6 Tuesday, September 18, 1990/ University Daily Kansan $ save money $ CLIP A COUPON SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS PRSSA Informational Meeting Tuesday, September 18, 7:00 p.m. 100 Stauffer-Flint For more information call: Erik Nelson 749-0680 ATTENTION PRE-MED STUDENTS! And Pre-Dental Students! Informational meeting Tuesday, Sept. 18, 7 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union KU advisors and Representatives from the KU Medical School will discuss: *Admissions criteria *Application Procedure *The Interview *The Medical Student Experience *and Answer all of Your Questions Individual Advisement KU Medical School representatives are taking appointments for individual meetings here on campus on selected Mondays in October and November Representatives from UMKC Dental School will be on campus in October Make your appointment in the Pre-Med Office, 106 Strong Hall or call 864-3667. AMMAN, Jordan — Arab radicals meeting in Amman yesterday cheered calls for suicide attacks against U.S. forces and for an Islamic uprising to topple Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. against U.S. forces and Saudi oil pipelines. He urged them to follow the example of JauJamal, a Syrian gunbait commander who died in 1965 when he deliberately rammed his vehicle during fighting over the Suez Canal. Arab groups back suicide strikes The Associated Press "We have striking examples of heroes who turned their bodies into bombs that horrified the aggressors and forced them to flee in darkness as happened to the American Marines in Beirut in 1983," said Ibrahim Al-Kharraz of the Libyan Peoples Congress. He drew rapturous applause on the final day of the three-day meeting by exherting Arabs to swiftly move He also healed the suicide bombers who killed 241 U.S. Marines in an attack on their Beirut barracks in 1983. The call for Mubarak's ouster came from Adnan Sauddain, a member of the Jordaniian Islamic Moslem Brotherhood and the most defiant Moslem Brotherhood impassioned plea for an Islamic uprising to "free Egypt from the The 150 delegates from 11 Arab countries officially represent only their individual organizations, so the communique will not necessarily reflect the positions of their governments. shackles of the treasonous Camp David accords." Jordan, for example, agreed to act as host for the conference although King Hussein has called for Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait and allow the ousted emir to return. However, the king has resigned Western pressure to publicly condemn Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. Saddam has won support in the Arab world by insisting that any Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait must be tied to a similar Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories and a solution to the Palestinian problem. The United States objects to linking the Iraqi and Israeli issues "The Arab triumph had already started when an Arab leader said 'No' to America and slapped its face. We will slip the face of Bush with the shoes of Iraqi soldiers," Saududdin told the conference. Groups from Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya, Sudan, Mauritania, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Iraq and the Palestine Liberation Organization were invited to the conference. Iraqi troops seize men crossing border The Associated Press KHAFJI, Saudi Arabia — Iraqi troops yesterday randomly seized young men among the thousands of refugees fleeing Kuwait but let wives, mothers and other women go, refuses said. "We were just sitting in the car and they put a gun to his face. The soldier said if he didn't come now, we will shoot him," said a 45-year-old woman named Fatima, who had been her 17-year-old son disapcrel. Refugees said busloads of men between the ages of 17 and 40 were seen being shipped toward Iraq. No explanation was given. Other young men were allowed to pass through. Many refugees the detained would be killed, and they mentioned the names of cousins or friends who were killed or resisting of resisting the Iran occupation. The soldiers manning Iraqi border posts confiscated passports and other documents, forcing people to wait outside the border crossing for more than 24 hours as their identities checked for entry into Saudi Arabia. Since Iraq on Saturday unexpectedly opened the border for the first time in more than a year, the U.S. entered Saudi Arabia, said the vice governor of the Eastern Province, Prince Fahd bin Salman. "It's just a slow process for security reasons," Prince Fahd said during an inspection tour of the border with IDS, which included with IDS issued by Iraq, he said. "We are trying to make sure that nothing is smuggled into the country," he said. Refugees left the Iraqis turned back all non-Kuwaitis except for a few Western women married to Kuwaiti citizens. Six checkpoints on the 120-mile route from Kuwait City to the border eliminated the possibility of random escapes, they said. Briefs Nations agree to expel Iraq's military aides travel outside the Hague European Community nations agreed yesterday to expel Iraqi military aides and restrict the movement of Iraq's diplomats