Elections - Daily Iowan: Archive

16

Click here to load reader

Transcript of Elections - Daily Iowan: Archive

I •

Elections Secretary of State, Attorney Gene~1 races. Page 4A

Racism dramatized in 'Stick Wife.' Page SA

Moidavians attack Romanian border. Page SA

Volleyball team sweeps MinnesOta. Page 1 B

• al

Iowa City's Morning Newspaper Thursday, November 1, 1990

;;Bus'h 'fed up' with Saddam's treatment of U.S. hostages I

, By u •• Gena.el The Associated Press

Preaident Bush said Wednesday Jle wa~ · fed up with Saddam Hussein's harsh , treatment of U.S. hostages. Iraq later said

it would allow American families to visit the captives for the holidays.

But Iraq's amba88ador to the United States, Mohamed al-Mashat, said he sought to avoid bloodshed and reiterated Iraq's offer to negotiate - if other Middle East conflicts were included on the agenda. The United States has rejected such linkage.

The commander of British forces in the gulf warned that an attack against Iraq is increasingly likely. Air Chief Marshal Sir Paddy Hine said a joint team culled from the Royal Air Force, Royal Navy and Army is developing plans for military strikes.

Bush said his patience was wearing thin with Saddam over the 1,000 American hostages in Iraq and Kuwait.

"The embassy is being starved,· Bush said of the besieged U.S. mission in occupied Kuwait. "The people out there are not being resupplied.

Later Wednesday, an Information Mini­stry spokesman in Baghdad said the Iraqi government is prepared to allow families of Americans in Iraq to visit during the Christmas and New Year's holidays. No other details were available, and there was no immediate reaction from the State Department.

• Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and 8

British commander meanwhile warned the likelihood of war in the region was

, increasing. •

Mubarak said the Persian Gulf crisis has become so dangerous it ·could explode at any time." And he urged ·our brothers in Iraq" to realize the danger their Aug. 2 invasion of oil-rich Kuwait has caused.

"Saddam Husaein seems reluctant at the moment to accept the judgment of world opinion," he said. "It is looking increas­ingly unlikely that Saddam Hussein will withdraw unconditionally from Kuwait."

"Do you think fm concerned about it? You're darn right I am. And what fm going to do about it - let's just wait and see, because 1 have had it with that kind of treatment of Americans," Bush said.

The offer to American relatives appears to be part of an overall Iraqi offer to all relatives of its "foreign guests" to viait

See QuIt. Page 7A I

UI embarks on recycling plan Director outlines new 5-year project By AIlE G6kdemlr The Daily Iowan

In an effort dubbed the world's most extraordinary cleanup, clim­bers from the U.S., Soviet Union and China roamed the slopes of Mount Everest this spring to clean up the junk that had accumulated during numerous expeditions since 1921. They came back with 4,000 pounds of garbage.

Yet in a single day, tbe Ul creates an estimated 6,000 pounds of paper waste alone.

Recycling paper is the starting point of the Ufs new waste man­agement program, as paper waste makes up 40 percent of all solid waste by volume generated in the U.S. Plastics follow with 25 per­cent.

Contrary to popular belief, recy­cling js not a new idea.

Inhabitants of China were recy-

Recycling is making a comeback now because of another shortage -the earth's natural resources.

Recycling causes 74 percent less air pollution and 35 percent le88 water pollution than production methods that start from 9Cl'8tch. Incineration, an 'a lternative method of waste management, is controversial and poses environ­mental concerns.

Waste disposal through landfills is limited - it is estimated that by 1991, half of the existing landfill sites in the U.S. will be closed.

Faced with these figures , the state of Iowa h~ outlined its recycling and degradable product milestones for the 1990s. The state aims to recycle 90 percent of paper waste by the year 2000.

Casey said Iowa's waste manage­ment laws are very progressive.

When the UI establishes a success­ful paper recycling program, it Will move on to the others, said Casey.

"There are kinks in logistics, but we are now moving faster," she said. •

Casey has presented the recycling program to 2000 of the 12,000 UI employees since she took office in May and has spoken to student groups such as the Ul Environ­mental Coalition.

Casey outlined two major goals for the next five years - compiling information for a waste audit of the Ul and setting an agenda to follow the state mandates for waste man· agement.

A 1989 audit of the University of California-Los Angeles will be used as a guide for the UI's own audit.

This is the first in a tllllo-part series examining ruycling at the VI.

m. In 1991, the goals will be "reduction and reuse." In 1992 the progre88 in waste reduction will be evaluated.

The UI Custodial Services suffered a big budget cut this year, and Casey said this cut is not helping the Waste Management Commit­tee, which has to rely on custo­dians for the collection and trans­portation of recyclable wastes.

I cling paper as early as A.D. 105.

The UI began to take steps to comply with the state mandate last spring -ith the appointment of a waste management coordinator, Carol Casey. In addition to paper recycling, the state also calls for the recycling of foam, glass and plastic waste.

The Ulaims to reduce the amount of waste going to landfill by 25 percent in 1994 and by 50 percent in 2000.

. "The program has to be user· friendly," she said. "We have to do what we can to malte (the custo­dians') job easiet."

. During World War IT Americans recycled one-third of their paper because of shortage.

The y~r 1990 marks the start of extensive paper recycling at the

The paper recycling program will See Recycle, Page 7A

: UISA to offer travel funds ,to students , By Jim Snyder • The Oaily Iowan

UJ students who need to travel for "\ research purposes will finally get I some financial help from the Ul

Student Assembly. , After several weeks offailed com­I promises between the three bodies

of the student government, the I UISA established a committee , Tuesday night pesigned .to allocate • travel funds to students perform­

ing research. • But it wasn't easy. • Similar legislation had been pro-• posed and voted on by tbe separate

bodies of the UlSA, but theBe bills, • due primarily to a conflict between • the Undergraduate Activities I Senate and the Graduate and · Profe88iOnal Student Senate, had • DeVer been debated by the com­

plete assembly. Several UAS senators felt that

• there should be equal representa· I •

tion from each body on the commit­tee. But because more than 90 percent of the funds will be allo­cated to graduate students, the GPSS felt it should ,have more representatives on the committee.

In order to open up a dialogue between the three assembly bodies, GPSS Sen. AI Beardsley met infor­mally with UAS executive officer Troy Raper and Undergraduate Collegiate Senate executive officer Thomas Lunde prior to Tuesday's meeting.

"I met with Troy and Tom, specifi­cally Troy, and we talked about some of the things his body had problems with, I told him what the GPSS was concerned about and from that we worked out a com­promise," Beardsley said.

GPSS executive officer Nancy Mor· tensen and UCS Sen. Jennifer Kelly joined with B~ardsley, Lunde and Raper to 'author the legisla­tion. The committee will consist of

69 _ g~aduate schools to p'articip'ate in fair

I a, Wllllem Pepper , The Oaily Iowan

Choosing a graduate or professional school is not easy for many juniors IIId aeniors. But the Graduate and Professional Schools Fair held today ill the Union may make the decis.ion a little easier.

Representatives from 69 healthlmedical, business and law schools as I well as general and specialized graduate schools across the country will

participate in the fair. The schools will answer questions about I admi88ion requirements and will present descriptions of available

i& ~ Va aduate schools at the UI will also be represented, including the U eges of Dentiatry. Law, Education and Medicine.

, I Don Moffett, associate director of the Business and Liberal Arts Placement Office, said that students should be "open to discovery"

• because going to graduate school i8 becoming a popular option for • atudents.

Moffett said people typically apply to 16 or 20 graduate schools and added that the fair can help students decide where they want to apply.

Students' should attend the fair even if a particular school of interest to • tbem it not represented, said Wendy Mahle, a graduate aasistant

helping to organize the event. She said students will atill be able to ~ about the basic entrance requirements for different types of Ithools.

She also suggests students "have some ideas of questions they'd like to .' •• k.- . •

Career Infonnation Sevices: Busine88 and Liberal Arts p1acement, the \ tnaineering Placement Office and the Residence Services Education

ProIram are sponsoring the {air in the Main Lounge of the Union from oj 10 Lm. to 2 p.m.

five members from the GPSS, three it on the Table" and "How to Deal from the UCS and two from the with the Main Motion" frQm UAS. "Robert's Rules of Order."

"It was a matter of just sitting "I wanted to stop a debate that down and realizing what everybody was going to go on forever and wanted," Raper said. "It was sur- allow time for the assembly to vote prisingly simple: on the legislation," Raper said.

However, getting the legislation Several senators, primarily from passed on the UISA floor was not the GPSS, became angered at as simple. The bill's passage was Raper's mini-fiIi\>uster and asked threatened by debate concerning Raper to yield the floor. During the proce88 of electing a chairper- Raper's speech, one GPSS member son on the committee and the referred to Raper's actions as maximum funding levels the com- childish. mittee could allocate to an indivi- "His actions were a bit excessive," dual. Beardsley said. "He has every

"We sit here and bitch, bitch, bitch ' right to state his case, but he could - and never get anything accom- have done so in a way that didn't plished," Raper said. "We have infuriate people.· this powerful motion and we must After Raper finally yielded the deal with it. It needs to be passed floor, GPSS executive officer Nancy tonight so that we can get the Mortensen stood. and endorsed the graduates their money." legislation and asked the assembly

Down on the

Raper then held the UlSA floor for to do so as well.

Denee,.. of the KIrov BeHet from Lenlngl'lld .tend elOp e II'IIcIDr on the farm of Allegra and John Dane, ownera of Dane.' Del'1 and Ice Cr •• m Store, during a vllIt Tuead.y afternoon. The dence,.. were given e lour of three local farm •• For a review of the beNet, ... pege SA. 16 minutes reading to the mSA "I support this legislation," Mor-

senators the chaptere "How to Lay See UISA. Page 71'.

New SAT format includes more math By Tony Roge,.. The Associated Press

BOSTON - College Board trustees announced Wednesday the most sweeping changes ever in the Scholastic Aptitude Test, adding some math questions that aren't multiple choice and introducing optional essay questions.

Board officials rejected suggesti.ons that charges of cultural bias prompted the revi­sions in the test used heavily in deciding who gets into what college.

The new Scholastic Aptitude Test, called SAT-I, will be introduced in the spring of 1994, said College Board. Preside.nt Donald Stewart.

In the language section, emphasis on reading comprehension will be increased. Students will be allowed to use caJcul~tors in the math section.

The revisions are aimed in part at reducing students' reliance on test coaches, Stewart said at the board's annual meeting.

Critics have long charged that the SAT - the most widely used college entrance exam -was biased, particularly against women and minorities.

"Nothing could be further from the truth," Stewart laid. "The SAT haa been in almost continual evolution. It has never been set in

concrete . ... "The Dew SAT will combine the high,

academically demanding standards of the current tests with revisions that inCrease their educational relevance and quality for all college-bound students."

The old SAT had 85 verbal and 60 math questions. The SAT·I will have 76-85 verbal and 55-60 math questions.

The new math questions requiring students to produce an answer rather than choose one from a list will make up about 20 percent of the math section.

'The changes also include the introduction of the optional SAT-II, an expansion of the achievement tests that some schools pres­ently give in addition to the SAT to help gain admission to some colleges.

SAT-II will include a written essay section, language proficiency teats for native speakers of Japanese and Chinese, and proficiency teats for non-native English speakers.

Observere had predicted the essay would I)e included in the main SAT. But Gregory Anrig, president of thll Educational Testing Service of Princeton, N.J ., which administers the test, said field trials showed an essay would make the exam too long.

Bob Schaeffer, a spokesman for the group FairTest and co-author of the book "Standing up to the SAT,~ said the cbengea fail to solve

the problem of the test's bias. "The new SAT amounts to little more than

rearranging the dec~ chairs on an educational Titanic," Schaeffer said. "The SAT should be optional and it should be comprehensively overhauled to addreas its problems."

FairTest and other critics have claimed that the SAT tends to cover subjects that white male and aftluent test-takers are more likely to be familiar with.

Oft-cited examples in the teat include the question "Dividends are to stockholders as ' .. . " with the answer being "royalties are to writers," and the use of words such as "regatta· and "aria" in the vocMlulary section.

Whites as a group have outperfonned minor­ity students, and malea have fared better than females.

In 1988, the National Orga5ation for Women filed a lawsuit that forced the New York State Education Department to atop using the SAT exclusively to award merit scho.larshlpa. The department now uses hiP­school grades as well.

The SAT, administered by the Educational Testing Service of Princeton, N.J., was rtr8t given to 8,040 students in 1926. Now about 1 million college-bound students take it annu­ally.

2A METRO/IOWA The Daily Iowan - Thursday, November 1, 1990

3 interested parties bid on Holiday Inn a, Cynthia Taytor The Daily Iowan

Iowa City's downtown Holiday Inn may be saved from foreclosure thanks to bids from three prospec­tive buyers Tuesday.

The hotel's owner, Hany Johnson, has until the end of this week to sign a sale agreement before fed­eral govenunent foreclosure pro­ceedings will begin. said City Man­ager Stephen Atkina.

The hotel was taken over by the Resolution Trust Corporation, a

federal government bailout firm, when the original lender. Midwest Federal Savings. filed bankruptcy during the savings and loan crisis in early 1989.

Johnson. along with the hotel's manager, Pineapple Management. also went bankrupt last year. Johnson. Pineapple Management and Midwest Federal Savings are all based out of Minneapolis.

Fred !{atter. president of Pineap­ple Management. said no informa­tion on the pending sale agree­ments will be available until Fri-

day or Monday. An interim management (lTm,

American General Hospitality Inc. of Dallas. will be appointed this week by the Resolution Trust Cor­poration to allow the hotel to stay in business.

The city lent Johnson $2 million in an Urban Development Action Grant in 1984 for the construction of the hotel complex. Johnson made six payments of $19.000 each on the note before fUing for bank­ruptcy in April 1989. said City Attorney Linda Gentry.

She said the city hopes to be at least partially repaid from a resale.

However. whether the hotel is foreclosed and resold by the federal government or sold to a new owner. Gentry said she is doubtful the loan from the city will be repaid in full

Gentry attributes the hotel's ina­bility to make loan payments to its failing food and beverage opera­tions. She added that the room rents appear to be steady at 80 percent occupancy.

New lipid disorder center at UI a, Greg Smith The Associated Press

IOWA CITY - Too many Ameri­cans have high blood cholesterol levels. but that could change in the next few yeara, the director of a new Lipid Disorder Training Cen­ter in Iowa said Wednesday.

Helmut Schrott. associate profes­sor of preventive medicine and environmental health at the UI College of Medicine. said the center will train about 270 doctors to specialize in the detection and management of lipid disorders.

"Maybe 200.000 or 300,000 (heart) bypass operations are performed every year. Our goal in getting cholesterol down is to put those guys out of business," Schrott said.

Courts By arenda Mobile The Daily Iowan

An Iowa City man was charged with falsely impersonating a public official yesterday and with harrass­ment Tuesday, UI Department of Safety records state.

According to Johnson County Dis­trict Court records. Aaron M. WindschitI, 20. 808B Mayflower. presented himself on the phone to IUs ex-girlfriend as a police officer of Iowa City.

A preliminary hearing is set for Nov. 20.

Briefs Baker named Dental Educator of the Year

Karen Baker. a pharmacotherapy expert at the UI College of Denti­stry has been named 1990 Dental Educator of the Year by the UI OentaJ Alumni Association.

Baker received the award at the annual dentistry alumni reunion banquet on Oct. 27.

Absentee ballots available for Nov. 6 election

Voters unable to vote in the Nov. 6 general election may now submit absentee ballots in the county auditor's office through the close of business on Monday. They may also have absentee ballots sent to them.

Each request for an absentee blll­lot must include the name, address and signature of the requester and the name or date of the election for which a ballot is requested. Ballots

t

Calendar

Thursda, • Alph Kappa P.I will hold a

meeting at 7 p.m. In the Union, Iowa Aoom.

• Air Fore. ROTC will ' have a recruiting table set up at the Union from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

• MPea.ant SocIal IdenUtl •• Under 'taHnllm" will be presented by Sheil. Fitzpatrick of the University of Chicago at 7:30 p.m. in Gilmore Hall, Room 106.

• -Langll'e- de.", In "'e Graat PI"n.: The Chlwera (Siouan) c .... " a Department of linguistiCS COlloquium, will be given by anthropology Profes· sor Lori Stanley at 4:30 p.m. In the English-Philosophy Building, Room 203.

• • An infonnation session about -Ir. I.nd: Conftlct and Accommodation In • DI"lded Iocle.,. " a new study 8broad program, will be held at 5 p.m. !n the International Center. Room 28.

• • En"lronmental Advoc.te. will hold their monthly meeting at 7 p.m .. at the First Christian Church, 217 Iowa Ave.

: • Racydlng .nd Energy Efftci.ncy ~ of the UI Envtronmental CoaIlMon will hold a ~ting at 4:30 CI.m. in Schaeffer Hall, Room 364.

: • Dlaablllly PolIcy In .... 'lOt will be the topic of a lecture by Bobby Silvers­lein. staff director .nd chief coulll8l of th. U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Dllf!bllity Policy. Thl event will be held from 3:30-4:30 p.m. In Undqullt Cen­ter: Room N3OO.

Lipids are fatty substances in the ceutical Group has contributed a blood that have been linked to $3 million grant for the training heart and blood vessel disease. centers. Each lipid center will

Iowa is one of six nationaltraining receive $140.000 a year for the centers that will operate the next three years. three-year program coordinated by . Tuition for the program will be the American Heart Association free, although trainees must pay with support from . Bristol-Myers their own travel and housing costs. Squibb Pharmaceutical Group. During tbe program, doctors will

About 1 ,500 doctors will be trained study a wide range of disorders in the diagnosis and management and will receive specialized train­of lipid disorders. Other centers ing in nutrition. diet counseling are located at Baylor College of and lab procedures. Medicine in Houston; Johns Hopk- "About 60 million Americans have ins University School of Medicine got a cholesterol level that's too in Baltimore; the University of high - over 240," Schrott said. California at San Francisco- "If your cholesterol level is 300. Berkeley, Calif.; the University of your risk of having a heart attack Washington; and Washington Uni- is four times the individual whose versity in St. Louis. level is at 200. If your cholesterol

Squibb-United States Pharma- level is at 150. your risk is 30

• A $15,000 bail was determined Wednesday for an Iowa City man charged with second-degree burg­lary and third-degree theft Oct. 8.

According to Johnson County Dis­t r ict Court records, Wayne D. Beach. 24. 29C Mea dowbrook Estates, allegedly broke into a North Liberty residence with another person. Following the rob­bery. officers stopped a car after the incident that contained the stolen merchandise, records state. The defendant was in the car holding three stolen items from the residence. records state.

A preliminary hearing is scheduled

can be returned by band or mail t o the county auditor's office.

For further information, contact Tim Waddell at 515-281-5864.

Busch Gardens auditions planned

Talent scouts from Busch Gardens, The Old Country in Williamsburg, Va .• will be hosting auditions for singers, dancers, musicians. actors, variety artists and stage techni­cians for their 1991 season at the UI on Nov. 8.

Auditions will be held from 2·5 p.m. in the South Room at the Union.

Those auditioning should be 16 years or older by March 1991 and should be available for full-time employment during three-, seven­or nine-month seasonal entertain­ment periods.

Auditions will be on a first-come, first-served basis. and will be limited to 1'12 minutes. For further information, call 1-800-253-3302.

• Hawkeye Juggler. will have a general meeting from 6-8 p.m. In the Field House, Main Floor.

• A dl.cu .. lon on "What'. the Alternatl"e to War?" and an organiza­tional meeting will be held by Opera· tion U.S. Out at 6:30 p.m. in Schaeffer Hall, Room 16.

• A Bible dlseu,.lon on commit­ment, sponsored by the Campus Bible Fellowship, will be held at 6:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel, Union Field.

• Stre •• -A .. oel.ted Immune Mod­ulallon: Implication, for Reactl"allon of Latent Epstein-Bah Vlru. is the topiC for an Ida Beam Distinguished ViSiting Professor Ronald Glaser, pro­fessor of medical microtliology and immunology at Ohio State University, to be held at noon In the General Hospital, Room El40, Peterson Con­ference Room.

hnce • Open r.h.arael. for the Dance

0.1. : David Berkey" "Communal Aspects of the Prairie Dog," 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. In the Grey Studio: Room E125 , of Halsey Hall; and Alicia Brown's ".. . if only in a glanca," 5:16-8:30 .p.m. in the Grey Studio.

BQou • -l·A.enlur." (Michelangelo

Antonionl, 1960)- 8:30 p.m.

• -.rlnglng Up aaby" (Ho.ward Hawks, 1938) - 9:15 p.m.

Fliin • -The Abendolted field - Free

for Nov. 9. , • A $10.000 bail was determined yesterday for an Iowa City man charged with second-degree burg­lary in connection with the above defendant.

According to Johnson County Dis­trict Court records. Sean P . Hogan. 18, 2608 BaTtelle Road, partici­pated in the above robbery.

A preliminary hearing is set for Nov.9.

iI Bail of $7.000 was determined for an Indiana man charged Aug. 10 with second-degree theft.

According to Johnson County Dis-

Operation Desert Shield support group offered

Eastern Iowans who have loved ones in either a military or civilian capacity in tbe Persian Gulf are invited to attend the weekly Oper­ation Desert Shield Family Sup­port Group.

The group meets on Friday even­ings from 7:30-9 p.m. at the Grant Wood Chapter of the American Red Cross, 3601 42nd Street NE. Cedar Rapids.

This Friday's and the Nov. 9 meetings will be held at the Schwartz Center. Rooms A, Band C at St. Luke's HospitsJ in Cedar Rapids.

World Community Day scheduled for Friday "Women for Justice/Justice for Women," will be the topic of the 1990 World Community Day on Friday at 1 p.m. at the First Baptist Church, ~OO N. Clinton St.

World Community Day is an ecu­menical worship event. sponsored

Fire Zone" (Nguyen Hong Sen, 1979) - 7 p.m. in Communication Studies Buiiding. Room 101, as part of the Vietnam Film Project : Vietnam 's Vietnam War.

RadIo • WSUI AM 1110 - "National Press

Club" features documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, discussing his recent PBS special "The Civil War," at noon; """ernoon Edition" features UI Pro­fessor Emeritus Stow Persons, author of "The University of Iowa In the n.,entleth Century," at 1 :30 p.m ..

Theater • "Can.nnle .nd Alice" by Rebecca

Gilman will be performed at Theatre A in the UI Theatre Building at 8 p.m.

• "Run For Your Wife" by Ray Cooney will be performed at 3 and 8 p.m. at the Amana Colonies Visitors Center. For reservations phone l.aOO-352-6262.

Mueic • Collegium Mualcum will perform

at 8 p.m. at Harper Hall In the UI Music Building.

c.lender PoIIcJ Announcements lor this column must be

submitted to Thfl Dally Iowan newsroom, 20tH Communications Center, by 1 p.m. two days prior to publication. Notices msy be sent through the mlil. but be sure to mall ea".. to ensure publication. All .ubmlsalon. must be clearty printed on a Calendar column blank (whiCh appear. on the cl ... i­lied ad. pag") or typewritten and trlpl. .".ced on a full sheet 01 paper.

Announcementa will not be I~ed _ the telephone. AlillUbmiulon. mu.t Include the n.me and phone number, which will not

percent less than a person who is at 200: he said. "These risks have a meaning with heart disease."

Iowa's training center will begin in January, Schrott said.

"Physicians will be caJled clinical lipid specialists." Schrott said. "They will have an opportunity to be experts in their local commu­nity. We think this is very impor­tant."

"One. it will upgrade the quality of clinical measurement in that com­munity," he said. "The second thing it will do - besides building their practice, perhaps - is have them act as a consultant to their other colleagues in the community so that when cholesterol problems arise, they can be the person who is the local exoert."

trict Court records. Earl L. Herrin, 37, 1715 Park St.. Huntington, Ind.. was allegedly one of three men hired to do repair work around the home of an elderly Iowa City man. The three men cleared brush, did minor cement work and painted a single-car garage for $2,445. records state. The man then hired the defendant and another man to do repairs to a porch and wrote him a check for $4.800 prior to the work, records state. Both men disappeared fol­lowing this, records state.

A preliminary hearing was set for Nov. 9.

annually by Church Women United to bring Christian women together to focus on issues of the wider global copununity.

For further information, contact Virginia Spalding at 338-1942.

Author seeking photos for veterans' album

Jon Schneider of Richmond, Va., is seeking photographs from Vietnam veterans for his book "A Veterans' Album: by the men and women who were there." a compilation of personal photographs from the Vietnam era.

Schneider said the album is meant to be a fond remembrance of the era and the people involved, and he has requested that no combat photos be submitted.

Photos can be mailed to VETER­ANS ALBUM, PO Box 15096. Richmond, Va. 23227-5096. and people submitting photos should include self-addressed, stamped envelopes, as every effort will be made to return the photos to their owners.

be published. of a contact person In case of questioll8.

Notices thaI are commercial advertise­ments will not be accepted.

Question8 regarding the Calendar column 8hould be directed 10 Ann Marie Williams, 335-6063.

CorrecIIona The Deily Iowan strives for accuracy and

fairness In the reporting of naws. " a report Is wrong or misleading, a requesl lor a correction or a ctariflcation may be made by contacting the Editor at 335-ti030. A corrac· tion or a clarification will be publishad in thi8 column.

The Dally Iowan

Volume 123 No. 92 The Dally Iowan is publlahed by Student

Publications Inc .• 111 Communications Cen· ter, Iowa City. Iowa 52242 dally except Saturdays. Sundays, legal holidays and university holidays. and university vacations. Second class postage paid at the IOWa City POit Office under the Act 01 Cong,... of March 2, 1879.

lubacrtptlon ,. .. : Iowa City and Coral· Ville. $12 for one .. mester. $24 for two .. mellers. sa lor lummer _ion. $30 lor full year: Oul of town, $20 for one .. me.ter, $40 for two .. meaters. $10 lor IlUmmer _Ion, $50 all year.

USPS l433-eOOO

Publisher ........... .. ........ , .. ... ....... _am Ca •• r Editor .............. ..... .... ...... ..... I.,. Lanoenbe ... Managing Editor ....................... ... ml ...... ,. Sports Editor ..... ... .. ..... ............. Er1c8 W .. and Copy Desk Editor ............... .......... Jak. luter. Photo Editor ...... ............. ........ .. .. Randy Bardy Graphics Editor ...... ................ .. '''111 DeGraw Bull"... M.n.ger ......... ..•...... ...... Debra PI.", AdvertISing ............................. ..•.. Jim LMMnI CI ... ItIedAd • .............•............. crt •• P.rry Clrcu I.tion •• ..•............ .•.•.....•.• • rancl, R. Lalor Oay Production ...••.. ........... Joanne E. HInIn. NlglIt Production ............. .. ......... Robert 'oIe,

WE'VE MADE THE BIG ·MOVE!

We are now centrally located at 320 East Benton (comer of Gilbert & Benton)

Please stop in to see our new clinic and for more information about our programs,

~-....... IGHT & WELLNESS MANAGEMENT

320 E. Benton • Iowa Cny.IA

338·9775 OWned SlId Opera/ed by RNs

THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA REHABILJrATION COUNSEUNG ASSOCIATION

, Invites you to hear Bobby Silverstein

Staff Director and Chief Counsel U.S. Senate Subcommittee

on Disability Polley

SPEAK ON THE TOPIC DISABILITY POLICY IN THE 90's

Thursday, November 1,1990 3:30-4:30 P.M.

N300 Lindquist Center (Jones Commons)

A dollar for the cup 50¢ draws all night

TONIGHT AT •••

Five dancers use four elements - earth, water, air and light - to create a cosmos on stage.

Friday &, Saturday November 16&17 8 p.m.

Pre performance discussion with UI professors Dudley Andrew, Broadcast and Film, and Aaron Gerow, Communication Studies, Hancher GreenroolT\ November16, 7 p.m. Free ticket required .

Senior Citizen and Youth discounts

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

Supported by lhe National Endowment for the Arts

HANCHER For ticket information

- Call319-335-1160 or loiliret in 10Wl Oulslde low. City

1-800-HANCHER The University 01 Iowa 10wa.City. Iowa

~IROMEO 2: TANGO

RlsH 826 S. Clinton

The Daily Iowan Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

Business Office .......... : ............................ 335-5786 Circulation .... ............................................ 335-5783 Classified Advertising ............................ 335-5784 Display Advertising ................................ 335~5790 Newsroom ............................................... 335-6063 Production ............................ , .................. 335-5789 FAX ...................... , ............................ 319-335-6297

A ~

..... , " 1 ......

. : _. ""'?iI,' .. ' The Doily "-' - ...,....,. Nt end '" allen prkIIod"" ....... ~. w.-. our ...... to...,..tIIIIr ............

....

Metro edit Ann Marie

. : Aven, 'new , BY Ke.ln Bool

The Daily Iowan

Democratic gub

gar ~ven8CJ Repre ives Nagle an ounce

I plans to build fo\! aCross Iowa wit' years:

During a locall I discuss their trw , sa!s, Nagle said t , son, along with i

are ·committed I team to seeing th I construction pr , within this deCi

elected. The news COnfE

, Iowa Ci~y Public sixth of the eigb

I dates planned £1

I ever. Harkin Wi

Iowa City after sick in Mason Cit

Naglesaidthel , projects would il

ing: • The Avenue I

, will run from St polis and will p

UI s1 , By Chris Pothovi I The Daily Iowan

Would you likE , certain career? I getting some hal

profession or fie}, I having to devote

internship?

If so, a UI Call extemship may

I looking for.

According to , representative f(

. , , are designed to I chance to work 1

• at their careers f ·(The progran

enhance studen • ness." Johnson s~

Extemships a

,. I Iowa's. Unwerszt 1920 ,..

Can. and A

• II. pia, b, of Ib, Jowa 'Ia.

November (Sunds)

at the Theatre Bui!

Call 3

• ..

rore

____ ~----------------------------------------__.~------Theoal~~----~~----~----------------------------______________ _ Metro editor Ann Marie Williams, 335-6063 Metrollowa Page3A

Thursday, November 1, 1990

: Avenson, Nagle plan I

: new Iowa highways I 8y Kevin Boot

The Daily Iowan

Democratic gubernatorial challen-ger Do venson and House of

I Repre ives incumbent Dave • Nagle announced Tuesday their , plans to build four major highways I across Iowa within the next 10

years:

City and Coralville . This will include the expansion and rerout­ing of Highway 218.

• Highway 63, which will run from Waterloo to Rochester, Minn.

• A new highway connecting Des Moines and Burlington, Iowa.

• Highway 520, which will run across the northern part of the state from Sioux City to Dubuque.

School board adopts r •

strategic new model -Planning model will have 2 phases By Heidi Ped.raon The Daily Iowan

The Iowa City School Board has adopted a strategic planning model that will allow "everyone to march in the same direction."

"I've been very frustrated as a board member at times,- said Betsy Hawtrey. "It's been hit or miss with some things." .

In the decision to use an outside consultant for Phase I of the pro­gram, the board considered the. benefits of having a neutral guide~ in goal-setting, as well as the current shortage of district staff members.

, During a local press conference to I discuss their transportation propo­I sals, Nagle said that he and Aven­I son, along with Sen. Tom Harkin,

are ·committed as a Democratic I team to seeing that four major road I construction projects are done I within this decade" if they are

Nagle said that it was through his and Harkin's efforta that initial federal funding for the Avenue of the Sain.ts was obtained. He added that these transportation pledges show the commitment of the Demo­cratic candidates to remedying the state's ailing economy'.

The Dally lowanlHui-Un Chao

Congre .. man Dave Nagle (ltandlng) end Democrl!tlc gubemetorlal candidate Don Avenson endorse the Avenue of the Saints Tuelday afternoon et the lowe City Pllbllc Ubrery_

At a Tuesday meeting, the board voted to adopt the planning model presented to the board by Bill Cook of Cambridge Management Group Inc.

