8 Friday, September 18. 1992 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Dickinson 6 841-8000 2339 South Iowa St League of Their Own PG(4:50) 15:94 5 Captain Ron PG(13:4(35) 7:30 9:55 Honeymonnie in Vegas PG(13:4(35) 7:10 9:15 Unforgive R (4:20) 7:00 9:40 Husbands & Wives R (4:45) 7:05 9:20 Sister Act G (4:45) 7:09 9:30 53 Primetime Show (+) Hearing + Dolby Senior Citizen Anime Imagined Stereo Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00 (LIMITED TO SEAING) SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Sneakers (PG-13) 2:30 9:00 7:00 9:00 HILLCAST 925 IOWA 841-5191 Single White Female (R) 2:30 9:00 7:15 9:30 Hellraiser III (R) 2:40 9:15 7:20 9:30 Death Becomes Her (PG-13) 2:45 9:15 7:20 9:30 Wind (PG-13) 2:30 9:00 7:15 9:40 Singles (PG-13) 2:30 9:00 7:15 9:40 CINEMA TWIN 3110 IOWA 841-5191 Raising Cain (R) 2:40 9:15 7:20 9:30 Patriot Games (R) 2:45 9:00 7:20 9:40 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY KU WOMEN'S LACROSSE Welcomes everyone interested in joining Practice Every Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday at 5 p.m. Shenk Complex 23rd and Iowa DON'T FORGET THE GAMES IN OCTOBER For info call Jill McDonald 842-5274 Bush stresses his differences ENID, Okla. — President Bush yesterday sought to spotlight his differences with the economic policies of Democrat Bill Clinton saying, "We may talk about the same issues, but the similarity ends there." The Associated Press Bush said he and Clinton hoped to take the country in different directions. He said he pictured himself an entrepreneur who favors risk-takers and Clinton as a lifelong politician as his faith in government planners. It was the president's clearest statement to date on the wide range of economic issues that divides them. Bush painted the Arkansas governor's economic views in the gloomiest terms. The president said he believed in private enterprise while Clinton favored letting the government pick economic winners and losers. This was an apparent reference to the Democrat's advocacy of moving workers in shrinking industries into other jobs in fields with greater growth potential. Clinton was flying to Denver, where he was meeting later with Western Reserve officials. Clinton would raise them. The president said that his rival would take money from the wealthy but that Clinton neglected to mention that two-thirds of the rich are small farmers and small business owners. Bush said he would cut taxes while In fact, Clinton has called for $94 billion in increases that would fall on the wealthy and foreign corporations and $104 billion in cuts for the working poor as well as research and investment credits for business. Bush said that he wanted to reduce government spending and increase trade but that Clinton would do the opposite. "I've called adding sunset provisions to all new regulations," Bush said. He also called for changes in the nation's system of civil law. He has strongly supported an insurance industry-backed product liability bill that would limit damages for victims of defective products but provide them with compensation if they were willing to bypass the courts and settle A New York Times/CBS News poll published Wednesday showed that 63 percent of all U.S. adults felt that most U.S. families were worse off today than they were four years ago and that the economy dominated concerns. An ABC poll released Wednesday said 58 percent of Americans believed the economy was getting worse. quicklv. Clinton discussed his economic plan Wednesday in riot-ravaged South Central Los Angeles, where he described a $1.5 billion program that he said would nurture small business and help to rebuild poor communities. He released what he described as his community-development plan, a more detailed version of part of the economic program he unveiled in June. Included in his plan were: Federal grants to create 100 community banks to provide loans and technical assistance to small entrepreneurs. Expansion of tax-deferred Individual Retirement Accounts so money could be withdrawn for business development, with federal-matching funds aimed at helping in poor areas. A provision allowing people to hold up to $10,000 in assets before losing certain welfare benefits. Stronger federal efforts to get commercial banks to lend money in poor areas and up to 125 federal tax-reduced enterprise zones to attract business to areas with high unemployment, a concept dating to the Reagan administration. But while he sometimes sounded like a Republican, Clinton said his emphasis was totally different, that his plan assumed that people other than the wealthy could succeed in business and create jobs if given a chance. "Don't you know we would diminish the tensions of this community; don't you know we would diminish the tensions between rich and poor in this community if everybody thought that if they worked