouge soldier interviewed at Sre Noi.

Khmer Rouge bulldozers and chainsaws are carving tank and truck roads through the jungles toward Angkor Wat.

-what we see happening in Siem Reap is alarming; said a Western military intelligence analyst. "They are using a strategy differ­ent from anywhere else. It looks like a real move to take Siem Reap."

Analysts said the capture of Siem Reap an~ Angkor Wat would be a major psychological victory.

Thai and Western sources, speak­ing on cQndition of anonymity, said China's secret delivery of 24 tanks is the first such shipment ever to the guerrillas. Dozens of the Com­munist rebels have returned to the jungles from China, where they were trained to operate tanks, they said. .

The sources said 12 tanks are at the Khmer Rouge-controlled dis­trict capital of Andung Veng, the staging area for the offensive against Siem Reap. The other 12 are near the Khmer Rouge·held

town of Pailin in western Battam­bang province.

The guerrillas also have received scores of Chinese jeeps, transport trucks and heavy weapons.

The Khmer Rouge has relied on Chinese arms in the nearly 12.year-old war against the Vietnamese-installed government armed by the Soviet Union.

Hundreds of thousands of people died from starvation, execution and disease during the Khmer Rouge's fanatical Communist rule from 1975 until Vietnam invaded in late 1978.

Areas of the country's north are under the control of former monarch Prince Norodom Siba­nouk, whose guerrillas are allied with the Khmer Rouge and a third rebel group. Sihanouk has wide support among peasants, and sev­eral thousand of his troops move freely through scores of isolated rural villages.

They are welcomed by many villa­gers fearful of the Khmer Rouge and deeply suspicious of Vietnam's influence over Prime Minister Hun Sen's government in Phnom Penh.

But Sibanouk commanders say they cannot compete for territory with the Khmer Rouge, who have stockpiles of ammunition to fight for several years if China were to cut them oft'.

One source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk Sharaa is trying hard "to resolve the issue but has been encountering unexpected obstacles. "

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He did not elaborate, but noted that Sharaa is expected to meet soon with Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati to discuss the issue.

Speculation also has been fueled by expectations that Britain and Syria will soon restore relations. Britain broke off ties in October 1986 after Syrian intelligence was implicated in a plot to bomb an Israeli airliner at London's Heath­row airport.

Ad-Diyar said the unidentified Iranian official flew into Beirut Saturday carrying an Algerian passport.

"Secret talks have been held in the last two months and resulted in agreement on the release operation as well as the final touches and details; the report said. It said the envoy was assigned to supervise the release, which would come "in the next few days:

In London, the British Foreign Office said there was nothing to the report and reiterated British I policy that it will not negotiate to I get hostages out.

Britain and Iran restored diploma- I tic relations after a 19-month I break triggered by the publication

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Waite, 51, disappeared Jan. 20, 1987, after leaving his hotel in Muslim west Beirut for a meeting with representatives of Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War. The pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim faction is believed to hold American hos­tages Terry Anderson and Thomas Sutherland.

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would hay. 1 Instead, h.

or not his kick-off. ihought, [ come the : they didn'l quitting or:

And no~ Luck has c

This pas Ohio Stad

I confused, i I their Bue

I 11th-ranke

I Oh. • Ohio St&

\ Cooper,f needed a 'III

f Bothlost His job, tho

The Buel early in tI theyattem

The kick up by lllin eke)'. As hj Poloskey jJ

to one of scampered for the SCOI

Poloslrey the replay!

With the • II and the

NAIA in tI .................................................................. ~~) Hawkeye

REGISTER TO UJln A

.... ACHE:~ Ocloller 8-12, On. lack., Will

.e Glyen Awa, Dall, ONLY IJ

tournamenl challenge -IOn's 3-9 10

It didn't I

The Ha\l

I matches ­Friday, Net and the (

I Sunday ­nament at I

"Ithinkrl on confide, her players Dlent title.

"We're pI! than befo,", continue to into a habit

The Haw: , eat test of

when St. Ft NAIA, expl rame one.

But H Itrai 12-7. ~ 0

freshman. the run, roc block each.

After BeV. I ICored thei:

point of the by the Haw eight straii Trista Scha tributing t",

No group claims to have kidnapped Waite. But a former hostap, Irishman Brian Keenan, said after he was released by Shiite captors in August that Waite was hel~ with him for a while.

"I'm not. could come Helaon .. lei 19 Sturgis Drive they can -lIain,t aD)

University· Book · Store . Iowa Memorial Union' The University of Iowa .

.'

L;;..::;::;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;:;;,35:.:..1,;.·~'1~250~....;:;,;;~ ~_--' ..... ~-.... _-.iiIIiI-.IIIIIIiIIII .... _ .... _ .. ___ ... JIIIfIIiJi~~y ~~: the eecond I

f , t

~.

-The Daily Iowan

IOWA

Bombs The Iowa field hockey team

'Buckeyes' boss loses

~ /ady luck \ Ohio State, the 20th-ranked col­

~-_""l l lege football team in the nation, •• _-.j t might not win another football !" game this season.

You see, quitters never win. Two weeks ago, Ohio State was

boating the Trojans of USC. The Buckeyes were down nine points

I with 2:36 remaining in the game, wben the weather, plaguing the

I game all day, took a turn for the , worse.

The referees, concerned ~bout the I players' safety, approached Ohio t Stste coach John Cooper and asked

if be felt the game should continue. I Cooper told the officials that if his

team's ensuing on-side kick wasn't successful, he would have no prob­

I lem ending the game. In other words, he quit.

I If Cooper was sincerely worried • about the health of his players, he

would have put a stop to the game. oj Instead, he decided to see whether

or not his team would recover the kick-off. If they did , Cooper thought, maybe they could over­come the nine-point deficit. When they didn't , he stopped the game, quitting on his team.

And now, deservedly so, Lady Luck has quit on the Buckeyes.

This past Saturday afternoon, an Obio Stadium capacity crowd of confused, angry fans peered on as

, their Buckeyes played host to 11th-ranked llIinois in Columbus,

, Dh. • Ohio State needed a win.

Cooper, and his now-ailing career, needed a win.

Both lost. Cooper might lose again. His job, that is.

The Buckeyes were trailing 24-20 early in the fourth quarter when they attempted a field goal.

The kick was blocked and scooped • up by llIinois defender, Mike Polo­

skey. As he was falling to the turf, Poloakey illegally lateraled the ball to one of his teammates, who scampered the remaining 45 yards for the score.

Poloskey's pitcb was not a lateral, the replays showed. It was more of

See PohIcy, Page 28

Confident Iowa wins Challenge By Brian aaul The Daily Iowan

With the No. 16 team in Division n and the second-ranked team in NAIA in town, it looked like the

__ - .. ~' Hawkeye Challenge volleyball tournament might be just that - a challenge - for Coach Ruth Nel­IOn's 3-9 Iowa club.

It didn't turn out that way. The Hawkeyes swept three 3-0

matches - beating Indiana State Friday, Nebraska-Omaha Saturday IIId the College of St. Francis Sunday - in the round-robin tour­nament at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

"I think right now they're building on confidence,' Nelson said after her players cruised to the tourna­ment title.

"We're playing consistently better than before,' she added. "If we continue to dG that, it will build Into a habit.'

The Hawkeye. faced their tough-· lit teIIt of the weekend Sunday

when St. Francis, ranked second in NAJA, exploded to a 12-3 lead in lUne one.

But , Hawkeye. rallied for fGur Itrai ints to cut the lead to 12-7. ~' or Ruth Spethman and freshman Courtney Gillis keyed the run, recording one kill and one block each.

After leven sideouts, the Saints I ecored their 13th - and last -

point .of the game .on a net viGlatiGn by the Hawkeyes. I.owa then ICOred

I eight It!'aiibt points, with junlor Triata Schoenbe<:k and Gillis con­tributing two ldlls each.

"I'm not 10 lure they believed they could come back three weeks 810,· NellOn lAid after the rally. "Now, they can be d.own match-point .,ainat anyone, and I think they can come back.·

Ipwa allO UI8d alate spurt to win the aeoond game, U~-8. The Hawk·

• wins big against 2 unranked o away opponents. Page 28

, field hockey Monday, October 8,1990 1-- .

Defense 'bottles No.·18 Spartans By Jamie Butters The Daily Iowan

EAST LANSING, Mich. - An Iowa defense that "came to play" held Michigan State scoreless for 55 minutes and led the Hawk­eyes to a 12-7 win Saturday in Spartan .Stadium.

"The defense showed up today." said senior co-captain Merton Hanks. "They're a tough team, but we wanted to prove defen­sively that we could do the job. So that's what we did."

In the first half, doing the job meant intercepting two passes from Spartan quarterback Dan Enos. The first was a diving snag by freshman Jason Olejniczak. The second was a gift to Melvin Foster from sophomore Jeff Nel­son who put a hand on the ball and sent it fluttering tqward Foster.

"It was either Mike Wells or (Nelson) or Rod Davis, one of the three," Foster said. "I'm n.ot exactly sure but whichever .one it is, I'd like to thank him , and I think I'm going to take him out to dinner."

Foster, who finished the game with 20 tsckles, ran the intercep­tion back 14 yards.

"I never played a running back. Never ever. Not even in juni.or high or high school ," the 240-pound senior said. "... I tried to shake 'em in and out. I was just trying to be like Nick Bell, a big 01' guy trying to throw some moves. '

Iowa was leading 3-0 on a 31-yard field goa) by junior Jeff Skillett. F.oster's interception set up the Hawkeye's only touch­down. Matt Rodgers' 5-yard pa88 to the real Nick Bell put the Hawkeyes ahead 9-0 with 3:34 left in the first half. Skillett missed the extra point.

Skillett avenges 'loss' By Erica Weiland The Daily Iowan

EAST LANSING,Mich.-1t was a bright, sunny day Saturday when the Iowa football team faced Michi­gan State, unlike the lut time the Hawkeyes were on Spartan turf .

But the weather wasn't the only thing that was different.

Two years ago, the game between the Hawkeyes and Spartans ended in a 17-17 tie in the rain and fog.

At that point, Iowa kicker Jeff Skillett hit what he calls the lowest point in his college career.

In the waning. seconds of the 1988 game, SkiUett kicked a field goal that would have won the game for the Hawkeyes.

The referee under the uprights watched the ball over his shoulder - through the posts. But the far nlferee said it was wide right.

Last Saturday on the same field, Skillett kicked two field goals as th.e Hawkeyes upset the No. 18 Spartans 12-9.

"Two years ago it was probably the lowest time that rve ever had as being a kicker and now without a doubt is the highest point,' Skillett said. "And there's no other place that rd rather be than here. Two years ago I had a 52-yard field goal that I stiU and Coach Fry still (count) as good with three seconds to go. It missed wide right sup­posedly, and now we're right back into it."

Bell was the sec.ondary receiver and Fry referred to the playas another "little wrinkle" added to the .offense specifically for use against Michigan State.

Going into the game, Michigan State placekicker John Langeloh trailed Morten Anders.on by one point for the school's all-time sc.oring title. And he had a chance to claim the record as his own on the first drive .of the game.

The Dally Iowan/M,chael WIIIIBmI

Iowa tailback Nick Bellleapl .over Michigan State In Ea.t Lansfng, MI., on Saturday.lowa I. now defender Myron Beilin the Hawkeye. 12-7 victory 5-0-1 under Hayden Fry In East Lansing,

Iowa's kicking game has been a concern lately, with punter Jim Hujsak averaging about 34 yards per punt and Skillett having made only one out of three field goals this season.

aut Saturday both Hujsak and Skillett quelled those concerns as each came through with stellar performances.

Following the opening kickoff, Michigan State drove the ball from their .own 31 yard line to the Iowa 2. Langeloh missed the field goal in the str.ong and swirling wind.

"I think I put the jinx on that great kicker before the game:

Iowa Coach Hayc\en Fry said. "Because I knew he just needed one 3-pointer to break the record I went over and congratulated him before the game."

That failed drive may have set the tone for the entire game - at least Michigan State coach George Perles said it did.

"I think when you drive the ball that far in the first series and

The Dally IowanIDavid Greedy

Maldng a block In the second game agaln.t the Unlveralty of Nebralka-Omaha are UI vollyball playe,. Stephanie Stitt, lett, and Rachel Buaer. The Hawkeya. won Saturday night'. match, 3-0, a. part of 1111. weekend'. Hawkeye Challenge tournament.

yes broke a 6-6 tie on setter Janet Moylan'. tip f.or a kill, and senior outBide hitter Barb Willis contrib­uted two kills and a solo block to help the Hawkeyes build a 11-7 lead.

Schoenbeck, who had nine kill. and a .231 hitting average in the match, later ended the contest with two straight spike •.

In game three, Iowa had a 10-6 lead cut to 12-11 by the Saints, but a block by Moylan and two Sainta' hitting errors allowed I.owa to win the game and match.

Willis led the Hawkeyes with 14 kills and six blocks in the match. Senior outside hitter Jenny Rees was second with 10 kills and also chipped in with 13 digs, which tied Moylan for the team lead.

The victory gave Iowa a four­mutch winning streak which started with a five-game win over Minnesota Oct. 3. The Hawkeyes had lost five straight entering that contest.

MEveryone has picked up their game,' senior Ginger LorentBOn

See Volle,.,.., Page 28

you go for the field goal and y.ou don't get anything out of it, it has a way of letting the air out of a lot of people." Perles said.

Foster said this win will have a big impact on the team emotion­ally.

"Two years ago we tied and last year we lost to (Michigan State) and we never did rec.over," Foster said.

Foster wasn't the only one impressed by the importance of this victory.

"It's been a long time since we did the 'Hokey Pokey' in the dressing room after the game," Fry said . "We save that f.or the big victories."

"It's a tradition f.or us,' Hanks said . "Whenever we come un

See FOOIbIn, Page 28

"Jim Hujsak and I (have) had a couple of long talks: Skillett said. "We fmally figured out that this was Big Ten seaSGn now, and if we're going to do something we'd better start doing it."

Hujsak ended the day with seven punts for 301 yards and a 43-yard average.

"I've been kicking well in practice See IIk..u, Page 2B

Boston bats fail in Game 2 By Ben Walker The Associated Press

BOSTON - Maybe Babe Ruth still has a curse on the Boston Red Sox, and maybe not. But the Oakland Athletics sure do.

Welch, a 27 -game winner in the regular season, held B.oston to one run on four hits. Eekersley esCl,lped a bases-loaded jam in the eighth by striking out Dwight Evans on three pitches.

The series resumes Tuesday in Oakland, when Mike Moore (13-15) faces Boston's Mike Boddicker (17-8). Bob Welch shut down the Red Sox for 7'1:1 innings

and Dennis Eckersley finished them off Sunday night as the Athletics won 4-1 for a 2-0 lead in the American League playoffs.

Both teams wasted bases-loaded threats in the sixth, with Oakland getting four hits in the inning, but hitting the ball too sharply to score.

Two days, two wins for the Athletics. They won their eighth straight postseason game.

Too little talent for the Red Sox, apparently. They tied a record with their sixth straight loss in the playoffs, including a four-game sweep against the Athletics in 1988.

Once again, B.oston hung tough. They led early, as they did in Saturday night's 9-1 los8, but again the Red Sox bullpen could not hold it.

Jose Canseco led offwith a single and was running on a full-count pitch when Baines hit a grounder so hard to second base that the Red Sox were able to tum a double play. But singles by Mark McGwire and Carney Lansford finished Kiecker, and Greg" Harris, the losing pitcher, gave up a single to Ron Hassey that reached right fielder Torn Brunansky too fast for McGwire to try for the plate.

Harold Baines' RBI grounder put Oakland ahead in the seventh and Oakland added two runs in the ninth for insurance, as if Eckersley even needs it.

The Athletics batted .343 this season with the bases loaded and Walt Weiss went 2-for-3 in those situations. This time, though, the Red Sox escaped when Weiss grounded into a routine force play.

Record field races for hospice By Brett Ridge The Daily Iowan

They say that a dog is man's best friend, but few expect to run against one in a road race.

At the 15th annual Hospice Road Races Sunday, a dog registered as Ozzie Lone Dog, age 3, took the tape in the mile run that opened the races with a time of 5 minutes, 20 seconds. The dog's .owner ran the mile with the dog but was not registered for the race.

Twelve-year-.old Tim Ocheltree of Iowa City was the first human to cross the finish line as he came in with with a time of 5:47.

A record field of 3,346 elite and local runners took off from the starting line of the 5K, 10K, and half-marathon racell to help raise an estimated $71,000 for the Hospice of Iowa City and other United Way agencies.

Records were broken in both the women's mile run and the 10K run. Kathy Dootheman of Iowa City broke the mile record with a time of 6 minutes. Dootheman, who normally runs longer dis­tances including triathalons and biatbalons, was competing in the mile due to recent injuries.

