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July 11 - The Daily Iowan Historic Newspapers - University of Iowa

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'OWA CITY'S MORNIN,G I"fW,$.PAPf<br />

Georgia flood pulls town together<br />

",,!;n • ..t "<br />

The World Cup moves to semifin<strong>al</strong>s.<br />

See story Page 10.<br />

News Briefs<br />

LOCAL<br />

, UI Hospit<strong>al</strong>s and Clinics<br />

security guard honored<br />

The flag atop<br />

Old Capitol<br />

will fly at h<strong>al</strong>fstaff<br />

today in<br />

memory of<br />

William Nash,<br />

who died<br />

Sunday, July<br />

3,after<strong>al</strong>ong<br />

illness.<br />

Nash worked<br />

as a security guard at the UI<br />

Hospit<strong>al</strong>s and Clinics. He was<br />

born July 5, 1942 and had lived in<br />

the Iowa City area since 1963.<br />

In addition to working at<br />

UIHC, Nash was <strong>al</strong>so a member of<br />

the West Branch United<br />

Methodist Church and former<br />

member of the Lions Club.<br />

His funer<strong>al</strong> was last Thursday.<br />

Survivors include his wife, Wanda;<br />

his son, William, of Iowa City; and<br />

his daughter, Mary, of Hannib<strong>al</strong>,<br />

Mo.<br />

$10,000 ring stolen at m<strong>al</strong>l<br />

A ring worth more than<br />

$10,000 was stolen from Z<strong>al</strong>es<br />

Jewelers, Old Capitol M<strong>al</strong>l, just<br />

after close Saturday.<br />

Iowa City police said witnesses<br />

saw the suspect come into the<br />

store at 6:18 p.m. and examine a<br />

ring. He put the ring on his finger<br />

and fled out of the store, witnesses<br />

told police.<br />

The suspect was described as a<br />

dark-complected black m<strong>al</strong>e in his<br />

mid-20s, 5-feet-9-inches t<strong>al</strong>l and<br />

_ weighing 150 to 160 pounds. He<br />

was wearing a white T-shirt, baggy<br />

black jeans and black tennis<br />

shoes, witnesses said.<br />

INTERNATIONAL<br />

Report: Michael Jackson<br />

. weds lisa Marie Presley<br />

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican<br />

Republic (AP) - A newspaper<br />

report that Michael Jackson married<br />

Lisa Marie Presley was denied<br />

Sunday.<br />

A judge who said he performed<br />

the ceremony claimed that Jackson,<br />

35, and Presley, 26, were married<br />

May 18 in a private ceremony.<br />

Jackson's publicist told the<br />

Associated Press the report wasn't<br />

true. He said the singer was in New<br />

York City on Sunday recording an<br />

<strong>al</strong>bum.<br />

The couple paid about $53 for<br />

the 15-minute ceremony, the judge<br />

said, then stayed lit the house for<br />

another h<strong>al</strong>f-hour.<br />

Person<strong>al</strong>ities ............ : ................... 2<br />

Metro & Iowa ............................. 3<br />

C<strong>al</strong>endar / News of Record ......... 3<br />

Viewpoints ................................. 4<br />

Nation & World .......................... 5<br />

Movies ....................................... 6<br />

Comics / Crossword .................... 6<br />

TV Listings .................................. 6<br />

Classifieds ................................... 8<br />

Sports ....................................... 10<br />

Sharon Cohen<br />

Associated Press<br />

ALBANY, Ga. - Helen Dukes is<br />

waiting the flood out on the west<br />

side of town with two of her chilo<br />

dren. Two others are on the east<br />

side. It's not just miles that sepa·<br />

rate them - it's water.<br />

This flooded city is split in h<strong>al</strong>f<br />

because high waters have closed<br />

four bridges that cross from one<br />

side of town to the other. For now,<br />

east and west - and some families<br />

- are not about to meet.<br />

But if nature has divided this<br />

community, disaster has brought it<br />

together.<br />

"It certainly has broken down<br />

lines between the haves and the<br />

have-nots, blacks and whites, and<br />

young and old," said Mary Young­<br />

Cummings, a fonner state legislator<br />

and city commissioner whose<br />

home was flooded . "All of a sudden,<br />

everybody re<strong>al</strong>izes we're <strong>al</strong>l in the<br />

same boat."<br />

"There's nothing like a lesson<br />

taught," she added, perched on a<br />

bleacher in a sweaty crowded highschool<br />

gymnasium serving as a Red<br />

Cross shelter. "Water does not discriminate."<br />

Flooding brought on by Tropic<strong>al</strong><br />

Storm Alberto has been blamed for<br />

26 deaths in Georgia. The residents<br />

of Albany have warily waited<br />

for days for the Flint River to crest;<br />

This is only a test<br />

on Sunday, it reached 44.1 feet,<br />

surpassing the 69·year-old record<br />

of37.8 feet. Flood stage is 20 feet.<br />

The raging waters have taken a<br />

ghoulish turn here, unearthing<br />

about 200 coffins from cemeteries<br />

and forcing workers to temporarily<br />

tie some of them to trees.<br />

About 20,000 area residents<br />

have fled their homes; about onefifth<br />

of them are in shelters. All are<br />

waiting for the water to recede so<br />

they'll bl) able to determine what<br />

they can s<strong>al</strong>vage from their lives.<br />

Among them is Dukes, a 38-yearold<br />

single mother of four, who was<br />

forced from her house. She is staying<br />

and <strong>al</strong>so volunteering for the<br />

Red Cross at the shelter at the<br />

Albany High School. Her two<br />

daughters are with her; her two<br />

sons are with others across town.<br />

"In a situation like this, who can<br />

complain?" she asks stoic<strong>al</strong>ly, surrounded<br />

by stacks of donated food,<br />

blankets and clothes. "There's<br />

nothing you can do about it so you<br />

make the best of it. If your heart<br />

and mind are not up to it, you've<br />

got problems."<br />

"People have forgotten about<br />

trivi<strong>al</strong> stuff. They're just banding<br />

together," said Young-Cummings, a<br />

lawyer who escaped with two<br />

dresses, two suits, a family reunion<br />

T-shirt and a pair of hot pink<br />

shoes.<br />

While advance word of rising<br />

waters gave many people time -<br />

sometimes just a few hours - to<br />

evacuate before their homes were<br />

engulfed, loc<strong>al</strong> offici<strong>al</strong>s spent days<br />

preparing for the possible split in<br />

the city.<br />

"We anticipated being cut in<br />

two," said Dougherty County<br />

administrator Alan Reddish.<br />

He said a review of flood plain<br />

maps <strong>al</strong>erted offici<strong>al</strong>s to the problem<br />

so more than 100 medic<strong>al</strong> per·<br />

sonnel, law enforcement and public<br />

works staffers were moved in<br />

advance to the town's east side -<br />

in norm<strong>al</strong> times about a 10-minute<br />

drive.<br />

"You can see across the river. You<br />

just can't get across. It is strange,"<br />

Reddish said. He noted that water<br />

covers the roads leading to some<br />

bridges. There <strong>al</strong>so is concern<br />

about structur<strong>al</strong> damage.<br />

He,icopters <strong>al</strong>so have been based<br />

on the east side of town so medic<strong>al</strong><br />

emergencies can be ferried to the<br />

west, where the two hospit<strong>al</strong>s are<br />

located.<br />

At one of those hospit<strong>al</strong>s,<br />

P<strong>al</strong>myra Medic<strong>al</strong> Centers, 13 critic<strong>al</strong>-care<br />

patients were evacuated<br />

by helicopters but 145 others<br />

Pms<br />

remain, including scores of nurs- Carlos H<strong>al</strong>l carries two of his pit bull terriers to safety from his home<br />

ing·home resid~n~ relocate~ there. in Albany, Ga., Thursday through flood waters from the Flint River. The<br />

"We ~ere wlthl~ two .brlcks ~f last of four bridges over the Flint River were closed Friday morning.<br />

evacuatmg tot<strong>al</strong>ly, hOS~lt<strong>al</strong> preSI- isolating downtown Albany on the river's west side from industri<strong>al</strong> and<br />

dent Doug Parker said. Water . 'd ti' I th t<br />

See GEORGIA, Page 6 res I en a areas on e eas .<br />

Firefighters from six area departments, Cor<strong>al</strong>ville, Iowa City, Hills, day afternoon in Cor<strong>al</strong>ville. The home that was set ablaze was<br />

Keota, North Uberty and Tiffin, took part in a training exercise Sun- donated by First Avenue Partnership of Cor<strong>al</strong>ville. See story Page 3.<br />

Gay establishments<br />

targeted for new beer<br />

Heather Pitzel<br />

The Daily Iowan<br />

Pink Triangle beer, a nonprofit<br />

micro brew targeting gays and lesbians,<br />

could be hitting Iowa City<br />

within the next few weeks.<br />

Rick Tierney of Fleck Wholes<strong>al</strong>e<br />

distributing in Cedar Rapids<br />

bought 215 cases of the 99-c<strong>al</strong>orie<br />

beer, which he said he plans to sell<br />

to gay establishments in Des<br />

Moines, Iowa City and Dubuque.<br />

Mike Beery, a gay Denver attorney<br />

and president of Pink Triangle<br />

Beer Co., got the idea from a "Saturday<br />

Night Live" skit that was a<br />

mock commerci<strong>al</strong> for a gay beer.<br />

The bottled brew is named for the<br />

symbol gay men were. forced to<br />

wear in Nazi concentration camps<br />

and has been on the market for one<br />

year.<br />

Dubuque Bottling and Brewing<br />

Co. was contracted out to make the<br />

beer.<br />

For every case sold, at least $1 is<br />

donated to loc<strong>al</strong> AIDS charities.<br />

Dubuque Bottling and Brewing Co.<br />

marketing director Keith Jolinsen<br />

and loc<strong>al</strong> distributors decide what<br />

charities get donations. Johnsen<br />

said the company will soon make<br />

an addition<strong>al</strong> 25 cent donation per<br />

case to the AIDS Orphan Adoption<br />

Project.<br />

That project is a subdivision of<br />

'the Nation<strong>al</strong> Council for Adoption,<br />

and some of the children were<br />

orpbaned because they have AIDS,<br />

while others were orphaned when<br />

their parents died of AIDS.<br />

Johnsen said it's an indication<br />

that AIDS isn't just a gay disease.<br />

"We're hoping that crossover in<br />

charities will generate some<br />

crossover purchasing,n he said.<br />

Profits, however, aren't the driving<br />

force behind the marketing. .<br />

"We are completely nonprofit.<br />

Our profit is in the charity we do<br />

with this brand,n Johnsen said. "It's<br />

not a brand we re<strong>al</strong>ly make any<br />

money {rola. Most arrangements<br />

like this are percentage donations<br />

of profits, but this is a set amount<br />

per case."<br />

Pink Triangle was origin<strong>al</strong>ly sold<br />

in Der.ver and then marketed in<br />

large cities in Arizona, C<strong>al</strong>ifornia,<br />

Washington, Florida, Pennsylvania<br />

and New York. The Midwest was<br />

included most recently this summer.<br />

"There's a widespread gay population<br />

across the country, but when<br />

you think nf marketing, the first<br />

places you go is San Francisco and<br />

New York," Johnsen said. "As we've<br />

found, that's not necessarily the<br />

case. After <strong>al</strong>l the publicity, we've<br />

received I lot of c<strong>al</strong>ls from the Midwest<br />

and Texas. n<br />

Loc<strong>al</strong> reaction to the new brew<br />

was tepid, however.<br />

Daryl Woodson, owner of the 620<br />

lnc., -620 S. Madison St., said he'd<br />

never heard of Pink Triangle beer.<br />

"We will look into carrying it if<br />

it's presented to us," Woodson .aid.<br />

"We stock on taste, not on label."<br />

' I<br />

110-___ COUNTRY'MOURNS • ,",~ ~., I.OSS OF RULE<br />

Evidence<br />

exists for<br />

Simpson<br />

to face tri<strong>al</strong><br />

Michael Fleeman<br />

Associated Press<br />

LOS ANGELES - Attacked by<br />

a knife-wi.elding assailant in dark<br />

leather gloves,<br />

Ron<strong>al</strong>d Goldman<br />

put up a<br />

furious fight,<br />

suffering cuts<br />

to his neck, fingers,<br />

p<strong>al</strong>ms and<br />

forearms before<br />

succumbing to<br />

four deep gashes.<br />

His friend,<br />

Nicole Brown<br />

Simpson, <strong>al</strong>so<br />

tried to fight back, cutting her finger<br />

when she either tried to fend<br />

off the attacker or grab the knife.<br />

She too died after suffering a slash<br />

to the neck that reached her spine.<br />

The murderer then fled down an<br />

<strong>al</strong>ley behind Brown Simpson's condo<br />

and into the darkness on that<br />

cool June night in Brentwood,<br />

leaving behind footprints in the<br />

blood of the victims.<br />

Those details emerged over sa<br />

dramatic days of testimony in O.J:<br />

See SIMPSON, Page G<br />

N. Kore~n leadership<br />

seized by Kim. Jong n<br />

Laura King remained wary - keeping its mili-<br />

Associated Press<br />

tary on high <strong>al</strong>ert and closely<br />

SEOUL, South Korea _ Fears of watching Northern troop movements.<br />

military instability on the Korean<br />

peninsula diminished Sunday as But by Sunday, it appeared that<br />

indications grew that the son of Kim Jong n, 52, had taken control<br />

North Korea's late dictator had of the Pyongyang government.<br />

taken the power for which his The North's offici<strong>al</strong> news agency<br />

father had long groomed him. heaped praise on Kim n Sung for<br />

Diplomats and an<strong>al</strong>ysts were his "greatest and priceless revolurelying<br />

on eyewitness reports and tionary feat" in picking a successor.<br />

close readings of offici<strong>al</strong> state- There were signs Kim was movments<br />

to discern what was hap- ing swiftly to consolidate his power<br />

pening in the wake 'of the death base. Offici<strong>al</strong>s of the North's ruling<br />

Friday of Kim n Sung, who had Workers'. Party were ordered to<br />

run the country with a slavish cult convene 10 Pyongyang by today,<br />

ofperaon<strong>al</strong>ity since 1948. . ostensibly to pay collective tribute<br />

