6 Friday, October 15, 1993 Low Cost Early Abortion Services Wichita Women's Center. BC/BS Mastercard Visa Toll Free Dial "1" & then...800 467 4340 ABORTION ASSISTANCE Delivering from Lawrence's favorite restaurants: Cornucopia Low Rider Paradise Cafe Quinton's Bar & Dell Tin Pan Alley Uptown Bagels 842-2662 Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. 7 Days A Week INDEPENDENT RESTAURANT DELIVERY SERVICE We'll diagnose and repair whatever ails your car — wherever it is— and most repairs take less than an hour! - Experts - Quality Parts - Competitive Prices - And Extended Guarantee Complete shop facility available 842-0384 We make house calls! Ask for Auto Medic 3631w 10th VISA MasterCard Welcome KU students & staff! 2108 W.27th Park Plaza Center 843-8467 Hours: Mon. 9-6 Tues.-Thurs. 9-8 Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-5 PERM $42 (With coupon) Includes Haircut & Style Long hair slightly higher 2108 W. 27th 843-8467 Not Valid With Other Offers Expires 1-1-94 Jayhawk Spirit Wishes the Jayhawks Good Luck In Homecoming - Heavyweight t-shirts and sweatshirts - Shirts,shorts and sweatshirts for all ages - KU memorabilia - Jayhawk mugs and key chains - Fittedcaps - Custom printing and lettering - KU bumper stickers - Gifts and glassware 935 Massachusetts 749-5194 Hours: Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Thurs 'til 8:00 Sun 12-5:00 Gunmen assassinate pro-Aristide minister Killing the latest in series of U.N. setbacks in Haiti pave the way for Aristide's return. The Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — A U.N. police队 pulled out of Haiti yesterday, weakening the prospects for ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's return by Oct. 30 under a U.N. plan. Within hours, gunmen assassinated the pro-Aristide justice minister. The assassination of Guy Malary was the latest in a series of killings and other violence aimed at sabotaging the U.N. plan to return Aristide to power. Malary was part of the transitional government installed on Sept. 2 to The withdrawal represented the premature end of a U.N. plan to retrain Haiti's repressive police. It followed the retreat on Tuesday of a U.S. warship carrying military medics, engineers and civil affairs specialists in advance of the return of Aristide, who was ousted in a September 1991 military coup. Radio Metropol reported Malary was leaving the Justice Ministry building in his car when gunmen in another car shot him. A driver and two security guards also were killed in the hall of bullets; Metropol director Richard Widmeier said. Like many Cabinet members in the transition government, Malary had received death threats since joining the administration, said Ira Kurbzan, a friend and lawyer in Miami who specializes in Haitian issues. He said Malary handled court work for the U.S. Embassy in Haiti. after noon. In the morning, 51 Canadian Mounties flew home in a clear sign that a U.N.-brokered plan to restore democracy was foundering. The Canadians were in Haiti as the advance unit to lay the groundwork for the U.N. peace plan that calls for Aristide's return. Aristide and army commander Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras, who participated in the coup, signed the accord in July. Malary, a corporate lawyer in his 30s, attended Georgetown and Howard universities in Washington. The assassination occurred shortly The Mounties were to help train a new civilian police force, but the Haitian Parliament did not comply with the U.N. plan to create one. Aidid releases two captives but plans to return to hiding The Associated Press MOGADISHU, Somalia — Mohamed Farrah Aidid recognizes the value of putting on a good public face. That was never more true than yesterday, when he emerged from four months of hiding to say he was letting two captives go. copterpilot Michael Durant and Nigerian Trooper Umar Shantali were free. In his neatly pressed pinstripe shirt, red tie and cane, Aidid looked like anything but a fugitive clan leader blamed for the deaths of more than 100 U.N. peacekeepers, including 18 Americans. Within two hours, U.S. Army heli- In a well-orchestrated scenario, Aidid strolled into a hastily called news conference to announce that two captives held by his faction would be released soon. Aidid started by carefully reading a 45-minute statement, his reading glasses perched on his nose. Then he answered questions, looking relaxed and confident as he shot back answers. "I am not a warlord," Aidid insisted, pointing to the unilateral cease-fire he began almost a week ago. "We are not willing to break the cease-fire. We want peace." He said that he had decided to release Durant and Shantali because President Clinton had switched policy and the United States had decided to "correct its past mistakes." The United States has made clear that Aidiid's capture is not the aim of its mission in Somalia. In a briefing yesterday, Maj. David Stockwell, a U.N. military representative, said that the United Nations had stopped actively searching for him. But Aidid said that he planned to go back into hiding for the time being, saying contradictory statements from the United States and the United Nations raised questions on how wanted he remains. Aldid dropped from sight after 24 Pakistani peacekeepers were killed June 5 in a series of coordinated ambushes that were blamed on him. As his faction traded hit-and-run assaults with the U.N.'s aerial and ground power, the United Nations offered a $25,000 reward for his capture. Berlin educators promote tolerance B'nai B'rith teaches course to combat bigotry, neo-Nazis program. Seeds have already been planted in the eastern city of Rostock, where citizens cheered as neo-Nazi youths set fire to a refugee shelter last year that housed mostly Roma- niai The Associated Press BERLIN — The lights come on and the Berlin educators and social workers start arguing over whether the American shock-treatment method for combating bigotry they have just seen on film is right for Germany. "I think this would just be too hard on the kids," says one teacher. But others don't mind subjecting 8 and 9-year-olds, as seen in the film, to ridicule and irrational putdowns if it teaches them tolerance. At the invitation of Chancellor Helmut Kohl and other German leaders, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith has brought from New York a sensitivity-training the workshop's centerpiece Wednesday was the film "Eye of the Beholder," which starts out chronicling an Iowa school teacher's experiment in bias with her elementary school class. Blue-eyed kids are separated from brown-eyed kids and the teacher belittles and deprives one group, then the other. "The foreigners aren't the problem. It is the lack of tolerance," said Kristina Koehler, one of two young teachers setting up the program in Rostock. "Kids get in trouble and join neo-Nazi groups because they have so few opportunities to express themselves."