6B Monday, October 3, 1994 We could do fake ID's but we won't. NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN At the University of Kansas Printing Services we have all the equipment and services of the pros and with three on campus locations, there's no more convenient place to copy. We serve only the University Community so we might check your student ID, but we won't check your DOB. Copies 10 or less: 5¢ 11 or more: 3¢ 309 Burge Union Main Floor Kansas 1520 Wescoe Hall 864-5098 Union 864-3354 864.4008 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PRINTING SERVICE Double Elimination Trivia Tournament Saturday, October 15,-9am to 4pm in the Kansas Union Teams of Four-$25 Per Team Winning team will represent KU at the regionals in Manhattan, KS Applications Available From October 3-12 at the SUA Box Office Fourth Floor Kansas Union Questions? Call SUA at 864-3477 THE NEWS in brief TURKU, Finland Two robots videotape ferry wreck for clues Two camera-equipped robots scanned the hull of the sunken ferry Estonia yesterday, sending back pictures of the bow section that was leaking before the tragedy. Memorial services for the more than 900 dead were held in Sweden, Estonia and Finland. Only 138 people survived the sinking off the Finnish coast on Wednesday, authorities said yesterday. perching the underwater darkness with searchlights, Sea Owl robots sent back electronic images taken during several hours from the bottom of the frigid Baltic Sea. The pictures show unused lifeboats still attached to the ship's deck. Search crews received a complete view of the hull, upper decks, bridge, stern and bow section of the Estonia, though no bodies were found, said Tuomo Karppinen, a scientist aboard the salvage ship Halli. He said the robots' two cameras had seen most of the 515-foot ship easily. The ferry is lying 180 to 280 feet below the surface, and visibility at the site is about 15 to 21 feet. He refused to describe anything else in the pictures and would not say whether any pieces, such as the bow door, were missing. GARMISCH, Germany NATO. Russia aid European security GARMISCH, Germany The NATO alliance remains relevant in keeping the peace in Europe despite the end of the Cold War, Defense Secretary William Perry said yesterday at a training center for East European military leaders in the heart of Bavaria. "We seek a transatlantic security system embracing the United States and Canada, as well as all of Europe," Perry told about 75 military officers and civilian defense officials from former Warsaw Pact countries. "Our greatest hope is for a future Europe in which no nation threatens its neighbors in which there are no common enemies." Meanwhile, some are questioning the need for an alliance now that the Soviet Union has collapsed. And last week's meeting of NATO defense ministers included a debate on which former Soviet-bloc states should be allowed to move from the "Partnership for Peace" program to full membership. Perry defended the partnership concept and insisted that Russia must be part of any new European defense cooperation system. LOS ANGELES Poll says O.J. will not be convicted LOS ANGELES A majority of lawyers in a national poll think O.J. Simpson will not be convicted in his murder trial. Sixty-one percent believe the trial will result in either acquittal or a hung jury for Simpson in the deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, The National Law Journal reported in the Sept. 26 edition. "I hope those lawyers get to serve on the jury," Simpson attorney Robert Shipiro told the legal journal. eXtremal player. Recently, the same percentage thought the judge should issue a gag order prohibiting all parties from discussing the case publicly. In the survey, 78 percent of the lawyers said intense media coverage of the case reduced the likelihood of the ex-football player receiving a fair trial. The telephone survey by Penn & Schoen Associates included 311 randomly selected lawyers interviewed Sept. 23-26. Results have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 6 percentage points. NEW YORK Microsoft tycoon tops Forbes' list Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates is back on top as the richest American, with a net worth of $9.35 billion from his burgeoning software empire, according to Forbes magazine. Gates bumped stock tycoon Warren Buffett, with $9.2 billion, out of the No.1 spot, the biweekly business journal said in its annual report on the 400 richest Americans. Forbes attributed the flip-flop since last year to the erratic nature of the stock market. Buffett, 64, the folksy investor from Omaha, Neb., kept his investment company, Berkshire Hathaway, growing this year, but not as fast as Microsoft. Thanks to his holdings in Microsoft, Gates' net worth grew by more than $3 billion; Buffett's rose by $900 million. Gates, 38, of Bellevue, Wash., was helped out earlier this year when Microsoft emerged largely unscathed from a federal antitrust inquiry. Gates is quoted in the Oct. 17 Forbes as saying its list is "silly." Forbes also said Gates appeared to be the wealthiest commoner in the world. The only foreign billionaire in his league besides royalty is Yoshiaki Tsutsumi, a Japanese railroad and hotel tycoon whom Forbes said was worth $8.5 billion. Compiled from The Associated Press. ...AFRESH EXPERIENCE - SEGA * NINTENDO * GENESIS * K.U. SPORTSWEAR * AUDIO BOOKS * BASEBALL CARD COLLECTIBLES * PHOTO DEVELOPING GRAND OPENING TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4TH 6:00 a.m. - UPS * WESTERN UNION * MONEY ORDERS * POSTAL SUB STATION * OVER 2,000 VIDEOS Hy-Vee NOT JUST ANOTHER GROCERY STORE! FOOD&DRUGSTORE KASOLD & CLINTON PKWY • 832-0044