Offici<strong>al</strong> reports said North Kore- ~ their late leader.<br />

ans in the capit<strong>al</strong> of Pyongyang But a senior South Korean offiwere<br />

gathering at a towering stat- ci<strong>al</strong>, speaking on condition of<br />

ue of the "Great Leader" to pay anonymity, said the gathering<br />

weeping tribute. . could be meant to pave the way for<br />

The death of Kim at age 82 left a the quick election of the younger<br />

potenti<strong>al</strong>ly enormous gap to be Kim as party chief.<br />

filled. South Korea had initi<strong>al</strong>ly . North Korea's state radio on<br />

feared a chaotic power struggle Sunday broadcast even more promight<br />

break out in the wake of grams than before extolling the<br />

Kim's death and spill across the younger Kim's virtues and carried<br />

border.<br />

statements from a long line of top<br />

Two days after Kim's death.it See N. KOREA, Pllge 6 .


tI<br />

o<br />

iJ<br />

A<br />

01<br />

2 - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 11, 1994<br />

Person<strong>al</strong>ities<br />

Brothers are a step ahead of Christmas season<br />

Amanda Morton<br />

The Daily Iowan<br />

Months before a flake of snow<br />

f<strong>al</strong>ls or a stocking is hung, brothera<br />

Bob and Terry Handley begin<br />

to trim their Christmas trees.<br />

As owners of Handley's Holiday<br />

Hi1Jside, five miles east of Solon,<br />

the two spend nearly every day of<br />

summer in their 20-acre spread<br />

trimming the trees' new growth so<br />

-<br />

DAY 1:,\ TI IE LIfE<br />

they become dense and shapely by<br />

Christmas.<br />

The brothers, who sometimes<br />

hire three helpers, begin early in<br />

th,~ morning and try to finish by<br />

noon.<br />

"When we're shearing, we usu<strong>al</strong>ly<br />

try to get five to six hours in<br />

each day,~ Bob Handley, a 62-yearold<br />

retired teacher, said. "Then<br />

when it gets a little cooler, you can<br />

put in a full day's work because<br />

there's <strong>al</strong>ways something to do."<br />

The Handleys grow some white<br />

pines, but the majority of their<br />

24,000 trees are French blue<br />

Saotch pines native to the Pyre·<br />

nees Mountains. They sold 1,000<br />

trees last winter for $23 each.<br />

"(French pines) are use to cold<br />

dry winters and hot dry summera<br />

so they do well in Iowa," Bob Han·<br />

dley said.<br />

Although their trees appear to<br />

relish the 90-degree heat, the Handleys<br />

do not.<br />

"It has seemed hotter this year<br />

and more humid than in the past,"<br />

Bob Handley said.<br />

In addition to shearing, the<br />

Handleys mow between the trees,<br />

contract to stores, order supplies<br />

aIld cut dead and large trees.<br />

While working they <strong>al</strong>so see a<br />

variety of· wildlife, some of which<br />

are a nuisance. Terry Handley said<br />

deer rub their antlers on the white<br />

pines and often kill the trees.<br />

"But the other day I spotted a<br />

lBush not known for<br />

his batting average<br />

L PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - As a<br />

first baseman for Y<strong>al</strong>e, George<br />

,Bush was known for his smooth<br />

fielding and leadership, not for his<br />

bat.<br />

: Nonetheless, the former presi­<br />

~ent was inducted - <strong>al</strong>ong with<br />

:eight others - into the Maine<br />

IBaseb<strong>al</strong>l H<strong>al</strong>l of Fame on Sunday.<br />

trhe state's most famous summer<br />

hsident used to play summers for<br />

~e Kennebunk Collegians, a group<br />

• f college and prep-school students<br />

'that played other Maine teams.<br />

: While a Y<strong>al</strong>e student, Bush<br />

~layed in two college World Series<br />

~n 1947 and 1948. He went 3·for-5<br />

~ a 1948 game against North Car­<br />

~lina, hitting a double, a triple and<br />

~icki ng up three RBIs. And he<br />

,smacked a home run against Con­<br />

:necticut the Bame year.<br />

I Displays of hitting might were<br />

Tare for Bush, who hit .215 in his<br />

:three seasons for Y<strong>al</strong>e.<br />

: Bush still eJijoys the game as a<br />

I pectator. .<br />

I "I find it tot<strong>al</strong>ly relaxing to<br />

~atch," he said. "I know the game<br />

,:and I love it."<br />

: Assocblled 1'r8.<br />

former president George Bush<br />

Is inducted into the Maine<br />

Jlaseb<strong>al</strong>l H<strong>al</strong>l of Fame Sunday.<br />

frilllk Miller/The Daily Iowan<br />

Terry (above, left) and Bob Handley<br />

stand among more than<br />

20,000 pine· trees on their farm.<br />

Terry Handley (right) uses a<br />

razor-sharp knife to shape what<br />

will become one of this year's<br />

Christmas trees. The brothers<br />

have been growing trees on their<br />

farm for nearly 20 years since<br />

Bob came up with the idea while<br />

working as a school teacher in<br />

C<strong>al</strong>ifornia. Both agree the 365-<br />

day-a-year job comes with <strong>al</strong>l<br />

types of difficulties ranging from<br />

uncooperative weather to hungry<br />

deer that destroy v<strong>al</strong>uable trees.<br />

little tiny fawn, and they're beautiful<br />

creatures," Bob Handley said.<br />

"We've <strong>al</strong>so seen peregrine f<strong>al</strong>cons<br />

that fly down from Cedar Rapids,<br />

eagles, wild turkeys and rabbits."<br />

Although he enjoys nature, Bob<br />

Handley's favorite aspect of his job<br />

Associated Press<br />

Mujibur Rahman, right, and Sirajullslam wave to their fans Friday<br />

near San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge after finishing their seg·<br />

ment for the "Late Show with David Letterman." Mujibur and Sirajul<br />

hit San Francisco as the iast stop on their four-week cross·<br />

country tour for Letterman's show.<br />

Winfrey: favorite<br />

TV person<strong>al</strong>ity<br />

NEW YORK (AP) - Remember<br />

t<strong>al</strong>k shows? What people used to<br />

watch before O.J.? An annu<strong>al</strong> Harris<br />

poll found that Oprah Winfrey<br />

is the most popular host, though<br />

David Letterman is on the<br />

upswing.<br />

In .the nation<strong>al</strong> telephone poll<br />

released for today, 27 pe~ent said<br />

Winfrey was the one they most like<br />

to watch. It was the third year in a<br />

row she led the list.<br />

Letterman jumped from fifth to<br />

second place with 15 percent, up<br />

from 8 percent last year, even<br />

though more television person<strong>al</strong>ities<br />

were included this year.<br />

The daytime duo of Regis Philbin<br />

and Kathie Lee Gifford got 7 percent<br />

to rank third. But they virtu<strong>al</strong>ly<br />

tied with Phil Donahue, Jay<br />

Leno and Ted Koppel at 6 percent<br />

and Ger<strong>al</strong>do Rivera and Montel<br />

Williams at 5 percent.<br />

Artist changes mind<br />

about Cobain statue<br />

ABERDEEN, Wash. (AP) - Nevermind.<br />

Artist Randi Hubbard says she<br />

won't display the larger than lifesize<br />

statue of the late Kurt Cobain<br />

in a city park after <strong>al</strong>l because it<br />

caused too much controversy. Shell<br />

sell it instead.<br />

Cobain, who grew up in this logging<br />

town, committed suicide in<br />

April at his Seattle home at age 27.<br />

is meeting people at Christmas<br />

time. And the brothers agreed that<br />

the least enjoyable part of thea job<br />

is shearing in the summer.<br />

The brothers said raising Christ·<br />

mas trees is a year-round commitment<br />

and knowing the market is<br />

essenti<strong>al</strong> for anyone planning to<br />

begin a tree farm.<br />

"Know the market and don't<br />

plant more than your wife can<br />

take care of," 'Jerry Handley said.<br />

The guitarist for the group Nirvana<br />

helped bring grunge rock to<br />

internation<strong>al</strong> popularity with the<br />

<strong>al</strong>bum Nevermind, featuring the<br />

hit "Smells Like Teen Spirit."<br />

Among those who objected to the<br />

5·foot-6-inch, 600-pound concrete<br />

statue was Nirvana bassist Kris<br />

Novo~eJic, who said he'd knock it<br />

down if it's erected in the park.<br />

N ovoselic said Cobain would have<br />

hated the statue.<br />

Woodstock guitarist<br />

sues for misuse of<br />

'Freedom'<br />

NEW YORK (AP) - Richie<br />

Havens says Time·Warner doesn't<br />

have the freedom to make millions<br />

from his appearance in the movie<br />

"'Woodstock."<br />

He filed a $50 million lawsuit in<br />

feder<strong>al</strong> court, claiming the media<br />

giant violated copyright and civil<br />

rights laws by not getting his permission,<br />

the New York Post4iteported<br />

Saturday.<br />

Havens 1lpened the legendary<br />

music festiv<strong>al</strong> in 1969 with his guitar-strumming<br />

hit "Freedom." The<br />

movie and soundtrack of the concert<br />

went on to reap millions for Time­<br />

Warner.<br />

Jay Gerber, a lawyer for Time­<br />

Warner, disputed the claims, saying<br />

the company has a contract signed<br />

by Havens. "Mr. Havens has been<br />

getting roy<strong>al</strong>ty checks for more<br />

than 24 years," he told the Post.<br />

Havens' lawyer, Jacques Catafago,<br />

said the contract isn't v<strong>al</strong>id.<br />

Richie Havens<br />

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Til E 1>:\1 LY I()\\·. \:\f IOWA c/1Y'!-J MORNIN(; NEW,'PAPER VOLLJMf 12" , NUMBER 2(J<br />

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•<br />

.<br />

I:<br />

I •<br />

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I<br />

Ma<br />

ThE<br />

V<br />

at<br />

cau<br />

er,<br />

con<br />

th~<br />

me<br />

din<br />

1<br />

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add<br />

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ATMOSPHERE ENJOYED<br />

Diners pleased by outdoor setting<br />

Mary Geraghty<br />

The Daily Iowan<br />

While the heat and humidity of<br />

a typic<strong>al</strong> Iowa summer often<br />

cause loc<strong>al</strong> residents to seek cool·<br />

er, drier atmospheres inside air·<br />

conditioned buildings, there are<br />

those who will brave the elements<br />

for the simple pleasure of<br />

dining outdoors.<br />

Loc<strong>al</strong> restaurant owners agree<br />

that <strong>al</strong>fresco dining is a positive<br />

addition to their establishments<br />

and said customers enjoy the<br />

opportunity to spend time outdoors.<br />

"I think it's a nice addition to<br />

Iowa City dining," Kathy Jones,<br />

owner of Season's Best Restaurant<br />

and Bar, 325 E. Washington<br />

St., said. "It gives it a little more<br />

of an internation<strong>al</strong> flare."<br />

Season's Best has six four·person<br />

tables available in front of<br />

the restaurant, some of which<br />

are shaded by the porch of the<br />

Commerce Center.<br />

With overhead awnings that<br />

can be rolled back for star-gazing<br />

at night, outdoor music and lighting,<br />

and a garden full of color <strong>al</strong>l<br />

summer, Faye Swift, owner of<br />

Sluggers Sports Bar and Grill,<br />

Cor<strong>al</strong>ville, said her patio has<br />

become quite popular since she<br />

opened it four years ago.<br />

"When customers c<strong>al</strong>l for reservations,<br />

they request it <strong>al</strong>l the<br />

time,· she said. "People do wait<br />

because it is preferred seating."<br />

Open from about April to October,<br />

Swift said customers are<br />

often reluctant to admit when it<br />

has gotten too chilly for patio<br />

dining.<br />

"People look forward to it in<br />

spring because it's a definite sign<br />

that winter is over," she said.<br />

"There are <strong>al</strong>so die·hards who<br />

like to sit out there until the bitter<br />

end."<br />

Often the weather can throw a<br />

wrench into the plans of outdoor<br />

diners. Anything from extreme<br />

heat to endless days of rain can<br />

put a damper on outdoor busi·<br />

ness.<br />

Frank Miller/The Daily Iowan<br />

Barbara Meyer eats her breakfast outside The Cottage restaurant,<br />

14 S. Linn St. Origin<strong>al</strong>ly from Dubuque, she recently completed<br />

her master of arts in music, speci<strong>al</strong>izing in folk music, and plans<br />

to leave Iowa City for Minneapolis or New York to work in music<strong>al</strong><br />