The motion includes a district commitment of $27,000 for the program. The price tag includes the services of an outside consul­tant in Phase I of the planning, which will focus on setting goals. Phase IT, the "action phase," will be handled by an inside facilitator trained by the Cambridge group.

Board member Sally Staley said, "Being the new kid on the block, I would have liked to have seen us use someone inside the system, but . I am aware of the lack of depth in our staff right now." elected. could also contribute to an ec0-

nomic rebound. make development possible," Avenson said. "1 think it's more important than the level of grants or loans that you give to individual busin.esses. "

Hiring this consultant will be the board's next challenge. A three-· member board has been chosen to make the decision.

The news conference, held at the , Iowa City Public Library, was the

sixth of'the eight the three candi­I dates planned for the day. How­I ever, Harkin was not present in

Iowa City after reportedly falling sick in Mason City earlier Tuesday.

Nagle said the new major highway , projects would include the follow­I ing:

"We feel that with a modern transportation system, and with a modem communications system as a second prong of the attack, there is reason ., . the 1990s could be a halt of the historical migration of this state, and a decade of the greatest growth of this state," he said.

He added that other factors -such as the low cost of hOUSing, the "relatively crime-free atmosphere" and the educational system -

But Nagle stressed that these tran.sporation initiatives must be coupled with gubernatorial sup­port.

And Avenson, who is challenging incumbent Gov. Terry Branstad, backed up Nagle's statements by saying that, as governor, he would accomplish all four of the projects in 10 years.

Aven80n's proposals for imple­menting the transportation pro­jects included holding a Midwest summit to coordinate the efforts of all surrounding states.

He also expressed interest in see­ing an additional highway built to run from the Quad Cities through lllinois to St. Louis.

Strategic planning is designed to help the district determine and prioritize its future goals while taking into consideration such fac­tors as the community and chang­ing demographics.

Superintendent Barbara Grohe said no specific timetable for the hirip.g has been set.

"It will involve the choice of who the facilitator will be," she said. "We will have to work with their schedule." • The Avenue ofthe Saints, which

J will run from St. Louis to Minnea­I polis and will pass through Iowa

"I think it very important that Iowa have the infrastructure to

And board members say they're excited about the plan's abilities to focus these goals.

Grohe said the first phase of the · plan would begin in mid..January.

'UI students get hands-on training with externship sponsors • By Chris Pothoven , The Daily Iowan

Would you like to fmd out more about a I certain career? Are you interested in , getting some hands-on experience in the

profession or field of your choice, without I having to devote a semester or more to an

internship? If 80, a UI Career Information Network

externship may be just what you are I looking for.

According to Todd Johnson, program I representative for eIN, the externships I are designed to provide students with the

chance to work with ill alumni sponsors I at their careers for a week.

"(The program) is basically there to enhance students' academic prepared-

• ness," Jolinson said. Extemships are offered during both

winter and spring breaks, and about 100 sponsors participate in the program. Of these, about half are located in Iowa. Not all sponsors are able to participate during both periods, but 74 positions are open this winter.

There is a wide variety of sponsors and career areas that participate in the program, Johnson said. Sponsors include business owners, government workers, social workers, attorneys and corporation employees - and most are ill alumni.

During the externships, students are given the chance to experience aspects of a potential career not traditionally pre­sented in the classroom. Some extern­ships . consist of research work or hands-on experience, while others simply involve following a sponsor through his or her work day.

CIN has received favorable responses from students who participated in the

program, Johnson said. "They said they learned more from the

externship experience than from the classroom experience, because the extern­ship is hands-on,· he said. "In some cases, it has helped solidify decisions to enter afield.·

Johnson said that some students have received recommendations from their sponsors, and others have even been offered jobs.

"The relationship depends on the enthu­siasm of the student," he said.

Lynn Evertowsk.i, a UI student who participated in an extemship with a social worker in lllinois, said she learned a lot through her experience.

"It made me see whether I wanted to go into the area or not," Evertowski said.

The program has also been a good experience for the sponsors, said Eliot Keller, general manager of KRNA radio.

· Universit Theatres LAE • ~r • LAE • ~r • LAB • ~r • LAE

Keller supervises students who have externships at the radio station.

"We've really had some excellent people over the years," he said. "Overall, it's been a very positive experience. It's also been exciting for us to see the enthusiasm of youth."

He said that the extemships gave stu­dents a good opportunity to learn more about a business than just the classroom side.

"Some (students) are shocked by the differences; others thrive on them," Keller said.

The externship program isn't the only service offered by the CIN. Other services include Telephone Tips, Hawkeye Hosts and AlumNet.

Telephone Tips allows a student to contact an alumnus by phone and ask questions regarding a career, while Alum­Net is a career-networking system newly

implemented last year_ Hawkeye Hosts is an area information

service for students who are relocating from the m campus. It consists of a network of ill alumni from across the country who can provide students with information about different regions.

Johnson said students interested inapp­lying for an externship should stop by the l

CIN office, Room 286 of the Union. There students can examine the types of intern­ships offered and can fill out applications.

A committee will review each application submitted and will choose extems of the basis of career goals, educational back­grounds and relevant experiences or activities. After students are selected, they must attend a mandatory orientation meeting and then must contact their sponsors.

The deadline for the extemahip app\ica­tions is Nov. 14.

• • • 1920 .r. 1990 LAE The women of Delta LAE

Ca"annie and Alice

• g Gamma would like to thank the men of Sigma Alpha Epsilon for a fantastic

• ~r

COACH CLASSICS II " •• pili, by R.b.eell Gllmlln

./ th. I.n Pillywrightl WlltlhllP

November 1-18 at 8 pm (Sundays at 3 pm)

allho Thealre Building. N. Riverside Drive

Call 335·1160

• LAE

• ~r

• LAE

Homecoming Week! • •

LAE. ~r. LAE. ~r. LAE . · ~r. LAE

I •

Just one of the over 40 styles from. our collection of Coach handbags ... small leather goods too!

Especially at

Downtown ... ofcoune

Enter Today! $5,000

Shopping Extravaganza

4A METRO/IOWA The Daily Iowan Thursday, November 1, 1990

Baxter highlights registration By Jennifer Glynn The Daily Iowan

Democratic incumbent Elaine Bax­ter, who is running for a second term as Iowa's secretary of lltate, Mid she has made it easier for 10watl8 to vote.

"1 worked with the Legislature to improve the voter registration pro­ceu; said Buter. "There were three major efforts to increase voter registration." She I18id these were: • Placing voter registration poet cards in every state office in Iowa.

• Enclosing two voter registration post cards in all income tax book­lets.

• Changing Iowa d.river's1icenses to include a voter registration form.

CRaving a registration form included in the driver's license form is very convenient for new Iowans,· Baxter I18id.

Baxter also started the first pro­gram in the nation to get voter registration cards put into tele­phone books.

"It was a real breakthrough.·

Baxter said. "My hope is that it will spread to other states.·

Baxter is a member of the Execu­tive Council and the Voter Regis­tration Commission. She also serves as chairwoman of the State Records Commiuion and the State Insurance Committee.

Baxter served, from 1979 to 1981. as senior liaison officer in the Office of Legislation and Congres­sional Relations, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Develop­ment. Washington. D.C. More recently. she has worked as an economic development consultant and taught history at Burlington High School.

Anderson: 'I can do better' with Iowa's state budget By Jennifer Glynn The Daily Iowan

Beverly Anderson, the Republican candidate for secretary of state. Mid she can get Iowans more for their money.

Anderson said incumbent Elaine Baxter has ~ried to increase the secretary of state'a budget more than 53 percent over the past four yea",. and that is a waste of your tax doll8T8; I can do better.·

Anderson said ITer experience will help her to do a better job with 10watl8' tax doll8T8 than Baxter has done.

". will be part of a working, responsible government and I have got. the experience to do the job right."

Anderson said she will also work to improve voter registration.

"I'd like to see more educational information given to the potential

vote"''" she said. "We should edu­cate them so we can demand more responsibility from our vote"'.

"lowa's voter registration has been 2.9 percent lower than the national average in the past four years," according to Anderson.

"I want to review Baxter's ideas. improve them and obtain a higher voter registration turnout: she said.

Anderson lives in Cherokee, Iowa. and attended the University of South Dakota. She is on a National Health and Education Steering Committee and a Taxation and Finance Committee.

She was the past president of the Iowa State Association of Counties and past president of the Iowa State Auditors Association. Ander­son is presently on a Homemaker Health Advisory Board and is a county auditor and election com­missioner.

Open door of speeding car knocks down trick-or-treater The Associated Press

DES MOINES - Des Moines police charged five teen-agers with assault after 8 12-year-old trick­or-treater was knocked down Tues­day by the door of a speeding car.

Police Sgt. James O'Donnell said witnesses told police the hit-and­run "was not an accident. They intentionally did it."

Police said Jeremy Mohler was struck by the door of a speeding car about 7:30 p.m. as he stood near

INTRODUCING

the curb of a Des Moines street with a group of trick-or-treaters.

O'Donnell said witnesses told police that a two-door yellow Ford swerved toward the group. The front seat passenger opened the door. knocked the boy to the pave­ment and sped away, O'Donnell said.

Jerry and Shelley MobJer. the boy's parents, said Jeremy has a hairline fracture in his shoulder and several bruises.

'.

THE ULTIMATE SWISS TIMEPIECE .. ,

CVMA The lJllimate Swiss Timepiece Since 1862 For 127 years CYMA has told Europeans not lust what time It Is but when they have amved. Now erMA's new signature sports watch Is available In the U.S.A. It's ver­saUle. comfortably thin. very water-resistant. and has a unIque hIdden clasp. Backed by a two year International WamlJ1ty. In 18kt gold and stainless steel from $1.495.

HERTEEH &STOCK~R DOWNTOWN 101 S. Dubuque

JEWELERS 338·4212

Attorney general race focuses on crime Kelly: 'Crack down on violent crime,' ensure the 'victim's bill of rights' By Jennifer Glynn The Daily Iowan

Ed Kelly. the Republican candi­date for attorney general. stated that experience is the issue in this campaign: "Iowans deserve a pro­feuional prosecutor as their attor­ney general. not a partill8n politi­cian."

Kelly I18id he is committed to malting Iowa the safest state in the nation.

"I will focus the attorney general's office on Iowa's drug and crime problem. crack down on violent and habitual cJ;'iminals and ensure the 'victim's bill of rights' for every victim of crime in Iowa," Kelly said.

Kelly ia also in favor of strictly enforcing laws requiring that those who commit a violent crime with a gun be subject to tough mandatory sentencing.

"I will work to establish additional prison space for criminals. at both minimum and maximum security facilities.w he said.

Kelly has plans to deter people from situations in which alcohol is

Wmter Comfort Wann your feet in Birkenstock clogs and shoes! With the Original contoured footbed, our winter styles provide natural comfort as well as wannth. Choose from soft suede and leather styles in a vibrant range of colors from rich forest green to classic black.

abused. "I will ensure strict enforcement of

laws against operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol," he said.

In addition to the above plans. Kelly also aims to:

• Establish regional offices of the attorney general throughout the state.

• Help implement and strengthen drug awareness programs across Iowa.

• Re-establish the Anti-Trust Division to enforce the Iowa Com­petition Laws.

Kelly received a degree from Wayne State College in Wayne. Neb .• in 1968 and obtained a law degree from the UI in 1971.

He was a member of the Iowa Crime Commision Project to Develop Standards and Goals fo~ Courts, as well as the Iowa State Bar Association's Special Commit­tee on Criminal Law.

Kelly. his wife and three children live in Fai.rfield. Iowa.

Kelly has been a Jefferson County attorney for 12 ye8T8 and a trial attorney in Fairfield since 1971.

128 E Washington. Downtown· 319-337-2530

•... ~. of··· .. •

." " I J ,,..,

~ \. If' •. ". '" .' II

•. "." ".-4'''' . .t c.~,:" ,. ." ." ·· .... ·· ... '80.···· I"" v;;:- ~ .. :.;." .... :~" .. t-"~ r

....... ,." .~~-' .,' rJ"'!';!" p· .. .,·,' ... .t.O. ,,' ,,"'\D" • '" .. - '

"'" ~dp "".>; • 1 ," ~ ~Jj " ,'" ,- .. ~'P" ,.,...r-' .... -'

I~ .... t •• " -

I ....... ,~.<r-I.'· ,., ..... ~-.o., .... .......... -' .. ··· 6 '''1'.'''' ',,-;;;,-, .. "., - ,.~. L../JP .•.•• ~ .......

u' .' .. ~ "

Campbell ~ disparity in prison terms, proposes 'Truth in Sentencing' plan By Jennifer Glynn The Daily Iowan

Bonnie Campbell. Democratic candidate for attorney general. said most criminal offenders serve barely a 10th of their actual sentences.

To combat this, Campbell is proposing a "Truth in Sentenc­ing" plan.

Campbell said her sentencing proposal is particularly impor­tant in light of the recent upsurge of violent crime cases in Des Moines and Davenport.

"There is a huge disparity between a criminal's sentence and the time he or she actually spends in prison.· Campbell said. "That undermines the system. We lose the deterrent effect on potential criminals and we lose public confidence."

She said that people sentenced to 25-year prison terms serve an average of only six years and added that most criminals sen­tenced to 10 to 15 yea", serve only about 15 months in prison.

"We need a sentencing structure

that says what it means and means what it says." CampbeU said.

Campbell's "Truth in Senune· ing" plan includes:

• Replacing the present indeter· minate sentencing system with structured sentencing.

• Requiring regular. accurate prison population proj!ll of how many beds are need

• Providing additional 'BOn facilities as needed.

"We need to review and overhaul the state's sentencing structure and provide enough prison space.· Campbell said. "Lalt year. over a third of the 1.725 prisoners who were paroled were considered a poor or very poor safety risk, and that's another reason for improving the sys­tem."

Campbell said the biggest benefit of her proposal would be to "restore respect to the criminal justice system and reclaim ita own integrity."

Campbell is the former chairwo­man of the Iowa Democratic Party.

The University of Iowa Alumni Association and the Hills Bank and Trust Company invite you 10 the

DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI LECTURE SERIES

... . ..... , ,1.",1 1\ " ," ,I- ..

,.' ..... ,. ....

with Justice

Juanita Kidd Stout of the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas who will present her lecture

"It Is Not the Brains That Matter Most, But That Which Guides Them"

Tuesday, November 6, 1990 2:00 p.m. Old Capitol Senate Chamber 3:15 p.m. Post-lecture reception,

Old Capitol Free and open to the public.

The Distinguished Alumni Lecture Series is made possible by a generous gift fIOm the Hills Bank and Trust Company.

For more information, call the UI Alumni Association, 335-3294 .

If you've written a term paper, you know. the right 116,000 words and look up word meanings, proper usage, words can make the difference between anAand C paper. synonyms, hyphenations, pronunciation, example senrences,

With The American Heritage Electronic D1CbO~, and idioms. Also, the complete Roget's II Electronic you can enhance your IBM or Macintosh Com~uter with a Thesaurus will help you find alternative ways to express reference tool that will help you write better, With a greater yourself. command of the language. Plus, this is the on~ software package that offers you the

The American Hentage Electronic Dictionary is a com- power of Search TextT • This unique tool lets you scour the plete software package. aictionary for a word in just seconds. All you need is a vague

It goes far beyond the limitations of a spell-checker. meaning, concept, or definition and Search Text will retrieve You can access complete dictionary infonnanon for over the woras related to the idea you have in mind. Use Search-r - - - - - .- - - - - - - - - - - - ,. - - - - - - Text for brainstorming or fact finding. 1 SPECIAL INTRODUcrORY OFFER. For example: type individual a~d universe, I JYES' Pins. I<nd 111< - roptcsofth< DOS \,,,,,,,,ofThe Amcricoo H,rillgt E1carooic DICtIonary .. $89.95 carh d S hTc 1St" /. 0

plus SJ.9JshipPIng and han~g fcit' each cop,.. 1.·,11 ="~ a ~E copy of.Writ."'" HOUgbtOll·.\I,min'"u)'.IOoUSt an earc ext returns ex entia. Ism. renter I""'" promsing prognm ~,th tach ropy ofThc :\menan H'"lIgt E1CC1rontc DICtIOn.ry ordcml. sailor and SearchText returns a list of 16 related I Disk s,zc (chcck on,): J Jill" 5-1Il006 J ilH' 5·10005 entri~s including' blueiacket mtlrintr. 1lilutil1JS JYES! PIt ... !<nd me _ ropi« ofth< .\(odntOlh \\:1'51011 ofThcAmcrican Heri .. Ekctronic Dictionary" S89.95 _ , . ~, , ,

l.odI p1usSJ.9i "'ippio~ .nd h.RdI'RI fer carh "'Pl' 1",11 =n~. ruE copy of Ii .. ., Ii",. th, boo!< thlts ...... rTl< and ;wab. l':tocdllm)' ..... nting.ith<ach"'l')'\ordcr.(S.\~) Oroer The American Heritage Electr?nic 1 :oi.rTl< Dictionary now, for only $89.95 and receive

:~ SlIl<~~P r~800~63 3:~515 1 Tclcp/>ont·Dar ( ) EI"Ring ( to order, or return the cou~n. 1 J CIwJ< my cmIit ord :l.\IC J \ '!SA

l~rdX~~r ____ ~ __________ ~ ______ ~, ________ ~ __ __

I~~,--------------------------------------1 J.\I\' rhea or mon<\' ordu l")'IblclO H ... ~"", .\Iimi. Compon)' i. ",dol<d.(PItnt odd !III. tu: I",,·. ~'Ii: '\C'" 6%) 1 MAiL TO: tioqIotOa Ml8Ihi c-p..y. Waysidt Rood, .. rIinct .... MA'OI80J-'lM2. Attn· C_r Stl\n.

IUOI I _________ ~---------------

~ Houghton Mifflin

For IB.\1 PC...1 ~tiblcs: lI.rd dill: .. ilh J.O Mbofr... spo«; \'101( JlA.\\ rtqulmi: DOS ....... /.1 or.bo.~. 1\OrIIs with most "Ord proeM.g plO!fIml. For ~\acinIOlh"\IodnIOlh Plus. SE, S[·)O, 11, 1I ... 1Ica.llci. nr., or POrt.bIc MaciRIOIh SjlCm linion 6.1 or hirh<r. Hard disk .ith) Mb oHItt spirt. llOtli .u iInIc 1CCf!!OI)'.

Cll9'lO HOOIplOO MillIin CDrnpan)'JSo(".~If Dnisiol\. 0... McmoriaI Drn<, ~ .. ~, MA 01 HI. Sarth 1'," and \\,riler 'If tndrnurb 01' lJourhIOll MiAlln Compon).

, ArtsiEntertair , Steve Crl:ls.e,

..

Kirov By Kathleen Hurley nte Daily Iowan

A standing , corned the

Iowa City , for its Ioiselle" at llll.ma,,!

However. the performance of ,!istasteful faux by side with atnn." ..

I

7:00 p.m.:

3:30 p.m.:

5:00 p.m.: 7:00 p.m.:

SATURDAY .m.:

'erhaul "Ilcture prison ~La8t

, 1,725 d were y pOor Lllother le sys..

