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OATS If ; , i camp breather, Chicago i~e Ditka says he likes the ~ 1 1back Brad Muster perfo~. .L _ ~ l: __u
Pnce: 25 cents Iowa City's Morning Newspaper Thursday, July 28, 1988 :· Americans Firefighters injured· }· flunk • ' g~graphy in Westwinds blaze , WASHINGTON
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P1ge 2-The Daily Iowan -Iowa City, Iowa- Thursday, July 28, 1988 ------Metro Metro/Iowa JOB.Splus Hearing to be held for County-state law internships Un Ii Ill iL·ed By Heather Maher new child care program •The Dally Iowan A public hearing regarding the offer Ul students experience The Iowa City School Boar state ~ Iowa's new transitional LET US DO YOUR JOB eeveral goals Tuesday night f child care assistance program, By Deborah Gluba students to gain practical experi· stress private practice cases but he at improving the efficiency • which will be implemeted on Oct. 1, The Daily Iowan ence in public sector law. The has been impressed with the vari meetings and promoting t will be held on Aug. 5 at 10 am. on interns work full-time during the ety and volume of cases he encoun SEARCH FOR YOU! ' cooperation between board · the sixth floor of the Iowa Building, Twenty-five Iowa law students summer and about 10 hours during ters in the county. 400 South Clinton Street . bers. 221 Fourth Ave. SE, Cedar Rapids. interested in public service are the academic year and are in court "One thing amazing about the job 'These are board goals for The intent of the program is to prosecuting cases in county cour about once every week. is that we're given a lot of discre Iowa City Post Office Building, Suite 275 selves for next year," said 888ist Aid to Dependent Children tr'OOms across the state this sum "Research is not the main goal of tion and responsibility," he said. For An Appointment Call: (319) 351-4966 City School Board President 1 clients in beooming self-sufficient mer. this program," she said. "The main He said they are sometimes given 1-800-728-4-JOBS Cannon. "These are more 01 through employment Under this The second- and third-year law goal is to get the students exposed cases where the defendant has ,our personal aims- how W• students from the UI and Drake to pleaded not guilty and they may MasterCard, Visa and American Exprt!ll ( make t~ard function bette program, ADC recipients who Jose to all aspects of prosecution and ACCEPTED eligibility due to employment may University are part of an intern give them prosecuting experience." plea bargain with them. • interact:,t0 ~er." "'Get 11 hNd stM1 on your c~, todly."' be able to qualify for subsidized ship program offered through a McGuire said she became involved DeJoode said the full time summer Cannon told the board mer child care for 12 months. cooperative effort by the Iowa in public sector law following an internship, at $5 an hour, may not that it was necessary to sep The program will be open to ADC State Attorney General's Office internship, adding she feels public be as lucrative as working as a law district goals from board goal! recipients who lost their ADC eligi and several Iowa counties. sector law offers rewards not clerk in a private firm, but added it that the board needed to eva bility on and after Oct. 1, 1988. Ann McGuire, Johnson County's achieved in private practice. is more challenging. ' and possibly alter current pra, Child care providers are limited to first assistant district attorney, "Rather than working on one Don Mason, of the state attorney that might be having a ne~ registered and licensed providers. works with the Ul College of Law personal problem at a time, I feel I general's prosecuting attorneys effect on the board's abilil Written comments and suggestions clinical law programs to supervise can have a bigger impact on social council, said he beJieved the ' govern the district effectively. may be submitted prior to the the program. problems and issues," she said. interns deserved more compensa Cannon recommended tha hearing to Mary Ann Walker, Ru1es She said the five interns assigned tion. ' board formally adopt each me She said public sector law is Coordinator, Bureau of Policy Coor to Johnson County magistrate "We would like to pay a more • agenda at the beginning o dination, Department of Human court prosecute misdemeanor cases different from private sector law because it involves working for a compatible wage for the interns," Services, Hoover Building, Des - typically traffic offenses, fifth he said. "Something more compati Moines. degree theft and assault - answer government or public agency on behalf of the public interest, ble with private law finn clerk's legal questions and work with salaries." :wizard_ juvenile and mental commitment adding she hoped the program court cases. would generate student interest in He said the Iowa Legislature them needs visibility to be lOcal ranger to present Students go through a week-long public sector law. appropriated about $50,000 for the effective. program and pays $2 toward the "We'd like to get it ink geology, fossil program certification course and are "Students appear to be thinking approved to be a part of the state more about a career in public interns' salaries. schools, the churches, the ba , anywhere we can put it on Ranger Soott Behrends will present attorney general's contractual pro service," she said. Johnson County Attorney J. Pat a program on the geology and gram before they begin the intern Ul third-year law student Jeff rick White said by eliminating the said. fossils of the Coralville Lake area ships. The interns have full power DeJoode, an intern at the Johnson need for an additional attorney the He said he didn't know if e. , tiona! officials would allow on July 30 at 7 p.m. at MA of attorney in the magistrate County Court House, said the program saves the county money. ) Stainbrook State Geologic Preserve. courses and the county attorneys experience has made him more The interns' input, up-to-date show to be performed in Chi area high schools, but he s The Stainbrook preserve is located generally act as advisers, McGuire open to a career in public sector knowledge and inquisitve tenden UP rm the east end of Mehaffey Bridge said. law. cies also benefit his office, White that it was well-received wh by the entrance road to Sugar McGuire said the program enables He said Jaw school courses tend to said. was performed recently at a 'Bottom Recreation Area For addi school in Ypsilanti, Mich. TO "We think of the show ~onal information, contact Kate &eka at 338-3543. springboard for discussion, Man sues McDonald's, Coralville we'd like to follow perform1 with a question-and-answer i his truck ahead as instructed and prosecuted for criminal trespassing !· By James Cahoy sion," Barto said. '1UI students elected as The Daily Iowan paid for the food at the designated but was aquitted of the charge on 75% John E. Lynch, an undergra< window, according to court records. Sept. 18, 1986, according to court student in the UI Theatre association's officers A Des Moines man filed suit in When Schmacht was asked to records. Department who has seen Johnson County District Court move his car to the waiting lane, 1 ;·,-UI College of Medicine students Wednesday against a Coralville he refused. The manager of the Among those listed in Schmacht's OFF Enrique R Bedia and Jackie L. restaurant, the city of Coralville McDonald's then informed suit include the McDonald's corpo Bristow have been elected as and two Coralville police officers, Schmacht that he must pull for ration; the owners of the Coralville American Medical Student Associa alleging he was unjustly prose ward into the waiting area or the McDonald's at the time the suit tion officers for the 1988-89 K/.