--- Thursday, February 23, 1989 / University Daily Kansan Jon Hofer Greg Scott Greg Scott Jon Hofe Party Favors Custom Screen Printing T· G·R·A·P·H·I·C·S 518 East 8th Lawrence, Ks. 913-842-3338 When you buy a new bra at UNDERCOVER We have more than 50 different bra styles to choose from. Our least experienced fitter has fit 500 women before you. Our most experienced fitter has fit over 7,500 women. Visit us. We appreciate your business. You'll appreciate the fit. Offer good thru Sat., March 4 32A 32B 32C 32D 32DD 34A 34B 34C 34D 34DD 36A 36B 36C 36D 36DD 38A 38B 38C 38D 38DD 40B 40C 40D 40DD 42C 42D 42D 44C 44D 44D 46C 46D 46D 48D 48DD We have your size! UNDERCOVER In the Pink Building at 21 West 9th BONUS: If your bra is the worst we find, your 2nd bra is FREE. Booby prize awarded March 23. Don's Automotive Center Inc. 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PORTER'S IS THE HOME OF FRESH FISH IN LAWRENCE What a bite Beatles sue for use of 'apple' trademark The Associated Press CUPERTINO, Calif. — The company representing the disbanded Beatles has sued Apple Computer Inc., challenging its use of the "apple" trademark on some of its products, a newspaper reported. In a lawsuit filed Tuesday in London, Apple Corps Ltd. accused the Silicon Valley computer company of violating a secret 181 agreement under which the Beatles' company allegedly sold software trademark on computer products, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. The lawsuit asks the court for an injunction to bar Apple Computer from breaching the agreement and damaging damages, legal fees and interest. The agreement retained the right of Apple Corp to use the fruit as a trademark in its music business, and Apple Computer promised not to enter that field, according to the court. The court said the lawsuit was filed in the chancery division of Britain's High Court of Justice. During the past few years, however, the computer company has developed top-selling new hardware with music synthesizing capabilities, and the Beatles' company contends that Apple's break Apple Computer's promise. The computer company, however does not believe it is in breach of the agreement, a company spokeswoman said. But company officials would not comment in detail on the reasons they had not yet seen it, she said. Under the agreement reached in November 1981, Apple Computer, founded in 1977, paid the Beatles an annual royalty and used its famous apple trademark. Apple Corp had been fourteen years earlier and its activities included releases under the Apple label and a chain of clothing stores. Steve Wozniak, a co-founder of Apple Computer, said on Tuesday he was not aware of the agreement. "I never heard anything about a fuss over the name," said Wozniak, who is no longer associated with Apple Computer. The other co-founder was Steve Jobs, and some company histories trace the name to his recollections of working in the Oregon apple country where he became convinced apples are a perfect food. The Beatles pop group broke up in 1970, but the London-based company still represents the business interests of the three surviving members of the Beatles and the estate of the late John Lennon. Wayne Cooper, a San Francisco lawyer representing the Beatles' company in the dispute, said negotiations between Apple Corps and the computer company broke down at a meeting Feb. 13 in London. Mississippi lawman burning about movie The Associated Press JACKSON, Miss. — A former Mississippi sheriff said yesterday that he sued the makers of the movie "Mississippi Burning" for $8 million because they have done me terrible harm and they ought to face up to it." "Everybody all over the South knows the one they have playing the sheriff in that movie is referring to me," said Lawrence Rainey, 65, who previously filed a shot against Orion Jones in federal court in Meridian. The critically acclaimed movie, which has received seven Academy Award nominations, is based on the 1964 slaughters of three civil rights workers in Neshoba County. Rainey was sheriff at the time. Bill Bernstein, a spokesman for Orion in New York, said the movie maker had not seen the lawsuit and could not comment on it. The deaths of Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman prompted an FBI investigation that led to conspiracy charges against 18 men, including Rainey, who was acquitted. In the film, the character Sheriff Stucky is depicted as a backwoods lawman who dislikes blacks. Stucky does not participate in the actual killings but helps protect those responsible by not investigating. Rainey, who now works for a black-owned security firm in Meridian, said the character of the sheriff in the film made it appear he failed to carry out his responsibilities and was a terrible person. He has said that he was not guilty of any coverup and was not a racist and that he carried out his responsibilities. He said he never would have made the remarks that were attributed to the sheriff in the film. The charges against Rainey followed much the same line, with officials alleging that the sheriff and police violate the civil rights of the victims. His attorney, James G. McIntyre, who defended Rainey in the 1967 conspiracy trial, said he had received no response from several years ago that it correct what he described as untruths in the film. Bhopal payment is called too low The Associated Press NEW DELHI, India — Opposition legislators yesterday rejected the $470 million compensation that Union Carbide Corp. agreed to pay victims of the 1884 Bohpa gas disaster, and government to fight for more money. Survivors of the world's worst industrial disaster marched in their own protest yesterday as yet another petition was filed, this one from a social service group seeking $800 for victims of the explosion caused by the lethal cloud of gas that seeped out of a storage tank at a Bhopal pesticide plant. The $470 million was part of a settlement reached Feb. 14 between the U.S. based multinational corporation AstraZeneca, which originally demanded $3 billion. "is human life so cheap in this country we must accept such a low amount?" asked Communist Party legislator Safiduddin Chowdury. "Our consciences are not dead, and neither are those of the victims who are suffering but have come here to show they will not be humiliated," he said in a special parliamentary debate. About 2,500 gas victims came to New Delhi from Bhopal to protest the settlement yesterday at the Boat Club, a grassy expanse half a mile from the Parliament building. They were joined by 500 Delhi University students. Police prevented them from marching to Parliament. In Bhopal, 1,000 victims marched outside the residence of Chief Minister Motilal Vorha of Madhya Pradesh state. More than 3,400 people were killed in the disaster, and 20,000 more are listed as seriously affected by the leak of methyl isocyanate. Deaths attributed to it continue at the rate of at least one a day. More than 500,000 damage claims have been filed. The latest was filed yesterday by the Association for Socio-Legal Literacy, a social service group which sought a direction from the Supreme Court to award $60 million may $800 million because the Feb. 14 order rendered the gas victims "remedialless". Under the agreement, the single payment absolves Union Carbide from any other claims in the disaster. India's Supreme Court long ago issued criminal charges brought against the Danbury, Conn., base corporation. Yesterday's parliamentary debate was inconclusive. Madhu Dandaveh of the opposition Janata Party said parliament was the only forum that could reverse the Supreme Court order. Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL Visit Our Showroom to See Fine Furnishings at your Fingertips! Prompt Delivery Group Discounts Brand Names Month to Month Rentals Purchase Option Programs 520 E. 22nd Terr. 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