theater or opera. Along with the fresh air and sunshine, being<br />

able to watch people on the street is a large part of why she<br />

prefers to eat outdoors.<br />

"We have had more people sit<br />

out there in the past month than<br />

we had <strong>al</strong>l last summer," Jones<br />

said.<br />

Daytime heat causes most diners<br />

to remain inside for lunch,<br />

but Jones said as temperatures<br />

drop in the evenings, more customers<br />

are likely to request a<br />

table outside.<br />

However, when the weather<br />

cooperates, she said people take<br />

the opportunity to extend me<strong>al</strong><br />

times and she doesn't mind customers<br />

staying.<br />

"It's hard to begrudge someone<br />

sitting and having a nice afternoon,"<br />

Jones said. "We anticipate<br />

people will sit longer outdoors."<br />

Diana Smith, an employee at<br />

The Cottage, 14 S. Linn St., said<br />

outdoor dining is 80 popular that<br />

customers will set up their own<br />

tables if employees haven't done<br />

so.<br />

"If the weather changes, customers<br />

actu<strong>al</strong>ly come in and take<br />

the tables out themselves," she<br />

said. "People very much enjoy<br />

that we have outside seating."<br />

Smith said <strong>al</strong>though the<br />

restaurant uses its china mugs<br />

for hot beverages served outside,<br />

there have not been problems<br />

with lost, stolen or broken mugs.<br />

"Our customers are helpful in<br />

that they usu<strong>al</strong>ly bring things<br />

back in," she said.<br />

VI senior Amy Metc<strong>al</strong>f frequently<br />

dines <strong>al</strong>fresco in Iowa<br />

City. She said eating outdoors<br />

tot<strong>al</strong>ly changes the restaurant<br />

atmosphere and makes her feel<br />

less distracted by other people.<br />

"I love eating outside," she<br />

said. "I like the fresh air and the<br />

breeze. And at night it is very<br />

romantic - the candle flickers."<br />

Metro & Iowa<br />

The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 11 , 1994 - 3<br />

Practice blaze destroys house ;<br />

Liza Roche<br />

The Daily Iowan<br />

Fire tore through an abandoned<br />

home at the comer of Fifth Street<br />

and Second Avenue in Cor<strong>al</strong>ville<br />

Sunday, but don't be <strong>al</strong>armed - it<br />

was a practice session involving an<br />

estimated 45 firefighters from area<br />

tire departments.<br />

"This is the best training you'll<br />

ever find," said Cor<strong>al</strong>ville Fire<br />

Department Chief Gary Kinsinger.<br />

The session began at 7 a.m.<br />

when the firefighters performed<br />

rescue drills in an artifici<strong>al</strong>ly<br />

smoke-filled house. In the smoke,<br />

which is similar to that used in<br />

theater productions, firefighters<br />

LEGAL MATTERS<br />

POLICE<br />

Nils W. Gottreu, 22, 625 S. Dodge St.,<br />

Apt. 51; was charged with possession of<br />

an open container and public intoxica·<br />

tion in the ]00 block of Ginton Street on<br />

July 10 at 12:01 a.m.<br />

James J. Grabowy, 21, 25 Lincoln<br />

Ave., Apt. 17, was charged with public<br />

intoxication in the ]00 block of Clinton<br />

Street on July 10 at 12:01 a.m.<br />

Geoffrey E. Goin, 19, 308 S. Gilbert<br />

St., Apt. 1113, was charged with keeping<br />

a disorderly house at 308 S. Gilbert St.<br />

on July 10 at 1 :10 a.m.<br />

Kevin l. Henkens, 22, 625 s. Dodge<br />

St., Apt. 5, was charged with driving<br />

under suspension in the 700 block of<br />

South Dodge Street on July 10 at 1 :34<br />

a.m.<br />

Doug R. Lynk, 33, 900 W. Benton St.,<br />

Apt. ]04C, was charged with domestic<br />

assault (serious) at 900 W. Benton SI. bn<br />

July 10 at 1 :30 a.m.<br />

David S. Sheronick, 29, Cedar Rapids,<br />

was charged with operating while intoxi·<br />

cated at the corner of linn Street and<br />

Iowa Avenue on July 10 at 12:36 a.m.<br />

Anthony S. Flatley, 23, Marion, was<br />

charged with operating while intoxicated<br />

at the corner of Burlington and Dubuque<br />

streets on July 10 at 1 :48 a.m.<br />

Christopher Sonnenburg, 20, 801 S.<br />

Gilbert 51., Apt. 305, was ch~rged with<br />

operating while intoxicated in the 500<br />

block of South Gilbert Street on July 9 at<br />

2:09a.m.<br />

Michael Manganiello, 23, 2510<br />

Bartelt Road, Apt. 2A, was charged with<br />

operating while intoxicated at the corner<br />

of Mormon Trek Boulevard and Bartelt<br />

searched for a ISO-pound "Rescue<br />

Randy" dummy that was hid inside<br />

the house.<br />

Sm<strong>al</strong>l fires were then set<br />

throughout the house so firefighters<br />

could practice bringing them<br />

under control.<br />

When those drills ended just<br />

before 3 p.m., the house was completely<br />

set ablaze so firefighters<br />

could practice on a larger fire.<br />

The firefighters used foam to<br />

fight the blaze and tried to isolate<br />

it from other areas as well as control<br />

the direction in which the<br />

house would eventu<strong>al</strong>ly collapse.<br />

Keota fireman Richard Ellis<br />

described the day as "hot.·<br />

"Usu<strong>al</strong>ly you creep down and<br />

Road on July 9 at 2:38 a.m.<br />

Vaugn A. Jaspers, 24, Cor<strong>al</strong>ville, was<br />

charged with operating while intoxicated<br />

at the corner of Jefferson and Madison<br />

streets on July 9 at 1 :18 a.m.<br />

Vance L. Cooper, 35, 2312 Muscatine<br />

Ave., Apt. 8E, was charged with driving<br />

under revocation and operating while<br />

intoxicated in the :noo block of Musca·<br />

tine Avenue on July 9 at 4:35 a.m.<br />

Shane M. Coffmann, 20, 710 Westgate<br />

St., Apt. 63, was charged with driving<br />

under suspension in the 1000 block<br />

of Highland Drive on July 9 at 4:19p.m.<br />

George E. Siracy, 30, Cedar Rapids,<br />

was charged with public intoxication in<br />

the 100 block of East College Street on<br />

July 9 at 11 :01 p.m.<br />

William E. Davis Jr., 28, Cor<strong>al</strong>ville,<br />

was charged with public intoxication at<br />

the corner of Jefferson and Capitol streets<br />

on July 9 at 9:26 p.m.<br />

James P. Graham, 51, 415 S. Van<br />

Buren St., was charged with possession<br />

of an open container in the 300 block of<br />

East Burlington Street on July 9 at 5:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Weekend Bar Tab<br />

Vito's, 118 E. College St., had one<br />

patron charged with possession of <strong>al</strong>cohol<br />

under the leg<strong>al</strong> age. .<br />

COURTS<br />

Magistrate<br />

Compiled by Liza Roche<br />

Public intoxication - Ted M. Voerding,<br />

331 N. Gibert St., fined $25.<br />

The above fines do not include surcharges<br />

or court costs.<br />

District<br />

stay on your hands and knees, but ~<br />

today we stood up and felt what it's<br />

like to be in SOO-to-700 degree I<br />

heat," he said.<br />

Neil Trott of First Avenue ParV<br />

nership donated the house. He said ..<br />

the land the structure sits on is '<br />

scheduled to be incorporated into<br />

the expanding Riverview Square"<br />

this f<strong>al</strong>l or winter. "<br />

Trott said the practice session'"<br />

was mutu<strong>al</strong>ly benefici<strong>al</strong> because he .­<br />

needed to get rid of the structure<br />

and loc<strong>al</strong> firefighters needed a<br />

practice site.<br />

A crowd of 80 lined neighboring<br />

lawns and parking lots throughout"<br />

the day to watch the blaze. '<br />

OWl - Michael W. Hiatt, North Lib· •<br />

erty, preliminary hearing set for July 28 at !;<br />

2 p.m.; Traci R. Miller, 98 Erobi Lane, ~<br />

preliminary hearing set for July 28 at 2<br />

p.m.<br />

Assault causing injury - Eldon D. ~<br />

O'leary, Cor<strong>al</strong>ville, preliminary hearing •<br />

set for July 28 at 2 p.m.<br />

'<br />

Forgery, two counts - Bradley R'. "<br />

Askvig, address unknown, preliminary '<br />

hearing set for July 18 at 2 p.m.<br />

Third.degree burglary - Aaron t ':<br />

Davidson, Mount Vernon, preliminary <<br />

hearing set for July 28 at 2 p.m.; Jason'"<br />

M. Kidder, Cedar Rapids, preliminary "<br />

hearing set for July 18 at 2 p.m. •<br />

Compiled by Amanda Morton<br />

CALENDAR<br />

TODAY'S EVENTS<br />

• Iowa City Chorus -<br />

.,<br />

.<br />

--0'<br />

Sweet Adelines<br />

Internation<strong>al</strong> will hold rehears<strong>al</strong>s at "<br />

the Robert A. Lee Recreation Center, 220<br />

S. Gilbert St., at 7:30 p.m.<br />

Radio<br />

• KSUI (FM 91.n Recordin~ by eight"<br />

of the nine music directors to have held ',­<br />

the post with the Chicago Symphony ­<br />

Orchestra, 7 p.m.<br />

• WSUI (AM 910) Speaker's Corner :;<br />

with David Brower, chairman of the _<br />

Earth Island Institute, speaking on ·CPR ..<br />

for the Earth," noon; Soundings with hiSc..<br />

torian Conor Cruise O'Brien discussing<br />

his book "God Land,' 8 p.m.<br />

Bijou<br />

Straight Out of Brooklyn (1991), 7 p.m..-.­<br />

Autumn Sonata (1978),8:45 p.m.<br />

Office Hours:<br />

Mon.·Frl. 8 am to 9 pm<br />

Saturday 8 am to 5 pm<br />

Sunday Noon to 5 pm<br />

W<strong>al</strong>k-in service as available<br />

or c<strong>al</strong>l for an appointment<br />

337-6226<br />

River City<br />

Dent<strong>al</strong> Care®<br />

GENERAL DENTISTRY<br />

Bradford Stiles, D.D.S.<br />

& Associates<br />

• Insurance Welcome<br />

• Park/Bus Shop<br />

ecsc<br />

Conveniently located across<br />

from Old Capitol Center<br />

228 s. eli nton<br />

''Without MacintosH<br />

I would never have<br />

gotten my pa rs<br />

and projects<br />

on time!"<br />

Where's<br />

• going?<br />

Haven't you heard •••<br />

Ragbrai is July 24<br />

and Iowa City Spoke & SId has FREE<br />

Ragbrai chedc-ups on any bike<br />

• 20% off <strong>al</strong>l helmets<br />

15% off <strong>al</strong>l clothing • $35 Tune-ups<br />

IOWA CITY'S ALTERNATIVE<br />

BICYCLE SHOP<br />

Hours:<br />

Mon. " TIIu,.: ........................... 9:30-8:00<br />

TUII., Wid. & Fri.: .................... 9:30-6:00<br />

s.t.: .......... , ............ ............... 9:30·5:00<br />

Sun.: .................................... 12:00·5:00<br />

700 S. Dubuque. 338·6909<br />

IOWA CITY<br />

SPOKE<br />

& SKI<br />

AmyJeffrey<br />

U of I Senior in<br />

Communications<br />

"Cut and paste functions on the Mac are<br />

lifesavers as they enable me to write and re-write<br />

my papers while sitting in front of the computer.<br />

I've previously used a Mac to type scripts for a<br />

production course, to write many tenn papers,<br />

and to complete projects for sever<strong>al</strong> business and<br />

statistics classes.<br />

I would purchase a Macintosh because it ~<br />

user-friendly and helpful in writing papers and<br />

finishing projects.<br />

The Mac ~ easy to use, it takes no time at <strong>al</strong>l to<br />

learn and there are a large variety of applications<br />

to choose from. Once you've tried a Macintosh,<br />

you will never want to switch to another<br />

computer. "<br />

Step 1: C<strong>al</strong>l the Person<strong>al</strong> Computing Support Center at 335-5454 for more information<br />

Step 2: Place your order at the Person<strong>al</strong> Computing Support Center, 229 lindquist Center.<br />

Step 3: Get the power to be your best at Iowa!<br />

Wcltch for the Miao Computer Fair October 4 at the IMU.<br />

Ttlls offer is av<strong>al</strong>labl .. 10 U of I slUdents, facully. staff and depanrnenls.<br />

Eligible Individu<strong>al</strong>s mey purchase one Apple Macintosh computer. one printer and one Newton~ person<strong>al</strong> digit<strong>al</strong> assistant every year.<br />

Macintosh I. a regltlered trademar1< of AppI. Computer. InJ. This ad Is peld fO( by App~ ComP


4 - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 11 , 1994<br />

.\ITI fAT/ON Df,\-1ANf).\ ACT/ON<br />

Strict gun control needed<br />

,<br />

J n November 1991, Gang Lu, a UI graduate student who was<br />

tsgruntled after being denied a physics award, shot and killed<br />

hree professors, a graduate student, an administrator, left<br />

another student permanently par<strong>al</strong>yzed and then killed him­<br />

+elf. Although it was the man, not the gun, which was responsi­<br />

~le for this act, there is no way the man could have inflicted so<br />

fluch damage in so little time had he used any other weapon.<br />

The theory behind the Second Amendment was that an armed<br />

,opulace would prohibit the government from abusing the<br />

rights of its citizens. However, the Constitution was written<br />

~fore the United States' was a superpower with an arsen<strong>al</strong> of<br />

ianks, submarines, fighter jets and nuclear weapons. Suffice it<br />

k say that the power imb<strong>al</strong>ance between the American military<br />

lnd the average citizen today is so great that John Doe on the<br />

~rch with his shotgun is no longer a threat to the government.<br />

: Most Americans who own guns dOJi't see themselves as watch-<br />

40gs of the government anyway; they own guns because they<br />

~lieve having one is necessary for person<strong>al</strong> protection. This is<br />

f<strong>al</strong>lacious thinking, however, because statistics have proven<br />

,gain and again that gun ownership does not stop violence - it<br />

fsc<strong>al</strong>ates it.<br />

• I<br />

• The framers of the Constitution were well-intentioned.<br />

But circumstances have changed drastic<strong>al</strong>ly from the<br />

: days of muskets and minutemen.<br />

. •<br />

: The fact is, having a gun in your home triples your chances of<br />

~eing killed there. If the gun is kept unloaded in a locked met<strong>al</strong><br />

t>ox and the ammunition kept in a separate locked box, its utili­<br />

'y as a means of protection is limited since one cannot immediately<br />

reach for it in the middle of the night.<br />

: Keeping a gun in the home for person<strong>al</strong> protection is irra­<br />

'ion<strong>al</strong>, based not on a fear of death, but rather on a need for<br />

' ontrol, on a fear that someone else will get the better of you.<br />

tor if it is death that is worrying, the numbers are quite clear:<br />

Every time a gun is used for self-defense, it is used 43 times to<br />

~use an accident<strong>al</strong> death, a suicide or a crimin<strong>al</strong> homicide.<br />

~ For these reasons, the manufacture and s<strong>al</strong>e of <strong>al</strong>l assault<br />

tilles, exploding ammunition, met<strong>al</strong>-piercing bullets, and other<br />

forms of guns and ammunition, which have no purpose other<br />

~han widespread carnage, should be illeg<strong>al</strong>. Shotguns and rifles<br />

should be <strong>al</strong>lowed for hunting purposes, <strong>al</strong>though storing them<br />

either loaded or in an unlocked box should be illeg<strong>al</strong> in a house<br />

Where there are children. Handguns should be leg<strong>al</strong> for target<br />

practice only with a requirement that <strong>al</strong>l weapons be stored at<br />

.hooting clubs and not <strong>al</strong>lowed to leave the premises.<br />

The framers of the Constitution were well-intentioned. But<br />

Hrcumstances have changed drastic<strong>al</strong>ly from the days of mus­<br />