\1 cuted for refusing to pull his car manager would call the police, was filed, William E. and Dorothy academic year. forward while ordering food in the according to court records. O'Brien; Eggerton and Stubbs, Bedia, of West Des Moines, was drive-thru lane of the restaurant, Schmacht continued to refuse, and individually and in their official BIB SKIRTS .. elected as local chapter president according to court records. the police were called. Two police capacity; and the city of Coralville. and Bristow, of Sioux City, will Carl Schmacht claims that he was officers, Charles Stubbs and Scott CROPJACKE' serve as the local chapter recruiting wrongly arrested for criminal tres Egerton, ordered Schmacht to pull Schmacht is suing for damages in coordinator. pai!S at McDonald's, 618 First Ave., his truck into the waiting area or connection with his alleged loss of The American Medical Student after refusing to pull his car for be put in jail. When Schmacht business opportunity, loss of earn JEANS •.,....'32 ... Association is the largest indepen ward and to the side of the drive refused, he was handcuffed and ings, loss of reputation, personal 100% co~ dent organziation representing charged with criminal trespassing, Engineer striped In blue & thru lane into a waiting area while embarrassment and humiliation, Solids physicians-in-training. Its member- waiting for his order. according to court records. mental anguish and emotional dis l•,ship is comprised of over 30,000 Schmacht allegedly used the Schmacht never received his tress, legal fees, travel expenses medical students and residents restaurant's drive-thru facilites on money back or his food order on and other costs of defense, accord Buy 3 Montht Get 1 Month FREE! affiliated with chapters located on July 27, 1986, ordered food, pulled the date of the incident. He was ing to court records. the campuses of every medical and Buy 6 Months Get 2 Months FREE! osteopathic school in the United States. Buy 12 Months Get 3 Months FREE! Courts Offer expires July 31, 1988 1:.. ~ LocalhospHalsponsors By Belinda Bloor second operation on June 18, 1986, A Johnson County couple filed suit The Dally Iowan and additional post-operative care on hehalf of their child Wednesday ~ ' child-related programs through June 30, 1986, according against Obstetrics and Gynecologic A Grand Island, Neb., woman filed to court records. Associates of Iowa City, P.C., 1025 Mercy Hospital in Iowa City will suit Wednesday in Johnson County Hehr claims that Bardach was Wade St.; a physician; and Mercy hold a variety of educational health District Court against UI Hospitals negligent in allegedly failing to Hospital, 500 Market St., according during August. programs and Clinics and a plastic surgeon advise her that the operations to Johnson County District Court Four family~ntered maternity at the hospital regarding two oper would not improve and could wor records. care classes will be held. Early Bird ations and medical care in which sen the cosmetic appearance of Sherri and Lon Brincks filed the for couples in the first trimester of Body she claims the surgeon was negli Hehr's eye and the surrounding suit alleging negligence in the care will their pregnancy be held Aug. gent, according to court records. area of her face, according to court provided by the physician, Lovera 24 at 7 p.m. Childbirth Preparation The suit concerns operative proce records. W. Miller, and the other defen Dimensions - 'for couples in the third trimester dures and treatment used on the Hehr also claims that too much dants of Sherri and their child of their pregnancy - will be held plantiff, Ida Hehr, at the hospital grafting material was used and Sarah, before and after the Sarah's Fitness Center on Aug. 16 and Aug. 23 at 7 p.m. during the period from April 26, that the rim of her eye was not birth on Aug. 1, 1986, according to 111 E. Washington New Mother and Baby Classes are 1985, to June 30, 1986, according correctly reconstructed in the first court records. Iowa Cfty held every Thursday at 10 a.m. to court records. operation and that the second The Brincks claim that the defen 354-2252 New Brother/New Sister classes Court records state Hehr was operation was also unsuccessful, dants were negligent in the care will be held Aug. 18 at 10 a.m. or 6 admitted into UI Hospitals in April according to court records. they provided during the period Cantebury Inn p.m. for children ages 3 to 6 and at 1985 for examination and diagno Hehr said she has suffered severe from Dec. 16, 1985, to the time Cor lvilr. 7:30 p.m. for children ages 7 to 12. sis of a deformity in the eye area of physical pain, mental anguish, after Sarah's birth. The Brincks For further information and regis 338-8447 one side of her face. emotional distress and humiliation claim that as a result of this ~tration , call Mercy Hospital's Edu Hehr underwent reconstructive as a result of the defendant's alleged negligence, particularly cation Office at 337-0670. surgery on April 26, 1985, which alleged negligence and malpractice during her mother's labor and The monthly meeting of the ~. was performed by the defendant, and is suing for $350,000 against delivery, Sarah suffered injury to !•SHARE support group will be held Janusz Bardach. Bardach provided each of the defendants, according her brain and body from a lack of on Aug. 9 at 7:30 p.m. at Mercy post-operative care and continuing to court records. oxygen, according to court records. ~ ~ Hospital in the First-FI~r Confer- treatment for Hehr through June ence Room. There will be an open 17, 1986, and then performed a • • • Jdiscussion on how the death of a •child affects views about life, family :relationships and dealing with :mends. Police • SHARE is a support group for :parents who have experienced mis By Belinda Bloor Report: A North Liberty, Iowa, man report. :carriage, stillbirth or infant death. was arrested and charged with operat Peter J. Kramer, 22, 717 E. Washing The Daily Iowan :For more infonnation, contact Pat Ing a vehicle while intoxicated and ton, was charged in connection with 'Williams, Head Nurse, Family Cen A Cedar Rapids man was charged reckless driving Wednesday after an the incident, according to the report. l:tered Maternity Care Unit, with failure to control his vehicle, Iowa City police officer stopped his Report: A car was reported to have 1:337.()576. vehicle on Bloomington Street, been vandalized while parked In the leaving the scene of an accident according to pollee reports, Old Public Library lot Wednesday, I~ causing property damage and hav· James Russell Poggenpohl, 27, according to police reports. ing an expired license after North Liberty, was arrested at sbout The passenger window of the vehi 1 • allegedly leaving an accident in 12:50 a.m., according to the report. cle was reportedly broken out. There Corrections which his car was on its side Report: An Iowa City man was was no estimate for the total damages Friday, according to Wednesday's arrested and charged with disorderly sustained in the incident, according to I! conduct after four females reported the report. ' 'The Oarly Iowan Slr•v~s for accu r ac~ police reports. Adver: ~ ~ and ta~rness ,n the report•ng of news If a Richard Lee Martin, 23, allegedly that someone had thrown glass at Theft: Two cases of computer paper • report •s wrong or m•sleacf•ng a request left the scene of the accident, which them early Wednesday, according to were reported stolen Tuesday night Noa~ I• for a correct•on or clanhcahon may be police reports. from a loading dock at a Ul medical • made by cont aclrng the Edrtor at occurred on Ridge Road in Iowa The four women reported that the laboratory, according to Ul Campus : 33!> 6030 A correcl•on or clar•f• cahon City and caused damage to an area , w1 ll be published rn thrs column suspects, three males, were walking Security reports. resident's property, according to east on Washington Street, where the The total value of the cases of paper First c: the report. incident took place, according to the is about $37, according to the report. Tuesc ~ubscription
USPS 1433 6000 Tomorrow The Deify Iowen •s published by Student Pubhcatrons Inc t tt Comrnun•ca!lons Center. submissions must be clearly printed Cen ter Iowa Ctty low ~ 52242. aarly except Saturdays Sundays ll'gal hoi• Friday Events Announcements for the Tomorrow on a Tomorrow column blank (which days and unrvers•tv holidays and •Jr> lver Student• Agalnet the VIbrating column must be submitted to The appears on the classified ads pages) or ' srty vacatrons Second class postage Molecule will sponsor an Information Daffy Iowan by 3 p.m. two days prior to typewritten and triple-spaced on a full pard at the Iowa C•ty Post Offrce under the Act ol Conqress of March 2 1879 booth on the greenhouse effect from 1 publication. For example: Notices for sheet of paper Subacrlplfon rain Iowa C1ty and Coral to 5 p.m. at econofoods. Friday events must be submitted by 3 Announcements will not be vrllt $t2 for one semester $24 for two p.m. Wednesday. All notices will accepted over the telephone. All sub semesters $6 for summer sessron $30 Tomorrow Polley appear in the 0/ one day prior to the missions must Include the name and for fu If year out of town S20 for one Tomorrow column applications may events they announce. Notices may be phone number, which will not be semester $40 for tv. v seml'sters S 10 for , summer sessron SSO for all year be picked up at The Dally Iowan sent through the mall, but be sure to published, of a contact person In case newsroom, 201 N Communications mall early to ensure publication. All of questions.
