8 Wednesday, October 28, 1992 Specialising in VOLKSWAGEN·24 Years Experience Crown Cinema CINEMA TWIN 3170 IOWA 841-5191 ALL SEATS $1.25 A League of their own (PG) Single White Female (R) Sat Sun 12:30 2:30 Mon Sat 12:30 2:30 Wed Mon Sat 12:45 2:45 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Dickinson 6 841 8400 2339 South Iowa 51 Dickinson SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS Consenting Adults R(5'20)7:45 Blade Runner R(5'05)7:50 Of Mice & Men PG13(5'25)7:40 Night & City R(5'10)7:25 Pure Country PG(5'15)7:30 Mr. Baseball PG13(5'20)7:45 Pirmelaire Show (+) Hearing Dalby Soundscape Chants / Impound Stereo Blues Brew & BBQ Restaurant & Lounge Open for Lunch each day 11-2 Closed Tuesday & Wednesday night only Karoke on Friday nights Live music Sat. nights Monday night Football on big screen Pitchers $1.00 off. 1910 Haskell Good Food & Fun! 841-5531 I'm proud of my service to the public employees and all the taxpayers of Kansas. -Neva Entrikin While Neva Entrikin was on the KPERS Board of Trustees, assets grew from $2.9 billion to $4.5 billion (1987-1992). Also during Neva's term: - She introduced a Trustee Code of Ethics to "...assure Kansas taxpayers that the board intends to follow the strictest standards of good public service." (K.C. Star 6/21/90) Pol Adv. Paid for by Entnikin for 46th Bernie Norwood, Treasurer - She spoke out against junk bonds. - She questioned direct placement investments "...we don't need such risky enterprises... It is public money and there certainly is no need to put members' money at risk." (K.C. Star 2/27/89) he spoke out against your critics." "...Neva Entrikin questioned why the board was even talking about such investments." (K.C. Star 9/6/87) Sen. Wint Winter, Jr., Chair of the KPERS Joint Committee says: "Neva served with distinction on the KPERS Board. She was a strong advocate for KPERS members. She was one of the first to question risky investments." CLASSROOMS NEEDED VOTE YES FOR 78 NEW CLASSROOMS - 23 new classrooms at a new Southwest Elementary, South of Clinton Parkway on Innesset. - 16 new classrooms at a new India Elementary, 27th Street, East of Mary's Lake. - 32 new classrooms at a new Southwest Junior High, South of Clinton Parkway on Inverness. - Renovate Central Junior High, 14th and Massachusetts. - 7 new classrooms at Wakarusa Elementary, County Road 5. - Our students need safe and effective classrooms for learning. - Renovate Lawrence High, 19th and Louisiana Paid political advertisement. Paid for by Classrooms for Learning, Bob Johnson, Co-Chair CAMPAIGN'92 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Focus on the candidates and the issue of.. This is the third in a series addressing the views of the three main presidential candidates. Foreign policy "I think with Bush you will see a continuation of the policies of the last four years, which is very internationalist perspective." "Bill Clinton will probably be more apt to intervene to stop massacres or injustices in the world." - Philin Schrodt professor of government Schrodt "I would imagine under Perot you would see a very, very radical cutback (on defense spending)." Schrodt Scopere: Kansas staff research Bush would keep global profile By Lynne McAdoo Kansan staff writer President Bush has not offered many details of his foreign policy plan for the next four years, but his record speaks for a strong U.S. international presence. "Bush has not indicated any strong stimulus for change," said Philip Schrodt, professor of government. "I think that with Bush you will see a continuation of the policies of the last four years, which is very much an internationalist perspective." Some experts think Bush will continue his policy of global cooperation. But Bush will not use U.S. military force unless he knows he can win. ANALYSIS "Vietnam was a lesson realized," said Martine Gilbert of the Chicago Council on Foreign Policy. "The U.S. will no longer get involved in a crisis unless they can win it on the short term." Schrodt said Bush was more likely to take the stance that the United Gun-shy of any limited force. Bush will hesitate to send troops to the former Yugoslavian republics because the United States has no economic interest in that region, Gilbert said. States did not have to agree with every policy of the nations it dealt with. "Bush is more likely to go for the grand balance of power type stuff," he said. Some people think that Bush is stuck in the Cold War era, but that is a mistake. Dröhrd said. "Bush reversed almost every single Reagan foreign policy," Shrödt said. "He was a complete turnaround. The things Reagan emphasized, Bush deemphasized, like the Contras and condemning China." in this post-Cold War era, the next president must face restructuring in the defense industry. All three candidates plan to cut the defense budget. Bush plans to cut it by $50 billion during the next five years to $230亿. In his "Agenda for American Renewal," Bush said that this restructuring in the defense industry would free up talent and resources and that job training programs were essential to ease the transition. He would initiate an aid program that would give grants for up to $3,000 to help pay for the cost of retraining. Bush often has stressed his success in the Persian Gulf War, but less than a year later some people are questioning how successful the mission really was. "If our objective is to get Iraq out of Kuwait, then we won," Schrodt said. "If the objective is to get rid of Saddam Hussein, then no, we didn't." "On the other hand, it was a substantial deterrence. It sent the message that little countries with lots of weapons can't invade even littler countries with not so many weapons." Bush has stressed that he has the most experience of the three candidates, but Gilbert does not think experience is important. "Experience is really not a factor," she said. "It's important that the president has good managerial skills and surrounds himself with good people." Not much difference separates the three candidates in foreign policy, "I don't think there is much distinction," she said. "The policy ultimately set forth will be bipartisan." AND THE TIANANMEN SQUARE MASSACRE CHINESE DEMOCRACY MOVEMENT