.,ets and minutemen. Today, a person is fat<strong>al</strong>ly shot every 14<br />

tninutes; a child dies from a gunshot wound every two hours.<br />

fhe surgeon gener<strong>al</strong> has c<strong>al</strong>led gun violence "one of the leading<br />

public he<strong>al</strong>th issues in America." She's right. Something must<br />

pe done.<br />

I ,<br />

I<br />

t<br />

'*"4"4":_<br />

Laura Fokkenna<br />

Editori<strong>al</strong> Writer<br />

Viewpoints<br />

Foc<strong>al</strong> point:<br />

gun control<br />

Across the United States in recent years, a perception<br />

has emerged that society is spinning violently<br />

out of control. Since many crimes involve<br />

firearms, the gun control debate has. become<br />

increasingly heated as advocates and opponents<br />

make the Second Amendment a controversi<strong>al</strong><br />

flashpoint. Today, four DI Viewpoints writers<br />

examine the issue in detail.<br />

Source: Handgun Control, The Economist<br />

Derick LaVinefThe Daily Iowan<br />

"A'I"ltltilt._<br />

'1I4ilt'li'tfJ~6'''t''!ij'ij'' III<br />

Putting the right in context<br />

"A .<br />

well regulated militia, being necessary to the secunty of a<br />

free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, sh<strong>al</strong>l not<br />

be infringed."<br />

So says the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The<br />

words are often quoted in one form or another by those opposing<br />

any type of firearm control or regulation. A few of these words -<br />

apparently there wasn't enough space for <strong>al</strong>l of them - are<br />

carved in the stone above the headquarters door of the Nation<strong>al</strong><br />

Rife Association in Washington, D.C.<br />

NRA members and those opposing <strong>al</strong>l efforts to control the proliferation<br />

of firearms seem to think that their carved-in-stone version<br />

of the Second Amendment should remain that way - carved<br />

in stone.<br />

As with any right, a delicate b<strong>al</strong>ance must be struck<br />

between the rights of the individu<strong>al</strong> and the safety of a<br />

society.<br />

The Constitution has been c<strong>al</strong>led a living document because of<br />

its ability to be changed, adapted and amended. In the nearly 203<br />

years since the Bill of Rights was ratified, more than two-thirds<br />

of the 10 amendments have been <strong>al</strong>tered or modified through<br />

interpretation, including the right to bear arms.<br />

Through laws passed by Congress and the decisions of the<br />

Supreme Court, the government has chipped away at our rights<br />

and placed limits on what we can leg<strong>al</strong>ly read and say. Over the<br />

years, lawmakers and judges have restricted our right to be<br />

secure in our homes or w<strong>al</strong>king down the street. When a court<br />

<strong>al</strong>lows the admission of blood and breath tests, we are compelled<br />

to be witnesses against ourselves.<br />

Private property, in the form of easements, is taken away from<br />

homeowners without just compensation - an exact violation of<br />

the Constitution that has been upheld in the courts.<br />

Some of the amendments have been more tightly or more loosely<br />

interpreted than others. It is well past time for lawmakers W<br />

more tightly interpret the Second Amendment.<br />

Whether we agree or not, some of us have given up rights 80<br />

that <strong>al</strong>l of us may be safer in society. We <strong>al</strong>l face the possibility of<br />

leg<strong>al</strong>, warrantless searches in the name of law and order. So too<br />

must we <strong>al</strong>l face the possibility of background checks and waiting<br />

periods when we seek to leg<strong>al</strong>ly purchase a gun.<br />

We have given up, or have had taken, some of our rights to buy<br />

and own arms, but the handgun murder rate continues to<br />

increase. As a result, greater measures still must be taken to prevent<br />

the illeg<strong>al</strong> purchase and use of guns. We must consider the<br />

registration of every gun produced or imported in the United<br />

States. Guns could be better traced if they were registered<br />

through producers rather than purchasers.<br />

As with any right, a delicate b<strong>al</strong>ance must be struck between<br />

the rights of the individu<strong>al</strong> and the safety of a society. Other constitution<strong>al</strong>ly<br />

protected rights have been restricted for the common<br />

good; for society's sake, the Second Amendment rights of gun<br />

owners - <strong>al</strong>l gun owners, law abiding and law breaking - must<br />

be restricted further as well.<br />

Jim Meisner<br />

Editori<strong>al</strong> Writer<br />

l<br />

~oci<strong>al</strong> renew<strong>al</strong> needed above <strong>al</strong>l Constitution protects right to arms<br />

The gun con·<br />

trol debate is<br />

full of dubious<br />

logic. I person<strong>al</strong>ly<br />

do not find<br />

the right to<br />

keep and bear<br />

arms especi<strong>al</strong>ly<br />

worth preserving.<br />

Still, we<br />

should examine<br />

the reasons we<br />

e given for placing speci<strong>al</strong> conrols<br />

on guns. The potenti<strong>al</strong> of the<br />

to kill is easily enough under­<br />

, but I don't Bee anyone comg<br />

after my impressive collection<br />

f kitchen cutlery -<br />

any piece of<br />

hich in the wrong hands could<br />

urn into an equ<strong>al</strong>ly deadly<br />

eapon.<br />

"I need statistics," I told a friend<br />

after confessing ambiv<strong>al</strong>ence about<br />

~ontrol measures. "Something that<br />

ells me whether gun deaths are<br />

.ctu<strong>al</strong>ly reduced by gun control or<br />

not. I need to know ifit works."<br />

The friend said, "Go to Europe.<br />

1hat's <strong>al</strong>l you need to tell you gun<br />

fontrol works." A pithy observation,<br />

but on examination too weak<br />

10 hang my hat on.<br />

On the other side we hear from<br />

loy<strong>al</strong> Sports Afield types, whose<br />

lOgic is no better. "Guos are neu­<br />

F<strong>al</strong>," they say. "They neither cause<br />

nor deter crime. It is how some<br />

heople choose to handle guns that<br />

brings us grief." They go on to tout<br />

the respect for guns cultivated by<br />

familiarity and end with, "What<br />

)ome c<strong>al</strong>l the gun problem is a pea­<br />

'PIe problem, not a gun problem at<br />

.an."<br />

• This crowd conveniently ignores<br />

~he mystique of guns, their speci<strong>al</strong><br />

place in American lore. Guns are<br />

An American passion. Their power<br />

\0 put any garden-variety nerd on<br />

the cover of Time magazine makes<br />

1hem uniquely compelling.<br />

I<br />

So what to do with <strong>al</strong>l of America's<br />

seductive guns. Guns kill people.<br />

Of that we can be sure. More<br />

insidious is the surre<strong>al</strong> distance<br />

guns open up between killer and<br />

killed. The remove is first physic<strong>al</strong>,<br />

yet because physic<strong>al</strong> confrontation<br />

with others most <strong>al</strong>ways carries<br />

emotion<strong>al</strong> consequences, an emotion<strong>al</strong><br />

distance gapes between gun<br />

holder and gun victim as well. This<br />

distance is as cold and still as the<br />

dead bodies that have f<strong>al</strong>len in it.<br />

The unique cruelty of gun killings<br />

gives rise to the powerful public<br />

demand for action.<br />

Diminishing the cultur<strong>al</strong><br />

potency of the gun is the<br />

only way to stop its use as<br />

a murder weapon.<br />

But legislation geared to control<br />

cultur<strong>al</strong> forces indifferent to the<br />

law does not work. I c<strong>al</strong>l it placebo<br />

legislation, and it often exacerbates<br />

our woes even as it soothes our<br />

minds. Laws written in the hysteria<br />

of Nancy Reagan's "just say no"<br />

to drugs campaign are prime examples,<br />

especi<strong>al</strong>ly the minimum sen·<br />

tencing laws. These required jail<br />

terms for most nonviolent drug<br />

offenses. In turn, pressures on an<br />

overcrowded prison system cause<br />

the release of violent crimin<strong>al</strong>s to<br />

make room for pot heads.<br />

New York City and Washington,<br />

D.C., have the toughest anti-gun<br />

laws in America. They <strong>al</strong>so have<br />

the highest crime rates, the highest<br />

murder rates, the largest number<br />

of illeg<strong>al</strong> guns on the streets in<br />

the hands of crimin<strong>al</strong>s and the<br />

greatest array of illeg<strong>al</strong> weapons<br />

available on the black market. So<br />

much for gun "contro!."<br />

Those are just some reasons to<br />

w<strong>al</strong>k rather than stampede toward<br />

gun control legislation. Others<br />

-I.fTTfRS POlICY. Leite .. to the editor must be signed and must Indude the writer's address and<br />

phone number for verifICation. Lette .. should not exceed 0400 words. The Daily lowlII reserves the<br />

right to edit lor length and darity. The D<strong>al</strong>ly Iowan will publW, only One letter pel author per<br />

month.<br />

-OPINKlNS expressed on the VoewpoIhlS Pages 011!te Daily lowlII are those 01 the signed autho ...<br />

1M Daily Iowan, ~ a nonprofit corporation, ~ not express opinions on these matters.<br />

-"UEST OPINIONS are articles on current Issues written by reade .. of The D<strong>al</strong>ly Iowan. The VI<br />

welcomes ~ opinions; submissions should be typed and signed, and should not exceed 750<br />

words in Jensth. A brief biography should accompoany <strong>al</strong>l submissions.<br />

The Daily Iowan reserves the right to ed~ for lenfh, s1yIe and darity.<br />

include the following facts (figures<br />

from a survey by Dr. Gary Kleck,<br />

author o( "Point Blank: Guns and<br />

Violence in America"):<br />

• Firearms are used up to 2.5<br />

million times each year in acts of<br />

defense against crimin<strong>al</strong> threat.<br />

• Fifty-four percent of these<br />

defenses involve a verb<strong>al</strong> reference<br />

to the gun.<br />

• Forty-seven percent involved<br />

pointing the gun at the crimin<strong>al</strong>.<br />

• Fourteen percent involved firing<br />

the gun "at" crimin<strong>al</strong>s with<br />

intent to hit them.<br />

• Eight percent involved the<br />

wounding or killing of an assailant.<br />

Those figures involve only actu<strong>al</strong><br />

crime threats (not noises heard in<br />

back yards for which no cause is<br />

found). Law enforcement, security<br />

and military use is excluded.<br />

There is no doubt that having<br />

200 million fireanns at large in the<br />

United States is insane when we<br />

purport to be civilized. Seventy<br />

percent of Americans want stricter<br />

gun laws. But much more than legislation<br />

is needed to curb the violence<br />

and deaths.<br />

Guns attract because we made<br />

them sexy, just like we did cigarettes<br />

- through dressing up the<br />

grubby history of the gun in films,<br />

novels and t<strong>al</strong>l t<strong>al</strong>es told over<br />

campfires. Diminishing the cultur<strong>al</strong><br />

potency of the gun is the only<br />

way to stop its use as a murder<br />

weapon. That feat will require<br />

numerous collective gestures that<br />

reach beyond firearms restrictions.<br />

Daniel Patrick Moynihan's notion<br />

of high taxes on ammunition<br />

deserves a close look for starters.<br />

All gun use - the good, the bad<br />

and the ugly - feeds on the proliferation<br />

of guns in our mi4st.<br />

Among youth that proliferation is<br />

often based on reaching for a gun<br />

to earn minim<strong>al</strong> respect in hostile<br />

urban environments rife with<br />

racism, poverty and other dehumanizing<br />

factors.<br />

So goes the gun beat. Whether<br />

we love, hate or ignore them, we<br />

are as intimate with guns as we<br />

are with our own fantasies. Once<br />

we admit that, we may find keys to<br />

gun control that surpass impotent<br />

symbolism, hysteria and hypocrisy.<br />

Kim Painter1s column appears <strong>al</strong>ternate<br />

Mondays on the Viewpoints Pages .<br />

When t<strong>al</strong>king to most liber<strong>al</strong>s<br />

about the U.S. Constitution, I<br />

never cease to be amazed by the<br />

schizophrenia with which they<br />

approach the subject. On subjects<br />

like free speech and abortion<br />

rights, they desire the most<br />

expansive interpretation of the<br />

document; but on issues like the<br />

freedom of religion or the right to<br />

bear arms, they desire a highly<br />

restricted interpretation.<br />

Most often gun control advocates prefer to avoid<br />

the constitution<strong>al</strong> question in order to focus on the<br />

blood flowing through our streets and their desire to<br />

"do something." When pinned down and forced to<br />

discuss the Constitution, they invariably resort to a<br />

faux-strict constructionist argument that the Second<br />

Amendment only applies in the context of a "well<br />

regulated militia.»<br />

The simple fact of the matter is that by any<br />

reasonable reading of the Second Amendment,<br />

there is no constitution<strong>al</strong> authority<br />

to regulate the possession of arms by citizens<br />

of the United States.<br />

The full amendment reads like this: "A well regulated<br />

militia, being necessary to the security of a<br />

free State, the right of the people to keep and bear<br />

arms, sh<strong>al</strong>l not be infringed." Since gun control<br />

advocates want to apply a strict constructionist<br />

interpretation of the Second Amendment, let's take<br />

a look at the amendment clause by clause within the<br />

historic<strong>al</strong> context in which it was written.<br />

In the late 18th century, "a well regulated militia"<br />

meant that every able-bodied man was required to<br />

own an up-to-date firearm and a sufficient supply of<br />

ammunition. These were to be kept in working order<br />

and closely accessible in the man's house. Between<br />

certain ages, in most communities, the man was<br />

req!lired to be a member of the loc<strong>al</strong> militia and<br />

train as often as once a week.<br />

The meaning of the first clause of the Second<br />

Amendment in today's terms would mean that ablebodied<br />

men would be required to be part of the<br />

Nation<strong>al</strong> Guard and keep an M·16 assault rifle with<br />

sllver<strong>al</strong> loaded high-capacity magazines in their<br />

house.<br />

The second clause of the Second Amendment,<br />

"being necessary to the security of a free State," has<br />

two meanings. The new republic was dirt poor and<br />

felt threatened by many foreign enemies and some<br />

domestic. Because of this, it was necessary for the<br />

United States to produce a significant military force,<br />

but the treasury didn't have the money for a large<br />

standing army. A near univers<strong>al</strong> militia was the<br />

best answer.<br />

The second reason for this clause was the belief<br />

among many of the founders that periodic revolution<br />

was neCessary for the maintenance of freedom. I'm<br />

afraid I have to paraphrase, but Jefferson said<br />

something like, "The soil of liberty must be watered<br />

with the blood of kings and tyrants." They believed<br />

that governments <strong>al</strong>ways tried to encroach on the<br />

rights of their citizens, and a well-armed and militarily<br />

trained populace was the best guard against<br />

that encroachment and the best remedy for it. The<br />

founding fathers foresaw events like the Tianarunen<br />

Square massacre and planned that if the United<br />

States government acted that way, the people would<br />

have the means to rebel.<br />

The last two clauses of the Second Amendment<br />

are often what causes the most confusion: "the right<br />

of the people to keep and bear arms, sh<strong>al</strong>l not be I<br />

infringed. n Because of the comma between those two<br />

phrases, advocates of gun control argue that the<br />

phrase "sh<strong>al</strong>l not be infringed" does not apply to the<br />

phrase before it and, therefore, there must not be a<br />

right of every citizen to keep and bear arms.<br />

The question then becomes, to which clause of the<br />

Second Amendment does the phrase "sh<strong>al</strong>l not be<br />

infringed" belong. "A well regulated militia" - shaJI<br />

not be infringed? Maybe, "being necessary to the<br />

security of a free State" - sh<strong>al</strong>l not be infringed.<br />

Neither of those possibilities make any sense. The<br />

right which sh<strong>al</strong>l not be infringed is the right of the<br />

citizens to keep and bear arms.<br />

Of course, the constitution<strong>al</strong> argument<br />

does not bear on the efficacy of gun control-<br />

there are many good arguments on<br />

both sides of that question. However, for<br />

restrictions on firearms to be constitution<strong>al</strong>,<br />

the Constitution itself would have to be<br />

amended.<br />

The simple fact of the matter is that by any rea'<br />

sonable reading of the Second Amendment, there it<br />

no constitution<strong>al</strong> authority to regulate the posseesion<br />

ofanns by citizens of the United States.<br />

or course, the constitution<strong>al</strong> argument does not<br />

bear on the efficacy of gun control - there are many<br />

good arguments on both sides of that question. How'<br />

ever, for restrictions on fll'tlarms to be constitution<strong>al</strong>,<br />