Ie pany

out mon

tter les

mber

IUS

~~~ ____ ~~ ________________________ ~ __________________ Theoal~~an __ ~ ____________________________ ~ __ --~~----~------------

. , ; Arts/Entertainment editor

Steve Cruse, 335-5851 ArlslEntertainlnent Page5A Thursday, November 1,1990 ..

Up and Away ' UI daricer. rehear.e David Berkey'. "Communal which will Include piece. by three other UI 'aculty AlpeCts of the Urban Prairie Dog," part of the membe,., will be h.,d Nov. 1-3, and are tree and upcoming UI Dance Gala, Nov. 9 and 10 In open to the public. For time. and plac •• , Me TIt. Hincher Auditorium. Rehea,.al. for the Gala, Dally Iowan "Calendar" .ectlon.

Kirov is polished but flawed I

Albrecht clinging hopelessly to Giselle's tombstone.

A standing ovation wel-I corned the Kirov Ballet to I Iowa City Monday night

for its performance of luiselle" at Hancher Auditorium. However, the evening presented a perfonnance of paradoxes with j\iBtssteful faux pas occurring side by side with stunning perfection.

The beauty of the story, however, was not always reflected in the performance - especially during the first act. After having arrived in Iowa City around 6 p.m. with the performance at 8 p.m., the entire corn,pany understandably looked a bit shaken in the first act. However, such unfortunate circum­stances can often occur for compa­nies . traveling on extensive tours. Although the dancer portraying Albrecht presented a countenance akin to a powerful buck, some corps members appeared some­what discombobulated with clunky turns and yelled . cues on stage. Violating the standards of profes­Sionalism, company members wore bright fingernail polish, loose pointe shoe ribbons, and personal jewelry. Disappointingly, they ignored the details so important to the perfection of classical ballet.

gusto. The company redeemed itself with a second act stunning in both drama and purity of line. As a most elusive Wills, Giselle enticed Albrecht to join her in dance in the custom of revenge upon the man who caused disappointed love. Con­sciously. dancers do not search for passion while on stage just as tigers do not search for courage while prowling in the darkness. The dancer portraying Giselle ema­nated this passion - springing from beyond her exquisite arched feet, soaring leaps and fluid foot­work. Even her spectacular tour ietes landed with her leg nearly hitting the back of her head.

I

I The story of "Giselle" centers upon a beautiful peasant girl who, with a great affinity for dancing, attracts the affection of Count ~brecht. However, upon the dis­covery of Bathilde, Albrecht's fiancee, Giselle Dies into an intense despair leading to tragic ,weide. Later as one of the ghostly Wilis, maidens who died disap­Pointed it) love, Giselle reluctantly ~tices Albrecht into dance to QUse death by exhaustion. How­ever, upon the approach of morn­ing, the Wilis fade away and the 'curtain closes on the mournful

However, the true test of a profes­sional is to amend a mistake in progress and continue with full

The Kirov performed the classical favorite with laudable gallantry and staunch purpose, though at times looking uninspired 8S if performing stale and dated choreo­graphy. In contrast, the electric energy between Giselle and Albrecht and the piercing presence of Hans created insatiable inten­sity that followed the moody music of Adolphe Adam.

THE VIETNAM FILM PROJECT:

VIETNAM'S VIETNAM WAR ASYMPOSWM

organized by The Institue for Cinema and Culture

THURSDAY, November'l , 7:00 p.m.: THE ABANDONED FIELD - fREE FIRE ZONE (1979)

Directed by Nguyen Hong Sen. One of the first Vietnamese rums to receive international recongnition, this mm explores how the war intrudes into everyday life. As a young couple with a baby work as liasons for the Viet Cong, American helicopters sweep marshes in an unrelenting search for guerillas. This mm provides an unprecedented look at guerilla warfare and the effect of the war on Vietnamese citizens. 35 mm, 90 min. Discussion: Rick Berg.

FRIDAY, November 2 1 :30 p.m.: "Vietnam Today: Fifteen Years Afer Unification"

Lecture: John McAuliff (Indochina Policy Forum) 3:30 p.m.: "Vietnamese War Narratives"

'Lecture: Rick Berg (Pitzer College) 5:00 p.m.: Reception for Rick Berg and John McAuliff 7:00 p.m.: WHEN THE TEN11i MOON COMES (1984) .

Directed by Dang Nhat Minh. A film of great visual poetry in which a young Vietnamese woman conceals her husband's death at the front from her in-laws. To aid her deception, she persuades the village schoolteacher to fabricate letters supposedly sent by her husband. The mm throws a powerful light on the problems of mourning and reconciliation, of private grief and national purpose. 35mm, 90 min. Discussion: John McAuliff

SATURDAY, November 3 9 .m.: BROTHERS AND RELATIONS (1986)

Directed by Tran Vu and Nguyen Huu Luyen. This mm invites many comparisons with the problems of American Vietnam veterans. A Vietnamese soldier returns from the war and tries to adjust to a society anxious to forget the war and get on with their lives. 35mm, 90 min. Discussion: Rick Berg.

All sessions will take place in 101 CSB.

This symposlulIliB sponsored by the Institute for Cinema at the University of Iowa. with additional support from the University's center for ASian and Pacltlc Studies, the Global Studies Program.and the Department of HlslDIY.

1963 bombing dramatized in Cloud's 'The Stick Wife' By Stacl Sturrock The Dally Iowan

Just as t~e children's Sunday school was about to begin, a bomb went off in the 16th St. Baptist Church in Bir­

mingham. Ala. Four black girls were killed in the bombing. The year was 1963. Members of t.he Ku Klux Klan were suspected of the crime, but no one was arrested for 14 years.

This true story is the basis of UI graduate Darrah Cloud's "The Stick Wife,w to be performed by the Riverside Theatre beginning fri­day, Nov. 2. "The Stick Wifew is Cloud's attempt to understand Klan members through their domi­neering relationships with their wives.

Cloud says, "I had a theory about racism and sexism - that it comes from the same place within our­selves.»

Guest director Meredith Alexander says that it is rare to find a contemporary play with such an ear for language and dialogue and

Theater real, whole characters. Although the play i.s set in the South, Alexander feels the subject should have relevance for Midwest audi­ences.

Oom Franco

Catherine Burrougha and kate Burke In a acene from Darrah aoud'. "The Stick Wife," which beglna Ita run at Riverside Theatre tonIght

"I had a theory about racism and sexism -- that it comes from the same place within ourselves."

and reveals . the helplessness to which she has been reduced.

Darrah Cloud author of "The Stick WIfe"

focus on the play's historic back­ground. Frank Moorer, who teaches in the UI African­American Studies Department, and director Meredith Alexander will lead the discussion, which will be free and open to the public.

· -

"The KKK is very big in the Midwest. There ie no lack of mem­bers,· she says. "Our hope is that the audience would not dismiss this as belonging to the South. We always have to he vigilant about independent responsibility for one's own power .. . , It's a never­ending issue:

Jessie tries to forget her fears by hanging out her wash, a seemingly bottomless basket of white sheets, and by talking around the subject with her friends Marguerite and Betty - whose husbands have also "gone out» for the morning. Ten­sion mounts as news of the bomb­ing, and of the deaths offour young girls, reaches the women.

Darrah Cloud's "The Stick Wife - , opens Nov. 2, with performances at

The play begins early Sunday morning at the home of Ed Bliss. As he is dressing to leave, his wife, Jessie, fearfully asks where he is going. His refusal to answer and the secretive nature of his activi­ties with "the club" reawaken in Jessie the nagging fear that has clearly become a part of her life

Alexander says that although the play is about a very serious topic, it contains a lot of humor. "In the end, it is positive. One person can make a difference. It gets the message across without heavy­handedness, without being obvi­ous."

On Nov. 10, the Riverside Theatre will host a pre-perfonnance discus­sion of "The Stick Wife" that will

8 p.m. Nov . 2·3, 7-10, and 14·17. and a 2 p.m. matinee on Nov . 4. Riverside Theatre is at 213 N . Gilbert St. Tickets can be pur­chased in advance at Prairie Lights Books, 15 S. Dubuque St., or can. be reserved by calling Riverside Theatre at 338-7672. Tickets will be sold at the door as available. Cost for evening performances is $10 for general admission and $8 for senior citizens and students. Mati­nees are $8 and $6.

'Follow the Hawks In the Daily Iowan

Monday, November 12th from 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. is Macintosh Multimedia Day at the University of Iowa!!

A full day of instruction and demonstrations covering topic~ including:

Digitized Sound Digitized Images Video Standards Director

Macintosh

Presentations by:

CD-ROM CD Audio Hardcopy MIDI

HyperCard/SuperCard Media Compression Interactive Videodisc Mac-based "Slide Shows"

Multimedia Day

• Todd Papke, Mike Partridge, and Joan Huntley of Weeg Computing Center • Pat Whetstone from the Printing Department • Tom Simon of Gold Ribbon Sound/Cinema

• lllla a speda18:00 p.m. presentation by multimedia guru Bill Hanson of Apple Computer Inc. in Chicago

Registration includes all demonstrations and instruction, lunch, hardcopy and digital handouts, including a Demo HyperCard Stack. A special T-shirt is also

provided courtesy of Apple Computer Inc. I

There will be a $20 registration fee for the daytime sessions. where participation will be limited to 60 people. The evening presentation is free and attendance is not limited. All sessions will be held in

room 301 Lindquist Center. For further information, contact Fran Burns at 335-5471.

. ·

· ,

------___________________________________________________ TheDaIW~n __ ~~ ______________________________________ ~ ______ __

Viewpoints editor V·ewpo·nts C:+h · I Michael Lorenger, 335-5863 I I ~L nlc -----...... --....... -------...... ~-----. ----.~: , liSSR-f

ELECTION 1990

The Grand Finale Nov. 6 is less than five days away and many Americans will

be actively participating in the democratic process. For those who care nothing about voting, Election Day is just another day. Election results are usually measured in terms of the number of seats gained by the parties and winners and losers. However, the biggest loser in this year's election will be a man whose name does not appear on the ballot: President George Bush.

The first Tuesday after the first Monday in November will be an interesting one this year even though this is not an "executive election." The outcome will be a true gauge of Americans' approval or disapproval of their elected public officials. No doubt the budget issue will be a key concern of those few informed Americans who care to vote.

Much to their credit, the Democrats played the J?udget issue like a Stradivarius. When Bush had his tax conversion in July, the lip readiJ).g was over. This is what Democrats werE! waiting for. In an overture to the budget negotiations in October, Capitol Hill Democrats seized the moment to politicize the tax talks. When the talks stalled on tax rates on the upper bracket of society, Democrats inserted the theme of "fairness." The results: a minuscule $40 billion cut in the deficit and a plunge for Bush in the opinion polls.

One of the longest presidential honeymoons is finally over. Now the American voter must decide where to place the

blame. And it appears, much to the chagrin of GOP challengers and incumbents, that their party - the party of the president - will bear responsibility. At this stage the GOP is in retreat. To avoid a pummeling at the polls, Ed Rollins, co-chairman of the National Republican Congressional Com­mittee, has suggested that GOP House members dissociate themselves from the president. Bush has received cool receptions around the country from Republican candidates. He now finds himself being opposed by Democrats and Republi­cans alike. The Bush brand of lip reading has fallen on deaf ears.

Viewed as almost invincible, at least through the scope of opinion polls, George Herbert Walker Bush is again human. There is even talk of a serious Democratic challenge to Bush in 1992. New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley's name often surfaces as a possible contender. But one name that is being overlooked is that of Democratic Majority Leader George Mitchell. In all probability Mitchell is the most powerfuJ Democrat on the Hill. He is the concertmaster who has orchestrated a symphony of discontent with the president. It has been Mitchell's strong will that has brought President Bush to his knees.

Nov. 6 will be an indicator of how well the Democrats have played the tax issue. Most likely, the Democrats will gain two seats in the Senate, bringing them to a 5743 advantage. Firm control of both houses will be detrimental to President Bush. Predicting the presidential situation in 1992 is conjecture. However, there can be no question tluit Tuesday's elections will have overtones for 1992. The Democrats are conducting a masterpiece in party politics. The grand finale - control of the White House - i,8 in the works.

Paul Bukta Editorial Writer

OpinIons expressed on the VIewpoints page of The Dally Iowan are lhose of Ihe signed author. The Dally Iowan, as a non-profit corporallon, does nol express opinions on Ihese matters.

Letters PoJJticaJ context To the EdItor:

Although Jim Rogers' Oct. 18 column ["Jefferson's 'useless' free­doms," Dl) correctly identifies Tho­mas Jefferson's reliance on indivi­dual virtue within the polity, he needs to place the example of the Kentucky ResolutiolllJ within the proper political context. Jefferson clandestinely penned the resolu­tion in response to the Federalist Party's attempta to limit free expression through the Alien and Sedition Acts. By nullifying federal jurisdiction on the matter of sedi­tious libel, Jefferson sought to guard First Amendment rights against unwarranted intrusion by government. Since he assumed that the States would naturally reflect the republican desires of the people, the Kentucky Resolutions . reflect a reaffirmation in faith of individual sovereignty more than an attempt to regulate free speech.

Protectilll freedom of expression wsa also Jefferson's goal in sup­porting the prosecution of an editor of a Federalist paper for seditious libel in 1804. Rabid Federalist leaders, he argued, were now seeking to destroy liberty "by pushing ita licentiousnesa and ita Jyir)g to such a degree sa to deprive it of all credit." State libel laws, enforced sparingly, would suffice to reatore the integrity of the press. Jefferson did not intend the decla­ration to serve as a heckler's veto rX free lpeech, however. The mar­ketplace of ideaa would flourish only if diuent atanda "undisturbed aa monuments of the safety with whlch error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.' Granted, virtue and morality are integral aspeets of the free society, but Jefferson believed these checb must come from w;tbiD - and not be im.,..d by

the state.

Matt Schramm lows City

Balance To the EdItor:

In the state election campaign under way the Democrats are working hard to e~ect Avenson governor so that they will have complete control of the legislative process. I admire their zeal but not their wisdom. History has shown rather conclusively that when either party, Democrat or Republi­can, becomes dominant the taxpay­ers suffer from that imbalance. A party that dominates tends to take the state or the nation to one extreme or the other. We should not trust any individual or group with too much power. They are likely to abuse it.

Undoubtedly the Democrats will maintain their lead in state and national legislative offices. Friends, we'd better have a Repu­blican Branstad or Bush to counter that imbalance.

Our founding fathers strove for balance in their design for our government, a resounding b,it of common sense. We would do well to maintain that balance in all our elections to this day.

Hope for regret To the Editor:

Don Klotz Iowa City

From my perspective the "Home­coming Spirit" and "School Pride" at the UI ia a farce.

Every year for the past 86 years The CoUege of Engineering has built a Corn Monument. This monument, which sits on the Pen­tacrest, is our contribution to the univel"llity's Homecoming activi-

Living up to Lincoln's legacy:, ~=.~~~, . ) ' MOSCOW - Tholl Many Republican officeholders throughout the

nation and in Iowa have been backpedaling like mad on the issue of abortion. Lee Atwater advertises the GOP as a "hig tent" - one big enough to include both pro-choice and pro-life opinions. Gov. Branstad essentially has said that he thinks abortion is irrelevant to Iowa state government.

Independence; that is, to the essential core of the American regime: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happi­ness."

crats' pro-choice principle, Lincoln muaed ~ h h d h f h' d' , Moldavians attackE

t e c eers an laug ter 0 IS au lences: ,'It \: the frontier witl is, as a principle, no other than that, if III, I man chooses to make a slave of another lIIIa,' ednesday, vowing neither that other man nor anybody else hara 1 !der...posts off the faCl right to object." And "I suppose the institutiea, ,ibe" official Soviet of slavery really looks small to ige 14 , T1t88 reported. glas). He is so put up by nature t lash'. ) :themij' i ts, whc

All this is intended to portray the Republican party as an inclusive party: Since abortion is a divisive issue, the thought goes, the GOP should eschew enforcing its candidates to toe the line on the matter.

Yet however unfashionable the idea may be that political parties ought to stand for endur­ing principles, the GOP was founded on the idea that there are some principles upon which no compromise could be had. It advanced the opinion that there are, in fact, Republican principles, and that party candidates should embrace these principles.

In asserting this proposition, Lincoln argued, the American Founders "meant to set up a standard maxim for free society which should be familiar to all: constantly looked to, con­stantly labored for, and even, though never perfectly attained, constantly approximated, and thereby constantly spreading and deepen­ing its influence and augmenting the happi­ness and value of life to all people, of all colors, everywhere. "

his ' back would hurl him, but h UJIII Jto. Rom threl anybody else's back does not hurt him." ,border s and

How can we hold otherwise, if we are indifSt, unless the Kreml rent to abortion, but the incongruity that if.1ft 1 :~o~~t:: s~~d were cut out of our mother's womb we WO\IW' have been hurt. but that anybody else beiD& I ,TaBs said. cut out does not hurt them? The point. I "'Fass did not ment

ties. It sai<I the n childishly simple; it, is, after all, the well. , 'swoes and set fire

l known children's book, "Horton Hears a Who',' , that affinns the obvious: "A person is a penaa 're,linquished contr Indifference to the choice of "a moral, social

and political wrong," as Douglas counseled Electoral victory is a natural goal for~. Moldavian leaders.

no matter how small." '"'" "I :dIeckpoints after~

IT we look to the genesis of Republican principles we see that abortion, far from being a tertiary matter to these principles, lies at the very core of those issues addressed by Republi­canism.

These principles are best found in the life and work of the Republican master, Abraham Lincoln - the man who articulated RepUblican principles par exceUence.

Jim ROgers

political party, but victory ought to IDeIlI I '~Part of Moldavia something. Lincoln argued that to reject \erritory until it principle in order to secure victory in the short I t:~~~:c d~~i1~ run was both craven and, in the long I'WI" 'them Romanians b counterproductive: "If we shall adopt a plat. Ii h /1':'1 ' , ,a::nt, want to se onn t . at 181 s to recogruze' or expre88 our Soviet Union and

purpose, or elect a man that declares himteJf. , However, the Ga inimical to our purpose, we not only tab . 1JIIin0rity numberin nothing by our success, but we tacitly admi~ . that we act upon no other principles thall'. ' ,want to secede fro

It is here that we find that legalized abortion cannot be a matter of indifference to Republi­cans. Rather, the essential character of Repu­blican principles requires opposition to legal­ized abortion. An opposition not characterized by shrill denunciation, hate and imprudent action, but one birthed by good reason, a love of justice and mercy, and a commitment to the fundamental principles of the American proj­ect.

The Republican Party was founded, Lincoln said in his seventh debate with Stephen Douglas in 1858, in order to right "a moral, social and political wrong." That · is, "The sentiment that contemplates the institution of slavery in this country as a wrong is the sentiment of the Republican Party. It is the sentiment around which all their actions - all their arguments - circle, from which alJ their propositions radiate."

with his "don't care" position on slavery, was inconsistent with Republican principles. Lin­coln hated slavery not only because it was a "monstrous injustice," but also because it "forces so many really good men . . . into an open war with the very fundamental principles of civil liberty - criticising the Declaration of IndeP.8ndence and insisting that there is no right principle of action but self-interest."

Wednesday's bor desire to have 'the loaves and fishes: by which .. • 'the first reported vi in the end our apparent success is really." lG&gauz minority Ii injury to us." ,sion drive last monl

We must recall that Lincoln lost his 1858 ' ~Romania's presid Senate bid because of his desire to extend the I '141d Austrian televi rights recognized in the declaration to til 'has no designs on humans, and Lincoln assumed the presidenq JOJI Iliescu, in co wit.hout wlnning a majority of t.he popu\sr vote ' befpre the attacks in 1860. But by forgoing early majorities 'fut j 'checkpoints, said principle; Lincoln forged a Republican PIl!1Y' ' _

It was upon the truth recognized in the declaration, no less, that Lincoln founded the essential principles of the Republican Party. Principles that the Democrats repudiated in their "don't care" position on slavery.

that remained dominant for the next 70 yean. In the face of opposition to fundamen'bl

Republican principles Lincoln counseled stead· ' .. fastness. His counsel stands in stark contrut

to that of Lee Atwater and other RepublicaJt pundits. " ,

'~captives . Sever '8Iready done so, .visiting their husb ilt\raq.

This sentiment, however, was not innovative and ad hoc. Rather, "this chief and real purpose of the Republican Party," Lincoln said in an 1859 Ohio speech , "is eminently conser­vative." That is, Lincoln and the Republican Party "proposed nothing" but "to restore this government" to its original principles.

Today, again, the Republican Party affirms the truths of the declaration in the party's principled opposition to abortion . The right to life, as the declaration affirms, is an inalien­able right - one standing on equal ground with the right to liberty. And history also repeats itself with the Democrats embracing indifference toward legal respeCt for the ina­lienable right to life of all humans.

Lincoln counsled that the Republican Partfo( , 1859 resist the temptation of eschew princi\l1e ' for short-run electoral gain, and the lesson is relevant today: "If we do not allow ourselves't.t be allured from the strict path of our duty.bY , such a device as shifting our ground 8116 ) throwing ourselves into the rear of a Ie_ . who denies our first principle . . . then the future of the Repubican cause j.s safe ud •

, • "it's probably ju chological ploy," s ,ner. whose husbanq the crisis was vid 'Saddam to let fore ,clUldren go. Spea Desert, Calif., she 'ing" that we won' ~Mark) there .. . down to it, I will g , A few diplomats 1 the u.s. Embassy ' 'ing an l.rB ql order 1 'in the annexed nat ,/f.ilities and surro ,~d with troog Embassy also rem

Lincoln never grew tired of citing the principal commitment of the Republican Party to the central truths identified in the Declaration of

Lincoln rejected the pro-choice sentiment of the Democratic party: Only a craven self­centeredness, the 19th-century equivalent of the "Me Generation," could cause people to be indifferent toward an unjust choice, .

victory assured." . • ,

I Jim Rogers' column appears Thursdays on ther

What else couJd be at the root of the Demo- Viewpoints page. 1

Those :90od 01' days of 'Homeweenin~r I The administr

I do not know which bureaucratic enclave is responsible for scheduling Homecoming, but I stand in awe of its ironic sense of humor. It scheduled Homecoming right next to Halloween.

Perfect. The similarities are such that these last two weeks should have been

called Homeweening. The two festivals involve people dressed in strange costumes indulging in lots of role-playing and generally making fools of themselves. Especially Homecoming.

"Me? Are you funnin' me, Bob? Could I afford a bumblebee jumper of this size and quality if I wasn't livin' high on the hog? Workio' on 100 percent commission is FANTASTIC. Keeps you on your toes. I'm tellin' you, Bob, you gotta get with it, janitorial supply is the wave of the future."

Both holidays pay tribute to the historic past. With Halloween you might dress up like Napoleon. During Homecoming, you might sit

Mitch Martin

around with an old buddy and talk about the time when you got really really drunk, I mean so drunk you peed your pants and everybody else who was also really really drunk, like these guys were just wrecked, they just - get this - started laughing and laughing really really loud.

What these holidays are actually about, however, is fear. All Hallow's Eve playfully remembers those old . superstitions. Every bank and savings and loan in the world is wallpapered with crepe paper ghosts and goblins. With Homecoming, on the other hand, the ghosts and goblins that haunt you are real. Which made last weekend as scary as a Stephen King novel is and a Stephen King movie isn't .

As I walked around downtown this past weekend observing the visitors, I kept saying to myself, "Oh God. Oh Holy Yahweh. OhGodohGodohGodohGodohGod ooohGod ohwoeho God. Please, let there be life after college. Please give me a sign that I hllve more to look forward to than a minivan, a video club with a fabulous selection and scoring the occasional suck-up points with the Old Man at the company picnic." I can't help thinking that as I descend from the stage with a diploma in one hand and some dean's palm sweat in the other, I'm going to instantaneously turn into a middle-aged pumpkin.

You know things must be bad out "there," the way our alumni come

ties. It is a structure that is designed, by an engineering stu­dent and is constructed· by the members of the Associated Stu­de.nts of Engineering.

Once again, this year some people felt the need to destroy our monu­m.ent. Not only did they .totally demolish all of the hard work, time and money put into the first monu­ment - but once the structure was "reconstructed" (nowhere near its orginial form) it was once again vandalized.

It is a sad world we live in where a creatioh such sa the Corn Monu­ment - which is not offensive to anyone's beliefs or morals - is torn down "just for fun."

were involved; it still did happen. I would just like the people respon­

sible for this vandalism to know that their actions reflect on the university as a whole. And if you are a happy student at a university that has no concept of respect, integrity, conscience or school spirit, I really pity you. I am afraid for the future if it continues to consist of people who are as irres­ponsible ~d disrespectful as you. I hope someday you will realize the consequences of your actions, and will feel the same as all of the people you have affected.

Krllt. M. McDon.ld Vice preSident, Associated

Students of Engineering

back and pray at the altar of St. Elmo. With the possible exception 'br j <Pl::\!sident Reagan that parade of broken flesh known as the NBA Old-Timers' Game: is" J I ,of Americans as there any greater testament to the mortality of Homo sapienkind than invade Grenada in the Hawkeye AJumni Marching Band? : " 'administration also

How bad is it in the netherworld of post-academia? I have invented a . , 00(, 4mericans whe new drinking game. It is called Name the College Degree of Yo'i!r ' . ,to"panama in 1989 Waiter or Waitress. " I InBaghdad,Info

Bets are placed before your order is taken. Winner pays for the fintu I 'Spokesman Latif round. One needn't take the easy way out and ask the major of the I 'lIDJted States was person in question. Look for revealing clues instead. For instan~,' )I'\'ll!lrts" on the co pretend your waiter is trying to stiff you. Say: "I gave you a 10 and yolr ' , ,ign" guests" to s only gave me $8.50 back." If your waiter defends himself by sayinc. attack Iraq. "How do you know that the 10 is really here? How do you know you're' I . .Baghdad calls really here? Couldn't you simply ,be a l,rain floating in a vat ot· 'Westerners hel chemicals making all of this up?" He obviously has a degree In' ) 1 .l\qwait to deter philosophy. As we all know, a degree in philosophy is only good for ' 1 ,multinational for being annoying at parties and as mixologist school preparatory. .J Saudi Arabia "gu

As another example, ask your waitress why she deserves a big tip. It ~n sent to s she tells you that inventory is up as indexed in Standard & Poor's Ltgt" , j 'h}lQ)80 shields. of Obscenely Wealthly Guys and that grassroots spending is needed to. , ' .~~I ~ant to tell yo reverse a gradual softening trend, you know she has one of those higbly. luolt' m good con uneconomical economics degrees. ., \ 'places better th

It is a !I,m, painful game for me. I am coming to the end of a brillilillt ' , ltmilies, but Bus college 'Career. I have bitten deeply from the kumquat of knowled~. ' J m-excuse," Jassi The future appears bleak before me. • ~S Radio quo

[ keep thinking about the poor sap who ran the Denny's near my hiP j '4'lg,he will make school. He looked about 40 and had the sort of career that lell hbfl ' ,~l!lvision netwo buying shoes with "GASS" (Great American Shoe Store) written on the ' I messages from soles. He was frazzled and embittered from having one too many 'l4.their families t cocaine addicts for a hostess. His entire vocabulary consisted of the' 'illItbeing mistrea phrase, "Hey, all you damn high·school kids, get the hell outts my, • 'the United Sta place." At the time, I hated the old fart. But now at the mere mention ,2.1(},OOO troops in of the phrase "job fair," my complexion turns the color of the undead., # " ,the.la,rgest force s am plagued with the knowledge that in the soul of every collece ,tl)e..Vletnam war graduate lurks Willie Loman. So, in retrospect, I am surprised and even' IP.9 plans to sen thankful that the Denny's Guy didn't waste every last one us. ,. . About 100,000 so

You see, I used to feel superior to the Denny's Guy, and everyone e!~ j deployed by o.ther who had reason to prefer the past. Now I fear him. Because it's h~e i . :/:he 13-natlOn Ii Bruce Springsteen said, back before he got fame on the brain: "When 1 , ~ps from sever get older I hope I don't sit around talking about it, but I probably will. \ , nations - faces Yeah, just sitting back trying to recapture a little of the glory of, but ~i troops st~ti time slips away and leaves you with nothing, mister, but boring stoMes I lT4iI and Kuwalt. of . .. glory days. Egypt, along wi

-, has led Arab oppo

Mitch Martin's column appears Thursdays on the Viewpoints page. " • Speaking to repo

in Cairo, Mubar

Does Terry Branstad deserve another tenn as governor?~ Oct. 22, Dl] cites the governor's willing­ness to "veto legislative pork." What he failed to mention is that the governor's definition of legisla­tive pork includes the UI Libraries.

Between 1984 and 1989 the UI Libraries fell from 27th in the nation to 38th in the rankings of the , Association of Research Libraries. In 1989 Don Avenson and the Democratic leadership in the legislatqre sent to the governor a budget that included 8 miUion dollars in additional money for regents libraries in order to try to stop this deterioration in quality. Among all the many items of legislative pork in the budget,

difficult to improve our natio~ J

ranking. w .i

Jeff Cox " Iowa Clly ~

Letters policy .

This university should be ashamed and embarrassed about this occur­renee and incidenta limi1ar to this. I realize that this was done by a small minority of the total univer­sity population, but the po.int is it doetm't matter how many people

Terry Branstad singled out our Nice veto libraries for one of his line-item

Letters to the editor must be typed and signed and muit include the writer's address aiiit phone number for veriticati~. Letters should be no longer than one double-spaced page in length. The Daily Iowan reserves tOe right to edit for length a~

Anyone '1 assls~

J

To the Editor: vetoes. Michael Lorenger's endorsement of Our library is still reeling from

Terry Branstad ["Election 1990: thiI veto, which is making it very clarity. S

The Daily Iowan - Thursday, November 1, 1990 NATIONJWO~,

areindift.. that if", , we_ "

else beiIg I

point ,it the WtIJ, ,

a Who',' , is a penon

, I

Ethnic Moldavians storm j ......

~SSR-Romania border . .. I . ~ndr.w Katell ftili:Associated Press -I ~OSCOW - Thousands of ethnic Moldavians attacked checkpoints PI!' the frontier with Romania on Wednesday, vowing to "wipe bor­tler...posta off the face of the Eartli,· ,the- official Soviet news agency Tees reported.

I . .'J:hemii· i nts, who seek closer ties ,to. Rom threatened to kill border and their families

'unless the Kremlin withdraws lbeops sent to Moldavia last week ' Io . .enforce a state of emergency, ,Ta'sa said. , ~'fass did not mention any casual­ties. It saiC:l the rnili tants threw 'swnes and set fire to a fence but 'relinquished control of the two £heckpoints after speaking with Moldavian leaders. I ~Part of Moldavia was Romanian Writory until it was annexed by f.he- Soviets during World War II. Some ethnic Moldavians, many of them Romanians by birth or des­,ce.ut, want to secede from the Soviet Union and rejoin Romania. However, the Gagauz, an ethnic l!IIinority numbering about 150,000, ,WAnt to secede from Moldavia.

Wednesday's border unrest was 'the-first reported violence since the 'Gagauz minority began its seces­,sion drive last month. -ROmania's president, meanwhile,

'told Austrian television his country lbas no designs on Soviet Moldavia. ~an TIiescu, in comments recorded befpre the attacks on the border 'checkpOints, said Romanians are , -

concerned about ethnic Romanians in the Soviet Union but do not seek to revise the bordera.

Tass said 3,000 militants stormed the border checkpoints. However, the independent news agency Interfax put the number of mili­tants at 7,000. The discrepancy could Dot be resolved immediately.

"The militants pelted the Stoya­novka checkpoint with stones and then set the fence . around it on fire,· Tass said. Stoyanovka is a town on the border with Romania.

Moldavian leaders flew to the scene and persuaded the militants to surrender the two checkpoints they were blocking, Tass said with­out providing details. It did not say if both checkpoints were in Stoya­novka.

The Gagauz, descendants of Christians who fled religious perse­cution in Turkey 160 years ago, claimed control over part of Molda­via in October. They feared rising Moldavian nationalism and were angry over a law making Molda­vian the republic's official lan­guage.

Last week, the Gagauz began elections for an autonomous gov­ernment. Ethnic Moldavians opposed the move, and the elec­tions were called otT Saturday after talks between Gagauz representa­tives and a Soviet-Moldavian com­mittee.

The legislature of the Gagauz republic, which Moldavia's parlia­ment declared unconstitutional, elected a president on Tuesday. He is Stepan Topal, a 52-year-old civil

Moldavlan nationalls" attach a "ag to a bus and gather In national Assembly Square Tuesday evening In Chlalnau. They stormed border posta In the southern republIc Wednesday.

engineer. The militants who attacked the

frontier checkpoints Wednesday also threatened to go to the Molda­vian capital of Kishinev "to restore order; according to Tass.

The Moldavian Interior Ministry, reached by telephone in Kishinev, declined to comment on the unrest.

Moldavia's Communist Party Cen­tral Committee issued a statement condemning use of Mpower methods to solve national, political and

other conflicts by stirring up pas- • sions and mass psychosis." It con­demned seizures of party buildings in several townQ in the republic.

In June, tens of thousands of Romanians and Moldavians forced open several border crossings on the anniversary of Moscow's anne­xation of the region. In May, tens of thousands of Romanians streamed across eight bridges on a border river for the first time in more than a half-centurY.

:~lIlfL _____________________ ~ __ nti_nu_~_f_ro_m_p~ __ '_A FlE!c:lfc:IE!_L-_____________ c_o_m_inu_oo_f_m_m_~ __ e_1A

,th; captives. Several Britons have talready done so, including wives ,visiting their husbands being held in, Iraq. I "lC\! p-rohably lust another psy­chological ploy," said Dawn Baz­)ler, whose husband, Mark, early in Ult tru.\\! was videota\ll!d asking 'Saddam to let foreign women and ,chitdren go. Speaking from Palm Desert, Calif., she said, "I'm hop­\1l1J~ that we won't have to visit ~Mark) there ... but if it comes

'. .down to it, I will go.·

./f

ng~ :

I A few diplomats have held out at the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait, defy­'ing an Iraqi order to close missions in the annexed nation. Iraq has cut at\l\tie\\ and surrounded the com­~nd with troops. The British Embassy also remains open.

"our brothers in Iraq will under­stand well that the situation is very dangerous and could explode at any time."

If war comes, "Iraq will be ruined, and (it) will harm all of us," Mubarak said.

At a news conference in Washing­ton, Iraq's al-Mashat spoke of peace.

"We once more call for a nego­tiated solution, to have a political and diplomatic solution. We seek to avoid bloodshed,· he said.

He reiterated that Iraq was ready to begin negotiations on the crisis if issues such as Israel's occupation of the Gaza Strip and West Bank were included in the talks.

"We seek a peaceful solution to all of these questions; al-Mashat said. "All of them together. Now."

not be a large source of revenue for the UI, Casey said.

Each of the UI's12,OOO employees generates an estimated half pound of paper waste daily, but the UI will probably earn only $33,000 yearly from selling the waste to recycling companies.

The cash ' flow changes direction when it comes to recycling news­papers - the UI must pay compa­nies $10 per ton to get newsprint recycled.

"Garbage never paid for itself," said Casey.

The UI is not alone in its recycling efforts in Iowa City.

The cities of Iowa Ci~y and Coral­ville joined with the UI to publish a full-page ad in the Sept. 7 issue of the'DI informing the community of recycling opportunities in the area.

A number of local companies are also helping with recycling etTorts

by collecting batteries, glass, plas­tic bottles, pop cans, waste oil, yard waste and tires.

Statistics were compiled with infor­mation from the Environme'ltal Protection Agency, Worldwatch lnstitute, Environmental Action Coalition, World Resources Insti­tute, Friends of tM Earth, Earth Works Group, National Wildlife Federation and Greenpeace USA.

UISA __ Continued 'mm ~e 1A

tensen said. "Forgive me, gradu­ates, but this is a good compromise on an important legislation."

Mortensen added that because of the new system of student govern­ment, the Graduate Student Senate, could not al10cate travel funds to students as has beert done for the past nine years.

, 'MIe administration of former 'P'7:lJsident Reagan used the safety ,of ·Americans as a justification to invade Grenada in 1983. The Bush 'administration also cited the safety llt~ericans when he sent troops ,to .panama in 1989.

In Baghdad, Information Ministry 'Spokesman Latif Jassim said the '!.Wj;ed States was spreading "false I~Wrts· on the conditions of "fore­i8'Jl' guests" to seek an excuse to

Former West German Chancellor Willy Brandt announced he is traveling to Baghdad next week at Saddarn's invitation. Follow the· Hawks in the Daily Iowan

aUack Iraq. I .llaghdad calls the hundreds of IW.esterners held in Iraq and '!\\1wait to deter attack by the ,multinational force deployed in Saudi Arabia "guests." Many have _n sent to strategic sites as .hYJl:lan shields. • ft~I want to tell you that our guests IWII, in good conditions at some 'places better than many Iraqi .ftmiIies, but Bush perhaps wants

"I think it's most important now to listen to what the people in Bagh­dad think, to listen to whether they think there's a way out of their isolation; said Brandt, who won the 1971 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to bridge the Cold War gap between West Germany and the Soviet Union.

About 400 Germans are among thousands of foreigners stranded or held in Iraq. Brandt said he was going as a private citizen, not a representative of Bonn.

8JI excuse," Jassirn said. • I C'BS Radio quoted Jassim as say­

' iv,g,he will make available to U.S. .t~.!evision networks vi.deotaped messages from American. hostages 'to ,their families to show they were

on the ' many

of the '

Al-Mashat also reiterated claims that Iraqi agents in Kuwait had seized a secret document showing the CIA and Kuwaiti intelligence were plotting against Iraq before the invasion.

Peter Earnest, a spokesman for the U.S. intelligence agency, said the document is fake. outta rhy •

mention • undead. I •

college and even' •

. natio~

"

'lll1t ,being mistreated. , The United States has more than ,210 .. 000 troops in the gulf region -,the largest force sent abroad since \4Vietnam war - and Washing­'lpn plans to send 100,000 more.

. About 100,000 soldiers have been deployed by other nations. ":/:he 13-nation force - including

troops from several moderate Arab nations - faces about 460,000 Iraqi troops stationed in southern Ir411 and Kuwait.

Egypt, along with Saudi Arabia, has led Arab opposition to Saddarn. Speaking to reportera Wednesday in Cairo, Mubarak said he hoped

In other developments: • In Israel, a Defense Ministry

official said the army has distri­buted 3 million gas masks to protect civilians from a possible Iraqi chemical attack.

• Iranian President Hashemi Raf­sanjani said his country had asked ' Iraq to end its occupation of Kuwait, Tehran television reported.

• The official Iraqi News Agency said Switzerland would ship about 30 tons of medicine to Iraq.

A.~O ACl»O Acl>O ACl»O Acl>O Acl>O ACl»O Acl>O Acl>Q ACl»O

j In Recognition qf ~ 'i NATIONAL SERVICE DAY ~ ~iSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1990~ : « Alpha Phi Omega :::> : ! Win be working with the Ernergeocy Housing Project ~ : i The Fall ple4ge class will be working > « with Flderly Services Association. ~

~ Bea Friend d ' ~ ,~ BeaLea er B fSe .

eo Mce ~ Anyone wishing to Attend or Anyone requiring spedal

STORE HOOR-':

Are you considering an advanced degree in public administration, medicine,

law, social science, or business?

Graduate and Professional School Fair

Thursday, November 1, 1990, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Main Lounge, Iowa Memorial Union

Representatives from more than 60 schools are here today to answer your questions. Pick up a list of the

attending schools in yesterday'S Daily Iowan, or at the door of The Main Lounge.

Sponsored by Career Information Services, Business and liberal Arts Placement, Engineering Placement,

Law Admissions, Educational Placement, and Graduate Admissions. For information call 335-3201.

TWO LOCATIONS 712 3rd /we. s.E. c.dIr RIpidI 314 4311

843 S. RIvwIIde Dr. Iowa CIty 354-2200

THE BEST SELECTION. . THE BEST PRICES.

PERIOD.

Powder Keg Parka"

POWDER KEG A System Parka From

+ Columbia Sportswear Company

• 100% Nylon Bergundtal Cloth outershell