Susan Scites of Louisville, C.oI.o., also broke the record in the 10K, shattering the old record of 34:28 wither her time of 34:20 .

The overall winners in the 5K • race included Libbie J.ohnson of Boulder, Colo., who came in with a time of 16:29, and Iowa native Mark Hammons. currently of Charlottesville, Va.

Hammons, who was originally from Marengo, Iowa, bad won Iowa State Titles in c1'088 country in 1988 and the 3200-meter run in both 1988 and 1989. His winning time of 15:34 was sur­prising to him as well as his win. Hammons said.

MI ran a good time but not a

great time," Hammons said. "It helped that most of the better runners were in the 10K"

The men's 10K and both the men's and women's marathons provided no surprises.

Expected winner Paul McGovern ofLynn, Mass., took the 10K with a time of 29:57 wbile Fernando Braz, of Peabody, Mass., and Fordie Madiera, of Shearborn, Mass., took the marathons with times of 1:06:14 and 1:19:27" respectively.

For local runners, Sunday was a chance to run for a good cause in step with some of the country's best.

William Davies, a faculty mem­ber in the ill Linguistics Depart­ment, expressed the general feel­ings of most of the runners.

"It geta a little crowded out there especially at the start with some or the kids," -Davies said. "But it's always fun to run in races like these when you can run with some of the elite •. "

s

2B SCOREBOARD The Daily Iowan - Monday. October 8. 1990

Saturday Big Ten Football Summaries AI Eal Lan.lng , Mich . Iow . ... _ ................ _ .... _ •.•• _ ... 0 • 0 .... ,2 _ ... nlt. ................ _ .•.• O 0 0 7- 1

'-e-FG Skllle11 3' lowlt---l!ell 5 p_ Irom Rodgers (kick loIl.cI) MSu-HlckllOn e run (Longeloll kick) lowe-FG Sklll." 34 A-18.813

T .... 1IdoIIc low. MIll Flrs1dow"..................................... '8 '9 Rulheo-yard. ............................... 3'·73 47·2'4 P_lng......................................... 23e 11111 RIIlurnV.rd. ................................. '4 0 ComI>'Att~n1 , .............................. 20-38-0 17-36-2 Punt . ............................................. 7~ &-38 Fumbles-Loat ................................ 2·2 HI Pen.nles-Y .. d. ............................. 5-37 7-aD TI meol _lon...... ................ 25:011 34;51

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS AUSHING-Iowa, Bell 18·44, Kul.wa 8·24.

Stew.n 2-4, Montgo_ry '-3, Aodgers 4·(mlnu. 2) . Michigan St., Ducko11 2)"21 , Hickson 18-86, Miller , -4. Enos 5-3.

PASSING-lowa, Aodgars ~-{)'236. Michl· gen St., EnOl 17-304-2· ' l1li. Miller 0-,-0-0.

AECEIVING-tow.. Smllh 4-4" Kul .... 4-31, Bell ),25, Hughes 2-44, Slewart 2-38. Tilley 2,'8, Filloon '·17, Saunders 1·'5, Crooa '·7. Michigan St. , Bradley 5·91 . Hickson ).41 , Smollnakl ),20, MacFarland 2·25, Ducka11 2·15. Prln., 1-<4. Young 1-3.

AI Columbua, Ohio I ...................... ......................... , 1 a '4 7-31 Ohio IL........................................ 14 3 3 0-30

III-Flnko 2 p ... from Vorduzco (Hlggln. kick) OSll-Roben Smith 5 run (T.WIIII.ms kick) OSU4iarrt., run (T.Wllllams kick) III--FG Hlggln. 43 OSll-FG T.WIIII.ms 22 III--Grlffltll '2 run (Higgins kick) OSll-FG T.WIIII.ma 37 III--Olson 1 pa .. from Verduzco (HIggins kick) III-Parker 45 relum 01 blockad field goal

(Higgins kick) _9,404.

T .. m .... 1lk: II 08U Flr.tdow". .................................. 23 25 Rulh .. ·y .. d . .............................. 45-"9 45-243 PllIIIngy.rd. ............................. 258 244 Aelum y.rd..................... ............ 22 6 P_ .......................................... 22-31·' ,6-32-4 PUn1a ............................................. 4-3, 1·59

Fumbleo·loet ................................ 3-(1 2·2 """"les-yarda ............................ 5.J5 ),25 TIme 01 P..-on...................... 3' ;38 28;21

INDIVIDUAL LUDeIIS AU5H1NG-lIlInoI., Grlff"h 23-8e, Boyer 7·29,

Foogln 4-21 , L-* fl." , Tu .... r 1-3, Lynch 1-1 . Bell "' , Vorduzco 2·(mlnus '0). Ohio 51., Harrt. 2f!..118, Robon Smith ,.-, S .Graham ),20. J .Grah.m H7, Frey 1·2.

PASSING-ItlInolo, V.rdUJco 22-31·1 ·251. Ohio 5t. , Frey 16-32-4-244.

AECEIVtNG-llllnolo, W .. 8-'59, Boll H6, Harney 2-20. ~ 2· 11 , Anke 2·11, Tumer '·17, Muellor ,.e, Griffith ,.e, Fo.gln I.e. Oloon 1·1. Ohio 51., J .Grahim 7_, Olive 4-49, ElM. H7, H.rris 2·'3, EdWardo '·2' , B.S,.bleln '·'9.

At Madison, WII. MIdt",n . ......... _ .. _ ..... ..... _ ... 7 10 17 7-41 _no", ..... ...................... _ ... ... 0 0 0 .... a

MI<:It-41ow.rd 29 pua from Grt>ac (Cenaon kick)

Mleh-Aloxander a p ... lrom Grbee (Carlson kick)

Mlch-FG C.rillOn 38 MI~G Carlson 38 Mlch-V.ughn 4 run (Cerlaon kick)

. Mlch-41oward 2 pua from G,bee (C.rtson kick)

Mlch-I'owera 8 run (Cerlson kick) Wle-FG Thompaon 33 ~,a;;9.

T_rnll8tlellc _ WIo Firat_no....... ............................ 29 14 Ruu.e.y.rd. ............................... 5f!..38O 2f!..18 P_lng......................................... 174 17' Aoturn Yard. ........................... ........ 9 (.1) COm~"·lnt .............................. ,. 17·22-'1 If!..31).' PUntl ............................................. ).40 7-<42 Fumbl .. ·Loet ................................ ,. I 1-1 Pon.ltI ... Vard. ............................. 7~ 7-38 Tlm.oIP_lon .. ....... "........... 34;38 25;24

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Mlchlg.n, _ra 12·'oe, V.ughn

15-94, Joffonoon ,1).82. eunch 9-38, I.ogotW 4-24. Wlaconaln, Robinson 11-25, Monlgomery 3-<4, Lowory 6-2.

PASSING-Mlchlg.n, Grbac 15-2O-{).154. Sol· 10m 2·2-{)'2O. Wlscon.ln, Lowery 1).2)."'29, Wilson )'7-{).42.

AECEIVING-Mlchlg.n, Howard 6-92, V.ughn 4-20, Alexander ),24, DlebOlt 2· '8. Wlacon.ln, Crawford 5-53, Wa .. ).40, K.MIlIer ),29.

NFL Standings AMI!RICAN CONnlll!NCI!

I!Ht W L T Pet. Pf PA Buff .. o ....................... 4 1 0 .800 130 98 MI.ml... .. ".................. 4 , 0 .800 loe 13 Indlan."oU. .............. 2 3 0 .400 8' loe N.Y. Jota ..................... 2 3 0 .400 104 109 _Engl.nd ............. 1 4 0 .200 eo 152

Ce",",1 Clnclnn.U.................. 4 I 0 .800 137 105 Houlton ..................... 2 3 0 .400 98'oe Plttaburgh ................. 2 3 0 .400 68 84 C_1and .................. 1 3 0 .250 48 85 ._1 LAA.lders ................. 4 I 0 .800 l1li 73 K.nIUClty ................ 3 2 0 .800 117 71 De"""r ....................... 2 2 0 .500 8!i 87 Seettto ....................... 2 3 0 .400 loe ,04 San Diego .................. 1 4 0 .200 75 105

NATIONAl CONnRI!NCe bat • l T Pet. Pf PA N.Y. GI.n................... 4 0 0 1.000 106 47 Walhlngton ............... 3 1 0 .750 101 51 Dalla ......................... 2 3 0 .400 70 102 Phlladolphl. .............. , 3 0 .250 8' 95 Phoonl. ............. ........ I 3 0 .250 40 118

CanIr8I Chleogo ..................... 4 , 0 .800 104 ea T.mpaB.y ................. 3 2 0 .600 106 "0 DetroIL ...................... 2 3 0 .400 117 128 Groen Bey .................. 2 3 0 .400 89 1211 Mln""",ta ................. I 4 0 .200 116 103

• W.at San Francl"", ........... 4 0 0 1.000 82 59 Atlan" ....................... 2 2 0 .500 102 84 LAA.ma .................... I 3 0 .250 II' ,,, _Orl .. no .............. I 3 0 .250 70 80

lund.,..a __

Detroit 34. Mlnneso" 27 Indl.n.polls 23, Kln_ City 19 AtlanlO 28, _ OrIe.ns 27 Miami 20, New YOlk JII.,S Pllliburgh 38, San OIogo '4 San Francl"'" 24, Houst9Jl 2' Seallie 33, _ Engl.nd 20 0.11 .. 14, T.mpe Bey '0 Clnclnn.tI 34, Loa Angel .. Aama 31 , OT Chicago 21, Groen Bay 13 Buffalo 38, LOs Angoles Rlldera 24 OPEN DATE; New Yorl< Glints, Phll_lphla,

Phoonlx, Walhlngton Tod.,.. a .....

CI_land I I Denver, 8 p.m. lundey·._ ..

San Francl"'" It Atlanta, noon Cinclnnalll1 Houston, noon Detroit .t Kan ... City, noon CI .... ,.nd .t New OriN"., noon San Diogo .t _ Vorl< Jota, noon

G,..., Bey.' T.mp. Bey, noon Plttabutgh ar Denver, 3 p.m. Seaffto at Loa Angelea A.ld ... , 3 p.m. 0.11 .. at Phoenix, 3 p.m. _ York Giant •• t Walhlngton, 3 p.m. Loa Angol_ Rams .t Chicago, 6;30 p.m. OPEN DATE: euff.lo, Indl.napollo, MI.ml, _

Engl.nd Mond8y'. aa_

Mln""",ta .t Phll.delphl., 8 p.m.

Major League Baseball Playoffs

"_ILa_. Thu"'" Oct. 4

PltiOburgh 4, Cincinnati 3 _y,Got.5

Cinclnn8l12, PI11Iburgh 1, .. " .. tied , . , T ..... ".a .....

Clnclnnatt (Jackson f!..6) 11 Pltt.bUrgh (Smnh '2-9), 2:18 p.m.

Tuead.,. Oct. • Cincinnati (AI)o ,4-8) .t Plltlburgh (W.lk 7·5),

7;27 p.m. .edn._y. Got. II

Clnclnn.1I at PittSbUrgh, 7:27 p.m. _y,Got.I2

PlltlbUrgh .t Clnclnn.tl, 7:27 p.m .. II neeesury I ........ '. Got. 13

PIII.burgh at Cincinnati, 7 ;27 p.m .. If neCOSllry

Amerlc .. Laogue •• turdey. Got. •

Oakl. nd 9, Boolon , lunde,. Got. 7

Oakland 4, Boston' , Oakl.nd I •• d. aerie. 2-'1 Tuead.y. Oct. •

Booton (Boddlcko, 17-8) .t Olkland (Moore ,3·15), 2;'8 p.m.

Wadn ..... ', Oct. 10 BoOlon 01 Oakland, 2:18 p.m.

Thu"'" Oct. 11 . Booton .t Dakland, 7;27 p.m .. If n ...... ry

Be ... rdey. Oct. 11 OOkllnd at Bos1on, " :'8 • . m., It-.ary

BIIndey. Oct. 14 Oakland 8t Bo.ton, 7;27 p.m., If naceuary

WOIILD IERI!8 Tu.ad.y, Oct. ,.

American League chlmplon 11 Nallonal League chlmplon, 7:32 p.m.

Wedn_y, Oct. 17 AL II NL, 7:29 p.m.

F_y, Got.'1 NL .t AL, 7;32 p.m.

S.turde,. Oct. 20 NL It AL, 7:29 p.m.

Football ____ ~ _______ COn_tinUed_· from_pag_elB

here and get the victory, we got to do the 'Hokey Pokey'."

But it wasn't "Hokey Pokey" time yet.

Michigan State took over the ball on their own 31 yard line with 7:06 left in the game. Enos completed five passes to move the Spartan offense to the Iowa 14. Senior tailback Hyland Hickson then carried the ball twice - the second time into the endzone.

Langeloh converted the point

said about the team's turnaround. · We've concentrated and we're focused a lot better. There was a time when everyone decided to turn things around. It wasn't a conscience decision. we just all decided it was time to go."

In the tournament opener Friday, Iowa hit .368 as a team and downed Division I Indiana State easily, 15-1, 15-6, 15-8,

Iowa's starting outside hitters, Willis and Rees. combined for 30 kills and a .413 attack percentage in the match. Willis had 17 kills

after to cut the Iowa lead to 9-7 and tie Morten Anderson for the Michigan State all-time scoring lead.

Michigan State had two chances late in the game but the Iowa defense kept them from scoring again.

With 2:10 left in the game and the Hawkeyes leading 9·7 Michi .. gan State took over at their own 20 yard line. On fourth down . with four yards to go, Enos kept

and hit .455 while Rees had 13 and hit .367.

Saturday. Nelson's club used a second-game rally and strong hit­ting in games one and three to defeat Nebraska-Omaha. ranked 16th in Division II, in three games, 15-8, 16-14, 15·4.

In the second game, the"Hawkeyes fought off three game-points. at 13-14, before tying the game on a net violation by Nebraska-Omaha. Iowa then took the lead on a Lady Mav hitting error and won it on Moylan'~ tip kill.

the ball and went to the left side. That's Melvin Foster's side of the field .

"They ran the 'pop out' to my side, which was the' wrong move,· Foster said.

He penetrated the Spartans' offensive line and Enos waB stopped short of the first down.

Six plays later Skillet made a 34·yard field goal to give the Hawkeyes a 12·7 lead, -

"Had we not been just super, _.

The Hawkeyes hit .321 in game one and .400 in game three to come away with easy victories. Iowa led 11-0 in the third game before giving up four points in a row.

Two Iowa players earned all­tournament team honors following Sunday's match. Willis was named the MVP after finishing the weekend with 43 kills. 31 digs. 11 blocks and five aces in the three matches.

Moylan was also a member of the Hawkeye Challenge all­tournament team after recording

Michigan State would have won the game," Fry said. "They came right back down the field the latter part of the game and our defense had to come up with some big plays."

"It's not a surprise that they played good defense, I was just disappointed that we didn't score more ," Perles said. "Nothing about them is that good, it's just us, We didn't do well. We played poorly."

109 assists and 35 digs in the three matches.

The Hawkeyes, 6-9 overall, will take their winning streak to the state of Michigan next weekend as they return to Big Ten competition. Iowa, 1 .. 4 in the league. faces Michigan Frid'ay and Michigan ~tate Salurday.

"We realize we contro\ ~\lr ~Wt\. destiny," Moylan said of Iowa's chances of winning the conference. "The win against Minnesota inched us up. We're still in a hole but we're not out of it."

Polisky ________________ COn_tinued_from_pag_B1B

a forward pass, traveling nearly three ya~s ahead of the runner,

The score widened IIlinoiB' lead to eleven . And considering that Cooper felt his team uncapable of overcoming a nine-point deficit the week before, Ohio State was prob­ably already lathering up in the showers, Mentally, at least.

It's hard to wage a comeback with a towel wrapped around the waist.

The irony here, (or is it humor?), is that the week after Cooper insulted his playere and Ohio state's football tradition. someone, somewhere, royally screwed over his team.

I think Woody Hayes, Ohio State's legendary coach. had something to do with it. Good thing he's not alive, or Cooper might be nursing a black eye.

illinois' touchdown didn't count. But it did. You can blame it on a tough break, bad officiating or a simple coincidence, I blame it on John Cooper.

It's time to throw in his towel. Although it's probably less painful

than being on Lady Luck's black Mike Polisky's column appears in list. the D1 Mondays and Fridays.

·Skillett _____ __ .,.-----_COnti_"uedf_rompage_ 1B

record. but I just hadn't done it in a game yet," Hujsak said. "Now it's start­ing to come around, The confidence from practice seemed to carry over to the game this week, so I'm happy. I really need to keep it up now."