the Constitution itself would have to be amended.<br />

Nevertheless, the liber<strong>al</strong> activists who dominated<br />

the courts for 30 years, and who now dominate the<br />

legislative branch, don't care a whit about what th~<br />

Constitution means or what the founders intended.<br />

They care about getting their own way. The Consti·<br />

tution matters ohly when it helps their cause.<br />

David Mastio's column appears <strong>al</strong>ternate Mondays on the<br />

Viewpoints Pages. .<br />

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Nation & World<br />

W't!ztll!III"diil1'kll""II;I'ICftll'It!.<br />

Wildfires die down in Colorado<br />

Robert Weller<br />

Associated Press<br />

GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colo. -<br />

Only occasion<strong>al</strong> puffs of white<br />

smoke rose from the steep, rocky<br />

slopes above town Sunday, remnants<br />

of the wildfire that killed 14<br />

firefighters last week. Residents<br />

and state offici<strong>al</strong>s gathered to<br />

remember their courage as the wildfires<br />

subsided.<br />

Survivors of the Prineville Interagency Hotshots firefighting crew<br />

embrace as they are met by family and friends after arriving at the<br />

Redmond, Ore., airport Friday. Nine of their comrades were killed in<br />

a firestorm near Glenwood Springs, Colo., Wednesday.<br />

An outdoor memori<strong>al</strong> service in a<br />

loc<strong>al</strong> park was planned for the firefighters,<br />

members of an elite U.S.<br />

Forest Service team.<br />

The group was killed Wednesday<br />

when a sm<strong>al</strong>l forest fire on Storm<br />

King Mountain was whipped by<br />

winds into a major firestorm that<br />

covered 1,856 acres above this<br />

Rocky Mountain resort town.<br />

The fire was completely contained<br />

by Saturday night, surrounded by<br />

fire lines dug into the ground. An<br />

Army helicopter sssisted ground<br />

crews in putting out the remaining<br />

sm<strong>al</strong>l isolated blazes on Sunday.<br />

"We hope for control by Monday<br />

evening,· said fire command post<br />

spokesman Vern Schmitt.<br />

A week ago, h<strong>al</strong>f a dozen major<br />

wildfires were burning acr088 Colorado.<br />

As of Sunday, the Rocky<br />

Mountain Fire Coordination Center<br />

in Denver said only three sm<strong>al</strong>l new<br />

fires - <strong>al</strong>l under 20 acres - had<br />

been reported since Saturday.<br />

Two were in the White River<br />

Nation<strong>al</strong> Forest about 50 miles east<br />

of Glenwood Springs and a third<br />

was in the Pike Nation<strong>al</strong> Forest<br />

southwest of Denver.<br />

One of the fires in the White River<br />

forest was potenti<strong>al</strong>ly dangerous,<br />

authorities said. Forty extra firefighters<br />

were sent in to fight the 15-<br />

acre blaze near a large area of timber<br />

about 20 miles north of Vail.<br />

"It's one of those de<strong>al</strong>s that if we<br />

get the predicted winds it could<br />

grow fairly fast,· said White River<br />

fire management officer Phil Bowden.<br />

Hot dry windy weather was<br />

expected to continue across Colorado,<br />

said Cindy Metz, a center<br />

spokeswoman.<br />

Meanwhile, in Oregon, firefighters<br />

had to put aside their grief from<br />

the loss of their colleagues and<br />

return to the fire lines. Nine of the<br />

14 who died in the Colorado blaze<br />

were from a squad in Prineville,<br />

Ore.<br />

Safe areas are running out<br />

for Hutus as rebels advance<br />

Karin Davies<br />

Associated Press<br />

MUKINGO, Rwanda -<br />

The road<br />

to Rwanda's northwest border is<br />

choked with hundreds of thousands<br />

of Hutu8. They don't know where<br />

they are going or what they will<br />

find.<br />

They only know they are running<br />

out of places to hide from the 'JUtsi<br />

rebels they fear will kill them.<br />

By Sunday afternoon, a 25-milelong<br />

column of Hutu refugees<br />

stretched from Ruhengeri toward<br />

Gisenyi, the city on the Zairean<br />

border where the Hutu-dominated<br />

government has taken refuge.<br />

Lt. Col. Didier Bolelli, spokesman<br />

for the French humanitarian mission<br />

to Rwanda, estimated the<br />

number of Hutu refugees at<br />

300,000.<br />

Since April, the mainly 'JUtsi<br />

Rwandan Patriotic Front has<br />

marched west across two-thirds of<br />

the country, driving the Hutu population<br />

ahead of it. An estimated 3<br />

million people - out of a prewar<br />

population of more than 8 million<br />

- fled their homes to escape the<br />

fighting and the ethnic slaughter.<br />

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Russia seeks<br />

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politic<strong>al</strong> t<strong>al</strong>ks<br />

Terence Hunt<br />

Associated Press<br />

NAPLES, It<strong>al</strong>y - In unprecedented<br />

partnership, Russia joined<br />

Western nations Sunday in<br />

demanding a settlement of the war<br />

in Bosnia and an end to North<br />

Korea's secrecy about its nuclear<br />

program. In return, Boris Yeltsin<br />

insisted Russia "be accepted and<br />

recognized as equ<strong>al</strong>."<br />

The Russian president, his voice<br />

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country.<br />

Yeltsin, for the first time, joined<br />

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democracies - the United<br />

States, Japan, Germany, Canada,<br />

Britain, France and It<strong>al</strong>y - at the<br />

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summit.<br />

"We share fundament<strong>al</strong> foreign<br />

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.; said. "On these matters, we spoke<br />

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moments.<br />

German Chancellor Helmut Kohl<br />

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ask Clinton for more money for<br />

Russia's 1867 $7.2 million s<strong>al</strong>e of<br />

Alaska to the United States.<br />

Yeltsin wagged his finger and said<br />

no. Clinton said It<strong>al</strong>y or Germany<br />

- whichever wins the World Cup<br />

soccer championship -<br />

should<br />

"fork over another billion dollars·<br />

to Russia.<br />

More seriously, there was not<br />

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"Nyet,· Yeltsin thundered at a<br />

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Yeltsin complained that retired<br />

Russian officers and others in Esto-<br />

, nia were subject to "very crude violations<br />

of human rights." However,<br />

Yeltsin said he had promised Clinton<br />

to meet with Estonian President<br />

Lennart Med to reach a settlement,<br />

and the United States<br />

promised to help.<br />

For the embattled Yeltsin, struggling<br />

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and politic<strong>al</strong> attacks, the summit<br />

provided a sorely needed pre8tige<br />

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6 - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 11 , 1994<br />

SIMPSON<br />

Continued from Page 1<br />

Simpson's preliminary hearing,<br />

which ended Friday.<br />

Prosecutor Marcia Clark and<br />

investigators fin<strong>al</strong>ly sketched out<br />

what they believe the killer did<br />

late June 12, piecing together a<br />

puzzle of blood, stained gloves and<br />

crashes in the night.<br />

It's a theory that paints Simpson<br />

as a vicious, careless killer who<br />

committed his crimes out of the<br />

sight of witnesse8, but who left<br />

behind enough physic<strong>al</strong> evidence to<br />

possibly send him to San Quentin's<br />

gas chamber.<br />

The defense in turn spent the<br />

hearing trying to poke holes in the<br />

prosecution's scenario, contending<br />

reasonable doubts exist at every<br />

turn and insisting that Simpson is<br />

a man wrongly accused.<br />

In the end, Municip<strong>al</strong> Court<br />

Judge Kathleen Kennedy-Powell,<br />

who wasn't bound by a tri<strong>al</strong> court's<br />

steep burden of proof, found "ample<br />

e~idence' to suspect Simpson in<br />

the murders.<br />

' That decision, which would have<br />

~n bypassed had pretri<strong>al</strong> publicity<br />

not interfered with a grand jury<br />

considering an indictment, set the<br />

stage for a tri<strong>al</strong>.<br />

Two of the most notorious murdlrs<br />

in U.S. history may have been<br />

announced by a dog's howl.<br />

'About 15 minutes into watching<br />

the Channel 5 news at 10 p.m. that<br />

Sunday night, neighbor Pablo Fenjves<br />

heard a dog's "plaintive wail"<br />

from the direction of Brown Simpson's<br />

condo.<br />

About a h<strong>al</strong>f-hour later, at 10:45<br />

p .m., another neighbor, Steven<br />

Schwab, was w<strong>al</strong>king his dog and<br />

encountered a large white Akita,<br />

its paws soaked in blood.<br />

Schwab tried to find the dog's<br />

owner and eventu<strong>al</strong>ly turned it<br />

over to his neighbors, Bettina Rasmussen<br />

and Sukru Boztepe, a married<br />

couple. At about 11:30 p.m.,<br />

they took the dog for a w<strong>al</strong>k and it<br />

led them to 875 South Bundy, the<br />

luxury home of a footb<strong>al</strong>l hero's exwife.<br />

On the front steps was a<br />

sqene so horrible that Rasmussen<br />

had to look away.<br />

:For the victims, the series of<br />

e\,ents started at 6:30 p.m. when<br />

Brown Simpson and nine family<br />

members, including her children by<br />

O:J., Sydney, 8, and Justin, 5, ate<br />

at a trendy restaurant c<strong>al</strong>led Mezz<strong>al</strong>una,<br />

just around the corner<br />

from Brown Simpson's home.<br />

'They were celebrating Sydney's<br />

dance recit<strong>al</strong> earlier that day.<br />

~mpson, divorced from Brown<br />

Slmpson since 1992, attended the<br />

rtcit<strong>al</strong> but not the dinner.<br />

• Among the waiters on duty that<br />

Il,Ight was the 25-year-old Ron<strong>al</strong>d<br />

qoldman, an aspiring model and<br />

friend of 35-year-old Brown Simpson,<br />

who sometimes let Goldman<br />

dtive the white Ferrari that Simpson<br />

had bought for her.<br />

GEORGIA<br />

Continued from Page 1<br />

threatened to knock out power, but<br />

8 feverish sandbagging and pumping<br />

effort by hundreds of military<br />

personnel and volunteers kept<br />

most of it from seeping inside.<br />

, But water still blankets surr:ounding<br />

streets and sta(fers are<br />

brought in by Nation<strong>al</strong> Guard<br />

vehicles. Others haven't been home<br />

i)l days; one husband of a hospit<strong>al</strong><br />

worker came in Thursday for tests,<br />

and when they were canceled, he<br />

~ouldn't get home. He has worn<br />

scrubs and helped out ever since,<br />

moving equipment, lifting patients<br />

and perfonning other tasks.<br />

: Even the Red Cross hasn't<br />

N.KOREA<br />

Continued from Page 1<br />

offici<strong>al</strong>s pledging loy<strong>al</strong>ty to him.<br />

In the demilitarized zone dividing<br />

the Koreas, cross-border loudspeaker<br />

announcements referred to<br />

Kim Jong II a8 "His Excellency" -<br />

norm<strong>al</strong>ly the term used to refer to<br />

tJte head of state.<br />

I Southern offici<strong>al</strong>s took the developments<br />

as an indication that Kim<br />

Jong II ha8 managed to hold off<br />

ijard-line military elements who<br />

were believed to be hoping to grab<br />

Power upon his father's death.<br />

: "We believe that the North's system<br />

will be consolidated under Kim<br />

~ng n, at least for the time being,"<br />

aaid Park Bum-jin, 8pokesman for<br />

the South's governing Democratic<br />

I;i.ber<strong>al</strong> Party.<br />

• North Koreans, taught from<br />

childhood to venerate the elder<br />

Itim a8 a godlike figure, appeared<br />

flenuinely at a 1088 upon his death.<br />

~olemn muaic poured from loud­<br />

~akers, and witnessea said pe0-<br />

ple in the atreeta of the capit<strong>al</strong><br />

ciied openly.<br />

•<br />

The Mill<br />

Restaurant<br />

Speci<strong>al</strong> Tonight<br />

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only $150<br />

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Shortly after 8:30 p.m., Brown<br />

