10 Thursday, October 14, 1993 Mr. Nanny P@ (4:30); 7:05; 9:35 The Program R@ (4:35); 7:20; 9:45 Mr. Jones R@ (4:20); 7:15; 9:50 The Fugitive P@13 @ (4:10); 7:00; 9:40 For Love or Money P@13 @ (4:25); 7:00; 9:30 Malice @ (4:15); 7:10; 9:50 $3 Primetime Show (1) • Heating Dolby Senior Client Anime • Impressed Tapes SUA FILMS • GAS FOOD LODGING Wed., Oct. 13, 7:00 PM Thurs., Oct. 14, 9:30 PM • WINGS OF DESIRE Wed., Oct. 13, 9:30 PM Thurs., Oct. 14, 7:00 PM • UNFORGIVEN Fri., Oct. 15, 7 & 9:30 PM Sat., Oct. 16, 7 & 9:30 PM Sun., Oct. 17, 2:00 PM • AIRPLANE! Fri., Oct. 15, midnight Sat., Oct. 16, midnight All shows in Woodruff Auditorium. Tickets $2.50, midnight $3. Free admission with SUA Movie Card. For information, call 864-SHOW. Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3 00 (limited to SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3 00 VARSITY 7015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191 Cool Runnings PG 5.15, 7.9.30 The Good Son R 5.15, 7.9.30 Bronx Tale R 5.00, 7.15.93 Age of Innocence PG 5.00, 8.00 Gettysburg PG 7.00 Demolition Man $ ^{R} $ 5:00, 7:20, 9:45 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 841-6191 CINEMA TWIN $110 OVA SAT $191 $1.25 SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY Son in Law PG-13 5.00. 7.20, 9.30 Heart & Souls PG-13 5.00. 7.26, 9.30 TURQUOISE SOL OCT. 16 2 FOR 1 WELLS! Interviewing? Don't go intq that Cold Cruel world Unprepared. 710 Mass. 843-1771 SPECTATORS Delivering from Lawrence's favorite restaurants: 842-2662 Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. 7 Days A Week Cornucopia Low Rider Paradise Cafe Quinton's Bar & Dell Tin Pan Alley Uptown Bagels INDEPENDENT RESTAURANT DELIVERY SERVICE KU Pre-Law invites students to a FREE LSAT SEMINAR presented by The Princeton Review Learn about the content of the LSAT. Learn about the Law School admissions process. 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Envoy to Somalia rules out bargaining to free prisoners The Associated Press MOGADISHU, Somalia — A U.S. presidential envoy made it plain yesterday that Washington would not bargain for captured U.S. pilot Michael Durant as his Somali captors retreated to consider the demand that he be freed at once. "We will not buy prisoners," said Robert Oakley, the former U.S. ambassador to this Horn of Africa nation. Oakley did not rule out a U.S. rescue mission to free Durant. But he hinted that Durant's ordeal was almost over. Somali fighters seized the chief warrant officer after his helicopter was shot down during a fierce Oct. 3 battle that killed up to 18 U.S. soldiers. Oakley met earlier with members of the Somali National Alliance, the clan-based political group holding Durant and a Nigerian peacekeeper. The political group is loyal to warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid, whose arrest is sought by the United Nations for killing 24 Pakistani peacekeepers in ambushes last June. Aidid's people are blamed for killing at least 121 peacekeepers. The Somali National Alliance met to discuss Oakley's request for Durant's freedom and was expected to make a statement, alliance sources said. The Alliance was reported split over freeing Durant and the Nigerian or insisting the United Nations first free 32 Somali prisoners, including four key Aidid aides. Oakley, who arrived Sunday in quest of a peace settlement in Somalia, insisted yesterday that Durant be freed without conditions. He said there would be no bargaining or exchange of prisoners to secure the release of Durant or the Nigerian private captured earlier. But he added, "I believe that the release of both prisoners would indeed be a very positive sign... There are some optimistic indications out there." He would not elaborate. The United States has recently sounded a more conciliatory tone toward Aidid, apparently in hopes of reaching a political settlement here A guerrilla war with Aidid's forces has kept about half the U.N. force bottled up in southern Mogadishu. The rest of Somalia is generally quiet and recovering from the civil war and famine that killed an estimated 350,000 Somalis last year. As ambassador, Oakley left in 1991 when the overthrow of dictator Mohamed Sidar Barre deteriorated into clan warfare and anarchy. Mass starvation resulted, prompting creation of a multinational peacekeeping operation, now under United Nations command, to deliver food to the starving and restore order. U. N. efforts to capture Aidid, with the resultant casualties, set off a backlash in the United States and elsewhere against the mission. Kofi Annan, U.N. undersecretary-general for peacekeeping, cautioned in Mogadishu yesterday that the planned U.S. troop withdrawal could wreck the U.N. mission and send the wrong message to warring parties in other conflicts. Indians on women-only train jump into death The Associated Press BOMBAY, India — Dozens of women jumped from a burning commuter train into the path of another train bearing down on an adjoining track yesterday. At least 49 passengers were crushed to death, news agencies reported. Mutilated bodies, empty lunch boxes, shoes and