The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 01, 1999, Image 12

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    £j(2jC.i£i
restaurant
Wednesday Night Mexican Specials
5(X Drafts
All drink specials with student ID s and purchase of entree
99<t Frozen Margaritas • $ 3.95 Pitchers • $ 2.50 Cocktails
Strawberry Daiquiri, Reach Daiquiri, Pina Coladas
Entree Specials Starting at $3.99
Gorditas Filled with Mexican Brisket
Spinach and Chicken Enchiladas with Creamy Cilantro Sauce
Crawfish Tacos • Beef and Chicken Fajita Tacos • Beef Burritos
Cheese Enchiladas
All Served with Mexican Rice and Charm Beans
268-5333
3 I 7 College Ave. • Old Albertson’s Shopping Center
OUTBOUND Dining
Now available 7 days a week
’til 11 pm at MARKETS!
First 2000 Students!
pick up FREE
in foyer of Underground Market/Underground Food Court!
(Reg. P nce *
AM Brands
Mem
WMfim
many Hew Scnool Supply items
Markets
- I>c|M of food Sct^iccn ^
CZ* 'tcxa&A&rfH O >
^ °^GRO' 5
Two locations conveniently on Campus!
Store Locations:
Common Market, by mail boxes In Commons
Underground Market, lower level of Sbisa,
by Underground Food Court
Store Hours:
7:30 am to 11:00 pm Monday - Friday
11:00 am to 11:00 pm Saturday & Sunday
F
Use Aggie Bucks, Bank Cards, Personal Checks
* While supplies fast
i
%
-
"The 0t/y^ u)ho made
Then's Somerthin^ About Mary'
are taking you backet* school.
Farrelly brothers have done it
again! Wonderful, witty and warm.
You will love ‘Outside Providence’!”
-I.Hiiren Hudson. Ul’N-TV
‘^Jutside Providence’rocks! Don’t
miss this rip-roaring comedy...
Nothing is funnier!”
Patti Spltler. NBC-TV
! Laugh-out-loud
funny! A brilliant comedy
not to be missed!”
- Tnul Wunder. WIIAI KADIO
'^llec Baldwin gives the
performance of his career!
-Liz Smith. SYNDICATE!) COLUMNIST
m* (me ■« .mi MMiiriM fiioiiiti- siffliroimBiiis
TOIW m l(ffl Mil MM 1SIMW UtlM
* mmemiii ffliwray ediwin mm .‘,f?rawimiy -tpmuiiysMiM wimisBOBByiiiiiiY • mwH
fDOf^xs mmmm nr^srsM' miramax
EOi.A-r “
SOUNOlHACKAMfOHSjOnt i
) !ni«^malinll«|i(iE pj,IMcC«itt(aiiWnj: <
Directed by Michael Corrente
Screenplay by Peter Farrelly & Michael Corrente & Bobby Farrelly
Starts IVednesday* September 1st
at Theatres Everywhere?
Page 12 • Wednesday, September 1, 1999
w
ORLD
Battalio
Explosion rocks Moscow ma
rt:
Blast in video-game arcade injures 30; officials unsure
MOSCOW (APJ — A video- Kremlin’s northwest wall. The ex- teen-agers. Biryukov said three high red brick walls has
game machine exploded in an up
scale shopping mall adjacent to the
Kremlin yesterday, injuring 30 peo
ple, police said.
Moscow police spokesperson
Viktor Biryukov said it was unclear
whether the blast was planned or ac
cidental. He said the explosion,
which hit at 8:04 p.m. (12:04 p.m.
EOT), caused no fire.
Fire officials evacuated the busy
Manezh shopping center, an un
derground complex just outside the
plosion hit on the bottom floor of
the complex in a room of video
game machines.
Television footage showed
ambulances rushing to the scene,
their lights whirring. The complex
was roped off to keep onlookers
from entering the mall.
The mall, which opened to
much fanfare in 1997, includes top-
name retailers. The game room is
next to a huge food court, and both
are popular hangouts for Russian
people were hospitalized, of 30 in
jured total.
The Moscow prosecutor’s office
opened a criminal case into the
blast, the ITAR-Tass news agency
reported.
Bombings are often used in Rus
sia to settle disputes between rival
criminal gangs and businesses.
There was no indication whether
yesterday's blast had organized
crime connections.
The area around the Kremlin's
share of violence recently
In November, a manbl;
car just outside the Krerr.
wounding three guards
died of a heart attackinp:
months later.
In May, a man was den
driving his car onto Red Sc
threatening to set himselfo
less police let him tell ?.
about his problems. Hese
gasoline can and he was
hospital emergency room
view with NC
speaker of ■
sentatives,_
■ During tlf|
gram, Gingr
have come '
"politics of—
tipn,” surely
own encour—
mongers in
■ “In the fm
a saint,” hs
Brian Lamt»>
Serb military commander japa
Understand
denies war-crime charges brace
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP)
— The highest-ranking Bosnian
Serb military official in U.N. cus
tody pleaded innocent yesterday to
charges that he committed crimes
against humanity in a bloody 1992
ethnic purge of non-Serbs.