Simpson left the restaurant with<br />

her family. An hour later, a woman<br />

c<strong>al</strong>led to see if anybody had found a<br />

lost pair of prescription sunglasses.<br />

Goldman took them to Brown<br />

Simpson's townhouse, leaving at<br />

9:45 p.m.<br />

At about that time a few miles<br />

away, O.J. Simpson <strong>al</strong>so had dinner.<br />

He and his house guest, an<br />

aspiring writer-actor named Brian<br />

"Kato" Kaelin, drove to McDon<strong>al</strong>d's<br />

in Simpson's Rolls-Royce.<br />

The two went back to the estate<br />

at 360 Rockingham, arriving at<br />

about 9:45 p.m. Simpson ate his<br />

food while driving. Kaelin ate his<br />

dinner in his guest room.<br />

About 10:25 p.m., limousine driver<br />

Allan Park drove up to Simpson's<br />

estate to take him to the airport<br />

for a previously scheduled trip<br />

to Chicago. Simpson couldn't be<br />

found .<br />

At 10:40 p.m., Park buzzed the<br />

intercom and saw upstairs lights<br />

on. Nobody answered.<br />

Prosecutors <strong>al</strong>lege Simpson<br />

couldn't answer because he was<br />

busy trying to hide evidence from<br />

the killings of his ex-wife and Goldman.<br />

They were messy murders.<br />

Brown Simpson's neck was<br />

slashed to the spin<strong>al</strong> column, the<br />

knife going a quarter inch into the<br />

vertebrae. The knife severed both<br />

her carotid arteries and one jugular<br />

vein and cut into the other<br />

jugular.<br />

Goldman suffered even more<br />

wounds, including fat<strong>al</strong> slashes to<br />

the neck, head, chest and side. One<br />

cut was more than 5 inches deep.<br />

Both victims showed signs of<br />

defensive wounds, indicating they<br />

tried to fight ofT the attacker.<br />

A single-edged knife caused most<br />

of the wounds, a coroner says, possibly<br />

similar to the stiletto that<br />

Simpson <strong>al</strong>legedly bought in May<br />

but which hasn't been accounted<br />

for.<br />

During the attack Simpson made<br />

a cruci<strong>al</strong> mistake, prosecutors<br />

<strong>al</strong>lege - losing his left glove and<br />

somehow cutting his left middle<br />

finger. As he w<strong>al</strong>ked away from the<br />

crime scene, he left drops of blood<br />

from the wound <strong>al</strong>ongside his<br />

bloody footprints, prosecutors say.<br />

Blood tests showed the drops<br />

were of Simpson's somewhat rare<br />

blood type and not of his ex-wife's<br />

or Goldman's.<br />

According to prosecutors, Simpson<br />

drove his Ford Bronco the two<br />

miles back home, leaving a red<br />

smudge of blood above fhe door<br />

handle. More blood stains were<br />

found inside the Bronco and on the<br />

steering wheel.<br />

Simpson, prosecutors <strong>al</strong>lege, got<br />

home after the limo driver arrived<br />

and tried to get rid of the righthand<br />

mate to the glove left at the<br />

escaped unscathed. The loc<strong>al</strong><br />

branch moved its office because it<br />

was in a danger zone and the chapter's<br />

executive director, Debbie<br />

Blanton, and her family are now<br />

homeless.<br />

"I have no flood insurance," she<br />

said. "I have what I have on and a<br />

change of undergarments. I think I<br />

can empathize with everybody a<br />

little bit better.'<br />

"It's one of those things,' she<br />

added. "You're thankful you have<br />

life and family. We're <strong>al</strong>l in this<br />

together. We'll rebuild and start<br />

over again."<br />

The North's offici<strong>al</strong> mourning<br />

period, during which <strong>al</strong>l entertainment<br />

is banned, is to be capped<br />

with a huge r<strong>al</strong>ly in Pyongyang<br />

next Sunday, the day of the state<br />

funer<strong>al</strong>.<br />

No foreign dignitaries will be<br />

<strong>al</strong>lowed by the North to attend,<br />

which some observers said could<br />

mean instability.<br />

Northern authorities, meanwhile,<br />

sought to channel the outpouring<br />

of emotion.<br />

-All the people of the nation are<br />

... determined to turn their grief<br />

into strength, devoting themselves<br />

even more completely to the governance<br />

of our beloved leader, comrade<br />

Kim Jong 11,' said offici<strong>al</strong><br />

Radio Pyongyang.<br />

North Korea has ordered <strong>al</strong>l<br />

senior offici<strong>al</strong>s currently on overseas<br />

trips to return home immediately,<br />

South Korean offici<strong>al</strong>s laid.<br />

That includes the delegation to<br />

high-level t<strong>al</strong>ks with the United<br />

States in Geneva.<br />

crime scene near Goldman's feet.<br />

In the darkness, Simpson went<br />

down the unlighted, leaf-covered<br />

w<strong>al</strong>kway on the side of his house,<br />

but he crashed into an air conditioner<br />

jutting out into the w<strong>al</strong>kway,<br />

dropping the glove, prosecutors<br />

say.<br />

This, prosecutors <strong>al</strong>lege, would<br />

account for three loud thumps that<br />

Kaelin heard at 10:40 p.m. The<br />

next day, Detective Mark Fuhrman<br />

found the glove near the air conditioner<br />

on the other side of Kaelin's<br />

w<strong>al</strong>l.<br />

Mer dropping the glove, Simpson<br />

had to get back into the house<br />

to get ready for his flight, prosecutors<br />

say. Park described a 6-foot,<br />

200-pound black figure w<strong>al</strong>king on<br />

the grounds toward the house.<br />

Somewhere <strong>al</strong>ong the way, Simpson<br />

ditched his bloody clothing and<br />

bloodstained shoes, say prosecutors,<br />

who strongly imply they may<br />

have been stuffed in a black knapsack<br />

that Park saw sitting next to<br />

the garage.<br />

About a minute after 11 p.m.,<br />

Simpson emerged from his house<br />

and he and the limo driver packed<br />

his golf clubs, Gucci garment bag<br />

and other luggage. Simpson made<br />

a point of person<strong>al</strong>ly packing away<br />

the knapsack.<br />

As they drove off to the airport,<br />

Park noticed a white Ford Bronco<br />

on the street that he hadn't seen<br />

before.<br />

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8 • The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Monday, July 11 , 1994<br />

Sports<br />

Montre<strong>al</strong> jumps into first place<br />

Associated Press<br />

SAN DIEGO - Wi! Cordero, named<br />

to the All-Star earlier Sunday, hit his<br />

first career grand slam and Moises<br />

Alou hit two homers as the Montre<strong>al</strong><br />

Expos moved into first place in the NL<br />

East with an 8-2 victory over the San<br />

Diego Padres.<br />

Cordero, named to replace Cincinnati's<br />

Barry Larkin on the NL squad,<br />

hit his 13th homer off rookie Joey<br />

Hamilton (5-4) in the second to snap a<br />

2-2 tie.<br />

Jeff Fassero (7-5) shut down the<br />

Padres after giving up two runs in the<br />

first inning. He gave up six hits and<br />

struck out eight in six innings.<br />

The four-game sweep moved the<br />

Expos past Atlanta - a 6-1 loser to<br />

St. Louis - into first in the East.<br />

Montre<strong>al</strong> (54-33) has the best record<br />

in the majors and leads the Braves<br />

(52-33) by one game.<br />

The Expos have won nine straight<br />

over the Padres and 19 of 21 over the<br />

past two years.<br />

Indians 9, TwinB 1<br />

MINNEAPOLIS - Mark Clark<br />

pitched eight strong innings despite a<br />

stiff neck, and Kenny Lofton had four<br />

hits and four RBI as the Cleveland<br />

Indians rolled into the All-Star break<br />

with a victory over Minnesota.<br />

Lofton homered off Scott Erickson<br />

(8-7) in the first inning. It gave him 10<br />

homers after he had only six in his<br />

first two big-league seasons. Lofton<br />

singled in a second-inning run and<br />

doubled home two in the eighth,<br />

matching his career high for a game.<br />

Clark (10-3) <strong>al</strong>lowed six hits, w<strong>al</strong>ked<br />

none and struck out four.<br />

Carlos Baerga, Jim Thome and Sandy<br />

Alomar Jr., <strong>al</strong>so homered for the Indians,<br />

in first place at the break for the<br />

first time since 1959.<br />

Athletics 4, Orioles 3<br />

BALTIMORE - Mark McGwire hit<br />

a two-run homer off Lee Smith in the<br />

ninth inning as Oakland beat B<strong>al</strong>timore.<br />

. The Orioles were three outs away<br />

from taking over first place in the AL<br />

East when McGwire hit an 0-2 pitch<br />

over the center-field w<strong>al</strong>l. The homer,<br />

his seventh, followed a leadoff single<br />

by Ruben Sierra.<br />

Ron DarlinK (8-9) <strong>al</strong>lowed four runs<br />

and six hits in eight innings, w<strong>al</strong>king<br />

five and striking out seven.<br />

Dennis Eckersley pitched the ninth<br />

for his 15th save.<br />

Red Sol[ 9, Mariners 2<br />

BOSTON - Rich Rowland had a<br />

homer among three hits and two RBI<br />

as Boston - worst in the AL in batting<br />

- came <strong>al</strong>ive with 13 hits.<br />

Joe Hesketh (5-5) <strong>al</strong>lowed five hits<br />

in seven innings. Both runs came on a<br />

homer by Marc Newfield. Hesketh,<br />

who w<strong>al</strong>ked two and struck out five,<br />

came within six outs of his first complete<br />

game win since 1985.<br />

Jim Converse (0-2) lasted just 1%<br />

innings for Seattle, <strong>al</strong>lowing five runs<br />

on six hits.<br />

Tigers 6, Rangers 5<br />

DETROIT - Tony Phillips hit a<br />

three-run homer with two outs in the<br />

ninth inning off 'Ibm Henke (2-4) to<br />

r<strong>al</strong>ly Detroit over Texas.<br />

Henke got ahead in the count 0-2 on<br />

Phillips, who was fooled by an offspeed<br />

pitch for the second strike.<br />

Phillips hit the next for his 14th<br />

homer.<br />

Joe Boever (7-2) pitchd a hitless 2 ~<br />

innings in relief of starter David<br />

Wells. Cecil Fielder hit a three-run<br />

homer and a tripled for the Tigers.<br />

Ivan Rodriguez hit a two-run homer<br />

and Chris James drove in two runs for<br />

the Rangers.<br />

Angels 9, Yankees 6<br />

NEW YORK - J.T. Snow homered<br />

and drove in four runs, and Spike<br />

Owen and Tim S<strong>al</strong>mon <strong>al</strong>so homered<br />

for C<strong>al</strong>ifornia.<br />

Snow, a former Yankee, hit a tworun<br />

homer during the Angels' four-run<br />

fourth off Terry Mulholland (6-7) and<br />

singled in two runs in the ninth.<br />

Owen, <strong>al</strong>so an ex-Yankee, hit a tworun<br />

homer in the first and S<strong>al</strong>mon led<br />

off the fIfth with his 19th homer, both<br />

off Mulholland.<br />

Winner Chuck Finley (7-8) went 5~.<br />

innings, <strong>al</strong>lowing nine hits and four<br />

runs, w<strong>al</strong>king two and striking out<br />

seven.<br />

Blue Jays 7, Roy<strong>al</strong>s S<br />

TORONTO - Juan Guzman<br />

matched a career high with nine<br />

Associated Press<br />

~ Home plate umpire Field Culbreth, left, and Texas Rangers pitcher Kevin<br />

Brown, right, are kept separated by Rangers catcher Ivan Rodriguez, center,<br />

· following Brown's ejection in the third inning Sunday, in Detroit.<br />

: CYCLING<br />

.w Continued from back page Classifieds<br />

& leg from Poitiers to Trelissac, conserving<br />

, energy for today's individu<strong>al</strong> time tri<strong>al</strong> of 40<br />

• miles from Perigueux to Bergerac.<br />

Museeuw, despite f<strong>al</strong>ling at one point,<br />

gained a few seconds in an intermediate<br />

sprint and held a five-second lead over Gian­<br />

. luca Bortolami of It<strong>al</strong>y in the over<strong>al</strong>l stand­<br />

, ings.<br />

The U.S.-based Motorola team had three<br />

of the top eight over<strong>al</strong>l - Britain's Sean<br />

• Yates in third, 10 seconds behind; American<br />

Frankie Andreu in fourth, 13 back, and<br />

, world champion Lance Armstrong eighth, 42<br />

behind.<br />

• Favorites Miguel Indurain of Spain and<br />

• '!bny Rominger of Switzerland stayed with<br />

I • the pack. Indurain, in seventh place, was<br />

I only 30 seconds behind Museeuw.<br />

\ -Rominger was another 28 seconds behind.<br />

Both Indurain and Rominger won a long .<br />

time tri<strong>al</strong> in last year's Tour, when<br />

Indurain won his third consecutive title.<br />

Chris Boardman of Britain, winner of<br />

; the short prologue July 2, <strong>al</strong>so is one of the<br />

: - favorites for the time tri<strong>al</strong>.<br />

I<br />

; "The time tri<strong>al</strong>s are my speci<strong>al</strong>ty," said<br />

