6 Thursday, November 5, 1992 - On Bus Route * 2-3 Bedrooms Quail Creek ELECTION'92 2111 Kasold 843-4300 MUSIC FAIR COMES TO LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY NOV 8th 10am-5pm ONE DAY ONLY! $2 ADMISSION ! FOR 1 WITH THIS AD) LAWRENCE'S BEST-EVER MUSIC SALE!! DEALERS FROM MANY STATES Every Type of Music • All Price Ranges UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ROCK · BLUES · COUNTRY · JAZZ · SOUNDTRACKS BLUES · CDS · ALBUMS · A5s · POSTERS · MORE! Many Out of Print - Hard to Find Even One of a Kind Great Collectables! at The Lawrence "Holidome" Easy to Find - 170 at the West Lawrence Exc. FOR MORE INFORMATION ON BUYING, SELLING OR TRADING CALL - (815) 831-9060 - 11-8 pm SUNFLOWER INTERNATIONAL CHADING YOUR INTEREST IN CULTURES WORLDWIDE IN THE CASDAH 803 MASSACHUSETTS ST WALT DISNEY WORLD COLLEGE PROGRAM Walt Disney World Co. representatives will present an information session on the Walt Disney World College Program on Thursday, November 12, 6:30pm in the Auditorium. Attendance at this presentation is required to interview for the SPRING '93 COLLEGE PROGRAM. Interviews will be held on Friday, November 13. The following majors are encouraged to attend: Business, Communication, Recreation and Theatre/Drama. Clinton said the hard and vital task of reviving the U.S. economy would be his top domestic priority." The task has already begun," the President-elect said on the first day after his victory. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Bill Clinton appealed to foreign leaders yesterday to cooperate with George Bush during the president's final two months in office, then turned his attention to planning the Democrats' takeover of the White House. The Associated Press Clinton stresses smooth transition The Democrat sought to quiet jittery financial markets with a promise that stressed stability while pursuing new growth. Clinton said his changes would strengthen U.S. market systems, not weaken them. "I am happy, exhausted, thinking of all the work to be done," Clinton said. With Vice President-elect Al Gore at his side, Clinton sought to reassure world leaders there would be a smooth transition of power and no disruption of U.S. foreign policy. Clinton said he would continue Bush's effort to broker Middle East peace and negotiate a START II arms treaty with Russia. As world leaders offered congratulations, and tried to assess any shifts Clinton would make in foreign policy, the president-elect used his first big step on the world stage to urge continuity. "America has only one president at a time," Clinton said, speaking outside the Arkansas governor's mansion. "America's foreign policy remains solely in his hands." "The greatest gesture of goodwill that any nation can make toward me during this period is to continue full cooperation with our one president, George Bush," Clinton said. "The greatest mistake any adversary could make would be to doubt America's resolve during this transition." Later, Clinton met with his six-member transition team at the mansion to discuss policy and personnel decisions. Initial announcements were likely by the end of the week, aides said. In addition, Clinton was expected to make a decision soon about when to resign his governor's post. Aides expect Clinton to stay in Little Rock — conducting most of the transition from there rather than at an office in Washington — until at least year's end. Clinton's itinerary for the next few days consists of meetings, getting his voice back, thinking and returning phone calls, said communications "I am happy, exhausted thinking of all the work to be done" Bill Clinton President-elect director George Stephanopoulos. Clinton's address came after he walked out of the mansion with Gore. Their wives, Hillary and Tippler, foil them. The girls were stayed later and stayed in the background. While Clinton set about the business of assuming power, members of his campaign's high command took to the lectern one by one at a midday briefing to lay out what in the end was a winning strategy for breaking the "Republican coalition" that held a 12-year lock on the White House. As for foreign affairs, Clinton said he wanted to make progress in global trade talks, assist Russia and other former Soviet republics in their transition to democracy and deliver aid to Somalia's famine victims. Clinton's decision on when to resign as Arkansas governor is somewhat complicated by a lawsuit over whether the lieutenant governor would automatically take over, Clinton would get to appoint a successor, or a special election would be called. At the midday briefing, Clinton's aides offered several explanations for how the Arkansas governor — written off several times earlier in the year *Pollster Stanley Greenberg said Clinton made inroads with suburban middle class residents who