Friday, April 1, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7 >dy." :hargi H' 1 ? ft msaii ' e fit I Wtli; World and Nation You can’t beat these prices on loose diamonds! This is a new list of Diamonds bought April 11. Shop today for the best selection. Senator informs Meese of members’ concerns WASHINGTON (AP) — Republi- n Sen. Strom Thurmond met hursday with Attorney General Idwin Meese III and expressed eep concern” on behalf of Con fess about problems at the Justice lepartrnent in the wake of the resig- tions of two of Meese’s top aides. ■ Meese’s meeting with Thurmond, urned!;; the ranking Republican on the Sen- vere -Be Judiciary Committee, was the i ludfBrQngest signal of growing biparti- concern in Congress over .000 [Bhether the attorney general, the fo- HatldoB 15 °f an ll-roonth criminal investi- jj jjjBition, can continue to run the Jus- ledirB 6 Department. number of people on Capitol ^■ill have expressed deep concern ijUjuBtout the problems at the Justice De- jju^Brtinent,” Thurmond said in a jjgpBatement alter the meeting. ‘‘I went ' Hday to talk to the attorney general t to convey these concerns to him.” itoB M‘ lultes after the meeting, Meese JluHpused to answer reporters’ ques- ( Hons about the resignations when he jpiended a news conference at FBI uarters on a drug bust. Meese, who said Wednesday “there’s no reason” for him to re sign, said he would answer questions on the resignations of his aides “within the next several days” when “I hope and I fully expect ... to be announcing various appointments to fill those vacancies.” “The business of law enforcement is going forward energetically and without interrupton,” Meese said. “Our strong management team is on the job.” The attorney general, a longtime confidant of President Reagan, stood somberly next to FBI Director William Sessions as the FBI chief praised Deputy Attorney General Arnold Burns and Assistant Attor ney General William Weld, who quit Tuesday because they felt Meese’s continuing legal troubles were hurt ing Justice Department operations. “I think they’re very fine gen tlemen, (who) served their govern ment well (and) are to be com mended for the service that they performed,” Sessions said when asked about Burns and Weld, who oversaw all federal criminal investi gations. Meese, in response to a reporter’s question, said he had no plans to meet with Thurmond later in the day, neglecting to mention that he had done so already. After the news conference and af ter Thurmond already had issued his statement, Justice Department spokesman Terry Eastland issued a clarifying statement confirming that the meeting had occurred before the news conference. Thurmond said at a Senate Judi ciary subcommittee meeting in the morning that he wouldn’t “counte nance any corruption in any way, shape or form in the Justice Depart ment or any other department.” The Washington Post reported Thursday, and Justice Department soyrces subsequently confirmed, that Weld had told Meese during a meeting Tuesday that the criminal investigation of the attorney general was a close call in terms of whether the attorney general should be pros ecuted. xiled Soviet stage director eeks to return to homeland I MOSCOW (AP) — Exiled stage ^lirector Yuri Lyubimov expressed UK “ Bis desire to return to the Soviet ro^Hnicn in an unusual newspaper in- ^rview that could signal official will- Jpgness to allow him to come back. I Lyubimov was interviewed by the government newspaper Izvestia in Madrid, where he viewed four per- fcmances by Moscow’s Taganka ■ heater of Maxim Gorky’s fMother.” I Lyubimov, 70, founded the Ta- lanka Theater and more than 20 fears turned it into Moscow’s most iopular modern theater with his