Michigan State's specialists, how­ever, didn't live up to their reputa­tion.

as the Spartans all-time scoring leader with 261 points.

But it looked like the record would have to wait until the Spartans' matchup with Michigan next weekend as Langeloh missed a field goal in the first quarter and another-in the third,

"John Langeloh's a great kicker and there's going to be days like today that things just don't go your way," Skillett said. "That's what happened to John today. I feel for him because I've been there, and I know what he's feeling like.

"That helped us a lot this week,· Hujsak said. "It made our special· ists look forward to this week because Michigan State had the No. 1 rated special teams in the nation this preseason. So I think it helped our special teams get excited for this game,

Kicker John Langeloh need just one point to tie Morten Anderson

At the 4:06 mark in the fourth, however, Langeloh made the extra point after a 6-yard touchdown run by Hyland Hickson and tied the

Because the Michigan State spe­cial teams are so well-known, Hujsak said the Iowa specialists were excited about the game,

"Iowa's known not to have a great kicking game and we're trying our best to tum that around right now."

Hawkeyes bomb unranked ' opponents By Jay Nanda The Daily Iowan

The bomb squad was out in full force over the weekend - the Hawkeye field hockey squad, that is.

Iowa tuned up for their upcoming conference battles at Northern Illinois and Northwestern by blanking James Madison 3'() Sunday and leveling Cal-Berkeley 7-0 Friday in St. Louis.

Sophomore Kristy Gleason led the invasion of the Dukes Sunday, 88 she accounted for all three goals in recording her second hat trick of the year,

Surprisingly. the unranked Dukes played the No. 6 Hawkeyes to a scoreless standstill in the first half. But then Iowa unloaded their artillery.

Gleason put the Hawkeyes on the board 5:40 into the second half, al she dribbled around James Madison goalie Laura Knapp and put the ball in the net after Knapp made the initial save off' a direct comer.

Gleason then became the beneficiary of a direct penalty comer situation and usista from juniors Li"a Sweeney and Kerry Horgan, when 8he made it 2-0 at 18:52. The same trio teamed up again at the 27:07 mark to round out the scoring, It wu Gleason'_ team-leading 16Ut goal of the year and Sweeney'l 18th

assist, also tops on the squad, Horgan collected her 15th assist.

For Gleason, the game signaled a strong comeback after she sat out Friday's contest with Berkeley due to a tender ankle.

"Luck was there," the sophomore joked. "I'm still a little sore, but I'm just glad that I was able to contribute and that we came out with the victory."

The Hawkeyes outahot the Dukes 29·14 and recorded 18 penalty comers to seven for James Madison, Iowa goalie Eileen Moyer improved her record to 7-0 between the posta, by making seven Baves for her fifth shutout of the season.

"Overall, I W88 happy," Iowa Coach Beth Beglin said. "I really felt James Madison plays a lot like Northern Illinois, The firet period W88 pretty even and we dominated the second. Our players did a good job of keeping their poise, even when it W88 O.() at halftime.

"Amy Fowler did a good job at sweeper,· Beglin added, "She was chaniing the point of direction and kept the defense organized."

"Today was much more of a challeop,· Fowler said. "We had to adjust to them and it took a lot loopr than I thought it would."

On Friday, Berkeley was at Iowa'. mercy 88 they bowed to the HawkeyeB, 7'(),

Freshman Heather Bryant, who entered the pme with three goal8 for the year, equaled that total in registering the first hat trick of her career.

Bryant started thinp off' at the 7:27 point of the opening period off' a direct corner from

r

junior Jibs Thorson and Sweeney. That proved to be all that goalie Andrea Wieland would need, in earning her third shutout in four victories this year, but the Hawkeyes weren't satisfied,

Bryant teamed up with Sweeney and Thorson again three minutes and eleven seconds later off another comer and it stayed that way until :11 remained in the half, when junior Kris FilIat notched her 13th goal of the year, Horgan and Sweeney assisted on the direct comer.

After Bryant scored again with 30:09 left in the game, sophomore Jamie Rofrano brought home her first goal of the season, off' a scramble around the circle, as freshman Tif­fany Bybel recorded her second assi8t.

With 14:27 left in the game, Fi1lat scored again off a corner and then with 4:11 left, freshman Amy Aaronson netted the first goal of her collegiate career. Sweeney regi8tered her fourth assist of the game on the goal.

"That was a beautiful play," Beglin said of the final JOal. "Lisa blew by the defeDle and laid the ball acroaa to Amy who put it in the cage,.

For the game, Iowa out penalty-comered Berkeley 22-4 and outahot them 25-4,

"We played real weU,· Beglin 8ald, "and I W88

real happy with 'our corners. They couldn't etay with our team because of our _peed,.

Iowa, (11-2), will now prepare to put their 3-0 conference record on the line when they travel to Northern Illinois Thunclay ru,ht and No, 3 Northwe_tem Saturday,

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,:Steelers highlight NFL scoring binge 18, alrry Wilner • The Associated Press

Yes, air, the Pittsburgh Steelers' ' olfense can find the end zone. Not 1 surprisingly, so can the Bengals SlId Rams.

~ The Steelers did it four times (Sunday, ending a streak of touch­down futility dating to last season's

I plsyoffs. Bubby Brister threw two ! second-quarter TO passes to rookie ~ric Green as the offense, held

A without touchdown for 19 quar­three in 17 minutes

and fou , erall in a 36-14 victory lover San Diego.

Green scored from eight and one )yard out, and Warren Williams (SlId Barry Foster each had 2-yard runs for Pittsburgh.

I Boomer Esiason passed for 471 lyardS, outdueling Jim Everett, who had 372, as Cincinati beat the Los

' Angeles Rams 34-31. Cincinnati , blew a 21-0 lead,. then won on Jim Breech's 44-yard field goal with

\ 3:04 left in overtime. , Playing without Eddie Brown, their top receiver, the Bengals got

, \ l00-yard receiving days from Rod­ney Holman (10 for 161 yards),

lTUn McGee (eight for 142) and IJames Brooks (seven for 109). For Los Angeles, Flipper Anderson

' caught seven passes for 144 yards \ and Henry Ellard was seven for 100.

I Four NFC East teams - the • I Redskins, Eagles, Giants and Car-

dinals - had byes. ~ 'Bean 27, Packers 13

I At Chicago, Mike Tomczak's 6-yard touchdown run on a bootleg

'play and field goals of 50 and 51 yards by Kevin Butler were deci­

I sive as the Bears took control of • the NFC Central lead at 4-1.

Neal Anderson rushed 21 times for ' 141 yards, with a 52-yard run to j set up the final TO.

Green Bay (2-3) lost for a second , time in four weeks to the Bears.

The Bears led 10-6 late in the • third quarter when Richard Dent • recovered a fumble on the Green Bay 17. Three plays later, Tomczak

• skirted right end on his touchdown ,run. He had replaced starter Jim Harbaugh, who left late in the first

, half with injured ribs. i Colts 23, Chiefe 19

At Indianapolis, the Colts won j their second straight after opening • with three defeats. Albert Bentley

won it with a 10-yard run with •

5:53 to go for his second touch­down.

Nick Lowery kicked four field goals and Derrick Thomas had four of seven sacks by Kansas City (3-2) against Jack Trudeau. But Chris­tian Okoye's fumble set up the winning touchdown midway through the final period.

Mike Prior recovered at the Chiefs' 21. After a 4-yard gain by Trudeau and a 7-yard pass to Stacey Sim· mons, Bentley ran in for the touch­down. Seahawb 33, Patriots 20

After New England took its only lead, 20-19 on Jason Staurovsky's 48-yard field goal, visiting Seattle rallied in the fmal three minutes with two touchdowns in 24 sec­onds. Dave Krieg found Jeff Chad­wick with a 45-yard scoring pass and Derrick Fenner added a 5-yard run for his seventh TO this year.

Seattle (2-3) scored on its first four possessions. New England (1-4) got a 53-yard field goal from Staur­ovsky that tied Gino Cappelletti's team record. Falcons 28, Saints 27

At Atlanta, Chris Miller capped his best day in the NFL with a 3-yard touchdown pass to Andre Rison with 1:33 remaining, snap­ping the Falcons' six-game losing streak against the Saints. Before the score, Miller twice hit Rison on fourth-down plays to keep alive the 80·yard drive.

Miller completed 23 of 44 passes for 366 yards and three touch­downs. Rison had 10 catches for 154 yards and two scores for Atlanta (2-2).

John Fourcade, fighting to keep his job as quarterback, passed for two touchdowns and ran for another for the Saints (1-3). Steve Walsh, acquired from Dallas late last month, did not play for New Orleans. 4gers 24, OUers 21

At Houston, the Super Bowl champions benefitted from a time­out called by the Oilers defense that negated a turnover. Joe Mon· tana then completed a 46-yard TO pass to John Taylor for the win­ning points with 6:31 left.

It was Montana's third touchdown pass as he earlier hit Taylor with a 78-yarder and threw six yards to Jerry Rice. Montana finished with 318 yards, completing 20 of 28 passes. Taylor caught four passes for 132 yards and Rice had 78

'No.2 doubles earns ;1st place at Ball State _ By Olvld Tlylor

The Daily Iowan

• The Iowa men's tennis team con­I tinued its strong faH showing, \ turning in an impressive perform-ance at the Ball State Invitational

I oyer the weekend. , The Hawkeyes won a majority of their contests in a tournament

I where no team scores were kept I and matches were divided into Rights.

,----------------------~ M. Tennis ~ -----------------------\ '"!'here were some tough tearus at this tournament," Iowa coach

\ Steve Houghton said. "Ball State, ) Wisconsin, and Kentucky are all

e:rcellent programs." I Iowa captured the No. 2 doubles championship with an outstanding performance from seniors Paul

I Buckingham and Tommy Heiting. I After disposing of a credible Ball j State pair, Buckingham and Heit-

ing went on to crush Mike Hopkin· ' lI0II and Mahyar Goodarz of Ken­~ tidy, 6-1, 6-2.

'"!'hat match was definitely a \ hlchlight," said Houghton. "Ken·

tucky has a strong team, so beating them was a good win for those two

• guys." i In No. 2 singles, freshman KIas

Bergstrom finished second after dropping a 6-2, 6-4 decision to Bryan Nelson of Wisconsin.

Iowa's No. 1 singles player, senior Thomas Adler, dumped Greg Winchester of Western Michigan 6-1, 6-2 to finish third in his flight.

·On paper we looked good, but we're better than what we showed at the meet, and I expect more from the team," said Houghton. "Sometimes I have to remind myself that this is a young team and they will get better and more experienced at every meet."

Next up for the squad is a trip to Boulder, Colo., for the Colorado Invitational on Oct. 19-21.

"The Colorado meet will be similar to the Ball State one,· Houghton said. "Although it may not be quite as strong a field, it will definitely be solid.

"This is the fall and we are still trying to evaluate where we are and where the players fit in, so we will continue to do that at the next meet."

The team is well-stocked this year and that has proven to be a concern as well as a blessing.

"Since we have so many good players sometimes it is hard to decide who will play in the top six," said Houghton. "I don't think anyone is really hung up on that right now though. We just have an overload of talented players."

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The Daily Iowan - Monday, October 8,1990 SPORTS 38 .

Daniel wins Centel on Lopez's bad putt By Brent Kalle.tad The Associated Press

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Beth Daniel won the $1 million Centel Classic on Sunday when Nancy Lopez nrissed a 4-foot putt for par on the 18th hole that would have forced a playoff.

It was the only bogey of the day for Lopez, who had birdied the 16th and 17th holes to catch Daniel with a final·round , 7-tinder-par 65.

Lopez moved into a tie at 17 when she made a 5-foot birdie putt after Daniel picked up her third bogey of the round when she missed a 3-foot putt.

Daniel, who increased her record earnings to $811,578 this season, opened the back nine with suc­cessive birdies to move three strokes ahead of Lopez.

On the 16th hole, Lopez puijed within two shots when she drilled a 35-foot birdie putt, but Daniel followed with a difficult 12-footer to save par.

Sheehan, who began the final round tied for second with Lopez, shot a 72 Sunday and finished at 278, pocketing $67,500 for third place. Sheehan's total of $708,251 also passed Betsy King's single­season earnings record of $654,132 set in 1989.

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4B· SPORTS The Daily Iowan - Monday, October 8,1990

Locker room controversies: Not just for NFL anymore

Notre Dame light end Derek Brown, left, drops a pa •• from quarterback Rick Mlrer In the end zone

Associated Press

that would have given the No. 1 Irish another miracle victory Saturday over the Stanford Cardinal.

Luck slips Irish fingertips By Dick Brln.ter The Associated Press

Who's No. I? Michigan? Nebraska? Oklahoma? Virginia?

Pick a team. At least one that didn't lose - or play - Saturday.

That would eliminate No. 1 Notre Dame and No.2 Florida State. For the first time since Nov. 11, 1984 - when No.1 Nebraska and No.2 South Carolina were beaten - the top teams feU together during the regular season. It also happened Jan. 1, 1986 when No. 1 Penn State and No. 2 Miami lost bowl games.

That brings us to this week. See­ing Michigan, Nebraska or Okla­homa at the top would be one thing. But Virginia?

The fourth-ranked Cavaliers were idle Saturday. Coach George Welsh's phone has been ringing since Saturday night, but he won't even address the issue.

"I anticipated your call,~ Rich Murray, Virginia's sports informa­tion director, said Sunday. "I vis­ited with him earlier. Coach Welsh has decided he's just not comment­ing on the rankings." Stanford 36, No.1 N. Dame 31

Notre Dame, a winner over Michi­gan and Michigan State in the fmal minute, ran out of miracles. But the Irish (3-1) believed until the end.

"When we were in the huddle, there was no feeling of defeat," said Tony Smith, who earlier caught touchdown passes of 11 and 16 yards from Rick Mirer. "We needed just one more play, and I think we would have won."

But Derek Brown, who had beaten double coverage in the end zone, just missed holding a 23-yard pass that would have won for Notre Dame.

"I was stretched out and had the ball in my hands, then my hands hit the ground, and I lost it,"

Brown said. "I should have had it." No.9 Miami 31, No 2. Fla. St. 22

Some Florida State players called Miami and its quarterback Craig Erickson "average," and the Hur­ricanes didn't like it.

"We kind of took that personally," said Stephen McGuire, who rushed for a career-high 176 yards and one touchdown.

"When you call a quarterback average, you have to prove it." said Miami linebacker Micheal Barrow, who had 14 tackles. "When you call a team average, you have to prove it. Today, they couldn't prove it." No.3 Michigan 41, Wisconsin 3

Three touchdown passes by Elvis Grbac paced the Wolverines (3-1), who also got 106 rushing yards and a touchdown from Ricky Powers. Grbac completed 15-of-20 passes for 154 yards. No.5 Auburn 16, La. Tech 14

The Tigers (3-0-1) escaped embar­rassment on Jim Von Wyl's third field goal, a 30-yarder with 3 seconds remaining. Stan White drove Auburn 74 yards in the last two minutes to set up the winning kick. No.7 Oklahoma 31, Okla. St. 17

Freshman quarterback Cale Gundy, whose brother Mike played at Oklahoma State and now coaches there, threw a 52-yard TO pass on the last play of the first half for a 14-14 tie. The Sooners (5-0) dominated thereafter. No.8 Nebraska 45, Kansas St. 8

Third-quarter touchdowns by Mickey Joseph and Leodis Flowers broke open a tight game. The Cornhuskers (5-0) had led only 10-2 at halftime. No. 10 Florida 34, LSU 8

Shane Matthews directed two long scoring drives in the fourth quarter to blow the game open after the Gators (5-0) recovered two fumbles and blocked a punt to set up three first-half touchdowns.

No. 12 Colorado 33, Missouri 31 On what turned out to be a fifth

down, Charles Johnson scored on the game's fmal play from the 1 for the Buffaloes (4-1-1). Referee J.C. Louderback and the game's official play-by-play record disagreed on what down it was. A Big Eight spokesman said he doubted it would be reversed.

No. 13 Houston 31, Baylor 15 The Cougars (4-0) struggled and

led only 13-7 in the third period before David Klingler hit Patrick Cooper with two touchdown passes.

No. 13 m. 31, No. 20 Ohio St. 20 The decisive score for the Illini

(3-1) came when Quintin Parker took a disputed lateral on a blocked field goal and returned it 45 yards for a score against the Buckeyes (2-2).

No. 15 USC 30, Wash. St. 17 Tailback Ricky Ervins was out

with an ankle injury, but Mazio Royster rushed for 203 yards and three touchdowns. The Trojans (4-1) also got 102 yards from Scott Lockwood.