• Zip out down REVERSIBLE Thlnsulate liner

• Radial sleeve design • Snap-closed front storm flap • Four exterior zlpper-closed

pockets

PLUS! Vamooses· Ylhlrllblrds .BugaboOS .Wlzbangs eCr1tertons eGlzzmos

.ANDMOREI Men's and Women's!

HOURS M&.TH·8TOII T.W·F·S - 8 TO 5:30 SUNDAY: Iowa City ·11 TO 4 Cedar Rapid. -10T04

rII1rllJiIl: f~'"'' ...,...,.

PRICES GOOD THR.U:

Nov. 10

assistance contact Alpha Phi Omega at 335-3274. ~ spedaI Thanks to: ROCKY ROCOCCO'S >

M& TH 10-9pm T. W. F 10-5:30 Sat. 10-5:30 Sun. 12-5:00 338-0553

PAUL REVERE'S PIZZA e < for their donations C I YT£41

207 E. Washington \'A DIFFERf:'NTK\NO OFCLOTHIN<3 STORE:" ,

A~aA~A~aA~aA~A~Acl>nAcl>nAcl>OAcl>O

V~i __ ~ __ ~ _____________________________________________ TheD8~~ __________ ~~ ___ ~ __ ~ ____________________ ~~~~---

, Nation/World editor ~ John Kenyon. 335-5864 Nation/World ,~ .................... ----.. ~--................ ----............................... ,

/ Troops fire on Hindu fundamentalists in India; at least 24 dead

, J

B, VII-, Joshi The Associated Press

AYODHYA, India-ThousandaofHindu fundamentalists failed in a new attempt Wednesday to storm an ancient shrine claimed by Muslims, and at least 24 more people died in violence sparked by the diapute,

in his beleaguered eoaIition. Armed panuniJitary troops blocked about

5,000 Hindus from attempting to re-enter the mosque in Ayocihya, wbich has been the center of a decades-old dispute between India's Hindu majority and Muslim minority.

injured when police opened ftre to throw back the rioters. At least two of the injured died Wednesday, doctors said.

The dispute has killed at least 170 people in the past eight days and has pushed Singh's ll-month-old government to the verge of collapse. The Hindu fundamen­talist Bharatiya Janata Party withdrew support from the governing coalition last ~nth to protest government policy on the temple project,

political crisis received another aetbd· Wednesday, when the deput~ministerr.i sporta, Bhakta Charan Das, resigned in' protest of the police action at Ayodhya. , Press Tnut oflndia said at least 22 other

people were killed in street battles between Hindus and Muslims in four widely separated cities.

Das, a Hindu, accused Singh in bia' ~8ignation letter of "lack of foreeighW.'

A government minister resigned protest­ing Prime Minister V.P. Singh's attempts to block construction of a Hindu temple on the disputed site, deepening the crisis

Hindu fundamentalists broke through police cordons on Tuesday and chipped away bricks and bits of plaster from the one-story mosque, which they want to replace with a temple.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Margaret Tutwiler said the administration is "very distressed by the violence and loss of life and we hope that this crisis can be averted without further bloodshed."

The desertion left; Singh without a majority in Parliament, but he h88 said he will win a vote of confidence scheduled for Nov. 7.

nes8" in tackling the crisis. •

The dispute also triggered ence in neighboring Bangladesh, an Islamic nation, where Muslim mobs attacked: temples and Hindu shope and homes after heariDlt of the sitUAtion in Ayodhya. , At least five Hindus were killed and 20 Singh's attempts to ride the religious and

Experts praise change in budget law B, Alan Ff8m The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Congress and the White House have once again postponed the date by which the federal deficit must be eliminated.

But in their latest change in the budget law, they have included something new that is drawing raves from some fiscal experts: tight spending controls.

"We never before have had effec­tive expenditure controls," Carol Cox, president of the watchdog Committee for a &sponsi,ble Fed­eral Budget, said Wednesday. "That is incredible progress. ~

Under the original 1985 version of the Gramm-Rudman balanced-

Arsonists celebrate in Detroit B, Wllllem S. Bergatrom The Associated Press

DETROIT - John Holtyn moved in with his daughter Wednesday, a day after his tidy home burned in a Devil's Night arson fire. Francine Smith watched her garage burn after saving the family cars.

The Holtyns and Smith believe they were among the victims of arsoni.sts who celebrated the illegal holiday tradition known as Devil's Night by setting scattered blazes citywide.

budget law, the federal shortfall was supposed to be eliminated this year. When the law was changed in 1987, the target date was pushed back to fiscal 1993.

Neither goal ie attainable. The deficit for the fUlCal year that ended Sept. 30 wae $220.4 billion, the second highest total ever. This year's gap is projected to exceed $250 billion - a record - even with the giant deficit-reduction bill Congress passed 188t Saturday.

But that same measure contained extensive change8 in the budget process that de-emphasizes the law's focus on react;ing specified deficit targets.

Instead, it groups many kinds of federal spending into three sepa-

rate categories - domestic, defense and foreign affairs - and puts a spending cap on each of them.

If the cap is exceeded, most pro­grams in that category would be slashed by an amount equal to the excess spending - a powerful incentive to not go beyond the limit.

The creation of the three separate categories is important for another reason: It prevents lawmakers from increasing domestic spending by cutting military programs. This satisfies the Bueh administration, which has been eager to prevent the Democratic-controlled Con­gress from slashing the Pentagon's budget so it could beef up social

Detroit flreflghtera struggle to get the first stream of water going .s ftamea completely engulf two hou .. a on Detrolfa eaat aide Tueaday night, known aa Devil'. Night, when arion become. common.

The worst Devil'e Night came in 1984, when 810 fires were set over three days.

tolerance for any kind of in dents. like that. We'll be out again tonight," he said Wednesday.

programs. "They know ... we're not going to

cut money in one area and switch it to another," said House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo.

The three categories will be com­bined into one in 1994.

Other controls have been put on the fastest-growing category of spending, benefit programs such as Medicare and Social Security . These programs will be allowed to grow with inflation and as the population increases, but any expansion in benefits would have to be balanced by an equal cut somewhere else.

Some critics of the new law have argued that it shiJts congressional budget power to the White House.

One Dozen Roses . $798 Reg. S30

Mini carnations

$249 Reg. $6 bunch

One Dozen carnations

$449 Reg. SIS

(Caoh. Cany 'NIl" &oppUoo lMt.)

•• h.elZ flo

Grand Cayman ~~ $669 Jamaica ~~: $479 Nassau ~~: $539

Including round-trip air, hotel and morel

Call us now!

Meacham Travel SeIVice 229 E. Washington 351-1360

1527 S. Gilbert 351-1900

t:ilPPI.E VACATIONS@ rrlces .r. per person. double o<cup.II~cy Including round' lrlp air on Amertc.n Tr.nt Air. Uo Tur Or SCheduled carrie ... rrlu,. 14Ib1e<:llo ••• 11· abUlly .nq vary by depaflU'" <Yle. durallon and holel. Forolan de"",· lur. ,.oct .ddlllo"",. See the Fair T,ade COnitaCIIn I~ Appl. brochUro.

Firefighters and thousands of block-watchers remained .01\ guard Wednesday night for the end of the arson spree that traditionally begins Oct. 29 and continues through All Hallows Eve.

This year's fires left. a haze over some commuter routes and cut visibility to six miles at the city airport late Tuesday.

Wright said his patrol group seized .......

one youth and took hUn to the r-----------------------------------------------__ ------------------~ Although Devil's Night is Oct. 30,

the night before Ha\)oween, arson ftres also are set the night before and the night after.

"Tonight's Hall.oween, and the basic thing we're trying to do is make sure the kids are safe," said volunteer patrol organizer Ray Wright. .

Fire and police officials on Wed­nesday refused to discuss the num­ber of fires set. Mayor Coleman Young said the number would be revealed at a news conference Thursday or Friday.

Last year, the mayor's office reported 223 fires between Oct. 29 and Oct. 31, with 115 of those on Oct. 30. Leaders of the firefighters' union, who backed a Young oppo­nent in Jast year's mayoral contest, counted there were 412 fires over the three days. The union's count included blazes in rubbish and in trash bins; the city counted only structure fires.

"On the surface it's . very, very clear that we still have a Devil's Night problem," Young said Wed­nesday. "But those problems are much more under control today than they were .•

The Holtyns moved to their daughter's house on Wednesday. Holtyn said vandals torched the vacant house next door, and the flames spread to his home.

"We just saw a flame next door ­something blew and it just started burning," said John Holtyn, 65.

Smith clutched her nightgown as she watched flames she believed to be intentionally set destroy her garage and spread to another next door. "What's Wrong with people, anyway?" she asked Wednesday.

Patrol organizer Wright said he saw only one small fire in his neighborhood, down from six area blazes the same night a year ago.

"We're trying to really go (or zero

police station. "He was pouring gas. He was tl'}'ing to set a garage on fire," he said.

Block-watehers in some neighbor­hoods reported no vandalism. "In this area we had none, not one brush fire," said patrol captain Sims Charlemagne, whose group represents 20,000 residents living near the city's western border.

In southwest and northwest Detroit, ·we have now buried Devil's Night," said Alberta Black­burn, a mayoral aide who coordi­nated citizen patrols.

Edie Albion, who handles claims on hundreds of Detroit properties for Arlan's Insurance Center, reported just one ftre claim Wed­nesday, She speculated that the Devil's Night fires involved' mostly vacant, uninsured properties.

In nearby Flint, 144 fires were reported Tuesday night, down from 194 the same night the year before, said Assistant Fire Chief Ron Downing.

Sentences reduced for Israeli soldiers in connection with military brutality B, Sergei Shargordonak, 34-month-old Palestinian uprising. The Associated Press The three-judge court earlier this

month found the defendants guilty JERUSALEM-An Israeli soldier of the Feb. 7, 1988, Gaza Strip

W81 sentenced Wednesday to two beating of brothers Khaled and months in prison for participating Eyad Akkal. Eyad died within in the beatings of two Palestinian hours at Shira Hospital in Gaza brothers, one of whom later died. City. .

'l1lree other soldiers were given They were charged with aggra-sUBpended &entences by the mili- vated asaault because prosecutors tary court. All four - who could found no direct connection between haWl faced a maximum of 20 years the beating and the death. in prison each - were demoted in wae1 army radio also quoted the rank. judges aa saying the deCendants

The soldiers maintained through- "violated basic norms of an out the trial they were only foUow- advanced society ' " (and) oper­ing ordera from top officers to beat ated under the distorted concept Paleltinian riot suspects. The that everything is justifiable for order has since been changed. the sake of a military mission .~

A1Bo Wednesday, a spokeeman Cor 1st Lt. Ofer Reahefwasordered to Defenee Minister Moshe Arena said serve two months in prison, given a the minister propoeed limiting the six-month suspended a:entence and number of Paleetiniana working in reduced in rank to sergeant. lanel. The plan would revene ~. Yitzak Levitt, 32, received a Iar.eli policy bepn in 1967, when three-month lIupended sentence l8lU1 captured the West Bank and and was demoted to 1st lieutenant. the Goa Strip. The panel said he was not directly

Laat month, Uraeli authoritiee involved in the beatinga but was cIoaed oft' the occupied lands for reaponaible for them. four days following a wave of Staff Sgt. Eli Shukrun and Sgt. violence between Palestinians and Gad Zinbar were each given a Jew&. five-month sUipended term and

The case of the four soldiers was reduced in rank to private. ..... a teat of the army's willing- Earlier this month, the chief army .-"to puniah troop' convicted of ' prosecutor ordered an Inveetiga­brutality in lupprel.iDl th. tiaa of Col. Effie Fein, who W8I

commander of the soldiers' unit at the time of the beatings.

In the early months of the upris­ing, officers said they were ordered to beat people caught rioting, but not to strike those in custody. But many soldie" said the orders were not clear. The army has since banned beatings as punishment.

Arens'. proposal to limit the Pales­tinian work force in [srael was made Tuesday before Parliament's Foreign Affairs and Defense Com­mittee, said 8pokesman ,Dan Naveh.

Meanwhile, Israel is under pres­sure to find jobs for tens of thou­sanda of Soviet Jewish immigrants in a country with an unemploy­ment rate above 10 percent.

The four-day closure of the borders W88 taken after Arab-Jewh street violence left five dead following the Oct. 8 Temple Mount killings of 20 Palestinians. It kept about 110,000 Arabs off from their jobs in Israel .

A three-man commission appointed by Prime Minister Yitz­halt Sbamir to look into the Temple Mount ehootinp released its find­

' ings Friday, stating that Palesti­nians had caused the violence by throwing 8&ones at police and that police were justified in UlIDg gun­fire because their Uvea were in danpr. /

ATTENTION STUDENTS! . -U OF I STUDENT SENATE

§IFm:CCTIAIL lEILlECClfI((Q)N§ NOVEMBER 13, 1990

Students interested in running for the following U of I Student Association seats should pick up Guidelines and a Signature Form at the Office of Campus Programs and Student Activities at 145 IMU. The following seats are currently vacant in the Undergraduate Activities Senate & Undergraduate Collegiate

I Senate:

• I ues BUSINESS (2) EDUCATION (2) ENGINEERING (3) NURSING (2) PHARMACY (2)

LIBI!RAL ARTS (12) -NA1URAL SCIENCE (4) -SOCIAL SCIENCE (2) -HUMANITIES (3) -FINE ARTS (3)

VAS FAMn..Y HOUSING (1)

Letters of intent to run for a specific Graduate and Professional Student Senate constituency should be in Election Board Box OCPSA, 145 IMU, by no later than 6:00 p.m., November 6, 1990, or may be brought to the mandatory candidates meeting. GPSS DENTISTRY (3) MEDICINE (12) GRADUATE (43) •

• FOR MORE INFORMATION REGARDING VACANT GRADUATE SEATS, PLEASE CONTACf YOUR DEPARTMENTAL OFFICE.

Signature Fonns, letters of intent, and a required bond of $25 per cru:tdidate must be turned in at the mandatory candidates meeting on November 6, 1990 at 8:30 p.m. in the Indiana Room, 346 IMU .. Please direct .questions to the OCPSA at 335-. 3059 or the University of Iowa Student Assembly at 335-3263.

Mucl :abou

e

Now wait. "why piss and -drag coach , ~aer was man on

• ing to "" ... ..., ... , ~ut

A ing swimmer third

The Daily Iowan

Much ado :about non­

e shirts • • The circus blew into town via the

I 10cal print and broadcast media on I Tuesday. It's not a very big circus, I but the clowns and freaks involved ~ put on a pretty good show. I What time iI it?

It's not going to be Boom-Time I anymore. KGAN.TV. Sports ' Director John Baer had the prover­, bial rug pulled out from under him by Iowa Athletic Director Chal·

' mers "Bump" Elliott and the , NCAA, and nearly broke out in tears during the 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. newscasts on Tuesday.

1 All that" was missing from the Boom-Time Funeral was a red,

1 foem-rubber nose, a technicolor ' fright-wig and the bleary-eyed I makeup. But what transpired was nearly as funny.

, Baer, angered by an article that I appeared in the Cedar Rapids ,Gautte on Tuesday, launched into !. spiel that la8ted the entire ,portscast. He called the Boom­Time T-shirt scandal a "non-issue"

I leveral times, for the eTltire 8POrts­j cast, and defe~ded h~self against the Gazette article.

• ----------------

Now wait. A "non-issue"? Then ' why piss and moan about it? Why • drag coach Hayden fry into it? • ~er was obviously a desperate man on Tuesday. and he did noth-

• ing to conceal this fact. He flailed I ~bout the sportscast like a drown­, tog swimmer going down for the :third and final time. By taking his 9WD advice and treating this petty

I quagmire like a "non-i8sue" he • might not have sounded like a ,grieving mother. · The sports department at the

''lkuette probably danced around l:the newsroom in glee after Baer I held up the their sports section. Baer shouldn't ha\'e chided the pewspaper with his sickly whining,

• 'lifter all. didn't the Gazette simply ,ao its job by reporting on a contra­~ersial topic salient to its Illaders?

' It's not swimming lessons for lhappy, little tots at the municipal

• ,pool, but it is news. I ' "It's going to take more than one I headline to get rid of me," Baer said. This may be true, but if he devotes the precious 3112 minutes delegated to the sportscast for a

, reaction to some negative publicity he received then he may just

I eliminate himself. This is probably ' something the Gazette staff didn't • even consider.

"Coach Fry, are you mad at us?" j Baer asked. Hmmmm ... what has ' been discussed in the Iowa 8POrts • media this week? Oh yeah, Iowa is playing Illinois this week for first

I place in the- Big Ten. There- was ' lOme other stuff about Iowa high I lIChool football playoffs in the news, but according to the actions of Baer

, these are the real "non-issues." I There was another clown lurking 1 around the circus, one who was sporting a sneer. He was the kind

I Ii clown that scared you when you I were little, the kind you struggled I to get away from when your mom made you kiss him on the mouth. He used words like "infuriates," "ineligible" 8J1d "upset."

This clown, of course was Bump Elliott. Why was he so angry at

• Baer? Can you say "ineligible players?" This is defmitely a good 1'881jOn . . The real question here is why Elliott didn't act on the situa-tion sooner. Boom-Times has been a weekly occurrence, has usually involved Hawkeye players and has had all the subtlety of an insurance lIIlesman. This is not exactly an abacure event.

1 Elliott must have known about Boom-Times. He should have

I a1n!ady questioned whether it was 1 legal under NCAA rules to give

Itudent-athletes T-shirts and \ parade them .around in commer-

cials promoting a local television I lpo . deast. He should have

Idmi made a mistake by not looking into Boom-Times further.

The real reason for this freak ahow • the greedheads at the NCAA.

I Doe8 a 57 T-ahirt gift really consti­tute a rules violation? This falla llDder the "Why are you giving me • parking ticket when someone is

,bem, murdered acJ'Olll the street" WOlD.

t Dlinols, the Don Corleone of the Bil Ten, is skirting some rough "atar with the NCAA at the mOlllent. It has something to do

. with cars and money offered to a recruit. Yet Iowa players get 1q11~ for Boom·Titne T-shirta alid are ordered to return them to

See ....... PIgI2B

.0 Big money? Mike Tyson is fined $100 in compensatory damages for fondling. Page 38

Thursday. November 1. 1990

Iowa scares Minnesota with big win . .

ay arlan Gaul The Daily Iowan

Tricking and treating were the themes of the night when the Iowa volleyball team faced Big Ten rival Minnesota in a Halloween match at Carver-Hawkeye Arena Wednes­day.

The Hawkeyes played a trick on the Gophers in game two, scoring 12 unanswered points to rally from a 14-4 deficit and ahock coach Stephanie ScbJueder's team, 16-14.

And the treat was A 15-5, 16-14, 15-11 victory that allowed the Hawkeyea to keep Garfield of Dinkytown, a stUffed cat which is awarded to the winner of the Iowa-Minnesota volleyball series each year.

Garfield remained in the hands of the Hawkeyes for a second conse­cutive year as Iowa swept the seriea for the first time aince 1984. The Hawkeyes edged the Gophers, 13-15, 13-15, 15-11, 15-12, 15-6 in Minneapoilis, Minn., Oct. 3. .

Despite the sweep, Iowa coach Ruth Nelson said her team's perfonnance Wednesday was "like night and day" compared to its three-game sweep of No.)3 minois Saturday.

"We weren't clicking tonight like we did against Illinois," said senior Ruth Spethman, who hit .393 with 14 kills and a team­leading 16 digs in the match.

"Tonight we were hesitant and forced things,- she explained. "But the big thing was we got Garfield."

"It's like Ijust told my players, the moat important thing is that you win,- Nelson said. "Sometimes it's pretty and sometimes it's not so pretty. You just have to accept iC

was the catalyst, contributing two kills and one block as Iowa build a 14-4 lead and won, 15-5.

The Gophers returned the favor in game two, scoring nine straight points to turn a 5-4 lead into a 14-4 advantage.

But the lead wasn't big enough. The Hawkeyes survived six game­points and scored 12 atraight points to escape with a 16-14 win.

Spethman capped the rally with a game-winning kill, and seniors Jenny Rees and Barb Willis each had two kills during the stretch.

"It's like I just told my players, the most important thing is that you win."

Ruth NellOn lowl yolleybaH coach

"That broke our backs,· Minne­sota coach Stephanie Schlueder said after the match. "Morale-wise, it deflated us . .. that was the tUrning point. I thought we had played well up until that point.

"I saw the panic in their eyes after Iowa got to 11 points; Scblueder continued. "Iowa had a great come­back . . . but with a lead like that, we should have been able to scOre one point."

The victory allowed the Hawkeyes to even both their overall record (11-11) and their conference mark (6-6). Minnesota fell to 6-20 and 1-11.

The Gophers again gained the upper hand in. game three, 7-4, but Iowa used a 4-1 spurt to draw even at eight. The Hawkeyes later pulled out of an 11-11 deadlock with four straight points, three of them on kills by Willis, to seal the victory.

Iowa setter Janet Moylan (3) reaches up for the ball as Junior middle blocker Trista Schoenbeck

(12) stan~ ready for a dig In the Hawkeyes' match with Minnesota Wednesday nlghL

In the first game, the Hawkeyes broke open a close 6-4 contest with e,ight straight points. Spethrnan

Willis led the Hawkeyes hit .256 with a game-high 18 kills, 15 digs and four blocks in the match. Rees also reached double digits in kills,

with 12, and hit .344. She also recorded 16 digs.

The Hawkeyes next action will be a home contest with Northern Iowa

.

Suns visit land of. rising sun The Associated Press

Coach Cotton Fitz8immons wants to make sure hi8 Phoenix Suns aren't burned out Friday night when they open the season against Utah in Tokyo.

"I want to make Sl}re this team is sharp, " Fitzsimmons said before the Suns flew to Japan for the first regular·season NBA game outside North America. "If we happen to get beat by a very good Utah team, I don't want anybody saying it was because of a tough trip. n

To a certain extent, it's alreay been a rough trip. To get his team acclimated to the I6-hour time difference, Fitzsimmons held practice at 3 a.m. both Monday and Tuesday before flying to Japan for games Friday and Saturday.

Elsewhere Friday night, it will be Orlando at Atlanta, Cleveland at Boston, New York at Char­lotte, New Jer8ey at Indiana, Washington at Miami, Milwaukee at Detroit, Philadelphia at Chicago, Dallas at Minnesota, Golden State at Denver, Sacramento at the Loa Angeles Clippers and Houston at Portland.

The Loa Angeles Lakers open Saturday at San Antonio while Houston is at Seattle to start the SuperSonics' season.

Fitzsimmons can't be blamed for trying to maintain momentum. The Suns, picked by many to reach the NBA Finals and possibly win the first title in their

beyland is named NL top skipper ay aen Walker The Associated Press

NEW YORK - Jim Leyland, who turned the Pittsburgh Pirates into contenders and guided them through the pressure of a pennant race, was selected the National League manager of the year on Wednesday.

23-year history, were 7-1 in the preseason. ·We've improved the last two years and we want to

improve some more this year," Fitzsimmons said. ·Onte you reach a certain plateau, though, 1 find it's harder to get improvement."

Phoenix reached the Western Conference fmals for the second straight time last season, but was beaten in six games by Portland.

"I think the biggest thing we got from pre8eason is that we all now realize we should. win the Pacific Division," guard Kevin Johnson said. "We got off to slow starts the last two years.' Eastern Conference

Detroit is trying to become the first team in 24 years - when Boston won the last of eight straight league titles - to win three seasons in a row.

The Pistons, built around guard Isiah Thomas and a supporting cast that includes defensive aces Joe Dumars and Dennis Rodman, figure to be pressed in the Central Division by the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls.

"We match them in the first unit .. ." Chicago coach Phil Jackson said while conceding Detroit's great depth.

While the Pistons have virtually the sarne team, the Bulls made . some moves. They added guard Dennis Hopson and forward Cliff Levingston.

The Pistons are heavy favorites, but don't hand out See NBA. Page 2B

Leyland took a team that went 74-88 and was flfth in the NL East in 1989 and molded it into a division champion at 95-67. The Pirates overcame the New York Mets and all the odds in the stretch to fmish with the second-beet rec­ord in baseball.

.JIm laytand of 1M PIttIburgh Pirate. amlle. at • reporter'. antic. during I PreiS conference Wednelday night In Ptttaburgh Wh.,.. he talked about baing nlmed the 19110 NIUonal League Mlnag.r of the · Year by the a.aaba. Write,. A.IOCIIUon of America.

The Pirates had Barry Bonds and Bobby Bonilla for offense, but did not have a set s,tarting rotation or a relief ace. Leyland juggled his staff and wound up wit 18 different pitchers getting victories.

Leyland got 17 of the 24 firat-place votes and ftniahed with 99 points. Lou PinieUa, whQ led Cincinnati to the World Seriee championship in his first season with the Reda, got three first-place votes and was second with 49 points.

Montreal's Buck Rodgers also got three tJnt..pJace vote. and tv .. tied

for third with 32 points 'with Los Angeles' Tom Lasorda, who got the other firat-place vote. San Francis­co's Roger Craig and New York's Bud Harrelson tied for fourth with two points each.

No manager was named on all 24 ballots. Two members of the BaBe­ball Writers Association of America in each NL city vote, and votihg was completed before the start of the playoffs, in which Cincinnati beat Pittsburgh in six game •.

Jef£Torborg ofthe Chicago White Sox was selected the American

League mabager of the year on Tuesday.

Leyland, 45, won in his fu\h BeaSOn with Pittsburgh. He was a career minor league man before that, . playing seven seasons as a catcher in the Detroit organization and then managing for 11 years in the Tigers' system.

He joined the White Sox as a coach in J982 and studied under mana· ger Tony La RU8sa, who remains one of Leyland'. closest friends, and was finally hired to manqe in

See \..rIIINl. PIIQII 28

on Nov. 6. The Panthers were 21-1 entering the week.

"We need to work hard in practice this week," Spethman said of

Iowa's six-day layoff before the Northern Iowa match. "Every game is so important at this time of year."

Royals, Wilson bid ain indifferent adieu ay Doug Tucker The Asso.ciated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Willie Wilson's career with the Kansas City Royals came to a close Wed­nesday; ending 13 years of headline-making highs and lows that included a World Series cham­pionship, a batting title and a drug conviction.

The Royals , as expected, announced they are not offering the 35-year-old outfielder a con­tract for next selijJOn.

"He has been a tremendous asset to this ballclub for 13 years,n general manager Herk Robinson said. "He helped us into two World Series and provided tremendous excitement for the fans of Kansas City. We'll miss him and we wish him well. He was a great ball-player." -

Wilson, a .290 lifetime hitter who hit .332 to win the 1982 batting title, could not be reached immedi­ately for comment. ,

The Royals have at least four centerfielder candidates for next year, including Bo Ja,ckson and Brian McRae, who played well when brought up from the minor leagues in August.

"I don't know that he was greatly surprised by our decision," Robin­son said. "But Willie took our notification, if you will, as a true professional."

Wilson, who filed for free agency last week, is the third veteran to be cut from the roster. The club earlier notified longtime second baseman Frank White, 40, and catcher Bob Boone, 42, that they would not be offered 1991 con­tracts.

Wilson was supplanted as the everyday center fielder last season but played in 115 games and hit .290. He led the Royals in stolen bases with 24.

Wilson said after the season that he did not expect to return to the Royals.

Whim the Royals called him up as a rookie in 1978, Wilson was widely acknowledged aa the fastest man in the mlijor Jeagues. A. the No. 1 running back prospect in the nation, he was heavily recruited out of high school in Sum.nlit, N.J., and signed a letter-of-intent to play football at Maryland.

The nen season he led the league with 83 stolen bases, then hit his full stride in 1980 and helped thrust the Royals into their first World Series.

He finished with a team-record

Willie WlllOn

230 hits, scored a club-record 133 runs and shared the league lead with 15 triple8 in one of the moat productive seasons any player enjoyed during the entire decade. He also became only the second player in major league history to log 100 hits from each side of the plate, and broke Mickey Mantle's switch-hitting record with 133 runs.

From July 20-Sept. 30,1980 he set an American League record with 32 consecutive stolen bases.

In 1982, Wilson became the second Royal in two years to win the _\1. batting title, barely edging Mil· waukee's Robiri Yount.

But the following November, Wil­son and four other members of the Royals became ensnared in a drUg investigation in the metropolitan area. He eventually pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of attempting to possess cocaine and served a three-month sentence at a minimum-security facility .

He was suspended for one year but was reinstated the foUowing May 15, maintaining that he was not a user but was trying to pqrchase the drug at the request of a friend.

Also sentenced in the probe were pitcher Vida Blue, first baseman Willie Aikens and outfielder Jerry Martin. .

"Willie Wilson's style of play brought a lot of excitement to the. Royals' organization,· Robinson BBid.

Wilson has indicated he does not believe his career is over.

-1 think Willie would like to continue playing. We would cer­tainly wish him well," Robinson said.

2B SCOREBOARD

Transactions

-~ BOSTON RED SOX-Ag_ to ........ whh <hg _ . pilcher. on • ~ ..... tract.

""~ the contnICIs of Tom Flocher. DeteIt lJvemoia. Don O'NeIl. Jeff Plympton. oa... OWen and Scott ToyIOr. pltchen. hom Pa1ud<et of IIIIomotioMf ~.

KANSAS CrTY AOYAL&-Announced they wt. ,.,.. 0"", • oontrae:t 10 WI .. WI_. __ fer next aeason

N_La .... CINCINNATI REllS-Oectined to .KetcIM ,.,

C¥lftl..et option 01 Ron Oeste<. oecond ~ ~OS ANGELES OOOGER~u''- !he

DOnI,acts of Elle 1WmI. "nil _ . lind Henry Rodng ..... oulflekler. from San Antonio of the T .... LMgue. R&-inaIated Or .. Hero/Iioef.nd Tim Belcher. pltchen, lind Jett H.milton. third _ . from the SkI8y emergency __

It" PHILADELPlitA PHILUES-Ag,Md to "'rm.

with O.",en o.uIton. cat_. on • ~r oanI..ct. lUmed Johnny Pod ... poldllng .....""

PITTSBURGH PlRATE5-Oed,,*, to ._cl .. filiI conllKl option of Ted P<>w.<. pHch..-

SAN oteGO PADRE_Ired Jaclt .... i00i. bat· ling Instruct", Named MeN Renenmund, banlng ~tor

_.u-Ja_ OKLAHOMA CITY I19ER~'med Tommy

Thompeon manager; ano Jeff Md~ and Stan Hough ooacheI. • ....... CoaItLa_

TlICOMA TIGER~tmed .Ie" _ men. go<. and Glenn Abboll pitching COKII.

_La_ CH ... TTANOOGA LOOKOUTS-Hemed t.lell_

Spark. dlrecto, of p,omotlon. and .peel.1 .. en .. ; ~ Braazeu director 01 .. lea; and .... 11_ Riley dlnaclor 01 ma"'etIng and public rellllonL

HUNTSVILLE STAR~emed CONy Parton. m_ger. and Bart Bradley pltc"lr)g COKII .

-~ ...... DlSON MUSlQEs-tI."., Gar:y Jon. """,. _ • • nd Scott Budne' pitching ooacll.

_welle .... SOUTHERN OREGON-N.mad Dick ScoU

manager. end GlI Pan.,...", pitching OOIIch. IAIKETIIAll

.. ___ I ..... _L ..... ... TlANT ... HAWKS-Waived Duane Ferr." .nd

O,,,,a,, Henrie. to .... arclll.

The Daily Iowan - Thursday, November 1, 1990

GOLDEN ST ... TE W ... RRIORs-PI.cad Jim Pet...". Iorw"_tar. and Sart Koloed. _nt. on the ...... _ lilt. W._ Stan Kim-brough. _rd.

SACIlAMlEHTO KlNGs-R"'-d .... rty G0n­Ion. center. and Joe Fredrick, guard.

c.. .. ............. AaMdadon COLUMBUS HORIZON-W.I-..d Mel Kenne<ti. g-0\J,0\[) CrTY THUHOER-&gned Stove _

and .... '" ~ guatd-lo<Ward and Ron 0<_. lorward. FOORAU. ........ ~ .......

CLEVEI.ANO BROWNS-IIHigned Ken "-. I_kef Waiwd Eugene Rowell. wide ""'ver.

INIlIANAPOUS COL TS-SJoned RUsty Hilger. quan._ et.tmed Mickey Washington. cor. nerbaci<, oil the practice squad . Re-tlgned ~Ie Thornton. wide _ . 10 the practice squad

NEW YORK JET5-S lgned M,,~ Holland. 0","_ I".""",. ID tile practice squad.

PHOENIX CAROlNALS-_ JolIn Burch. running back.

HOCtlEY N_ HocII.y La..-

CHICAGO Bl.Aq(HAW!<5-Slgned 51 .... lar· mer. right wing. to J Iour·year conlract.

HEW YORK ISLAM>ERS-Treded Ma,c Berge­vin. defenaem.an. to tne Hanford Wl\alerl for futura consIdoratlonL

PHILADELPHIA FL YER5-Assigned Pew Pee­t.fL goaII.n",,, . and ... urray Beron. deten..",.n. to HaroI>ey 01 .... American Hockey Lugue COIled up Bruce Hollor\, goaIIendef. Irom Her· shey

09ULOI! FORDHAM-Namecl TIm Finnerty men'. volun·

teer _.tanl _tball coach. HOUSTOM-Announcad th.t Craig Upchun:h.

I<><w.rd. will miss the 1 ~I ba ... etball ... _ beca .... 01 • back Inlury.

KANSAS ST ... TE-Otsmlooed Kenny WIlliams. Iorw.rd. from the basketball teem.

NORTH CAROUNA-N.med Bruce Hemphill dirKto, of lootball recruiling .•

ST. LOUIS-Nomed Randy Bobblt aulstant .thletlc director lor matlt.tlng .nd promotions.

TENNESSEEoCHATTANOOGA-Ellended th. COfltrac\ 01 BuckIy !'I' •. IOOlball co.ch

WTA Money Leaders The Women'. Tennl, AaIOCI.tlon money ",.d·

era Ih,ough oct. 28

I.St.IIIG,.,_ ...... ___ ..... _.. SI .l&4.070 2.MartinaN--.tUova __ ... _ ... _ .... 11 .041.3I!O 3 MoniceSeieo ._ .......... _ ........... .. 4 Gabrlolot SobetInI _..... . .. .. 5 JaMHOYotna.__ ._ .... __ ... .. 8 ZI,...Gorrlton ._ ._ .. _ ..... _ .. . 7 HetenoSukova. e . MaryJoeFemondez .... . ~ 9 ... ,.ntxaSanchezVlcarlo. .. ... ~ .. .

IO. N ... llolwreva ... • ...... .. 11.Katerlno .... ,_..... _'_"_ 12:MonuelllWeeYa-Fregntera - "-13 N.thal .. Toudat.. ..... _ ......... .. 14.JennllerCOptIlU .. ... . __ .• IS. JUdith Wleaner _ .......... .. 16. Glgl Femandez ........... _ ..... _ .... .. 17 Elizabeth Smwlle .... __ ....... .. t8. Conc"lla .... rtlne ... ""_""'''' ... 18. LarlsaSavchenko.. _._ .......... . 20. ~ell ...... khl. ............. __ ... _ ... .. 2·' Mercedes paz ............... _ .............. _ 22. Barbar. Paulul. ,., ......•.................• 23. Gretchen Mag.rs ....... _ ...... _ ....... . 24. Nicol. PfOIIi........ .._ .. _........... .. . 25. Lort McNeIl .............................. . 28. P.tty Fandlck..... ... • ............. .. 27. Roaalyn F.,rbank·Nldelf".... . ... .. 28. Helen Kelaol ................................... . 29. AmyFrezler .................. _ ....... " ... . 30. ~aura Glldemelster .. .. ............ .. 31 ... anon Bolleg,.f ........................... .. 32. Dlnky .. n Rensburg ...... _ ._ ........ . 33 SanGra COcchlnl .................. ....... .. :lA RoblnWhlte ........................... _ 35 Rachel McOulll.n ... _ ............... .. 38. Brend.Schultz ............. _ ............. . 37. ElnaRelnac" ..... _ ...... _ ....... . 38 AnnGr_n ................................ .. 39 Claudl. Porwlk ............................... .. 40 Cotarin. Undqvl.I ........................ .. 41 . NathaIIeHerremon ..... .._._ ...... . 4Z, Rail"". Reggl .............................. .. 43 KathyJordan_._ •.. _ .... _ ............ j •• "

44. Clludla Kohde-KllSch ................ .. 45 AnneSmhh ._ ............................. . 46 . ... ndre. T_-.rl ...... ... _ ........ .

. 47. Wi"tUd Probsl ............................... . 0\8. Elu Burgin . .. .. 49 JoOurie .... . ..... _ .......... _ ... 50. Regin. Rajchtloya ...... . ................ .

$8&5.824 $697.533 $544.132 $518.468 5-175.5&1 5"2.616 5-125.999 $400.713 $3-41 .eeJ 52&4.948 5272.781 $261.915 S2Z1,337 $211 .120 $196.904 $196.1&4 $189.534 $175,879 $173.328 $162.797 5161 .617 $148.186 $148.852 $146,203 $141 .165 1138.397 $13U48 $138.53£ $131 .451 SI28.218 $128.114 $125._ S121 .173 SII9.744 $117.896 SI12.037 SI1' .489 SI06.304 $104,899 $103.883 SI02.682

$94.524 S9O,860 $90.332 $89.74<1 S89.:lAI $87.984 $88.140

ATP Money Leaders The leading money wlnn.,. on the 1990 ... TP

Tour through Oel .. 28' I . Slef.n Edberg ............................... SI.251 .1191 2. BorisBeckar ..................................... $1.102.332

Moreho'use __ Co_ntin_usd_frOm_pagB_1B

3. lvln Lendl .... . .......................... S973.I82 4. AndresGomez .. ......................... ..... S8OO.89O 5. AndreAg_I....... ............................. $7115.212 6. Pel. S.mp, .. ........................ :.......... $732.697

the station? However, Boom-Time T-shirts are

still a hot commodity. Maybe Baer will send the Hawkeyes' old shirts

to the NCAA - those shirts seem to mean a lot to them.

7. Goran",anlMYIc ... • .... _ .... _. $6011 .510 8. Emilio S.nchez............................... 1542.324 9. BrodGlibert ..................................... $511.803

10. Thomas Mu.ter................................ $505.287 Marc Morehouse is an assistant sports editor of the DI.

11 Guy Forg.I....... ..................... $4OS,463 12.JlmCourior ...................................... S40I.745 13. Andr.1 Chfinokov........................... S400.253

N BA Continued from page lB . -----.--------

tile title just yet. ·Can we sustain what we've done for three years?"

coach Chuck Daly asked. "We have to stay injury free .. ." .

That already is a problem for Detroit. Rodman has a recurring ankle injury. Also injured during the preseason were Thomaa and Bill Laimbeer, although both appear ready to go.

The Atlsntic Division - where defending cham· P-ion Philadelphia, Boston and New York figure to slug it out - looks more competitive. • The 76ers are led by Charles Barkley, whose

a'\terages of 25.2 points and 11.5 rebounds per game and 14-8 steals for the season make him one of the ' best forwards ever to play the game. He had off-season surgery on an arthritic shoulder.

Philadelphia has emerging star Hersey Hawkins in its bsckcourt and tough guy Rick Mahorn up front. 'Fhe 76ers also added shot-blocking Manute Bol. - The big question in Boston is how much longer can the big three of 33-year-old Larry Bird, Kevin ¥cHale (32) and Robert Parish (37) continue to defy age. The Celtic8 also are trying to adjust to !leW coach Chris Ford. o Patrick Ewing, who averaged 28.6 points, 10.9

bounds and 4.0 blocks last season, is probably the ~me's best center. But the Knicks have failed to aurround him with enough scorers to take the next itep. o

Western Conference ., Portland, a loser in five games to Detroit in the finals, hopes to get off to a good start in the tough I!acific Division. • "We can win anywhere, but ... we'd like to take advantage of the schedule . . ." said coach Rick !delman, whose team plays 10 of its firBt 13 games lit home. "It's not going to be easy. There are some 'Y'ery good teams coming in here." • Among them are Detroit, New York, Chicago, San 4ntonio and Phoenix. : Led by guard Clyde Drexler, who averaged 26.4 ~ints in the finals loss to Detroit, Portland is an IIllposing team. Forward Buck Williams is one of

the outstanding rebounders of his era and guard Terry Porter an outstanding playmaker and scorer.

It will be strange to see the Lakers without Coach of the Decade Pat Riley, under whom they won four league titles. Mike Dunleavy is his replacement on the bench~

The Lakers added Sam Perkins and Terry Teagle to the likes of Magic Johnson and James Worthy. Los Angeles, which took the Pacific title last season, figures to battle Portland and Phoenix to the wire.

Sacramento (23·59 last season) probably won't be a factor, but the Kings should be interesting with four first· round draft; picks. Two of them, Lionel Simmons and Travis Mays, may start.

Defending champion San Antonio and Utah figure to wage war in the Midwest Division, but Denver's offense and lack of defense could result in some records. Former Lakers coach Paul Westhead has come aboard from Loyola Marymount.

NBA coaches are wondering who would be the first team to score 200 points in a game. It's a good bet the Nuuets will be involved.

"We should be up in the 150s and above in most games," Westhead said. "Obviously, on some days the opposition will be right up there with us."

The record Cor one game is 186 points in triple overtime. In regulation, it is 173.

"We shouldn't have any problem reaching that," Westhead said when informed that the NBA record scoring average is 126.5, set by the Nuggets in 1981-82.

Utah, already loaded with all.league forward Karl Malone and assist champion John Stockton, has added 24-point scorer Jeff Malone to its ranks.

San Antonio, imposing with center David Robinson and forward Terry Cummings, certainly is a team to be reckoned with. But coach Larry Brown doesn't necessarily see the Midwest race as a two-team affair.

"Everyone assumes that because we won 56 games and we're a young team that we'll be better . . ." he said. "But so many teams have improved that it doesn't mean we'll have BS much success."

U J.kobHluek ................................ _ $374.948 15 Michael Chong ................................. S3e7.282 le. ,JonuS_soon................................ $357.575 IT. John McEnrce .............................. _ $348.895 18 JoyBorger ._............................... $343.1&4 18 .... ranKrickst.ln ............................... $318.353 20 David Whealon ..... ,.......................... $303.245 2t Guil"'rmo Pe,.,·Roldon .................. $2l1li.2411 22 JuanAgulle'......... ............. ............. $297.3411 23. SCOIlO •• I . ... _............................... $294.496 2. lII.rkKratzmann ............................... $218.631 25 Potr Ko,da • .... .............................. S288.S62 26 Jim Pugh .. ............. .................... $284.1192 2T. Rlchay Ren-.g .. _......................... 5274.191 28. Sorgl Brugu.,. ................................ S281 .003 29 Plet.r AldriCh . .•• ....................... $259.192 3D. Karel Novacek................ ................. $257.047 31 . MartlnJ.It. ..................................... $256.278 32 ~rlcl< Rostagno ............................. $253.862 33 O.nle Vlsaer.......... ...... ................... S250.5115 :lA. Goran Prplc ..................................... $241.928 35. M.n: Roue!.. ................................... $242.898 36. K.vlnCurren .............. _....... .............. S238.282 37. Grant Connall . ................................. $238.094 38 HO"ISkoH........................................ $237.-436 39.And, .. cnetltosov............................. $233.631 40. Ron.ld Agenor .•. ............................. $231 .830 41 .AmosM.nadorf ............. _ ... _ ......... $231 .076 4'!. MlchaelStlch ................................... $230.843 43. Todd Wlt.k.n.................................... $230.4119 44. Henri Le<:onte .. ............................ S228.1I8O 45. ToddWoodbrldg. .... ....................... S227.905 0\8. Tim Merolla ..... .._......................... $227.928 47 O.r",n COhill..................................... $22T.354 0\8. Rick La.ch ........................................ sm. n5 49. Pet.r Lundgren ................................ S222.01 I 5O. 0.vld P.t.......................................... S219.&42

NL Managers NEW YO~K (AP) - The N.tlon.1 League

",an.ge,. of the Ye.r as .. Iectad by Ihe B ... ball Wrller·. Assocl.tlon of Americ. (t". BBW ...... beg.n _Ing In 1963):

