8 Tuesday, April 26, 1994 NIVERSITY DALLY KANSAN "Professional quality and the lowest prices" Hrs: 8-M-7Th, 8-SFri, 9-8sat, 12-4Sun, 843-3826 $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer EXPIRES 5-31-94 40 Discover Our Difference Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa 841-6886 COULDN'T YOU USE A $400 WORRY FREE COLLEGE GRADUATE BONUS? layhawk Bookstore We know today's grads We know today's grads have a lot on their minds, so why not let Chrysler Corporation's $400 college graduate bonus help out. See dealer for complete details. details. 2121 W 29 St. Terr. Lawrence 843-3055 100% alloy frame oversize frame/fork 21 speed Shimano gears alloy wheels QR hubs/front & rear durable trail bike $374.95 The Giant Yukon is incredibly durable. We think it's the best entry mountain bike you can buy! RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc 916 Massachusetts, (913)841-6642 Converse Chuck Taylor $ ^{\circ} $ Available in: ARENSBERG'S SHOES Open evenings 'til 8:30 Open Sunday 12:00 to 5:00 Quality footwear for the whole family since 1958. 825 Massachusetts Downton Lawrence 843-3470 Student Loan Applications Available At Capitol Federal Savings Capitol Federal can help finance your college education with the Federal Family of Education loans. New higher loan limits apply to the Stafford Loan and Parent Loan for Students (PLUS). Now is the time to apply for the fall semester. Visit your school's financial aid officer who will determine your eligibility, and indicate Capitol Federal as your lender! Call 841-0700 Local Offices Iowa & Harvard 11th & Vermont The Serbs mostly halted their assault on Gorazde on Sunday, more than a day after NATO threatened air strikes if they did not immediately cease fire and withdraw armor and artillery 1.9 miles from the town center. Bosnian Serbs block aid convoy NATO commanders sought U.N. permission to conduct air strikes Saturday, but the chief U.N. official for former Yugoslavia, Yasushi Akashi, refused. U.N. officials said yesterday Helicopters evacuate 91 wounded people The Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Serbs blocked a U.N. aid convoy headed for Gorazde yesterday despite pledges to allow free access, but they appeared to be moving heavy weapons farther away from the Muslim town as demanded by NATO. U. N. helicopters evacuated 91 wounded people from the besieged Muslim enclave for treatment in Sarajevo. Hundreds more were waiting for flights. BOW HOUGHTON LENDER FDIC INSURED Although NATO and U.N. officials reportedly had heated exchanges about the refusal, officials at NATO's headquarters were satisfied yesterday. They said the alliance had received assurances that its warplanes would be allowed to stage bombing runs if Bosnian Serbs ignored ultimatums. Cmdr. Eric Chaperon, another U.N. representative, said that "all heavy weapons are believed to be out" of the exclusion zone. He said that "a number" of Serb infantrymen were still on the right bank of the Drina River, which divides Gorazde, but that it appeared they would withdraw. While they pulled back Sunday, the Serbs burned houses and blew up a water treatment plant, but U.N. officials said they were satisfied. that he had just worked out a truce agreement with the Serbs and did not want to leopardize that. The Bosnian Serb army said in a statement that it was completing the pullout of its heavy weapons from the 1.9-mile exclusion zone. It claimed that troops of Bosnia's Muslim-dominated government were violating the truce with sniper fire. from Gorazde by early tomorrow The Serbs appeared to be abiding by the cease-fire. Chaperon said there also were indications that the Serbs were pulling farther back to meet NATO's demand that their troops be at least 12.4 miles "We have good news from Gorazde," said a U.N. representative, Maj. Guy Vinet. "The situation is quiet. ... There's some sporadic small-arms fire, but it's very little." There was no immediate U.N. or NATO comment on the Serbs' blocking of the aid convoy heading for Gorazde. NATO demanded Friday that all U.N. personnel have unrestricted access for humanitarian convoys to Gorazde, Sarajevo and four other Muslim enclaves that the United Nations has designated "safe areas." About 350 peacekeepers moved to Gorazde over the weekend, and a humanitarian convoy delivered 90 tons of aid Sunday. But Bosnian Serbs blocked a second aid convoy at the Yugoslav border yesterday. The convoy, which carried 80 tons of food, planned to try again today. Anti-Aristide soldiers massacre 23 in Haiti The Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Soldiers massacred at least 23 fishermen and merchants near the western coastal city of Gonales, witnesses and human rights advocates said yesterday. The soldiers raided a seaside neighborhood that is allied to ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, firing shots into the air Saturday, but causing no reported injuries. The attack followed a series of attacks on Haiti's pro-democracy movement in recent months. The killings come as Washington has toughened its stance against the military that has dominated Haiti since it ousted Aristide in a bloody 1991 coup. Residents and the pro-Aristide Haitian Information Bureau said the attack had begun with a raid on the dusty, seaside slum of Raboteau in Gonaives, 100 miles north of the capital, Port-au-Prince. The witnesses, speaking on condition of anonymity, said soldiers claiming to be looking for armed Aristide partisans had shot into the air, roasted people from their beds and roughed them up. The soldiers returned at dawn Saturday, firing at By yesterday, many Raboteau residents had left their homes in fear of further attack. "I think this is a continuation of the effort to decapitate the democratic movement in Haiti," Ira Kurzban, the U.S. counsel for Aristide's government, told The Associated Press from his office in Miami. The bodies washed ashore gradually: three on Saturday and at least 20 from Sunday to early yesterday afternoon, the witnesses said. There was no immediate comment from state radio or from the military. Gonaives led the struggle to topple the 29-year Duvalier family dictatorship in 1986, and the city was a stronghold of support for Aristide in his electoral triumph in 1990. In recent months, however, the Raboteau slum has been a scene of struggle between Aristide supporters and militants of a neo-Duvalierist paramilitary movement, the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti (FRAPH). On April 17, a FRAPH militant, Pierre Paul Camille, was the victim of assault and battery, presumably by Aristide partisans, the independent Tropic FM radio reported. embarking fishermen. They commandeered rowboats and hunted down fishermen and merchants bringing in goods. The next day, FRAPH militants set up barricades of flaming tires, Tropic reported. Soldiers raided Raboteau and beat its residents. $ save money $ CLIP A COUPON A used car may cost more than you think... Legal Services for Students 148 Burge • 864-5665 STUDENT SENATE Research Consumer Law. HenryT's Bar&Grill Tues Specials 2 for 1 Burgers (after 6 pm) of Bud or Bud Light Wed Specials 15c Wings (after 6 pm) $1 ^{50} Domestic bottles.