No. 16 Clemson 34, Georgia 3 It was Georgia's worst loss since a

33-0 defeat by Kentucky 13 years ago. Chris Gardocki tied a school record by kicking four field goals for the Tigers.

No. 17 Washington 42, Ariz. St. 14

Greg Lewis, sixth on the all-time rushing list for th'e Huskies (4-1) with 2,043 yards, gained 159 and scored three touchdowns. Washing­ton's Beno Bryant returned a punt 82 yards for a TD.

No. 19 Tex. A&M 28, Tex. Tech 24

The Aggies (4-1) won when backup quarterback Bucky Richardson directed a long drive late in the game, scoring the winning touch­down fr9m a yard out.

Hawks nip UNI at half-speed

The Associated Press

TUCSON, Ariz. - Arizona football coach Dick Tomey apologized Sun­day for a player's apparent locker­room verbal harassment of a woman reporter and guaranteed no recurrence.

Orange County Register sports editor Mark Tomaszewski said Tomey's apology, along with a written one from the university's sports information director, would be sufficient, and the matter will not be pursued.

After Arizona's 28-21 win over UCLA Saturday in the Rose Bowl, Register reporter Karen Crouse said an unclothed, unidentified player in the Arizona locker room approached her and said, "What are we, in New England?" The remark was in reference to a Sept. 17 incident in Foxboro, Mass., when a Boston Heraid reporter allegedly was harassed sexually by several naked players in the New England Patriots' locker room.

Tomey said he had not witnessed any incident and learned of it from Butch Henry, assistant athletic director for media relations, only after returning home.

Tomey called it was "a very iso­lated incident' and said, "It won't happen again, I promise you that."

"1 think that's it; We asked them to apologize and they did, and we

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don't plan to do anything else," Tomaszewski said.

the issue of women in the locker ~ room with his players.

"It's never come up because ~ have such a professional relation· I

ship" with trainer Sue Hillman, weight coach Meg Ritchie and I

numerous female assistant train· , ers, he said.

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Tomey said the university's ath­letic department and football pro­gram is "at the forefront in collegi­ate athletics" in placing women in responsible positions, including as both the head trainer and strength coach, in close daily contact with male athletes.

Arizona has had an open locker room policy for women reporters covering football and men's basket· ball for eight years, Henry said.

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A Lead I' CFL team clolles locker room

WINNIPEG, Manitob, \ The CFL:s Winnipeg Blue . '~mber8 ' barred all members of th media from their locker room after Friday night's game rather than allow a female radio reporter to enter.

But Torney said that if opposite­sex reporters in college locker rooms becomes an issue, "it sounds to me like reporters should not be in locker rooms, period," or that some adjustment might be neces­sary.

Crouse could not be reached for comment, but Tomaszewski said she did not know which player had made the remark to her.

"I don't even know ifwe could find out who the person was," he said. "She had no idea who it was, because she didn't look at him."

She had not looked through a media guide, he said.

Tomaszewski said from what Crouse told him, there had been no sexual intimation, overtone or allu­sion to the comment, and that she had assessed it as strictly a verbal harassment.

Tomey said he never has discussed

The policy, which was designed to comply with the Canadian Football League's equal access rule, pleased CBC Radio's Robin Brown. But it left Bomber management, who made the decision, and Bomber players, who it ostensibly pro- I

tected, unhappy. Brown was told earlier this week

she would not be allowed in the . Winnipeg locker room. Although Brown and CBC protested, eft commissioner Donald Crump said he did not object to the policy ~ long as a mutually acceptable alternative could be agreed upon,

Late in Winnipeg's 25-9 win over the Toronto Argos on Friday night reporters were told all Winnipeg players would be ushered into a room adjacent to the locker I'OO1Il for post-game interviews.

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By Scott Garringer The Daily·lowan

The Panthers showed good packwork for a team running seven freshmen, taking spots four through eight with Allen in fourth, Jacinda Grishaber, fifth in 20:29; Paulette Nemmers, sixth in 20:38; Shawn Magnall, seventh in 20:41; and Heather Brown, · eighth in 20:64.

Pick the winners ... be a winner! I tion."

The t minutee 1 introdu.

With its top runners watching from the crowd, Iowa nipped Northern Iowa 27-30 in women's cross country action Saturday at Finkbine Golf Course.

Hoskins was pleased considering Iowa's lack of depth Saturday. The Hawkeyes rested Dahl, Brower, and Rachel Hosmer. Tina Stec came down with an illness and Patty Jones is coming off and injury.

Tami Hoskins filled in nicely for the withheld Tracy Dahl and Jennifer Brower by winning the meet in 18 minutes, 33 seconds.

w. Cross Country "With five runners out, we were unsure of how we

would do,' said the senior from Muscatine, Iowa. ·We've run against UNI before, so we knew to expect a tough race.

Close behind Hoskins were two more Hawkeyes -sophomore Christine Salsberry in 18:57 and fresh­man Jennifer Johnson in 19:28. Northern Iowa's top fmisher was Kathy Allen, fourth in 20:25.

Martha Vandervoort (9th in 21 :03) and Beth Wilson (12th in 21:43) rounded out the scoring for Iowa, which won the meet despite the cutbacks shown by the lineups, Northern Iowa ran 11 runners to Iowa's tlve.

Iowa showed good motivation, as the 1-2-3 finish guaranteed a win, but Vandervoort pressed on to secure the victory, The freshman from Waukegan, Ill., passed two Panthers in the final stretch to provide Iowa with cushion points.

After two weekends of resting key people, Iowa will send its top seven to the Tennessee Invitational Monday, Oct. 15 - a meet that Iowa is looking forward to because of its size and strength.

Geeks battle for OTL supremacy The Dally Iowan

With his 6-4 record, guest picker Jud Heathcote did well enough to tie staff geeks Jamie Butters and Erica Weiland for last in week four of On The Line. Butters, a news geek who actually held a freakish lead at one point, DOW drops two back of the lead with a 29-11 record while Erica, top-dOjJ of the sports department, continues to wallow in her prognostic: medio­crity, at 26-14.

Adding insult to injury, Myron Welch, director of the Iowa march­ing band,won a t-shirt this week by FiDi 10-0. When the band geeks ... beating the sports department.

something is seriously askew in the universe.

And speaking of geeks, those of you laminating your entries have gone beyond the parameters of anal and entered into the world of severe paranoia, This isn't Water­gate, this is a contest with ugly t-shirts at stake. And besides, shouldn't anyone with laminating equipment at their disposal think twice about calling attention to it?

Continuing with our cavalcade of geeks, we would be remiss if we didn't take the opportunity to men­tion our the leaders in the staff picking race. Knotted at 31-9 are Mike MColumni.t Of The People" Pollaky and Brian ·Soon It Will All

Be Over" Gaul, who, having shown everyone how cool he his, is leaving at the top. Kinda like Ray Thomp­son.

Taking home a a t-shirt and a $26 gift certificate from Austin Burke Clothiers is Robin Blaylock of North English, whose 10-0 entry and 21-17 estimate on the Navy­Air Force tie-breaker (actually 24-7) gave him top honors.

Those taking home t-shirts are Josh Horn, Keith Shield8, Mark Simonson, Todd Pentico, P .T. Hoyan, Maurice Mangum, Addie Lewi., J .J. HenIOn, Andy Steele and, of course, the leader of Iowa's award-winning marching band, Myron Welch. ThanIu for playiDi'

Pick the winners of these college football games and you could win a full color Daily Iowan On The Line T·Shirt

There will be 11 winners weekly, and the top picker this week will also win a $25 gift certificate from Eby's Athletic Company

~~------------------------~ WEEK FIVE (check on yoor pIoka)

a Wisconsin at Iowa 0 o Purdue at IllinoiS Q Q Ohio State at Indiana 0 o Michigan State at Michigan 0 o Florida at Tennessee 0 Q Texas at Oaklahoma a a Syracuse at Penn State 0

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Entries must be submitted by noon, Thursday to The Dally Iowan, Room 111 or Room 201 Communications Center. No more than five entries per person. The decision of the judges Is final. Winners will be announced In Monday's 0.1. GOOD LUCKI

D Oregon at Washington 0 TIE BREAKER:

a Miami (Ohio) at Ohio University (j ~~.ndcm.~. ____ ~ __

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The Daily Iowan Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

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:.s· ~ . :Judas Priest remains on track >

• 18, Anne M. Peter.on The Associated Press

just stand up and say, 'But there are no messages!' "

never will ever be, any scientific proof evidential that heavy metal music, or any kind of music, can physically make somebody to do something, or change, or be someone else.~

DI Classifieds I NEW YORK - Members of the

1 the locker ~ .heavy metal band Judas Priest would

Raymond Belknap, 18, died from a self-inflicted shotgun blast to the face on Dec. 23, 1985. James Vance. then 20, shot himself also. He lived but suffered horrible facial disfigurement, and died in 1988 of complications from his injuries and a reaction to medications. Both had listened to "Stained Class" before making the suicide pact.

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like to put the recent past behind )them, but they're not about to change .their tune.

The band is recovering from a recent iNevada court battle, which ques­tioned whether subliminal messages exist on their 1978 album, "Stained

'Class," and ultimately prompted two young men to enter a suicide pact.

I Lead~' r Rob Halford and guitar-• ist Gle 'pton said their court victory, . g them of deliberately

'placing the subliminal messages on Jthe album, was bittersweet. But they're not about to quit making the

'music they've been driven to make for the past 16 years.

Their families sued Judas Priest and CBS Records for $6.2 million in damages, claiming the subliminal messages were on the album .

Defense lawyers, however, countered that the youths carne from troubled homes and had been drinking and smoking marijuana that day.

So-called "backward-masking," or conveying a subliminal message by recording it backward, also became a well-publicized issue in the trial.

Halford testified on the stand he had put a backward message on one Judas Priest song, but it was not on the album or song cited by the plaintiffs. And he disagreed that backward messages are "masked" to influence behavior.

"No, it's not backward-masking. And that's the confusing issue about that. When I made that statement in court, the prosecution was jumping up and down in glee, because they thought they won the trial," Halford said.

"The fact is, it's just a sound effect.

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~ ·We won't back down to that kind of lJegal terrorism," said Tipton. The Priest's new hard-driving album. "Painkiller," and upComing tour dem­

lonstrate their tenacity.

The judge did order CBS Records to pay the plaintiffs $40,000 for refusing to comply with discovery orders involving the original master tape of the album.

It's been going on since Jimi Hendrix and before him. It's a simple opera­tion of recording an instrument - a cymbal, a guitar, a voice - back­wards to create a sound effect. It's been going on for 30 or 40 years," he added.

'Keys 'Wofd processIng and resumes

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alleged subliminal message "do it" 'on the song "Better by You, Better Than

,Me,' was an unintentional exhalation

Both Halford and Tipton, recently in New York before three weeks of rest in England and Spain, said they were sorry the young men died, but the band was the unnecessary scapegoat for the tragedy.

"People try and shoulder the burden of guilt on anyone else's shoulders. They should look a little closer to horne for the real issues and the real reasons that cause incidents like this," Tipton said.

Tipton agreed, saying it was impossi­ble to prove whether backward mes­sages are effective.

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\ "We were fighting a ease on an issue based on something that doesn't exist.

)We had to sit in court while they were ,discussing Freudian theories on sub­conscious levels and whether the

\ subconscious mind could pick up ,sub-audible signals and act upon it," said Tipton. "We had to sit through

'that when all the time we wanted to

Halford added that it was ridiculous to place the blame on the band or the music. He said at times during the court battle he felt 'it was heavy metal on trial, not just Judas Priest.

"In tbe whole history of the world there is not one instance that's been proven that anybody caD interpret anything backwards, particularly something below audible level ,~ he said.

Halford, 39, wearing a T-shirt imprinted with the words "Free Speech" formed ,from the American flag. is the group's primary lyricist.

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:Worldwide I

'tribute to , :Lennol!1 is ;planned ;,By Larry McShane ,The Associated Pres~

~ NEW YORK - A global celebra­tion is planned for John Lennon's

' 50th birthday this week, with the slain rock star's peace anthem

'"Imagine" played simultaneously ~ in 130 countries for a potential audience of 1 billion.

I Lennon, who was gunned down outside his Manhattan apartment house in December 1980. would

'have reached the half-century ., mark on Oct. 9. The occasion will

be marked by a live " worldwide ~ broadcast from the United Nations.

"This idea appealed to me, because ~ not only will we cover the whole 1 __________________ __

"It's not a • pandemonium.

And I thought that was in John's spirit in away."

Yoko Ono

\-----------------------\ world, but also there's something )that's very small," said Yoko Ono, I who will speak briefly before the

80ng is played. ) "It's not a pandemonium. And I I thought that was in John's spirit in

a way - we didn't believe in ' pandemoniums. We believed in ~ just an honest kind of communica­\ tion."

The event will last about 10 t minutes and will include a short 1 introduction by Marcela Perez de

Cuellar, wife of the U.N. secretary-general. A taped message

\ from Lennon will then air before "Imagine" is played.

1 As of Thursday, more than 1,000 1 radio stations and networks from ) 50 countries had signed on for the

satellite broadcast. U.S. Armed ~ Forces television and radio will hit ~ at least 80 other countries. The

event also will be televised by MTV , in 26 countries. 1 "There's no commercials. There's l no sponsors. It is a pure, simple,

very touching event; said Jeff Pollock, the radio and television consultant who carne up with the

~ idea. , Pollock, head of the California-

baaed Pollack Media Group, said , the idea carne to him after an April , meetin~ with Ono. ~ "I was riding around in a cab in

New Yq City, and then 'Imagine'

"There's absolutely never been, and

That Grammar Guy By Jake Stigers The Daily Iowan

G entle Communicators, Today's column deals

with verbs that begin with f.

To flaunt is to exhibit ostenta­tiously or to show off. To flout is to show contempt for or to defy openly.

Many graDlmar columnists do nothing more than flaunt their knowledge of language. I, however, Write to educate the masses who {lout the rules of English.

Some dictionaries, following popu­lar usage, list flaunt as a synonym for flout , but erudite English speakers know such a blurring of distinction is tantamount to Ie zi­ness.

To flounder is to move clumsily or thrash about. To founder is to sink or fall. It comes from the Latin fundus, meaning bqttom (as in foundation). It is believed /lounder is a portmanteau word formed from founder and blunder.

If you are foundering in The

History of Neo-Platonism in Rap Lyrics, you should drop the class. If you are merely floundering, per­haps you should devote more time to studying; you still have a chance.

To forego is to go before or precede in time or place. To forgo is to abstain from or relinquish.

The baroque period of music, which lasted roughly from 1600 to 1750, forewent the classical period (roughly 1750 to 1825). Classical composers did in turn forego the romantics (approximately 1825 to 19(0). I will forgo enumerating the countless movements in modem music.

Again, dictionaries that follow the lazy habits of the uneducated list forego ae- It vari&nt of forgo. Yoa, however, know better.

Until next time, happy communi­cating.

Do you have questions, comments or gifts for That Grammar Guy? Mail or deliver them to The Daily Iowan, 201N Communications Cen­ter, Iowa City, Iowa 52242.

'20/20' producers duped by Buckwheat impostor By Michelle Mittelstadt The Associated Press

DALLAS - The executive pro­ducer of ABC's "20/20" acknowl­edged Saturday that the television show was duped by an impostor claiming to be Buckwheat from the classic "Our Gang" comedies.

William "Billy· Thomas, the actor who played Buckwheat, died nearly a decade ago.

On "20/20· Friday night, Hugh Downs narrated a segment in which the series claimed to have found Buckwheat working as a grocery bagger in Tempe, Ariz. The impostor, Bill English, said he had changed his last n8Dle from Tho­mas and refused to sign auto­graphs because it would interfere with his work.

"20/20" spokeswoman Maurie Perl said Saturday that Thomas' obi­tuaries proved English was a fake and the show would apologize during its next broadcast Friday.

"(Executive producer Victor Neufeld) feels indeed there was a lapse in the research done by the production team and we may very well have made a mistake,' Perl said. ·Obviously we are upset and dismayed with the mistake."

Thomas' friends and family said they were angry the, impostor received a national television audi­ence.

character, said impostors threaten his business. He has filed several lawsuits to protect the n8Dle.

George McFarland, 62, the child star who played Buckwheat's side­kick Spanky, said he spoke Satur­day with Neufeld and the producer "was terribly concerned about what had happened." McFarland, who lives in Fort Worth, said he too has been dogged by impostors.

Richard Bann, who co-wrote the 1976 book "Our Gang, the Life and Times of the Little Rascals," with Leonard Maltin, said the error hurt the ABC news magazine show's credibility.

"We may very well have made a mistake."

Maurie Perl '20/20' spoke.woman

"What kind of research is this? You would think that at this level of investigative reporting, you would catch something like this," he said from his Los Angeles home. "It sort of undermines anything you'll ever see on that show again. And next week, they'll fmd Elvis."