1990 - Jim Leyland. Pittsburgh 1989 - OOn Zimmer, Chicago 1988 - To<nmy Laaorda. Los Angeles 1981'- Bob RodgofL M""Ire., 1986 - Hil Lanier, Houston HIllS - Whitey Henog. 51. Loul. I~ - Jim Fray. Chicago 1983 - Tommy laso,da. LOl Angeles

PGA Money Leaders PO!'ITE VEDRA. Fla. ("'p) - Anal money

leade" on Ih. 1990 PGA Tour through lhe N.blac:o Ch.mplon.hlpo. which ended Oct. 27:

I Greg Norm.n ...... .......................... SI .165 •• n 2. W.yneLovI ........................... :........... 1.024.&47 3. P.yneSI_.rt................................. 978.281 4. P.ul .... ,nger .. . .................. ..... 944.731 5 JodleMudd ..................................... 911 .748 6. Hale Irwin ........................................ 838.249 7. M.'kC.,c •• ecchla ......................... 834.281 8. Tlm Simpson .....•• 1.......................... • 809,772 9 Fred Couples .................................. 757.999

10. M.rkO·M .. '. ................................. 707.175 11 . Gil Morg.n .................. ,................... 702.629 12. Billy MayfaIr .................................... 693.658 13. L.nnyW.dkln. ........................ .. .... 673.433 14. LarryMlz. ....................................... 868.196 t5. Tom Kit. .......................................... 658.202 16. I.n B.k.r· Flnch .............................. 611.492 17. Chlp Beck ....................................... 571.816 t8. Steve ElkIngton ............................. 548.5&4 19. Poter J.cobsen ............................... 547.279 20. Oavl. Lov.III .... ...... .................... 537. I n 21 . W.yn.Gredy ................................. 527.185 22. Hick Price............. .......................... 520.m 23. Bob Tway ........................ ,............... 495.862 24. Loren Roberts ............................. .1. 478.522 25.Jlm Gallagher. Jr .. ........................... 47&.706 28. Co'ay P.vln..................................... 468.830 27. Robert G.mez ................................. 461 .407 28 John Cook...... ............................... 448.112 28. BrI.n Tennyson ........ ,..................... 443.508 30. John HUlton ................ .. ................. 435.690

NHL Standings W"'LES CONFERENCE

Pflnck D •• I.lon W L T PIe OF OA fojY Ringer. . .................... 11 3 0 22 &4 304 NewJersey ................. 6 4 1 17 53 .. W .. hlngton ....................... 7 7 0 14 43 45 Pittsburgh ......................... 6 6 1 13 61 53 PhII.d.,phl . .... .............. 6 6 0 12 4<1 48 NYlslendero .... 3 9 0 6 31 54

Adalll. DI.,.lon Monl 'e.I .... ........................ 7 6 15 48 48 Bo.ton ............................... e ~ 14 39 4-4 Nart4erd ... " .... _ ......... . ........ .- ....... J ~ ,0.- 32 .. Bull.,o ._........................... 3 5 4 10 39 39 Qu.beo .............................. 3 1 3 9 38 53

CAMPBElL CONFERENCE NOtrl.lltvlalon W L T PIa OF OA St louis. ............ ............. 8 3 1 17 45 35 Chlc.go ............................. 8 5 0 16 43 32 Dat'oR ................................ 6 4 3 15 51 48 Minnasots ..... ............. 2 8 3 7 35 52 Toronlo............................. 2 to 1 5:lA 81

Sm' .... D1.ltIon Los Ang.I......................... 9 3 t 19 61 42 Calgary ............................. 9 4 0 18 58 39 V.ncouver ......................... 6 6 0 12 37 40 Winnipeg ........................... 5 7 1 II 42 42 Edmonton ......................... 2 7 2 6 29 32

WednHdlY'. Olm •• Boston 3, Bullalo 3. tI. Monl,.., 4. Hartford 2 NY. Rangers 9, Los Angeles .. Winnipeg 1. Edmonton O. DT

Today', aam •• St. Louis .1 Boston. 6 :35 p.m. Toronto at Detrolt j 6:35 p.m. Mlnnesot •• 1 Philad.'phla. 6:35 p.m. Quebec .1 Chicago. 7 :35 p.m. Winnipeg at Calg.ry. 8 :35 p.m New Jersey at Vancouver, 9:35 p.m.

Friday'. 0,1""1 N.Y. Islando" at N.Y. ~ange,.. 8:35 p.m. Los Ang.'.' .t Washington. 7:05 p.m.

Leyland ______________________________ C_onti_n~_f~_p_._1B ~e majors in 1986 with Pitts· ~urgh.

• Pittsburgh improved the ftrst three years un,der Leyland, going 85·75 in 1988 and challenging the frlets for most of the season. But in 1989, the Pirates slipped far back fDd they were given HttIe chance this season of competing with the Mets, the defending champion Chi­cago Cubs or St. Louis.

two weeks, then hit their stride and took over first place. Pitts­burgh stayed there for most of the season and, even when the Mets nudged ahead in the first week of September, would not fold as many predicted.

expected him to become more ner .. vous, he did not.

Instead, he kept the Pirates in front by skillfully sticking with whoever was the hot reliever, be it Stan Belinda, Vincente Palacios or Bill Landrum. Leyland also had the benefit of Doug Drabek, who emerged as one of baseball's best starters, plus the Killer Bs -Bonds and BoniUa, along with Sid Bream, Wally Backman and Jay Bell.

TM Pirates finished four games ahead of the M;ets. Many had thought the division would be decided by a three-game, season· ending series against New York at Three Rivers Stadium, but by the time the Mets came to town, Pitts­burgh already had won its f'lTBt division title since 1979.

The Pirates struggled fOT the first

Leyland would not let his team collapse, guiding the Pirates with an intense yet coo) demeanor. He quit smoking midway through the season and just when his own team

Oakland, at 103·59, was the only team in the majors to finish with a better record than the Pirates.

Illinois' Gardner is Lombardi finalist 0\ wire services

HOUSTON - Moe Gardner ofminoi8, Russell Maryland of Miami, David Rocker of Auburn and Chris Zorich of Notre Dame on Wednesday were named finalists for the Lombardi Award, given to the nation's top lineman.

All four are defensive players, although offe~­sive linemen also are eligible for the award.

Twelve players were nominated before the season. That list was narrowed to four fmaliste - all eeniors - by a nationwide committee of collep coaches, sports writers and sportscas­ters.

The winner will be announced Dec. 6. Gardner was an AlI.Big Ten selection as a

sophomore and junior. Rocker, whose brother Tracy won the wmbaJ:di Award in 1988, anchors Auburn's highly rated defense.

Maryland, who had a career.high 20 tackles again.t Notre Dame two weeks ago, has 64 tackles this season with six sacks. •

injury could force Zorich to miss the reet of the season.

sanden charged with auauJt HOUSTON - Washington Redskins receiver

Ricky Sanders will be tried on aggravated assault charges on Dec. 17 in a Houston courtroom.

State District Judge Donald Shipley set the date Wednesday in an effort to resolve the case stemming from a May 1 incident before football season ends.

Sanders appeared before Shipley Tuesday for pretrial motions and the judge ordered prose­cutors and defense attorneys to decide on a date by Wednesday.

Team representatives and Sanders' attorneys negUtiated Tuesday to schedule the trial so it would not interfere with the Redskins sche­dule.

The Redskins will be on the road the week beCore and week after the date for Saturday games.

Valenzuela may bolt from Dodgen

"We had a conversation with the Dodgers," DeMarco said. "They're going to look at all their options and Fernando's going to do the same. . "There's a time when you have to look at .all

your options. So far, the Dodgers and looking at theirS and we're going to look at ours. We're going to talk to anybody and everybody. Anything can happen. The poeeibility of Fer­nando going somewhere ellie is greater than ever at this time."

Valenzuela, who turns 30 on Thursday, was 13-13 with a 4.59 ERA. He made 33 starts, completing five, and pitched 204 inning8. He allowed 223 hits while walking 77 and 8triking out 115.

Boeou' Barris come. to terms BOSTON - Greg Harris, who was eligible to

tile for free agency, agreed Wednesday with the Boston Red Sox on a two-year contract Cor a guaranteed $2.8 million.

Harris, who turns 35 on Friday, was 13-9 with '" a 4.00 ERA in 1990 in. 34 games, including 30

starts. He will get $1.3 million next season and ' $1.4- million in 1992. BOlton has an option for 1993 at $1.5 million and must pay a $100,000 buyout if it is not exercised.

GIl Your

MICKY'S PINT RoIIIIad lor

50' (Sud &Bud llgl\l) .toCL08E

Open o.ur.tll am II S. Dubuque

J\\ ~.1,!J~ ~ 'M~ oABIS

1--::""::-" TON I G H T-I~-1

Cats from Ubhadiyal Willie Wisely Trio

Old Style Tall ~oys $1

Fri. Dangtrlppers Big CHlzen HI-FI & The Roadbumers

Sat. House of Large Sizes Badthlng Thursday's Rags

18·20 S, Clinton (lIbov.1'CBY)

351 .. 9821

I , ~--~--------~ : I I: I ~ I: I ~ I-I 1\ I' I PIZZAhI. Ii I ~ I: I II I '2.00 off 16" pizza II I '1.00 off 14" pizza :!

2 or more toppings I: I,

337-8200 J PIZZA· SALADS

BEER Dine In or Carry Out

We Deliver Mon.·Sat. 4 pm· Midnight Sun. 4 pm-10 pm

: I : ' I 1 1 I I 1

: 11 ' I ' 321 S. Gilbert S1. '1 :

(across from Ralston Creek Apia) J ;

------------

Iowa City's Most DeleCtlbie Dell

PARTY SANDWICHES .

Choo .. from 3 Iiue:

2 ft. "C8b00S8" $1895 :.L Setv .. 10-12 .'

4 ft. "Side car" ~1 95 .. 5eMe 20-24 .... ~ 6 ft. "Box car" til JI 95 .n Setv .. 3()..4() -tAt ...

Sinoo ... apedally ...... ou, _In ..... _ ', ~. piNH ordtr :M hounJ In odvonoo •

517 S. Riverside, Iowa City 337-5270

Sun.-Th. 10:30 A.M. 10 10:00 P.1l

THURSDAY NIGHT

2J

o~lBa~ $200 i Drmks .I."".aJl"a

$2.00 Cover ~J & Dancing 9-Close • Game Room 7:30-Close

TV Football SfJecial. w MILLER 24 cant IS~99 ~ KEYSTONE Reg. or Lt. 24canl 17.59 II OLD STYLE Reg. 241160z. Ial boy. IS.99 o RHINELANDER Reg. 24 bottlell 15.99

. ~ BUD Reg. or Lt. 24 bottle. 19.59 y MILWAUKEE'S BEST 12peck 12.99

Wine Specials WOLFE RIESLING 75Om1. 12.99 RIVERSIDE FARM White 1.5 L 13.99 SEBASTIANI White Zin 1.5 l '5.99 MARTINI & ROSSI ASTI 75Om1 '1 0.99 ANDRE Champagne c.. '32.29 SKOL VODKA 750mI '4.99 JACK PANIELS 75Om1 '11.99

Check out our low.r 1ev.1

for moIW1peC1a11 on beer and wine'

Freah from the Dell & Bakery Freehad Baked Cinnamon Rolls, Pecan Rolls, Mufflns, Breads and Pastries every

Zorich, who was a Lombardi finalist laat year, dislocated his Imeecap last Saturday and will miss this week's game against Navy. The

- LOS ANGELES - Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela flied for free agency Wednesday and his agent, Tony DeMarco, said there's an excellent chance Valenzuela will play for another team next season.

The Red Sox signed Harris on Aug. 7, 1989, after he was released by the Philadelphia Phillie8. .._.

, ~veral 1: Asked if I management, • • free agimt

Harris, who I $615,000. He \ BOitton has an lmyout if it is

"Oester, 34, 1 aW>ats with diad an , $100,000

Power • team. , With a 3.66 • m20,OOO, • ~O,OOO • - Valenzuela

agency. He ' ~OO,OOO in

~ ~ A Red October

The Daily Iowan - Thursday, November 1, 1990 SPORTS 38

No players penalized in LSU fray The Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. - Louisiana State University announced Wed­nesday that it won't suspend any players involved in the bench­clearing brawl at the Florida State football game last Saturday. in spite of a longstanding policy against fighting.

The \lniversity disciplined no one for the tight, which cleared the benches after what was perceived as a late bit on the final play of the lopsided game, won by Florida State. 42-3.

"Fault cannot be attributed to just one team or to particular 'individu­als," LSU said in a statement.

The statement, i88ued after Ath­letic Director Joe Dean met with football coach Mike Archer and basketball coach Dale Brown, warned that players "who fla­grantly and deliberately initiate or escalate a fighting incident" can be suspended.

330 E. Prentiss Tonight

50¢ Pints $ 2 00 Pitchers

10¢Shrimp 10¢Buffalo Win

~~...."..-...

, . • World Champion Cincinnati Red. owner Marge from leit, Mariano Duncan, Paul O'Neill and the

, : Schott I. greeted along with the team In the White World Serl •• Moat Valuabl. Player, pitcher Jose I : Hous. ros. garden Tuesday. Stanclng behind are, RIJo.

The fight at Florida State was the tirst melee for LSU since a 1984 game against Tulane .

This one came as the game ended and was shown severa1 times on national television.

:Free agency claims :~ne 'player, lose one I By Ronald Blum ,The Associated Press

I NEW YORK - Outfielder George Bell of the Toronto Blue Jays filed I for free agency Wednesday while pitcher Greg Harris, who was eligible • fp file, re-signed with the Boston Red Sox for $2.8 million over two ~ears.

I • Meanwhile, Cincinnati declined to exercise its 1991 option on second I baseman Ron Oester and Pittsburgh declined to exercise its option on I pitcher Ted Power.

Oester and Power immediately filed for free agency, as did Bell, Los ' Angeles pitcher Fernando Valenzuela and Pirates first baseman Sid , Bream.

: A tota1 of 89 players have filed and nine more are eligible to submit I ~eir names by Sunday's midnight deadline. . I Bell, the 1987 American League MVP, batted .269 this season with 21 , homers and 86 RBIs. Alan Hendricks, Bell's agent, said the outfielder • was prepared to leave Toronto. '

: "We're exploring a11 options," Hendricks said. "I already talked to ~ several teams and we plan to talk to aU ofthem.n • • Asked if Bell could return to Toronto, where he has clashed with • management, Hendricks said, "There's always a cbance, sure. But he's ; • free agEmt and everyone's on a level playing field."

Harris, who will be 35 on Friday, was 13-9 with a 4.00 ERA and made • $615,000. He will get $1.3 million next .season and $1.4 million in 1992. I Boston has an option for 1993 at .$1.5 million~ and must pay a $100,000

buyout if it is not exercised. S)ester, 34, was the longest-tenured Reds player and batted .299 in 154

I at-bats with no homers and 13 RBIs. He made $650,000 and the Reds • had an option at the same sa1ary. Instead, they are giving him a , $100,000 buyout and hope to sign him at a lower salary.

Power and Bream give the Pirates 10 free agents, the most of any • team. Power, 35, signed with Pittsburgh as a free agent and was 1-3

With a 3.66 ERA and seven saves in seven opportunities. He made • t«20,000, including $270,000 in bonuses, and would have made • ~O,OOO under the option. Instead, he also gets a $100,000 buyout. • - Valenzuela re-signed with the Dodgers last year after ruing for free

agency. He was 13-13 with a 4.59 ERA and made $2.2 million, including , UOO,OOO in bonuses. L

:ryson is found guilty qt : fondling, only fined $100 ,

By Veri HIUer I The Associated Press

the jury will get a copy of Tyson's financial statement. Miller's attor­neys said they also plan to call another woman who has sued Tyson for a similar incident that allegedly happened the same night at Bentley's.

• • NEWYORK-Ajuryon Wednes-• day decided that fonner heavy­• eight champion Mike Tyson , t§ndled a woman at a Manhattan

dance club in 1988 and awarded • t1ie woman $100 in compensatory I ¢amages. , The five-women, one-man jury will , "turn to Manhattan's federal , court on Thursday to hear testi-

mony on Tyson's financial status , !lefore ruling on punitive damages. , The woman, ~andra Miller, asked : Iilr up to $2.5 million in punitive

Qamages in her civil lawsuit. The jury deliberated about 4'/2

~uts before finding that Tyson, Ihe former heavyweight champion, trabbed Miller's breasts and but­tocks after she refused his advances at Bentley's Disco on Dec. 10,1988.

Tyson, who had denied that the

The second woman's testimony will be presented to show that Tyson engaged in a pattern of abusive activity. Tyson is expected to testify again on Thursday to dispute those claims.

"If they thought it was serious, they would have given her more than 100 bucks."

Mike Tyson Boxer

incident ever took place, showed no In closing arguments earlier Wed­outward emotion as U.S. District nesday, Tyson's attorney, Robert

, Judge Michael B. Mukasey read Hirth, told the jury that Miller had Ute verdict, which found the fighter concocted the allegations to obtain had committed battery but not money from Tyson. l188ault. "You should send a message that

In his instructions on the law, the if Sandra Miller wants to engage in , iudge had explained that assault a get-rich-quick 'scheme she should

requ" finding of contact but buy a lottery ticket,· Hirth said. I Dlus e a threat. A finding of He belittled Miller's credibility by

battery requires actual contact, he pointing to discrepancies in her laid. trial testimony and a sworn state­

Tyson said he was not disap- ment she gae earlier. j POinted with the verdict. "If they "Her story has gotten better the

thought it was serious, they would closer she got to the courtroom and -1 have given her more than 100 appeared before you,- Hirth said.

bucks,n he said. "Sandra Miller has come here to When asked how she felt, Miller, a collect her announced goal - to get

26·year-old computer operator , money from Mike Tyson." !'rom Queens, said, "Great that Her lawyer, however, urged jurors they know that he did it." to believe her version of events , Tyson, who testified during the because she had the "courage and

three-day trial, acknowledged that guts" to take on the former world , he was at Bentley's Disco that heavyweight champion.

hifht but denied knowing or ever "Any touching that is unwanted is touching Miller. offensive and should not be permit-

Berore decidilll punitive damages, ted," Miller's attorney.

(

THE MILL RESTAURANT 120 E. Burlington

Friday & Saturday Raaoslav Lorkovic

Sunday G Brown

READ: That Grammar Guy

Mondays in The Daily Break

Tell us about you £ • BRAVO in 50 d I r laVOrtte programming on tickets to the e~~~~ °b ess, Snd

dyou'lL be eligible to win

name, address and ha ave. en yo.ur 50 word statement, to our office at 54ls onh number WIth your bill or bring it hold add . out gate Avenue in Iowa City. We'll

ran am rawlng on November 15. Entrie5 received after No~ 15 will not quall'fy N h ' . . 0 pure ase necessary.

Heritage Ch. 33 ' • Henta e BRAVO aD' Ca11351-3984 for infonnation. ~

Evening. It 7:00, 1:30 Saturday' SlIIdly

... U ..... t1~,4:OO

Evtnlng.lt 1:45, 8:30 Satwdly • su_y

... t1~ It 1:30, 4:00

~lfIELDI10USE ... 111 E. COU£GE ST. ·IOWACITY.1A522~

TONIGHT

FREE -- BEER ,

First Sunday of Every Month

Eastdale Plaza SPORTS CARD SHOW

November 4, leeO Noon to 4:30 p.m.

BUY 'SELL TRADE FREE Admission' to the Public

EASTDALE PLAZA Iowa City, Iowa 52240 319/338-1788

Friday' SaturdlY It Midnight ONLY ·AlI ..... $I.OO • Rocky "KII." av .... bIe • Comic Book on StIle ADVANCE nCKETS AT ENGLERT VIDEO

Evening. It 7:15, 8:30 Saturday' SlIIdIy

... U .... '12:00, 4:30

Ev.nlngalt . 7:00,1:15 Siturday • Sunday

... U".. •• t 1:30,4:00

ENGLERT VIDEO MOVIE MART RENTAL AND SALES

ORDER A COPY OF ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW • '71.15 80% DOWN PRmv WOMEN ON SALE NOW '1e." - NO MEMBERSHIPS REQUIRED

"

48 SPORTS

-Reluctant nominees . on list for hoops hall 8y Trudy Tyn.n The Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. - Bob Knight and Larry O'Brien, the fonner NBA commissioner who died last month, were among 12 candidates nominated Tuesday for election to the basketball Hall of Fame - even though they had said they wanted no part of it.

Hall of Fame president Bob Kur­land said the trustees decided that -if an individual is worthy of nomination to this prestigious honor that person's name and qualifications will be submitted to the 24-member honors committee.·

-rile guts of it is that history should be reported in its true fonn," Kurland said. "Both these guys are deserving of being recog­nized under the standards of the Basketball Hall of Fame. I don't know how they are going to come out in the voting by the honors committee, but they are certainly deserving to be nominated. You can't deny history."

To be elected to the hall, nominees need 18 votes from the honors committee in its balloting next spring. Enshrinement ceremonies are scheduled for May 13 in this city, where the game began nearly 100 years ago.

O'Brien, who died on Sept. 27 , withdrew his name from considera­tion last year in protest of the hall's secret elections.

Knight, the Indiana coach. asked that he not be considered for renomination after he failed to be elected in 1987. At the time, he called it a "slap in the face."

Knight said through a spokesman that he was unaware he was being nominated again and would have no comment.

Renominated as players were Nate Archibald, Dave Cowens, Bob Lanier, John Kerr, Calvin Murphy and Nera White, a women's Ama-

teur Athletic Union star. In addition to Knight, Jack Hart·

man, the winningeat coach in Kan­sas State history, was nominated for the fourth time and Jack Ram­say, one of the moat aucceaafuJ coaches in NBA history, for a second time.

The late Larry Fleisher, who founded the NBA players 888OCia­tion in 1962, was the only new name on the list. In addition to O'Brien, the late Carol Eckman, who organized the tint national college tournament for women in 1969, was al80 nominated.

The names were announced at halftime of the NBA's Hall of Fame exhibition game between Detroit and Houston.

O'Brien, whose long political career included being an adviser to President Kennedy and national Democratic Party chainnan, said before his death that he had tried unauCC888fuJly to make the election proce88 public during his two terms 88 Hall of Fame president.

-r have no quarrel with the Hall of Fame and would consider election a high honor, but I'm a guy who believes in the Democratic pro­cess," O'Brien had said.

Kurland said Hall of Fame trus· tees decided to make some changes in the Hall of Fame voting at their tneetings Tuesday, but the names of the honors committee and its vote will remain secret.

"That will never change,· he said. O'Brien and Knight have been the

only nominees who tried to with­draw their names. But they are not the first to express their di88atis­faction. Bill Russell, the first black player to be elected to the Hall of Fame, refused to come to hi. 1974 induction to protest the lack of blacks.

Since Russell was enshrined in absentia, 16 black players, includ­ing Elvin Hayes, Earl Monroe and Dave Bing, who were installed this

Phillies' .Daulton says no to free agent fray 8y Ralph Barn.'eln The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA - Catcher Darren Daulton, who had declared free agency, changed his mind and returned to the Philadelphia Phillies Wednesday, signing a three-year contract worth $6.75 million.

Both Daulton and the Phillies said the key to their agreement was Daulton's right to test the £ree.agent market at the expiration of his new contract.

Phillies president Bill Giles, who personally negotiated the contract, said that if Daulton, 28, 'haa signed with any other team he coUldn't become a free agent again for five years .

Daulton, a .206 lifetime hitter until this year, hit .268 in 1990 and set career highs in almost every offensive department, including games played (139), home runs (12), doubles (30), RBIs (57) and walks (72).

General manager Lee Thomas said Daulton had agreed to a $500,000 signi", bonus, a salary next season of $1.75 million and $2.25 million in 1992 and '93.

"We're glad to have him before he goes into the so-called mine field (free agency)," Thomas said. "Once you get out there you don't know what can happen. You want to keep your own and that's what we did.'

Daulton, who was visiting with his parents in Kansas, said by telephone that he and his agent talked to some teams and they were interested, "but in my heart 1 wanted to stay in Philadelphia, and I wanted to keep my free-agency status at the end of the contract."

The Philljes were anxious to sign Daulton because he had developed into one of the top defensive catchers in the NL. He threw out 39 percent of opposition base stealers and effectively handled a young pitching staff that won 10 more games and helped the club out of the East Division cellar.

Daulton said the New York Mets, San Francisco Giants and some American League teams had expressed interest in him. He made it cJear that no contract terms were discussed since that was illegal until after Nov. 5.

Daulton said he really didn't know what turned him around as a hitter in the last half of the 1990 season. He hit .297 in the second half.

"Maybe it was being moved up in the order," he said. He had been the eighth-place hitter in the lineup and was elevated to batting second, where he saw a lot more fastballs. He is known as a good fastball hitter.

-I really had a fun year," said Daulton, whose career nearly ended in June 1986 with a severe knee injury. WAnd I think we are headed in the right direction. II we can acquire a quality pitcher we can win."

Daulton said that despite the reconstructive knee surgery that handicapped him for more than two seasons, -I alwaYII thought in my heart and mind I'd reach this level of play. And I'm going to do a lot better."

Giles said he always had admired Daulton because "he's a workaholic. I like people whd show extra effort and dedication. ~ . Daulton had been seeking a four-or even five-year contract, but changed his direction when the subject of retaining his free-agency rights after three years instead of five was put on the table.

Giles said he had told Daulton's agent that the club president was going on vacation as of Wednesday night, and that if they didn't reach agreement by then, it wouldn't before free-agent negotiations began. That meant the catcher would lose the three-year free agency rights.

'nle PhilIies also announced the signing of Johnny Pndres, 58, as pitching coach to succeed Darold Knowles, who was released after last season.

Tonight

THURSDAY SPECIALS SJopppy Joe. $1. 75 • Capt. Nemo $2.45

HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS 4-8 pm Mon.-Fri. $1.75 Burpr Baskets

&rvI". &elknt LuMhalhUly 13 S. Lbm 8t. • 3U-74S0

The Houlton Rockets' (34) Akeem OtaJuwon dunk. a shot during Tuead.y'l Han of Fame game again.' the Detro" Pilton. at the Springfield Civic Center In Ma... Illah Thoma. looks on In the b.ckground.

May, and two coaches, John McLendon and Clarence Gaines, have been inducted. The New York Renaissance, the most famous of the early black teams, was installed in 1963.

Currently there are 169 men, three women and four teams enshrined in the hall. Last year, when none of the nominees got the

needed votes on the first ballot, trustees called for a second vote over the objections of president 'Bob Cousy, who quit in protest.

On Tuesday, trustees voted to require that a minimum of three people be selected by the honors committee each year even if it takes more than one vote, Kurland said.

ATIENTION HY-VEE SHOPPERS:

The Hy-Vee ad that appeared in the Oct. 31, 1990 DAIL Y IOWAN contained two price errors. The price on the Coca-Cola products should have read $5.29. The price on the Old Style beer should have read $6.39.

.

, YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO GOOD FOOD! _~CAST YOUR VOTE FOR 'i The Silver Spoon Sunday Evening ButTet 'i

Featuring a Homemade Soup Course, Appetizers, Entre~s, Fresh Salads and Creative Side ~s.

5:00-8:00 pm $850 OR $tOO '11ie Silver Spoon perperNn r.:t!~) ~ Second Ave. • Coralville JA • 138-1323 • Ruervationa RecolllJDended

IOWA vs. ILLINOIS on 5 Big Screen TV's

SATURDAY GAME SPECIAL FREE BEER

During Game Only! $5 Cover

• $1 leE.c:OLD BUD & BUD LIGHT In Long Neck Bottles

All majOr credit cards accepted, plus University 1.0. for students, faculty and staff.

NO PERSONAL CHECKS!

SCOPE ,PRODUCTIONS

EVERY WEEKEND

THREE LOCATIONS: 33rd Ave. SW 1402 S. Gilbert 2208 N. Dodge Cedar Rapids Iowa City Iowa City

FRIDAY NIGHT SEAFOOD BUFFET! 5 p.m.·g p.m.

• Clam Chowder and Soup of the Day • Sal~d Bar • Stir Fry • Shrimp Peel • Fried Chicken • Baked Cod • Pasta • Salmon Patties • Potato • Fried Fish • Rice • Clam Strips • Rolls • Whole Catfish e Hushpuppies

Children under 10 & Seniors $5.95 Children under 5 Free

SATURDAY BREAKFAST BUFFET

12:00 Midnight-11 a.m. (5. Gilbert Only) 7 a.m.·11 a.m. (North Dodge & 33rd Ave. 5W)

• Scrambled eggs • Sausage or Bacoo • Hash browns • Biscuits • Gravy • Fruit • French toast, or Pancakes. Jams, Syrup, Preserves

$495 Children under 10 & Seniors $3.95 Children under 5 Free

SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 a.m.·2 p.m.

• Scrambled eggs • Salad Bar • Hash browns • Chicken • Gravy . • Roastbeef or Ham or Pork or Turkey • French toast, or Pancakes • Pasta $ 69 • Sausage or Bacon • Potatoe. • Jams, Syrup, Presel'lles • Gravy .... t!'f'!!Ir • 2 Soups

Children under 10 & Seniors $5.95 Children under 5 Free

We Are A Family Re.taurant

NOT AVAILABLE AT CORALVILLE COUNTRY KITCHEN

The Dally Iowan - Thursday, November 1,1990 SPORTS 58

Medicine slows Nuggets"rookie

J Denver Nuggets rookie Chrl. Jackson, .hown In thl. recent photo at ,the team'. training camp, will mi •• at least the first 10 day. of the NBA ... eon due to .Ide effects of the medication Jackson take. for

'Tourette'. Syndrome.

The Associated Press

DENVER - A change in medication for Denver Nuggets rookie Chris Jackson to control Tourette's Syndrome is working and he should be back within two weeks.

Jackson, the third player chosen in the NBA draft, was placed on the injured reserve list on Monday and will miss the ftrst five games of the regular season.

Jackson, a high·scoring guard from LSU, was hoapitalized on Sunday while doctors ran several tests to determine why he wall so sluggish on the court.

Team physician Dr. Allan Schreiber concluded that Jackson's play was been slowed "dramati­cally" by one of two prescription drugs he has been taking to combat Tourette'8 Syndrome, a neurological disorder characterized by involun· tary muscle movements, uncontrollable vocal sounds and inappropriate words.

Jackson is said to have a mild case of the multiple-tic disorder, and team physicians said they did not believe it wo).1ld hinder him when the Nuggets selected him in the draft.

Schreiber, in consultation with Jackson's per· sonal doctors, took Jackson off one of the medicines and substituted another drug he bas

taken in the past without incident. After changing medications, Jackson per·

formed better in Tuesday's practice, Coach Paul Westbead said.

"l think the bright side is that Chris has now kind of turned the comer physically," Westh­ead said. "It probably was his best practice since he's been here."

Westhead said Jackson, who was late report­ing to training camp becau8e of a contract dispute, can use the next 10 days "as his personal training period, the time he probably needed in the first place."

Jackson ha<l been taking two prescription drugs - Proloxin and Anafronil .

Schreiber said Jackson has been taking Prolo­xin for years without trouble. But he said a Houston specialist put him on Anafronil just four months ago and recently increased the dosage to help suppress the symptoms more. That drug, Schreiber said, caused Jackson problems - such as sluggish play, difficulty in concentrating, dizziness, headaches and poor appetite.

Jackson discontinued taking Anafronil on Sunday and began tsking Prozac the next day, Schreiber said.

MI am willing to go on record and say that a

significant percentage of his atypical play was due to the side effects of this medicine," Schreiber said. "I have every reason to think that readjustment of his mediction will make a noticeable difl'erence in his play, and it should not take very long to become apparent.·

Jackson, however, was taking a wait-and-see attitude.

"I can only trust what the doctors say," he said. "I believe they may be right, but I'm just saying for Ill! long as I've been taking it, I haven't had any problems with it. Maybe now I may have one. But it may not be the medi-cine." I

Jackson said his confidence hill! suffered1l8 he struggled physically in trying to make the adjustment to Westhead's fast-paced offense.

·Confidence is going to come,· he said. "It's just going to take time. I'm going to use the time to get back in shape and work on my game and work on weights and hit the pool and the court every hour on the hour. While they're gone, I'm going to be in the gym. I'm going to stay positive."

Jackson never missed any playing time during his two years at LSU because of reaction to the medication he was taking.

,6avs hope to live up to No~ 1 :r:anking on Sat. against Tech

ILLINOIS' PARTY HEADQUARTERS

,By Rick Warner I The Associated Press

I All season, college football fans I have been wondering if Virginia is for real. On Saturday, they'll frnd

'out. • The top-ranked Cavaliers host No. 16 Georgia Tech in an Atlantic

• Coast Conference showdown that I will also have a major impact on I the national championship. , The winner will remain unbeaten (Virginia is 7-0, Georgia Tech

' 6-0-1) and virtually lock up the ' ACC title. But for Virginia, the , stakes are even higher.

A victory by the Cavaljers would I give them an excellent chance to I finish the regular season unde-fea.ted and play for the national

' title on New Year's Day - possibly Virginia OB Shawn Moore (12) I against Notre Dame in the Citrus • Bowl.

A win also might convert skeptics • who feel Virginia has thrived ' against a weak schedule. The , Cavaliers have played only one I ranked team so far, beating Clem-

son 20-7 in their second game. I But Georgia Tech should provide a

tough test for the Cavaliers, who • lead the nation in total offense (545 I yards per game) and scoring (48 points per game).

The Yellow Jackets have one of the • top defenses in the country, hold-

NOTRE DAME 48·10. No. 9 Colorado (plus 6'1.) at No. 3 Nebraska

The battle for the Big Eight title. ." COLORADO 24·23.

No.4 Auburn (plus 3) at No. Hi Florida

The Tigers run out of fourth­quarter miracles. ... FLORIDA 21-17.

No. 13 Iowa (plus 4) at No. 5 Dlinois

The winner has the inside track to the Rose Bowl. ... ILLINOIS 28·21.

ing opponents to 13 points and 252 1 yards per game. However, their , defense may not be at full strength , on Saturday because standout Texas Christian (plus 21) at No. safety Ken Swilling is still hobbled 6 Houston

: by a sprained ankle. He is listed as The Cougars' 11-game winning questionable. but is expected to streak is the nation's longest. '"

1 play. HOUS'rON 42-21.

, Both teams ar~ on a roll. Virginia N 23 Arizo (Ius 17) t No.7 I has won 13 str81ght regular-season Woo h' ~~ na p a

hil Geo . T h h as In.""n I gl8JDl es, w bee te rgItareakec as an · Washington's Greg Lewis has

·game un a n s. h d fi 100 I d ' • But this is Virginia's year, and rus e ~r -p us yar s rn every I Saturday will be Virginia's game. game this season. ... W ASHING­j ~e Cavaliers are favored by 13 TON 44-24.

pornt/! .... VIRGINIA 31-21. Pittsburgb (plus 24) at No. 8 • No, 2 Notre Dame (minus 3t5) V8. Miami , Navy at East Rutherford, N.J. Poor Pitt. First Notre D8lne, then

Head coaches Lou Holtz and Mi8lni .... .MIAMI 45.28. , George Chaump were assistants at I Ohio State when the Buckeyes won No. 10 Brigham Young (minus I the 1968 national championship... 18) at Air Force

The Cougars have won seven straight against the Falcons. .., BRIGHAM YOUNG 56·28. Temple (plus 29) at No. 11 Tennessee

The Volunteers won the onlyprevi· ous meeting, 27·14 in 1944. ... TENNESSEE 58·17. No. 12 Florida St. (minus 15) at South CaroUna

The Seminoles lead the series 13-3 .... FLORIDA ST. 38-28. No. 14 Texas (minus 11) at Texas Tech

The Longborns are off to their best start since 1984 .... TEXAS 34-21. No. 17 Missl8llippi (plus 21/.) at LBU

Ole Mi88 hasn't been to the Sugar Bowl Bince 1970 .... MISSISSIPPI 27-24. North Carolina (plus 16) at No. 18CleDl8On

The Tigers lead the nation in total defense .... CLEMSON 28·14. No. 19 Wyoming (plus 3'/.) at Colorado St.

Wyoming is 26·3 in WAC games since Paul Roach took over in 1987. ... WYOMING 34-27. No. 20 Michigan (minus 27) at Purdue

Purdue's only victory came against Division I·M Indiana State. .. , MICHIG~ 52.7. California (plus 131/.) at No. 21 Southern Cal

The Trojans have won 11 of the last 12 meetings. '" SOUTHERN CAL 35·28. UCLA (plus 10) at No. 22 0re­gon

Oregon has never gone to two straight bowl games. ... OREGON 28·24. No. 24 Penn St. (minus 10'1.) at West Virginia

The Nittany Lions have won five straight since starting 0-2. .., PENN ST. 24·10. No. 25 Louisville (minus 26) at Cincinnati

The Cardinals are ranked for the first time in 18 years .... LOUIS­VILLE 45-10.

Last week: 18-3 (straight); 10-9 (spread).

Season: 121-36 (straight); 65-76 (spread).

Pick the winners ... be a'winner!

On The Line Rules s must be submitted by noon,

rsday to The Daily 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

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 one month FREE membership to Body Dimensions

~~------------------------~ : WEEK EIGHT : I (check off your picks) I : 0 Iowa at Illinois 0 :

o Indiana at Michigan State 0 I o Minnesota at Wisconsin 0 I o Michigan at Purdue 0 I o Georgia Tech at Virginia 0 I o Colorado at Nebraska 0 : o Houston at Texas Christian 0 : o Auburn at Florida 0 I o Arizona at Washington 0 : o Penn State at W. Virginia 0 I

TIE BREAKER: : o Portland State at Pacific University 0 I

Please Indicate score : I~~ I I I I AddnIee Phone * I L ________________________ I

The Daily Iowan Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

{$all' U of I's ONLY

NIGHTCLUB

THE

#1 GREAT FOOD

Three Levels To Dance and Party

GREEK BAR Home of the

Big Red Bucket Served

10 a.m. until Midnight

619 SOUTH WRIGHT 608 EAST DANIEL 708 SOUTH SIXTH . . CHAMPAIGN ·~· .... CHAMPAIGN CHAMPAIGN . . '

• '. " . ' .- ~ • • r

PEPPERONI PIZZA FEAST

$7.99 Get one medium pizza with loads

of extra pepperoni and extra cheese for only

$7.991 Buy now and get a secon<ltor'

only $4.00 more!

II. I11III.,........._..,.Il0l ........ .., ... '''''_..,....,._ .. ...... _ ...... DtIWt __ ._ .......... 0.. __ '"

... 12IIlII.00If_ .... _"' .. _

NOW I-llRING

Guaranteed $600 .per hour

4lcluding wages, tIpS and g~ money. Sundays, tune-and-a~ha1f. II. Call 338~OO30

THURSDAY -SUNDAY ONLY! (Limited time offer)

i $3~~mx I ONE MEDIUM CHEESE PIZZA I T~pin~ only $1.00 each.

I $ 95 I 5 pltmmx lONE LARGE CHEESE PIZZA

Toppin~ ooly $1.45 each.

THURSDAY SPECIAL

$5.00 Get one modium *pepperoni pizza with

extra cheese for only $5.00!

*Substitutions can be made.

•• .......... -... *----,-""'--.. _ .. _ ........ -. __ ._"" ....... 00If __ _ ... _o.r_ ... ~ ... I000_

529 S. Riversi~e Dr. Hwy 6 & 2nd Ave.

Iowa Coralville

8B SPORTS The Daily Iowan - Thursday, November 1, 1990

Emperor's new belt Newty-crowned heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield . ports the International Boxing Federation Champlon.hlp belt at a pre .. conference In New York on Tueaday. Holyfield knocked out former champion Jam •• "Bual.r" Dougla. In a title tight In La. Vega • .

Edberg wins in Paris By Nata.he Cart.ton The Associated Press

PARIS - Stefan Edberg, Boria Beclr.er and Ivan Lend} continued their battle for the No.1 ranking in the world Wednesday by winning their second-round matchea at the the $2 million Paris Indoor tourna­ment.

However, John McEnroe double­faulted at match point in the third set tiebreaker to lose to Jakob Hlaaek, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7-5) .

in beating Reneberg again. "It is difficult because he knows

my game by now, that's really the most difficult part," Becker said.

After spliting the first two sets, Becker won five of the last six games to end the I-hour, 58-minute match. Reneberg faced Beckel', the defending champion in Paris, first in Sydney, then in Tokyo and Stockholm.

Becker routed Edberg in the finals at Sydney and Stockholm a.nd knows he might be able to pass

DIS C o IOWAT

DI Classifieds 111' Communications Center· 335-5784 11 am deadline for new aqs & cancellations.

PERSONAL PERSONAL PEOPLE MEETING HELP WANTED -1IA-L!-=-D-A~NC-E--R-a-va-lIa-b-~-lo-r --I ----------1 PEOPLE

NANNY" EAST -----------1 Hal mother's h.~r Jobs I Vililable.

bKheforwn • • bfnhday or Iny PrlVlt. party. R&R Entertl1nmefll. :137-11381

WELCOME to our Reformation 0., _rvk. Sundav 10~30.m . 51. Paul lutheran en,pet 1M Onlver.lty Center 0404 E ",Uetaon

==---==1 PERSONAL SECULAR Orgonl ... t""'s 10< SERVICE Sobr .. ty 1505) Nonroltgious enemalwe to M Sobt"IY meeting " TuHdIya. 8pm 511 S

337.".25.

CHAINS. lTEPH"

Who'"". Jewelry 107 S. DubuQu, 5 •.

eARIIING'. MORE

TIReD OF LONG LlNU 7 MAIL BOXfS !!TC.

la: your f •• ing. packing, .hlppmg .nd more 110re

WE DO:

AT TM! COLUMNANO

WAY TO THE TOP.

B rRIHRlGHI offerl

Free PregNIncy T..aIng ConfldenU .. eoun .. llng

and Support No eppoIntIne,. __ ry

Mon.·Wed. l1-2; ThunIdIIy & FrId8y 1-4

BIJGAY Person,ls Spend In exciling year on 1he "5' Find. pen pat COIst II you love ch ildren, would 'rlend or mil. like to see another part of thl

SASE: AI M Club country, share femily .l(per~nce5 PO Box 1772 and mike new friends. c.1I

IOWI CIty IA 5224.04 201 ~7"o-o204 or WU1. 80 .. 625. livingston NJ 07039.

SM, 25. grad IludenL Hones'l. Iffectiona'e lo~" musIC. dancing. romlnlic eYenlngs Seeking tema'- for .. rious romanc. rllationshlp Would you 1.lI;e to meet • IWHI ... n,hi.,.. .Incer. guy? Write: The Oally Iowan, Box 062, "1 Communlcltlons Center. lowl CUy. IA 52242.

1.11, THIRTYISH, prof.sslona l, polltlcilly liberal. mo,olly conservativi. seelts self-confJdent attractIve fem.l. of Iny race 25-35 for friendship with potential. Write Th. O.lt~ Iowan. Box 063, 111 CpmmUnlctllons CAmlr. IOWl CItY 11\ 52242.

MESSAGE BOARD

a l!LLAVON EARN EXTRA $$S.

Up 10 50'lIo CIII Mary. 338· 7823

Bronda. 645-2216

NEED CASH? Make money &eUmg your clothes,

THE SECOND ACT RESALE &HOP olfe" top dollar. for your f.1I and wlntl' cloth ...

Open al noon. Call Urll 2203 F 5 u eet

(lerOIi from S.nor Pablol). 338-8454

URN MONEY ra.dlng booksl $30.0001 year In~oml potential. Now hiring 1-805-681-6000. lilt. Y·96.2

TACO BELL Now hiring- .11 shifts

·Po.tl' .. ,....iees ·UPS

'Packlng and shipping ·o..mlOhl

"tnternltional 'F_ pick up

'Fax ·Cople. s.turdey 11 :00 ..... 1:00 pm BATIIUFFYI BATCHIPI

Earn "'.2G' hour and more Flexible Schedule Bonus Incentives Discounted Meals

Apply In person at · Taco a.u 'KellS

'Word processing and rHUmes 'Wntlrn Union

W~CA"RY: ·Shlpplng .upph ..

'Ottl~1 end eompu1.r luppltft ·SChooIIUPPU ..

ALL MAJO~ C~EOlT CA~DS ACCEPTED

MAIL IIOKES ETC. 221 E. Marklt

354-2113 "2 block weal 01 OullC Trip

NI!!D A dlnc,r? can Tina. 351.()200 B.Chllor plrtles .• tc.

How can w. atop the Insidioul CAU 338-8ee5 Ihreal 01 our new Arch Vlliain. Kid

118 S. ClInton. ~:~~r;.:~: did this evil cre.tur. Suit. 250 come?

1 .. ---------- How dar. he threaten us OR our ---------- tllr clly? COMPACT r,lnger.tor. 'or rent ThrH liz" avallabll. Irom $39, school yeat Microwaves only S39J "metter Fr .. dtthvery 8ig Tin ~enliis Inc 331·RENT

TAROT and other mel.phYStc.1 _son. Ind r .. dlngs by Jan Oaut, Ixperl.nced lnitrUCIof. Can 351-8511 .

RAPE A.Nult Ha,.nrn,nt Rape Crl,ls lIr\4 33~ (2. Hour.~

Sllwlillng lor words of Batwlsdom Irom thto coot Batchlck • ...

·Robln and C8rwomRn

Planned Parenthood­of M id-Iowa

TRANSIT

213 Flr.t AVI_, Coralville

CNAs Full or plrt time positions av.lIlble. Competitive salary and ben.fllI. W.stside 10000don , on buill"" Apply at Greenwood Minor, 605 Greenwood Drive. EOE .

s

2 South Linn Street, Iowa City, Iowa 354-8000

50 Y~AAS of .xperlence and 100,000 weekly custome,. II dlnnlt"Y In ael to fOllow NObody cen ride Just once. Tryl -==-==:--:---:--:--:---1

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED

INTELlIG!NCE Jobi FED, CIA. US CUiloma, OEA. Ilc. Now Hiring Usllng •. HI05-881.eooo oxt. K·1le12

n WAVI lo bUI Iho hlg~ "'" 01 attendi ng coUeo.1 Makl 11 2. f2O. t

ATT!NTtONIl MI'" Fema'"

HouNWiYlW StUdent, Wo .- IOn ENTHUSIASTIC personl to t.ke Orders In our oHice. OUARANTEED $51 per hour up to '101 per hOur with cuh bonUM. and commlu'on. Oay .nd • ......,Ing IhIH, aVlllable No

$50 an houri Be your own bou! t Fr" 2 .. ·hour recorded d.taill. HIJ6.766-5.304,

I UMMER Jobs Ouldoo,.1 0'11" 5000 opening"

Nllton.1 ParkS, FOtMII Fir. Crew •.

Send stlmp lor fr_ o.tIi ... ' 13 east Wyoming. t<allspell Ml

5990.

I

"

:~~~~~ec=j~Ii:~~ I to earn up to $701 a day, cln lin 11339-1084 orlPPIy In perso n I I Global Ml lkeUng It Lantern Park Pla.ta 1"".1 10 Tergll) on Hwy G. Cor.'vlIl • . Monday· FrldlY. 9a m· 9pm, or SalUlday, 9am-3pm, ALSO M~NAGE~ T~AINEE POSITION

PAAT~ TtME posit ion .yall.b~, i, \ Dietary aide at Oak noll Retirement residenci. Varied houralflcludlnt lome eVlnlngs and wtlkendl, Competitivi wages, C,U351·1120 tor Interview a ppointment.