: - Boardman, winner of the 1992 Olympic<br />

, pursuit title. "But it is a lot different now<br />

: because I am tired. As is everyone."<br />

I I -<br />

Today's course has two moderate climbs.<br />

"It is a whole new experience, but I think<br />

it is. a good route for me,· Boardman said.<br />

In Sunday's stage, Leblanc, Aldag,<br />

Camargo and Hamburger were more than<br />

six minutes ahead of the pack with 18<br />

miles to go. However, Museeuw'a GB-MG<br />

I team picked up the pace and reduced the<br />

• margin to 2:16 at the finish, keeping the<br />

Belgian in the lead.<br />

strikeouts, and Joe Carter had a<br />

homer among three hits and drove in<br />

three runs for'Ibronto.<br />

Guzman (8-9) won his second<br />

straight start after breaking a streak<br />

of four straight losses. He <strong>al</strong>lowed<br />

three runs in seven innings. Danny<br />

Cox went the fin<strong>al</strong> two innings for the<br />

save in his first appearance of the season.<br />

Carter hit a two-run homer in the<br />

eighth, his 19th, to account for the<br />

fin<strong>al</strong> '!bronto runs.<br />

Cardin<strong>al</strong>s 6, Braves 1<br />

ATLANTA - Mark Whiten hit a<br />

three-run homer in support of Allen '<br />

WrBtson, and the St. Louis Cardin<strong>al</strong>s<br />

reached .500 at the All-Star break.<br />

The Cardin<strong>al</strong>s entered the three-day<br />

All-Star break at 42-42, taking two of<br />

three games from the Braves following<br />

a five-game losing streak.<br />

Watson (6-4) <strong>al</strong>lowed one run and<br />

five hits in seven innings.<br />

John Smoltz (6-9), victimized by a<br />

four-run fourth inning, <strong>al</strong>lowed five<br />

hits and four runs in seven innings.<br />

Pirates 7, Reds 6,11 innings<br />

CINCINNATI - Tom Foley's oneout<br />

double in the 11th scored pinchrunner<br />

AI Martin, and the Pirates<br />

overcame a six-run deficit.<br />

Don Slaught, pinch-hitting for Steve<br />

Cooke (4-6) w<strong>al</strong>ked leading off and<br />

was replaced by Martin. Lance Parrish<br />

sacrificed before Foley doubled<br />

down the right-field line off Hector<br />

Carrasco (4-6).<br />

Bias Minor got the fin<strong>al</strong> three outs<br />

for his first save.<br />

Mets 5, Dodgers 1<br />

LOS ANGELES - Bobby Bonilla,<br />

Rico Brogna and Joe Orsulak homered<br />

to back eight solid innings by Bret<br />

Saberhagen.<br />

Saberhagen (10-4) ran his career<br />

record against the Dodgers to 5-0 with<br />

his third straight win over<strong>al</strong>l. Saberhagen,<br />

the Mets' lone All-Star representative,<br />

struck out six and w<strong>al</strong>ked<br />

one.<br />

Pedro Astacio (6-6) gave up just two<br />

hits in seven innings, striking out 10.<br />

He w<strong>al</strong>ked three in absorbing his first<br />

loss since June 1 in Atlanta.<br />

Giants 2, Phillies I, 10 innings<br />

SAN FRANCISCO - Pinch-hitter<br />

Jeff Reed's single in the 10th scored<br />

Dave Martinez, giving the Giants a<br />

four-game sweep.<br />

Dave Burba (1-5) pitched 1 ~3 innings<br />

for the victory.<br />

Marlins 6, Rockies 4<br />

MIAMI - Pinch hitter Mario Diaz<br />

hit a bases-loaded triple and the Marlins<br />

r<strong>al</strong>lied from a four-run deficit to<br />

win their third straight.<br />

Bret Barberie doubled, homered and<br />

scored twice for the Marlins. They<br />

improved to 7-2 against Colorado,<br />

clinching the season series in the<br />

matchup of second-year teams.<br />

Luis Aquino (2-1) pitched one scoreless<br />

inning, and Robb Nen got the last<br />

two outs for his 10th in 10 tries.<br />

Astros 5, Cubs 3<br />

CHICAGO - Rookie Orlando<br />

Miller, playing in his third majorleague<br />

game, hit two home runs competely<br />

out of Wrigley Field to lead the<br />

Houston Astros past the Chicago<br />

Cubs.<br />

Jeff Bagwell drove in his Nation<strong>al</strong><br />

League-leading 82nd run and Pete<br />

Harnisch (5-4) got his third straight<br />

victory for the Astros, who enter the<br />

All-Star break 2Y, games behind<br />

Cincinnati in the NL Centr<strong>al</strong>.<br />

III Communications Center • 335-5784<br />

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yeIrI.xJ*ien


The Daily Iowan - Iowa City. Iowa - Monday, July 11, 1994 · 9<br />

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Sports<br />

WHO-WHAT-WHtN<br />

TIll [J ·\lU I()\\-\ \ • \10ND·\}; JlIn' II, I/N.J<br />

SportsBriefs<br />

LOCAL<br />

Hawkeye gymnasts in top<br />

six at Olympic Festiv<strong>al</strong><br />

,<br />

...<br />

Baseb<strong>al</strong>l<br />

-AII·Star Game from Pittsburgh,<br />

Tuesday 7 p.m., NBC.<br />

- Cubs at Reds, Thursday 6:30 p.m.,<br />

WGN.<br />

-Marlins at Braves, Thursday 6:35<br />

p.m., TBS.<br />

3-point night<br />

for Prime Time<br />

-Indians at Wh ite Sox, Thursday 7<br />

p.m., SportsChannel.<br />

Soccer<br />

-World Cup, Semifin<strong>al</strong> match from<br />

East Rutherford, N.)., Wednesday<br />

2:55 p.m., ESPN.<br />

-World Cup, Semifi n<strong>al</strong> Match from<br />

Pasadena, Ca lif., Wednesday 6:25<br />

p.m., ESPN.<br />

Golf<br />

- British Open, first·round action from<br />

Turnberry, Scotland, Thursday 8 a.m.,<br />

ESPN.<br />

Bowling<br />

-PBA Hilton Hotels Classic from<br />

Reno, Nev., Tuesday 6:30 p.m.,<br />

ESPN.<br />

Q<br />

How many night games<br />

have been played at<br />

Wrigley Field?<br />

See answer on Page 7.<br />

"<br />

,<br />

1· ,<br />

Iowa gymnasts Garry Denk<br />

and Jay Thornton have placed in<br />

the top six in the <strong>al</strong>l-around competition<br />

and qu<strong>al</strong>ified for the<br />

individu<strong>al</strong> event fin<strong>al</strong>s at the u.s.<br />

Olympic Festiv<strong>al</strong> in St. Lou is.<br />

Thornton, competing for the<br />

South team that won the team<br />

~ompetit i on , placed fifth in the<br />

<strong>al</strong>l-around events "-'ith a score of<br />

56.05. He finished seven-tenths<br />

of a point behind the <strong>al</strong>l-around<br />

champion, Bo Haun (56.75) of<br />

Minnesota. Thornton, a junior at<br />

Iowa this f<strong>al</strong>l, has the lead in the<br />

floor exercise after the preliminary<br />

round. He was an <strong>al</strong>i-American<br />

in that event in 1994.<br />

Denk, a member of the second-place<br />

East team, finished<br />

sixth in the <strong>al</strong>l-around competition.<br />

The Northbrook, 111., native<br />

has the highest score on the still<br />

rings after the first round. Denk is<br />

1IIso a 1994 <strong>al</strong>l-American and<br />

1993 u.s. Olympic Festiv<strong>al</strong> gold<br />

med<strong>al</strong>ist in the still rings. He finished<br />

his collegiat~ ree r last<br />

winter.<br />

Other top six finishers were<br />

Temple's Bill Roth (second;<br />

56.70), UCLA's Steve McCain<br />

(third; 56.675) and Oklahoma's<br />

Jeff Lutz (fourth; 56.375).<br />

BASEBALL ·<br />

Giants' Beck relieves ailing<br />

Jose ~ijo of All-Star duties<br />

- SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - San<br />

Francisco Giants reliever Rod<br />

Beck was added to the Nation<strong>al</strong><br />

~eague All-Star team Sunday,<br />

replacing Cincinnati's Jose Rijo.<br />

• Rijo has been bothered by a<br />

sore elbow and said Saturday he<br />

did not want to pitch in Tuesday's<br />

game at Pittsburgh.<br />

Beck, whose 18 saves rank<br />

third in the league, was then<br />

selected to take the place of the<br />

Reds' starter.<br />

An All-Star for the second con·<br />

secutive year, Beck has converted<br />

his last 30 save opportunities dating<br />

back to last season.<br />

However, Beck has given up<br />

nine home runs this season, five<br />

in extra innings with four of those<br />

resulting in San Francisco losses.<br />

The right-hander broke a bone<br />

in his left foot after being struck<br />

by a ground b<strong>al</strong>l AprilS and<br />

missed 20 games.<br />

The Reds' Barry Larkin <strong>al</strong>so<br />

decided Sunday not to play in the<br />

AII·Star Game because of a bothersome<br />

sore elbow.<br />

He will be replace


Free Movie<br />

Ticket Offer<br />

to Dlsney's·<br />

The Lion Klngl<br />

Details in Pack<br />

<strong>al</strong>\lkillint,I\<br />

oC or D-2 pack.<br />

·g.Volt-slngle pack.<br />

J.~~~$2<br />

OSCO AA Alk<strong>al</strong>ine<br />

Batteries<br />

Each tape provides<br />

OJ!,,<br />

up to 6 hours of<br />

plaYing/recording time.<br />

$<br />

·T-120 Extra High Grade­<br />

IX.GH20<br />

lJ SOFT<br />

J.lIGHLIGH1~<br />

Enlunc lu.',<br />

1I.ot~" biChiidlI1<br />

Arlzona<br />

Iced Tea<br />

Suave- Shampoo<br />

or Conditioner<br />

Assorted fOrmulas.<br />

11 to 15 ounces.<br />

Assorted flavors.<br />

4!s s!iI<br />

Roy<strong>al</strong> Oak- Light<br />

Charco<strong>al</strong> Briquets<br />

Requires no lighter flUid.<br />

25~$<br />

pepsi or Mountain Dew<br />

Alev • ·Pepsl ·Dlet Pepsi<br />

e<br />

-caffeine Free Diet pepsi<br />

Pain reliever/fever<br />

·Mount<strong>al</strong>n Dew<br />

reducer. 50 tablets or<br />

caplets; 220 mg each.<br />

2-Llter- , .,.. . 12-Can Pack<br />

Your ChOice Bottle 12-ounce cans.<br />

2!9'~~I~~<br />

2-pack<br />

Night Light<br />

Bulbs<br />

Nestle·<br />

Sweet Success""<br />

weight Loss Shake _<br />

i; "'<br />

Assorted flavors. . " N'iestle .,.-<br />

10-ounce can. ... •<br />

·12-tan case<br />

-ff<br />

Crest-<br />

Your Choice<br />

Toothpaste ~2<br />

·Tube--6.4 ounces ~<br />

·stand-Up Tube--6 ounces<br />

Paste or Cel. Assorted<br />

fOrmulas.<br />

24-Can<br />

Case<br />

Miller or<br />

Coors Beer<br />

Assorted.<br />

12-ounce cans.<br />

Your ChOice<br />

ggg<br />

FanCY Feast- Gourmet Cat Food<br />

Lear<br />

~~r.:'::21" y.,.. ;aslce<br />

Fruits. Assorted<br />

flavors.<br />

14-0unce bag.<br />

lor


•• Coupon returned with your origin<strong>al</strong><br />

roll color print processing order.<br />

'For 110 cameraS-l110-24 expo<br />

2!4<br />

'For 35mm CameraS-l135-24 expo<br />

2!5<br />

Plonee" Giant Refillable<br />

Photo Album<br />

$<br />

3-rlng binder<br />

with 50 sheets<br />

(100 pages)<br />

protects photos<br />

up to S'x 10'.<br />

Leathergr<strong>al</strong>n<br />

padded vinyl cover.<br />

Assorted colors. ITR-100<br />

Acme Photo Frames<br />

'Met<strong>al</strong> with Pearl-8' x 10'.<br />

'Sports Montage with Wood~" x 12".<br />

You,$<br />

Choice<br />

I Regular Size Color Print Processing<br />

l ane 211<br />

0,1 t<br />

I set 24 Exp. ets 24Exp.<br />

: 12 Exp. p. 12 Exp. 2 8S<br />

I 36 EXp. 5" 36 Exp . • 8'<br />

I when coupon accompanies order<br />

I Cood only on single print orders (C-41 , full frames).<br />

I Not v<strong>al</strong>id with any other offer or on one· hour service.<br />

I Cood thru sat., July 16, 1994.<br />

'------------------­<br />

~ ~-:-~-~-~-;-~-----------------<br />

14" JumbO Size Color Print PrOCeSSlng __ ~<br />

I Order 2 Sets ..,<br />

From 35mm<br />

9<br />

I 2nd set<br />

e<br />

Is<br />

and 110 color<br />

I<br />

print<br />

(C-41 ,<br />

film<br />

full<br />

only<br />

I<br />

frames).<br />

I any Not v<strong>al</strong>id with<br />

exposure any other offer<br />

I at the time of origin<strong>al</strong> roll or on one-hour<br />

I color Print processing, when service.<br />

I coupon accompanies order.<br />

12~d!,~ ~.;.!u! 1! ~.:. _____ _<br />

5" X 7" BIC SHOTS<br />

: Color Print Processing<br />

I Order 2 Sets... Custom prints<br />

~~~ ~T~~n~~lor<br />

I 2nd set Is<br />

I FREE' (C-41,fUliframesl.<br />

I • Not v<strong>al</strong>id with<br />

at the time of origin<strong>al</strong> roll ~~~~~~:_=~<br />

color print processing service<br />

I with this coupon. .<br />

- -0- ":AskforPhoto Ex'presSdet'aiiS<br />

We recycle photOflnlshlng chelmlC


11"11:';11 lilt<br />

Wonder<br />

Bubbles<br />

Bounces.<br />

!f<br />

$:1<br />

Citronella<br />

BUg-O-Bucket<br />

Candle<br />

In g<strong>al</strong>vanized steel p<strong>al</strong>l.<br />

Long burnIng.<br />

For outdoor use. 1#912<br />

Ice-patsubstitute<br />

Reusable Ice$2<br />

Non-toxIc.<br />

Weekender:<br />

1lw.r'x S' x 11'l'.<br />

I#IP-4(X)<br />

Selected Lawn<br />

& Garden Items<br />

'Planter Pots and saucers.<br />

-Garden Hand Tools.<br />

'Lawn ornaments and EdgIng.<br />

·Grass Seed.<br />

SelectIon will vary by store<br />

Power Rangers<br />

Pre-Recorded<br />

Videos<br />

Assorted titles.<br />

'POwer Rangers<br />

'Mlghty Morphln $ft<br />

Green Ranger ~ ,<br />

spray Ch<strong>al</strong>k<br />

Cutter­<br />

Insect<br />

Repellent<br />

Pest-strlpTM $:1<br />

$2<br />

Kills sm<strong>al</strong>l flyIng Insects.<br />

lasts up to 4 months.<br />

ounces.<br />

Pic<br />

ROach Killer<br />

BorIc acId.<br />

16-ounce<br />

squeeze bottle.<br />

X-Men Figures<br />

Detailed, poseable figures.<br />

For ages 5 and up.<br />

Plastic My-KO Sign<br />

Assorted messages IncludIng: For S<strong>al</strong>e By<br />

owner and Garage s<strong>al</strong>e. g'x 12'.<br />

$<br />

·8-G<strong>al</strong>lon MedIum Carbagepack<br />

of 20.<br />

,13-G<strong>al</strong>lon TcJII Kltchenpack<br />

of15.<br />

04-G<strong>al</strong>lon Sm<strong>al</strong>l-pack of 30.<br />

$f<br />

Westley'S-<br />

Blue Cor<strong>al</strong><br />

Car Care<br />

-Clear-Magic'"<br />

Concentrated Cleaner<br />

'Espree- Wheel Magic<br />

23-ounce trigger spray.<br />

'Bleche-Wlte-32-ounce<br />

trIgger spray.<br />

Your Choice<br />

$<br />

UL listed. ~· x 50-ft. roll.<br />

Wlndmere e 10"<br />

2-Speed Box Fan<br />

Patton S-speed<br />

18"" High Velocity<br />

Air Circulator<br />

2! L---------______ r-~~~~<br />

WhIsper quIet, energy efficIent. QuIetly cools an average 5 room<br />

'BF-1000<br />

$fO<br />

home.<br />

$50<br />

UL listed. tTG-1887<br />

~-<br />

2-Pack<br />

Lee Rowan<br />

Swlveler Hangers<br />

With clips.<br />

$f<br />

Heather Jumbo<br />

storage Box<br />

corrugated. Easy to<br />

assemble. 26'X 16'x 11 '.<br />

$2<br />

PlastiC Lunch Kit<br />

Nylon Insulated Juicer paCk,<br />

'~~~~~~k~l~h, ~Ps?~e1~eermo bottle.<br />

·Aladdlne-wlth Pop-Top'" thermo bottle.<br />

PlastiC Sandwich storage<br />

BOX, or BOx TO Go<br />

Assorted deslgnS$ ASsorted COlOrs. $f<br />

ThermoS­<br />

.1-Qt. Tandem<br />

Cup Bottle<br />

WIth 2 nested cups.<br />

Assorted colors.<br />

c~:~:e 5 c~:~:e ·:~u~~: Jar<br />

Assorted colors.<br />

--~=~""';';;;;;;;;;;;'-'---..It.::l..~~~ _ ..... ".~;;;;"' ___________ _<br />

1-C<strong>al</strong>lon<br />

Plastic Pitcher<br />

White, with choIce of<br />

assorted color lids.<br />

$2<br />

Frem PlastiC Containers<br />

-Convenience caddY-13'X 15Wx 11 '.<br />

,2·Pocket Activity TraY-24'X 12' x S'.<br />

Assorted colors.<br />

~:r:e $~<br />

ThermoS- Bag or Bottle<br />

'Roll-Up Lunch Bag-reusable, Insulated.<br />

'ROughneck- Bottle-shatter-proof<br />

plastic. 10 ounces.<br />

~:;;~010~$ 4<br />

Kellogg<br />

Bowl Brush<br />

polvpropylene<br />

$,<br />

bristles;<br />

break-resistant plastIc<br />

naMle.<br />

campbell's 16-0z.<br />

PlastiC Soup Mug<br />

With<br />

$2<br />

lid.<br />

'ThennOS'-soft nylon. With<br />

ThermoS- bottle. Assorted colors.<br />

'Aladdln--wlth 8-ounce<br />

thermo bOttle.<br />

Assorted colors.<br />

$8<br />

Choice Your<br />

52-Qt. Laundryl ~4<br />

utility Basket ~<br />

Euro style.<br />

Assorted colors.<br />

Guardsman- One- ~f<br />

Wlpee Dust Cloth ~<br />

Fashion Design CIR Wrap<br />

_ All occasion<br />

assortment.<br />

Recycled paper.<br />

90 sQ. ft. roll,<br />

21'l ft.X 36'.<br />

$,<br />

All OCcasion<br />

Cards<br />

Box of 12.<br />

r-.............................. ~~~<br />