A Tempe viewer suggested the profile, said Perl. ,

Doonesbury

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I 4 the world?" Pollock said.

Thomas died Oct. 10, 1980, of a heart attack at age 49, said his son, William Thomas Jr. of Covina, Calif.

"I don't believe in the 12 years of the broadcast we have ever had such a problem, and we will with­out question tighten all research and review processes,' she said.

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He made the proposal to Yoko, Who gave it the go-ahead. Ono

• , believes the recent events in Ger-1 many, Eastern Europe and parti­

cularly the Middle East point up the importance of Lennon's mes­sage of peace.

~ "When this was discussed, we had " bo knowledge of what would hap­

pen in Iraq and Kuwait, you know. And now it seems very appropriate

\ that this be sung all over the World,' laid Ono. -It's going to be IUDi In the Peralan Gulf.

~ "I don't know, the timing I. incre­dible. It's beyond me. .., It's

. ' beautifUl.·

The elder Thomas appeared in 89 "Our Gang" (1Ims, starting in 1934 - when he was 3 years old - until the series ended in 1944.

"I just can't believe '20/20' didn't investigate this better. I'm some­what dumbfounded by the whole thing," Bi11 Thomas said Saturday.

"We did not mean to cause any pain or unpleasantness for any of Buckwheat', family or friends," Perl IBid. "With regard to the production team, obviously they will be reprimanded and that win be handled internally." Thomas, who runl Buckwheat Enterprises and make. a living licensing the

The "Our Gang" series, which included 221 short films and one of feature length, began in 1922 with the dual billing: "Hal Roach pre­sents his Rascals in their latest Our Gang comedy titled ... "

The term "Little" was added to "Rascals" when the films were broadcast on television beginning in 1955. .

The series starred several child actors, including Robert Blake and Jackie Cooper.

A year to the day after Thomas died, Eddie Murphy began his parody of an adult Buckwheat on NBC's "Saturday Night Live."