~~~~------·I NOW ""UNG. W.itr ..... and NUAI!I AIDE. Willing, caring khchln hllp. ApplV within. 1-3pm. person, needed ror the vita' Hnk In The QUI, 21' lowl A downt.,. OUr health car. 'acllity. Pr.f. r h igh Iowa eilV. school gr.dulte Pr,flr certified =.::...:='-----4 but will "1'''' Providing hindI-on car. to our .ldelty residents Is both ct)lllengmg end 'ewardlng. Apply In JMrlOn:

Lantern Park Care Center 915 20th Ave.

Corllv.11e IA 5224' EOE

ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS C.da r ~Ipidl fi rm 'lIpandlng to Iowa CI IY ParH I",ol lull'lIme openings. S7.5O to s ta rt . nlllible .checlule, no ellperience necessary. Intlrnlhlps! scholarships . 1-317·9280

_TAL Jobs 118.392- $87.1251 )'tier . Now hir ing C.II 1-805-687-8000 .xl. P-9812 for curr.nt 11$1

FULL-TIMe: COOk po.llion al Oaknoll Retlr.ment R_ldlnc • . 61fT\- 2pm. ElCperi.rice nlceslary I" Ilrge qUl ntll)' cooking, Cer1iflcatlon in tood preparation and meal servici helpful but not necessary. P5eaunl working condi tions, competitive wages.

CEUs. excellenl be""fIIs. Cali lor Interview

MANN Elementary School needs Immediate educatlona' ISsoclat. tor th. lowl City Community School Oi.trlet 's Preschoo l Child eafl Centef. Hour. arl : 11 :OOam-S:30pm. Applica tions .\t.llabll al 509 S. Dubuqu. Str .. t EOE.

IAAN 1100. weekly re 11mi' working at hom • . s.nd I ~t .ddrnud .tlmped envlkJP4t 10 Kinetici. BOlli 313. lowl City lA 52244

PROGRAM SPECIALIST

""""""""""$] FuIhimc. CoonIiIIIIe reo CNiunent, jOO p'-­andfoOow-upfcw)'Olllh and yowt, Idulu in CQI­

IClVatiaI COIpIlDd oilier employment Pl'Dlrlllli. Conw:t or &end JaUIIIC:

~I McElroy, IhCQllive ~OR Pun KIeea, Administrative Aa.u..m. Mayor'. Y <lIIIh Employ. ment, 410 Iowa Avmuc. (319) 3S6-S410. MYI!P is ID equal opportlility employer. W-. ali­noriliea and handicapped individ..... an 1IIpti 10 ARlly.

Now tiring food c:MJI~ Must have some lunch availaXlity. AWY

between 2 ard 4 Monday tlYough 'Thursday. The Iowa River Power Company

5011 st CoraMlle EOE

HandiMart Food Stores

McEnroe survived a point penalty in the second set and carne from a break down in the third to force a tiebreaker. But his 10th double fault knocked the No.7 seed out of the tournament.

him by winning this week. KIt's a little bit· in my mind, of 1l!:::========:::::::==========:!J ADOPTION

PERMANENT FUll OR PART-nME CLERKS We·r. growing and need outgoing, energetic neat appearing clerk. to work both full and pan-time for aU aIIllt •. Muit be hlgfi school OraclUi\e or equi~alen\. Ey.plK\ance '" (J)(\l/8n11ml store, grocelY or DIher retail sale. helpful. CompreheMi ... benefi t pack8ae available as you mDVe up the ladder. All DUr

. manage .. and supervi~rl started at derkllD thl' II really.

Edberg, the world's No. 1 player, opened the third day of the tourna­ment and needed only an hour to beat Andrei Cherkasov of the Soviet Union, 6-2, 6-3.

Becker had an uncertain start before eliminating American Richey Reneberg 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 for the fourth tournament in a row. Lendl whipped another American, Kevin Curren, 6-3, 6-4, in a routine match with a service break in each game.

Also, American Brad GiJbert avenged a loss to Amos Mansdorf of b rael in the 1988 fmal with a 6-3,7-6 (10-8) victory. French Ope~ champion Andres Gomez, fifth­seeded, lost to Sergi Bruguera of Spain 7-6 (7-4), U, 6-1.

Two Frenchmen alao qualified for the third round. Guillaume RaOUl!: beat Guillermo Perez·Roldan, the No. 13 seed, 7-5, 6-4 and 12th·seeded Guy Forget downed Ronald Agenor of Haiti, 7-6 (7·5), 6-2.

Edberg had an easy time, domi­nating Cherkaaov with his serve and strong net play. But Becker , who's trying to overtake Edberg for the No. 1 spot, had a harder time

course, but it's such a long way to make it to the flnal and win the whole thing," Becker said.

Lendl, who's trying to regain the No. 1 apot, beat Becker to win in Tokyo three weeks ago.

-rhere's not much difference Tor me to be the number one, two or three," Lendl said. "But it goes hand in hand when you win tour­naments you go higher in the ranking."

But Edberg is detennined to keep his No.1 ranking.Ifhe reaches the quarterfmals in Paris he's assured to keep his top spot no matter what happens.

"I'll try to keep my place for the rest of the year, that's still my aim," Edberg said. "I am going to try and play well in the last two tournaments and work very hard.·

Both players meet Americans in the third round. Becker faces Jim Courier and Edberg meets Aaron Krickstein.

Courier routed 16th·seeded Juan Aguilera of Spain 6-1, 6-2 in 55 minutes and Krickstein disap­point ed the French crowd by knocking out Yannick Noah, 6-3, 6-2.

Lendl takes on Jonas Svensson of Sweden in the third round.

Pele struts stuff again By PI.ro ValHCChl The Associated Press

MILAN, Italy - Pele, the most famous player in soccer history , made an emotional one-night comeback in an exhibition match at San Siro Stadium to celebrate his 50th birthday.

Wearing the No. 10 jersey he made famous with the Brazilian national team, Pele played the rU'8t 40 minutes of a game against a group of world all·stars Wednesday night, showing that age has slowed him but left his magic touch intact.

Pele made aome beautiful passes for his young teammates, unsuccess· fully tried a shot from the long distance and led a fast counter-attack by a Brazilian team before surrendering to fatigue and emotion.

His Brazilian teammates, players of the rival team and Italian referee Tullio Lanese applauded the retired Brazilian superstar as he walked off the field while a crowd of 20,000 shouted his name.

'Mte player who led Brazil to three World Cup titles appeared moved as he confessed to television interviewers, while walking to the dressing rooms, that Wednesday night's appearance possibly was his last on a soccer field.

Pele came out of retirement several times since his last official game in October 1977. Prior to the kickoff, he was honored with a birthday celebration that included a four-story-high styrofoam cake with 50 electri.c candles.

Some of the world's mOllt renowned players, including Spaniards Michel and Rafael Martin Vasquez, Dutch striker Marco Van Basten, Colombian goalie Rene Higuita, Uruguayan Enzo FranceacoJi and Cameroon striker Roger MiHa, played on a so-called Rest of the World aelection to honor Pele.

Ailing Argentine star Diego Maradona did not show up while Dutch ace Ruud Gullit applauded Pele from the stands.

The exhibition, marking the first European appearance of the Brazilian team under the direction of newly-appointed coach Paulo Roberto Falcao, was played at Blow motion in the first half, with Pele and most players just diaplaying their talent.

It was faster and tougher in the second half as the Rest of the World team won 2-1.

-It would have been nice if Pele had IICOred," commented Roberto Aliprandi, one of the many boys under 15 of age who were admitted free to the stadium and who saw Pele in action for the first time.