~~~~~~------~~~~~~~~~ ,<br />

y


-white Musk<br />

-Musk for women<br />

-Island Gardenia<br />

-Tribe<br />

-Aspen for women<br />

2.5 ounces.<br />

Love's Frenzy<br />

-All Over Body spray-<br />

4 ounces.<br />

-Body Mlst-<br />

1.5 ounces.<br />

ShoWer<br />

and<br />

Bath<br />

Oil<br />

~C»'!<br />

ForDt)' Slcin<br />

OSeo Shower<br />

and Bath 011<br />

Max Factor High Definition Revlon<br />

Eyeshadow<br />

!7<br />

Quad<br />

is<br />

Colorstay<br />

4 coordinated shades.<br />

Llpeolor<br />

MS02<br />

''--==---<br />

All Jean Nate Bath<br />

& Body Items In stock<br />

\..<br />

eOl dlliOi<br />

1o C: • .oII,"<br />

~ --................<br />

-Shampoo or Condltloner-1s ounces.<br />

-stylers-assorted types. 4 to 7 ounces.<br />

-Hair spray-aerosol or non-aerosol.<br />

7 ounces.<br />

Assorted formulas.<br />

Your Choice<br />

$2<br />

Cl<strong>al</strong>rol- Condition<br />

3-ln-1 Shampoo Plus<br />

Assorted formulas. 12 ounces.<br />

2!3<br />

Cl<strong>al</strong>rol- H<strong>al</strong>reolor<br />

-Brights Nice 'N Easy<br />

-Gllnts--condltlonlng color<br />

enhancer.<br />

Assorted shades. One application.<br />

$5<br />

Your Choice<br />

----........ --.....<br />

-~.:.:- -,......- .... ~ ........................ --........ -<br />

-European Shampoo or condltlonerassorted<br />

formulas. 32 ounces.<br />

-3-Pack Hot 011 Treatment- Extra-BodY<br />

formula. 21-ounce vi<strong>al</strong>s.<br />

$5<br />

-Leave-In Vitamin Treatment-16 ounces.<br />

Your<br />

Choice lor<br />

L'Ore<strong>al</strong>­<br />

Mascaras<br />

-Lash Out<br />

TWI n-Pae k -FOrmula Riche<br />

Summer"s Eve- -Splash Out<br />

Disposable<br />

Douche<br />

-Accentuous<br />

-~~~sw,nous High<br />

Assorted non-medicated :s~~:~ys~:~~~~g<br />

formulas. lWo,<br />

2,!3<br />

4.S-ounce units. Your Choice<br />

$4<br />

N<strong>al</strong>lene·<br />

Nail Kit<br />

Assorted styles.<br />

$3<br />

Vid<strong>al</strong> sassoon·<br />

Hair spray<br />

Petite Hand Mirrors<br />

05C:0 B __ and<br />

Coppertone e<br />

,Suncare<br />

Assorted types and<br />

SPF's. 4 ounces.<br />

Assorted types<br />

and SPF's. 6 to<br />

8 ounces.<br />

$6 $6<br />

Fruit<br />

Of the Earth~<br />

Aloe Vera<br />

Sun Care<br />

-COOl Blue spray-<br />

S ounces.<br />

-twin Pack-B-ounce<br />

Moisturizing Mist<br />

with FREE 4-ounce<br />

Cell<br />

$4<br />

Your Choice<br />

~~=------ ---------------------~ .. ~<br />

2.5 fLOL<br />

Baking Soda<br />

Toothpaste<br />

WIth fluoride. s-ounce tube.<br />

Compare to Arm & Hammer.<br />

Men"s Hair Spray<br />

Extra-Hold formula. g.g-ounce<br />

aerosol. Compare to consort.<br />

Angle<br />

Toothbrush<br />

Breath Fresheners<br />

-concentrated Sprayspearmint<br />

or Mint flavor.<br />

~ounce .<br />

-2-Pack concentrated Mint<br />

Drops-lil ounce each.<br />

Compare to Blnaca.<br />

Oseo Super Dry<br />

Roll-On<br />

Antl-PersplrantlDeodorant.<br />

Soft or Medium bristle textures. 2.5 ounces. Compare to<br />

compare to Reach.<br />

Ban Roll-On.<br />

P<strong>al</strong>mer"se<br />

Cocoa Butter<br />

Formula~<br />

-Jar-3.5 ounces.<br />

-1\.Ibe-3.75 ounces.<br />

With Vitamin E.<br />

Your Choice<br />

2!5<br />

UPigio<br />

A. T_C. Thigh Cream<br />

With aminophylline. Helps reduce<br />

appearance of cellulite from<br />

Summer<br />

L'eaaS­<br />

Pantyhose<br />

All Sheer or Control<br />

Top. Assorted shades.<br />

Sizes A, B, or Queen.<br />

Your Choice<br />

$<br />

~-;J ~<br />

Your<br />

Choice, .........<br />

•<br />

$<br />

Assorted scents.<br />

5 ounces.<br />

Compare to<br />

Mennen.<br />

OSco After Shave Lotion<br />

Vid<strong>al</strong> Sassoon·<br />

PrOfession<strong>al</strong> Curling Irons<br />

~" Barrel-lVS101<br />

-'Y1" Barrel-lVS103N<br />

'Jumbo 1" Barrel-fVS100N<br />

$7<br />

Choice YOUr<br />

Con<strong>al</strong> ..<br />

1600-Watt Hair Dryers<br />

-Pro style- -2 speed/4 heat settings.<br />

1087A<br />

-Pro stylist .. -wIth 2 speedl2 heat<br />

settlnii Clu<strong>al</strong> voltage, and retractable<br />

:""$'6<br />

Braun<br />

Or<strong>al</strong>-B<br />

Plaque Remover<br />

Cordless rechargeable, With built-In<br />

brush head & cord storage. w<strong>al</strong>l mount<br />

ADA $59


Mevacore® Patients ...<br />

Ask your Osco Drug<br />

pharmacist about a<br />

money-saving <strong>al</strong>ternative.<br />

-Undergarments-56 Regular or 30<br />

Super Absorbency.<br />

-BrlefS-22 Medium or 18 Large.<br />

o(iuarcls-28 Long or Super or 32 Regular.<br />

,<br />

YOur<br />

Choice $t~<br />

ASsorted flavors. 12 ounces.<br />

2!5<br />

Pepto-Blsmote<br />

-L1Quld-12 ounces.<br />

-MaXimum strength<br />

L1Quld-<br />

Bounces.<br />

-cnewable 13bletsorigin<strong>al</strong><br />

or cherry flavor.<br />

Pack of 48.<br />

-Diarrhea control--<br />

2 ounces.<br />

your$~<br />

Choice ...<br />

Assorted types and absorbencies.<br />

packs Of 16 to 24.<br />

2!5<br />

AIw.ys "ntlllnen<br />

ASsorte


Scoop AwayTM<br />

cat Litter<br />

Unscented, Actl-Scent,<br />

or No-Ttack. 7 pounds.<br />

BOUntypaper<br />

TOwels<br />

Assorted colors<br />

2$,<br />

Bathroom<br />

OSCo<br />

Tissue<br />

Single roll.<br />

lor<br />

Ultra<br />

Downye<br />

Fabric<br />

Softener<br />

Blue or SunRlnse.<br />

20 ounces.<br />

YOur Choice<br />

$2<br />

3-ounce<br />

'3<br />

$, S Assorted flavors.<br />

Maruchan e Noodles<br />

·Instant lunch-<br />

2.25 ounces. #Or<br />

-Ramen Orient<strong>al</strong><br />

NOOdle SOuP-<br />

$,<br />

package ~<br />

makes two,<br />

a-ounce servings. ,..<br />

Nabisco·<br />

Honey M<strong>al</strong>r<br />

Honey Grahams<br />

16 ounces.<br />

$2<br />

Arm & Hamme"<br />

Baking Soda ~<br />

16 ·oon~~. 2::f<br />

S.O.S.­<br />

Soap Pads<br />

Box of 10.<br />

.---10<br />

Fireside Marshm<strong>al</strong>lows<br />

$,<br />

'Regular-<br />

2$,<br />

10·ounce bag.<br />

10.5·ounce bag.<br />

Your Choice<br />

lor<br />

~"""'1<br />

'Mlnlature-<br />

Hershey'S­<br />

Candy Bars<br />

Speci<strong>al</strong> selection Including Milk<br />

Chocolate Bars. 1.55 ounces.<br />

:i!f<br />

Pringle'S-<br />

Potato<br />

Chips<br />

Assorted flavors.<br />

6 to 7 ounces.<br />

$<br />

Coke<br />

-Coke Classic<br />

-Diet coke<br />

-Caffeine Free<br />

Diet Coke<br />

-12oCan Pack<br />

12-ounce cans<br />

~g<br />

r-2-Llter Bottle<br />

g<br />

Plus deposIt<br />

wnere applicable.<br />

!""\ Pure Amerlcan lY<br />

Spring water<br />

1 Liter<br />

3,or<br />

$2<br />

Gatorade $<br />

f<br />

.<br />

e<br />

Thirst Quenche,.<br />

Assorted flavors. .<br />

32 ounces.<br />

Roy<strong>al</strong><br />

Mlstlc<br />

McCormick Gin<br />

or Gilbey'S Vodka<br />

1.75 Liters<br />

Your Choice<br />

,,29<br />

Uquorand not<br />

at our downtown Iowa city or<br />

Cedar Rapids locations.<br />

Ronrlco Rum<br />

Gold or White. 1.75 Liters<br />

Your Choice<br />

'3 89<br />

Jim Beam or<br />

Ancient ADe Bourbon<br />

1.75 Liters<br />

Your Choice<br />

'S99<br />

Black Velvet<br />

Canadian or<br />

Seagram's 7 Crown<br />

7S0ML<br />

8<br />

Your Choice<br />

29<br />

Christian Brothers<br />

Brandy 8or Aunt Bea's<br />

Butterscotch Cream<br />

750ML<br />

Your . g9<br />

Choice<br />

southern comfOrt<br />

76 proof. 750 ML<br />

Er"<br />

18-C8n Pack<br />

Budweiser or<br />

24-C8n Case<br />

Old Milwaukee<br />

ASSOrted.<br />

12-ounce cans.<br />

Your Choice<br />

12-Can Pack<br />

Keystone or ri .:~ "''''' - M~~<br />

Pabst Blue<br />

Ribbon<br />

ASSorted.<br />

12·ounce cans.<br />

Your Choice<br />

9 .... ~<br />

DeKuyper<br />

Schnapps<br />

6""<br />

ASSOrted. 750 ML<br />

12·Can Pack<br />

Busch<br />

ASsorted.<br />

Miller<br />

High Life<br />

12·ounce cans.<br />

Your Choice<br />

12-can pack<br />

Milwaukee I<br />

Best<br />

;4<br />

ASsorted. "<br />

Natur<strong>al</strong> Light ~ "<br />

12·ounce cans.<br />

Your Choice<br />

459 1~ ~59<br />

Andre or<br />

J. Roget<br />

Champagnes<br />

ASSOrted. 750 ML<br />

Your ChOice<br />

2!5<br />

Beringer<br />

White<br />

Zinfandel<br />

750ML<br />

Cook's<br />

Variet<strong>al</strong><br />

Wines<br />

Carlo Rossi<br />

Wines<br />

ASSorted. 4 Liters<br />

Fetzer<br />

premium<br />

Red Wine<br />

1.5 Liters<br />

Your Choice<br />

7 99<br />

C<strong>al</strong>lo<br />

Livingston<br />

Cellars Wines ~~

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