6 Wednesday, October 13, 1993 842-1212 1601 W.23RD SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER Americans who arrived in Port-au- Prince last week as an advance team would leave Monday if no significant progress was made in calming the sitiuation at the port. NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NO COUPON SPECIALS EVERYDAY PRIMETIME 2-PIZZAS TWO-FERS WASHINGTON — President Clinton withdrew a shipload of troops from Haitian waters yesterday but warned defiant leaders that he was "dead serious" about reinstating ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. 2-TOPPINGS 2-COKES $9.00 Secretary of State Warren Christopher accused Haitian Army chief Raoul Cedras and police commander Michel Francois of reneging on commitments made last July for a return to democratic rule from military dictatorship. 3-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING 4-COKES $11.50 Clinton coupled his action with an President requests renewed sanctions on military dictators The Associated Press International sanctions against Haiti were lifted after the July agreements were signed. PARTY "10" CARRY OUT The Associated Press 10-PIZZAS 1-TOPPING The ship was sent yesterday to the U.S. Navybase at Guantanamo, Cuba. A second U.S. ship set to arrive at Haiti today, the USS Fairfax County, was ordered not to leave its station at Little Creek, Va. Aidid clan elders will urge release of U.S. pilot Kathleen deLaski, the chief Pentagon representative, said that 25 CARRYOUT 1-PIZZA 1-TOPPING 1-COKE $3.50 $30.00 dian noncombat forces, was blocked from docking in Port-au-Prince. The troops were on a U.N. mission to help the Haitians improve in military professionalism, road-building, medical care and other areas in anticipation of Aristide's return. NAIROBI, Kenya — Elders of militia leader Mohamed Farrah Aidid's clan will urge him to release a captured U.S. pilot and a Nigerian peacekeeper as a gesture of peace, news reports said yesterday. DELIVERYHOURS Clinton withdraws troops from Haiti "Now the time has come for the people who are clinging to their last gasp of power to honor the agreement," Clinton said. "They made the agreement. They've got to honor it." FRIDAY-SATURDAY 11 AM-3AM MONDAY-THURSDAY 11 AM-2 AM SUNDAY 11 AM-1AM Aidid representatives have said the U.S. pilot, Chief Warrant Officer Mike Durant, wouldn't be released until the United Nations freed 32 Somali prisoners, including four key aides of Aidid captured during U.N raids. The fast-moving chain of events came one day after the USS Harlan County, an amphibious landing ship carrying about 170 U.S. and 26 Cana- urgent request for the immediate reimposition of U.N. economic sanctions against Haiti, targeted at military and police leaders trying to block Aristide's return under a United Nations accord. But elders of Aidid's clan were working to free A U.N. representative in Mogadishu said yesterday that U.N. Secretary-General Boutros-Boutros-Ghali will convene a meeting in Ethiopia next week to discuss Somalia despite opposition from Aidid and another top warlord. Farouk Mawlawi, a U.N. civilian representative, said yesterday that the Oct. 20 meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, would be attended by representatives of the Organization of African Unity, the Islamic Conference and the Arab League. Durant was captured during a U.N. raid Oct. 3 that left at least 17 American soldiers dead and more than 70 wounded. Aidid said 315 Somali were killed, many of them civilians, and the Red Cross put the figure of Somali wounded at 700, about one-third of them women and children. The bungled operation stunned Washington and prompted calls by some U.S. lawmakers to withdraw U.S. troops from Somalia. President Clinton has since pledged to withdraw U.S. soldiers by March 31. Durant and the Nigerian U.N. peacekeeper first, as a goodwill gesture, the Washington Post and CBS Radio reported yesterday. Aidid and his chief rival, Ali Mahdi Mohamed, each called for postponement of the meeting in radio broadcasts Monday night.