ADOPTED two y.ar old __ k. brother Of ... ter. Pl .... help our d.uotuer's dream come lruel

_-'--'-_.;...;...:;..;,---"c..:.... __ _______ ~=IIIIIlUll.j E.pen ... paid. E.erythlng logoll

'11!!!!!l~~tl conlldonUal Coli Dobbyl Josh

EMERALO CITY CUltom Jewetry;

Repair Gemalonl.l

Indl.n Blanke .. Ceremoni.1 Inllrumen"

H.IIM.II 354-1/lM

GOT DIRTY UNOERWEAR? (AU m.. Pick ... up Ind

d.llvtry laundry HnlICI, No hassi .. 354-a855

PREGNANT? Wo lie htoro 10 halpl

FREE PAEGIWICY lUliNG c:orIIdenIIII OfIUnMlWIg

W ... ~ ..... , JIII1 ,,"W-F or 7~ 11M T·Th or .. 111 ....

CONCERN FOR WOMEN ~--.. ....

..... 110 ....

FREE BIBLE CORRESPONOENCE COURSE. Send nam • . • ddresa: 8CC PO 80. 185t . low. City. low .. 52244.

JI .. ·S Journll merchandise! T·sh,ru. boll.,.. mugl Send tor f," catalog: Amerfprint F.,IUri •. PO Box: 680. U ar,han WI ~9 or calt 608.ess..4201l1.

OVEREATER, ANONYMOUS CAN HELP

Me.llng times Noon Mond.y

7 :30pm Tuosdayo! Thu""'a\," 9.m Silurdly.

GLORIA DEI CHURCH

jj: 00Il,cI914·162·5536.

THINGS TO EAT & DRINK

F •• 'urlllfl:

Org.nlc .OO~ whole Whelt crUll (or unbillched whlll'

• Org,nlc Belt Ind 1t,11. n Saullge

• "100111 Yt Prici EVlryday

• fREE pop lor elt·ln .nd Ptckup Ordl,.

• No Charge For Check.

• Generou. Toppings

• Fllr Pr le .. Everyd.y

J61-0ggg FREE DELIVERY ICE CREAM I SALADS TOOl --... .-

Open 4:10 p ..... 11:00 p .... ~ 11-,0) - L_11y Ow""" -

922 Mllden Line

m~f3aoJut AD BLANK

• It there __ e JOU Deed 10 lei a m-ae lo? • Do 1DII wallllo IImUI. a llleet1nc Ibne III1d pillfe? • Do 10U Deed 10 apolocf_ 10 lIJIIIe~e? • Do 10U wut 10 wIIh __ bpp,lIIrtIId.I"

bpp, a.I,1I'I8I1 ... pod luck? • II tllere __ e "at JOII wuuld Uite til ftlrt ..tth? • Do you .... 11110 18, COIIp'&tulalloa.? • Do ,OU want 10 pIu II F .A.C • ..t .. ,000r frlenda?

One day $5 (up to) 24 words. 1 ___ 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 PrInt name & phone number below.

. Name ___________ Phone ___ ...,-

Send completed ad blank with check Of' money order, Of' 8tDp by our office:

The Dally Iowan 111 Communlcatione Cen .... corner of College. Macllaon 10Wi City, 5224:: • 335· !11M

... .

~=-====='---- I career opportunity with a top company. Sl8rting wage $5.00 per NOW HIR ING ., Golden Co"ol hDur With POSsibllity 01 eaming up 10 $5.40 per hour aher \I Famllv St,lIk ~ouse, monthl. ::;:,!';:: and lull time po.itlon. HANDIMART FOOD STORES

'Flexlble scheduling Apply al1he Coralville Hancimart alter {J am 'Plrt tlml vacation pay.

'Ueal benefits. ·Fun work condition ..

-Ask .bout scholarship. program.

Appt~ at your convenience. 621 S . ~Ive .. ld.

AMI!RICAN Testronlcs. an IOWI City based netlonal educallonal tlst publisher. has t,mporery tull·tlml Ind part·tlm. poalHonl opening Immediliely. Positions Include recel\tlng material., sClnnlng. editing, printing. and quality aSlut8n~ • . Some computer experience Is preferred but not necessary . Wlgas start at $4 25 per nour, Please SlOP in for an application .nd Intl,...,lew between 8am and 4pm, Monday- FIldey at : American Testronlcs, 213 east 10th Sireet, Coralvllll.lowa 52241. 3 t&-351 -9066.

UOFI STUDENT EMPLOYMENf MANYsnJOENTSenjoy helpin, toc:lean up campus buildinC. dUriDI the evenint houri. The Uni· vcnity of Iowa Pbylical Pianl provide. jOO lkilb development aDd p.y. $4.9SJhr. for 20 hour work weeki. Help keep your Cllllpus beautiful and act pIid to do ill Call Julie at Campllind CuIIOdiaI Ser· vica, m-S066 (8 AM· 4:30 PM) orapp!y atl'hy.i· cal P\anI officii, 103 W. B1Irlinc1On.

(AAIEBO an c:r

STOP!!! Wol1< part-time evenings and weekends in a fun, relaxed atmosphere. Call on behaH of national non-proftt organization and earn up to $12 per houri Guaranteed hourty pay, great borus opportunities and paid training are provided at our convenient downtown location.

354-6226 I •

Immediate opening for all shifts. We are looking for friendly faces!

Starting wages $4.75 full-time; $4.50 part­time. ~ have openings for shift manag­

ers s . at $550/hour. Weo er.

• Discounted meals • Free unifonns policy • Paid breaks

• V~ flexible • Oean modem schedules environment

Apply today at: Coralville, 804 S. Rivenide

PART-nME STUDENT EMPLOYMENT AND WORK STUDY

has immediate openings in: STATEROOM-DISHWASHERS

Evenings , CATERING-CART PERSON

Monday-Friday 8 am-Noon and Noon-5pm

RIVER ROOM-GRILL WORKER Wednesday-Friday 7am-2:30 pm Saturday and Sunday 7 am-II am

UNION PANTRY-Monday-Friday 6:30-10 am

UNION STATION-Several shifts and positions available

STOREROOM-Monday and Friday 7-11 am Monday 9-1 pm

Sign for an interview at CAMPUS INFORMATION CENTERor

CAlL 335-3105

,HELP WANTI , IfIT W!IT!RN Wo.,fi ,

now tlklng IPPIlClllons lOCI part time wail.rll w banqUet .. t-uP. host! he

t tJuspe'aon. pl.d prep. bartender Also p,.pllin,

~ =:~:':~J:~; : eo ond HighwI' Ille. E ..

t eoratv,I", • TMlI.I T Wlstern We.

r.ow accepting Ipplicati pln.Ume night ludltor I time Ironl desk clerkl. J plflOO to the s.st West

• W .. IUold Inn. !-to E.I. : Go",lvilio . EOE.

I Hew PlDNEER Co-op r pIII·limo doll clerk Foe

.I and custom,' MrvlCI al desirable. Benolils. App person It New Pioneer. VI" Buren

,AIIIT TI 10d.1 h, A .... .,..d P ,M. Apply S.3Opm-5 3Opm. Mood

lItI ldWflt J.nltori.1 • 510 E, Burling·

klwa C,IY. low

HELP WANTED HST WESTERN Westll.ld Inn s now liking application. lor full and part time waJterai waitresses, banquet .. t-up, hostl hostess,

• buaperson ... tid prep end bartende,. Also prepJllne cOOk,

8 " ..... apply in person .t eest Western Westfield Inn, Interstate 110 ond Highway '98. E,I. 240,

I eoralYllle.

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED WANTeD: A right lolly old • .,. MinI AS8JITANT manager poaltton.t have good listening akW. and 60 Minute Pnoto S6I hou,. R.tIU eniD), working with children. e.perience helpful. Apply In Temporary position Nov,mber 19- e!~_n It eo Mlnule Photo.

I ?;~t~t~~~f.':I~I\k:~·son ii;;'p-';'~~~:'=Y?F..~~' ~ WANTlD: Sama'i h"per photo concession work,r Must nay, Pf:OPl.E who .r. interested in good people skllla, be responsible working wilh young Chlld~~"'~ I?n

USED CLOTHING COMPUTER -----------1,...5)( loaded, SUllO. O1her

THE SE~UEL. lowl City'. newest conlignment Ixperience. Men's. women s. chUdren s clothlno 50 percent 0" .. Ie 1705 First Av.., .... Mini Mill

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

$)'Stems Ind fInanCing ""1.illb6e Seago .. 40mb HD. SI80 new l 1200b mOdem $40. Aftlr Spm PIli 351~

IBII PS/2 30-28e I Meg RAM, 20 u.g HD, Co,<>r Monnor, WP/ 1231 Nonon ,.450 NEW Epson L~'05O PrlOl.r, 5495. 338-4548

• 1lt! HIT Western Wesllllld Ion II now accepting applications for a ~1't.t1",. night auditor and perl -

II lime hont desk c lerks Apply m

and dependable Tempor-Bry ~So~lon:. ,;;:u\~=ur. W~II~~~_:~ . position, No~~v.~m:be~lr~~11 'W9-c~ ~ . ' ptWa .. ' December 24 person.t ___________ _

WORD Proo ... or with lett.r quah(y prinl.r. spreadlhMt. speUcheck and t.hesaurus 5375 firm. 337·5681

~ Co the e8'1 Western Old Capitol

t Westfield Inn, 1-80 exit 2<40. WANTED: CourtlfQUS, energetic :;CO:; • .:.;,;IY;;;IIIe.:..,;E:;O:;E=-______ .1 people pe .. "".o sell gill H!W PIONEER Co-op nHds clntlle,," and shopping bags Inc parHJme dIll clerk. FOOd he.ndllng distribute Information at Cuslomer and customer service skills Service 1I10I1c. Temporary position desirable. Benefits. Apply in November 23· o.c.mber 24 . patlOn at New Pioneer. 22 S. Apply In person at Old Caphol Van Buren~ Center office

'AIIIT Tt torlal help n..oed. ..... ..,d P.U . Apply 3 3Opm--5.30pm, Monday· Friday

U ld ... l Janitorial SefV1c. 510 E. Burlington

Iowa Citv. iowa

WORK-STUDY clerical work", needed In School of Joumilism office and Rnource Center. Flexible hours Salary S5I hour MUST be work·studv authorized , Contact Laur. Hudson, ,335-8420

EARN S5O().. S 15001 week pan·1im. Itufflng enveJopes In your home, For 'r" Inlormatlon, send a long, Mlf·addressed, stamped envelope t6: PO Box 4645, Dept P1 '0, Albuquerque NM 87198.

Counlly Kllchen of Ion C"1Iy II IIXqJtIng ~ tiona iIr dining room pel' IOnoei lOCI kitchen help; aD Ibib Milable. FuJI. time or put.tIme. We wID work arowxI your ached­ule. SaIaIy commenaurate with experience. Apply in penon at 1402 s. GObert.

FUTONS and tram" Things & Things & Things 130 South Clinton 331-9&.1

WANT A solo> Oeok1 Tlbl.? f\OCker? VisIt HOUSEWORKS We've got a Itor, full of clean used fumlrurl plus dish ... drlpes. lamps and other household Items All at reasonlble prices. Now accepting new con,tgnments HOUSEWORKS 809 Hollywood. Iowa CIIY 338-4357

BOOKCASE:, S19 95; 4..orlwer ch .. ~ $58 85. lable- _~. $3<185. love .. at, S99. futons. see 8~. m.me"", 568.95, chllrl, S 1. 95, limps. e.c WOODSTOCK FURNITURE, 532 No"h Dodge Open 11am-5 15PnJ every day

useD Vlcuum cluner ... rlasonably priced

BRANDY 'S VACUU". 35101'53,

IBM LA~P with printer and softwar' $800 elll Timmy. 354·7092.

EIITEND YOUR WARRANTY Computet Solutions offlrs Wlrrlnty extenlionl on ANY brlnd ot computer or prlnltH. Call US Jor d.lall •• 35.·7549

Comput.r SoIUIlonl 327 KlrlIwood Av.

lowl City

NEED TO PLACf: AN AD? COli! TO ROOIl 111 COIIIIUNICA· TlONS C!HU II !'OR MTAILS

MACPt.-US 4meg RAM. $700. Irnegewrlter II, $225. Excel""t condilion. bo.h S900 353-5229, evenIngs

STEREO

The Daily Iowan - Thursday, November 1, 1990 78

MOVING AUTO DOMESTIC ROOMMATE APARTMENT FOR RENT

ONf-LOAO MOVE P'""Odlng spacioul Irud< (covered . ramp) and manpower. InIIlp.nsfve. Hours ' 71"'" tpm da.liy 351·59<13.

U7S _lUI MUllIng P'S-AT. .unroof, new IUernltOrI blttery. $1501 OBO. 353-4413 314 Hew~ey. Coun,lttemoon

'n PONTIAC 350 V-e AutomatIC, TIll! UHRIINCI!D IIOV!RS CO.: NC. AM/FM Runs g, .. t· $7001 O""b!y movinoJ r._nable r..... aBO K.lly. 351-8368

SPEClAutlNG IN PIANOS 11n PONTIAC 0,_ P.I. Runl

Jon Kldw.1I 354-19.6 g ... ' Solid body. $'000. 337-8591

, _ OOOOI! OIlNl GLH Turbo. ------------16000 m11e wlrrlnty. Arizonl t1tle.

STORAGE

MOTORCYCl! STORAGE Security, heated. tlos .... n. Um1t~ apace, call now. 5111 month BentOf'l Street Storage 338-5303.

IIINI· PR1C! MINI· STORAGE

SI ..... t $15 Siz15 up 10 10.20 ."0 IV'llatHe

~'65. 331.56>14

STORAGE·STORAGE MlnJ.warehousa unita from 5 'x10' lJ.Slore-AII 01.1 331..a506

TYPING

NC. c .... II • • lost 5-SIIMd $3850 35'·2549

AUTO FOREIGN WANTED DE.4D OR ALlVE"1 JUNK CARS W. pey CASH, "0.00 \0 S. 00.00, 3311-2523

HAWkEYE Coun.ry Auto Se .... 1947 W.tlffront Oml" toWI City 338-2523

1111 DATSUN 510. NC, 4 •• !>Wd, AlFIC Stlreo. r,,;ab ... Good mileage. MUST SELLI CIII 351·5878. evening.

I'" VOLIIO 149 GLE. Turbo d~set wagon, '.ather, sunroof. AIC. llloys. limited slip diUe,enUIt 32 mpg F_callent condition $6500 331-5263.

WANTED ON! "ND IWo bedroo ..

OWN ROOM In three bedroom. apar1ments IvaUlb'- in November Llrge, ck> .... ln Feml'- d Oec November 3. $110 plus utlht_ In ember Helt, NC . .... t., Cell back or Ie ... message paid Good Iocabon. Cell Sevilla Dlnlla, 683-2833. AparllMr11S. 338-1175.

=1III'=R=QOM:!..:::::.: ..... =TI!=-need--ed--u-r-ge-·1 ON! ANO two bedroom privltl bedroom With w,lk-in .par1ments evailabfeln NoYernbet closeL $2101 month pNl Ind o.cember Quiet .., ... ironment.. oIec.rlCIg;,HIW poid. Avoll.bI. Good 1oc.11"" Cell Em,,"ld Coun.

331~23, or Sco'_ Nov 3. ntact John, 35'·1497. Ap.".....,I .. 35'.'= IWnings

"C)OItIItIAT!.1 wanted lAales or "'.lET 'til "'ld·Mly. Two femaln .. of December 10 mmulf bedroom furnished Iptrtment walk to CIImpUL Must SMI S388 Includes HIW. Hospita. Ind 351~187 Law School. CIOM. Busllne

35'~50. 351~ e.. F!.ItIALI! Own room in three ONI! I!DfllOOM aPllrtmtnt bedroom ,plrtment 10000ted on S South Oodgo Renl S,90 plu •• /3 PICIOU. hllChen. 1010 01 Ught, utlll"es 354.112'6. plrklng. I.undry. Two blocks Irom

cempus S320. H/W, A"II.ble OWN ROOM. $2'OCW month. Four JlnUary 1 L .. ~ meuagl. btocks 'rom Pentlerest. Available 351.$&48 . by' .,.fori January 1. 354--6968, ONt! OR two bedroom $39$ plu' Briln .teetric No pets. Ayailable OWN ROOM In two room spar;IOUf JanUlry 1 S. Johnson St apenmen. $.901 mon.h C.II 338-4618, al •• r 7pm.

339-09.1. TWO II! GROOM CorIIVlII • • ROOMMATES: We he.,. residents Laundry, bus. parking. no pets. who need roommates 'or one. two S365 Includes ""Iter 351.2.' 5. and Il)r .. bedroom ap.rtment, ONE BEDROOII E ... oide. Parillng, Information Is posted on door al bu • . no pet. $360 Includes HJW.

'"T·"M! residen t counselor 8t r"kiantlal tr •• tment center for adolescenl wOmlln. expertlnce wOrking with adolesce"t. p"ferred bU1 not required. Wf-'klnd shihs available, Applications may be picked up at 1\1. E. Washington St , WMhlngton. Iowa or 1500 Sycamore. Iowa City.

EARN EXTRA money at Ilom • . Send SASE for free Inlo to:

FUTONS from Things, Things & Things Black orj White. Full with frame. $230 Ou"n with frlme. $210 35Hl.81,

------------I TYltlNO: e.perienced, .CCU,.11. NEED TO PLACE AN AD? COME TO ROOM 111 COMMUNICA· TIONS CENTER FOR OETAILS

.U Ea.t Marklt for you to pick up 351~2415.

VegaCorp, 308 E. Burllngron, Sullo 320, low. CI.y IA 52240.

HOUS!k U PI!RS wanted wHklnds. Apply In person , 1205 S. Riversld. Drive ,

TIME = MONEY "irorried about payine tbat nen unive ... ity bill?

LOW SEMESTER rll.s ComplC1 refrigel'810ta. microwave., TVs .nd freezer. lowest price. 00 camcorder .. typewrllersl

dishwlah., •. walhers and drylrs F rea dall'lllry on most Items Big Tan Ranlala, Inc. 331·RENT.

DRYI!R Westinghouse electriC. Basic. rellabl. $.25. 354-2165.

WANTED TO BUY

CARV! R amphli.r 14OW'ch, $230, Onkyo pr ... ampIIfJer. remot., $110. Onkyo tU ...... T4000, $'00, Pioneer equalizer, with remole, S 150. Alwa cI.sen • • $70. Bose 601 111, 5420. OBO, 337-6242.

YA .. AHA RX·SOO-A 'acelv ••. S225 or .,... oller 354-0555

RENT TO OWN TV. VCA, sterlO

WOODBURN ElECTRONICIi 400 Highllnd Court

338·1541 .

tot. Reasonable 1'I11S' Cali M.rI ..... 337·9339

TYP'NG and WORD PROCESSIHO MYour Perwnal Asshn&ntM

UAIL BOXES, ETC USA ;)54.2113

WHEN YOU need I typist and In edito,. call 351·9316.

PROFESSIONAL IneJltpens)ye; Papers, APA

Resumes. applications Ef"Iltlrgencies possibte 354-1962.7am· IOpm

Many employel'll are 8eekine .tudent. to till part.time and Collep Work·Study po_itiolUl. BUYINO class rings and other gold tt la Imposllbl. 10 de f, ••

Ind silver. ITEP"'S STAM PS a a n ignorant mi n In argument. FAST. dependable, St .OOI pago Be .. Ouallty Oolsywh .. 1 prtnUng. Ted's Typing. 354·25'6, I ..... message. luterelted in jobe that offer

linanciall"NOQrCN and work ezperience1

COINS. 107 S DUbuquo.354- .958. - WIII II .. G, lIe Adoo

1-. ' -- For more information, contact Student Employment .taft in Room 213, Calvin Hall, 335-1480.

WASHER Ind doy •• . A.k 10' Rob, Chris or Tim It 331·229.

USEP FURNITURE USED CARPET 12. 18 pius piece for S30 Nch plUS condition Inquire .t the B.at Weatem Wotl/eld Inn, 354·1770

APART .. ENT oiled lOla (550) wilh -':-" ----------.-------------,-----------·1 matching end·table (5'0). Good e,AREGIVER tor physically conditlon. 3J8.0689. 41sa~ed young man. Weekend HOMI! TYP' . T • • ~~~~72· n ---_. hour, . We.tside home. SSf hour. $3-5:000· potln1!al . I . ' .. _ ...... - . ~~~~~96~. _____________ 1 , 0'1.

~ST CHANCE to participate in UNDER new management West ~~~,~s .. ~:~:ta~g~eme~~nl~t study. Brlnch Conoco and Restlurant :::~.~ ••• ~,I.~ ... ~~!!.8:!...~3O~n~eed~ed:_, _I Fuel ctlrks, cook., dishwash.,. _ 338-3421. and waitresses Top pay tor ~w HeRING cocktail Sirvers responsible people. Apply In "'\llt h,~e lunch Ivailabllity. Apply person at Interstate 80 and Ia~rton . 2 .... pm, Monday~ Downey Road. West Branch. Iowa. n....sd.y, 0' c.1I 643-2515 'Ale Iowa RIVer Power Company.

''1 501 First Avenue '1 I Coralville. Iowa ::.:.. eOE

4DULT .carrler wanled tor.

~dow~.n1towltyn~ a~r8~a. Afternoons.

i.;:.~ tmmedla'e'v· Call the I Press CItizen . Terese

81 ext. 72.

THE CArs MEOW a tun toy Slore l(Om Cedar RaPifts Is tomlng to 0'«1 Capitol Center. TempOrary Christmas po6ilions aVl llable Immediately for m8ture' ndlviduals who can WOrk through December 26. Interviews will be given Sunday, November 4. 1.Jpm. Old Capitol Cont .. In the empty space next to the ytinton Street entrance ,

Seiferts hal a position open lor a cleaning per-80n to vacuum, to take out trash ele. Mult be available over Thanks· giving and Chri81ma8 hoIidayl , Mon.-Sat morningl. appI'Oximalllly ten hours per week, flexible, call 338-7587.

EAR N S3lO to S500 per week reading books It home Call 1-615-413·7440, .,t. B·33O

FIREWOOD SEASONED oak Ilr.wood Spli •• delivered, stacked. $125 full cord ; 585 hall co.d, 331).1601

PETS BRENN EIIAN seeD

• PET CENTER Tropical 'ish. pet. Ind pet supplle .. pet grooming. 1500 1 st Avenue Sou-tho 338-8501

ANTIQUES

MIND/BODY IOWA CITY YOGA C!NT! II

established 1975 Hatha yoga Imphaslzlng

TH! ENGLISH M-..JOR Word Processing

.,nth speed • • ccurlCY and .tyle '51·3822

breathing. align_nt, strelchlng, J eANN E'S Typing , S1.251 poge, Enhances .xperlence of aEINO· $1 .001 p1ck·op. 51 001 dll~ry. CIII In·tho-body CI ...... t."lng now 628-4541 'nformatlon. call Barba,a Welch TOO BUSY? 1"1 do your Breder. PhD. 19 years experiencMt laundry. PfCK.UP and OEUVER'Y. ~ln~s~tr~u~c.~lo~n~.~3~5~..:9~79~4~ ________ 1_354 __ ~~5~5 ________________ __

THERAPEUTIC COLONIAL PAR K BUSINESS 8!RVICfS

MASSAGE 1110' BROADWAY. 331·1800 Typing, word p.oceDing. I.U.r.,

______________ 1 r •• um ••. bookkeeping. wha""",r

TOUCH FOR H~ALTH Ste~.n L. Hutchlnaon C.rtif~ ml.sage .nd

Aelkl therapl,l Sh1atsu- Acupressure· Swedish·

Neur'omuscular Therlpy- po'arity TherapY'· RefielCology

For natural pain ,eU.f Ind refalC'~ lion.

FREE INTROOUCTORY MASSAGE

you need. Also, reguler and mlcrocasseltl tranacrlptlon Equlpme",. IBM Dl'playwrlltr Fa. service. fbt. efficient, reasonable.

PttYL'S TYPING 20 )'91(5' experience.

IBM Correcting Selec.rlc T~pewrller 338-.6996

_1I2_2_M_ald_._n_u~33Q.02:.:n·..:::;3:.:._I_ow_a_cl_ ... 1 RESUME TH~ SHIATSU CLINIC

Acupressure lor ther.peutlc naturat pain and Itrest rellel. By appointment.

Tuesday· SalurdlY 9--7 338-4300

E .... A GOLD .. AN CLINIC FOR WO"EN

RllaJl ing, Swedish massage with some acuprellull work Pr,,"at.1 and sports mass.ge also. COnven'-nt location, reasonable fees. Call for eppolntment.

221 N OubUqu, 337·2111

OUA L I TY WORO PROC!SSING

329 E, Cou"

e.pert r&Sume preparltlon.

Enlry. level through executive.

Updat •• by FAX

354·7122

RESUMes THAT GET THE INTERVIEW

MAIL BOXES. ETC, USA 221 Eas1 Market

, _ TOYOTA Cellca GT . Sunrool. ..... 00. Eegl. STs, only 60.000 miles. S1I100. 354-0001 . , •• v. measage

, .. , DATSUN 200 SX. PIS . PIB. PIW, NC, runl porlect $950 353-08.9

1110 VW JeUa. axcellen. condition 11750 337-11781

. _ VOLVO 240 Dl. 2-<100', 4-1p1ed 0 0 AlC. AMiFU cu .. ". Good condlUon 95.000 mil ... $2600. Phone 3&4 ..... 956. after Spm.

AUTO SERVICE SOUTH Sl OE IIiPORT

AUTO SERVICE 804 MAIDEN LANE

338-3554 Rapair specialists Swedish, Germln, Japanese, Italian.

MIkE McNIEL AUTO REPAIR

has moved to 1949 Waterfront Onve.

35'·7'30

MOTORCYCLE HAl "OVING ~eFT you WITH TOO "ANY THINGS AND NOT ENOUGH SPACE? TIIY SELLI NG SOliE OF YOUR UNHEEDED ITEIiS IN THE DAILY IOWAN. CAL1. OUR OFACE TODAY FOR DETAILS AT 335-5784. 335-5785.

WINTER STORAGE Indoor ator.ge

Sl51 monlh or SOc IdlY.

MALE. Tlke OVlr lease starting DOWNTOWN studiO Laundry, no Janulry 1 Sevilll Apartmertts. pet • . $380 Includft HIW. 351.2415. F," A/C, pool Ahernoona. ~93 TWO BEDROOII '0 luble •• , of

December 1 S400 a month MAU!: roomm.te fOf IpnOij 331.5026 "meltl'. '1251 month CIOM 10 campus Avalla~ o.c.mber RALSTON Creek. Two bedroom 3S1 ~1230 Ipar1menl fOf sublet. Avall.bte in =-'-'-'---------lla.oo.cembo. CaU331·9Hl . MALE. Own room In two bedroom Ipartment On Mormon Trek and CUFF apartment Thr .. bedroom, ..... Irose S200 plu. Ulllll'" New 1 112 baths, free ~rll;lng, helt Ind carpet. On busllne. Qule. 1000tion water paid Available elll Jill, 3J8..t8.41. or Todd. mld·December 351·n34 . 331-4020. Subllt· Ivalilble 'Immediltety AllOY! Sunlhlne Laundryl ThrM ===='--------1 bedroom I splclous. parking. ~::~~o~~~~~~:. Av.llab .. January 1. 33&-7326

tHtdroom Ipartmlnt. $1461 month TWO BI!OAOOM apartment. Sublet HIW paid CLOSE. AVllitble efter lKond ""'"tl(. CIOM·ln. NC. finals Tami.351-o3«. offal,..t parlelng. S"SOI mOnth piUS -;;";"-'-'-"''-~------lllectriclty. 338-M65. GAY ROOMMATe wanled . Own room In thrH bedroom house LAROl! one ~roorn CIOM to $'1851 month piuS utillt.... campu. Unique LeNlng option Beginning Oecttmber 15. .vall.ble Iltlr hnlla. HJW paid . 338.112'4. 338-3838. ~FO;!II;":;Ao.l-!,";Ow--n-'-oo-m-, H-IW--pe-I-d-- I ON! I EDRooll '0' sublet. Vln Buren 5t,...t. Janulry 1. CIII AVllllble January t. Great Jar one

or two people $3481 month, HIW _A_nge=-II..;,'-33_9-054 __ 9_· ______ IPald Four blocks from campus,

AUR pfNTACIIEST Apartm.nt 33&-0742. Own or ,h.re room with friend TWO BEDROOM lpart/Tl4lnt on 331·5718. Oakcrest. Available second

sem"te •• Call 354-0928. OWN BeDROOM In two bedroom, near CINar·Hawkeye. Female nonsmoker $245. heat. waler parking Included. Contact Krla . · PEOOLE" YOU" 11K! tN THE 331-4585 O"ILY IOWAN. 335-511., =~ ________ """ I 335-5715.

ROOM FOR RENT HOUSE CAMBUS IIno. Qe.ober IrM. S.401 FOR RENT month, u1ll11le. Included 339·1021

ROOM In house. Private bath . Wilking distance to campus. SfSOt'

Don sHondl 338·1071 month and utI/ties 354-8663. 1==;;;';;-'--;;';;;";';;;';' HOUSE for rent. Two bedroom. one bath. Doubll cat glrlg • . Available Novemb.r 1, S550. lincoln Aell Estate, 338-3701 GARAGE/PARKING

IIONTHLV $115- $225. No deposit. no 1.lse Westsld. 337·5158.

THREIE bedroom house in ONE BE DROOII. Shared ki.chen Uni.orslly Helghl •. Singlo car

GARAOIE space wanted, Very close and bath. Includes gas $160. garage. central air. 6 month lease. to campus (Pre'.rably nelr :;39;:,;1:.,;-390::.:::2:..' n;;;l~g:.;h.=·~ _______ ll1nCOln Real Estate. 338,3701 .

~ayflower) PlY top cash. Ask for FEMALI! non.moker to sublet one TWO BEDROOM houst Wi lh Eric. 353--1030. room in new four bedroom garage lor r.nt Quiet e .. tslde

apartment. Free plrklng, busHnl. neighbOrhood Newly remodlled. For .."ery 'Ilent that AvaUable immediately Call Available Immediately. $5251 poverty hi. 1.lmula, red It hi. Jennifer. 337.a573. month 337.7721 .

blighted • hUndred":"'ohn G.rdnl' IIIF, Large prlvat. room In two "'RE=N"'Tf'-R;;':S"'"1 H';';O-"""'''-I-.o-m-s-, ---bedroom apartment Furnished (U.Repalr) GoYf)rnment giveawavs.

