6 University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 28, 1992 Double Feature Drive-In Fri, May 1 8:30 $5 a carload Lot 91 behind the Union Bring your radio JAYHAWK Special Prices for KU Faculty, Staff and Students MTech Pro 386/33 - 33MHz 386DX CPU MTech Talent 386SX/25 - 25MHz 386SX CPU - 2MME 3608X CPU - 2MB RAM, expandable to 16MB - 1.4MMB TEAC floppy drive - 52MB IDE HD with disk caching - SVGA video adapter - 14" SVGA color monitor,0.28dpi - 2 serial, 1 parallel, 1 game ports - 101-key enhanced keyboard - MS-DOS 5.0 - Windows 3.1 - High resolution mouse - 1 year warranty $ 1158.00 Optional 1.2MB/360K floppy, 100/125/200/300M hard disk, CDR, Tape drive, 14" non-interleaved color monitor, MB SVGA card, 15" color monitor, Co-processor. 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 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 The KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions Clinton campaign shifts focus to Bush for Pennsylvania vote The Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Bill Clinton wrapped up the Pennsylvania primary campaign yesterday by attacking President Bush as the candidate of economic decline and ignoring Democratic rival Jerry Brown. Jesse Jackson retreated from an apparent call to be named Clinton's running mate. Clinton's focus was all Bush as the all-but-certain Democratic nominee campaigned in Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia a day before the Pennsylvania primary. Polls showed Clinton the strong favorite in the state. The Arkansas governor offered himself as an activist president who would bring national health care, improved schools, safer streets and a tax code that encourages investment in U.S. workers and plants. On each of these issues, Clinton said, "You won't get it unless you change presidents." Clinton had words of change for his own party, too. "The Democratic Party has to give the American people not the promise that we can go back to the good old days but that the future is bleak unless we change," he said. Former California Gov. Brown returned to Philadelphia's Independence Hall, where he launched his campaign in the fall, and said he would continue his calls for political reform whether it takes six months or a year or a generation. There are 169 delegates at stake in Pennsylvania's Democratic primary. Going into the primary, Clinton has 1,388 delegates to 271 for Brown, with 2,145 needed to clinch the nomination. On the eve of the primary, Jackson backpedaled on suggestions he should be offered the vice presidential slot on the Democratic ticket. In an interview in yesterday's New York Daily News and in comments to AP Network News, Jackson had suggested the vice presidential slot should be offered him. The Pennsylvania campaign has been low-key affair. Asked yesterday if a big win there would put Brown away, Clinton shrugged and said, "Jerry Brown has been running for president for 16 years. I don't know if there is any such thing as putting anybody away for good." Jackson, who has not endorsed either candidate, later issued a statement saying that he would be honored to be selected but that the eventual nominee of the party has the option of whom he will recommend to be on the ticket. "If we are not offered the chance to serve, then we will have to assess what our other options are," Jackson said. "It must not be seen as a threat, just a normal deliberation." Asked if he would support the ticket if he were not selected, Jackson said, "Well, I have supported it all of these years, not being on the ticket, but things do change." Clinton responded that he was dealing with the vice presidency issue on my own time and I am not going to be diverted by this. He spoke privately with Jackson by telephone. At the Pittsburgh rally, Clinton won rousing applause when he told the rally, "You don't need four more years of certain, slow economic decline when you are being told things are getting better and they're not." Clinton used his campaign swing to tie them for his likely fall showdown. Although Pennsylvania is holding a GOP primary as well, the Republican focus yesterday was on North Carolina, which votes next week. Lawrence Donor Center 816 W.24th (Behind Laird Noller Ford) Open Monday - Friday 8 am- 6 pm, Saturday 9 am -1pm TEN DOLLARS Enjoy paid vacations, and medical, dental, and optical benefits as a part-time loader/unloader at UPS. So, within one short year, you'll have a benefits package equal to or better than most full-time jobs! Sign up at the Placement Center at the Burge Union. We will be interviewing on April 29th The Best Choice for a Part-time JOB eoe/m/f