av- t-garde productions. The director struggled constantly ith censors. In July 1983 he was al lowed to travel to London to stage lyodor Dostoyevsky’s “Crime and Hunishment” amid speculation au- porities did not want him to return. In March 1984 he was thrown out of the Communist Party, and four months later his Soviet citizenship was revoked. Lyubimov has staged productions around the world since then. He took Israeli citizenship this year and has moved to Jerusalem with his wife, Katalin, and son, Peter. He al most never is mentioned in the offi cial press. In its article on Tuesday, Izvestia stressed that Soviet writers and art ists have more freedom under Mik hail S. Gorbachev’s reforms, in a possible effort to show the differ ences between Lyubimov and au thorities have narrowed enough to allow him to return. Lyubimov reiterated his previous statement that he would like to re turn to work in the Soviet Union if he were guaranteed artistic free dom, but that he was making no po litical demands. “We are talking only about the creative side of my life,” he was quoted as saying. After more than four years abroad, “in order to once again gain strength, survive, one needs to stand on his native land, on which he was raised, where his fathers and grand fathers lived,” Lyubimov said. Even while he has been exiled, he told the newspaper, he has concen trated on staging productions that aquaint the world with Russian cul ture. He praised the more open litera ture that is being published under Gorbachev’s policy of glasnost, and said, “it is necessary to come, to see and to work in the theater.” [Official favors test to fight cholesterol 1 WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government’s health chief urged Americans on Wednesday to get their cholesterol level becked to learn whether they are mong the 50 percent .of the pop- iladon at unnecessary risk for heart disease. Health and Human Services ecretary Otis R. Bowen said the link between high cholesterol and heart attacks — the nation’s No. 1 killer — has been well established. But he emphasized the good hews that anyone with an el evated cholesterol level can lower it and thus reduce their risk of dying a premature death from heart disease. I “Most people can lower their | cholesterol level by reducing the 1 amount of cholesterol and satu rated fat n their diet,” Bowen aid at a news conference kicking off April as National Know Your Cholesterol Month. Getting your level checked is the only way to find out,” he said. ‘‘Cholesterol, like high blood pressure, is a silent killer. There are no signs or symptoms.” Spokesman: Roberts did not ask for return of Swaggart to pulpit TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Oral Rob erts prayed with fellow television evangelist Jimmy Swaggart after Swaggart was suspended from his ministry, but Roberts did not recom mend Swaggart’s immediate return to the pulpit, a spokesman for the Tulsa evangelist said Thursday. The Rev. Mike Evans, pastor of the Church on the Move in Euless said Wednesday that while he was visiting Baton Rouge last month, Swaggart told him of Roberts’ prayer. “Oral Roberts called him up and told him that he saw demons with long fingernails digging the flesh into Jimmy Swaggart’s body and he cast those demons out of his body,” Evans said. Swaggart, of Baton Rouge, La., stepped down from the pulpit Feb. 21 after admitting a moral lapse. Church officials have said that he admitted meeting prostitutes in mo tel rooms. After the conversation with Rob erts, the 52-year-old Swaggart felt he was released from sin, Evans said. He has announced he will return May 22 in defiance of an order from the Assemblies of God General Pres bytery