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The Daily Iowan- Iowa City, Iowa-Thursday, July 28. 1988- Pege 3 Metro/Iowa iplus School board outlines new goals .... regular Tuesday night meetings. retreat this fall to help them NBC chooses Ames editor nil'cd By Heather Maher Ths Dally Iowan She said this action would ae<:om become more knowledgeable about plish the twin goals of letting the their role as a school board mem The Iowa City School Board set audience see the sequence of ber. OUR JOB eeveral goals Tuesday night aimed agenda items for the evening and Better communication with the to head news department at improving the efficiency of its forcing the board to stick to the public was also a major topic meetings and promoting better prearranged order and time limit during the goal-setting discussion. DES MOINES (AP) - Iowans things to do,• Waller said. R YOU! • cooperation between board mem set for each item. say NBC is getting an electric Waller said Gartner plans to "I think maybe we need a more leader in choosing newspaper commute on weekends to his n Street bera. A decision to increase the televised professional program to sell this 'These are board goals for our editor Michael Gartner to replace home in Dea Moines, 10 he will coverage of each meeting was also district and get across to the public ilding, Suite 275 selves for next year," said Iowa departing news department keep in touch with the Ames reached - meetings will now be how good our programs are and (319) 351-4966 City School Board President Lynne president Lawrence Grossman. newspaper. covered until 11 p.m. instead of some of the needs of the district," OBS Cannon. "These are more or less "He has an electric personality," "He11 be able to monitor our • 10:30 p.m. said board member Betsy Hawtry. said James Gannon, the editor of progress while he's in Des rican Expms , our personal aims - how we can ( make tbMK>ard function better and Board member Connie Champion She added that in light of the the Des Moines Register. Gannon Moines," Waller said. ' interac~.to ~r." voiced her concern over the amount recent negative recommendation was hired by Gartner in 1978 and ·u·a been atnmge. He's a little l Cannon told the board members of responsibility taken on by the that was handed to the board worked with him until Gartner out of his element in a paper this' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ; that it was necessary to seperate president of the board, recom concerning a district enrichment left in 1984. size. We felt fortunate to have district goals from board goals and mending that the vice president be tax, the board should take steps "He's a brilliant journalist, a him here," Waller said. that the board needed to evaluate delegated more authority. now to cultivate elderly and child great idea person and a very While Gartner was editor of the. ' and possibly alter current practices "One thing I would like to see is a less citizens in the community who outgoing personality who had Register, the paper was awarded. . that might be having a negative way for the vice president to share may opppose such a tax next year. good effects on morale in the two Pulitzer prizes, both for effect on the board's ability to responsibility and take on some of Cannon agreed, saying, "I think newsroom," Gannon said. national reporting and both • govern the district effectively. the job done by the president," she that's particularly important when Gartner has most recently been a awarded to the paper's Washing Cannon recommended that the said. you're trying to raise funds because part-time general news executive ton bureau chief, James Ri ser. .. 'board formally adopt each meeting Members of the board also we have more non-parents than we with Gannett Co. and is editor •,genda at the beginning of the expressed interest in having a have parents." and co-owner of the Ames Daily Gartner "took a good newspaper Tribune. He is also former editor network's new corporate owners. and made it into a great or of The Courier-JournaL of Louis Dennis Waller, general manager near·great newspaper,• said ville, Ky. , and The Des MoiMs of the Ames newspaper, said Gannon. Continued from page 1 :Wizard Survey_ Register. Gartner will retain his position Gartner hasn't lost his Midwest· ------~-- Grossman, who left public broad with that paper. ern values. said Gannon, who them needs visibility to be most professional version of the play on Continued from page 1 casting four years ago to join the "He's going to continue to hold spoke with Gartner while both . effective. video tape, said the play is a good non or Afghanistan. network, said he is quitting the title of editor, although he's were at the Democratic National ~ "We'd like to get it into the vehicle to raise awareness of AIDS. • About one-third could name four because of differences with the obviously going to have other Convention at Atlanta last week. schools, the churches, the bars - "I think it's great that (the play) is of the 16 NATO member countries, .. .anywhere we can put it on," he going national," Lynch said. "It's another third failed to name any said. very positive, very exciting, very and 16 percent of those questioned He said he didn't know if educa funny and at the same time it's conferred membership on the , tional officials would allow the very educational. (The play) helps Soviet Union. show to be performed in Chicago us ease into something that makes • Fifty percent failed to name any The Daily Break UP area high schools, but he added us uncomfortable, as the AIDS members of the Warsaw Pact, 20 that it was well-received when it virus does." percent could name four and more was performed recently at a high than one in 10 erroneously made Lynch feels that the play would be school in Ypsilanti, Mich. the U.S. a member. especially effective with younger TO "We think of the show as a • Only 55 percent identified South audiences of teenagers and college springboard for discussion, and Africa as the nation ~ere apar students. we'd like to follow perfonnances theid is an official policy. with a question-and-answer ses "(Barto is) using something that is Americans generally did better on eion," Barto said. very familiar to us, as the 'Wizard environmental questions, with 75% John E. Lynch, an undergraduate of Oz' is, to draw our attention to nearly 95 percent knowing that student in the UI Theatre Arts something we'd rather ignore," he damage to the ozone layer would OFF Department who has seen the said. have worldwide effect. KATANA~M BIB SKIRTS -..mall...... 520 WEEKLY 5 mall ...... SPECIALS CROP JACKETS •. 18 Dosat aoses 5 JEANS •.,...1'32 ...... 16 1 00"/o cotton denim. Sizes 3-13. '6" Eng1neer striped in blue & white, pink & white, and mint & white. 4lh" Geranl1UD I Out FREE! Solids in peach & butter Som~boc1U:ute stuff! ..... Z for 99' All aose Baaba __ §_q9~c~------..!!!!:.~·!.~!!",!~~=·m•• ...~ ¥2 Price '--'l<:.a.\\ ~\> M-F 1G-9: Set. 10:5:30; Sun. 12·5 N <~oolvl ~rplrea July 31, 1988 ~ I'J ...... ~ • I Wla1l& "wllct Lut •·.o:!:P" II
\M'RE AGHTII'G ~ ~UFE "'•4 floris American Heart Ja Association ~ c fQSS word Edited by Eugene T. Maleska A~ 32 Anxieties 45 Nme: Comb. Body 33 Gordon of form 1 Dross comics 48 Sends a check 5 Poplar tree 34 Stir 41J Let it stand Dimensions 10 Unruly chald 35 - Gemayel, 50 Kin of aves. 14 Jot Lebanese 53 Presidential =itness Center 15 Fur scarf President address 11 Painter 58 Actor Jacques 111 E. WashingtOn Magritte 36 What quibblers 17 Gathering at spht Iowa City Monday 37 -Sedgwick, 57 Wisdom tooth, the White e.g. 354-2252 House tragic heiress 38 Light-Horse 58 Anabaena or 20 Bishopric Harry nos toe August 21 Balzac's "Le 51 Rubber trees -Gorlot" 31 Author of 60 Material for 36 22 Blunt; "Jude the keys 1988 dmunish Obscure" 11 Betty-, 23 Chaanti, e.g 40 Coop group cartoon 24 "Suslineo U Triple-: flapper -,"U.S.A.F. 1882-1915 motto 43 New Orleans 25 Ternf1ed eleven 28Thnlhng 44 Uncivil DOWN 1 Tastes 2 Learning 3Fitto- 4 Argon, e.g. S Rise I Marc part 7 Southern bread 8 Spnte 25 La-, opera 38 Lake Apollo 48 Alphabellc I Unaecessary house 37 One of five on a quartet 10 Kind of bone 21 Tylopod map 47 Kin of etc. II Sunder or Z7 Arab1an 31-couture 48 Best at chess splinter gazelle (h1gh fash1on) 41 French banle 12 Suffix with 28 Omn site m W.W. Il resist 21 Radioacuve 40 African 50 M1ssile'shome 13 Kettcon· element language 51 A neighbor of temporary 30 Dostoyevsky's 42 Optical Ghana 18 Certam moles "The-" tnflammauon 52 Lead-pipe 19 Attam 31 Some · 43 Scornful cinch 23 Small songbird Prmcetomans 45 Frome of 54 little pocket Advertising deadline is 24 Wing-shaped 33 Burlesque fiction 55 Capture Noon, Thursday, August 25 Iowa Book & Supply Co. First day of classes js Tuesday,August30 Downtown Across from The Old Capitol low•'• Mott Complete Book Selection Feeturing 40,000 nu..
THURSDAY July 2& KGAN KWWL KCRG IPT SPTS ESPN WGN WT8S HBO MAX USA _._ 0 The Daily Iowan Sport.c.. Hot lllot IIOl': ... Alrwllf 6 ~PM ...... •- ...... ,_ lpeeciWHII Major 110'1: ...... ,... :» ...... ""'' Ahlr Willi llde ...... 7 :PM .. Holln Will Am. T..... AIIIO "accfttt.. LMp ...... O...IIIIM- Iowa City's Morning Newspaper =• ~=- :o.:;:. .... Wk. Golf .ici&IIMI ...... =-MOl': l'cwt Ur 111noo1 a 11- CIIMR t•cnr£ Golf .. 110'1: ...... MOl': A 8 :PM ...... H ~ ....., T~ "'*~ lilt ...... =• c...., a """'c:-tL.A. Lew ...._. .. .. H .. H .. 9 :PM .. .. Mr•.,. .. "'*~ ...... 335-5790 :» .~- ...... MOl': My ...... COmputer AIIIO ..... n.L z- MOl': ...... ~ la:IICodl 10 ':': M•A'I'H TOftigllt lilt. TOIIIpt Net'! Aoldlt- ,..,.,. ~· t....., ...... !::v:*.::, ~ : a-.. IIIOW 110ft Jolin, M.D. HOw .. Let- '!aclftl ~ .. l=Jerof 11 == ...... o..td I!UrOpeeft .....~· "'* MOV: Mur- ...... _ ...... ,.... llgnOII .... 011 .':- 1=- .,..,. 11011: """" "'*~ ...... ~c-. 0 . 12::: ...... - =::-,... """ I..., c-. T- ,..