• -Gen. Momir Talic, the Bosnian
Serb military chief of staff, sat qui
etly with his hands in his lap dur
ing his 10-minute arraignment be
fore the tribunal. The U.N. war
crimes tribunal did not immediate
ly set a trial date for Talic, who
faces a maximum sentence of life
imprisonment if convicted.
Talic, 57, was secretly indicted in
March along with former Bosnian
Serb Cabinet minister Radislav Brd-
janin. He was arrested last week
while attending a conference in Vi
enna. Brdjanin had been arrested
and brought to The Hague July 6.
The men, who will stand trial
together, are accused of planning
and orchestrating a violent purge of
more than 100,000 Muslims and
Croats from northwest Bosnia in
1992. Their indictment describes
the campaign as “a plan designed
to expel ... non-Serb populations
on political, racial or religious
grounds” and alleges they were
personally responsible for the tor
ture, murder, imprisonment and
deportation of Muslims and Croats.
“These people will
stay under the reach
of the law for the
rest of their lives”
— Louise Arbour
U.N. Chief Prosecutor
Prosecutors allege that troops
under their command ran the infa
mous Omarska, Keraterm and
TVnopolje prison camps where de
tainees were "killed, tortured, and
continually subjected to physical
and psychological maltreatment
and inhumane treatment."
On her last official day on the
job, departing Chief Prosecutor
Louise Arbour of Canada said she
is confident that other top suspects
indicted by the tribunal eventually
will be brought to justice.
"These people will stay under
the reach of the law for the rest of
their lives,” Arbour said. “One day
either they will be apprehended or,
in the case of high-ranking figures,
the chances are good that they will
see it to be in their best interest to
surrender."
Arbour and her successor. Swiss
federal prosecutor Carla del Pointe,
discussed investigative strategies
during meetings last week. She said
more indictments would come.
"We are very far from finished,”
Arbour said.
TOKYO (AP)
morrow, Japanese
mg to elect:
toTelect a s.
Ijyoi elect a
Hsijiner who
^^■r who is i
pHowever -
Pilig this sc
(rnferk, Gingt
himself on
Who is wide
Bst skillfv
Country has
p“l was ri'
leader.
Cluy’s prob
speaker to
ai eader ai
at last have the pill - House sino
Yemeni, effectivebir s aid.
that has been ava. “ ■ ■■’ >
n elsewhere to: m hi . . ah
four decades. HHtssman 1
But hi' not Uniter Kin^
se to tut
AI Fayed: Son planned to marry Diana
LONDON (AP) — Marking exactly two years since
Princess Diana’s death, Mohamed Al Fayed yesterday
displayed the ring he insists would
have marked her engagement to his
son Dodi.
The ring and a glass of champagne
that Al Fayed said is the one the cou
ple last drank from before their deaths
in a Paris crash were added to shrines
at his Harrods department store.
At Diana’s former Kensington
Palace home, her most ardent ad-
DIANA
mirers petitioned for a permanent memorial.
Jill Marseilles, who stood outside the palace for two
days this week collecting 4,000 signatures, said she
was “overwhelmed” by the response.
‘‘The palace will have to take notice now.” Mar
seilles said. “Last year, people came here to pay their
respects. This year, they are getting angry."
•Al Fayed, whose dealings with the government and Di
ana’s family have grown embittered, said the deaths on
Aug. 31, 1997, were a conspiracy plotted by people who
did not approve of Diana's relationship with an Egyptian.
He said his son and Diana were planning to marry
and the diamond ring Dodi had bought was to have
been an engagement ring.
n out in drove'
The same attitudes
back the pill's govern
proval in this male-di
nation remain major
threatening to block its
cep ta nee — among t
and women.
"If a woman is on!
like to ask her: ‘Areuv
tute or something? "c.:
ki Yatabe, 29, whomr
girlfriend when she?.!’/ 1 '
“Sex should he naic-
ter not to use contraxM
Despite gains in!
place and society, ivd;
take initiative — espec
toy By the ti
ing himself
fhese, one
grich to sui
Spot on Me
sc' Apparen
to foist hin
theon of gr
ers, but on
anyone bu1
vinced.
lerf Newt’s c
v summons
Mo Rush Lir
tin Luther I
^ • And hov
hiately por
as speakei
then sexuality — are" on> ■ Ki •
upon in Japan, a culture tempts toi
expects them to be pas> if jf |g tr
docile Die should
That attitude was evidt are “self-a'
ing the pill s nine-year ; a f t|-, e j r f ai
against opposition in fp^y
aliment and among ^once elect
lives who thought it vvouk Bv maki
morals. The pill finally wj y
proved in June.
eMoyxe. P/teatussunf GetUend
I r r of BRAZOS VALLEY
FREE PREGNANCY TESTS
(immediate results)
♦ Pregnancy, Adoption &
Abortion Education
♦ Practical Assistance
♦ Post Abortion Counseling
♦ Adoption, Medical &
Community Service Referrals
♦ All Services Free & Confidential
846-1097
3620 E. 29TH ST • BRYAN
www.rtis.com/hope
BRONZ
BODY
TANNING C€NTf Editori
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