10 Thursday, September 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan FREE Medium Soft Drink with the purchase of any sandwich exp 10/6/88 Sun-Thurs' 11:30 a.m.-1:30 a.m. Fri & Sat 11:30 a.m.-2:30 a.m. 733 NEW HAMPSHIRE The Athlete's Foot FALL FITNESS SALE Start your fall fitness activities off with savings from the Athlete's Foot. selected BASKETBALL SHOES 25% off Nobody knows the athlete's foot like The Athlete's Foot Athlete's 942 Mass. The Athlete's Foot 841-6966 WINNING COMBINATION BUY A T-SHIRT AND GET FREE ADMISSION TO THE KU VS. NEW MEXICO STATE FOOTBALL GAME! Get your limited edition "Meet Me at the Stadium" T-Shirt for only $5.00! Wear your T-Shirt to the game, and you'll get in FREE! On sale at Wescoe Beach 9:00 am - 3:00 pm, today through Sept. 30th. Also available at the KU Ticket Office in Allen Field House and at the Union Bookstores. Don't forget to "Meet Us at the Stadium" for the pre-game Fiesta Fun,10:30 am -1:00 pm, Oct. 1 at the tennis courts southeast of Memorial Stadium. Enjoy FREE Citrus Hill Select Orange Juice, contests, giveaways and a live radio remote with Q104. Soviets say U.S., Pakistan violating Geneva accords Secretary of State George Shultz leveled a counterclaim that Soviet and Afghan bombing raids violated Pakistani airspace. The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — The U.S. Soviet discord over Afghanistan intensified yesterday and threatened Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Drawal from the embattled country. Shultz then escorted Sheardvariad from the Secretariat building. The two appeared grim and did not respond to reporters' questions. Charging Pakistan and, indirectly, the United States with violating the Geneva accords, the Soviet Union has called for a Security Council to resolve the dispute. Sultz urged the dispute be resolved. Nations observers, who have violations on either side, said State Department spokesman Charles Department. Soviet Foreign Minister Edward Shevardnadze registered the accusation at a meeting of the five permanent members of the Security Council, presided over by U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar. Response to Reporters' questions: But later, Redd said the Soviets "left the impression" they would maintain their troop withdrawal schedule. A communique was released after the meeting of Shultz, Sheardavarz and the foreign ministers of China, Britain and France that stresses the urgency for "continuous talks" to address the situation in Iran and Iraq in the Persian Gulf. Although State Department officials in Washington said they expected the troop withdrawal to be completed by Feb. 15, as specified in a memo sent on April, a Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman suggested a slowdown. "We want to be as good as our word is concerning the Geneva accords," the spokesman, Gennady Gerasimov, said. "The side also to be as good as its word." The Soviet official accused Pakistan of violations in supplying "so-called weapons." And Gerasimov broadened the complaint to include the United States. "I guess they come from the U.S. military-industry complex, mainly," he said. "The Geneva accords say that the Geneva note accepts to overthrow the government of Kabul. If you encourage the so-called freedom fighters to use the missiles to kill innocent people in the (Afghan) cities, I think it is a violation in our eyes." The U.N. meeting was arranged before Shearadhazadea a departure for the new camp, which summoned home for a meeting to discuss a "very important" reorganizational effort. The Soviet Communist Party's meet Friday to determine how to overhaul the country's political structure. Soviet officials said in Gerasimak acknowledged that a Soviet pilot had crossed the Pakistan border several weeks ago. But he stressed Pakistan's support for the rebels at war with the Afghan government. "It is a grave situation, and we must do something about it," he said. Meanwhile, State Department spokeswoman Phyllis Oyleklaid said in Washington that “there is no reason to allow the state to engage” to withhold by Feb. 15. Exhibit represents plumbers as protectors of U.S. health Chicago mayor opens event with a pipe-cutting ceremony $ ^{v} $ The Associated Press CHICAGO — The movers and shakers in the world of plumbing and wastewater treatment celebrated the opening yesterday of a museum exhibit illustrating the plumber's role as guardian of the nation's health. "The average person flushes the closest and (they) don't know what happens to the water. They don't realize all it involved in plumbing," said William