t. Spanlard's monetary unit

I!,:+.:;+':'-I;../ 23 Certain beans ~~~ 24 "Full many-

a:..j!!.I~ . . .": Gray II More

~~~~ perspicacious ~~~~ II Blazing .;:t;F.:.f;8 n Whall razor

razes

• Some nobleman

34 Praises highly 37 ThIs is earth

shaking " Kind of opera • Org. in which a

Bird Illes ... We, tha paopla

eo Convene 11 Injured uNoOOn PEqual: Fr.

17 Blaster's material

II Lawyar's retainer

Answers 10 any three clues in this puule are lVall.bl. by louch-Ione phone: t -900-420-5656 (75C aach mlnuta) .

Voted l'Best Bookstore in Iowa City" by U of I students

15 S. Dubuque St. • 337-2681

. ,

sa The Daily Iowan - Monday, October 8, 1990

PERSONAL SERVICE

PEOPLE MEETING HELP WANTED PEOPLE

PART TIllE IInltOl'lot holp needod_ A_M. and P,M. Apply 3 '3Opm-5:30pm. Monday- Frld.y_ AIDS INFORIIA TJON .nd

anonymous HIV Intlbody testing lValiable: SM 21. grad student Sincer.. Midwest Janitorial Service

honest. Loves music. dancing. 510 E, Burlington FREE MEDICAL CLINIC 120 N. Oubuque Street

337-4459

Seeking femate 'or seuous lowl City. ~w.

can 'Of an appointment.

TH! COUNSELING CLINIC Individual . grouP. f.mlly

rom.nce, relationship. MUlt hive PART TIM! help wanted for Feed OO?d sense of humor. Write : The Warehouse and Fertdlzer Plant. ~o~X low.n. Box 048, low. City IA Full doya .nd AU bockground 2 2. pref.rred. Stutsman's Inc .• Hilla,

lowI. 879-2281 . cou .... flng and psychotherapy, Immedilte opening •• Yallab~. Celli_sa. MESSAGE 100 M inl.cross or diet pills lor on1) BOARD $5 (1000 lor $t4 ,95). Call 1-800-II88-4988.

WANT TO MAK! SOliE CtlANGES IN VOUR LIFE? THE IrIAIL an project says _d

IndivIdual, group and coupl. something to Billy cavo, 403 coun .. llng for the towa C.ty S, Luc ••• fowo Ci ty IA 52240.

community, Sliding scal. fMS. AIIV, AIIV, AIIV-3501-1228 I shake my head at one who picks __ :.:."";:. .. = ... =,<:.:h",_=":.:.'''=';;..' __ I bo_ just to get attention.

Spe.king of bones, - Who's tho RAIlE AlNult Harassment dog her.?" " You 8r . ... Wh.t am I

Rape Crisis Line gonnl do without you and your __ ..:33=s-6000=",--,(2:.4:..;H",0:,:u:::rs:!.1_-4 humor(and your c lothos)? CAIH loans information Mrvices. Whenve .... r I miss you . which will 5 SE S be otten, I'll think about. .. our

!ARN SI00. _Iy working ot home in spar. time. Send Hlf·addressed stamped envelope to Kinelics , Box 373. Iowa City tA 52244.

EARN IIONEV typing! PCI WP. At home, Fulll part-tima, $35.0001 year potential. 1-805-687-6000. Ext. B-9612,

POSTAL Jobs, $18.392- $67. t 251 year. Now hiring Call 1-805-687-6000 Ext, P-96t2 lor current lisl

CNAs Full or part tim, positions available, Competitive salary and benefits. Westside kH:atlon. on busline. Apply .t Greenwood

HELP WANTED POSfTlON avallabl. for certifiod nur.lng auistant at O.knoll Retirement ResIdence tor 'ulHime days Cell 351.1120 tor InleNtew appointment.

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED

W! NnD rellabw, earlng poopw to work with deyelopmenta"y WANTED: Pan-lime cook, ... I"r disabled adults .nd chlldr.n In or waitress. Morning and eyenlng Iowa City group hOJ'ne •• Flexible me.1. Apply in person : 8-3 3Opm, hour. Includ. o".tnlghls and Presidential Motor In", w .. kends. $3.90 to stan; $4,15 Wost Branch, &43-2526, avanable In 90 days If you ar, • ..

1~~~~!£:.!~.!!::~'-__ 1 high sChool graduate, 18 yaar. - and ." Inter.sled , please attend HAlF·TIME Rape Preventionl

applicant orl.ntatlon Monday at Educalion Speelallsl. Writing 3pm, Wedne5day at 101m or SkillS. offjce skills and public Thursday .t 2pm Systems . peaklng e,perl.nc. nec .... ry,

7I!!!~~~~~~ ____ 1 Unlimited. 1040 Williams St" I=amillarlty with st)lU81 .uault - ..:fow,-"a-,-",,-,~",,-_2._E.;.:0;.;EJ;;..M..;;.' __ I Issuro. required, Flexibility In wor~ AM!.AICAN Testronlcs, In Iowa City basad nolional educational test publisher, has temporary full -time and part-time positions opening Immediately. Positions Include: receiving materials, scanning, edi ting, printing, and quality assurance. Some compuIer exparience Is preferred but not necessary. Wages stan at $4,25 par hOur. Please stop In lor an application and Interview between 9am and 4pm. Monday· Friday at : American Testron!cs, 2t3 East 10th Slreet. Cora lVille, Iowa 52241 319-35t-9066.

schedule is required, For more NANN V'S EAST Information, contect Ropa Vlcllm

Has mother's helper jobs avallabl. Ad'llOC8CY Program at Spend .n eXCiting y •• r on the (319) 335-6001 The Unl"" Sit, of coast. It you 10'" children, would Iowa Is an Equal Oppor1unlty like 10 see anothe, part of the Affirmative Action employer. country, ahara family expariences and make new lrlends, call EARN 1500- $1500 part-timo 201·74(H)204 or write Box 625. stuffing envelopes In your home. livingston NJ 07039. For Iree informalin. send a

self-addressed. stamped envelope to : PO Bo. 6t953, Dept. Ptl0. Albuquerque NM 87198.

HELP WANTED SELL AVON

EARN EXTRA $S$­Up to 50%

Call Mary , 338-7623 Bre"da, &45-2278

FULL-TIllE cook position avallabll at O.knoll Retirement Aelldenee, Bam- 2pm, E,parl.nce nec .... ry In f.rge quontlly cooking. Ceniflcatlon In food prep.ral lon .nd me.1 .ervlc. h"pful but not necessary. Pleasant working conditions. competitive wages. p.ld CeUl, .. cenont benefits Can 351-1120 for Interview appointment.

A , t9,95: L.G. Publlsh.r, Gucci. causing di.orslons, Aoute1. Box 71 , West Uberty, "Buu.KIII". Singing with Paul and _1ow...::a.;;S..:,2n..,;:.8_, ______ -1 RMOs' Vou'rttthe best !

Manor, 605 Greenwood Drivo, THE DAILY IOWAN CLASSIFIED ;:EO=E,'-________ AD OFFfC! IS LOCATEO IN

HE(O!.D; Two enthUSiastic. weU·,poken Individuals for part-time telemBrketing, Evening hours, base pay and cOfTlmlssion . " you have good communication skills, enJoy WOrking In a fun , friendly environment and would Ilke to earn up to $9/ hour. Call 337-4742, 4-9pm today,

OVERSEAS Jobs $900- S2000I month Summer, year'(Ound, all countries. all 'ields, Frft Info Write lJe. PO Box 52·IA04, Caron! Del Mar CA 92625.

THE DEPARTMENT ot Obstetrics . nd Gynecofogy It Unl ... slty of Iowa Hospllals and Cllnlca is seeking healthy femal. voluntee,s. 18-J.4 y.ars old, fOr anonymous oacyta (egg) donalions to Infertile couples. Must havi finished plannod chlldbaaring and complete screening procedures. Compensat ion given. For 'urther Information. contact Cyndy at 356-6463 betw .. n Bam and noon, or 2pm and 4pm. M-F

BIRfHRlGHI offet8

CHRIS:

love You know who

UNDER new management. West Branch Canoco and Restaurant. Fuel c lerks. cooks. dishwashers and waitresses. Top pay tor r.sponslble peeple. Apply in person at Interstate 80 Bnd Downey Road. West Branch, Iowa. or cell &43-2585,

Fr .. Pregnency T .. dng Conftdentlel Couneellng

Ind Support

It has been 50 long since we have had office lounge slnglng- irs just not the same without youl But don ', fret. the counters ar. clean. the order, are stacked and M 're stili •• tingt PART-TlIIEJ full-time deliveryl

WE MISS YOU!!! manufacturing. Must have clear ________ C .. ' K,.;._A_a_n_d_M driving record. Flexible hours,

EOE, 643-5550. lo.ve "",ssag., No IjIpOInlmenl __ ry TRANSIT

POSTAL JOBS $t6,392- 167,1251 li0ii. .... _ 1102;

'TJIuredQ " Friday 1-4 ... ...,11:00_1:00pm 50 YEARS of experience and year. Now hiring. Call

100,000 weekly customor. I, 1-805-667-6000 Ext, P-9612 for

CALL 338-8815 11. S, Clinton,

detinitely an act to follow. Nobody current list. can ride just once. Try! =--"'-.:.:::"--------

,==Su="'=250~=1 ADOPTION COIIPACT refrigerator. for rent AOOPTION Three sizes availab'-, from $391 We need one another Happily school ye.r. Microwaves only $l91 married couple wishes to otve Slm.,t.r. Fr .. delivery. Big Ten wonderful home and unending _R_on_tl_'_" _In_c,-'33_7-_R_EN_T_· ____ I IOYtt to white newborn. Legal and

COUNSELINO ASSOCIATES confidential. Call collecl : Individual, couple ond group 212-737-53 11.

."periences for peopl. who wish ADOPTED two year old seeks bab) to examine their lives wi1h an eye brother or sister Please help our toward Ins\ghU under5tanding and daughter's dream come true! chen go! becoming, Sliding fee Exponses paid. Evory1hing legall scale. DIY and evening hours. confidential. Call Debbyl Josh _336_-38_7t_· ________

1 collect 9t4-762-5536.

TAROT and other metaphysical lessons Ind r.adlngs by Jan Gaut, experienced instructor. Call 351-8511 .

PEOPLE MEETING PEOPLE

BI/GAY Personals '90s alternative

SASE: R&M Club PO Box 1772

Iowa City IA 52244

OW .. health care professional would like to meet gay Or biselCual whUe male In his 30s or 40s for friendShip and possibly long·term relotlonohlp, Writ. 221 E, Market,

Adoption Perfect choice of ".rvnbJ for

your ptllCious IIfIWIlonl W.'", young and loving wilh

a ptBtly home and huge play yard for baby's

alOlybook future. W._ your choIca of adoption 118 •

loving «HI. ' Let's talkl Ex".,- paid. C~I coIeel (914) 737·4597

Box 125. Iowa City IA 52245, ::":'~==:":::::!.===--I LOVING, secure. happily marned

ATTRACTIve. sincere lady, 53, looking tor balance In lih •• seeks aducatOll mal. friend, 45- 55, Llko outdoors, dancing, conversation. Box 5701. Corafvllle 52241 .

couple wants to adopt. let us help you through this difficult time. Legal, confidenlial, expenses paid. Call collect : Larryl Diane, 415-550-1876,

DON'T BE CRUEL TO

A HEART THAT'S TRUE.

lIP ni('t' ttl ylllll'

Iwarl Eat 111\\ t'lloli's-1('rtll flltHh , f ;,'1 plt'lily 411' ('\(T(is(' I';lt'k IIp

llit' ( 'lg;lIl 'll!'s, ,\nd la"(' lift';1 lill/! ' I'asil'r. Y4lIllitt';trl wllllo\l' you 1'111' il.

t ftAmericon Heart V AsSOCiation

'WE'RE FIGHTl1'¥3 Frn 'tOJR UFE

This apace provided • a public 18Moe,

NOW HIRfNG registerod U ot I students for part time custodial positions. University Hospital housekeeping depanment, Day and night shifts. Weekends and holidays requlrad , Apply in parson to C157 Genera' Hospital.

CERTAINTY GENERALL'f 18 ILLUSION. AND REPOSE IS HOT THE Dl!STINV OF IIAN,

-alver Wende' Holme.

WANTED: Journalism andJ or law student In(erested in investigative reporting on criminal! civil else. Advise on news releases, Possibility of publication or network media exposure) limitations mav apply. For further details contact Tyler at 319-627·2700 a"ernoons or 319-627-2921 evenings , leave message.

AODRESSERS wantad immediately! No experience necessary. Excellent payl Wont at home. Call toll-Ir .. : 1-800-395-3263,

LOOKING for 8 way to get paid while working out1look no furthedlmmed!a1e Aqua Aerobic Instructors needed during the evenings, 5:4~ :45pm . Interested ? COntact the CorallJlUe Recreation cantor at 1506 Eighth St., COralVille. 354-3006.

R.L. OARRETT, Inc, (Liquid & Dry Bulk Carrier) located in Muscatine, Iowa, is seeking OlR Drivers. Pays 23 112 cents per foadad and empty mile. load & unload pay. Paid health ins, 'IBcation 3 holidays, Home on 8 regular basis.

Must be 25 years old and have lhree years verifiable truck and trailer uperiance. Must pass DOT phy-sical and drug screen . Tanker ekperlence preferred but not necessary, Call 1-800-264-&417.

IF YOU ... 20-35 and h ... been involved in the break-up of an intimale relationship (at least 6 month duretlon) with in Ihe past 8 months. we are interested In how you are coping. Eight winners of $25 will be drawn from partiCipants in this questionnaire study. Responses confidential. Call 33S.2473. _eve ftrst name and phone number on machine.

NEW AOS STAAT AT TfiE BOTTOII OF THE COLUIrIN AND WORK THEIR WAY TO THE TOP.

NOW HIRINO .t Golden Corr.' Family St.ak House, Part time and full time positions available :

'Ffexibw scheduling , ·Part time v8cation pay.

'Meal benefits. "Fun work conditions.

'Ask about scholarship program,

Apply at your convenience. 621 5 , Riverside

fNTELLIGENCE Jobs, FED, CIA, US Customs, OEA, etc. Now hiring Listings. 1-805-687-6000, Ext. K-96t2,

PART- TIllE (som. lull- time)

Due to expansion. national corporation has 24 permanent! temporary openings. Earn 57.50 to 511n. Flexible schedule. Internships! scholarships available Can Cedar Rapids. 1-377-9280, Monday- Friday, 9-5.

OOVERNMENT Jobs, $16,412-S59,932l year Now hiring. Your area , Call 1-805-667-6000, Ext. R-9612. lor listings,

NOW HtRING cocktail servors, MUBt have lunch availability, Apply In perlon, 2-4pm, Monday· Thursday, The Iowa River Power Company.

501 First Avenue Coralville, Iowa

EOE

m Baan.J; ~ . AD BLANK

• b Iller. __ .,ou IIted to lit I ...... e toT • Do 1011 "Int to amna' I _ted ....... d place? • Do 1011 need to lpoIoaIle to __ T • Do , .. "ant 10 whII __ happ, blrtlllda"

1lapp1 InnlVtnll1 or lood IuckT , blilere __ e Ibl, .. _III like to nlrt "'lilT • Do 1011 want to II, COftInlulallo.." • Do , .. "Inllo pial I F .A.C. "'III, .. r frleftlll"

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 n&mI & phone number below. N~ ____________ ~ ______ P~ ______ ~

Send oompllfld lid ~lInk wIIh check or money order, or Itap br our oIfIce:

The DeNy IowIn 111 Communloetlone Center 00fMI' of eou. , IIIclleon !owl City, SZ24:! • S3H7M

ROOM ",, COIiMUNICATfONS CENTER, (ACROSS FROII THE MAfN UNfVERSITY OF IOWA LIBRARV),

HELP WANTED PAPER CARRIERS

IN FOLLOWING AREAS:

• Bu~ington. Coon. Madison, Harrison, Capilol

• Cllmon, Marllel. Dubuque. linn

Apply: THE DAILY IOWAN

CIRCULAnON Ph. 335-5782

Workers needed al 'Klnnicfl Stadium for

general, weekly maintenance work and specific 88signmenta

c*lring Hawkeye Foolball garnes.

Starting wage is $4,60 per hour. Regislered

students may apply eo Bill Neal. SW

mainlenance shop area or phone 335-9461,

Natlonal ... ln telernarkellng InWllry ....

ank:ulll., .nlhuolallic IndIIIlduola. You ... 11 be

nsp--.tlng Fanu"" 500 companlee "flng .Inoue

product. and .. rvtc:ool, W. .At o""'ng FTIf'r poellorw with

f.xlble hour&. EJtc:effttn1 oIaI1lng ...". 15.25 per hour

pit. 1>0",,_. For conaidaAttion. call 108CJ0.822·2722

A8k for 1rIr. Norrie

DIRECTOR : The Crisis Center, a United Way volunteer agency in Iowa City. Is lOoking tor an Executive Director with two years hum.n 6ervice e~perience, Duties Include financial, personnel and program mllnagement. public rela1l0ns, and grant writing . MA preferred. $23.000- $28,000 plu. benefitS. Send resume and tetter to: CCEO Search, t12 N, First Avenuo, Iowa City IA 52245, EOE.

econoifoods FuN and Pll'llime

poeItionl. Flexible hours, Over night stockers, video dept. ftoraI dept, bakery,

deU, demonslralJons, Apply In person al fl8lVlce

counter,

$4.75/hour IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

WE ARE LOOKING FOR FRIENDLY FACES!

Now hiring for fuU-lime days and closing Bhills. $4.7515,00 hr to start Other part-time shills starting al $4,SO/hr.

Also have openings for shift managers starting at $5.50Jhour.

CORALVillE STORE ONLY Closers Needed 7pm 10 c1os;ng

Sunday through Thursday starring $&17our.

We oller: • Free uniforms • very fIe~ibie sc:heduiea • DisaJunled meals policy • Paid breaks • Ciltan modem

environmenl

Apply today at:

618 Firat Ave, Coralville, 804 S. Riverside Dr. LC_

or Sycamore Man_

00._ 'Melon;".,

Hardee's of Plaza Center One Is now hiring fDl' all

shlfts_ We offer free unWonms,ernp~

bonuses & Incentives, paid vacation after one year, discounted meals & flexible scheduling. Eam up to $5/houI' .

AppIr In peraon betwMn tIM 11M,. of 1OIIIIt8pm

DENTAL ASSISTANT

Dental Assistant posi­tion Open at River City Dental Care. Pat1IIull­time hours, Experience preferred 001 wiN train the right person. If you would like to join our learn please call Brenda at 337 ~226 or 338-1551

MAONIFICO'S Earn up to 15.00 per hour. Hiring assistant manager and counter help, Apply in parson : t925 Broadway. Pepperwood Plac. Msil

~~CIdcba.

Friendly dependable people. Please call:

351·5028

FAST FUNDRAISING PROGRAM

Earn Ull to $1000 In one week for your campus

organization.

PIal. cbuce It $5000monl

This program worksl No Invesunent needed. caD 1-800-932.0511

Ell. SO

Now hiring food servers fall. Must have some lunch availability. Apply

between 2 a~ 4 Monday through Thursday, The Iowa Power Company

5011 st CoraMl1e EO!:

Now hiring night oooks & prep cooks, Apply in person 2-4~, Mon,:Jlus,

RETAIL SALES POSITION

Vanity, a leading women's junior fashion chain, is seeking applicants for a sales as­sociate position. The Iowa River Power Company

5011st CoraMlleEOE If your are hard wol1dng, outgoing & love clothes, you should apply immediately.

STOP!!! As a Vanity sales aSSociate. you w~1 receive: • Excellent wages • Paid holidays for full-time employees

