8 Thursday, March 10, 1994 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food Dickinson Reality Bites **P*13-10** 4:30" 7:15, 9:50 Angle **A*3:36"** 7:10, 9:35 Schindler's List **R*0:00"** 8:00 Sugar Hill **A*2:15"** 7:00, 9:40 On Deadly Ground **R*4:20"** 7:00, 9:45 Aventura - Pat Detective **P*13-10** 4:10" 7:20, 9:35 3 Prompting Show (+) + Healing Delay Senior Catered Amenity + Healing Delay SUA FILMS TUESDAY, MAR. 8 - THURSDAY, MAR. 10 Bicycle Thief Tuesday 7:00 pm Wednesday 9:30 pm Midnight Express Tuesday 9:30 pm Thursday 7:00 pm One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Wednesday 7:00pm Thursday 9:30pm AL. Shows in KANSAS Union Tickets $2.50, MONTHLY $3.00 FREE WITH SUA MOVING CARD. CALL 841-B4SHOW FOR MORE INFORMATION. Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM, ADULTS $1.00 (UNITED TO SATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191 Eight Seconds PG-13 6.15, 7.30, 8.30 925 IOWA 941-780 The Chase PG-13 $1.15, 0.28 Blue Chips PG-13 $1.00, 0.28 My Girl 2^P $9.00 ...AND.. Philadelphia PG-13 7.20, 0.45 What's Eating $1.10, 0.45 Gilbert Grape? PG-13 $1.10, 0.45 Greedy DTS $1.00, 0.28 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 HOLLYWOOD 941-780 3 Musketeers PG 8:00 7:20, 8:40 The Fugitive PG-13 8:00, 8:00 Live Music! BRANDING IRON SALOON 806 W. 24th • 843-2000 Open 4 p.m. 2 a.m. March 11th & 12th The Outfit Thur., March 17th Elite Male Dancers March 18th & 19th East B Street March 25th & 26th Billy Spears Free Dance Lessons Saturday & Tuesday 7-9 *Unlimited Parking* *Big Screen TV* *Open 7 Days* *Open 7 Days* connectivity at A PlayStation® Formerly Just A Playhous Behind McDonald's $5 Off Hair Design Not valid with any other offer EXPIRES 3/31/94 40 SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina Discover Our Difference Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa 841-6886 Bosnian Serbs frustrate relief efforts to Muslims; U.N. officials outraged U. N. relief officials expressed outrage yesterday but could do little else as Serbs stalled aid trucks bound for a northern Bosnian town that has suffered months of bombardment. The pignit of the Muslim enclave of Maglaj, which has received only two aid convoys in eight months, underscored the daunting problems facing U.N. relief efforts despite progress toward peace elsewhere in Bosnia. Mosrian SN repeatedly have blocked aid deliveries to the 19,000 people trapped in Maglaj, despite promises of safe passage "This is ridiculous," said Christiane Berthiaume of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees office in Geneva. "We have not been there since the 25th of October. Those people are depending only on airdrops. Everybody knows that is not enough." Maglaj is 50 miles north of Sarajevo, where a truce between the Serbs and the Muslim-led government has mostly held since Feb. 10. But the Serbs have continued to hammer Maglaj. The Bosnian government said that four people had been killed there in shelling yesterday, but the report could not be independently confirmed. Peter Kessler, a U.N. relief representative in Sarajevo, said the Serbs had been warning of fighting ahead. EUSKIRCHEN, Germany Seven killed in court bombing A man fined for battering his girlfriend walked calmly from a courtroom yesterday, then came back blazing away with a pistol. He left again and returned with a bomb in a backpack. He set it off without saving a word. seven people died — the bomber, his girlfriend, the judge, a witness, two lawyers and a woman described as either the man's mother or mother-in-law. Fifteen people were wounded, two critically, in the worst non-political crime that German police could recall. The explosion buckled masonry and walls of the unguarded, three-story misdemeanor courthouse in Euskirchen, a town of 50,000 people about 15 miles west of Bonn. The blast threw the bomber's body through a window into the street and scattered bloody law books, shards of glass and bits of furniture. THE NEWS in brief A prosecutor, Joerg Pitrusiek, said the 39-year-old bomber had been convicted last year of beating his girlfriend and fined the equivalent of $3,900. The man, a furnace mechanic whose name was not released, had no previous record. Police found stocks of ammunition and bomb-making chemicals when they searched the man's apartment in Euskirchen, Pietrusky said. MOSCOW Yeltsin cancels visit with Nixon Apeeved President Boris