hard and played by the rules they could get ahead," he said. The Clintons later attended a glitzy Beverly Hills fund-raiser, featuring a rare singing performance by Barbra Streisand. The sisters said the event raised $1.1 million. Marilyn Quayle attacks Clinton tax plan The Bush visit to Enid, Okla, was the first made by a president since Richard Nixon did it in 1974. The Associated Press TOPEKA — Bill Clinton's tax plan would hit a lot of two-income families and damage the economy by drying up investment capital, Marilyn Quayle said yesterday. Quayle also spoke for 45 minutes at a Republican fund-raising breakfast here without mentioning family values, the watchword stresses at the GOP national convention in Houston a month ago. However, the vice president's wife denied after her speech that she had been told to soft-pedal the issue because national polls show it hasn't played well for President Bush and her husband, Dan Quaile, in their re-election campaign. She accused Clinton of proposing a tax increase for middle-income wage earners. Quayle said she interpreted Clinton's rich as those who were getting down below where people have combined incomes of probably less than $100,000. "Now in two-income families, that's hitting a lot of people," she added. "I don't think anybody around that range considers themselves particularly rich." Latest U.S. Census figures show 97 percent of Kansas households have incomes of less than $100,000. The average household income in Kansas was $27,291. Quayle said Congress passed a tax increase on upper-income people in 1990. "We lost investment because people who had disposable income are people who invest," she said. "When you lose investment, you lose jobs because you don't have the capital to invest in growth." She said the family values issue had not been scrapped. She said she gave a speech stressing that theme Wednesday at Abilene Christian University in Abilene, Tex. "I think that it's an important issue," she said. "It's not the only thing we talk about. I think one of the big distortions is (that) it's all we talk about." "Values are important. We've had a values-free education system experiment for the last 20 years, Quayle blamed the media for Bush's trailing in the polls nationally and in Kansas. "I don't know what anybody can expect when the President's been bombarded now for almost nine months with negativism on the part of the national media," she said. "Bill Clinton's been getting an absolute free ride. He's like the rainmaker out there. he's saying all the things he wants and nobody calls him on it. "The president gives speech after speech pointing out things, and the press doesn't cover them. The national media is doing an incredible disservice to the country...showing their bias unbelieved." About 250 people pay $25 each to attend the GOP-sponsored breakfast and listen to Obama's speech. spokesman can be a listen to Quayle's speech. Her speech criticized Clinton on everything from his handling of the draft issue, to his opposition of the North American Trade Agreement to what she said was his support of the current litigation system. After the speech, Quayle visited Mabe Library at Washburn University, where she was shown a personal reader, a machine that reads tests out loud for blind students or students who have learning disabilities. She was greeted by 150 to 200 Washburn students, most of them supporters. She shook hands and signed autographs for supporters, bypassing a student holding a sign that said, "Hillary is my kind of woman." Quayle went from Topeka to Lincoln and Omaha. Neb. Today she will be in Hawaii surveying hurricane damage. river valley music festival LITTLE FEAT BoDEANS SOUL FOOD CAFE THE RED DEVILS BAGHDAD JONES September 19, 1992 Lawrence, Kansas Gates open at 1:00 PM Show starts at 3:00 PM Tickets at TICKET MASTER Charge-By-Phone 816-931-3330 Info Line 913-841-0505 Kansas City, MO I-435 to K-10 (Lawrence) 18 miles Follow signs to festival Exit 442 1 mile RIVER VALLEY MUSIC FESTIVAL 6 miles Lawrence, KS BUILD A SOLID FUTURE. at the 11th Annual Business Career Fair Tuesday, September 22, 1992 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m. Lawrence Holiday Inn Holidome Transportation provided Over 80 companies represented We Sell Accessories! RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Massachusetts, phone 841-6642 HEY,JAYHAWKS! PARENTS COMING TO VISIT? NO ROOM IN YOUR APARTMENT? WE HAVE THE ANSWER! Parent's Special $33 Plus Tax/Double Occupancy - 113 Beautifully appointed guest rooms - Greenery Restaurant, great food at reasonable prices - Hangar #4 Club, come in and enjoy your favorite beverage - Banquet & meeting rooms available. - Close to the Kansas University Campus - Outdoor pool 2309 Iowa Street *Lawrence, Kansas 66045* (913) 843-9100 Not valid during graduation or special events Offer expires 4-30-93