LOST & FOUND LOST: Ge,man Shepherd puppy 9 week okt male Black and tan " lound cell 337·9290, reward.

~~~.' AvaIlable Dec. 15. $220. bank repo., lorfIClosu,." I.­dellnquenl propertln. \-918-622·5852. E •• 1\\021 , Including Seturday and SUnday

I

VI!RY CLOSI! to cempus S130i month Share bath, Optlonll parking C.II 337·7310 Tuo.J Thur • • bolore noon. Ask 10. Kristin HOUSING WANTED

!AAN $15- $201 hour, .0-.5 hoo~ ,18k Call between 4·6pm. 351·9175 HELP WANTED

PAPER CARRIERS IN FOLLOWING

AREAS:

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Sunday

Browsing WHO DOES IT? __ -,;;,:354;.;,.·2;;.;.11~3 ---I TICKETS

A:.,;V;,;.;,;II.:.:;bl.:.:.;D;,;.=c.:e;,;m.:b.:M~1:;5 ________ 1

FEIIALE. Aoom In hou" Prlv.t. toilet Ind shower. ACtO&! from KIOlz tennis courts. 5194/ month. utiiU.s Ind¥ded . 354~2054 .

GR"DUATe S.udan. needl room byl belore Oecembo. '5. Good re'erences, 338·4010 .

Now hiring fO( full or part Ii me day and

second shift waitresses. Please apply In person at 2208 N. Dodge by Howard Johnsons

MANAGER TRAINEES . ,..Full time. Day hoW'S.

Salary and commiaaion. Health inllUl'1lnce. Profit

Iharing. Muatslll Market

Convenience Store.. I.C. area.

Apply at: 933 S. Clinton, Iowa City

, Posilion available lor part­tme evenInp • Certilled

Nursing Assistanl BI Oaknoll Reaidence

·CNACour18 • rWrOursemenl, tuitJon

relrrtlursemenl lor ~C8lional cour18S. 08" 351-1720 lor InlBrview

tIJlPQInmenl.

IlIMl!.DIAn openings for part­time IIlemarkelers. Evening ~ ..... hours. base pay and bonuses, r;;.,," ' up 10 S8I hour and have fun at the 11m. IIm.1 Call John today, 4·9pm .1337-6365. No exparlence nece ... oy

, ASTHIIA? SeekIng volunteers with aslhma. ages 12 10 65, nonsmokers, tor upcoming re .. arch studl •• CompenHlicn l~aIlBbl • . Phon. _~d.yo, 3.9-35&-. 659. 9am· 4pm, (Allergy Division! Unlv ... lty of Iowa HospUals).

HEAD COOk! kltch.n manager. Elks Club. Excellent wage. vlrlety lof duties. For Interview appointm.nl, 351·3100,

JOB CO~CH Goodwil l Industries II SMklng • Ihard·working,lnnovalivelndivlduel to provide on-llte tr.lnlng and aupport lor persons with dlaabllitlHln community tmpJoymen1. Hours vary. Must tllve own Clr and valid driv.,s license. MUeage reimbursement p'o~ided. Starting wag. se,7()' ' 7,181 hour Apply at Job SerVlc. thro Nov. 2 EOEIM.

UN,y a~el C.nt.r I. nOw tllring Plrt· e tourler positions ... 501 hour. MondlY- Friday. Flexible IChedule . Pl .... call _ 11 .

• Dubuqe, Clinton, Fairchild, Church

• Bloomington, Davenport. Clinton , Dubuque, Unn

• Rodleater Ave., Clapp. Mon1TOle, Jefferson. Hotz

Apply: THE DAILY IOWAN

CIRCULATION

VtPERIENCE D Secretaryl Bookkeeping

Assistance 351·4011

'L_tters 'Rlsumes ' Papers 'Brochures 'Books 'Multiple copies 'Ma1lings 'Ouality designs/layouts 'Late!" Equlpmenc

Free Parking Fast Serv1ce

HAIR CARE HALF·PRtCE hair-CUll tor new r;lIentl. Halrlze. 511 Iowa Ave 351-7525,

at The Antique Mall will uncover

unique gifts of lasting value. 507 S. Gilbert

10·5 Daily La:lOIIHIY, MIC, Vila

BOOKS Ph. 335-5782 I - - - - - - - - CO<JP()N · - - - - - - -

~TO=DD=L=ER=a=s.=IS1::an=. need==ed=::: I: FRIENDS OF THE IOWA CITY

PORTRAITS by T./'l .R. R'?IIOrs. 011 on c,rWBS. From lire or POoto 5«IIII.(:tlon guarlnteed 338-0033.

WOODBURN I!ll!CTRONICS sella and services TV, VCA. a"reo, auto sound and commercial sound sales and se,."le. 400 Htghland Cou", 338·7541.

SEWING with! WIthOut panem. Alteretlons. Seiling prom dresses. silk • •

GANOAS'S BRIDAL BOUTIOUE 62\1-2422

CHIPPER'S Tailor Shop, mon 's and women's alterlUons 128 112 E •• t W.shlngton StrMt. Dial 351· 1229.

RE" SONAILY priced cuslom framing Poster .. original art Browser. welcome. fhe Framl House and Gallery. 211 N. Linn

I (across 'rom Hamburg Inn)

HOUS! 01 Sewing E,pe" I alt.ra11ons Ind dresl making. I 338-0463.

Full·Um. mornings or .l1e,"oono, II PUBLIC LmRARY Apply •• TLC, .050 Fillh SI., I.

Corltvill • . Or call 338-4635. I- BOOK SALE =-=IO:':':WAc.::.;;;:Cl':":TY"-Co':':m"-m=u=-nlty~S:'=;C-hOO-I- I

. : CHILD CARE District needs two school bus • aid" .ach to work 8 :45- 8 :45am Hardcoyer $1.00 • paperbacka !SO~

I TRIPLE the pl ... ur.1 Mother' l I hetper wanted tor 3 112 month old

and 2::zo.. 4 '2Opm Apply at 509 :;,. =S . ..:D::u:;:b=uq",u.:. • .:.S::.1. .:.EO=E::c· ____ I~ Featuring Iowa CIty Press Citizen

triplets. Full·tlme' liv.ln available

~ 337-4321

WANTED: Coc~lail serv.rs. I:: P h otogra phic engravtng plates ExceUenl hours for student. th 50 and

.C·I CH1LDc;ARE REFERRAL COMPUTERllED CHILO CARE

REFERRAL AND INFORMATION SERVICES,

United Way Agency.

Colonial Bowling Lanes. Apply In from e 19 's, OO'B 70·s. person or call 338~1513 .

SealUng R,N. director 01 IOcIiI tQM cars program ~ privIIe aid and ~careslO

primarily eIdBI1y popuIaIion. Responslblltiel include ltafl aupervtsIon II1d

dBveIopmenl. markaling and financial f1IIINIII8I1Ienl.

PIIIt-lime, llex" hours. compelitive salary and

beneftls. Send rssume by Nov. 910 The Daily Iowan,

Box 060. 111 CC, Iowa Cly, IA 52242. EOE,

~----------------~ LAII ASSISTANT in an ImmunOlogy research laboratory. No experience necessary but musl b. work-story. For more Informlt ion. Call 335-8185.

IIOOEL II .. el. Aslen, prele, Aqua,lan, lor portrait and figure study (drawing, etc,) e ,F.A In art, 354-8265, eveni ngs.

CNA'S $5-$7

FIt.nd fIIII-IIII1I ...... I'IIiIIIIIt In IN .. ely _

W .. buldon JilllaI ..... • iII'IOt n nIIIIbIr aI 0IIIIIIcaIiIn 1IMn.!'Iid~, Cd,.. IIIIIonII ~ SeMcII 337·71l1li, I.JIoon and 1~ IoIondIy-F !Idly.

Day car. homes. centers, preschool IIsllngs. occasional sitterl.

I

I

I

I

I

I

WHEN: Sat .. Nov. 3. 1990. 10 am-4 pm WHERE: Library Garage. 123 S. Linn PREVIEW: 9 am to 10 am for $2.00

or Free for FRIENDS

I FREE·OF-CHARGE to Unlve .. lty I student!, faculty and Itat1

M-F. 338·16&4 I

Bring this couponJor FREE BOOK I NANNY RECRUITMENT Iov"'n

_ •••• _.- C()(JfI()N···· • pOllllons .vaillble In metropol1tan

- WashlnglOn, 0 C, CIJI JIM

MISC. FOR SALE COMPACT refrigerators for rent Three slz8& available. from $391 sch ool year Microwaves only $391 semester. Free delivery. BiO Ten Rentets Inc. 337·AENT.

DRAFTING machine MUTOH M·24 Sl55. LIRoy LIUe,.ng Guide, 5.35 338-4546.

FL!ER B .. hl1b. n . 810·81 $.81 set, $10016 HtS. $301 WIX bol(. 331·1329. Ilave message,

DeSK, chair and bankers lamp. P.rlect lor Sludying . $.00 354-1979,

FOR SALE: Royal o«lce typ.wrlt ••. EXlct duplicate of one on "M"rder. She Wrote ... Also chord argin. 80th 8J1tcelient. 351-7703.

RECORDS CASH PAlO for quality used rock, iazz and blu •• albums, cassettes and CDs. Large quantities wanted : will travel if neceMary RECORD COLLECTOR,4 .12 Sou.h Unn 331·5029.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENT TUBA: a&S Peranlacci, compact ce, 5 rotary Val~e. 18 Sl8 " bell $3000. 515-981·3120.

NEW and USED PIANOS J , HALL KEYBOAROS

1851 Lower Muscatine Ad, 338·4500

COUCH and two matching chairs. SIOO: mlc,owav •• $01() , 0'0" 5 PI ! CE LUOWIG ORUMS,S4501 country skll, $65, Fender baSI and I . ~~~:~~rdwa,. Included, cymbals amp, S200 taCh, 338-8090, I .v .... O'. 354-9388.

USED CLOTHING SHOP THE BUOOET SHOP. 2.2' South Riverside Drive, lor good used clothing . small khchen IlemB. elc. O!'.~ .very day, 6" 5-5'00. 338-~,o.

BEAUTIFUL bomb •• jack., Heavy • 'I'}lrm. Siz. Lerga. $1501 OBO. 351-6487,

"

For All Types 01 Quality Repair Work on your guitar. you

can trust West Music. (FmdtI. C.F. Martin,

BOO Yamaha Do.) •

Fen·Papke, 337...aQ59 or ElCluelvety Y04.Irs N,n", 8enk' Inc. 703·521-0307.

BABYSITTER wa nted for five Yllr old In own home lor evening November 8 and some atternoons. Own transportatio n and referlnces required. Call 331·3083,

NANNYI Hou",",Mpar needed lor New York. Transportation paid 1-800-235-6285, r.ference required.

INSTRUCTION SCUBA lesaon •. PADI open wlt.r certification In tour days (two weeklnds) 886-2946.

TUTORING TUTORING Compute. cia .... Including. 6K:70. 22C:00., 22C.001. 22C:009. 22C:016, 22C·OU. call Daon 331).1819,

TUTORING:

22101 :1·100 Math.mot,c. 22S:2· 1S4 S tatistiCS I

29:5-50 Physics 4 ·5--1" Chemislry

351-1888

MATH Tutor To The Rescue'l

Mark Jon"

354-0318

CALENDAR BLANK ENTERTAINMENT ..... or bring ID TIle .,..., ,.. ... Commun1cdona Con,"r Room 201. Ooodilne lor submitting Hems \0 the "Todiy" cotumn II 3 p,m, Iwo doya belono lhe evenl. Homa may be edHecI lor length, Ind In _ I MURPHY Sound . nd Lig h'.lng OJ

"rvlc. 10. your p arty, 351·3119.

PECH .. AN Rt!SVIlltE S!RIIICES ONr-wAY airline l1ckel to

Wlshlnglon 0 C. December 15 e..t Ollor 351-8050 MlF 81GGEST room In tour COIIDOM'II'·U'"

bedroom house, Washerl doyer, • m W. do It all for you . -personal Intlrview

4consul1I'Ion ·wril. tho resume 10. you • • • • • • • • •

.1 ... , polnl the '.sum. 10' you i' SPORTSMAH'S TICKET. _M_yrt~"''-'-A_._.n~u-'-o_s • ...;60_A_V_._"._b_I· __ 1 FOR SALE J.nuaoy 1 331-8901

____ 35_'_.'_52_3 ___ I i' SERVICE •

i' =:z';.,.~ • 1115, an bill. paid 6t 1 S. Clinton 354·5386 (Gill ev.nings) ~vallable Dlc_bor 15 •

.'Ac.o ua, quiet, luwury condos you can afford. 0".... two or three bedrooms wllh aU amenities Come end HI our newly renovated unlta.

THE ENGLISH II-..JOR Word Procedlng

with lpeed. accurlCY and styl. 351·,.22

HAS MOVING Lf:FT YOU WITH TOO MANY THINGS AND NOT ENOUGH SPACE? TRY SELLING SOliE OF YOUR UNNEED!D ITEMS IN THE DAILY IOWAN, CALL OUR OFACE TODAY FOR DETAILS AT 335-5714. 335·5115.

i' 351-0037 • i' ., .... ·TIIIII •

••••••••• SElLING IOWA AT ILLINOIS FOOTBALL TICKETS, 2.7-356-5533. HURRY.

I RE ALLY need Dylan I1ck .... row 100' bott.r (515) 232·9125.

APARTMENT FOR RENT THE OAl l.Y IOWAN CLASSIFIED AD OFFICE IS OPEN 1Im-5pm, IION-THU AND IIom-4pm

Oakwood Viliag. e.twMn Tlrgo. and K 1.11"

102 21St A .. PlacI Coralville 354·3412

HOUSE FOR SALE _FR_I_D_A_Y-,-S_. _________ 11852 GRANTWOOO Ori •• , Three

SHORT term I .... s IVlliable. bedroom ranch. Central air. built In Erticlency apanments In Coralville. dishwasher. selt-cleaning Itove . 354-0877 Relrlgerator, double car garage,

W RD ;::;,.;,.:;:.;,;.---------Ientrancl to basem.nt trom ga,age.

O TWO bedroom apanments. Comer lot. Halt block Irom Coralville. Pool. centra' Ilr, Grlnt Wood School. 351 .... 039

10WA·ILLINOIS 2 11cke .. , Iowa section 337~3452

PROCESSING WANT£O to buy 8 Bob Dylan laundry. bus. parking. s.t50, tickets. 10th row Or b4tU.r. Will pay I"clud" wlter 351-2 .. t5 SMALL four bedroom IlauM

_____________ 1 good price. 337-6119. OH~ 8!DROOM. Qule1 ~=:. w~~~:.e~s..~9~::500· QUA L I TY

WORD PROCESSING

329 E. Cou"

Uacintosh & Laser PrlntJng

'FAX 'Fr •• ParkIng 'Slme Day servici ·Appllcatlon'" Forms ·APA) Lega" Medical 'Selt Serve ~.chlnes

OFFICE HOURS: 9am·Spm U·F PHONE HOUAS Any1lmt

35 4 ·7 1 22

UCELLENCE GUARANTEEO

BEST g:"~~E:!=,VICES, Short tUto around.

338·.512 Monday th rough Sunday

a.m to 10jJm

PROFESSIONAL RI!SULTS Accurlte , fast and reasonable word processing . Papers. thesis. liners, resumes, mJlnulcripts.. TrlCY 351-8992,

WaAOC"RE. ProtHSlonl1 word processing on quality equipment for papers. resume •. dlssenltlons and theses. Ahonda. 338-3888.

TH! M S. manuscripts, studlnt papets, elc. Fast. experienced. professional. reasonable.

$1 pa' page (double .paced) Cell Peggy II 351·6328

BUDGET Compute' Services. Papers: $1 .501 page. Resumes: S10. NelCt dll)' Mrvte.. Plck·up.' d.Uvery available. Cell 845-2j78, ask for a,enda,

AUTO DOMESTIC ' WANT TO buy wrecked or u".lmed carl and trur;ks Toll IrM ~8-4911.

ROUNDTRIP tick." CR· DaUasi F., nelghbO'hOo<I He.tI water paid. Worth Thanksglylng weele. Sl58 Perfect for gradual. stu~nt. FOUR Bedroom hom. Walking Charlotte, 354·5976 Av.llable Oecember 17, $290, distance Woodwork. no yard, ';"~;;';;;--';';;''';''-------- I ::354-:;:..9:;1c:29:::c.' ::1 • .:av;,;t;:,;m::;,:es::s::."'Q::e.'-___ 1 589,900. 354·9162.

HEALTH & FITNESS OR1!AT downtown apartmentl LARGE nine room house, In •• penslv • . H/W paid. Will 'Ike •• tr. large Ipl. evergreens. garage,

--------------1 first available applicant. 80 hurryl twO baths, $70's, 338-<4070, 8-9am. :;3s:Hl383==-::::;:;.:(;:"'::a,;;v.:.;;.mo::::u::e~ge::)::.· ___ IGOYERNMf NT homes from 51 (U BODV Dimensions membe"hlp

only $".56/ monthl Call 'or det.lIs, avenlngl 3Stt..a919. !FFICIt!NCY. CloM-ln. Pets ,epalr). O.lInquent tax property.

negotiable. J38..7o..7. Repossessions Your .,.a. j-------------1 :;.===..::.:;:..:.."-"'-----1 1-80~1_8000 ... GH·9812 lor

LAAOE two bedroom apanment. current tepo list cta .. to campus. AlC. Offstr"t parking H/W Plld. A'iailable late ::,:DI,:.:ccem::.;,:bo::;.r:..::, C.:::'1I.:::33:::.~:::27:;::9' ___ 1 MOBILE HOME TWO BEDROOM two bath II 01 December 1. Microw.v" dlshwa.her. Ilundry. porCh. garagl. and pool. One VIIr old, 10

FOR' SALE minute walk to campus. Must ne' TWO B! DROOItI CIOM to ;;.35;..1_-6..;1..;8_'_. _________ 1 Unlv ... ity Hoop".I • . $31501 OBO. - Oullt. 338-2557. THR!! bedroom, spacious, cIOM. HIW paid. Pert'ally lum,.h.dl • GUALITYI Lowest PoIce.1 $ Available Oec. 15. 339.;)232. '0% down 11 ,5 APR IIx.d , -'''-''--''''----''-"-'---1 New '91, 16 ' wide, Ihree bedroom,

FALL OCCUPANCY. $15,987,

ROOMMATE WANTED

Leasing for fall Efficiencies and Large selection. Fr .. d.ltvery, set twO'-bed room townhouses. For up and bank financi ng .

N! W ADS START AT THf: BOTTOII OF THE COlUIiN AND WORK THEIR WAY TO THE TOP.

summer enJoy our pool and tennis Horkheimer Enterprises Inc. cou .... On busUno, Laundoy 1-800-632.5985, facilities, Hlzelton. lowi.

J..aII:e.lde

____ 33 __ 1-3 __ 103 ____ 1 CO-OP

GREAT: Two bed.oom, Iwo lull FI!MAL!: OWn roorn in two b.ths In Clpitol View. Minutes bedroom Seville ap'rtment 52151 Wilking d iltanee to downtown,

HOUSING month. 351·5031 or 339-0636. Centr.lalr. balconies, microw.ve.

' OIW. pool! AVllllble CHEAP. Water and hlat paid. Pool mld.oeo.mbe'r Ifter fln.ls Cell ;..";;,Sk-.;,:I0c.,.:J;;,0Io.;:BI;..33='_·2;;,29;,:.;.I;..' ____ I 337·7200

ROOII AVAILA_L!. 12.6, CIO .. to campus, shlred meal •. q uiet almosphare. 331·5260.

1

5

9

DI Classified Ad ' Blank Write ad below using one word per blank

I

,

C"IN TOD"YI Sell you. loroign 0' 13 domestic aUlo fast and elsy.

2

6

10

14

18 .

3

7

11

15

19

4

8

12

16

20 W.stwood Moto •• , 354·4445. 17

IIUST SELLIII 1911 Capric. Clas.lc, Starts In Ih. wln .. r. 55501 OBO, 354·58 ' 3,

QOVERNMI!NT Seized v.h lcles from Sl00. Fords. ~cedes. Corvette., Chevys. Surplul. Your .'''. 1-805-881-8000 ex' 5-98'2 .

MERCUR~ Mon.rch 4-dOOr oed.n· 1976, AlC, ,450. 338-7285.

21 22 .23

Print name. address & phone number below. Name Phone

Addrsss City

No. Days Heading Zip

24

I

, wi" not be Pl'bliohed more tlw1 """" Notice 01 ... nll lor which admlulon 1. o" "Qed will not be 1CCIpIId, Notloe of polillcel .....,11 will not bo """""ted, •• eept meeting .nnounoomen1s 01 recognlled _ groupo. P_ prtnt. P.A. PROS. Pa .. y music and I....... ON! OWN!II '80 Mu.tang, N.w

To ftgure colt multiply the number of words (including address and/or phone number) times the appropriate rate given below. Cost equals (number of words) x (rate per word). Minimum ad Is 10 words. No refunds. Deadline II 11 am' pr.vloul workIng day. Ewmt ______ ~------------------~----------___

o. vl' ....... ..,. '. Day, date, time _. __ , ________ • __ . ...,...--:'-__ .,.,-__ -:-_______ __

Location t . Contact person/phone , '.- . .

. - -. -

WANTlO: Gultl" 01 any kind o. condition. Top dollar paid

THE GUtTAR FOUND"TION 5.4E. felochlld 35. -0932

COIIPLET! OUITAII III~AIII Malorl mInor

Complete restoration Custom Intays

Lyl. Haldy TIll tOWA CITY OUITA"

FOUNOUION OibSOfl authorlz.d

351·0932

Ed. 351-5639. brek .. , owo new . Ire •. CIe.n. good

MOVING ilioN. TRUCK: Moving and hauling from 515 tor single ttems. 331·62110.

I WILL IIOII! YOU COII~ANY Help moving end .he truck, 1301 loed O" o. lng lcedlng .nd unk)ldlng of your ren',' ,ruck • • Mondey through fr iday IIom·5pm; StlturdlY elm·noon John,

l1li3-2703

ahope, $'6001 080. 01 .... , 35. ·1132,

1.,.. MODEL A truck loole. and run' good, Complete. air aged, $2500 • • ·5 ' 5·682.()44. ,

."CK Skyl ..... 980 New t'l namilllon, muffler . Bett o tter. Must se ll , 337·9534, o .. nlngl,

'h CUTLAII B.oughm, PIS. P18, AIC. PIwI""ows. P/steering Vinyl top, Ausl prooled, fully loaded, 100ki good. runa good. S2500I OBO, 354-8981.

1 - 3 days .............. 64~ord ($6.40 min,) 4· 5 days .............. 7O¢/Word($7.00min.)

Send compleled ad blank with check or money order, or stop by our office: . , ,,",. ,

..

6 - 10 days ............ 9Oe/word ($9.00 min.) 30days .. """",, .. 1.88Iword (S18.80min.)

Th. Dally lowln 111 COmmunications Center com., of COllege , MldllOn

IOWI City 52242 335-5714

8B DAILY BREAK The Daily Iowan - Thursday. November 1, 1990

c... From Ubheclya ........,.,. Matt Hyde. N.n Schwarz .nd J.rryd Lowder. The band, which also

IncIudH Julie HoIat, will pertonn tonight at Oabe'. 0 ..... 330 E. Walhlngton It

Cats transcend fol kie gen re By Brtan Jones The Daily Iowan

,.

T he most remarkable thing about the Cats From Ubhadiya is that they're not really lou8Y.

Really, really lousy. Any band lineup that'8 not guitar·

guitar-baas-drums i8 just begging for trouble (consult They Might Be Giants or Depeche Mode for instant verification). The qats -

. Music Julie Holst, Matt Hyde, Jarryd Lowder and Nan Schwarz - play, in various permutations and com­binationa, acoustic and electric guitara, mandolin, violin, ataod·up baS8, and percu8Bion. The violin presence alone should stimulate listeners' wince re8ponse.

But it doesn't, because unlike They Might Be Giants (who continue to believe that being clever puds is enough) and Depeche Mode (who mysteriously continue to draw breath), the Cats don't have any muter plan.

According to guitarist/vocalist Hyde, he didn't set out to have a band including a c1a88ically trained violinist with a beautiful, crystal· line voice. And he didn't envision a band necessitating II multitude of hyphens for descriptive purposes, as in, 'The Cats From Ubhadiya

are just another folk·rock~untry­baroque band from Iowa City."

Hyde's reason for starting the band was that "moat people here want to be in the Cure or Depeche Mode. People think they're 110 origi­nal in thia town, hut few people get out and really do anything origi­nal." Pretty good description of a town whose muaical landscape often seems made up entirely of recombinant pop combos and noise merchants, no?

And the Cats are original. There is no "typical" Cats From Ubhidaya song. Seguing easily from Appalachia-derived folk song to sensitive singer/songwriter thing to rock workout (albeit with violin and stand-up bass) to horror movie soundtrack music, these Cats defy euy description.

Compounding the problem is the band's lyrics, which veer from Hyde's "confe88ional Dylan things" to "That Happy Christ Family.· The once· religious Hyde wrote the song after waking one morning in a cold sweat, "wondering what would happen if they found out the Bible wu a hoax. Then Jeaus and God wouldn't have jobs anymore." Representative lyrics: "There's Jesus and Betty and their dad God and their mom, Mother Nature or something/Jesus, when he's not on tour, likes to visit his seldom· mentioned sister BettylShe lives in a condo near the beach and talks of all the times she'a seen Tom Petty, at the mall." On the page, it just looks dumb. But live, with

Schwan'a beautiful vocals atop Hyde's eameat warbling, it's a wonderful joke, one almoat capable of redeeming the whole "joke rock" axia.

But it'a important to note that the Cats aren't a joke band. In fact, said Hyde, "it's probably about 66 to 33 (percent) serious to wacky." Still, Lowder does sometimes play mandolin with a slide. Th.at's just weird.

"People think they're so original in this town, but few people get out and really do anything original."

Matt Hyde of Cats From Ubhedlya

Sometimes, he said, the lyrics just happen that way. "I don't jU8t write, 'Baby, you were really good last night.' If I did. I'd mean it, though."

So, finally, what does it aU mean? Decide for yourself tonight, when the Cats From UbhadiYII play Gabe's Oasis, 330 E. Washington St. The Willie Wisely Trid, a darned fine rock-sorta jazz band from Minneapolis, plays too.

our.TOP TEN .REASONS Why You Should Order A

1991 HAWKEYE YEARBOOK

10. In ten years the book will be here but the laser center won't.

9. What's $29.50 on a $2000 U-BiII?

8. Your chances of being in the book are greater than your chances of winning the lottery.

7. Something might happen to George Bush.

6. Proceeds from the sale of the book go towards our all­staff weekend retreat in Cancun. (NOT!) ~

5. Chock full '0' spicy Cajun reCipes.

4. Safer than abstinence,

3. Includes a behind-the-scenes look at the taping of Richard Simmons' "Sweatin' to the Oldies" video.

2. What a yearl What a bookl

And the WI Reason:

1. IN TEN YEARS YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!

• Look for an order form in your U-Bill or call 335-0637

• Order tod~yl

Modern works well-rendered , By Chrts hge,. The Daily Iowan

T he Oct. 28 performance of . the Composer's Workshop

wu a delightful trip into the hearts and minds of

some of the School of Music's brighteat young innovators. Four electronic piece8 and an acoustic work provided an evening of enjoy· able diversion. •

The concert began with ~Studies from Stanford," written by senior Craig MaeMillan, a piece that used an ingenious computer randomill· ing system that controlled virtually every parameter of the composi. tion. Even the order and nature of the musical events were controlled mathematically by the computer. The sou.nd8 created were then tran8ferred to electronic tape to produce a lush sonic landscape full of somber washe8 and soothing counterpoint.

The only work for traditional in8truments, Steven Hoffman's "Interpretations" for flute and piano, included a jolting keyboard

background in juxtaposition with a these sound8 haphazardly -meditative flute that hovered except for some unfortunate extra· around certain long notea and neous noise from the tape machine, teetered off on exprel8ive tangents. I found the performance very The piece, short but sweet, played entertaining. an interesting trick with little The concert ended with an music and a lot of music stands on impromptu perfonnance by Mac­stage. Millan and 'UI junior Matt Burrier,

Robert Fuller'8 "Untitled" was a titled appropriately "Improv." considerably more bombastic effort MacMillan played electric b811 aDd than the evening's rll'8t tape piece. Burrier, in a visual parody of the It was a lengthy exploration of other instrument, played a amaII complex, static sounds with per- echo/reverb device on a large gul­iodic little windows that let us' see, ' tar 8trap. perhaps, the work's internal wir- The sounds were a veIJl~aaut ing. The performance was quite examination of feedb and loud and could be described as sounded not unlike Ma Ian'. non-atop, for better or worse. other work. The performance WII

"Men at Work" was David Rogers' quite evidently experimental, bow· piece for two-channel electronic ever, and lacked the organized tape. It was a rather humorous development needed to make it an collection of motion picture sound- involving efTort. tracks and some other sound This year's Composer's Workshop effects. While audience members series, if in alignment with its two didn't seem to know how to react, I performance8 so far, promises to be found tbe outtakes of what I a highly entertaining one. KudOl to believed to be Curly from the three the new director, John Ro88, who stooges to be m08t comit:al. has helped make the concerts VIT.

There were, however, obviously ied and fruitful - in no small wa, serious elements to the composi- by the addition of his own music 10 tion. Rogers didn't just present the programs.

Th. UBi •• rsil, of Iowa Pr ... ha. books ,laal are lookia. for ho .... s! We've got books thot ore firsl-quality overstocks, best-sellers, gift bolts, serious books, bolts about lowo and Iowans, and stholorly books for disdpines ranging from natural history to 6terDIY criticism to Americon studies to history, iournonsm, anthropology, the medicol humanities, and more! These are books you've been looking for and books you'll wont when you've seen them­AND ALL THESE BOOKS ARE MARKED DOWN FOR ONE DAY ONLY!

Save 20-95" on November 1 from 10 AM 10 8 PM at Old Brick . I'

(comer of Market and GiMon) , MORE THAN 90 TITLES ARE PRICED AT $5 OR LESS! Visa, MasterCard, personal chlKkst and departmental requisiliOOs accepted (sorry, no charges con be mode to your university 10) . R •• III"'r-o •• da, onl,. Do ,OUI' 'Iolida, shopping .arl,! No ,... ordert, .. minK, II W .... gIS .... NY .rJ:'.

Nove~ber 1, 10 AM-8 PM, Old prick IIn ........ 1Iv of Iowa Pres~Th. Kuhl Hou~ 119 Wesl Pork Rood-Iowa

. 1P7D IU-lNJN6T

I

- ;-; f}.h ~e S"i~, "f"'t't'J t-\t '_\l'''~~, ~\>\~ UI~ ~ .. o~"'er te~tl ~CI'" "t sc.w -t~t ~ ",_s,,'t 'lOll t"ro,,", it II ~~ 'c.","i"" ~~ ~~, "''I." c.\ .(ri ~ bee 1" 'J.1tdI 1ft -- f~" Sf ."

k\l __ 0P, I,M, I SIIIt",.' ,- r-

Crossword Edited ~y Eugene T. Maleska No. 0920

ACROSS

1 Sc.d. .-Ann.de

Beaupr' a Kind olllnllge

1:' 'God 'II Uttle -': caldwell

14 Flower stalk ,. Willow

,.Orchestra I.,derwho promoted 22

II Jazz singer from Newpon News,Va.

H Poker "alii .7 Swiss river HACaasln( :., Division word II Hint U Apt till. lor 22

Across 40 T rlnlng amount 4' '-Camer.'

14 Up - (sing, Ina way)

II Topper 17 Word with wear

or water II Hillong lung

by 22 Acroas .. Vermont marble

center " Debauchee II Part of the

handwri~ng on the wall

Almprova Acro" 41 Excited

,. Express 41 Former 14 Make a boo·boo 6-~~

gratitude BroadWay org. laMonroe'l- .. River In EAala

01 Good Feeling 47 Song m.de 10 c:.nter of tamous by 22

actMty AerO" • • , Dik., Eunomla A Income for

and Elrene Pierre

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

liThe .. may be martial

DOWN , C1uny, e.g . • Pigm.nt for

Galnsborough a Kind of balloon 4Dry,uwine • He's a Wonder • JewIIh month 7 Ambauador',

res. a-·ptaI1

(tlllere) aOnIand

to Diadem ~~~~~ 11 Of the kidneys

,. Annoyed ~~.DWl~~~~~ 14Jonathanor I.! Tom

t7Geoghla­II Fall, bacIc

1;,J:i;~~ "Crazy ~~::J HClI,ln ~ I;+.I~~ H HaYing •

hoIldly

II HalfolCIV MWorkunil al Eddie's spou .. aaGeartooth UNliJnlro­l4-on (urge) »Puttered

aimlessly arTardy MAlno, amu,

" "-"!vice" (wslter', phlUll)

41 Skin dl ..... 41 SPAR', org. 41111and 011

Venezuel. 41 Two hourI

before noon

41 Depanm.nt In central Fran

.. Concernl a, Church offl II Formar Red SOx

pitcher II Henna II Land me .. ur. II Singer Sumac:

M Scottllh Answert 10 .~: .. clUNIn thlt nightshirt puzzle are IV Ie by touch·tone

41To thereer oIa phone: 1 ·900-420-5658 (751 eac:h Ship minute).

10..,0 Book" Supply Co. Downtown Aorou from The Old capitol