Reichert, chairman of the Chicago Plumbing Council. "Our motto is: the plumbers protect the health of the nation. The doctors take care of it, but we protect it," said Reichert, who began as an apprentice plumber in 1868 and now is president of a local plumbing and Boating Company. About 200 peole, many of them plumbing contractors, plumbing inspectors or plumbing engineers, crowded into the new 2,200-square-foot exhibit at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry. The exhibit shows the flow of water in the Chicago area from Lake Michigan through treatment plants, into the Mississippi. Instead of the traditional ribbon-cutting, Mayor Eugene Sawyer did the honors at a pipe-cutting ceremony in New York. "I've just earned my plumbing (union) card again." Sawyer said. "I used to be a member of the Plumbers Union because I started out in the Water Department as a chemist. "I understand how important it is that we in Chicago have clean water." Reichert, proudly showing off the exhibit, said it was a tribute to the plumber's role in modern society. The first section features seven animated transparencies showing how the city's water system provides more than 1 billion gallons of water daily to more than 7 million people. The next section, a series of full-scale cutaway rooms in a house, features glass pipes instead of steel or cast iron, showing how water flows through the kitchen, bathroom and laundry room. "When you flush the closet, it shows how the closet works and where the water goes." Reichert said. "It's interesting. If you have kids, you can bring them down and show them." The final section is a walk-through theater describing the treatment responsibilities of the Metropolitan Sanitary District. CHECKERS PIZZA Peace prize recipient Nobel committee to name winner today in Norway The Associated Press 4 Star Specials The list included 74 individuals and 23 organizations. Aarvik quashed speculation that Secretary General Javien Areza would lead the U.N. chief was not nominated before the Feb. 1 deadline for this report. The prize carries a cash award of $390,000. Committee Chairman Egil Aarvik was to announce the decision at 2 p.m. (10 a.m. CDT) today. ★ 2 12" 2-topping pizzas & 2 soft drinks $7.75 plus tax ***** Yesterday's session was the group's first formal meeting since the fall, and he indicated that a consensus emerged even before the final The committee made its selection from an initial list of 97 members of the board of directors of the Nobel Institute, a two-story building in the shadow of the royal palace at St. Paul's College. The committee's regulations bar it from dividing wings, but the team has already superpower leaders would share the honor for signing a treaty to dismantle intermediate-range nuclear weapons on all new countries armed only on a new course. CHECKERS Dine in...Carry out...Free Delivery Among other candidates reportedly on the list were the World Health Organization, the U.N. Environmental Protection mediator Diego Cordovez, an church envoy to Lebanon Terry Wate, the Greenpeace leader and African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, and Norwegian Prime Minister Ghar Harlem Bokhari, the U.N. environmental commission. ★ 16" 2-topping pizza & 2 soft drinks $6.75 plus tax ★ 2 16" 2-topping pizzas & 4 soft drinks $12.99 plus tax ★ 12" 2-topping pizza & 1 soft drink $3.99 plus tax OSLOR, Norway — The five members of the Nobel prize committee met behind locked doors yesterday in an award winner of the 1988 peace prize. 841-8010 The peace prize is the first to be announced of five awards founded by the estate of Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite who died in 1900. The economics was added in 1968 and tundded by the Bank of Sweden. President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev were mentioned as leading contenders for the prestigious award. Come explore the fundamentals of car maintenance and repair courses offered by licensed teacher and licensed mechanic. The registration fee is waived in lieu of tuition session. Because of the limited enrollment, pre-registration is required. FOR BEGINNER AUTO MECHANICS FOR BEGINNERS 7:00 9:00 p.m. Thursday, October 6, 1988 Byron's Autohaus 906 Vermont There will be two follow-up sessions: Thursday, October 13 7:00 p.m Thursday, October 20 7:00 p.m 'Session 1 is a prerequisite for sessions 2.8 & 3. Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. 218 Strong Hall. For more information, Call Sheril Robinson at 864-3552 MOOSEHEAD Keg Beer Now Available In Selected Retail Liquor Stores And Taverns 1