had voted for Ronald Reagan. on several times earlier in the year - pulled off the win: Clinton stayed on the economic message. "He did not give the same stump speech everyday, but he gave the same message," said strategist Paul Begala. Unorthodox advertising decisions to save money and not go on the air in big states like California, since Clinton already had a lead there. "We left them unprotected," said media aide Mandy Gruwald. That gave the campaign more money for battleground states. ■ Making headway in the West and South. "We didn't find the key to the electoral lock, we just picked it," said strategist James Carville. Election results THESE CANDIDATES RAN UNOPPOSED: Court Clerk, Patty James (R); Register of Deeds, Nees Usnester (D); Sheriff, Loren Anderson (R) Dan Schauer / KANSAN Source: Douglas County Clerk Bush looks ahead to grandfather role The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush came home to begin turning the lights out on 12 years of Republican rule yesterday to help ease President-elect Clinton's transition but had little else in the way of specific plans for the 77 days left in his presidency. Aides suggested that a once-planned trip to Moscow seemed to be off and that there seemed to be little that Bush could do, or that is expected of him, between now and Jan. 20 — other than minding the store. One thing he did do, flying back to Washington, was veto the $27 billion urban aid and tax bill. His veto message said the bill "includes numerous tax increases, violates fiscal discipline and would destroy jobs and undermine small business." Bush was greeted by several hundred White House employees, Republican members of Congress, Cabinet members and loyalists at an arrival ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House. "Maybe you didn't read the election returns. It didn't work out quite the way we wanted," Bush joked to cheers from the crowd. "I can think of nothing other to say than let's finish this job with style," Bush said. "Let's get the job done, cooperate fully with the new administration. "The government goes on, as well it should. And we will support the new president and give him every chance to give us a better entry to greater heights." Bush said. I am very grateful." Bush said. "It's been a wonderful four years and nobody can take that away from any of us. I think we really contributed something to the country and maybe "I can think of nothing other to say than let's finish this job with style." President George Bush history will record it that way." Tears were plentiful among the crowd, as were discussions of future reunions and job searches. The last incumbent turned out of office was Democrat Jimmy Carter. As a lame-duck, he wrestled with the Iran hostage crisis until it was time to head for the U.S. Capitol and Ronald Reagan's inauguration in January 1981. There is no similar foreign crisis brewing as Bush closes out the Reagan-Bush era, and his flexibility to act has been severely limited by political realities. Bush planned to go to the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md., through the weekend. A vacation trip the following week seemed likely, although a destination remained unclear. The president himself told tear-eyed supporters on Tuesday night that he planned to get very active in the grandchild business. Bush fought back tears as he boarded Air Force One in Houston on a rainy, raw morning, hugging a few close friends who had come out to Ellington Air Base to see him off. ΣK Celebrating One Hundred-Eighteen Years Of Sisterhood TastetheWorld! fifi's Restaurant "Where People Make the Difference" Since 1978 Taste Europe Fine Continental Cuisine 841-7226 925 Iowa Hilcrest Shopping Center Take a taste trip into unique and exciting cuisine without leaving Lawrence. Your taste for fine dining is your guide to experiencing the best that we have to offer. He's Back...And Front and Center!!! IN THE ELDRIDGE HOTEL Taste America American Regional AMERICAN BISTRO A former KU student and winner of the 1990 Leeds (England) International Piano Competition, Mr. Pizarro will perform works by Haydn, Beethoven, Debussy, and Prokofiev. American Regional Cuisine 841-8490 The Mass This Mass Driving Lawrence 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 17, 1992 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; KU student tickets available in the SUA Office, Kansas Univ. all seats; reserved; public $16 & $14, KU and K-12 students $8 & $7; senior citizen and other students $15 & $13; to charge tickets by phone, using VISA or MasterCard. call 911/664-3982. This performance is partially funded by the KU Student Senate Act Fee, Swainbould Society, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partner: Half Price for Students!!! The University of Kansas School of Fine Art ARTUR PIZARRO