Paid vacations for full-time employees Wort( part-time evenings and weekends in a funr relaxed atmosphere. Calion behalf of national non-prof~ organization and earn up to $12 per hour! Guaranteed hourly pay. great borus opportunities and paid training are provided at our convenient downtown

• Personal discounts • Sales/service training ~rtun~yforadvanoennent Flexible hours

• A fun place to wort(

To apply, ask to fill out an application at: Old capitol Center

location. 354-6226

PART-TIME CLERK

QuikTrip Corporation is now hiring qualHied persona for part time help to work up to 35 houra per week. Day & evening hours are available. Starting wag. it $4.2Slhr.

Applicants must be at leaat 16 y.ars old. have transportatlonr

& b. able to handl. a variety of dutle. while

working wnh em· ploye.a & customera_ AppIlcadonlllll aVllhlbl. .t 11111 OuikTrIp Slort,

CERTIFIED REGISTERED NURSE

ANESTHEIST ILLINOIS

Methodist Medical Center, one of Illinois' largest and most progressive health care facilities, is a 530 bed teaching hospilal, serving a metro· politan popu(ation of 350,000, Peoria offers a variely of cultural, sports, recreational and educational opportunities , Built on the beautiful bluffs of the Illinois River, Peoria Is situated just 3 hours away from Chicago and Sl. Louis ,

The Anesthesia Departmenl consists of nine anesthesiologisls and ton CRNAs. In-house call counts towards your scheduled 40 hour work­week. Realistic earnings are belWeen $65,000-$70,000,

We offer an outstanding benefit packago, a liberal time off pollcY,On· sile Wellness Center and Child Care facilily.To lako advanlago of Ihls unique opportunity, please send or fax, (309) 67t -8210. your resume along with salary history to :

DONNA BECK, EMPLOYMENT MANAGER

III!ETHODIST MEDICAL CENTER OF ILLINOIS

221 N,E. GLEN OAK PEORIA, fLLlNOIS 11631 (309) 672-4862

an equal opportunity employer mil

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED ---------- -..--­BARTEND!R', Walt .. s (M/F) ea,,' Pl!R80N for hou""Of1l F bigger tipst E.tra $tO,OOOIy •• r, hour. per .... k, Noar c~rn,,"r Ca ll1 -5t5-883-4000, Ext. C-96t2 337.9181 Pili.

UNEMPLOYED? HOIrI! HEAl TIt AIDI!I

C.mbndge TEMPollllon, hal ~~~'o~e:~;;':::It~r cC~A. to patltions .voll.bl. for PIOck.g.rt, fowa City .... Flexible-in ... food "'VICe wo'kerl, IChtduling, tuH or PlrHlmt IU houlOk"pert and g.ner.' cWrlc.1 Ihllte Salory" 2S- M,1lO ~ ..... ,. Call 35+828t EOE, depending on experience, Colii' ACTIVIIT, NO EXPERIENCE more Inform.tlon, flo ... Lift Or requlrod, You lusl h.ve to bofWy. ~.Ith Servl .. s, MOnd.y thr""", In loctallu5tlea and want to fight Frld.y, 8·4.3Opm, 337-11055, for It. Sal.ry, paid tr.'n lng , r.pld ANI ' LPNs advancement. ICAN, 354-8118, Immedl.tt openings for ANa Ind EOE, LPN, 10 .. ork on PIOdlltric or =.:.::::...---------1 hlgh-tOCh .dult hom. hoalth ,101 HOUR. Ou.r.nl •• d. M.k. in 10 ... City .... , Ff .. lbl. '"'" .. or '251 110., with bOnu •••. Sell achadullng. full or PIOrt-Urno ""n T -shlr" on .nd .round campUI def.ronll.1 SI.nlng 801.rlo,; 17,10, with absolutely no flnlnolll $'" plr hour For m obligation C." 351-7834, informlllon c." Ho '! lItoftl1 PART-TIllE hetp needad for Servlc .. , Mondey th FrIOoj _k.ndl, First and sacond Ihlffl, 6-4'30, 337-9055, ' &-18 hours p.r WMk Fllr start ing wag. with rO!)Jl'ler Incr ..... Apptl at your convenience. Sinelair, Coralvill. ,

SOLfD GOLD DINER now occaplin, applications for walt'" waitr .... cook, dishwash.r • . Full Ind part time Apply In person: t30 Suglr Cr .. k LIne, North Liberty

WANT!.D : .... 5 responslbie studenu WIth valid driver', licenses to work IS Cate,ing delivery drh/"l Sign up for an interview 81 the Campus Information Cent.r or caJi the Student P.rsonne' Mln.ger at 335-3105,

BARTeNDER! W.'tre •• needOllIt e rinr ', Lounge in Hilla Must be friendly, par80n.bw .nd well-groomed. No ,1IJ)9ri.nce needOll, C.II 6711-2535. aftar 2pm

1rI0RNINO HOURS 12- 15 hoursl _k, beginning 8.m M-F. We need peep" with wong IIst.nlng skiffs to verify Illes mad. by our lelmarkatera. No calling. Must be Ibis 10 work five days CIII 339-9900, .. k 10' Mr_ Mead

PROMOTABLE PEOPLE NEEDED

~~"'f'. '" IIOt.ooo.ooo __ _ .. __ Y .. _-.... _ ... ,.......,.M -. .. -........ ~ ..,.la,aeo,,"',St2._'-" _ ... ,.., ... ..,..-.... ---.I>Wr"'_ .. : _A _ "1MCI. ..,. "­...... .w .. _ ....... 0IL .. .. " :1 ..... t :1.~11

.... ", ..... 1.0 ....... __

...... fOE

Visit our booth at t Mlcroco"l>Uter Fair to find out about office/computer opportunities and free taking.

TueIdIY, Oc:tobIr. IMU

101m-7pm

KELi.Y=My fhf"'~"rl''''''' 11l.fIlSl IJMITIII"Il"

• Do you have time to eara good moaey? We have.job ror you!

Our delivery driven earn up to $8_00 III hour from wages, tips and gas reimbursement Ph. we offer flexible s<:heduIes and half-pice meals. Day and night shifts Ivailable-full and pan-rime mUll hive own CIlllld insurlllce. You must be 18 yan old Slop in and apply today 118 S_ Dubuque SL.lowICIty.

Youth Homes Inc. P.D.Box 324

Iowa City, Iowa 52244 319·3374523

Progrusive child wtlfart agency suks appliclNQ for t~ following posiJioM c,~ by CDrIlinlwl pro­gram growlh. Comptlilive salary and btN/its. SIIb­mil reswrre and specify posiliorrsl, $) wilt" applyUtf,

SUBSTANCE ABUSE PREVENTION SPEClALISI'. FuU-timeorhalf-lime. Devdopllld impjemenI~ liYe SAP pqnrn incllldina cliart scra:nina and tdan!, cmsuIIalion and coordination wiU! c:ollalaa1l, pIaa II1II implement educational and tOCt'eIIionli activities. BAIIIS and relaled upericoce rcqumd.

INDEPENDENT LIVING COORDINATOR. Mlnaee a comprehensive n. PIOIIWII, incllldin, coordina­tion willi collateral pt'08ram. and .,enciel; auperviae eda­cation, recreation IIId talC wcllk <XlII1pC1'1enl1; ovcnec lramitionaJ livin& radlilY ,1CIlle~-site housina IIld after· care rervi~. An OUl.ltaodin, opponunily for 10 upai­encedandmotivllrdindiYiduallOdevelopamoclelpropa BAIBS and ~rcn,ive related uperience ftquiJed MAl MSW preferred.

BOE

EVENING SHIFT SUPERVISOR Experienced RN wanted for charge position on evening shift. Apply or

send resume to: LANTERN PARK CARE CENTER

91520th Av •• Coralville !oWl

SLEEP LATE!

And still enjoy a rewarding career? That's rightl

Pioneer T eletechnologies, Inc, people are doing just

that-so can youl Check out th ••• b.neflttt

• $5 - $8 an hour, plus ince~ • Hea~h, life, dental, vision

disability and 401 (k) pilI ., • A pleasant, professional

business environment • Paid training on state·of· the·art equipment

• Part·time shifts nowavailabl , 1 am - 4 pm and 4:30 - 8 pm.

/Ii ~ Applr In po .... 01 tr 1925 eoyrum Iowa CitY

P T I (319) 354JO-Nt Equal Opportunhy E~yer

t It

!..--­HELP'I .x--

-, <Q rk . Foul i' campus.

r:-.loe;-­~.~ CNAs 10

rub~-Intht ~;"-tl..,., III ISM O Pel !\OU, , Ience. CollI.,. 110m. Uf. /tnd.y thlOUgh fI7·9055.

·/ N. -

~ IOf RNt .... Idlltric Or • he.lth c ....

IlIe.iIlII

, "'I~ ' 7.so.

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED USED FURNITURE THERAPEUTIC

CHEF TAAINEES Tho State Room Is looking fOr IUllenl appllcanls Sign up lor

Inl,..,lew at Ihe Campus 1.1,,,m .• ' iir In Center, Or call the

Manager at

,IOIlPHSON'S J .... ler. I. looking ~r ,nlh uslntlc sal.s peop .. fO' lull-time positions. Apply in ~rlOn. Plaza Cenlr, On., downtown Iowa Clly.

~ or part time day and

shift walVesses. Please apply In person at 2208 N. Dodge by Howard Johnaona

W£ITI!"N Wostfl,'d Inn iB _ laking appl ications lor lull ,ltd part Hm. Walters! Waitresses,

,JanQUl t Set-up, Host! Hostess, 1Mperson, and Sa lad Prep. appty In person at Best Western

FtWtslfleid Inn, Interstate 80 and HIVOwl)' 196, E.it 240, Coralyllle.

'THr BeST Western Westt •• ld Inn Is now accepting applications tor 8 ~r1.lime night auditor and pert· lime front desk cl,rkl. Apply In

,.pIfIOn to the Besl Western ·W.thold Inn, 1-80 E.lt 240,

O~NINO" or dey kilch. n h. lp and wlltr ts18 • . 211 Iowa Ave. Apply with in, 1-3pm dally.

Manlg.ment Opportunltltl

MIt'. Re.taurant of !he Ok! Caphol Ceol8r Is laking applications for aaliatant management poaItlona. AppllcanlB

mutt be able 10 WOIk a llexlble IIChedUle-days, nlghlB and weekenda.

Benelta Indude corJ1lllli1ive salary. paid

vacaliona. IneuranOl, 11118 meals and more. We are looking for people with a poailive atdtude and a

wilNngneae 10 gellhe job done.

Send your resume 10: Arby'l Rlltulrlnt

201 S. Clinton, IoWI City, 52240. Attn: Tom Bras •.

~~:r;"~:I;,I ~~. ~E~O~E~. ~;;~~~~! NEED CASH? \. ~ake money ",Ilng you r clothes,

~ATII TtLlER. Part-time pOlition ,".III~a In our CoralVile of1ice,

, Must bt .bl. to work Mond.ys Slm- .. pm, Teller or accd'unting 'Iplrtence beneflclal. Apply In

) person al tho Hills, lo"a, 01111:. 01 HIllS Bank and Trust Company.

~. NOW HIRING

PIZZA OEUVERY PERSONS

• FUN • FAST PACED • FlEXIBlE HOURS • EARN UP TO $&'HOUR 1IIJIhoootr .. ,....,..,... ... ,.""1 • FULL OR PART-TIME

OUAlFICATIOHS: '18 yeats 0/ ~ • Own car and InSIKance • Good driving record

AlIa IntkIe CCij iCtr help nHded Apply In person

DOMINO'S PIZZA 5211 S. RIwrIIdt OIIv •• I.C.

Hwy e 1 22nd Avo .. COrIlv ... 338-0030

TH! SECOND ACT RESALE SHOP otters lOp dollars for your

fall and winter ctothes. Open 8t noon, Call fi rst

2203 F Str", (across from Senor Pablos),

~454

GAZETTE esrrlers needed In Tlffen, N. Uberty, Solon and lowi City. No cOI .. ctlng. Call 626-2777.

JOBSI JOBSI JOBSI

$5 to $12.n hour NalionllJ "rm haa Immed­

Iate .venlng positions avall«ble lor the right

people. TtIa is an excellenl .-y 10 earn . X'"a income In a job that you can be-

lieveln. We need artiaJIalll, ou~ng people with

aboVIIaverage phone voioeI. W. oller:

• Convenient downtowni campUs location

• Aexlble hoUf8 • Paid training

For IlI'IIMdIa. Int.rvlaw call rtomel at 354-12411.

GUTTER InS18Uor, part-timo days. Need transponation. No experience nece5$8ry. 337-68&4.

CONSTlIUCTION company nMds laborers. backhoe operato,s and cherry picker operators. Pipeline construction experience helpful. Call 913-829-0744. EEO.

FULL . Part-timo poslUans available In OUr pruning and mowing department. Will train. Positive ani lude and good work elhlc Call Ouailly Care al

detoils.

WANTED: Food worker. and cooks, University 0' towa Hospitals ond Clinics Oo-tary Department.

?!iiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. Stlrtlng wlge: $4.501 hour. 10-20 II hours par _k. Conlacl:

J Oin Oolelll , ,,"sl. Director, Dietary

UI Hosp"al. and Clln;',. Oietory o.plrtmenl, C-1 47

IOWI City IA 52242

USY WO .. KI Exc.llent pl yl Assemble producl, at home. Calt for Informatlon. 5().t..64 H Woa, •• t 1894.

!ARN MONEY .. adlng books! $30,0001 yea' Income potenUal. Now ol rlng. 1-l10S-687-6000, .xt.

KENIIORE 20 cubic toot r.frigerator. Four year. oki. Ver; clean and runs well. S195.

Futon double bed. 100% colton m. nr .... Solid pine frlrM. 1751 OBO. 337-7013.

.:...:Y-96=f2=--. ____ I FIREWOOD INTtLltOENCE Job •. FED. CIA, US Customs. DEA, elc. Now Hiring . li~t l ngs. 1-60S-687-6000 oxt. FOR SAL!: Firewood. $55 • K-9612. pick-up load. Dell.ered, Phone

aft.r 5pm, 648-4175.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

!XPERIENCED Secr.toryl Bookktoplng

AssIstance 351-40t '

' lenl rS 'Resumes ' Papers ' BroChur" ' Books 'Multiple copies 'M lilings 'Quali ty designs/layouts 'Late'l Equipment

Free Parking Delivery Fast Service

HAIR CARE HALF·PRIC! hair-cuI. lor new clients. Halrez., 511 Iowa Ave.

MISC. FOR SALE COMPACT refrigerators for ren t. Three sizes avallabl., from $391 school year. Microwaves only $39/ semester. Free dell ..... ry, Big Ten Rental. Inc. 337- RENT.

B!!R LIGHTS: •• sortad ya riell ... Sony minlptape recorder , also: . I.ctric guitar wi th amp. Make oller. call 365-9228. or I.ave message.

USED CLOTHING SHOP THE BUDGET SHOP. 2121 South Rlv.rslde Drl •• , lor good used clothing, small kitchen ite",!5, ate, Open every day, 8 ; 45--~:OO, 338-3418

LADIES' black leather coat for sale. Size medium. Like new, $100. 354-1208.

U OF I SURPlUS POOL

UNIVE .. SITY OF IOWA SU RPLUS POOL

Termlnels $10

Bolt~own tab arm chairs $5 oach

Oak sludent desks. 'ormlct! desks, clothes dressers ;

singly $45 each, In quanill .. up 10 flye - 540;

511( or more • $35 each. 19 inch electronic racks

$20 each High tlmper.ture, gas fired, small kil n

700 S. Clinton Ope n Tuesday & Thursdav

12-1pm.

HOUSEHOlD ITEMS BOOKCASE. $19.95; 4-drawer chest, S59.95; table- dosk, $34.95; lov ... at, 599; futons, $69.95: mattre"'., 569.95; chairs, $14.95; lamps, BtC. WOODSTOCK FURNITURE, 532 North Dodge. Open 1 fam-5:f5pm every day.

WANT A sota? Desk? Table? Rocker? Visit HO USEWORKS. We'vi got a store full of clesn used furni ture plus dishes, drapes, lamps and other household items.

PETS B .. ENNEMAN S!ED

• PnCENUR Tropical fish, pets and pet supplies, pet grooming 1500 151 Avonue Soulh. ~SOI .

ALWAYS FOIIGIVE YOU" ENEMIE5-NOTHING ANNOYS THEM SO MUCH.

ANTIQUES

INFUSION OF FRESH

FURNITURE and other quality

antiques.

THE ANTIQUE

MALL ~ '1110 V\IIO ud",.

-." tt

507 S. Gilbert

BOOKS

October Book sae 20\ OFF

all hCl'dbacks HCIIlIed Bookshop

520 E. Walhlngton

RECORDS WOWlloW8 City's newest! oldest record album swap shop: Jazz, blues, classical. STORM CELLAR MUSIC, 521 E. Washington. Evenings, Saturdays, 35+4118 . Bring your stuff,

CASH PAID for qualily used roc., jazz and blues albums. cassettes and CD's. Large quantities wanted, will Iravet It necessary .. RECORD COLLECTOR,4 112 South Unn. 337-5029.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENT

NEW and USED PfANOS J. HALL KEYBOARDS

1851 Lower MUscatine Rd. 338-4500

ELECTRIC GUITAR SETUP New strings. intonation, Icl ion and neck adjust

$22.SO THE GUITAR FOU"'DATION Authorlzad Gibson Repair

514E, Fairchild 351-0932

TUBA: B&S Perantaccl, compact cc.5 rotary valve, 16 5IS" beU. S3OOO. 5t5-961-312O.

PHOTOGRAPHY MINOLTA ....... um 7000. One year old. Automatic everything, Includes lithium batte!} pack, Great camera. Great condition. I\sklng $250. Call Jesan. 339-0275.

COMPUTER All at reasonabl. prices. Now CHEAPI Unused 386 40MB VGA accepting new consi gnments. 515 with software, mouse . $1629 HOUSEWORKS 609 Hollywood, up. Ono yea r warranty. Harry,

l-'a_w_a_C_i..:;ty_. 338 __ -4_3_57_. -----i 3t !}-399-8051 . Keep trying.

Increase your Apple® Computer'1 memoryl

Appl.® 1 MG SIMMS Mac!ntosh Plus .89 •• Macintosh 51 Macintosh n eoch

FREE Inslallalion In-Store Bv APPOintmenl

Appl.nGS Appl.n.

with memory card

Moriofl Iii1Iiii'treeIt Mall 377""1

Installation AI Your Business For SIIohl Added Charge

·36·· 256K bonk of chips .. _t.· .. WoahIRSr ,Downwn Conneding Point :JD'

653-7203 COM~a CENT.as

10 k) 20 Ho\isrNeek IIont1g MCI

IfIernOon . ~tli pI~. Call!I_IIOWiI Computer Solutions ....... _

MIl work 1VIIIa1M. ATTENTtON STUDENTSI Both _1Id'feniIIe e.rn St51 hour. Working In your

spare tim. on campus. Flexible appICIIItI Jadedl hOUri. 1-l10Q-688·4733.

I Athlett S TH! NEW Heartlend Inn I. now : owa . Ie, hiring lor the tollowlng position. : '111 CHA I)'}IUlJl10. Part-lim. night auditor (Friday,

_". SOlurdlY: midnight· Sam), -.. ........ -l1li •• 1 ParHlme front dflk, and .- housekeeping . Apply In pe rson

bet_n Qam· Spm, MondlY' F,ldey.

An!NTIONII ~al.1 Flm.'-I

HOultwlv", Students

UIEO vacuum cleane rs. reasonably priced.

"'ANDY" VACUUM. 351-1453.

FUTONS and tram.s. Thing. & Things & Things. t30 Soulh Clinton. 337·964 1.

LOW SEIIESTER rat ... Compacl refrigerators. microwaves, TV •• clmcorders, IrHzer!, dishwashlfl, Wishers and dryers . f .... delivery on most It. ms. Big T. n Rentl l. Inc. 337-RENT.

LOFT new, ling'" 'r ... standing loft In. taUad . 565. 354-9505 or 338-7774 .

DREA~S

NEED TO PLACE AN AD? COME TO ROOM 111 CO .. MUNICA­TIONS CENTER FOIl DETAILS

LEADING Edge .... od., O. 512kb, 20mb HD, mono or color display and prin ter. S6OO, negotiable. 338-9136.

!PSON Equity Ie 640k computer with Wa rdp. rfect 5.0. P,lce negotiabl • . 354-6709.

WORD PROCESSOR With I.tter­quality p,inter, spreadsheel, apoll check and thesau rus. $450, negotiable. 337·5661.

MASSAGE TOUCH FOR HULTH Steven L. Hutchinson CertUied massage aoo

Rolkl thorapill. Shiatsu· Acupressure. Swedish·

Neuromuscular TMrapy- Pol,rity Therlpy- ReflexologY

For natur,l pain rei., and r.tax.· tlon

FREE INTRODUCTORY ~"SSAGE 922 Malden \.In. lowl

330-0231

WHO DOES IT? WooOBU .... ELECT .. ONICS

seUs and sa",ices TV, VCR. Itereo. auto sound and commerc,,1 sound 58~ and se"'loe. "00 Highland Coun.338-7541.

SEWING w,thl without plltems AlteratIOns S,llIng prom dresses, ,ilks

GANDAS'e BRIDAL BOUTIOUE 626-2422

CUSTO" WindOW T r.atments. Or.pery. shad.S. vertlesl blinds Competitive priCing. M.ny samples to choose Irom. 337-3378.