handbags were strewn on the blood-smeared tracks outside Bombay. Press Trust of India news agency reported. Many women sat on the ground, waiting and waiting for help, Press Trust said, quoting witnesses. Most of the passengers were returning home from work. About 70 women were injured, said Bombay police representative Avinash Jadhav. The incident occurred on a "Ladies Special" train, one of a number of women-only trains created recently to make commuting safer and easier. The trains operate during rush hours on a busy suburban line. Press Trust and another national news agency, United "The women started screaming and jumping from the train." Jadhav said. Railway representative Mukul Marwah said the train had come to halt after smoke seeped into a coach from a fire in the undercarriage. News of India, reported at least 49 women were killed, but Jadhav said he could confirm only 22 deaths. They scrambled through the large, open doorway of the coach only to fall in the path of a fast train coming from the opposite direction, officials said. The cause of the fire was not immediately known. The accident occurred between the Kandivil and Borivili stations. About 5 million people use the high-speed, electric-powered trains daily. Police report a couple of deaths every day on the tracks. The women-only trains were started last year after complaints that many women were unable to compete with male commuters in pushing their way onto the trains. The women also complained of sexual harassment. THE NEWS in brief. WASHINGTON Clinton tries to avert congressional foes of Somalia mission President Clinton and Senate leaders struggled yesterday to avert a showdown over congressional demands for an early withdrawal of U.S. troops from Somalia. "I think the obvious import of what's happened in the last few days is that we're moving in the right direction, and I hope we can continue to do that." Clinton said. A leading Senate critic of the president's policy, Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., eased his demand for withdrawal by the end of the year. And the White House sought to appease angry lawmakers by furnishing — two days before it was due — a report defining the military mission as humanitarian and stating emphatically that it is not open-ended. In an interview, Clinton reiterated his position that the United States would withdraw its forces by the end of March but indicated he was open to other dates. "We could leave earlier if, No. 1, I'm sure we can do it safely, and, No. 2, it's clear to me that we've done everything that's possible to give the Somalis what you might call survival rights," Clinton said. The president, in an interview with Univision, a Spanish-speaking network, also conceded the mission may not achieve its goals. STOCKHOLM, Sweden Chemistry physics winners named An American and a Canadian won the Nobel Prize in chemistry yesterday for separate work in genetics that has advanced science's understanding of how the human body works. Two American scientists from Princeton University won the physics prize for spotting collapsed twin stars whose evidence of gravity waves supported Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. The chemistry Nobel was awarded to Kary B. Mullis, 48, The winners of the physics prize were Princeton's Russell A. Hulse, 42, and Joseph H. Taylor Jr., 52. Each Nobel Prize carries an award worth $825,000. Mullis won the chemistry prize for inventing a method called the polymerase chain reaction, making it possible to make millions of copies of a single, microscopic strand of DNA within hours. of La Jolla, Calif., who is writing a book about his discovery, and Michael Smith, 61, of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Information-age mega-deal closed NEW YORK Bell Atlantic Corp. is buying Tele-Communications Inc., the nation's largest cable TV operator, and an affiliate in a mega-deal consummating the "perfect information-age marriage." The merger dramatizes the rapidly changing communications landscape that is being reshaped to deliver voice, video and computer data through a single connection into the home. "With the combination of cable properties and wire and wireless telephone businesses, we will immediately create one of the world's largest information distribution companies," Bell Atlantic Chairman Raymond W. Smith said yesterday in announcing the deal. Bell Atlantic, a regional phone company, will acquire TCI and Liberty Media Corp., also a cable provider, in two phases for a price that could exceed $30 billion. After the merger, Bell Atlantic would have more than 22 million telephone and cable customers in 59 of the top 100 U.S. markets. Wall Street seemed pleased with the Bell Atlantic announcement. "The market's saying this is a very important, seminal deal for the future. It's been well thought out, well put together," said John S. Reidy, a media analyst at Smith Barney Shearson Inc. "Basically, for the first time you're going to have, in a major way, telephone and cable assets under the same ownership," he said. 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