6 Wednesday, November 11, 1992 The Jazzhaus 926 L/2 Mass 749-3320 Thursday Nov.12th Twisted Funk LONESOME HOUNDOGS Friday Nov.13th Millhous Nixons Saturday Nov.14th THE DUCKHILLS 'in less than two years. The Duckhills have come a long way, and it's still only the beginning. The Austin, Texas-based foursome have soared from a springboard of local popularity and press raves to building a national audience over nearly 50 dates across America opening for PoDog Pondering this year. As well, they were chosen to play this summer's Lola-alpaozo Festival when it hits Houston-a distinct honor for this young band-and have already played showcases at Austin's South by Southwest Music Festival for two years running. Next Tuesday Amnesty Benefit Master Cylinders & Hellcat Trio Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR.CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 641-5191 Passenger57 (R) Daily 5-15, 7-30, 9-30 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-5191 Last of the Mohicans (R) 9.00 .75.90 9.00 Candyman (R) 7.20 9.20 Under Siege (R) 5.15 .73.90 9.00 A River Run Through It (R) 6.70 .75.90 9.00 Jennifer 8 (R) 5.00 .75.90 9.00 CINEMA TWIN 3110 IOWA 841-5191 ATL SEATS $1.25 Sister Act (PCT) Daily 5.15, 7.30, 9.30 Husbands and Wives (R) 5.15, 7.30, 9.30 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Consenting Adults R(*5:20)7:45 Blade Runner R(*5:05)7:50 Of Mice & Men PG13(*5:20)7:40 Hero PG13(*5:10)7:25 Pure Country PG(*5:15)7:30 Mr. Baseball PG13(*5:20)7:45 Dickinson Dickinson & 841-8600 2339 South Iowa St PrimeTime Show (+) Hearing * Dalby Senior Citizen Anyone impaired. Stereo *SERAINING, TOUGH, TERSEY, TAUT, OSCAR MATERIAL* Able Bidbaw, A Paciro, GLENGRANGY GLENROSS (Th 2) (5'00") 7:30 9:30 Daily in Derek Jearman's EDWARDI (Th 1) LAST DAY (Th 3) Tue '7:30) 7:15 9:00 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The applications for Editor & Business Manager are available in the Kansan business office, room 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Editor Deadline: Interview: Editor Nov. 17, noon Nov. 18, 2:30 pm Business Manager Nov. 12, noon Nov. 13, 2:00 pm MR. GOODCENTS Great Subs and Pasta at a price that makes CENTS! 15th & Kasold - Orchards Corner Shopping Center 841-8444 17 Different kinds of subs. 3 different kinds of pasta with red or white sauce, meatballs or sausage --other interest groups, is likely to land either in the White House or at the Democratic National Committee. MILLENNIUM You can't miss SUNFLOWER's November 14-15 Check out our new space! Opening Register to win: Bianchi cycling clothing Power Bars SUNFLOWER greatly appreciates the contributions from these sponsors. Yakima lock w/bike attachment Specialized Hard Rock Ultra Bike SPECIALIZED SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, 843-5000 LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The strategies who helped Bill Clinton win the White House are now sketching plans for a political operation designed to keep him in touch and in tune with voters as he implements a busy policy agenda. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN In doing so, Clinton aides are borrowing a strategy of the Republicans they just beat: keeping a constant political watch over presidential policy and constantly preparing for the next national election. The Associated Press Clinton aides plan for future Key players in the effort are those who orchestrated Clinton's winning campaign; communications director George Stephanopoulos, manager David Wilhelm, strategists James Carville and Paul Begala, media adviser Mandy Grunwald, pollster Stanley Greenberg and fund-raiser Rahm Emuel. Stephanopoulos, one of Clinton's closest aides and his most visible representative, is certain to land in a senior White House position. Less clear is the role to be played by Carville's partner, Begala. He worked as a speech writer and strategist for House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt, and colleagues promote him heavily for a White House position. Wherever he lands, Begala is certain to remain in Clinton's political inner circle. Like Carville, Grunwald says she prefers to help Clinton from the outside, continuing to work for her campaign client list while serving as a political adviser to the new president. Wilhelm, who built Clinton'sorganization in crucial states and oftenserved as an emissary to labor and "Being at the table but from the outside gives you the luxury of being able to think long term" she said. "We will need a combination of people, inside and out." President Bush, on the other hand, installed campaign manager Lee Atwater as Republican Party chair- person and kept the knots and bolts of his political team at party headquarters. After Atwater's death, the Bush operation shifted to the White House but was never as effective. Emanuel is mentioned as likely to play a significant role in organizing Clinton's inauguration before moving on, either to an administration post or senior position at the Democratic National Committee. Pollster Greenberg is designing a polling and research operation whose primary focus will be to provide advice to Clinton, most likely contracted through the Democratic National Committee. Carville, who directed Clinton's daily strategy, has made it clear he wants no role in government. "I wouldn't live in a country that would allow me to work in the government," Carville said. "David is the right hand for politics," a senior Clinton advisor said. "Where he lands is where the politics get directed from." Bush to submit brief federal budget But he will serve as a senior political adviser from the outside for Clinton. "It will be nice to have the president of the United States call you in and say, 'James, what do you think about this?'" he said. Instead, the unusually brief document will summarize what fiscal policy has looked like during the Bush administration and simply project what the 1994 budget would look like without any of the changes that President-elect Clinton is certain to make. Fiscal 1994 begins Oct. 1, 1993. "There's just no reason to make a political statement," said a White House Office of Management and Budget aide who spoke