on Tuesday that he stay away for at least a year. The May 22 date coincides with the suspension recommended by the church’s Louisiana council. Oral Roberts’ son, Richard Rob erts, said Thursday, “I would prefer not to give the details because it was a confidential time together and I don’t think it would be appropriate for me to give any of the details. “If anyone is to report that Oral Roberts is recommending that Jimmy Swaggart defy the Assembly of God ruling from Springfield, that is not accurate. My dad had nothing to do with his decision. “We believe that that is a matter that Jimmy Swaggart must make his own decision and follow the leading of God.” WFAA television officials in Dal las said a spokesman for Swaggart Ministries declined to comment on the report. Peace treaty falters on aid decision ■ GENEVA (AP) — The latest round of U.N.-spon sored negotiations on an Afghan peace settlement en tered a fifth week Wednesday with the parties split on the question of when outside military aid to the warring sides would be halted. B A report in the New York Times, meanwhile, said Reagan administration officials had received indica tions that the Soviet Union would consider allowing aid to the rebels to continue after Soviet troops begin with drawing from Afghanistan. ■ This issue of cont inued aid to the two sides is the last obstacle to a comprehensive settlement designed to end more than eight years of fighting in Afghanistan, U.S. and Pakistani officials have said. B Washington has said it will not guarantee a set tlement unless the Soviet Union agrees to stop funding the Kabul government at the same time the United States stops aid to the guerrillas fighting the govern ment. Moscow has refused to agree to such a cutoff. ■ The Times, citing unidentified senior U.S. officials, said the administration’now is considering an arrange ment under which Pakistan would sign the accord but the United States and the Soviet Union would have a separate understanding on aid to the insurgents. ip The new position was discussed by telephone Wednesday by President Ronald Reagan and the presi dent of Pakistan, Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, the newspa per reported. The Soviet Union intervened in Afghanistan in 1979, and about 115,000 Soviet troops are believed to be helping the pro-Moscow government there. No formal meetings were scheduled between the U.N. mediator, Diego Cordovez, and the Afghan or Pa kistani delegations Wednesday. But Cordovez met sep arately with the special Soviet envoy, Nikolay Kozyrev, and with U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Rob ert Peck, both of whom have been following the indirect talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan since the latest round started March 2. Peck told reporters that he was “convinced that the Soviets want to withdraw and want an agreement, and we will stay here until we get an agreement.” He said Reagan “is not going to be easily satisfied,” and that an eventual accord “will have to ensure the withdrawal of Soviet troops, self-determination of the Afghan people, return of refugees and non-alignment of Afghanistan.” Kozyrev reiterated the Soviets’ opposition to a sym metrical cutoff. “We would like to see (the U.S.) as guar antors, but they refuse, insisting on the cutoff,” he told reporters. “It’s impossible.” ROUND DIAMONDS Our Price Compare 2.04 cts. 4,950°° 10,000°° 2.02 cts. 7,750°° 15,000°° 1.51 cts. 2,975°° 6,000°° 1.18 cts. 2,325°° 4,500°° 1.17 cts. 2,395°° 2,600°° 1.15 cts. 2,985°° 5,600°° 1.12 cts. 1,875°° 4,000°° 1.12 cts. 1,350°° 2,600°° 1.09 cts. 2,175°° 4,300°° 1.09 cts. 2,750°° 5,500°° 1.04 cts. 2,350°° 4,700°° 1.04 cts. 2,650°° 5,200°° 1.01 cts. 1,975°° 