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Page 4- The Daily Iowan -Iowa City, Iowa- Thursday, July 28, 1988 ~
Publlaher/Willlam Casey • •• Bualneaa Manapr/Marlea Fecht Briefly Editor/Chris lamb Aaalatant aporia editor/Brent Woods Advertlalng manager/Jim Leonard City editor/James Cahoy Artalantertalnment editor/Steve Donoghue Aaalatant advertlalng manager/Cath , fiOII1 01 wire Nf'Vices Unlvertlty editor/John Bartenhagen Wire editor/Paul Stolt Claaelfled ade manager/Maxine Elc~e 'Nttt Editorial page editor/John Golden Freelance editor/Jay Casinl Circulation manager/Francis A. Lalor r VteWPQ!!!tS Photography editor/Todd Mlzener Newa editor/Christine Selk Day production manager/Gene Oleken S. Koreans demc Graphic editor/Rod Facclo Volume 121, No. 33 Sporta editor/Eric J. Hess Night production manager/Robert Fott'j SEOUL, South Korea students yelling "Yankee U.S. Anny headquarters t . Hundreds of riot polic, helmets swiftly detained t Democrats need inclusion strategy, U.S. 8th Army headquat No justification who tried to stage a peac Once in a while you read a story so frightening, so awful, that police buses. you think to yourself, "This cannot be true." Such is the story hat is a special inter has set up a Business Council, a now being incorporated wholesale The students also demc est? Arthur H. Miller Corporate Donor's Club, a special into the academic analysis of pol~ today of the end of the Ko of Joan Duede Palma. North Korea's invasion of In 1982, Duede Palma killed her 3-year-old daughter, Chrissy, and Christopher Wle Jeffrey club for $5000 contributors and tics. W zien answer that other similar fund-raising clubs. It is undoubtedly the case that the The students called for after the child wet her pants. According to Duede Palma, she question for us in their article, Wealthy investors and business leaders of political face a based in South Korea un ban!J6'M denouncing the A was "real angry" with Chrissy, and she shoved her to the "Avoiding the special interest Cox groups are offered influence in the dilemma in reconciling (i with the Unitec party in the name of broadening of their supporters with "t.to floor. Duede Palma insists that the toddler "seemed fine," so trap" (The Daily Iowan, July 24). Korean peninsula," protes she left the room and drew herself a bath. But when she was Special interests are those groups cratic presidential campaign in the base of the party and getting electoral strategy. Some Radical students claim sue. finished, she returned to the living room to find Chrissy still newly associated with the Demo recent history, conservative in the away from the special interests. cians, like Dukakis, are more continued division of the} cratic Party which are unpopular sense that he was unwilling to But are these new friends of the cessful than others, like Mondale lying on the floor, suffering from what an autopsy would later a virtual colony. Radicals with the electorate and cause the advocate any extension of the New Democratic Party ever identified as Dukakis has put together a win: • with the communist Nortl term irreversible brain damage. Chrissy died three days later. party to lose elections. They men Deal-Great Society tradition of special interests? Do any critical ning coalition by reconciling h~ 1 Duede Palma served a 3 12-year prison term for the murder of tion in particular feminists, "mili social reform for fear of being journalists point out that a sophia- own party and its legitimate con. ' U.S.-Qatar talks s her child. She was released from the Iowa Correctional tant blacks" and the most unpopu labeled a tool of special interests. ticated rhetorical strategy of rede- stituencies, from pro-business to , Institution for Women in 1985. And on May 18 of this year, lar special interest of all, gays and Instead he was persuaded to fining special interests is being pro-feminist, with his own ele<:Ulral WASHINGTON - The lesbians. threaten middle-income people used to justify narrowing the base strategy. Although tilting ro big • and economic talks witt she had a baby boy. According to Miller and Wlezien, with tax increases in order to of the party, all in the name of business with his vice-presidential 1 sheikdom's unauthorized But Chrissy's death-as shocking as it seems-did not come Mondale lost the 1984 election reduce the deficit and continue the broadening it? No. Media commen· · selection, he has decisively missiles, U.S. diplomats s1 I ~ as a surprise to many. Neighbors frequently called the Iowa because he was too closely identi Reagan military build-up at a tators and political consultants rejected, so far, the Kirk-Miller. • Assistant Secretary of St Department of Human Services with reports of Duede Palma's fied with these unpopular groups slower rate. marched on and off the television Wlezien advice to shut down party would remain in place w United States. abuses. In light of the evidence, the same department actually and the labor movement. Dukakis By sleight of hand, the media screen during the Democratic caucuses and sever his ties with ' has made heroic efforts to distance identified this conservative, pro National Convention, repeating the "militant blacks" of the Jack. "What we have done is t ' separated mother and daughter for a number of months. But himself from special interests, but corporate losing strategy with Kirk's analysis that Democrats son campaign. that were under consider~ Chrissy eventually returned to her home, and five months he is likely to fail unless he Mondale's very different primary must shed their special interests in Divided parties lose elections, and mittee on Europe and the later she died. Duede Palma says, "She probably should have entirely severs his ties to them. strategy of building coalitions order to win the election. the surest way to divide a party is "We consider it very muc • been removed from my home before all of this happened." Political scientists can, of course, within the party. The decisive Miller and Wliezen accept this to go to war openly with various relationship with Qatar tl Probably. Yes, that probably would have been best. It adopt any tenns they find useful rejection by the electorate of Moo argument without modification. Do elements inside it. The Democratic 1 And we've made that very and persuasive. But it is interest· dale's 1984 campaign was then they investigate the way the tenn Paty has become the majority Another official, speak.in probably would have been best if Joan Duede Palma had ing to see how a highly partisan blamed entirely on the wicked "special interests" is befng used in party at every level of government had been seeking several 1 ' never had children, if the social service system weren't so phrase taken from a bitterly con special interests, newly defined as a highly partisan way inside the by practicing the politics of inclu. , the United States, includi ' inept and overworked, if the legal system were a bit more just. tested, ongoing political struggle militant blacks, feminists and Democratic Party, to help divorce sion, not the politics of exclusion. them everything is frozen. : But this is no justification for the continued abuse and murder has become, in the hands of Miller other undesirables. the party from its supporters and Dukakis needs a reasonably united t' but cool." : of our children. and Wlezien, an apparently neu Journalists have been repeating drive it into the hands of wealthy party not only to win the election The United States does tral tenn of political analysis. The this analysis parrot-like ever since business interests? Do they point but to govern the nation. His Qatar but considers the c , There are a million Chrissy Duede's in this world. How many f Miller-Wlezien definition of special 1984. Following their line of rea out that the phrase "special inter- vice-presidential selection 1 pro-Western Gulf Coope1 : more will die as the rule rather than the exception? interests has a well-known recent soning, the chainnan of the Demo eats" has rarely been used in threatened party unity, but his Arabia and Kuwait. Christine Selk history, for it originated in attacks cratic National Committee, Paul discussions of the Republican successful reconciliation with Jesse on the Mondale campaign by his Kirk, adopted a strategy of sup Party, where George Bush has just Jackson at the Democratic • FBI confirms recE ' News Editor political opponents during the 1984 pressing special interest groups in promised a small unpopular National Convention reassured his Democratic primaries. the party, such as the Gay and minority of investors that he will party that he had not capitulated MIAMI - The FBI l It became an influential line of Lesbian caucus. cut their capital gains taxes? to the Paul Kirk strategy of exclu· documents taken from th Asking for trouble argument with powerful Demo At the same time he began a very No. Instead we hear from Miller sion. By his generous treatment
