US. missiles sent to punish Saddam IRAQ from page 1 “reckless acts have consequences.” The president said that the attack and the extension of the “no-fly” zone in southern Iraq have “reduced Saddam’s ability to strike out again at his neighbors.” To do less, he said, would encour age Saddam in the sort of aggression former President Bush was forced to curb in 1991 during the Persian Gulf War. As American missiles roared into Iraq earlier in a daylight strike, U.S. allies watched from the sidelines, some of them voicing sharp criticism. France, Spain and Russia objected, as did China. Saudi Arabia refused to allow Saudi-based U.S. planes to take part in the assault. Britain, Germany and Japan applauded Clinton’s action. withdrawing. Later, however, McCurry said, “There have been movements in and around Irbil and in the corridor extending to the southeast, along the lines toward Chamchamal and Sulaymaniyah” - two other Kurdish areas. “We have given him a strong mes sage,” Defense Secretary William Perry said. “We expect to see changes in behavior, we will be watching very carefully. We reserve the right to take future military actions.”' The White House sent a fresh warn ing Tuesday to Iraq; it had to be faxed because Iraqi officials refused to meet with Americans. Clinton gave the “go” order for the attack at 7:11 pun. CDT Monday in a telephone call from Air Force One as he returned from nine days of cam paigning. Iskandiariyah just south of Baghdad, and al-Rut, a southern city on the Tigris River. The Defense Department con firmed Iraqi reports of five Iraqi deaths but Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Ba con rejected claims by Iraqi officials that a missile struck a housing complex. Tightening pressure on Saddam, Clinton expanded the U.N.-enforced “no-fly” zone in southern Iraq, extend ing it from the Kuwaiti border north to the suburbs of Baghdad. The presi dent also put a freeze on a U.N. brokered oil-for-food deal, saying he wanted assurances the food would reach the needy and not replenish Iraqi government resources. The attack - the second against Iraq during the Clinton administration - was intended to punish Saddam for his bloody siege of the Kurdish-controlled city oflrbil. “Our objectives are limited but clear: to make Saddam pay a price for the latest act of brutality, reducing his ability to threaten his neighbors and America’s interests,” the president said in a nationally broadcast statement from the Oval Office. Clinton said Saddam’s army still controlled Irbil and remained deployed for further attacks, despite claims it was Liunng uie lirsi anae&., x / miouhc guided cruise missiles were fired at sur face-to-air missile sites, radar installa tions and command-and-control instal lations in southern Iraq, where Saddam’s forces could threaten Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Flying from the Pacific island of Guam, two aging B-52 bombers fired 13 missiles. From the Persian Gulf, two Navy ships, the destroyer USS Laboon and the cruiser USS Shiloh, launched 14 Tomahawk cruise missiles. The weapons struck in the vicinity of the Thllil air base in southwestern Iraq, the nearby city of Nasiriyah on the Euphrates River, the city of al In a televised address, Saddam urged his soldiers to “resist these ag gressors” and pay no attention to “damned imaginary no-fly zones.” McCurry said the United States put Saddam Hussein strongly on notice - beginning Aug. 28 - that there would be important consequences if he did not withdraw troops from Irbil. He said the first warning, approved by Ginton while campaigning by train on his way to the Giicago convention, lefi “absolutely no doubt in Saddam Hussein’s mind that there would be serious, grave consequences” if Iraqi forces continued to pose a hostile threat to the Kurds. Representatives meet at new CBA council By Todd Anderson Staff Reporter The first meeting of the College of Business Administration’s Presi dents Council Tuesday brought to gether representatives and advisers from several of the college’s vari ous student organizations. Heidi Thomas, the council’s cre ator, said the council wanted to im prove communication between the organizations. Thomas, vice president of the CBA Student Advisory Board, said that by improving communication, each group could learn new ways of recruiting and organizing from the others. Ronald Hampton and Gordon Karels, associate deans of the Col lege of Business Administration, also attended the Tuesday night meeting. With support from the adminis tration, Thomas said, the council hopes to create more cohesiveness between students and members of the faculty. “We want to create an atmo sphere of openness because we want a well-rounded voice from the stu dent body,” Hampton said. The two main goals of the coun cil are to create organizations with more ethnic diversity and to find a way to retain all new members, Hampton said. The council also plans to coor dinate the construction of a World Wide Web page which will provide links to the home pages of all of CBA’s student organizations, Tho mas said. XX MERGE / I X. When we ail work together, / I \ great things can happen. \ / MDA H / Muscular Dystrophy Association / 1-800-572-1717 Cummers pay aepuatt telephone chugs «> reach the sente 01996 AMT ' Surviving in college is tough enough, right5 That’s why we’ve designed a package to make things easier Choose AI8T and lode at all you can get: AIXT Hue Reach* Savings ,> 1 Save 25% on every kind of U.S. call f on your AT&T phone bill when you spend just $25 a month.1 AIKT Hue Rewards* l Get savings at Sam Goody/Musicland, I TCBY “Treats” and BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO with the MemberJ3enefit Card. 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