6 Thursday, September 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan Dickinson 250 PRIME TIMER SHOW • SR CIT ANTIM Dickinson DEAD POINT PODGY (PO) 7,90; 9,45 (no student discount) PARENTHING (PO) 8,20; 9,35; 9,60; 9,85 LEWIS HELFION (PA) **$*21.10, 7,90; 7,20** TURNER AND HOOD (PA) **$*20.20, 7,45; 7,15; 9,40** (no student discount) CAVALIAN (PA) **$*20.20, 7,45; 7,15; 9,40** (no student discount) CHEETAH (D) **$*20.10, 7,40** (no student discount) WONDA STAR TREK W THE FINAL FRONTier (PS) **$*20.00 STAR TREK, 7,20 INDIY, 7,00 STAR TREK, 6,90 (double price of one) Showrooms that are # are good only on Fri, Sat, Mon, Sun. There will no allow afternoon meetings. UNITED ARTISTS Req num: 54 10 5 Cust no: 8324699 Region Manager: 13.000 Student with workperf ID: 51 10 GRANADA 1020 Mass. 843-5788 THE ABYSS (pg) 7:15 9:35 VARSITY 1015 Mass 843-1065 FIELD OF DREAMS (pgL) 7:00 9:30 Drug war Continued from p. 1 your source for alternative film programming @ KU programs while putting "overwhelming reliance on the criminal justice system." The plan will compromise civil liberties and cost the taxpayers millions of dollars, said Tra Glasser, ACLU's executive director. Neal R. Sonnett, president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said the administration's plan "docs us to repeat the failures of the past." The nation needs "to find better ways to divert first-time and nonviolent, minor offenders into treatment, rehabilitation and education programs," Sonnett said. And Donald Fiedler, national director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said the program declares "war on at least 25 million fellow citizens who are leading productive lives but for Bennett defended the strategy's emphasis on punishing casual users including requiring colleges to take action against them if they want to continue receiving federal funds their casual or regular use of marihuana." On other issues, Bennett said: prison, he said, "But there's a lot of things people can do as a way of . . . making restitution to the community. They can pay fines, they can give up their property if it's used for their crime. They can do community service. They can fill poles." "It is not to be mean and vindictive," Bennett said. "The user is the victim." He also said users give out drugs, because they like company in what they're doing." Although Bush rejected Bennett's plan to require states to impose strict punishment on casual users — including the revocation of drivers' licenses and seizures of autos used to obtain drugs — if the states wanted to receive federal highway funds, Bennett continued to press states to pass such laws. Those who criticize the plan's call for increased security at public housing projects - such as identification cards and the eviction of drug dealers - are failing to see that poor people should have the same safety enjoyed by the wealthy. Casual users may not need to go to > More research is needed in drug treatment to develop methods to get people off cocaine. "The simple fact is that crack (cocaine) has caught on as an addiction and as a criminal activity ahead of the researchers. South Africa Continued from p. 1 to speed up or slow down its program of limited political reform. Voting stations around the country were heavily guarded. Armored vehicles patrolled some mixed-race townships, which were enveloped in smoke from burning street barricades. Also at stake were seats in mixed-race and Indian chambers, which were established in 1984 and have little power. Blacks, who outnumber whites more than 5-1, have no voice in national affairs. Anti-apartheid activists called for a boycott of the non-white elections. Of the nation's 37 million people, 5 million are white, 28 million black. about 3 million of mixed race and nearly 1 million of Indian descent. The campaign platform of de Klekr, the acting president, called for limited black participation at the national level within five years. In the five weeks before the election, anti-apartheid groups mounted an unprecedented defiance camp against a provoking violent response by police. He is depicted as more flexible than his predecessor, President P.W. Botha, but supports segregation of schools and neighborhoods and rejects a one-person, one-vote system leading to black majority rule. The Conservative Party opposes political concessions to blacks and favors comprehensive racial segregation. The Democratic Party wants an immediate end to segregation and a vote of equal weight for every South African. Riot squads have used shotguns, water cannons, tear gas, clubs and dogs against anti-election marches, campus rallies and church meetings. More than 2,000 people have been arrested for disobeying laws that segregate hospitals, beaches and buses, and for defying restrictions on speech and political activity. MEN'S LONG SLEEVE TEES & MOCKS Unique Sailing Prints Reg. $18.00 NOW $299