; fines and imprisonrrumt by civil authorities does not accom ~o~~ 'PRo.)t.tltD I~Co~~ areas this summer. 1 : plish this goal. Yet, we're supposed to believe that the Altogether, 10 of the 14.: I ~ possibility of denying someone a Guaranteed Student Loan city Parks Department we1 ~._--. ~ In addition, most of thE I: • will stop drug use? o"? 'tl~'i' ~o ~ucH? ~"~Rt Recreation Area remained 1:: John Golden l~ ~ '?au ~11i r-lG 'f HI B '~'J(fftA' "It's very disappointing t Stern, who added that he h 1 :, Editorial Page Editor c~;"? Sf-LLt~G /MGA1-IN e. responsible for the illegal long time." ~u~~c~~~1'toN ~ ?! '$. While officials in New seaborne invasion of debris ~ Increasing emphasis had traced medical waste t: :VO.N'1 mm~ So!I York-area hospitals, drug ! ~ In a move prompted by pressure from AIDS patients, ibe Food Nine rats were among th' and Drug Administration has decided to allow Americans to Rockaway Beach on Tues, import small quantities of unapproved drugs from abroad spokesman Barry Adkins. found Wednesday. Most of 1 ~ · through the mail 11 Currently, there is only one approved AIDS treatment Stocks suffer bro~ It available in the United States. But this treatment, called AZT, NEW YORK - Stock pr or azidothymidine, is too toxic for many patients to take for an Letters Wednesday as traders fou extended period of time. For this reason, many AIDS patients statistics on economic grow and their advocates have criticized the government for making The Dow Jones average d1 analysis. Your target should be the number of violent, drug-related evidenced by their decision to 1 since it stood at 2,052.45 01 : such slow progress in the area of testing experimental drugs. Off the mark system that promotes apathy and crimes will decrease with the lega spray domestic marijuana with Volume on the floor of l I! According to FDA Commissioner Frank Young, the agency To the Editor: greed, traits which, unfortunately, lization of drugs. He doesn't tell us paraquat. shares, against 121.96 mill I ~ had approved 178 applications for the testing of drugs and Tom Hunter seems to have com mmanifest themselves in people of why this would be so; it just is. I Finally, I have a problem with the ( · other therapies to treat AIDS as of June 15. Meanwhile, the pletely missed the point in his all ages. Simply denigrating our think there is an argument that media and Ms. Reagan lumping all • Quoted ... column, "Shallow traits of our generation to "Material Girls" and such crimes would decline as a drugs into one category. Marijuana Centers for Disease Control have enumerated the AIDS death You get some special ones era," (The Daily Iowan, July 25). "paycheck engines," (whatever result of decreased drug prices and is not cocaine or heroin; its effects rabbits, you've got to start : toll at 38,541 Americans, only 56 percent of the total number Reading it, one gets the idea that that means), will only alienate control of drug distribution by the are very diffi rent. By combining all r - Marvin Kroening, 1 of reported AIDS cases in the U.S. selfisness and greed originated these substances into one category I ~ your potential allies and drive you government. Breeders Association, cor and not distinguishing the etfecta, I i The federal government is only now beginning to test dextran with the 1980's generation, instead further into your rose-colored, sim Third, O'Roake implies that breeders have when faced 1't sulfate, one of the drugs that AIDS patients will be able to of being part of every age and era. plified version of the past. although legalization would allow we risk the disbelief of our children "' in Iowa City Wednesday b 1 While I would agree that there James Haverkamp diversion of money from enforce in drug education endeavors. 1\il • ' : receive through the mail, in human trials as a treatment for 1988 Johnson County Fair seems to be an increase in mater Iowa City ment to education and rehabilita is a mistake which lost ua ground AIDS. ialism in today's society, the phe tion programs, such programs in the war against drugs in tht In their desperation, many AIDS victims have looked to nomenon isn't limited to the youn simply wouldn't work. My response '70s. ' foreign shores for relief, hoping to increase their chances of ger crowd. Afterall Mr. Hunter, Legalization is: If drug education simply doesn't Legalization isn't necessarily sur· • survival and searching for an alternative solution to the who do you think these Yuppies defended work, how does one explain the render. It is an alternate method• Entertatnn problem that their own government seems almost ignorant of, who worship the "all mighty dollar change in cigarette smoking habits regulation. We can legalize drug! f • - their God" are? The over-35 set To the Editor: and laws? and still teach out young people 10 , ------much less capable of solving. The sluggishness of the U.S. - the people who, as you say, John O'Roake's recent column Further, O'Roake argues that we say no; ma.ny people y art At thf- .. Jjou government in responding to the AIDS crisis has already cost "fought for their 20 years ago" - "Legalization is poor solution" shouldn't legalize drugs because already sa}'lng no to a other 1 w ... thousands of lives. This move by the FDA is a good one; are the ones snapping up the (The Daily Iowan, June 22) has the we didn't do it in the '70s: it would legal drugs - tobacco anaalcohol. "Kiss Me Deadly" (1955) - Ada1 ..., 1 from a Mickey Spillane novel, the however, it would be nicely complemented by a fuJI-scale BMW s and pasta machines, not the same failing as recent Newsweek hann Nancy Reagan's public per Ch I K 8 and Time articles - it is poorly sona. It seems to me this excuse •ry · mnn , centers on a slightly seedy pri campaign to find an approved treatment acceptable for all college seniors of today. Iowa Cl~ eye, Mike Hammer, who investig Surely the 1960's taught us that argued and purports conclusions comes from a mentality that AIDS patients. Thus, the government would not only be ,., a nasty series of murders, only to even the most noble movements not backed up by reason. believes that one should never ~------111! that the evil force behind them Is temporarily placating the desires of AIDS patients, but saving will attract the insincere and First of all, O'Roake makes an admit to mistakes. Remember the powerful to approach, much their lives. image-conscious. Instead of assumption that proponents of Vietnam War? t..-t 1 apprehend. 7 p.m. whitewashing this fact and roman· drug legalization expect such a A benefit of drug legalization not LAtter~ to the Editor mull be ,,.,.... Sara Langenberg ticizing the hippies who "came to solution to eradicate organized mentioned by O'Roake is control of and must be elgned. Unelgned or ,· "The Man Who Shot liberty Editorial Writer untyped letters will not be conelderld ., ance" (1962) - In John Ford's battle Wealthy Business America," crime. I would dispute this the purity of substances. Drug for publloatlon. L.ette11 ehould Include talgic, bittersweet farewell to why not spend some time reas assumption; it is well known that addicts will use drugs unless reha· the wrtter'a telephone number, whldl • Westerner and his vanishing Ide ' sessing the legacy of the era? What organized crime has its hands in bilitat.ed. If we are reallly inter· will not be publlehed, and add,. , John Wayne plays a charismatic I Opinions expressed on the Viewpoints page of The Dally happened to the admirable ideas illegal gambling and pornography, ested in saving lives, one way to do which will be withheld upon requell 1 rancher who mediates betwee the youth movement produced? among other things. Legalization 80 is to institute some quality Letters lhould bl brief IOd The Dllr naive Eastern-bred lawyer, playec Iowan are those of the signed author. The Dally Iowan, as a Why were they so easily co-opted would eradicate illegal drug traf control so those people know what Iowen ,_MI the right to edit 101 Jimmy St•wart, and the archei non-profit corporation, does not express opinions on these and undermined by the culture at ficking by organized crime. and how much they are uaing. length and clarity. • Western villain, played by Lee Ma, II p.m. maners. large? Mr. Hunter, these should be Second, O'Roake states that there Obviously, the current admini11tra· 1 II, ·cactua" (1986) - A beau the questions driving your is no reason to believe that the tion isn't interested in this, as ~------
-:::..--~"""-~·~- _·~~~-=---..: '="""'"'" --·------:: .....-.... -- ....:.J,;,..__ ...__ ..__ __ ,.._ ------.. ..,...... --·- -- - _....,. The Daily Iowan -Iowa City, Iowa- Thursday, July 28, 1988- Page 5
------~ GABE'S ~ illlam Casey ( . f) Nation/World Manager/Mariea Fecht w~~ Bn e y ,,\~oASis -~ " ., ••··~ 8IAIT BUII8ERS manager/Jim Leonard ( ttom 01 w1re services advertlalng manager/Cathy~ ~---TOMGHT----~ .,....Frill 1d1 m1n1ger/MaKine Eicher Tonight from Nashville ...... , 'J't man1ger/Francis R. Lalor Attack on Noriega tlon man1ger/Gene Oiektn S. Koreans demonstrate at U.S. Army base The Dig uctlon m1n1ger/Robert Foley SEOUL, South Korea-Riot police Wednesday arrested about 30 students yelling "Yankee go home" and demonstrating in front of Mandrakes ~owaCity _ U.S. Army headquarters to demand expulsion of U.S. forces. gets mixed reaction Friday Hundreds of riot police in green fatigues and black visored helmets swiftly detained the students as they marched toward the WASHINGTON CAP) - As the Rifle Sport ~achtClub U.S. 8th Army headquarters in southern Seoul. The students, Reagan administration reportedly Friday 8:30 pm trategy: who tried to stage a peaceful sit-down protest, were forced into embarked on a new plan for oust & Bowery Boys ROB SCHULTZ police buses. ing Panamanian le-:ler Manuel Antonio Noriega, a Panamanian Saturday Saturday, 8:30 pm ing incorporated wholesale The students also demonstrated to mark the 35th anniversary l today of the end of the Korean War, begun in 1950 by communist opposition leader on Wednesday e academic analysis of pol~ FICKEL& North Korea's invasion of the south. expressed enthusiastic support for Black Star The students called for removal of the 42,000 U.S. troops still the continuing U.S. effort to isolate MCKEEGAN undoubtedly the case Reggae that tbt based in South Korea under a defense treaty, and they carried Noriega. THURSDAY LUNCH s of political face l • ba~ denouncing the American military presence. Ambassador Juan Sosa, who broke a in reconciling Sloppy Joes '1.25 "t'.to ~;t with the United States, which forced partition of the with the Noriega-led government 'r supporters with FRIDAY LUNCH Korean peninsuJa," protesters shouted. in February, said in an interview 2 Tacos •t.50 raJ strategy. Some Radical students claim the United States is responsible for the he is pleased that the administra p???.r.