8 Wednesday, September 23, 1992 - KJHK BROADCASTS LIVE AT THE STADIUM FROM 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. NOON TO 5 P.M. - LIVE MUSIC; SMOOT MAHUTI BEGINS AT 5 P.M. - BE ON LIVE NATIONAL T.V.-MAKE A KU/ESPN BANNER - STUDENTS ADMITTED FREE * - (WITH CURRENT KUID AND STUDENT MUST ENTER THROUGH GATE 35 AFTER 6 P.M.) JOIN THE JAYTALK MEETING NETWORK CALL NOW TO PLACE AND RECORD YOUR MESSAGE HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad 1. Call or come into Kansanal 119 Staufer- Fint Hall B44-8358 2. You'll place an ad in the Jaitalk Network section of the Kansarand call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your ad will remain in the system for 21 days. 3. After your ad runs in the Kanas, you can a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you. 4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place. To check out an ad 1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them. 2. Call 900-787-0778 (you need a touch-one phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don’t interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You’ll be charged $1.95 per minute. 3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached. It's a new, smart, and easy, way to meet people. It's sophisticated, safe, and confidential. The Jaytalk Meeting Network can help you find the kind of person you like to spend time with. ___ You can place your ad by phone and charge it to your MasterCard or Visa. "I've been trying to teach Pooter here how to attract unattached women for me. But so far he hasn't figured it out. So, I'm giving Jaytalk Meeting Network a try." Contact the Kansan today! CAMPAIGN'92 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The president refused to participate in a debate in the state Clinton taunts Bush in Michigan The Associated Press EAST LANSING, Mich. — Bill Clinton taunted President Bush for refusing to debate yesterday and defended his home-state record against a scathing attack that Bush launched on a dash through the six states surrounding Arkansas. As Clinton and Bush traded barbs exactly six weeks before Election Day, Ross Perot added another twist by saying he had made a mistake when he abandoned plans to enter the race. The Texas businessman did not say he would reverse that decision but did say supporters were looking at the situation. With time running short and national polls showing Clinton with a comfortable lead, neither Bush nor Clinton had time to concern themselves publicly with Perot's latest maneuvering. In Washington, the Commission on Presidential Debates made a fresh proposal to the campaigns that the first Bush-Clinton debate be Tuesday in Louisville, Ky., the site and date originally proposed for a vice-presidential debate. The Clinton camp immediately accepted and said it was ready to discuss arrangements but only at an open meeting with the commission. The Bush campaign repeated its objection to the commission's single-moderator format and said it would deal with the Clinton campaign rather than the commission in pressing for a multiple-questioner arrangement. Clinton, asked if he would go outside the commission if the Bush camp insists, said simply, "I think the commission ought to sponsor these debates." In Michigan, Clinton said Bush was afraid to debate because he would have to defend four years in which 3 million people in the United States lost their jobs, industrial production fell for the first time in history, 2 million more U.S. citizens slipped into poverty and average family incomes declined by $1,600. Bush said yesterday, "We're not going to do it on his terms alone, but "I guess I can't blame him," Clinton told a boisterous rally at Michigan State University. "If I had the worst record of any president in 50 years I wouldn't want to defend that record either." Clinton said Bush was avoiding the debate because under the commission's single-moderator format, quick soundbitte-type answers would give way to detailed discussion of the economy, both candidates' records and their plans for the future. Bush, in his rival's home region, the sected Clinton's state record, saying there was a "grand canyon" separating the Democrat's state legacy and the promises he has made in the presidential race. "I propose a debate for him today, candidate Clinton versus Governor Clinton," Bush said. "We all heard what candidate Clinton says he can do for America, but that's very different." The governor Clinton has done to Arkansas. Clinton countered Bush's attacks in his campus speech before heading to Detroit for an evening town-hall style meeting being broadcast throughout Michigan, one of the industrial states Womb won in 1988 but now finds himself trailing in because of economic worries. The Arkansas governor cited Department of Labor figures showing his state led the nation in job growth last year, and he said Arkansas also had the second lowest per-capita tax burden in the country. Learn to Fly 842-0000 Students may return receipts from cash and check purchases made between Jan.1,1992 and June 30,1992 (period 91) until Dec. 30,1992 for a cash rebate. KU student I.D. is required. "Extra Point" promo ends 9/25/92 KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students