in retaliation for raids on foreign diplomatic compounds in Kuwait. Britain ousted eight members of the Iraqi Embassy and ordered the deportation of 23 other Iraqi citizens. Italy announced a previous expulsion order would apply to 11 employees in the Iraqi military attache's office. Baldium told Iraqi diplomats they could go no farther than 18 miles from the center of Brussels, and Italy restricted them to an area within 18 miles of Brussels. The government demanded written requests from Iraqi officials for In a final statement, the foreign ministers of the 12 Common Market nations urged Iraq "to realize the suicidal character of its behavior toward the international community." On Sunday, the U.N. Security Council condemned the Iraqi raids on the French, Belgian, Dutch and Canadian embassy compounds in Kuwait. France has since expelled 29 Iraqis. British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurl said there was support among the foreign ministers for an air blockade of Iraq, but he said it was important to get back from the Security Council for such a move. The 12 EC nations are Belgium, Denmark, France, West Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg. the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Spain and Portugal. Air blockade of Iraq gets support from Bush President Bush yesterday endorsed expanding the Iraqi trade embargo to include air traffic as a way of increasing pressure on Iraq President Saddam Hussein. He expressed concern over whether the United States will stand united if the showdown drags on too long. Still, he said, the country is "magnificently united" at this point and recalled that the nation "stayed fairly well together" during World War II. toward Iraq before it invaded Kuwait on Aug. 2. At the time, the administration was resisting congressional amnesty to impose sanctions against Iraq. "If everybody had the benefit of total hindsight, why, you'd go back and say, 'This doesn't make much sense.'" Bush said of the policy he pursued. "I'm not sure, having said that, that would have changed Saddam Hussein's intention to take over Kuwait." Bush, at a news conference, also said that in retrospect he regrets the U.S. policy of patient diplomacy The president offered clear support for stiffening the U.N. sanctions against Iraq by imposing an embargo on air traffic, in addition to the existing naval blockade. If approved, it would be the first time the U.N. had ever authorized an air blockade. From The Associated Press Get off to a Great Start KU Bookstore Computer Store Back to School Start Right Program Offer Ends September 28th,1990 Start Right Program includes: Macintosh SE (40 Meg. Hard Drive, 2 Meg. RAM) Standard Keyboard (Extended keyboard can be substituted for $69.00 more) Imagewriter II Printer with cable MacWrite II word processing software MacDraw II graphics software Please add 4.75% sales tax Back To School Special Price: Macintosh Deals: Macintosh SE (2 FDHD Floppy Drives) $1,012.00 Macintosh IIcx CPU $2,615.00 Macintosh IIcx 40 Meg. HD $3,007.00 Macintosh IIcx 80 Meg. HD/4 Meg. RAM $3,741.00 Macintosh IIx CPU/4 Meg. RAM $2,951.00 Macintosh IIx 40 Meg. HD $2,995.00 Macintosh IIx 80 Meg. HD/4 Meg. RAM $4,015.00 Apple Monochrome Monitor $239.00 MacWriteII and MacDraw II (Bundled together) $119.00 Carrying case & Accessories $129.00 (Accessories include Surge Protector, duscevers for Mac SE or Plus and Imagewriter, Box of 10 DSDD 3.5 inch floppy disks, Curtis Clip, Floppy disk holder, extra Imagewriter ribbon, mousepad, and 200 sheets computer paper. Purchased seperately, this is a $225.00 value.) Prices good while existing quantities last. Offer open only to students enrolled in six or more credit hours of course work, full-time faculty members, or full-time staff who are directly involved in the administration, delivery, or support of the academic mission of the University of Kansas, Lawrence campus. Please obtain and read a copy of the requirements for purchasing Macintosh computer equipment under the terms of the Apple Higher Education Program. You may obtain a copy of the requirements from the KU Bookstore in the Burge Union. Payment must be made in cash or by cashier's Check. The name of the person buying the computer must be on the Cashier's Check. No personal checks or credit cards accepted. Have your Cashier's Check made payable to the KU Bookstore. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases. KU Bookstore Computer Store Burge Union Level Two 864-5697 DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS HERE'S WHY THE SMART MONEY AT UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS IS GOING WITH TIAA-CREF AS IF THE FUTURE DEPENDED ON IT. Because it does. Smart investors know that your future depends or how well your retirement system performs. TIAA-CREF has been the premier retirement system for people in education and research for over 70 years. We have enabled over 200,000 people like you to enjoy a comfortable retirement. And over 1,000,000 more are now planning for the future with TIAA-CREF. SMART MONEY LOOKS FOR SECURITY, GROWTH AND DIVERSITY FOR RETIREMENT SAVINGS. 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