8 Wednesday, July 15, 1992 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN JAYHAWK Special Prices for KU Faculty, Staff and Students MTech Pro 386/33 - 33MHz386DXCPU - 64K cache MTech Talent 386 SX/25 - 64K cache * 4MB RAM, expandable to 32 MB * 1.44 MB TEAC floppy drive * 125 MB IDE HD with disk caching * SVGA video adapter * 14" SVGA color monitor, 0.28 dpi * 2 serial, 1 parallel, and 1 game ports * 101-key enhanced keyboard * MS-DOS 5.0 * Windows 3.1 * High resolution mouse * 1 year warranty *25 MHz 386 SX CPU $1550.00 - 25 MHz 386 SX CPU * 2MB RAM, expandable to 16 MB * 1.44 MB TEAC floppy drive * 40 MB IDE HD with disk caching * SVGA video adapter * 14* SVGA color monitor, 0.28 dpi * 2 serial, 1 parallel, 1 game ports * 101-key enhanced keyboard * MS-DOS 5.0 * Windows 3.1 * High resolution mouse * Upgradeable to 386 DX,486 * 1 Year warranty $1096.00 Optional 1.2 MB/360K floppy, 200/300/600 MB hard disk, CD ROM, Tape drive, 14" & 15" color monitor, 486 upgrade. Above systems are under State Microcomputer Contract State Contract prices for the University are available at KU purchasing dept. or call Microtech at 841-9513 Ext.State Contract dept. Over the years. Microtech has delivered thousands of micro-computer systems to Federal.State, Local governments, and Universities. Please call for details on 5 different Desktop and Notebook computer contracts currently offered by Microtech. Microtech Computers, Inc. 841-9513 Technical Support line: 841-9533 Fax: 841-1809 2329 Iowa St FREE MEDIUM ONE-TOPPING PIZZA when you buy any large Supreme, Pepperoni Lover's, or Meat Lover's pizza at regular menu price. Pizza Pizza Hut DINE-IN CARRYOUT 1606 W 23rd St. B43-3516 804 Iowa B42-1667 934 Massachusetts B43-7044 All You Can Eat Lunch Coffee Buffet $2,99 M-F. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. available at Participating restaurants FREE DELIVERY IN LAWRENCE CALL: Delivery House Houston 150th St North of 150th Street 843-2211 843-3000 843-7044 11am to 12pm midnight Saturday Friday to Saturday Limited Delivery Area Dine-In. Carryout or Delivery! FREE Medium One-Topping Pizza When you buy any large Supreme, Pepperoni Lover's $ or Meat Lover's $ Pizza at regular menu price. Valid in Deli, Carousel or Delivery. 921219 FREE Valid on Dine-In, Carryout or Delivery Offer expires August 16, 1992 Please maximum occupancy when booking. This coupon only party gets hold at participating Postal Team. Tour dates are based at AMSTERDAM with MAXIMUM TICKETS for 53 HOURS. TICKETS valid until completion of the tour. Offer is limited to a single tour. The Office of Management and Budget has recommended that each school begin charging tuition this fall to make up for the reduction. The proposal would have a fairly Haskell opposes federal cuts, denounces new tuition policy By Julie Wasson Kansan staff writer President George Bush's proposed budget for the next fiscal year includes cuts of $1,672,000 for Haskell and $946,000 for SIPL. The proposal would end long-standing tuition-free policies for Native Americans at Haskell and at the Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute, or SIPI, in Albuquerque, N.M. SIPI is the nation's only technical-vocational institute for Native Americans. It is planned to be converted to a tribal-oriented community college. Officials at Haskell Indian Junior College have joined Native-American leaders, students and education groups in opposing a federal proposal to charge tuition at Haskell and another Native-American institute. In a statement issued in response to the proposed budget cuts, the Haskell Boards of Regents said: "Haskell is one of the oldest government-supported educational institutions for Native Americans in existence and represents part of the federal trust responsibility for Native-American education." Combest said that Haskell had no plan to deal with the proposed cuts, which would take effect beginning Fall 1992. In a position paper issued by the Boards of Regents of Haskell and SIPI, the administration criticized the assertion that Native-American students would appreciate their educations more if they had to pay for them. The Associated Press contributed information to this story. the government's trust obligations to Native-American tribes, while others warned it could lead to campus closures. The Associated Press Some people at the meeting said the tuition proposal would further erode FORDLAND, Mo. — Murray Hill just wants his elephants back. Animal lover thieves elephants out of pity substantial impact on students here," said Hannes Combest, education assistant to the president at Haskell. Dean Chavers, president of the Native American Scholarship Fund and a representative of the Coalition for Indian Education, said everybody opposed charging tuition except for the people who had proposed it. According to a poll taken by the Haskell Student Senate in February 1992, 65 percent of Haskell students came from families with incomes below the poverty line. The poll also showed that 75 percent of Haskell students would not or could not attend Haskell if they had to pay tuition. Chavers spoke at a meeting Monday in Albuquerque, N.M., sponsored by the Bureau of Indian Affairs' Office of Indian Education Programs. The meeting was one of 10 slated this week in different parts of the country to let tribes air their views on key education issues. The man who went on the lam with two pachyderms for 51/2 years is building a subterranean barn in the Ozark Mountains for unwanted elephants, paid for with a cut from a new book about his adventures with 3-ton Tory and 31/2 ton Dutchess. For four years, Hill hid the elephants in northern New Jersey at the farm of a wealthy investment banker who sympathized with the animal-rights movement. "IIf I could get those elephants back, they'll never work another day," said the former circus-animal trainer, a wiry man barely 5 feet tall who changed his name from Alran Seidon for a previous job as a stand-up comic. Hill, 63, sold the two Asian elephants in 1981 to Richard and Edward Drake, a father-and-son team of animal trainers from Tehachapi, Calif. "There was no abuse," Richard Drake said. "I don't know why he would say that other than to get sympathy from anywhere he can find it." But he said they mistreated the performing animals, and so he went underground with them in May 1984 after a judge ruled that the elephants belonged to the Drakes. "After I got a look at those animals, there was no way in hell the Drakes were ever going to get their hands on them again," Hill said. "I did what I thought was right." The Drakes said Hill accused them of abuse to justify his theft. Hill was arrested on a fugitive warrant in October 1989 in Jefferson, Texas, and served a 100-hour sentence of community service for his theft of the animals. He got by mainly on money from his mother and the kindness of his hosts. He slept in a trailer with the elephants, who together ate about 300 pounds of hay and left about 200 pounds of manure to shovel every day. Horine's Retail Liquor Get 10% off any item with this ad!! 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