6 Wednesday, November 1, 1989 / University Daily Kansan Get your two cents in. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Opinion Page Dickinson Dickinson PARENTHOOD (PG13) *#20,00; *4,30; 7,00; 8,30 INNERHOOD MAN (R) *No Student Passes No Teacher Passes RIVER OF DEATH (R) *#20,15; *4,45; 7,25; 8,25 SHOCKER (R) *#20,40; *4,10; 7,90 WORLD MINTING (PG13) *#20,30; *4,50; 7,00; 8,30 No Student Discounts No Teacher Discounts GROSS ANATOMY (PG) *#20,06; *4,35; 7,00; 8,35 No Student Discounts No Teacher Discounts Showrooms marked with # are good only on Sat. 8 a.m. UNITED ARTISTS Theatres' Reg emd 5.10 $ 10 Boy Clr. Criens; Baigun Maimee $ 3.00 Student with progr. I D $ 10 GRANADA GHANADA 1020 Mass 843-5788 FABULOUS BAKER BOYS (B) EYE: 7/15 8:35 AM SUN: SUN. (*2:15 *4:00AM) IMMEDIATE FAMILY (p1.3) BYST. 7:30 a.m. SAT. SUN, JULY 19 =*5:00 HILLCREST 9th AIR BASE 842-8400 1015 Mass 893-1063 BOSTON, MA/MILFEN & EYE 7:30 9:30 HILLCREST 9th & iowa 842-8400 FATMAN & LITTLE BOY (pg) SAVE $ 8.95; 7.95; 6.95 SAT. (3:15PM) SEA OF LOVE (R) SAVE $ 8.95; 7.95; 6.95 SAT. (3:15PM) TIE BEAR (pg) SAVE $ 8.95; 7.95; 6.95 SAT. (3:15PM) NEXT OF KIN (R) SAVE $ 8.95; 7.95; 6.95 SAT. (3:15PM) LOOK WHO'S TALKING (pg13) SAVE $ 8.95; 7.95; 6.95 SAT. (3:15PM) 1710 W. 45th Kansas City, Mo. CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS $1.00 31st & Iowa 842-6400 It's No Secret. It's Good Food. All Sats $1.00 Anything BATMAN (pp13) VEE: 7:20-9:30 (2:15-8:45) LETHAL WEAPON II (b) VEE: 7:20-9:15 (2:15-8:45) LITTLE EGYPT IMPORTS MOVIE LINE 841-5191 FROM EGYPT ... CARTOUCHE JEWELRY 2700 RUNZA Iowa BISTAURANT Your name translated into Hieroglyphics ZEP ZEP EUROPEAN FASHIONS JEGYPTIAN JEWELRY; ART & ARTIFACTS 914 Massachusetts 10 am - 5 pm 843-5607 --at 4:30 p.m. H. O.P.E. AWARD FINALISTS SENIORS! CIRCLE ONE AND RETURN THIS BALLOT TO YOUR DEAN'S OFFICE BY THURSDAY at 4:30 p.m. Daryl Evans associate professor of sociology Herman Leon professor of social welfare Tim Mitchell chairman and associate professor of art history M. Evelyn Swartz professor of curriculum and instruction Bedru Yimer associate professor of mechanical engineering Local "The University has established a minimum of $3.50," she said. "Obviously, with our effort to $3.50 a few years ago, we moved ahead of the feds." Continued from p. 1 mum wage to request increased financing for student workers from the Legislature. because it was long overdue. Randy Withrow, Overland Park graduate student, said that increasing the minimum wage altered the entire pricing structure of hourly Mullens said she thought that the University could use the rising mini- employees but not necessarily for the better, "It's kind of silly to raise the minimum wage," he said. "There's no way my $4-an-hour job is going to be cranked up. It will not raise proportionately throughout the entire system." Fears of economic repercussions tempered the response of Kristy Rohr, Topeka sophomore. "I think it's good, but it would increase inflation, where people would be no better off than they were before," she said. Wage Continued from p. 1 in the minimum wage on April 1, to $3.80 an hour, with the jump to $4.25 coming a year later. The last increase in the minimum wage came in January 1981, when it increased from $2.65 an hour to the current $2.35. the new subminimum, which could be paid to workers 16-19 years old for three months and up to six months in some cases, would be 85 percent of the minimum wage. the minimum wage Democrats and union leaders long have considered such a "training wage" unacceptable. However, it became clear that agreeing to the provision was the only way to win a general increase after conservative Democrats and moderate Republicans helped Bush sustain a veto of a minimum-wage bill passed by Congress earlier this year. In siding with Bush, those lawmakers argued that employers would be reluctant to hire youths for part-time and summer jobs if the minimum wage was increased without an accompanying subminimum. For his part, Bush gave up nine months from his offer to increase the minimum wage to $4.25 in January 1992, and he also conceded ground on the training wage. He had demanded a six-month provision for all workers regardless of their age and prior work experience. The compromise affects only teenagers, and the subminimum could not be paid to any worker with six months work experience. Employers also would have to certify to the Labor Department that they were providing skills training to get permission to pay the subminimum to workers with three to six months The White House agreed to allow the subminimum to expire in April 1992. In exchange, Democrats dropped their demand for a commission to monitor the minimum wage, a mechanism the administration has said would be used to seek annual increases in the base wage. Reagan and Congress fought the issue bitterly, and when Bush won his veto fight earlier this year and insisted there was no room for compromise, it appeared the stalemate would continue. Owen Continued from p. 1 Commission that Owen funneled money into the 1986 election campaign of Gov. Mike Hayden in excess of donation limits in effect at the time. Owen, an Overland Park businessman and former banker, ran unsuccessfully for governor of Kansas in 1962. He was a national fund-raiser for Dole in his bid for the 1988 Republican presidential nomination but news media disclosures about Owen's involvement in the Hayden contribution case and Owen's business dealings prompted Owen to resign from the Dole campaign in January 1988. In their report, special prosecutors Michael Barbara and Thomas Haney, Topeka attorneys, noted media speculation about what knowledge Hayden and members of his campaign staff had of the allegedly illegal donations. "We have not formed any opinion nor attempted to answer the question posed, nor should any inference of any opinion be derived from the context of the report or from any absence of testimony," the prosecutors said in a preamble to their report. the report exonerated him and his staff, adding it "bears the true fact that neither I nor any others in my campaign had any knowledge or information of alleged violations of the Campaign Finance Act." Owen faces 18 felony and misdemeanor counts, all filed against him yesterday in Johnson County District Court in Olathe. 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That's because you'll have more graphic tools at your fingertips than you can fit on your drafting table. It's also powerful enough to solve your complex architectural problems. And learning how to use a Macintosh is easy. You can start using one today! But that's only part of what a Macintosh gives you. Making a successful project is a process of reworking it...until it's perfect. A Macintosh will store your design so you can make changes without starting from scratch. So you can produce cleaner, more professional work in less time. Right up to your deadline. Ohhh the long nights you've spent wishing for that kind of power. Macintosh® . The power to do your best at KU © 1969 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. The Mac deals are here! Burge Union 864-5697