6 Monday, October 15, 1990 / University Daily Kansan THE LSAT IS CHANGING DO YOU KNOW HOW?? To find out more about the upcoming changes and what you can do to prepare. Call The Princeton Review 843-3131 Classes now forming for the December test. TRUCKLOAD SALE! PANASONIC PRINTERS UP TO 45% OFF msrp PANASONIC PRINTERS UP TO 45% OFF msrsp HUNDREDS IN STOCK! DOT MATRIX PRINTERS AS LOW AS $169 LASERS AS LOW AS $849 WIDE-CARRIAGE, NARROW-CARRIAGE, WE'VE GOT THEM ALL FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE WE WILL BEAT ANY BONAFIDE PRICE IN THE LAWRENCE AREA HURRY IN, AT THESE PRICES, WE'LL MOVE THEM FAST. MICROTECH COMPUTER$, INC. Quality • Service • Value Panasonic 2329 MIOWA ST. 5003 SW 29TH ST. 6160 E, 21ST, #170 LAWRENCE, KS. 6047 TOPEKA, KS. 6614 WICHITA, KS. 67208 (913) 841-9513 (913) 272-1423 (316) 651-0202 Mon - Thur. 9:30 - 6:00, Fri. 10:00 - 5:30, Sat. 10:00 - 3:00 You don't have to speak German to understand the definition of Fahrvergnugen. Everyone who drives a new Volkswagen knows that it means "pleasurable driving experience." Don't just buy any car this semester. Buy some fun. Buy some Fahrvergnugen. Jim Clark Motors 29th and Iowa 843-3055 WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES ALCOHOL AWARENESS WEEK Today, October 15! AAW Kick-off on Wescoe Beach 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. educational literature, NABs, giveaways, and a special visit from Vince and Larry, the seat belt dummies All Week Events "Count the Cans in the Crashed Car" Contest Stauffer-Flint lawn Anheuser-Busch "Know When to Say When" Poster Competition $20,000 in prizes awarded to the winners who offer the best messages of legal and personal responsibility in alcohol consumption. Other Special Events Other Special Events Monday: Talk by Barbara Ballard, Olver Hall, 7 p.m. Tuesday: Talk by Frank Harwood: "Has Stress Become an Elephant in Your Room?" Templin Lobby, 7:30 p.m. WATCH FOR MORE EVENT INFORMATION OR CALL 864-9570. We Care for KU. Health Education 864-9570 Health Center 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students Mideast intervention criticized By Tatsuya Shimizu Kansan staff writer Muslims should not have asked for military help from non-Islamic countries to deal with the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, and the United States should not interfere with the Islamic world, Muslim scholar said Friday night. The scholar, Jamal Badiwi, professor at St. Mary's University, Halifax, Canada, spoke about his views on the Persian Gulf crisis to 140 people at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Hamed Ghazali, president of the Muslim Student Association, said Badawi was well known among Arab scholars more than 202 television programs. "Islam does not accept any foreign intervention or foreign hegemony," Badiwa said. "It doesn't apply to this crisis," he said. There is a rule of necessity in the Koran, the sacred book of Islam, that allows Muslims to seek help from others when there is a great need he said. under the Islamic rule of necessity only when those forces were helpers temporarily under the command of Muslims. However, the 200,000 U.S. soldiers in Saudi Arabia are not helpers anymore, he said. Badawi said Islamic scholars who supported seeking help from non-Islamic countries were not well informed. "People were not exposed to this kind of information." he said. In Saudi Arabia, the government withheld information about the Iraqi invasion for three days, Badawi said. When one of the prominent scholars who approved intervention of non-Islamic countries discovered the number of U.S. soldiers in Saudi Arabia, he was shocked, Badawi said. He said that Henry Kissinger, secretary of state in the Nixon and Ford administrations, said after the oil embargo in the early 1970s that the United States had the right to occupy the oil-producing countries to defend The U.S. military presence in Saudi Arabia was not simply the response to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, he said it had been planned for years. Badai said U.S. military desert training started in the early 1980s in order to prepare troops to occupy countries in the Middle East, he said. its petroleum supply. Although help from non-Islamic countries may benefit Muslims more than it harms them, they are losers in the long and short terms, he said. "Might is right in the world we are living." Badawi said. They are suffering from loss of lives and property, he said. April Hawkins, Harrisonville, Mo, graduate student, said she agreed with Badawi about U.S. intervention in the gulf crisis. Bilal Muhammad, an Olathe firefighter who attended the lecture, said Badawi's views were shared by most Muslims. "The Muslim world does not want non-Muslims there to settle their orblems," he said. "I think the United States should not have gone into it," she said. "The only reason we are there is for our own self interest. We never give any kind of support to Muslims. I think we should not support Kuwait." DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PIZZA! 842-1212 NO COUPON SPECIALS 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center Everyday Two-Fers 2·Toppings $8.00 Party "10" 10*Pizzas 1*Topping $25.00 Primetime Special primetime Spec 3*Pizzas 1*Topping 4*Cokes $10.00 1. Pizza CARRY-OUT SPECIAL 1•Pizza 1•Topping 1•Coke $3.50 DELIVERY BEGINS AT 11 am DAILY 11 am--M-Th----2 am 11 am--Fri-Sat----3 am 11 am--Sun----1 am Happy Birthday 15 Years The Sound Alternative 90.7 FM 15th Anniversary Concert, Monday, Oct. 22 This Week's Anniversary Events Monday 10/15 Thursday, 10/18 All Week Nostalgic Broadcast and Spin in front of Stauffer-Flint noon-1 p.m. Chicago Band "Material Issue" to perform in front of the Union noon-1 p.m. Special Giveaways CDs, cassetts, and concert tickets (including George Carlin) listen to 90.7 for details