6 Thursday, October 25, 1990/ University Daily Kansan ISN'T IT TIME YOU LISTENED TO YOUR LENSES? Over time, protein build-up can cause your contact lenses to feel less comfortable. A planned schedule of contact lens replacement helps avoid eye irritations and provides you with improved lens comfort and clearer vision. Listen to your lenses. Innovative new pricing structures allow you to replace lenses regularly at no increased costs to you. Call and ask whether Fresh Lens Replacement from Bausch and Lomb is right for you. Dr. Charles R. Pohl 831 Vermont St. 841-2866 8-6 MTWF 8-8 Th 8-12 S Dr. Kent E. Dobbins 831 Vermont St. 843-5665 BAUSCH & LOMB $ ^{3} $ PRIVATE CLUB THE JAZZHAUS "A LANDMARK. WARM, FUNNY AND COMPELLING." Susan Cranger AMERICAN MOVIE CLASSICS "TERRIFIC! EXCEPTIONAL!" — Jay Scott, TORONTO GLOBE & MAR "CAPTIVATING. MOVING. SEE IT." — Charles Krupp, GLAMOUR "A MUSICAL TRIP THAT WILL KNOCK YOUR SOCKS OFF. WONDERFULLY WARM." -- Roy Leonard, WGN Radio/TV (Chicago) "ASTONISHING AND MESMERIZING." — Brian D. Johnson, MACLAN'S MAGAZINE "DYNAMIC AND IRRESISTIBLE." — Lyon Samuels, WRIA Radio (New York) WARNER BROS. PRESENTS A COURTNEY SALE ROSS PRODUCTION LISTEN UP THE LIVES OF QUINCY JONES MULFORD NODES GINSBERG PIREE KAHL AND NORREN WORLEMIE LAUREL SULLivan PAUL ZELLNER #QUINCY JONES AT ANTHOR ARKHU BAKER STEPHEN KAWANKEH MELLIE DOWNELL [PAC] 1 3 3 8 2 9 4 6 7 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 Civil rights supporters, rebuffed in enacting their top legislative priority, vowed to turn the issue into an act of political activism as part of a modern political campaign. Nation/World The 66-34 vote was one shy of the two-thirds majority needed to enact the bill, and it marked the 16th time Bush has made a veto stick. Congress has failed to overturn any of Bush's vetoes. Senate's attempt to override veto of civil rights bill fails The bill would have overturned six job discrimination decisions that caused a furor when the Supreme Court handed them down in 1989. It would have banned racial discrimination in the workplace and defined The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Senate failed yesterday to override President Bush's veto of a major civil rights bill, sustaining his objection that the measure would lead to hiring quotas. OPENSOCTOBER26THEVERYWHERE punitive damages in extreme discrimination cases. But GOP Leader Bole Dole, R-Kan, said the bill would enable “lawyers to reap huge profits in the name of racial justice” and result in “quotas, quotas, quotas and more employment quotas.” Sen. Ornir Hatch, R-Utha, said, "Pure and simple, take it from me, it's still a quota bill and a litigation bonanza for lawyers." Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., said, "The president has taken the low road on civil rights, but that is no reason for the Senate to take it, too." But the vote on the politically charged issue fell one short of the two-thirds needed to pass the bill over presidential objections. Eleven Republicans joined 55 Democrats in eleaving Bush. In vetting the bill Monday, Bush submitted a compromise measure to Congress. But civil rights groups and other activists said they vowed to fight again next year. Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn. who originally opposed the bill, supported the override. form when the new Congress convened in January. Benjamin Hooks, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "You've got to return ... and we expect to win." The sharpest clashes came over intricate provisions that would have made it easier to win discrimination cases against employers. Bush contended that those terms were so harsh that employers would adopt hiring quotas to provide them with the necessary defense if they were taken to court. Plane crash in Cuba kills at least ten Supporters said the bill would be introduced in identical or similar The Associated Press MEXICO CITY — A Cuban passenger plane crashed early yesterday near an airport in eastern Cuba, killing at least 10 people and injuring 21, the news agency Notimex said. The twin-engine, Soviet-made turboprop plane went down at 1:46 a.m. near the Antonio Maceo Airport in Havana de Cuba, 560 miles east of Havana, the Cuban capital. Notimex said the flight originated in Havana and stopped in Camagüey on the way to Santiago de Cuba, about 50 miles from the U.S. Naval station in Guantanamo Bay. Ten Spanish tourists were among the passengers, and at least fifteen of them were吧 them in accord with Spanish Embassy in Havana. Military bill compromise nearing House approval WASHINGTON — The House yesterday moved toward approval of a 1991 military bill that slashes President Bush's budget request for Star Wars and barely keeps alive the B-2 stealth bomber program. The Associated Press Although the legislation is expected to be passed, some Republicans are expressing doubts that it meets the Pentagon's needs for the post-Cold War era while Democrats are questioning building costly weapons to counter a lessening Soviet threat. Overall, the legislation, which sets spending ceilings for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1, totals $282 million in federal funds credit in his original proposal in January. The total is $5.5 billion more than the House approved in September, a change made to meet the levels set in the resolution adopted by Congress. Among the major provisions is a scaled-down continuation of the B-2 bomber, the stealth aircraft estimated at nearly $865 million a plane and designed to locate targets in the Soviet Union after a nuclear attack. The legislation also calls for a budget of $2.9 billion for the Strategic Defense Initiative, or Star Wars, $1.8 billion less than Bush sought for SDI and $700 million less than Congress approved last year. "SDI's budget history resembles the trajectory of a ballistic missile: taking off like a rocket in the beginning, leveling off and now in freefall," said Rep Charles Bennett, D.C., who serves House Armed Services, Comms. The bill also reduces U.S. Irop levels, now about 2.1 million, by 100,000. But, bowing to pressure from the Pentagon, it gives the defense secretary added authority to limit the troop cut to 80,000 if he thinks the U.S. military buildup in the Persian Gulf warrants such a sten. 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