6 Tuesday, November 23, 1993 Red Lyon Tavern 944 Mass. 832-8228 APARTMENTS • TOWNHOMES • RESIDENCES so...how about those roommates?! Like 'em but can't live with them? We have a studio or a one bedroom apartment ESPECIALLY FOR YOU! MEADOWBROOK 842-4200 We also have 2 & 3 bedrooms for 2nd semester & are close to campus. MON-FRI 8am-5:30pm, SAT 10-4 SUN 1-4. (Sorry, no pets) Auto Loans 5. 9% Apr Fixed Rate 100% Financing NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Take advantage of low rates at KU Credit Union. Don't miss your opportunity for 100% financing of a new auto at the low fixed rate of 5.9% for 36 or 48 months and 60 month financing at the fixed rate of 6.75%. Serbians stall U.N. aid convoys The Associated Press SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Serbian forces blocked all U.N. aid convoy headed for eastern Bosnia yesterday, while U.N. officials reported starvation in the battle-scarred, southwestern city of Mostar. in Sarajevo, a mortar shell exploded among children sledding near a U.N. base, wounding five, two seriously. Lyndall Sachs, a U.N. representative in Berlgrade, said Serbian officials had begun demanding special authorization for aid convoys to cross into Bosnia yesterday. They cited a law passed by Yugoslavia last year requiring such permission for the passage of goods. to return to Belgrade yesterday. U.N. attempts to resupply its own operations in Bosnia also foundered. "This has created a bureaucratic nightmare for us," Sachs said. A 46 truck convoy carrying supplies for a Nordic peacekeeper battalion in Tuzla returned to Belggrade after Bosnian Serb soldiers threatened to shoot. Lt. Col. B艾ikman, U.N. military representative, said. As a result of the blockade, U.N. convoys headed for the Bosnian cities of Tuzla, Srebrenica and Sarajevo had Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic personally approved the convoy, Alkman said, but local soldiers claimed that paperwork was not in order and threatened to fire on the convoy unless the trucks turned away from the bridge at the border town of Zvornik. Aid for western and central Bosnia originates in Croatia, but fighting between ethnic Croats and Bosnia's Muslim-led government has hindered shipments for weeks. Leaders of Bosnia's Muslim, Serb and Croat factions pledged last week to ensure free and safe passage for aid convoy. That prompted U.N. officials to try to resume aid shipments in central Bosnia, which were halted Oct. 26 after a driver was killed. In Mostar, health officials in the Muslim sector of the city reported that an unspecified number of residents had died from lack of food, said Peter Kessler, a U.N. representative in Sarajevo. Many of the 50,000 Muslims there are living in basements because most buildings have been destroyed by Croat artillery. Aikman said nine residents in east Mostar were wounded Sunday while walking through a minefield to retrieve air-lifted food packages. On Sunday, only one U.N. convoy delivered its load — 78 tons of food to Tuzla. In better times, 20 or more convoys would drop off up to 1,500 tons of food daily in Bosnia. "Failure to get these convoys going again will mean the loss of a great many lives," Kessler said. In other developments: More than 2.7 million Bosnians are depending on aid to survive this winter because of disruptions from the 19-month-old war over Bosnia's secession from Yugoslavia. Bosnia's government estimated more than 200,000 people died during the war. In other developments. ■ Fighting between Croats and government forces intensified around the central town of Gornji Vakuf, the news agency Tanjug said. It quoted Bosnian Serbs saying troops from Croatia were fighting alongside Bosnian Croats, but government forces had repulsed the offensive. Bosnian radio said Serb forces continued a 2-week-old attack on the town of Olovo, northeast of Sarajevo, but said government defenders had killed 50 Serb soldiers and destroyed four tanks. Suspects in Biehl killing released to cheers The Associated Press CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Jubilant Black militants celebrated Monday's release of the three men charged in the murder of U.S. student Amy Bieleh after a witness refused to testify against the suspects. Ecstatic supporters shouted anti-white slogans and carried the three on their shoulders from the courthouse. The crowd prevented journalists from speaking to the three men, who were among seven Blacks charged in the murder that illustrated the anger of militant Blacks toward whites. Biehl, 27, a white Fulbright scholar from Newport Beach, Calif., was driving friends home to the Black township of Guguletu on Aug. 25 when a mob of youths stoned her car. When the car was forced to stop and Biehl ran for help, she was stabbed to death. 1961hl had been in South Africa several months working on voter education for Blacks and other political projects. Prosecutor Nollie Niehaus said he had to withdraw charges against the three because witness Charles Benjamin said he would not testify. Niehaus said Benjamin had given a sworn statement linking the three freed defendants to the crime but changed his mind about testifying for political reasons. Later, Benjamin told reporters he was a member of the African National Congress and feared the group would be unable to protect him if he testified against the men. He said he would have testified if the ANC would have promised protection, but also said no one had threatened him or tried to intimidate him. Most of the defendants are members of the youth league of the Pan African Congress, a Black group far more militant than the ANC. It refers to members of the white minority as "settlers," and opposes the ANC's negotiations with the white government. PAC supporters in the courtroom's public gallery gave the group's openhanded salute when charges of murder, robbery and public violence against Mungisl Ngxaza, Mzukisi MXoli and Mankenke Lumilisa were dropped. Outside the courthouse, about 20 PAC supporters sang and danced, chanting "One settler, one bullet" and harassing journalists. "If you don't stop taking pictures, we'll make you a settler too," some told a Black television camaman. Niehaus said that under South African law, those freed could be charged again. Court adjourned after his announcement, and the trial was scheduled to resume Tuesday. LUXEMBOURG Sanctions may end following approval of Serb peace plan THE NEWS in brief Sanctions against Yugoslavia should be suspended if persuaded Serbs in breakaway Bosnia-Herzegovina to accept an international peace plan, the European Community said yesterday. ened the suffering of people across Bosnia as the war among Muslim, Serbs and Croats enters its second winter. The EC plan must be approved by the U.N. Security Council but already has the conditional backing of the United States, EC sources said. The obstruction of humanitarian aid has deep- The foreign ministers of the 12-nation trading bloc also urged the United States and Russia to meet with Bosnia's warring factions in Geneva next week to seek guarantees for the safe passage of aid convoy. PALENCIA, Guatemala tion about 185 miles north of the capital. PALENCIA, Guatemala Americans killed in plane crash Aplane carrying American sightseers crashed into a mountain near Guatemala's capital, killing all 13 people on board. The Civil Aeronautics Board said two U.S. citizens were killed in Sunday's crash. Julio Roberto Godoy, an official with Guatemala's Civil Aeronautics Board, said the crash occurred in stormy weather. The Aerovias aircraft, a twin-engine Beechcraft plane, was returning from Flores, a tourist attract- U. S. Embassy spokesman Lee McClenny said the plane last made radio contact with the Guatemala City control tower Sunday afternoon, about one hour after taking off, then crashed in the mountainous area near this small hamlet. 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