Yeltsin froze Richard Nixon out of the Kremlin yesterday, complaining about the hard-line Communist company the former president has been keeping. Nixon's meetings with Yeltsin and other government officials were all canceled as a result of his talks with Yeltsin opponents, particularly the man who proclaimed himself Russian president during October's uprising. Yeltsin said Sadr's shot should be no surprise: "This is impossible after the sort of meetings Nixon has had here, and I'm glad President Clinton supports this position," Yeltsin said in unusually harsh remarks on Red Square. Yeltsin said his snub should be no surprise. Yeltsin said that Clinton had distanced himself from Nixon's private visit, but Clinton said yesterday that he thought that the Russian president should meet Nixon. "It's up to President Yeltisin whom he sees and doesn't see," Clinton said. "I wish he would see him because I think they'd enjoy talking to one another." Yeltsin was in no mood for a friendly chat. "How can one do something like that? Coming to a country and looking for some sort of stains here?" he said, scowling and jabbing his finger in the air to emphasize his disgust. It was Nixon's meeting Monday with former Vice President Alexander Rutskoi that most insulted Yeltsin. Rutskoi was named acting vice president in an attempted coup on Yelstin last year. WASHINGTON White House aides set to testify President Clinton told aides to "be very open" yesterday, a day before they face grand jury questioning in the probe of possible meddling in the Whitewater investigation. The special prosecutor pleaded on Capitol Hill for Republicans to hold off their own hearings. With aides summoned to testify today, the White House bundled relevant papers for prosecutors. The appearances of at least two of Clinton's closest aides — Bruce Lindsey and Harold Ickes — were postponed. Special prosecutor Robert Fiske called the Clinton administration "very responsive and cooperative" after trying to persuade Republicans to delay congressional hearings until he completes his inquiry into whether the White House attempted to influence the investigation. He said he planned to finish that part of his inquiry within a few months, after which he would have no objections to hearings. The debate in Congress about the hearings has run largely along parti-san lines. Republican Sens. Alfonse D'Amato and William Cohen said they couldn't agree with his request to hold off on all hearings. However, both said they had assured Fiske that prosecutors would get first crack at critical witnesses and that Congress would not grant immunity to anyone it called to testify. Congress granted immunity to crucial witnesses in the Iran-Contra hearings, a factor in the reversals of several convictions. "We have assured the counsel we can conduct our oversight hearings in a manner which will not deter or preclude him from carrying out his responsibilities," D'Amato said. Fiske is probing the failure of Arkansas' Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan Association and whether investors in the Whitewater land venture — including the president and Hillary Rodham Clinton — benefited from questionable Madison transactions during the 1980s. Compiled from The Associated Press. FINALLY, A USEFUL FOOTNOTE. The Marshalls Shoe Event. March 10th through March 16th only. *BUY ONE PAIR GET A SECOND PAIR 1/2 OFF. We can't tell you the names, but we have an incredible selection of the latest styles priced even below the department store sales. Choose from clogs, flats, mules, lug-looks, loafers, dress pumps and athletic shoes for men, women and kids. So hurry, and march out with the savings. BRING IN THIS AD AND YOUR COLLEGE I.D. AND RECEIVE 10% OFF ALL PURCHASES OTHER THAN ST. 10% discount offer not valid with any other discount, coupon or buy one get one free offers. Discount not applicable towards gift card. Offer does not apply to items purchased on layaway. 10% off is applied prior to state or local taxes. Code: 04 Marshalls Never, never, never pay full price. OVERLAND PARK (METCALF & 91ST), KS 9148 METCALF AVENUE (913) 381-6865 INDEPENDENCE (NOLAND & 170), MO 4023 SOUTH NOLAND ROAD (816) 254-4545 MERCHANDISE WILL VARY BY STORE KANSAS CITY (BANNISTER RD. & 1435), MO 4707 EAST BANNISTER ROAD (816) 765-9400 For the store nearest you, call toll-free 1-800-MARSHALLS • Over 450 stores nationwide © 1994 MARSHALLS