6 Monday, February 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan *mini make-up by KIM for photo *five poses, choice of two 4x6 color photos in the comfortable private setting of UNDERCOVER by KEN CLARK-one of the midwest's most respected fashion photographers *by appointment, February 7th and 9th y appointment, february 7th and 8th • please call UNDERCOVER the pink building·21 W 9th·749-0004 Spring shoe sale! 15% to 40% off Two weeks only. Fri., Feb. 1 thru Sat., Feb. 16. Shoes by Avia, Asics, Ryka, Adidas, New Balance, Diadora, Converse. (Includes new models, dated models -- even Reebok pumps and Nike Air.) For basketball, running, aerobics, cross training, tennis, soccer, hiking, baseball/softball and walking. Nation/World Nike Men's Air Trainer $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ Low Reebok The PUMP $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ AXT Welcome to our team...we're up to your game. Winnie Mandela's trial may hurt peace plans A judge has ruled that Winnie Mandela was present during the assault, at which the youths were accused of having sex with a white Methodist minister and Seipel also was accused of being a police spy. The Associated Press Mandela, wife of ANC leader Nelson Mandela, went on trial today with several ex-bodyguards on kidnapping and assault charges in Johannesburg. State prosecutors allege that four youths were taken to her home and beaten in December 1988. They accused youth, 14-year-old Stormi Seipel, was killed. Jerry Richardson, head of the disbanded bodyguards, the Mandela United Football Club, was convicted of murder in the case and is appealing a death sentence. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Winnie Manda is facing a trial that may be the greatest challenge yet in her turbulent life. But it also poses serious challenges for the African Congress and even to South Africa's peace hopes. Prosecutors now say the trial may be postponed because four of Mandela's seven co-defendants skipped bail in December. A decision will be made today. The trial involves more than the future of a flamboyant activist who has for years shocked opponents and delighted supporters with blistering attacks on apartheid and anything else that displeases her. It also poses a threat to the credibility of her husband, the ANC and talking on ending white rule. For many Blacks, especially the militant young, Winnie Mandela is "Mother of the Nation" — a fighter who calls for the violent destruction of apartheid. Controversy has surrounded Winnie Mandela for years. At a rally in 1986, she endorsed "necklace" killings, in which gasoline-soaked tires are placed around victims' necks by activists and ignited. She has a penchant for appearing at ANC rallies in side gear, whipping up emotions with calls for war. Critics, who rarely allow themselves to be named, accuse her of being power hungry, a prima donna whose taste for fame, clothes and good living belie her activism. Some say she wants to rule South Africa. Others say it is hard to know who is the real Winnie — the fiery activist, the sometimes-meek wife at her husband's side or the social worker who helps care for the poor in the Black townships. February store hours: Mon. thru Sat. 9:00 to 5:30 "She is blunt, rash, emotional and speaks from the heart — that is why people respond to her and why she is controversial," said Fatima Meer, a best-selling biography on Nelson Mandela. Parties collide in Albania Communist supporters and opposition scuffle at rally The Associated Press BURREL, Albania — Riot police intervened yesterday to separate supporters of the ruling Communists and the main opposition Democratic Party during an opposition rally by 10,000 people. An unconfirmed report said two children were injured. Albania's first opposition party is challenging the Communists in multiparty elections scheduled for March 31. It will be the first time the Communists challenge at the polls since they took power in 1944. Squads of police carrying shields and riot bats cut through crowds in the main square of Burrel, separating chanting Democratic Party supporters from anti-Democratic Bahraini 'baba' in late French strongman, Enver Hoxha. Hoxha, the founder of Communist Albania, kept the country under strict rule until his death in 1985. The rally in this isolated mountain town of 13,000 people — 35 miles northeast of Tirana, the capital — was the latest in a series of political gatherings organized by the Democratic Party. The party was formed Dec. 12, the day after Communist President Ramiz Ala reversed 46 years of Stalinist policy by legalizing opposition to the Muslim State and replacing it with this balkan nation of 3.2 million at rallies and through their semi-weekly newspaper, Democratic Revival. A core of more than 1,000 opposition supporters chanted, "Freedom, democracy," and punched the air with V-for-victory signs around the speakers' rostrum. They waved banners reading, "free political prisoners" and "soldiers and police are our friends." The party has pressured the Communists to pardon hundreds of political prisoners and has won other concessions from Alia. It is now demanding the de-politization of the police and armed forces As a Democratic Party leader, Azem Hajdari, finished speaking yesterday, small groups of pro-Communists holding aloft Hoxha pictures paraded through the crowds. Stones thrown from surrounding rooftops hit the roostrum and fell into the crowd. Scuffles broke out and one Hoxha picture was smashed. A Democratic Party banner was shreded. Democratic Party representative Genc Pollo said he saw police beating opposition supporters. He said there were unconfirmed reports that two children were injured. Police formed a human chain to back hold the Communist activists who then gathered at the party headquarters and shouted, "Party, Enver, we are ready." After 20 minutes, the audience obeyed a police order to disperse. World briefs Moscow Soviet radio stations suppressed The move against Radio Rossiya, which had been on the air for six weeks, was the latest attempt to halt media criticism of Gorbachev and the Soviet government. A radio station that had been broadcasting news and commentaries critical of President Mikhail Gorbachev has been forced off the air, main airwaves, staff members said yesterday. Interfax, an independent news service, was forced out of its offices in the central television center, ostensibly for failure to pay its bills. Two popular television programs, "Author's Television" and "Viewpoint," were canceled last month in what editors and producers called a revival of censorship. A government-controlled printing plant has refused to publish Civil Dignity, the weekly newspaper of the small Constitutional Democratic Party. It had a circulation of 75,000. Together, the steps against the media have raised doubt about the continued strength of Gorbachev's policy of glasnost, or openness. New York New brand of heroin kills 10 The death toll from a potent "designer" drug sold in the Bronx climbed to 10 yesterday as police cars cruised through drug-plagued neighborhood streets to plead with heroin to stay clear of. not as word spread that addicts should avoid "Tango and Cash," the name marked on the packages, police said that at least one dealer knew of the name and continued to sell the killer drug. Since the drug was first sold Friday afternoon, four people have died in New York, five in New Jersey and one in Connecticut. More than 100 people were taken to hospitals in the tri-state Authorities say preliminary tests show the heroin contained a kind of fentanyl, a powerful tranquilizer used in surgery that has been used in drug-treatment settings and in drugs trying to create synthetic forms of heroin. Islamabad, Pakistan Quake death toll could hit 700 As many as 400 people may have been killed in Afghanistan during last week's earthquake, aid workers said vesterday. That could bring to more than 700 the number of people who were killed in the quake, which was felt from Soviet Central Asia to India on Friday. In Pakistan, government officials said that more than 300 people had died and that hundreds more were injured. But that figure was expected to rise as officials receive reports from remote mountain villages that were hit hard by the quake. From The Associated Press SOUNDS GREAT CAR STEREO SALE NOW! All Floor Models Demos Great Prices! KIEF'S AUDIO/VIDEO, CAR AUDIO, CDs & TAPES 842-1544 2429 Iowa A planned schedule of contact lens replacement helps avoid eye irritations and provides you with improved lens comfort and clearer vision. Listen to your lenses. Innovative new pricing structures allow you to replace lenses regularly at no increased costs to you. Call and ask whether Fresh Lens Replacement from Bausch and Lomb is right for you. Dr. Charles R. 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