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With Hewlett-Packard's $150 rebate, you can step up to the superior performance of an HP Deskjet PLUS printer—and give your documents a more professional look. - Laser-quality, - 300-dpi resolution - Fast, quiet, easy operation - Spreadsheets at the touch of a button - Industry's first 3-year warranty Hewlett-Packard DeskJet PLUS Printer $699 After Rebate* HEWLETT PACKARD Authorized Dealer ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER Stop by our NEW location and Register to Win a FREE Computer 813 MASS • DOWNTOWN • 843-7584 • M-F:10-6,Sat:10-5 Police enter Mohawk land The Associated Press NY governor vows not to use force ST. REGIS INDIAN RESERVATION, N.Y. — Heavily armed police poured into this Mohawk reservation after two people were stain, but Gov. Mario Cuomo yesterday ruled out a judge who brought in a 9-month-old gambling dispute. U. S. and Canadian police sealed off the 14,000-acre reservation that straddles the border. Cuomo said that he had ordered the New York Army National Guard to assist state police but would not guardenm onto the reservation. New York State Police carryin- shotguns and the Quebec Provincial Force entered the reservation Tuesday night and yesterday after weeks or violence between pro- and anti-gambling factions culminated in the shootings deaths of two Mohawk men earlier on Tuesday. Cuomo said the National Guard was used to transport troopers and provide equipment at armories in pearlvtsown. On the Canadian side, Canadian troops provided communications assistance. State troopers denied entry onto the reservation to everyone but residents. They would not divulge the number of troopers on the reservation, and the combination U.S.Canadian police forces numbered in the hundreds. "We've got an armed invasion," said Diane Lazores, a spokesman for the Warrior Society, an armed progambling group. Lazores said that state police also were restricting movement of residents within the reservation despite Knight-Ridder Tribune News promises made before the action. State police Capt. Richard Garrant said that troopers would stay on Mohawk land to maintain some type of protection for himself, who arrived from the governor's office. Bush drops limits on computer sales The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush, probed by Western allies, proposed yesterday to drop restrictions on sales of sophistication technology products to the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. The move would eliminate 30 categories of goods and technologies from a list of 120 restricted items, and ease curbs on 13 others. "Careful study indicates that most of the goods and technologies that we currently control to Eastern Europe and Soviet destinations are of low strategic value and should be decontrolled," said Marlin Fitzwater, White House press secretary. 'Careful study indicates that most of the goods and technology that we currently control to Eastern Europe and Soviet destinations are of low strategic value and should be decontrolled.' In addition to computers, the affected products include telecommunications equipment such as cellular communications systems, satellite ground stations, microwave systems and fiber optics equipment, and precision-grade machine tools. For 40 years, the United States and its allies have imposed strict export curbs on high technology sales to Warsaw Pact nations and China to prevent them from buying equipment usable to produce weapons. Martin Fitzwater White House Press Secretary But pressure has been building to relax controls as a result of changes in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Fitzwater said Bush's proposal unanimously was endorsed by U.S. security agencies, as well as the Pentagon and State Department. Bush's proposal will be presented to the 17-nation Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls based in Paris. The countries include members of NATO and Japan. Official says talks can help future trade The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — U.S. Trade Representative Carla Hills tried yesterday to impart a sense of urgency to stalled trade talks by predicting diminished prosperity for all if negotiations fail. Hill's warning came at the start of three days of negotiations between trade ministers from Japan, the 12-nation European Community and Canada, which could break an impasse in a four-year effort to overhaul the rules governing the world trading system. The talks are designed to lower a variety of barriers to agriculture trade, textiles and other manufactured goods. The positions of opposing parties have become so entrenched that many fear failure to the talks being held under the auspices of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Such an outcome would deal a blow to the administration's hopes for expanding export opportunities for U.S. farmers and businesses. Hills, speaking to a group of business writers, called the negotiations the best chance this century to create trading rules that will be needed in the next century. Smith & Wessons Tonight! 25¢ Draws & 50¢ Well Drinks 18 & Up Admitted 623 Vermont 843-0689 Make Buyback a BREEZE Highest Cash—Now through Finals! Plus Double Bonus Buy back Bucks Enter the JBS Thousand Dollar Book Giveaway! Win one of 5 certificates for up to $200 for fall books! (One entry for each $10 of books sold per visit. Minimum one. Full details at the store.) Jayhawk Bookstore Your pros at the top of Naismith Hill Store Hours: Mon.-Thurs: 8-5:30 Fri: 8-5 Sat: 9-5 Sun: 12-4