-~ like Dukakis, are more sue. continued division of the Korean Peninsula and rules the south as tion has maintained a no 1 than others, like Mondale negotiations policy toward Noriega 2 for 1 All Drinks Servi"' Excelleral a virtual colony. Radicals have called for immediate reunification 4 to 6 Mon.-Fri. Luru:M• Daily is has put together a win. with the communist North. since the collapse of a U.S. bid in coalition by reconciling his May to encourage him to surrender Old Capitol Center 13 8. Linn • SM-7430 arty and its legitimate con. ' U.S.-Qatar talks suspended over missles power. ~------cies, from pro-business ~ 1 But Sosa, who shares the U.S. inist, with his own electoral WASHINGTON - The United States has suspended military view that ousted Panamanian M1nuel Noriega We·re Fighting RJr Your Life. &\American Heart . Although tilting to big • and economic talks with Qatar to protest the Persian GuJf President Eric Arturo Delva11e ia ss with his vice-presidential sheikdom's unauthorized acquisition of Stinger anti-aircraft the legitimate authority in Offers by Guatemalan President • As$0Ciatton ion, he has decisively missiles, U.S. diplomats said Wednesday. Panama, said he had not been Vinicio Cerezo and fornner Vene d, so far, the Kirk-Miller. Assistant Secretary ofState Richard Murphy said the suspension briefed on the covert action plan zuelan President Carlos Andres n advice to shut down party would remain in place until Qatar returns the missiles to the reportedly. approved by President. Perez to start up an alternate s and sever his ties with ' United States. Ronald Reagan. negotiating process have not home ilitant blacks" of the Jack. "What we have done is to place on hold a number of agreements This contradicted a source quoted fruit. paign. that were under consideration," Murphy told the House subcom in Wednesday's editions of The Noriega, who is under federal drug ed parties lose elections, and mittee on Europe and the Middle East. Washington Post, which along with smuggling indictments, has rest way to divide a party~ "We consider it very much in the interests of developing the solid the Los Angeles Times reported the refused to discuss Panama's politi to war openly with various relationship with Qatar that those missiles be returned soonest. new anti-Noriega plan. cal future since the collapse of the ts inside it. The Democratic • And we've made that very clear," he added. Contrary to the accounts in the U.S. initiative. has become the majority Another official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Qatar Post and the Times, Sosa also said The sources quoted by the Post t every level of government had been seeking several military and economic agreements with he doubted that Reagan had and the Timu declined to di8CU88 cticing the politics of incJu. > the United States, including the purchase of weapons. "We told infornned Delvalle of the plan dur details of the alleged covert action ot the politics of exclusion. them everything is frozen," he added. "Relations are now correct ing a telephone conversation on plan. One source told the Post that is needs a reasonably united ' but cool ." July 16. the activities fall short of a para ot only to win the election The United States does not have any defense cooperation with "As far as I know, the conversa military operation, such as kid govern the nation. His Qatar but considers the country important as a member of the tion did not touch on that," said naping Noriega. residential selection 1 pro-Western Gulf Cooperation Council which includes Saudi Sosa, who continues to serve at On Capitol Hill, Sen. Alphonse ned party unity, but his Arabia and Kuwait. Panama's embassy here in defiance D'Amato, R-N.Y., suggested that ful reconciliation with Jesse of the Panamanian government's the leak originated in the White n at the Democratic • FBI confirms receipt of stolen documents efforts to appoint its own envoy. House "during this political sea FREE DELIVERY 337-6776 at Convention reassured his The administration has frozen son" to create the impression that hat he had not capitulated MIAMI - The FBI acknowledged Wednesday it received Panamanian government assets in the United States is doing some Paul Kirk strategy of excJu. documents taken from the home of a reporter who worked for the United States as part of broad thing about Noriega and drug y his generous treatment of CBS-TV in Costa Rica, but said agents had no indication at the policy of economic denial against trafficking in Panama. 'or primary opponent, he 1 time that the material was stolen. Panama. When the May negotia· Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., li''i?J J -.~ " -[}; ~ ne a long way towards , The files belonged to Tony Avirgan, a free-lance cameraman who tions broke down, the administra said that Reagan authorized the ituting a modern version of was investigating a political bombing in Nicaragua that killed tion withdrew its proposals and activity to give the appearance of w Deal coalition. eight people. Avirgan later filed suit here against top U.S. and said it would not take part in stepping up his campaign against Contra officials he linked to the incident. Cox is a professor of history at further negotiations. Noriega. and a member of the Iowa The documents came to the FBI from an individua1 who atic Central Committee. "unsolicited, voluntarily provided the items in question to an Thursday SpeciaJS ;c_ agent," said a statement issued late Wednesday by Washington Forest fires continue FBI spokeswoman Sue Schnitzer. $125 Pints Harp (_JJ "This individual gave no indication that the documents were obtained through illegal means," the FBI statement said. Avirgan's home in Costa Rica was broken into in November 1985 destruction in 8 states and again a year later, said Lanny Sinkin, an attorney for the ~ Alf!My~N~ ~ By The Associated Press Wednesday. One firefighter auf· Washington-based Christie Institute, which represents Avirgan in fered a burned neck and a resident tt Enjoy tht ajimtoon '(jJ the suit. The thefts were reported to Costa Rican police at the Crews set backfires with flame suffered smoke inhalation. Another time, but no one was ever arrested. throwers Wednesday to protect Old person was hurt in a smoke-caused During preparations for the suit, attorneys routinely asked for SAMpl.E.1 cu, Faithful from the worst forest fire traffic accident. any documents the FBI Washington office might have on Avirgan, outbreak at Yellowstone National E.t3D Sep ~Tr:l.~! and the agency responded last month. Park this century, while wildfires The fire in Rapid City was "As we went through them, it became clear they were stolen from forced hundreds of people from reported Tuesday aft.ernoon, and $2 $1 M4T9aritas Tony's home," Sinkin said. swept across forest and meadow in i 5 ~ their homes in South Dakota and MOilMy tfuu ~ 4·7 prn The 39 pages included not only memos to CBS, but Avirgan's Idaho. the southwestern South Dakota handwritten notes about the bombing, he said. In Alaska, about 1,200 firefighters area that's home to 90,000 people. "It suggests that the break-in was targeted to find out what he battled blazes that burned about Interior Secretary Donald Hodel knew," said Sinkin. 1.3 million acres, an area larger new by helicopter over 10,000 i5~Gis ~r.~ than the state of Delaware, and charred acres in Yellowstone's Drowned rats wash onto New York beaches strong winds fanned two of the southern areas and told 500 fire· NEW YORK - Now decomposed rats have washed ashore on largest fires, officials said. fighters that he supports the policy New York City beaches, joining medical waste in a bounty of Large fires also burned in Arizona, of letting wildfires burn unchecked unwanted debris that has closed many East Coast recreation Oregon, Utah and Washington in wilderness areas unless they areas this summer. state. endanger buildings, people or Altogether, 10 of the 14.3 miles of beaches administered by the An 1,800-acre fire west of Rapid roads. City, S.D., prompted the evacua city Parks Department were closed because of debris Wednesday. "We aren't going to waste our In addition, most of the beaches m the Gateway National tion of more than 500 people, destroyed four homes and damaged resources where fires aren't doing Recreation Area remained closed. harnn to the park," he said. 'There "It's very disappointing to us," said Parks Commissioner Henry another four, said fire infornnation officer Corbin Newman. It also is a long-term beneficia] effect from Stem, who added that he hoped investigators would find who was fire." responsible for the illegal dumping "and send them away for a burned four vehicles and 15 out "Margaritaville" long time." buildings, including garages, sheds Crews took an active role against a While officia1s in New York said they were baffled by the and barns. 9,700-acre fire burning within six seaborne invasion of debris, authorities in Rhode Island said they An estimated 575 firefighters had miles of Old Faithful, the park's a> had traced medical waste that washed ashore in that state to New the blaze 70 percent contained most famous attraction. Margaritas York-area hospitals, drug stores and ambulances. ¢ ~ 1.; Nine rats were among the 246 pieces of waste that were found at U.S. still negotiating for hostages Rockaway Beach on Tuesday, according to Health Department 75 including Strawberry Tho Dolly IOWo~J"""' '""''"' ~ spokesman Barry Adkins. At least 24 more pieces of debris were as Iran, Iraq continue to battle found Wednesday. Most of the items were syringes, Adkins said. Here, at a glance, are Wednesday's lanes and a helicopter gunship Stocks suffer broad setback on low volume developments involving Iran, Iraq Wednesday. The claims could not NEW YORK - Stock prices declined broadly in quiet trading and the United States: be independently verified. Iran ~5¢Draws Wednesday as traders found little encouragement in the latest WASHINGTON - An offer by a complained that Iraqi planes statistics on economic growth. senior Iranian official to help free dropped chemical bombs near The Dow Jones average dropped 20.27 to 2,053. 