6 Monday, January 25, 1993 2 an experiment in rhythm, melody and atmosphere featuring recorded ambient, ethereal and electronic soundscapes music from Pink Floyd to the Orb, Cabaret Voltaire to Ultramarine, Cocteau Twins to Aphex Twin music from hear to eclectacy DJ Ray Velasquez Mondays beginning January 18, 1993 9pm-2am Teller's 746 Massachusetts St., Lawrence, KS $1.75 Boulevard Irish Ale What happens if you refuse to take a breathalizer test when pulled over for a DUI? Legal Services for Students No driving for one year. 148 Burge • 864-5665 STUDENT SENATE Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately? Reservations only: 843-1151 WORLD Hillel Monday, Jan. 26 Hawkpac Israel Info Table 11-3 Union Hillel Brown Bag Alcove F, KS Union 11-1 ******* UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Wednesday, Jan. 27 UJA Meeting with Sherri Greenbach (National Representative) Alcove B, KS Union 7 p.m. ************** Thursday, Jan. 28 UJA Table 10-2 Union (LJCC) 917 Highland Dr. Forides, reservations, and more for information HiltonOffice 864-3948 Iraq: cease-fire remains intact Iraq says attacks by U.S. warplanes are unwarranted The Associated Press BAGHDAAD, Iraq—Iraq denied its anti-aircraft batteries fired at U.S. warplanes again and insisted yesterday that the cease-fire it declared last week remained in effect. The claims came a day after U.S. warplanes attacked Iraqi missile sites for the third consecutive day. In Washington, Defense Secretary Les Aspin said it was not certain the Iraqis opened fire Saturday night in the southern no-fly zone, but he stressed the pilot thought he was shot at. U. S. military representatives stood by the report that U.S. planes were fired on, and a second pilot on the aircraft car. rier USS Kitty Hawk reported seeing gun flashes. Aspin also reported that there was "some indication" that Iraqi troops were preparing new sites for anti-aircraft missiles in southern Iraq, despite Allied warnings to keep such weapons out of the air-exclusion zone. But it's a little soon to make definitive judgments," he said. Apparing on CBs's "Face the Nation," Aspin said recent Iraqi action "was not proof" that Saddam Hussein's government was trying to test the new U.S. administration, or that it necessarily had broken its own cease fire. Iraq's information minister, Hamed Yousef Hummadi, called for "pragmatic businesslike discussion" with the United States, and government-run newspapers invited President Bill Clinton to settle disputes through dialogue. In an interview with CNN, Hummah said the recent U.S. attacks were "minor ones, and we are committed to the cease fire." In another development, Iraqi officials said a U.S. cruise missile that struck outside the Al-Rashid Hotel on Jan. 17, killing two people, was a deliberate attack. Pentagon officials say the missile was one of 45 aimed at a suburban factory involved in nuclear weapons work and was knocked off course by anti-aircraft fire The northern no fly zone. North of the 36th parallel, was imposed by the U.S. led allies in April 1961 to protect Kurdish rebels from Iraqi attacks. The southern zone, south of the 32nd parallel, was declared last August to protect rebellious Shiite Muslims. Iraq rejects the zones as an infringement on its sovereignty and says they are a Western effort to partition Iraq. The United States has said its planes attacked air defense sites in the no-fly zones in northern and southern Iraq on Thursday, Friday and Saturday after hostile acts by Iraqi troops. Iraq has repeatedly denied its forces fired at or turned targeting radar on any allied planes in the zones since it announced a cease-fire beginning Wednesday as a gesture to the Clinton administration.