Wednesday, January 25, 1989 / University Daily Kansan Why upstarts start with us. The E. & J. Gallo Winery offers a Sales Management career that's perfect for upstarts. You get thorough training to get you started on the right foot. Your responsibilities grow as fast as you grow. Fast enough, in fact, for even the most impatient of up- enough, impact, for the Career starts. Today, stop by the Career Planning & Placement Center and find out more about why upstarts start-and-stay with us. If you are interested in pursuing a sales management career with the E&J Gallo Winery, submit your resume to the business school placement office (Summerfield Hall) for pre-screening by 1-31-89. TAN for $1.75 $1.75 when you purchase 10 tans (17.50) (17.50) $2.00 for single tans (Wolffe System) (Suntan Beds) BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility 749-2424 842-4966 535 Gateway Rd. 925 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center UNION EXPRESS UNION EXPRESS gives students the opportunity to eat in all Kansas Union dining facilities without carrying cash, worrying about a forgotten checkbook or hassling with loose change. UNION EXPRESS is a prepaid food service account which works like a credit card in reverse. UNION EXPRESS is welcome in UNION SQUARE. THE HAWKS NEST and THE PRAIRIE ROOM. For KU students... "Membership Has Its Privileges" Quake survivors bury dead, further landslides threaten Soviets officials estimate death toll at 1,000 The Associated Press MOSCOW — Mountain villagers in "endless" funeral processions yesterday buried their dead from the Tadzhikistan earthquake that killed up to 1,000, and rescues slogged through muddy rubble in a desperate search for survivors. soon. New warnings were issued for more possible landslides caused by thawing snow in the Central Asian republic 1,800 miles south of Moscow that was hit by Monday's predawn earthquake. In northwestern Armenia, which was devastated by a Dec. 7 earthquake that killed 25,000 people, a powerful aftershock was reported yesterday; the death rate had been warned, and no casualties were reported. Rescuers reportedly found one survivor from the Tadzhikistan earthquake, although an official spokesman denied it. A 40-second tremor that U.S. seismologists registered as 5.4 on the Richter scale before bale down Monday. It loosened layers of mud thunder. cascaded onto mountain villages in a rural area about 20 miles southwest of the republic's capital of Dushanbe. Workers using shovels and bulldoors continued digging for survivors, Tass said, but a local official said the efforts might be in vain. "There is little hope because of the flood of dirt and mud." Erkin Kasymov, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry of Tadzhikistan, said by telephone. "But while there is any hope, the rescuers will keep digging." In one village, Sharora, more than 108 bodies have been hauled from the mud and wreckage. Tasa said. It said救援人员 one survivor, Muratov, 27. Muratov, reported to be in grave condition, was rushed to a hospital, where "surgeons are fighting for his life." Tass said. However, Vitaly Zhukov of the official's public news agency and chief of a press information center set up in the wake of the tragedy, told The Associated Press no survivors were found during excavations yest- Zainiddin Nasreddine, editor- chief of the news agency, estimated that about 600 people, about Khalrora's entire population, had been killed. terday. Tass on Monday estimated that 1,000 people had been killed, and official reports said more than 100 were hospitalized in Dushanbe. the predominantly Muslim villages buried their dead, and "the funeral processes seem endless," the Tass news agency said. He added, however, that it was still too early to determine how many people had been buried in the slide. Zhukov said 11 people died overnight in hospitals. Late yesterday, amid reports that casualties might not be as high as initially reported, he said the preliminary estimate remained at 1,000 dead. Shora and three other villages located at the earthquake's epicenter in Haiti. The Kisou sar—are now wreathed in the smoke of bonfires and field kilches. Freewheeling Soviet magazine editor nominated for national legislature The Associated Press MOSCOW - In more than four hours of passionate debate yesterday, nearly 1,200 Muscovites nominated the editor of a freewheeling weekly magazine for a new national legislature, which is charged with carrying out reforms. reformally Korotch of Ogonyk magazine, criticized in press and pounded by Russian nationalists, lost two previous tries for nomination. Backers at the Dzerzhinsky district meeting, however, overwhelmingly moved him to the next stage of the complex process leading to elections March 26. While supporters and opponents debated his reformist philosophy, the editor was in the United States on one of several recent trips abroad. Vladimir Tsetvet, a television reporter who spoke for the candidacy, said Korotich and others like him make President Mikhail S. Gorbachev's reform effort credible to foreigners. A small middle-aged woman wearing glasses and a gray sweater grabbed a microphone, but when the crowd heard the words "Korotitch" and "slander" a chant of "Down with Pamvait!" drowned her out to foreigners. "We are on the edge," and the Soviet Union can become a "great, free socialist country" or bog down in bureaucracy again, Tsvetov said. DOWN WITH PAMYAT. Several young members of Pamyat, a Russian nation alist group accused of anti-Semitism, raised banners in the back, of the hall criticizing Korotich. Ogonyok reported earlier this month that Pamayat members broke up an electoral meeting called to nominate Korotich for the 2,250-member Congress of People's Deputies. People's Deputies. On Jan. 18, the government newspaper Ivzesta implied Korotich supporters also were involved in the disorder. The Communist Party paper Pravda printed a letter denouncing his magazine as "scum" that defames the Soviet Union. When the 95 green cards that counted as ballots yesterday were collected and counted, Korotich had 787. Yuri Skokov, an electronics institute director who stressed economic reform, got 145. He stopped the meeting at one point and called out: "We will sit and wait until we restore elementary order!" The crowd gradually quieted. stressed column. Pyotr Makarin, a city official running the meeting, spent the evening trying to shout over people who used any nausea to comment or ask questions from the floor. After the earlier meeting was broken up, Korotich also lost in a try at the writers' union slate. Such other backers of reform as Andrei D. Sakharov, the Nobel Peace Prize winner, have been passed over by their professional groups and had to seek endorsement elsewhere. ACU-I RECREATION TOURNAMENT Association of College Unions International Intercollegiate Tournament 1988-1989 Program you can play Chess-Union-Feb.1,3,4 Backgammon-Union-Jan.28 Pool-Union-Jan.28,29 Table Tennis-Robinson-Jan.28 Entry forms available at the SUA Office in the Union. Deadline for entry is one day before game day. Winners will go all expenses paid to the University of Nebraska to represent KU at the regional level STUDENTS STUDENTS STUDENTS BIG EIGHT TOURNAMENT TICKETS MARCH 10-12 AT KEMPER ARENA COST: $80.00 COST: $80.00 Applications for tickets are available at the Allen Fieldhouse ticket office. A lottery will be held with a notification list posted at the KU Ticket Office at 10:00 a.m.the Monday before the tournament. Tickets must be picked up in person at Kemper Arena and are nontransferable One ticket per student. APPLICATION DEADLINE: Saturday, February 25.