CHIPPER'S T.,lor Shop. m.n·s and women's Iiteretions. 128 112 E.st Washington Str"t. Oi.135t·1229. . HOUSE 01 Sewing Over 20 V .... eJl(p8rience. Alt.ratlons, clothing, bridal, uniform, costume, drapes 338-0463.

REASONABLY priCed custOm framing. Postell. original an Browsers welcome. The Fram. House and Gallery. 211 N. Linn (across from Hamburg Inn)

POflTRAtTS by T.N.R. Rogera. 011 on ClnVas, From lif. or photo, SatiSfaction guaranteed , 338..0033.

STUDENT HEALTH PRESCRIPTIONS?

Have your doctor CIII It In. Low prices· we deliver FREE

UPS SHIPPING FEDERAL EXPRESS

Six bk)Cks from Clinton SI. dorms C!NTRAL .. exA LL PHAtlMACY

Dodge at Davenpo~ 338-3078

CHILD CARE 4-C'1 CHILDCARE REFERRAL CO~PUTEAllEO CHILO CARE

REFERRAL AND INFORMATION SERViCeS.

unltad Way Agency. Day car. homes, clnlers,

preschool listings. occasional sitters.

FAEE-OF-CHARGE 10 University stUdents, faculty and 51aff

M-F. 338-7684

CORALVILLE reglsterad lemily day care has seve,al fulipt lme openings, any age, Yeals and snacks provided. For more InfonTlation. call 354~253ol. Please , no calls after 8pm,

BABYSITTER .... kll.y. 2·7:30pm for one Intant In our home. References required. Call 338-2699. morni ngs.

INSTRUCTION SCUBA lessof'ls, PADI open water certification In four deys (("WO woekends) . 886-2946.

PIANO andl or music Iheory All ages and levels welcome 353-4555

TUTORING TUTORING elementary courses 'n French. Italian, psychology, sociology, logic, astronomy, geography. etc. 351 ·1868

ACTUARIAL E .. ma fOO- 1 fO. GRE , GMAT, quantitativel analytlCIII review. 351-1868.

TUTORtNO : 6A:1-2 Accounting SE.1-l15 EconomicS 61.4:100 Mart<etlng

6F;100 Finance SK :7t 1.4.1.5.

351·1888

NOW: Algebra through Calculus. All P'h~$l cs Courses

338-6568

TUTORING Computer classes including. 6K:70. 22C :001. 22C:007, 22C :009, 22C:Ot 6, 22C:017. call Dean 33&-1679

TUTO .. ING :

22~ : 1-1 00 ~ath.mallcs 22S:2-154 Statistics

29:5-SO Physic. 4:5-14 Chemistry

351-1668

ENTERTAINMENT P.A. PROS. party mu.'c end light • . Ed,351-5639.

· · · · ·COUPON .. • .. Wa,lIn ' Da,- Show

25% OFF Profes!ional OJ

Elvis! Blues Brothers Impersona10f Stat. ollho Art Sound/ Llghting

at Stone Age Prices 338·5227

MURPHY Sound and lIghling OJ saNics for your pany, 351~a119.

MOVING ------------------THE eXPERIENCED .. OVE .. S CO.: Quality moving ,eason,bl, rates

Jan Kldw.1I 354-79t8.

MOVINGIHAUliNG, .11 kinds, CHEAP. courteous, la.1. 337-7329

MAN' TRUCK: Moying and hauling from $15 for slnglo 11ems. 337-5260.

I WILL .. DYE YOU COIIPA"'Y He lp moying and the truck. $301 load. Offering loading and unloading of your renta l trucks. Monday IhroUgh Friday 8am-5pm: Saturday 8afTl ~noon . John.

683-2703

ONE·LOAO MOVE. Proyldlng specious truc. (covered. rampl and rnan power. '"-lCpen5h'e. :Counlry KlCchen of Iowa

. City II now lOC8pti1g : appIicatione for 3rd ,hill , lining room , .. " . 81eo cook potltlone available

W. nted I,n ENTHUSIASTIC peracns to tlke order. In our ofhc,. GUAMNTEED S51 par hour , up to StOi per hour with cish bonu .... nd commlulons. D. y Ind evening .hllt> avallabl • . No IJtperience nectll8ry: will train, W. 1110 need IOCII deliv.ry driver. to tern UP to $701. day. Call Lon " 339-1084 or .pply In person . 1 Glob.1 ~ark.t1ng .. \.Jnt"n Park PI ... (n .. t 10 To'g.t) on Hwy 6, Corolvilla. ~ond.y- Frldl Y, Qam· 9pm, Or S.lurllay, 9.m·3pm. ALSO ~ANAGER TRAIN EE POSITION

~~;";: __ ;';'_"" _____ I Hours : 7am· 9pm delly. 351-5943.

fwJttll Ihiftl. PIIue ft e In pelIOn

TV. VCR, staroo . WOODBURN ELECTRONICS

400 Highland Court 338·7547.

~~ r=1=~_2_8=.Q='~'~~rt~_~~AV~AI_L~A~B~L~E_. ~~~~ __ __ _ ~~~~~;=~~~~:-~~:-:-~I.THERAPEUTIC •. MASSAGE

CALENDAR BLANK Moll 0, bring to Tho .,.., ,.. .. , CommunlCSllons ConI .. !loorn 201 . Ottdllne for submitting ~_ 10 \he 'Today" OCtIumn It 3 p.m. two dayo 1>01_ tho ..... _ may be OCIlIod lor 1ongIh, ."., In gentf1Il

110\ be publlohed "", .. than onoo. No\Ioe of _II for which adm_ 10 c:hrtrved wtli not be . NoIIt:e 01 polilical _to will not bt ocoopt.d. txoepl ,"""log annou_"*,ts 01 _ Izod

groupo. "'- print.

TH!! SHIATSU CliNIC Acupressure lor th. rapeutlc natu r.1 peln Ind I tr ... ,,1101. flV appointment.

Tuesday· SlturdlY &-7 338-4300

HFECTlVE pel n and . tre .. reduction, deeply "lalClng and nurturing A~TA cartlliad molsage therapy. Downlown. 354·1132.

!!MMA GOLDMAN CLINIC FO .. WOIII!N

Rell xlng, Swadl.h mllsage with some ecuprHlur. work. Prenatal and sporta m .... o •• 110. Convenient loc.tlon , r ... onabll IHI. CI II for tlppolnt",,"!. .

227 N. Dubuqu. 337·211 1

MINI- PRICE MINI- STORAGE

Starts al $15 SiZ88 UP to 10.20 also avail.bl,

338-6 t 55, 337 -5544

STORAGI!·8TO .. AOE ~Inl·warehou .. unit. Irom 5·x10'. U-Stare-Alt. Dial 337-3506.

TYPING TYf'lNG

and WOIIO PIIOCESSING ," Your P. rsonal Assllt'ant"

MAIL BOXES. ETC. USA 354·2113

NANCY'S PEAFECTWORD P"OCESSING

Quality work with la"( print for re.umes, COV. r letterll en"'opes. Itudent papers •• nd busln ... form • . RUBh jobl . Clo .. to Low SchOOl

364-1871.

The Daily Iowan - Monday. October 8. 1990 78 -

LOST & FOUND LOST' Mlln's solid , .. k goad dome top wedding ring With diamond inset in lOp. Rewa/d $100 It fOUnd call 7'2-2112-3543 or 103-503-9365. col""t.

AUTO FOREIGN

N!! D TO PLACE AN AD ? COlI! TO ROO .. 1fl COMMUNICA· TlON' CENT!" FOR DET .... L.

ROOM FOR RENT AVAILAIlLE now. Vory ctoM. furnished , parlting. IIUndry S, 55I month. uWltlos peid. Sh .. ed kitchen. 351-t233 . ...... -ga.

LOST: Cit· y.t_ st,lped "ger -;iT.o;p;;;;;;;;s;-;;;.-;;;;-1 With whit. nOM, p.ws and bib F Lasl9 t~90. North IoWI City.

'11 HONDA Prelude, low mil ... 1'8, PB. sunroof Excellent condittOn 12600 OBO. 3S1·7973 .tter 5prn.

ROOII tN IIOU". sm plus ""'rod utlhhH. tNlth and I"tchen. laundry fecllll'" Within waJking diltance of camp<ls 337-11837.

LARGE REWARD 338-5587 or ~~~~~~~~~1~35~'-~~~ ____________ __ 'II TOYOTA t.4R2.1oaded . sharp"

.... u.t Nil Call 35H;319 FEIlALE. 1'1100 location. A •• ilable OCt. 15 "7~ monlh. utillti .. ir>eloo.d-~1. leaVe m!SUQI.

15 years' experl""",. TICKETS '12 IOIIARU. kpetd, A1C. IBM Correcting SiltK;uic C8S51tt • • Oood condition. $12001 AOOII ln 11OUM. P"vot. beth.

dlsUtn~ 10 c.mpus. ' 12Of utiliu .. October ft ... ____ ~~~~~~~~~ ___ I ------------------- 1 -0-BO~~~~-5~'-7------------

COLONIAL PARK * '! * * * * * * * * * FIAT BRlln '9110 ElIcallent BUSINESS SERVICES tI IIporiallUlll'e Ti~ tI condition $2495. Call 338-7897 fOf ! :=:::;~--------

11101 BROADWAY, 33I-HOO« 8ervioe « Ihow Typing. wOrd processing. I.ne... «c..onr willa __ tI 1M3 .. AIDA RX7. Sunroof. air. resumes, bookkeeping. whatever ..... 1Ilc..uRa...,., low mil •• s..ullfu' elr. 14500

APARTMENT FOR RENT you need. AlSO, regula. and tI ... :!L.!!± l_.JP_tI OBO 7235

mk,ocisstlte transcription. --..--... 33 ~ 9 «UT ..... .w... « Equipment, IB~ Ol.playwrtttf Fu 1M2 SUaA .. U 5oopeed. 4-door , S.IY.ce. FI.t, .ff.clont. r .. son.b~ « 3151-0037 AlC. at""". excellent cond'tion FtUl OCCUf'ANCY

tI Boq. - • TrMe U1()()( OBO 35H1194. Loasing lor toll EH,clenios .nd TYPING: E!<pIrienc:ed . accurato. * * * * * * * * * * two-bedroom townhou _ _ For fast. Reasonable ratesl Call '7' VW Super 8Mt'- Good $Ummel enJoy our pool and tennis Mlrlene. 337·9339 condition. tnechaniClilly sound courts. Oft bush,... Laundry

PAPERS, APA TRAVEL & ... '_1_000_,_0_80 _ _ 3.5_ 1-4308 __ . _ __ --I'ac'mits Resumes, Applications

Inexpensive ADVENTURE Emergencf .. P08$fb~ - .---- ~ .

lMeeIcIe 337-3103

354-1962 7am--noo" STUDY Abroad in Au.tr."1 ___________ llnformetion on semester. lumm.t.

term • • nd ,rUBrn,hlp proorams All fun tal under $6000. Call Curti" UniverSity at ---------------1 t-800-878.;)696.

........... -U-O-

ONE IIEDfIOOItiI oplrt"*,L S30Q, .11 ulll"los p.id. Ltwls Col, 337·7078.

RESUME RESUMES

THAT GET THE INTERVIEW

IOWA LODGE W. h ..... Hlclency .partments. AYoilable now .nd for 111i1tasIng. ------------1 call ~n for ""'rt

~-----t AUTO SERVICE inform.lion.

MAIL BOXES. ETC USA ... 221 East ~arket

__ -=;;.:.13=--__ 1 . ' . ~ :~ •

PECH .. AN ..ESUME S ERVIC E S

NaD TO PlACE AN AD? COlI! ------------1 TO ROOM '" COMMUNICA­.. IKE McNIEL AUTO REPAlfI

has moved to 1948 W.terfront Orl ...

351-7130

TIONS C! NTI!R FOIl DfTAU

EFFICIENCY· sublol All uhlit ... plld. On busltne V.ry qulel. Jackie, 350-0677 .xt 235 , .tt .. 5pm

w. do It all for you , ·personal Interview

·consultatlon ·wrlte the resume lor you

·I.s.r plinl the resume for you 351-1523

HAS "OVING LEFT YOU WITH TOO MANY THINOS AND NOT ENOUOH SPACe? TRY SELLING SOME of YOUR UNNEEDED ITEMS tN THE OAILY IOWAN. CALL OU" OFFICE TODAY FO" D!TAI LS AT 335-57114. 335·5185.

QUAL I TY WORD P .. OCESStNG

329 E Court

ElCpert resume preparation.

Entry- level through executive.

Updal.s by FAX

35 4 -7822

SPRING BREAK FUN SPRINO Break t991.lnd.yldual or student organization needed to promote Spring Brelk triP_ Earn

CAR ' RE'AIRED RIGHT by Curt Black Aulo Repair at Ih. low"t priClS in lown. Giw us • try . 354-0060

SOUTH IlDE IMPORT AUTO SERVtCE

604 MAIDEN LANE 338-3554

Repair specialists Swedish, Germ.n, J.p.n .... . It.h,n

TH! DAILY IOWAN ClAAIFI!D AD DFFIC£ IS OPEN ItMo5pa. lION· THU AND ltoo-4pm FIIIDAYS.

!FFICIENCY aplrtment _tslde. parking, bu., no pall. $2801 Includes utilities. 351-2415

UIIOE OM bedroom. NC. WID hoo'ups. Plls allowed. S340I month Including utlll1loo. AYlllabla immedi.t.ly. 626-8005. money. ~r .. trips and valuable S

work experl.nce Call now. AUTO PART SHORT term 'elSH Iw.Ua~ Intercampus Programs. Efficiency .ftllnmenl, in Corahtille. t-800-327 -flO13. .-.... ----------·1 NEW EXIDE lula bltte"es $24.95 _354_-06_77 ________ _

MINDIBODY ACUPUNCTURE:

For Weight. SmOking. Stress ,Health Problems

26th Year 354-8391 easl- West Center

AUTO DOMESTIC

and up 19of1 Waterfront Dnv., THREE or tour ~room condo low. City. W/O, OIW. perking, bush,...,

338-522t .

MOTORCYCLE OEALS, DEALI

BMW motorcycle IIlas Ind service Used pert. for .11 makes Nod's Auto .nd Cvcle. It

648·3241 toll trto t2 mil ..

TAK E OW" our I ..... ,l1actl •• Janu.ry 1 Downtown Pentlc,eat aplrlmenL ThrH bedrooms. 337-7011

TWO bedroom Ip.rtments. CoralVIlle POOl, centrll.lr. loundry. bu., partrlng $4SO,

~:""':'-'-~""-""':' ______ I IncludH Wlt,r 351 ·24f5

... HONDA 4SO Nlghth.wk. blue, TWO IIEOIIOOM I.rge _rtmtnt

.... II.nl 6,200 mil .. 't575 on bu,ltn. ln Cora",lIltt. Sub ..... ;.354-3:.:...::..1~2.::2'c.:or:...:33.:-I-O.:..l_7_4,-. ____ I until Juno 354-4012

HAS MOVINO LE FT YOU WITH FOR SUIILET: L.rg. thr" TOO MANY THINGS AJolD NOT bedroom In duplex. 54251 month. ENOUGH SPACE? TIIY SELLING 33705848 SOMe OF YOUR UNN EE DED ITEMIIN TH! DAI LV IOWAN. ONE IIEDflOOII ,plrt"*,t CA LL OUR OFFtCE TODAY FOR aYIII.bl, Octo~r IS. Located In DETAILS AT 335-57114, 335.5715. Hili,. $3001 month. HIW peld

Lincoln Reol Eo .. te, 338-370t 1185 HONDA Inttrc.ptor. 500 CC ====-==='::":"":":":::'--1 A.d, whitt , blu. e.",lIont shlpa

1876 FORD Granada. Winterized. New Fulmer helm,t. BeSt HOUSE new Ilr .. , brak ... .. heust. ;;re::aso::::::na=b;.::I,~0;;.I1::e:.:.r . .:354:.:..'.:;10::3:.:.t.,-__ 3-spead, 6-cyllnder . Auns smoolh 54SO 338-~2 . SACRI FICE. Suzuki GS400 and FOR RENT

.ccasso,I., Looks good 1977 Auns grelU. Firlt S300 takes it Clil __________ _ 338-0790, 1,8YI mesllQe

FALL DEALS : '83 Vom.he ~.,Im 400, low mil .. 56251 OBO '80 SUZUki TS25O. $ 1001 080 339-0591 T"R!! bedroom houae In ::;;SU:':Zc.:

U=K':"'"G-S-5-SO-'-9-7-9-0-n-'Y-3900-- University Heights. Slng~ car

millS. Like new 8est ol'er over garag8, Clntrll air, e month ' ..... $680 By t0l12 335.1063, night lincoln Real Eltlto. 338-3701 . 351-7674

WANTtO Immedl.loIy: OWn room :':;;;;;;;':';;'--------1 In hou ... Inel(~ljVe, clo ... to - campus. can Paul • . 354-0314.

!;j~ltJ~GiE,IP'AFlIKIIIII!; I::~.:.aY:.:.'-mt~s.:.se~g~O-------------ONE ORADUATI! .lUdent Ind OM -----------1 Cltt need one pllce to live. Responsible nonamok.,. Call Laur., 351·55f8. 335-t462.

CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE SPACIOUS. quo.t. lu.ury condos you can Iftord. One, two or thr .. bedroom. with ell am.nIUa. Come and ... our newl,;, renov.tld unltl.

O.k"ood Viliag. 80_ Target and K Mlrt

7022111 A .. Pllco Coralvll.. 354-34 f2

91 Escort LX YOU lAVE 2 Door 11400

FEMALE nonsmoker for spring semesler, Furnished .par1mtnt. HIW paid. AlC Pentac", .. ~partmenl' (across from Old capitol ~atl) Tracy or St.cey 350-1904 HOUSE FOR SALE

• Light & Con­venience GIOUp

• 6/t1JJX1J Mile WOllartty

• Powar Brokes

RooMMATtI: W. hlye r .. ldonts whO need roommates for one. two and thr .. bedroom apartment .. In!Ormation I, posted on door a1 414 Ea .. Market lor you to pick up

FEMA LE. OWn room $200 per month. Condo Evenings. 354·1029. Angl • .

FE .. AlE. Pentoc"st Apt5. HJW paid. NC. October ront paid. call collect, 653-5054.

IIALI! 8 .. OIIEII with esl. seeks mature roommate. Small room In tr.lIor. S1001 monlh Plus half ·utiliti .. 35t-1970

FOUR Btdroorn home. W.lklng dlstanee. WOOdw(M'k. no yard. seUoo. 354-9182.

SMALL lour bedroom hOU54 Naads work . Term • • $49,500. Horace Mann. 354·9182.

BEAUT'FULlY r •• loted hlslor\c two SIOry slngle-famllv brick home on Summit Str.et. 351·7587,

MOBILE HOME FOR SALE • QUALITYILuw.1 P"""sl S tO% down f 1.5 APR fixed . New '91. 16' .Ide, th,H bedroom, $15.967. Laro- seJectfon FrH deJlvery. set up and bank linartclng. Horkheimer Ent.rprlses Inc. 1-800-632·5965. HazeJton, lo ... .

FEMALE. Sevi l~ Ap.rtmenl. OWn

IliIlllIiilMillIiI~~!~~!!!!!!!!! __ .1 room. S170. AVlilobl.10111 . - 339.()()44, 353-f918.

WHY PAY ronl? Go together and own. mobile homo? 12165. thr .. bedrooms, shed , deck, AIC. c.b ... NI", Ylrd with garden. Fleuonable tot rent Call 879-2715, Itt .. 5pm.

WORD PROCESSING

NANCY 'S PERFECTWORD PROCESSING

Quality work wilh laser print for resumes, cove, letters/envelopes, student pa.pers. and business forms. Rush Jobs. Close to Law School.

354-1671.

BEST OFFICE SE .. VICES Ouallty Work.

Short turn around. 338-1572

SundBy

PROFESSIONAL RESULTS Accurate. fast and reasonable word Pipers, the.is,

manuscripts.

QUALITY WORD PROCESSING

329 E Court

Macintosh' l ase f Printing

• FAit °Free Parking 'Same Day Serv,,,, • Appllcallons! Forms • APAI Legel .... edic.1 'Self Sante Mach ines

OF FICE HOURS: 9am·5pm ~-F pHONE HOURS' Anytime

3 54 - 1122

EXCeLLENCE GUARANTEED

NDTEI to Noyel. Administrative Services

-Book Reports -Research .Resumes

'Using W"rdPerlect 5.0 1-l19~ IMI. Vernon)

AUTO FOREIGN FEIIALE roomm.l. w.ntod In Iwo bedroom apa~ment. Corolvil~.

_________ _ _ 1 Spring Hmtster sublease optional.

WANTI!D DEAD OR AlIVEI J UN1< Co~t.ct Karyn., 336·9898. CARSI We pay cash $10 to SIOO RESPONSI8LE nonsmokers to

:.338:::;;;.2;.:5;.;;23;:;. _________ l lhare f.rmhouse WIth pfotessional couple. Wood·bumlng slewe, hot

HAWkEYE Country Auto Sales, tub, five actH, single and double 1947 Wat .. 1ront OriYe. Iowa City. rOOm a.IIIIDIt . C.1i 643-7272 or

643-7488

CO-OP HOUSING ROOM AVAlLAal!. $2 18. Clo .. to cl mpus. shared m.als. quitt Itmosph.rt. 337.5260.

DI Classified Ad Blank Write ad below using one word per blank

2

6

10

3 ____ '-'--''--_ 4

8

12

18

20

24

5

9

7 ____ _

11

13 14 15

17 18 19

21 22 23 -----Print name. address & phone number below.

Name

Address

Phone City

No. Days Heading Zip

To figure coat multiply the number of words (Including address and/or phone number) times the appropriate rate given below. Cost equals (number of words) x (ratlJ per word). Minimum ad is 10 words. No refu .... D.edlln.ls" em ~vIou. wortdng dey. 1 - 3d1ys .............. 64CIworcl($6.40mln.) 4 - 5 days .............. 70e/W0rd ($7.00 min.)

Sand completed ad blink with check or money Dreier. or stop by our offica:

6 -10daya ....... _ .... 9OeIwordl$9.00mln.) 30days .............. 1.88Iword($18.80mln.)

The Daly low", ", Communlcdonl CenIIr comer of College • IIadIIon

Iowa cay 12242 33H7M

.. The o.Ily Iowan - Monday, October 8, 1990

300/0 OFF ALL SWEATERS

FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY 30% OFF

ALL SWEATERS IN JUNIOR, MISSES; PETITE AND

WOMEN'S SIZES.

30%OFF ALL SWEATERS IN MEN'S AND

. YOUNG MEN'S SIZES

30%OFF

ALL SWEATERS FOR BOYS, GIRLS AND INFANTS.

SWUterlI8Ie priced thru Mon .• Oct. 8th.

LAST DAY TO SAVE FAMILY SHOES

300/0 OFF ALL OUTERWEAR

FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY 30%OFF

OUTERWEAR IN JUNIOR, MISSES; PETITE AND

WOMEN'S SIZES.

300/0 OFF ALL MEN'S HEAVY·WEIGHT

JACKETS & COATS. Jackets sale priced through Mon .• Oct. 8th.

30%OFF

ALL CHILDREN'S OUTERWEAR.

15%-50% OFF

Every Shoe in Stock including Athletics

I , "I w today

f 1sweats

we ha in he