University Daily Kansan / Monday, October 13, 1986 5 Meeting Continued from p.1 nuclear tests, but that the potential agreements failed to materialize because all the parts were interrelated. "It became more and more clear that the Soviet Union's objective was effectively to kill off the SDI program, and to do so by seeking a change in the ABM treaty that would so constrain . . . that research would not be able to proceed forcefully," Shultz said. "The president . . . simply would not turn away from the basic interest of the United States' allies in the free world by abandoning this," he said. When asked whether the failure of the summit would produce feelings of animosity between Reagan and Gorbache, Shultz replied, "No, they were both disappointed, but the discussion throughout was straightforward and civil, and people didn't lose their tempers and so on." Shultz said U.S. and Soviet negotiators would continue their talks in Geneva. Max Kampelman, chief U.S. negotiator at the Geneva arms talks, said the summit was "in every way except the end a fantastic thing. It was the most appealing package ever negotiated by the two countries." Melott One hundred years ago, people decided the Earth wasn't the center of the universe, and the sun was just another star. Then they found many other galaxies than the Milky Way, and Darwin wrote that human beings were animals, too, he said. The kind of material human beings are made of may not even be the dominant form of matter, he said. Continued from p. 1 His field of study seems to go well with his religious convictions. He became a Unitarian minister in 1971, but he said he never had believed in God. He worked as a minister in a church in Tampa, Fla., from 1971 to 1978, he said. "There are no dogmas in our religion," he said. "We believe that religion is something that develops and changes over time." When he was studying to become a minister, he traveled in the Far East to experience different cultures, he said. While in Afghanistan in 1973, he accidentally was caught up in a coup to overthrow the government. Because he was suspected of being a spy, he was thrown in the Kabul jail for a night. β€œIn a sense I am a pantheist,” he said. β€œI believe in the divine within the universe itself.” When he isn't watching the universe, he said he liked to watch his trees grow. He owns a 90-acre farm in West Virginia where he raises black walnut trees. "If I live to be a 120 years old, I'll be very rich," he said. Back in his office, four bundles of 3-D glasses the kind with one red and one green lens - lay on the table. "I bought them from a monster-movie producer in Hollywood." Melott said with a smile. Melott has a grant for $250,000 worth of hours from the National Science Foundation to run his experiments on one of the two fastest computers in the nation. Each hour of running the Cyber 205 computer at Purdue University costs $500. Melott said, and he has spent $170,000 already. He didn't buy them to watch old movies, but to add depth to his computer printouts, he said. "The name of the game is to make computer models of different possibilities and try to compare the results with what we observe." Melott is a pioneer in the use of supercomputers in cosmology, said Jack Burns, professor of astronomy at the University of New Mexico and author of an article about immense structures in the universe in a recent Scientific American magazine. Standard 'models of the universe haven't shown too much agreement with observation, he said, and Melott is looking into other more promising and more exotic alleys. Earthquake Continued from p. juries among the 2,800 U.S. citizens registered with the embassy as living in EI Salvador. The U.S. Embassy, which is located in the 20-block area hit hardest by the quake, sustained heavy structural damage and may be beyond repair, the State Department said. Bart Kull of the Agency for International Development said several hospitals in San Salvador suffered structural damage or had lost water and electricity. The government of El Salvador requested that individuals and organizations wishing to contribute to the relief effort should send money to the Salvadoran Red Cross or to local U.S. chapters of the Red Cross with a request that the funds be used for the earthquake victims. Despite those losses, Kull said, the medical system is functioning because patients and supplies and equipment are being transferred to other hospitals in the city and to hospitals in the area. Ricardo Araujo, administrator of Bermejo Cemetery, the city's largest cemetery, said about 200 people who were killed in the quake have been buried. Electricity was out in most of the poor neighborhoods, and water was brought in by trucks. Residents in the city of 1 million have cleared rubble from streets and have set up their households on sidewalks and vacant lots. Committee sends wire to leaders Bv a Kansan reporter The Lawrence Meeting for Peace Committee sent a telegram Friday to President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavik, Iceland, wishing them success in the meeting and asking them to have their next summit in Lawrence. Bob Swan, chairman, said yesterday that the committee wanted the leaders to know Lawrence was serious about the idea of having a summit here. "We wanted to keep the invitation of Lawrence open," Swan said. "We felt it was in the right spirit of the summit." The group has lobbed for a Lawrence meeting between the leaders of the two countries for three years. The summit concluded yesterday with little progress on arms control issues and with White House officials doubting that a full-scale summit would take place in the near future. Swan said the telegram hadn't been acknowledged, but the committee thought it had been received. Chances are if you shop in Kansas City for diamonds, you'll pay too much. We went to Kansas City and compared our everyday prices to those of Half-Price Discount Stores and Direct Importers and found ours to be considerably less. If you want honest grading and better prices, please stop by. Marks JEWELERS 817 Massachusetts 843-4266 CAN YOU ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS? Your Future Depends On It. 1. Why Vote In Lawrence? 1. Why Vote In Lawrence? -Because your vote will decide who represents you in the Kansas Legislature. That directly impacts the funding of your University and the quality of your education. 2. Why Is Your Vote More Important Than Ever Before? -Because with higher enrollments, K.U. needs the release of excess funds. -Because on the 1986 ballot are Constitutional Amendments (liquor by the drink, pari-mutuel wagering, and lottery) which could make permanent changes in the Kansas Constitution. State Representative 45th District RE-ELECT TO VOTE IN LAWRENCE REGISTER TO VOTE AT THE DOUGLAS CO. COURTHOUSE BY 9:00 p.m. OCTOBER 14. Because experience counts... Pol. Adv. Paid for by Committee for Solbach Lovely Ulmer, Coordinator; J.J. Stoneback, Treasurer OCTOGINTA The cycling event of the season! Reminder: Avoid the late fee. Sign-up by this Thursday. 8-5 p.m. SUA Office, level 4 Kansas Union Directors: Nicholas Broomfield and Joan Churchill An astonishing documentary that looks at the lives of women Army recruits in boot camp at Fort Gordon, Georgia. By following four privates through their training, this warm and comic film shows the ironies of preparing for war in peacetime. 7:00 p.m. Tonight Coming Tomorrow "Annie Hall" $2.00 Woodruff Aud. Seasons Change, Classics Remain... The Oxford From season to season, The Oxford specializes in traditional women's clothing tailored to fit your changing wardrobe needs. This week, transitional skirts in a variety of fall colors, including denim, are 20% off. These timeless, traditional skirts are created from the finest quality cotton and B cotton blends. For a classic skirt that remains a classic season after season, remember the classic, The Oxford. 20 percent off transitional skirts thru Saturday, October 18, 1986. 742 Massachusetts 843-7217 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 Th. 'til 8:30 Open M-F 8-5 and Sat. 10-4 240-2360 For All German and Japanese Imports. We offer a Full Mechanical Service and We also are a Full Paint and Bodywork Facility. 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