70, its lowest close American hostages in Lebanon was Bakhtaran, an Iranian provincial r-----1 dismissed Wednesday by the Rea capital. ed by their decision to since it stood at 2,052.45 on June 2. ALL NIGHT LONG! domestic marijuana with • Volume on the floor of the Big Board came to 135.89 milhon gan administration. Freeing the UNITED NATIONS - Foreign t . shares, against 121.96 million in the previous session. nine American hostages is "a Minister Tariq Aziz of Iraq said his ly,l have a problem with the humanitarian issue" and not sub country will not be "stampeded" nd Ms. Reagan lumping all ' Quoted .•. ject to bartering with Iran over into a settlement and insists on to one category. Marijuana releasing Iranian assets frozen in direct cease-fire negotiations with You get some special ones, but when you get a couple hundred the United States, said State Iran. Ambassador Mohammad <><:aine or heroin; its effecU rabbits, you've got to start butchering some. different. By combining ~I 1 Department spokesman Charles Ja'afar Mahallati of Iran accused - Marvin Kroening, president of the Wisconsin Rabbit Redman. Iraq of stalling and sabotaging bstances into one category Breeders Associat1on, commenting on the two options rabbit distinguishing the effecU. BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iranian U.N. efforts to end the war. breeders have when faced with too many rabbits. Kroening was rebels said they held the cities well Secretary-General Javier Perez de the disbelief of our children I' in Iowa City Wednesday to judge the rabbit competition at the inside Iran, had killed or wounded Cuellar urged both governments to education endeavors. 'Thil • 1988 Johnson County Fair See story, page 1. thousands of Iranian soldiers and "help me in finding a solution take which lost us ground 1 war against drugs in the '------l had shot down two Iranian warp- through compromise." ization isn't neceBSarily sur· • It is an alternate ~ethod' ------on. We can legahze di'UI Entertainment Today teachoutyoungpoople~ .------' ma.ny people Y ve At thl ... J)ou Frencn woman visiting Australia Is p.m.), It Is mhabited by the strangest an exhibition featuring works by three sa,Ying no to other r ~.. involved in an automobile accident of creatures, Including a small but artists who use paper and fiber as art ... ge- tobacco an 81cohol. 1 "Kiss Me Deadly" (1955)- Adapted that forces her to choose between smug population of well-paid jour· media, and it will be on display In the .... from a Mickey Spillane novel, the film losing her eyesight and having an nalists (6:30 p.m.). "Wild America - Ul Museum of Art through Aug. 1-4. Cheryl K. Sm"" ~ centers on a slightly seedy private infected eye removed. The ultimate Time of the Grizzly" - The entire Some of the best-known photographs Iowa CIIY f eye, Mike Hammer, who Investigates decision is not as crucial as the spectrum of our attitudes toward the of American master Paul Strand will a nasty series of murders, only to find feelings engendered by her falling in grizzly IS examined, along with the be on display in the Museum of Art ·• lhat the ev1l force behind them Is too lova with a young blind man. 7 p.m. animal itself, its life history and through Aug. 7. powerful to approach, much less "The Black Cannon Incident" habitat. the long-distance phone bills ' apprehend. 7 p.m. (1985) - Admired for its political it can't pay, the student loans it must to the Editor mUll be l)1lld daring and subtle satire, this film defer and its relatively disastrous golf Nightlife be signed. Unelgned ~ ' "The Man Who Shot Liberty Val - concerns a hapless engineer who swing (7 p.m., IPTV 12). ·• 1. lettlf'l will not be cOOeidertd ance" (1962) - In John Ford's noa- Dig Mandrakes plays at Gabe's gets caught In a political wringer and "Mystery! - The Return of Sher· Oasis, 330 E. Washington St. icatiOn. Letter1 should includl talglc, bittersweet farewell to the emerges with his ego flattened. In lock Holmes - The Musgrave Ritual" 'a telephone number, wl'lldl Westerner and his vanishing Ideals, Mandarin. 7 p.m. - Holmes and Watson are guests of be publilhed, and ldd• , John Wayne plays a charismatic local Sir Reginald Musgrave. He tells them Radio ~~~ be withheld upon raq-. rancher who mediates between a Television of an ancient ritual which begins to lhould be brief and Tilt DIIIJ naive Eastern-bred lawyer, played by take place before their eyes (9 p.m.; Micheal Stern conducts the Cleve l'8eefWt the right to d fit Jimmy Stewart, and the archetypal "Wildside - Sulawesi: Island of IPTV 12). land Orchestra In works by Rachma· clarrty. • Western villain, played by Lee Marvin. Discovery" - Sulawesi is an island of ninoff, Mendelssohn and Beethoven, tp.m. mysteries. Situated where Asia meets Art his "Coriolan" overture (8 p.m.; KSUI ·cactus" (HI86) - A beautiful Australia (usually at Joe's after 11 "Katsiaficas, Purington, Schedl" is 91 .7 FM).
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Page 1-The Daily Iowan -Iowa City, Iowa- Thursday, July 28, 1988
<• Sports HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PROFESSIONAL TUTORING The Daily Iowan MATJiEMATICS. SVSTI!MS UNLIMITED 11 SERVICES ------22M 001 thru 27M 03e ~ntarvrew1ng paroons to work part - STATISTICS. NOW HilliNG partt1me lime w1th dtvtlopmt(llally doubled LOW BUDQU?· NO I'IIOBL!IIiltl 22S 008 thru· 275 170 busparsons and drshwashers children and tdulta Appllcanta VOUA BEST IMAGE CHE:MISTAY· 4 007. 4 013 DIC Apply In per10n 2-4pm Monday· mull be high school grads. at least WfODING PHOTOORAPiiV PHYSICS ?9 011 Manley placed Thurtda~ Iowa Ao~r Power 18 and have • valid lowe Drrvere Call lor lrM consultlllion 3~1·11127 Compan~ EOE. LlctnM. lmmedoata openings Evening• & weekends. 338·50115 111 Commu Apply II 1040 W1llram Slrftt, Su111 ILUI! MOON now hiring part tome A. Iowa Crly lA EOEIM THI! DAILY IOWAN onera disc JOckey Apply In person Park and Shop CHILD CARE (: _11_a_m_d_e_a_d_li_n..,..e_fo~ on suspension 2-4pm, Monda~· Thurtday. Iowa R1~r Power Company EOE. lue and' lhop ------~ Iowa City's Morning Newspaper (&1 0 minimum purchan) NANNY· Law atudent w•ll lll ~
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The Da1ly Iowan -Iowa City, Iowa- Thursday, July 28, 1988- P1ge 1 ------·,1 ~~~§§~§§§§§§~§§§§~§§~~§§§§§§§§§§~~§§§§~1------AL TUTORING ROOM FOR RENT APARTMENT APARTMENT HOUSE HOUSE FOR SALE~ MATMI!MATICS. 22M 001 thru' 22M 036 FOR REIT FOR RENT STATISTICS. OaL!IIII 22S 008 tnru· 22S 1:10 FOR REIT F1VI' BLOCICI eu1 ot ,_,tac:rnt 3E CHFMISTAY· 4 007, A Ot3 Dl Classified& kltc:twn,~--- bat" OffstrMC.. ~~· parking -· ON! llf.OIIOOIII. H'W .,..ct. 908 T...o bedroom. H'W peod 702 EMt APH'f PHYSICS :.'9 011 1t1on Waahongton S380 and $A25 33&-3175 -ngs 338-5085 ----35-1-·11...122--,f 111 Communications Center· 335-5784 -::..__,6pm::....;,:~..;..;;..~:~..;:...·~.;_;.· ~-l(.t-c'--~-~5~7;;.e.;-$340 WID p - --.._ -- - ,.,_-- ~- ... - -...,. - -~ ------,....,.....------.... - ·--·-- ·- ---- .... _...... _. ·------.... -· INSIDE SPORTS NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle announces he has put Washington's Dexter Manley on a non-football injury list for 30 days. SeePage& Iowa City, Iowa-Thursday, July 28, 1988- Page 8 25 cents Fitzpatrick's holds off comeback bid By Brent D. Woods minutes and helped his team The Athlete's Foot had five sec Ingram chipped in 19 each, and B 11 d Bl Ingram and Lookingbill n a oor The Dally Iowan stretch out its lead to 85-76 with onds remaining to launch a game both TheBY D• · an seven minutes remaining. tying three-point shot, but. Pollpe grabbed 10 rebounds. Incoming Iowa freshman Tro} At the 6:04 mark, Fitzpatrick's ter's attempt with two seconds left In the other early An lo City man plead Skinner got a chance to redeem held its biggest lead of the game, wouldn't fall. National Bank took guilty to one count of first himself in Prime Time Basketball 90-76, but The Athlete's Foot Skinner, a 5-foot-10 guard from sparse Southgate arson and one count of ~ League action Wednesday night. wasn't up for a blowout. Palmer, Iowa, said he thinks the team to win 116-104. degree arson Thursday, ace And he took advantage of it. Led by Les Jepsen and Kent Prime Time competition has con Ed Horton led the way for the , to Johnson County District Skinner sank two clutch free Pollpeter, The Athlete's Foot tinued to help his game. winners with 31 pointll. Kevi• records. Eric J. Hess throws with nine seconds remain chipped away at the 14-point mar "fm still not playing as well as I'd Drahozal had 26 for Southgate. Michael Sack, 22, 522 E. ( ing in the contest to give Fitzpat gin and pulled the score to 97-94 like to, but playing with this type Iowa Coach Tom Davis was agaia rick's a three-point cushion and with 1:06 left. of competition really helps," Skin watching the action and said the squelch an Athlete's Foot comeback Fitzpatrick's held a narrow 52-49 Incoming Iowa freshman Wade ner said. "I'm trying to work a lot league games give him a good patching in a 101-98 victory at Iowa City lead at the half mostly on the Lookingbill then made one of two on my ball-handling. My shooting chance to monitor the progreBIIi ·Newfi High School. strength of hot shooting by Greg free throws for Fitzpatrick's to has been pretty good, but it kind of his players. "' was