6 Monday, November 5, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Trees make shade... We don't recycle... You're getting warmer. Charlie's Eastside Bar & Grill Daily Drink Specials: Mon. $1.00 Mr. Beer (23 oz) Tues. 50% Draws Wed. $1.00 Mr. Beer (23 oz) Thurs. $1.00 Long Necks Fri. $1.00 Mr. Beer (23 oz) Eastside Bar & Grill Grill Menu: Hamburgers Cheeseburgers Hot Dogs Chili Dogs Polish Sausage French Fries Onion Rings Cheese Sticks Breaded Mushroom Chips NEWS PROGRAMMING KJHXC the Sound Alternative 907 --about." Alternative Agenda-Tues 8-9 p.m. with Jessie Jackson "Think About It"-Tues 7 p.m. with Laura Okmin & Diedra Davis This week: Women In The Locker Room Lawrence Between The Lines- Mon & Fri 11 a.m. with Shawn Bohs community events, problems and concerns ★ This Week ★ Election Coverage-Tues 7 p.m. with updates every half hour ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PIZZA! 842-1212 NO COUPON SPECIALS Everyday Two-Fers Party "10" 2*Pizzas 10*Pizzas 3*Pizzas 2*Toppings 1*Topping 1*Topping 2*Cokes $25.00 4*Cokes $8.00 $10.00 1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center CARRY-OUT SPECIAL 1·Pizza 1·Topping 1·Coke $3.50 DELIVERY BEGINS AT 11 am DAILY 11am----M-Th----2am 11am----Fri-Sat----3am 11am----Sun----1am Finding a Pro-Choice candidate is hard. Catching Mike Hayden lying is easy. Joan Finney Position on abortion: - Some restrictions in third trimester. - Has pledged not to introduce abortion restrictive legislation as governor. Mike Hayden Position on abortion: • Some restrictions in third trimester. • Has introduced abortion restrictive legislation as governor. • Pushed for abortion restrictive legislation during last legislative session. Mike Hayden thnks he can bury his record under a mountain of lies. After the Supreme Court's decision in Webster vs. Reproductive Services, the majority of American voters have been speaking out for their right to choose. Now, many lifelong anti-choice politicians like Mike Hayden want you to believe that they are pro-choice, in order to get your vote. Mike Hayden was pushing for abortion restrictions as recently as last spring. He has never supported a woman's right to choose and he still doesn't. Nice try, Mike, but Kansas voters know better. ADVERTISEMENT PAID FOR BY KANSAS YOUNG DEMOCRATS Pentagon may begin training officers from Warsaw nations The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Pentagon may soon be training military officers from the very countries it once viewed as archenemies. The administration is considering requests from members of the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria and Romania, to participate in a program known as International Military Education and Training, officials said. While the program probably would cost several hundred thousand dollars, the symbolic value of such a project would be much higher. "Who would have believed we would train officers from the very countries which we viewed as our enemies." He said one Defense Department official. The possible training project is one of many options under consideration by the Bush administration to help countries that this year discarded more than four decades of communist rule. "Money will be very tight, and we're considering a range of things for Eastern Europe," said a Bush official. "I don't think about the amount of the things that has been thought." That official said the decision on whether to include any East Europeans in the program would not be made until December, when the budget request together its budget request for the fiscal year that begins next Oct. 1. The program is financed under the foreign aid bill and administered jointly with the Pentagon. The 1990 program totaled $7.2 million. The size of the individual country-programs was $15,000 to $3.8 million for Turkey. There are more than 800,000 troops in the Warsaw Pact, not counting the Soviet Union. But the alliance is crumbling. It lost one of seven men under it, and many merged with West Germany. Hungary also is preparing to leave. Pact members have planned a summit for later this year to discuss the alliance's future. Plans may be making the Pact into a political grouping. Meanwhile, its members have begun reducing the size of their Soviet-armed and trained armed forces to save money for the expensive and painful transition from a state-run economy to a free-market system. The Soviet Union also is trying to save money. Its forces have begun pulling out of Hungary and Czechoslovakia. There are no Soviet troops stationed in Romania and Bulgaria, and those in Poland and the former territory of East Germany eventually withdrawn now that Moscow has decided to bring all its troops home. The way for cooperation with the United States was paved earlier this year when NATO leaders agreed to establish an alliance with members of the Warsaw Pact. Since then, diplomats from Eastern Europe have received regular briefings at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, mostly about the crisis in the Persian Gulf and about the Soviet Union. NATO is debating how far to go in sharing information with the East Europeans as long as they are still allied militarily with Moscow. The East Europeans, eager for any contact with the West as they structure their economies and social systems, want more. Cathedral consecrated in Red Square The Associated Press MOSCOW — More than 2,000 people pushed past police in Red Square yesterday to pray and watch the blessing of a cornerstone for a cathedral to be built on the site of a 17th century church that was razed by Stalin. The event took place under the stony gaze of a three-story portrait of Communicist leader Vladimir Lenin. The portrait was erected for the Revolution Day parade that is scheduled for Wednesday. Dozens of priests in sky-blue robes carried gold icons and marched with Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Aleix II of Moscow across the square and past the Lenin mausoleum. Russian Federation President Boris Yeltsin and Moscow Mayor Gavril Popov held candles as the patriarch consecrated the cornerstone with holy water. The Cathedral Lady of Kazan is expected to be completed in two years. The original cathedral, built in 1630 under Czar Mihail Romanov, was destroyed in the 1938s by Joseph Stalin. It is now a museum. The patriarch had a service in Uspensky Cathedral inside the Kremlin to celebrate the feast day of Our Lady of Kazan. Scores of worshippers, who shielded flickering flames, came to the square through the Paskagye gate as bells bealed in the square. Police tried to hold back the more than 2,000 spectators, but the crowd pushed through them to get a closer look. The Moscow Patriarchate is raising money for the construction of the cathedral. Let it ring. It's not for you. Tired of answering the phone all the time-only to find most of the calls are for your lazy roommate? Southwestern Bell Telephone's new Personalized Ring $ ^{3 8} $ service can simplify your life. Personalized Ring gives you one or two additional phone numbers for the phone you already have in your dorm room, apartment or house. You could give a new number to your friends and family and then know, by the way the phone rings, that they're calling you. The phone will ring differently for your roommate's calls. At just $4 a month for one new phone number ($6 for two). Personalized Ring is the best bargain on campus. Probably less than you spend on pizza each week. Quit playing messenger for your roommate. Order Personalized Ring today at toll-free 1-800-325-2686, Ext. 713. 1 4