on condition of anonymity. "We've basically decided to put the numbers together and tee the ball up for Clinton." The Associated Press Despite that disclaimer, the document may be more political than described. PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITION By laying out his final measurement of how the economy is performing and how it is affecting federal tax collections and spending. Bush will be establishing a benchmark to which Clinton's later spending blueprint can WASHINGTON — President Bush will depart from the practice of his recent predecessors and submit a bare-bones federal budget that will seek no tax or spending changes before leaving office, administration and congressional officials said yesterday. November • Native American Heritage Month Native American Student Association University of Kansas The outcome depends on whether Clinton chooses to run his political operation from inside the White House or through the party. be compared Volunteer Placement Fair perform scenes from "Princess Pocahontas and the Blue Spots" *Alderson Auditorium*, 12:30 p.m. --and Ford left office, they all submitted lengthy, full-blow budgets that included favorite proposals to make changes in tax and spending policies. Information on volunteer placements, internships, and paying positions in environmental concerns, housing, health care, peace with justice issues, community organizing, day care, and a myriad of other options for short/long terms. Information on a unique volunteer placement in Lawrence through The Praxis Project, beginning Spring Semester. It also is likely to include a brief message from budget director Richard Darman defining the problem of the growing federal deficit, which in fiscal 1992 hit a record $290.2 billion. Don't know what you would like to do? We will give you an overview and assistance. Missing in the budget will be proposals to cut the capital gains tax rate, shave the growth of Medicare and other benefit programs and increase law enforcement spending—proposals that have characterized spending plans Bush has submitted in the past. When Presidents Reagan, Carter It will show that with no additional changes, spending will remain under the caps required by the 1990 budget agreement, said the OMB official. A White House official and a congressional aide, also speaking anonymously, confirmed that the plan would merely list the spending caps. But the law does not require him to submit a budget if the outgoing president has done so. Clinton might need an extension from Congress if Bush's blueprint is so sparse that it is not considered a budget for purposes of meeting the Feb. 1 requirement. Amigos des las Amen. Bicycle Africa Global Volunteers Habitat for Humanity But the OMB aide said the administration thought that such an exercise would be irrelevant in light of the changes Clinton wanted to make. "We haven't made any decisions about how quickly we would move," said Bruce Reed, Clinton domestic policy adviser. (USA, International, Lawrence) The OMB official said that Bush's final budget probably would be about 200 pages, as opposed to the 1,700-page document that normally is submitted. It likely will be released in early January. Since that date is just 12 days after Clinton takes office, it would be hard for him to piece together a detailed document encompassing his budget priorities by the deadline. But Reed said that Clinton was ready with budget-level details for his top priorities — spending and tax changes. Jennifer Attockie and Leslie Tuckwin, University of Kansas. OMB officials are hoping to box Clinton in so he cannot play games, said one lobbyist who had talked with budget office officials and who spoke only on condition of anonymity. Wed. Nov. 11th, (3:00 p.m.) to Friday. Nov. 13t (4:00 p.m.) ECM Center, One block north of the Kansas Union Amigos des las Americanas Tzfat (israel) Progran U.N. Volunteers Witness for Peace Annalachal Service Student Poetry Readings. Haskell Indian Junior College Alderson Auditorium. 1:30 p.m. SPONSORED BY: KUSTUDENT SENATE, UNDERGRADUATE ANTHROPOLOGY & ARCHEOLOGY CLUB, LINGUISTS GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATION, STUDENT ASSOCIATION OF UNDERGRADUATE LANGUISTS, LAWRENCE ALLIANCE, OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS, DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL AND SOCIAL *CIENCES AT HASKEL IDIAN JUNIOR COLLEGE, LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL NATIVE AMERICAN CLUB* Wednesday, Nov. 18 OVER 150 MORE ORGANIZATIONS! AND Thursday, Nov. 19 Tzfat(Israel)Program John Taylor, staff rep. for VOLUNTEER INMISSION PROGRAM (over 200 placements) of Presbyterian (USA) will be at the fair on Friday. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 843-4933 --and Thursday, Nov. 12 Thunderbird Theatre, Haskell Indian Junior College presents Appalachia Service BENMORE INFORMATION CALLS 1933-1936 (Sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries/Presbyterian, Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ) "Songs of Life" Alderson Auditorium, 12:30 p.m. Oziel Major, M.D. Wishing Star Foundation, Washington, D.C. Native American Issues and Culture, Woodruff Auditorium; 2:30 p.m. Friday,Nov.13 Suzan Hajo, Director-Morning Star Foundation, Washington, D.C. Monday, Nov. 16 White Mountain Apache Crown Dancers, Haskell Indian Junior College Woodruf Auditorium 7:00 p.m. Monday, Nov. 16 Prof. Akira Yamamoto, University of Kansas "The Place of Native American Languages in Education" Alderson Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. KU Coalition of the Lawrence Alliance Racial Issues Discussion Regionalist Room. 11.30 a.m.-2.00 p.m. KANSAS POETS PATRICIA TRAXLER & HARLEY ELLIOTT Will be signing their books 2:30pm to 3:00pm Wednesday, November 11, 1992 at the Mt. Oread Bookshop OREAD Will read in honor of the Twentieth Anniversary of the Boston literary magazine AGNI 7:30pm that evening In the Jayhawk Room of the BOOKSHOP UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS In the Jayhawk Room of the Open Mon-Fri, 8:30am - 5:00pm Saturday 10:00am - 4:00 pm Sunday Noon - 3:00pm Kansas Union Level 2, Kansas Union University of Kansas 864-4431 1