nervous, especially after I McDermott. make the score 98-94, but Poll peter left me again tonight." "It's interesting. You get a chance choked off the first ones," Skinner Fitzpatrick's standout Michael answered with a 14-foot bank shot Jepsen scored 30 points and to see who is improving," DaYit the wave said, referring to his previous miss Ingram had spent nearly 10 to close the margin to 98-96. grabbed 15 rebounds in a losing said. "It's hard to tell how much, at the line late in the game. minutes of the first stanza on the Northern Iowa's Nick Nurse made cause for The Athlete's Foot. Todd but they're all improving: Like U. studer Skinner's free throws were all that bench in foul trouble, and when one free throw for Fitzpatrick's and Hutchenson tallied 25 and Pollpe (Jepsen) - he's trying very hard.' soccer stood between Fitzpatrick's and a Ingram returned in the second Jepsen hit a 10-foot turnaround ter added 23. In the late matchups, Ha'liJ'IV&- f 1 I , of hard-fought Athlete's Foot come half, he made his presence felt. He jumper to make the score 99-98 Fitzpatrick's was led by McDer McEieney faced Iowa State Bank back. scored seven points in the first 21/~ and set up Skinner's free throws. mott's 28 points. Nurse and a_nd Hills Bank played Eby's Athle- In p ac occer has long been an important sport in the ttc Company. world, something that causes riots and deep r ... NFL By Paula Roesler s owners The Daily Iowan splits between the countries of the globe. A new Iowa City career d1 Without regret, I must admit soc ment firm offers job search cer, which is commonly called ordered tance and self-esteem traini football in most other countries, $159 to $325, but many has hardly been my favorite sport. same services are provided " It's not the greatest spectator to pay charge by the Ul. sport, but neither is golf, and that's JOBSplus, 400 S. Clinton S a sport I enjoy. in its fourth week of busine1 Soccer certainly has worldwide $19 million 10 clients, eight of whm appeal, and it should be intriguing students.' to have the world's eyes focusing BALTIMORE (AP) - A court According to the business' on the 1994 World Cup soccer ruling that National Football dent, Rick Collins, the targe tournament, a four-week exercise. League team owners owe the play ket is primarily students, bt The United States wi11 be in the ers' pension fund more than $19 extends to underemployed a1 middle of the most important event million in overdue payments dep placed persons. in 1994, bar none, as countries rives the owners of a bargaining Subscribers to the JOBSplu parade in the cause of nationalism ploy, a union attorney said. package receive a job sea cheering for the home team. , U.S. Distnct Judge Herbert. Mur nationwide listing of curre This is serious busine88 for the ray ruled Tuesday in a lawsuit openings, personalized eva] world's No. 1 most-played game. filed by the NFL Players Associa of job skills, resume and So why isn't soccer a popular sport tion that the owners must pay letter preparation, analy1 in America? $19.3 million to the fund in a interview skills, customized Soccer is taught at an early age in dispute dating to 1984. kit, a complete color analys America. There are great numbers Dick Berthelsen, the union's gen follow-up services. of soccer leagues for grade school eral counsel, said the ruling WM a Through color analysis, clie1 era and teen-agers. In many places, significant legal victory for the advised what colors and l it's competition for Little League players in more ways than one. best complement their appea baseball. "Ever Aince the contributions were ' They are given material sw While there are probably more due but not paid, management has of the colors that look hE reasons, there seems to be three been trying to use the unpaid sums them. major ones for soccer's demise after as leverag in bargaining. The Clients can also purchase t the high school level. owner... tried to make us bargain search alone for $159. First, there's a lack of money in twice for the same pension benefits, "What we do is literally ta the sport. Professional soccer has but this pension money belongs til work out of the job search,", managed little luck in this country. the players and always has,' plus Executive Vice Pre1 Pele brought some appeal when he Berthelsen said. Sanetta Jackson said. played in New York several years The NFLPA, which administers Jackson added JOBSplus back, but the North American the pension fund with the league'& competing with the Ul's coun Soccer League, the last outdoor Management Council, had sought league to play in the United States, to force the owners to make the eventually felt its demise. Fearsome forehand payments of $12.5 million annually Certain m The Major Indoor Soccer League under the five-year collective bar· has provided several United States Ullaw student Jody Rowe of Iowa City smashes a shot back across Iowa City during a break from studying at Klotz Courts Wednesday gaining agreement that expired I a cities with an Astroturf, the net while volleying with Ul graduate student Brad Anderson of afternoon. last year. speeded-up version of the game 1n 1mprov which has reaked havoc with lawyers filling out Chapter 11 bankruptcy papers. Secondly, soccer has never been Teary Spinks· announces retirement UI actuarial science and ac1 the sport in which the whole family ing majors ar.e hot propert takes an evening break to sharpen NEW YORK (AP) - Michael have to admit it's been fun." Muhammad to capture the World "Twelve years is a lot of time for the job market this year, acc1 the soccer skills. Spinks, the only light heavyweight Spinks, whose Joss to Tyson in Boxing Association light getting run at and having to duck a to UI Business and Liberal Honestly, how many times have ever to dethrone a heavyweight Atlantic City, N.J., June 27 was heavyweight title, then beat lot of punches," said Spinks, who Placement Office Assi you seen a family out in their yard champion, tearfully announced his the only one in his 32 professional Dwight Muhammad Qawi on said Lewis had advised him to quit Director Don Moffett. kicking a soccer ball around? retirement Wednesday, a month to fights, said he will join Lewis as an March 18, 1983 to unify the cham while he still had his health and, "''he accounting people are It's usually a parent tossing a the day after Mike Tyson ended in agent-advisor to young athletes. pionship in the division. he said, $25 million in the bank. really well," Moffett said. '"81 football around or throwing a base 91-seconds his quest to regain the JOb outlook as far as WE An Olympic middleweight cham ball to give their child a little crown. uBut I look at some of the older determine is not too bad {ove pion in 1976, Spinks turned pro six Then, on Sept. 22, 1985, having batting practice, hoping, of course, "I've never retired from anything guys - Jersey Joe Walcott, Smo Moffett said actuaries do st months later and won eight beefed up from 175 pounds to more not to break the next door neigh except selling newspapers," the kin' Joe Frazier, Archie Moore, cal studies, such as studi1 straight fights before taking time than 200, he became the first light b6r's window. 32-year old Spinks said, breaking heavyweight to take away the title Muhammad Ali. They made 12 insurance companies to seE ofT to help his brother Leon win the long people are going to liv1 Don't forget the late-night urges to into sobs between words, then from a heavyweight champ when years look like six months." world heavyweight title from average salary for an ent!J shoot baskets for hours on end to wiping away the tears with napk he outpointed Larry Holmes in 15 "We're doing it our way," Lewis Muhammad Ali. actuary is about $30,000 a ye the point that a jump shot has ins handed him by his promoter rounds at Las Vegas, Nev., for the said. "He's got his money, he's got added. been perfected enough so even manager, Butch Lewis. He won his first pro title in 1981 International Boxing Federation his health. I just thought it was Many liberal arts studenl See Heu, Page 6 "It's been a tough 12 years, but I when he defeated Eddie Mustafa championship. time." finding jobs in sales, mark banking and insurance, he sa ,0~ Some of the approximately ~r~ • students who go througl ~~ campus interviews find jobs 2 for 1 All Drinks the visitmg companies, he sa 9to 11 Mon.-Thurs. S11111rgartta I p~Midnlght tt "We do about 7,000 to Old Capitol Center Dollntlc Bottles Sun.·Thun. DRAWS interviews each year with a. Drinks 10¢ 10.11 pm AND INIRODUCING the THURSDAY Inside SPECIAL THE MIDNIGHT HOUR Open To Close Index Drop All. 2 FOR 1 ON COCKTAD..S Arts ...... ~ 11:30-12:30 pm ClasslfledS ...... 1 '" Crossw ...... soon I Pia The Best In New Music Metro '""···•· ...... Bud, II• Rlbbll, Miller Ute • Mev ...... Bud Light Sports ...... ~ lVTOday ...... IS. D11lluque Viewpo1nta ...... ,...... '"W"'QQD 21 W. Benton u.lfllt (Next to McDonald'•) O.•ly 7 00 8 00 Nation/world ...... s.t I Sun 1 30. 3 20. 5 10. 7 00, Cempus Theens TilE DUD POOL 212 S. Clinton 121 E. CoUege Today, lUnny with a high rJ 354·8000 WHGFWU 100. Well, th1s Ia the last one P-Al TiiURSDAY NIGHT last weather box To all of you ..... RAIIIT,.. hate me - the feeling's mutual.· Dally 2 00, • 30, 1 00, 8 30 ol you who so kindly tolerate ~ 10¢ ~:~~30 IW. DURIIAM 11t you'll do. To all of you who 1\a¥ o.ity 1 00, • 00 IIOOd taste to laugh outwardly 1 IIIORT CIICIIT 2 ,.. Iron wit - the check's In the mail $150 $}00 hay: If there'll a fir&, don't call II mCHERS BAR UQUOR We'll all be busy, pondering the~ questions of joumalilm - at · AU NIGHT LONG! Happy trails, and be nloe to Hun1 Open To Close Non-alcohol drtnkl awllable for 19 .l 20 VW old Cllltomln -- - ...... ~ ------~ ·------__..,.. ---- ::.. - - -- ~ ... .. -... ------...... -·