8 Thursday; December 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan December 9: Friday Free Movie "Man of the Spring" Popcorn and Drink Provided 7:30 p.m. December 11: Sunday Evening Worship and supper 5:30 p.m. December 14: University Forum Planning Committee 11:30 -1 Alcove F on level 3 of the Kansas Union WE MAKE CHRISTMAS AFFORDABLE! An exciting collection of jewelry both new and used. All diamonds guaranteed, cleaned and inspected. Gift boxed for your sweetheart's Christmas! *Gold Chains *Promise Rings *Diamond Earrings *Pendants *Stereo Equipment *Guitars JAYHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY 1804 W. 6th 749-1919 ArnEx Visa Discover M.C Mon.-Fri. 9:00-6:00 Sat. 9:00-5:00 Sun. 12:30-5:00 Highlights of Gorbachev visit GORBACHEV DENOUNES POLITICAL IMPRISONMENT: Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev declared yesterday that his government no longer holds political prisoners and that it has applied strict time limits on the use of state secrecy as a reason for refusing Jews to attend school, without Western observers generally acknowledge there has been a dramatic reduction in the number of political prisoners since Gorbachev rose to power, human rights groups still count about 150 people said to be held solely because of their political or religious beliefs. allow him to divert needed funds from the military to the domestic sector. SOVIET TROOPS TO LEAVE EASTERN EUROPE: Mikhail S. Gorbachev gave new momentum to arms control talks yesterday with the hisatrical announcement at the United Nations that the Red army would reduce its forces by 10 percent and pull 50,000 of its troops, along with tanks and cannons, from Eastern Europe. U.S. analysts have been predicting such a move for months, believing it could further boost Gorbachev's popularity in the West and BORGACHEV SEEKS SUPERPOWER COOPERATION: Mikhail S. Gorbachev yesterday challenged the United States to suspend weapons ships to Afghan guerrillas and offered to cut off supplies to the Marxist government battling the guerrillas. But Secretary of State George Shultz immediately rejected the proposal, which the Soviet president made in a lengthy speech before the United Nations General Assembly. Gorbachev, in his address, urged superpower cooperation in resolving regional conflicts. massed outside the U.N. building in an effort to remind the Soviet leader of his various problems back home. Besides Jews, there were supporters of dissidents in the Baltic states, Ukrainians, Afghans and Armenians. ANTI-GORBACHEV DEMONSTRATORS ARRESTED: Fifty-six people protest the treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union were arrested yesterday when they crossed barricades and sat in the street outside the United Nations building during Mikhail S. Gorbachev's speech. They were part of a throng of 1,000 chanting, flag-waving demonstrators who SOVIETS OFFER TO REDESIGN RADAR:Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev said yesterday he is prepared to redesign and place under U.N. control a Soviet radar installation that President Reagan charges violates the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. The proposal was slightly different from an earlier Soviet plan that the United States has said is unacceptable. In his address to the U.N. General Assembly, REAGAN WARNS OF EAST-WEST DIFFERENCES: President Reagan, taking a wait-and-see attitude toward Mikhail S. Gorbachev's pledge to unilaterally reduce conventional forces, declared last night that U.S. officials must exercise caution as East-West dealings enter "this critical junction." GORBACHEV Continued from p. 1 Union already wracked by months of ethnic violence between Armenians and Azerbaijanians. State-run television, in an unusually prompt and detailed report from the scene, showed film of crumbled buildings in Kirovakan, Armenia's third-largest city, and in Spitak, a regional center of Armenia. Workers were shown picking up huge slabs of concrete amid the rubble. In one shot, a man put his hands over his head in grief as he "The spontaneous elements didn't spare one-story or multistory buildings," a TV correspondent said on the evening broadcast. The correspondent said that thousands were homeless and that there were casualties, but neither he nor Soviet news reports gave figures. "In several regions of Armenia there is significant damage, deaths and injuries," Tass said. Officials said communications had been cut off with Leninakin, near where the quake was centered, and with much of the disaster area. The temples northwest of Yerevan and close to the Soviet-Turkish border. They said the loss of communications complicated efforts to assess the damage and casualties. HYUNDAI The Price / Performance PC with an 18 month Warranty IBM compatibility with speed and growth: 10Mxm speed, 64K memory, drives or 30 Mb hard disk, mono or color screen, 101 keyboard, clockcalendar, word processing, spread sheet and database software, 18 month full warranty **with training included!** Qualifies for Endowment Financing $1095.* complete Less than $55/Mo. ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER COMPUTER CENTER Downtown Lawrence + 804 New Hampshire St. 843-7584 | In KC - 281-5100 DON'T WAIT DON'T WORRY BE HAPPY JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE is buying back books NOW through finals. Get up to 2/3 of your purchase price. Your one-stop buyback professionals. (If we can't buy them, no one can) Plus Pre-order your Spring '89 books! Located only at the top of Naismith Hill M-F 8-5 p.m. Sat 9-5 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m. Jayhawk Bookstore SCHWARZENEGGER DEVITO "TWINS" KELLY PRESTON CHLOE WEBB BONNIE BARTLETT WRITTEN BY WILLIAM DAVIES & WILLIAM OSBORNE AND TIMOTHY HARRIS & HERSCHIEL WEINGROD MUSIC BY GEORGES DELERUE AND RANDY EDELMAN PRODUCTION DESIGNER JAMES BISSELL UNDERCRAFT OF ANDRZEJ BARTKOWIAK EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS JOE MEDJUCK AND PACIFIC BRAMS SUBJECTED ABOVE MATERIAL MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR COLORS MICHAEL G. GROSS PRODUCES AND IVAN RETTIMAN UNDERCRAFT BY A UNIVERSAL PICTURE © 1980 UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIO, INC OPENS FRIDAY AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.