4,000°° 1.01 cts. 1,890°° 2,000°° .95 pts. 2,385°° 4,600°° .92 pts. 2,750°° 5,100°° .90 pts. 1,650°° 3,200°° .89 pts. 1,350°° 2,700°° .89 pts. 895°° 2,000°° .89 pts. 1,795°° 3,300°° .88 pts. 1,340°° 2,600°° .83 pts. 1,595°° 2,900°° .82 pts. 1,765°° 3,400°° .80 pts. 1,023°° 2,100°° .78 pts. 995°° 1.800°° .77 pts. 1,075°° 2.000 00 .77 pts. 985°° 1,800°° .75 pts. 950°° 2,000°° .75 pts. 1,395°° 2,200°° .75 pts. 1,135°° 2,100°° .74 pts. 1,480°° 2,800°° .73 pts. 1,495°° 2,800°° .73 pts. 1,125°° 2,200°° .72 pts. 1,395°° 2,700°° .71 pts. 1,095°° 2,000°° .71 pts. 1,395°° 2,600“ .71 pts. 1,395°° 2,700“ .71 pts. 1,050°° 2,500“ .70 pts. 695 00 1,200“ .70 pts. 795 00 1,400“ .65 pts. 785 00 1,450“ .60 pts. 795°° 1,400“ .58 pts. 850°° 1,700“ .57 pts. 695°° 1,275“ .57 pts. 795 00 1,500“ .56 pts. 695°° 1,275“ .55 pts. 795°° 1,400“ .54 pts. 750°° 1,400“ .54 pts. 795 00 1,600“ .54 pts. 695 00 1,300“ .53 pts. 695°° 1,250“ .53 pts. 795“° 2,000“ .52 pts. 695°° 1,250“ .51 pts. 650°° 1,300“ .51 pts. 795°° 1,600“ .50 pts. 695°° 1,400“ .50 pts. 795 00 1,400“ .50 pts. 795°° 1,600“ .49 pts. 595°° 1,150“ .42 pts. 695°° 1,300“ ROUND DIAMONDS Our Price Compair .34 pts. 165“ 300“ .30 pts. 325“ 600“ .25 pts. 225“ 400“ .24 pts. 225“ 400“ .22 pts. 165“ 300“ .21 pts. 165“ 300“ .20 pts. 165“ 300“ .19 pts. 165“ 300“ .18 pts. 185“ 310“ .16 pts. 115“ 200“ .14 pts. 115“ 200“ .12 pts. 110“ 200“ .10 pts. 63“ 120“ .09 pts. 55“ 80“ .08 pts. 48“ 70“ .07 pts. 47“ 80“ .06 pts. 37“ 80“ .05 pts. 35“ 70“ .04 pts. 30“ 60“ 1.51 cts. 1.18 cts. 1.11 cts. .88 pts. .79 pts. .71 pts. .57 pts. .53 pts. .51 pts. .46 pts. .28 pts. .10 pts. .90 pts. .75 pts. .58 pts. .51 pts. 2.78 cts. 1.10 cts. 1.05 cts. 1.02 cts. 1.02 cts. OVAL Our Price 2,900 00 2,225°° 2,095°° 1,475°° 985°° 1,350°° 1,185°° 1,095°° 1,225°° 375°° 315 00 105°° HEART Our Price 1,890°° 1,590°° 1,750°° 1,395°° MARQUISE Our Price 13,200°° 3,250°° 2,675°° 2,075°° 2,850°° •Compare 6,000°° 4,500°° 4,000°° 3,000°° 2,000°° 2,600°° 2,400°° 2,400°° 2100°° 700°° 650°° 210°° Compare 4,000°° 3,250°° 2,600°° 2,600°° Compare 26,000°° 6,5000°° 4,600°° 4,000°° 4,650°° MARQUISE Our Price Compare 1.01 cts. 1,275“ 2,400°° 1.00 pts. 2,950“ 8,800“ .89 pts. 1,750“ 3,400“ .82 pts. 1,575“ 3,000“ .74 pts. 1,095“ 2,000“ .68 pts. 1,195“ 2,200“ .55 pts. 995“ 1,900“ .51 pts. 985“ 1,800“ .48 pts. 850“ 1,700“ .47 pts. 625“ 1,500“ .35 pts. 425“ 800“ .30 pts. 475“ 850“ .25 pts. 250“ 500“ .23 pts. 275“ 500“ .18 pts. 195“ 400“ .11 pts. 110“ 200“ Princess Our Price Compare 1.02 cts. 2,475“ 6,000“ 1.02 cts. 1,650“ 3,200“ .64 pts. 1,295“ 2,500“ .47 pts. 795“ 1,500“ .33 pts. 395“ 800“ .28 pts. 385“ 800“ EMERALD CUT Our Price Compare 2.16 cts. 6,295“ 12,000“ 1.37 cts. 4,475“ 9,000“ .75 pts. 1,395“ 2,700“ .66 pts. 1,250“ 2,500“ .41 pts. 595“ 1,000“ .38 pts. 495“ 900“ PEAR SHAPE Our Price Compare 1.67 cts. 4,525“ 6,950“ 1.21 cts. 2,275“ 4,500“ 1.13 cts. 2,295“ 4,300“ 1.10 cts. 2,435“ 4,800“ 1.01 cts. 2,675“ 5,200“ .95 pts. 2,250“ 3,900“ .93 pts. 2,095“ 3,700“ .68 pts. 1,095“ 1,750“ .62 pts. 1,495“ 2,800“ .60 pts. 1,150“ 995“ 2,200“ i .58 pts. 1,525“ : .52 pts. 665“ 1,200“ 45 pts. 325“ 600“ .10 pts. 95“ 200“ Aggie Ring Diamond .21 Siesta $15°°to mount .10 $63 & $15°° to mount This Friday & Saturday buy your diamond & we will mount it in one day. Full Time Jewelry Repair Watch Batteries $3 9S installed Behind SheHenberger s 3CMj&y money back guarantee 404 University Dr. East, College Station 846-8905 • Enter a New Dancing Dimension Never Experienced Before. ' 1 ■ ; \ v ...v; , . '■ ;• • s • The Music You Want to Hear. • The Wildest Drink Specials. •' '.•>/?. ...v'v v '' '•'••*'*5'. ic - ^’V. • • 1 •• \ . ■ Y.Y ^ 313 S. College ■ 846-1542 ■ Open Late Nights The Battalion SPREADING THE NEWS Since 1878