6
Tuesday, October 12, 1993
Sandy D's Boutique
& Complete Nail Care
Owner Sandy Morris
9-6 Tues-Sat 925 Iowa
843-4545 Hillcrest Center
Rentco USA
749-1605
Nobody - Nobody Beats
Our Deals!
1741 Massachusetts
642 749
Mass 1912
ORLANDO (PG-13)
TODAY(5:15),7:15,9:15
FINAL WEEK! ENDS THURSDAY
Mr. Nanny PG* (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 PG*13 (4:10) ; 7:00; 9:40
For Love or Money PG*13 (4:25) ; 7:00; 9:30
Malice P* (4:15) ; 7:10; 9:50
Crown Cinema
**3 Primitive Show (+)** Hearing Obby
**5 Silent Guitar Alone** Impaired Stereo
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $1.00
(LIVING TO STATING)
SENIOR CLIENTS $3.00
CINEMA TWIN
STUDIO IOWA 847 5197
$1.25
**Son in Law PG-13**
5.00.
7.20, 9.30
**Heart & Souls PG-13**
5.00.
7.20, 9.30
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
NEED CASH
841-2451
550 Rental Costumes For Rent Adults & Children
Barb's Vintage Rose
New This Year- StarWars & Star Trek, Magicians,
Sorceress, Wizard plus all the old standbys & animals
Also Accessories - wigs, make-up, masks & more!
927 Massachusetts
ShowYourSpirit
Vormehr Gallery Riverfront Plaza Suite321,across from Bass 749-0744
THE STUMBLE INV
Drink Specials
**Monday** - $150 Schooners
- $150 Wells
**Tuesday** - 50¢ Draws (Including Boulevard!)
No Cover
Wednesday - 50¢ Draws
$1^{75} Import
$1^{00} Well Shots
Thursday - $2^{25} Big Beers of
Big Beers of Bud Light Coors Light $300 Big Beers of Boulevard $100 Kamis Shots $100 Watermelo Shots
704 New Hampshire
749-1999
Mon.-Sat. 7pm-2am
Try our Fishbowls and Buckets of Beer
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Burhan Mohamed Nur, a representative for Aidil, described the overflights by the jets and the target practice by the AC-130s as a provocation
Ask About The Birth Control Shot
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Before dawn, U.S. AC-130 aerial gunships fired their radar-guided cannones at mock targets in an unpopulated area near the city. It was the second time in three nights that the four-engine gunships tested their weapons, the same kind used to blast Aidid's home and weapons caches in the first major retaliatory raids against the warlord in mid-June.
Aidid announces cease-fire
The Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya — Following a show of force over Mogadishu by U.S. warplanes yesterday, the U.N. special envoy to Somalia welcomed a ceasefire by the militia of clan leader Mohamed Farrah Aidid.
The comment by Jonathan Howe, a retired admiral, was relayed to reporters at a briefing after Mogadishu ended its third night without attacks on fortified U.N. positions around the city.
"We welcome all overtures of peace and stability in Mogadishu, as we have seen them in the rest of the country," Howe's statement said. His representative, Farouk Mawlai, sail he would not elaborate on the envoy's words.
Fighting between U.N. peacekeepers and Aidid's militia has been largely confined to the part of Mogadishu
controlled by Aidid. Leaders of the other 14 main factions generally are cooperating with U.N. forces elsewhere in rebuilding the nation after a devastating civil war and famine.
Aidid reportedly announced the suspension of attacks in a radio broadcast Saturday.
A three-ship U.S. Navy amphibious battle group carrying 1,750 Marines moved through the Suez Canal yesterday heading for Somalia. The force is part of the reinforcements being sent to Somalia to give U.N. peacekeepers more fire power until the March 31 deadline set by Clinton for an American withdrawal.
The move was timed for the Sunday arrival of President Clinton's envoy, Robert Oakley, who is exploring a negotiated settlement of the conflict.
Oakley met with Aidid's representatives Sunday, a diplomat in Mogadishu said. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he did not know specifics of the discussions.
U. S. F-18 Hornet fighters and A-6 Intruder bombers roared low over the seaside capital yesterday, the thunder of their engines rattling windows and emphasizing Clinton's decision to reinforce the U.S. peacekeeping con-
THE NEWS in brief
TUNIS, Tunisia
PLO's political head puts misgivings aside supports peace plan
Head of the PLO Yasser Arafat gained an influential ally yesterday in efforts to get the Palestine Central Council to endorse a peace accord with Israel.
Farouk Kadoumi, head of the Palestine Liberation Organization's political department, set aside misgivings about parts of the accord and joined Arafat in urging the council to endorse it.
The pact gives Palestinians a measure of self-rule in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho, with their powers to be spread over a wider area pending the outcome of talks in the next three years.
Terms of the accord require approval by the Palestine National Congress, or parliament in exile. The 107-member Central Council is a policy-making body and its approval is preliminary to adoption by the much larger congress.
Radicals within the PLO oppose the accord because it fails to deal with the status of Jerusalem or guarantee the right of refugees to return home.
"This was the maximum we could get under the current
international circumstances," Arafat said.
"This is the first state. It is an essential step upon which we will build our independent Palestinian state," he said.
MOSCOW
Yeltsin orders both houses elected
President Boris Yelstein moved to give more power to Russian voters yesterday, ordering that both chambers of Russia's new parliament should be elected, instead of just the lower chamber.
Yeltsin said the upper chamber, the Federation Council, will be elected on Dec. 12 along with the larger State Duma. The order was issued as Yeltsin departed on a three-day state visit to Tokyo.
The upper chamber will consist of two representatives from each of the Russian Federation's 89 regions.
Representatives to both chambers will serve four-year terms.
Yeltsin disbanded the old parliament on Sept. 21 and called for the December elections to the new body, collectively known as the Federal Assembly. His action broke an 18-month standoff between the president and hard-line lawmakers over the pace of economic reforms in post-Soviet Russia.
Yeltsin has set presidential elections for next June.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
KU HOMECOMING 1993
Friday, Oct. 15
Schedule of Events
2:20 pm
- Homecoming Parade Chi Omega Fountain to Adams Alumni Center
- Kansas Union Grand Opening
- Homecoming Bonfire-Parade Winners
3:00 pm •Kansas Union Grand Opening
8:30 pm •Homecoming Bonfire-Parade Winners
At Broken Arrow Park
Saturday,Oct.16
9:00 am
9:30 am
- Alumni Association Info Table Level 4 - Kansas Union until 1:00 pm
- Walking Tour of Campus Starting at Adams Alumni Center
am • Academic Open Houses
1:00 am Academic Open Houses 1:00 am Picnic-Under-The-Tent Tennis Court Southeast of Stadium $6.00 per person
11:00 am Walking Tour of Campus Starting at Adams Alumni Center
1:00 pm
8:00 pm
- Kickoff, Kansas vs Iowa St.
- SUA Homecoming Show: George Winston in concert at Lied Center