8 Thursday. January 24, 1991 / University Daily Kansan Quail Creek Apartments Apple Lane Place 2111 Kasold 843-4300 EASY DISCREET RENTING Must be 21. I.D. Required XXX VIDEO- 1420 W, 23rd Adventure Travel 843-0964 544 Columbia Drive HOURS: 11-9 Sunday, Monday 11-10 Tuesday - Saturday 1801 Mass., Lawrence, Kansas 842-9637 Transcriptions • Resumes • Professional Writing • Cover letters • Laser Printing 1012 Mass. 842-4619 A Member of PA RW Professional Association of Resume Writers CAMPUS OUTLET Finally!! 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JANUARY PRICE THAW Regularly to $130 Women's Dress & Casual Shoes $5 to $50 Regularly to $150 $25 to $50 Women's Boots Men's Boots & Shoes Regularly to $140 $10 to $60 Children's Shoes Regularly to $53 $10 to $20 Open evenings 'til 8:30 Open Sunday 1:00 to 5:00 Quality footwear for the whole family 1985 family since 1968 825 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence U.S. motive in war pondered in forum on Mideast issues By Lara Gold Questions about the United States' goals in the Persian Gulf war and Middle East regional issues were the focus of a speech by a KU assistant professor of political science yesterday. Kansan staff writer "It is very clear that the goal of the United States is to destroy as much of the Iraq military as possible," said Deborah Gerner, assistant professor of political science, at a forum at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries. And for the United States, if Saddam Hussein were killed in the process, that would be even better, she said. But Gerner said she was concerned with how long the war would drag on before the United States could say it had achieved victory. She expressed concern about the consequences that a total destabilization of Iraq may have on the Middle East. "I am opposed to the military occupation of Kuwait by Iraq," she said. "But the crisis should have been solved without military action." i. Iraq is no longer a major player, possibilities would open for Syria, "What are the United States' goals after the war?" she asked. Syria, Gerner said, was the only country allied with Iran during the Iran-Iraq war and had been a long-time enemy of Iraq. If Iraq were destroyed, questions would arise about what nations in that region would be allowed to maintain military capabilities, she said. She said that people needed to come together so the Lessons learned from the Korean War could be transmitted. "The United States and the United Nations were doing fine in the war as long as its objectives were limited objectives," she said. 'The United States feels that they have a right - a right to control the resources in that region. I have a lot of trouble with this idea.' There were only minor casualties when the United States was pushing — Deborah Gerner Assistant professor of political sci- ence North Korea back to its borders, she said. Fighting and casualties escalated when the objectives broadened beyond the original intent. One man at the speech had similar concerns about the United States' objection to the gulf war. "Many of us have questions about what our government is going to do when the war ends." Don Conrad, minister, said after Gerner's speech. Conrad said he appreciated Gerner's position against military action. Gerner said she feared that the United States had other motives behind her actions. One of the main reasons is the United States wants to have cheap oil, she said. "The United States feels that they have a right — a right to control the resources in that region," she said. "Protect our oil in Kuwait. I have a lot of trouble with this idea. I believe our car is unnecessary and unwise." Answering a question about what a person could do to help stop the war, she advised voters to write their congressional representatives and attend vigils. She did, however, say she supported the troops that were fighting in the gulf. "Wanting the war to end does not mean you are not supporting the war." Iraqis claim U.S. bombed milk factory The Associated Press CNN's Peter Arnett, in a report from Baghdad, said Iraqi officials took him on a tour of the ruined installation, telling him it had been hit in bombing raids Sunday and Monday. WASHINGTON — The White House and Pentagon said yesterday that allied bombers destroyed an Iraqi biological weapons plant operating behind the facade of an infantformula factory. "An official said it had been producing 20 tons of powdered milk a day and was the only source of infant-formula food for children 1 year and younger in Iraq." Arnett said in the broadcast, which was cleared by Iraq censors. "The machinery inside was a molten pit. The intact signboard at the entrance to the Plant in English and in Arabic." Arnett said he had been told there were no injuries because the attack occurred at night, when the plant was closed. In Washington, officials said they were certain the baby milk was just a cover. "That factory is, in fact, a production facility for biological weapons," said White House press secretary Martin Fitzwater. "The Iraqis have hidden this facility behind a facade of baby-milk production as a form of disinformation." Biological weapons, sometimes known as germ warfare, are used to spread deadly diseases among opposing troops. Fitzwater said the plant had been guarded heavily and had barbed wire, but offered no other details when pressed for the evidence behind the U.S. assessment. Allies bomb entrenched Iraqi units Continued from Page 1 Even with a successful hit on the Scud, last night's attack was terrifying to those who listened below. With a flash of yellow light and a window-shattering thunderclap, a U.S. Patriot anti-missile rocket knocked the incoming Scud from the skies — the first Patriot kill over Israel. A day earlier, a Patriot fired by an Israeli crew had struck a Scud but failed to detonate its warhead, and then crashed into a Tel Aviv suburb. "We heard the shriek of the missile coming in, and then there was a big boom, " said Yossi Levi, who lives in Jerusalem. "We blocked the wall. " We叼shock if fear." In Saudi Arabia, Iraq fired Scuds overnight at the capital, Riyadh; at the eastern port city of Dhahran; and at another site in north-central Saudi Arabia, the U.S. military command said early today. Sources present at a congressional military briefing yesterday said lawmakers were told that scouring the deserts of western and southern Iraq was a difficult task, with some air attention from the anti- personnel phase of the allied battle plan. The military said the number of Scuds fired and the number of Patriots intercepts was being determined. Even so, the commanders claimed a string of successes. They said allied strikes had destroyed Iraq's two nuclear research reactors and seriously damaged factories believed to produce chemical and biological weapons. The focus of the air attacks was moving from Iraq's strategic military installations to its tactical targets, including elite ground forces and supply lines from Iraq to oceans said military officials in Saudi Arabia. Powell said allied forces had seized air superiority and now intended to zero in on Iraqi ground forces in and around Kuwait. "Our strategy for dealing with this army is very simple: First we're going to cut it off, then we're going to kill it," he said. Allied troops on the ground, though, said they counted on facing a tough fight — and perhaps a drawn- out one. One British artilleryman on the front lines in northern Saudi Arabia said Iraqi heavy artillery was well-sheltered, with underground stocks of conventional and chemical warfare shells. Oil-filled trenches and tank traps would be hard to breach, said the veteran non-comissioned officer, speaking on condition of anonymity. "It will take five weeks at the least, from the word 'go,' and it will be bloody difficult," he said. "A bloke's dug in with his artillery, he's going to fight you, isn't he?" Want to place an ad? Call 864-4358, 8am -5pm SCREEN. 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