Page 10 • Tuesday, September 28, 1999 VV ORLD TITANIUM... Titanium... your everlasting love is matched by these unique rings. Sparkling diamonds, I8kt yellow gold or sterling silver contrast with the beautiful silk matt surfaces to ensure a lifetime of pleasure. Titanium is extremely hard wearing, light weight and allergy free. Titanium... as strong as your feelings. DOUGLAS JEWELERS Serving the Bryan/College Station Area Since 1964 Culpepper Plaza • College Station • 693-0677 mm Career Center Events for the week of: Sept. Z8- Oct. 4 ★Sept. 1% behavioral Interviewing Presenter: IKON 6:30 pm. 226 MSC ★Sept 29 Case Method Interviewing 5:30 pm. 226 MSC ★Sept SO behavioral Interviewing Presenter: Hershey 1:00 pm. 308 Kudder ★Oct. 4 behavioral Interviewing Presenter: Ernst 8- Young 6:00 pm, 224 MSC areer Center 209 Koldus 845-5139 http://aggienet.tamu.edu/cctr MARSHALL FALL Goodwrench Service '&&C4 Lawrence Marshall offers GM Goodwrench Service Plus (the plus means better), the new way of servicing your truck or car. Now, you’ll get a limited Lifetime Guarantee on selected parts and repairs, good for as long as you own your GM vehicle. Plus, get courtesy transportation and up-front competitive pricing. See your Lawrence Marshall service advisor for details. OIL & FILTER CHANGE $ Plus 31 point inspection. Includes 5 quarts of oil and oil filter. Some models higher COOLING SYSTEM DRAIN AND FILL Includes one gallon of coolant. Some models higher. _ COOLING SYSTEM FLUSH Includes two gallons of coolant and chemical flush. Keeps your engine coo! and efficient. % OFF ALL G.M. PARTS PURCHASED OVER THE COUNTER. Accessories not included. Some restrictions apply. Plus free brake inspection. A tire rotation prolongs tire life! Some vehicles extra. ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS CHECK UP We’ll check alternator, battery and more to - determine any unnecessary electrical discharge. Most vehicles included. MARSHALL PONTIAC*BUICK*GMC MARSHALL OLDS*CADILLAC*ISUZU 779-1000 601 South Texas Ave 779-3516 2401 Texas Ave. HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 7am-6pm • SATURDAY-8am-12pm Aggie Owned • Aggie Operated All service specials are good through December 31,1999 Baita 1 Refugees flee RUSSIA bomb attacks Russians target Islamic rebels Grozny GROZNY, Russia (AP) — Terri fied civilians tried to flee Chechnya by the thousands yesterday, driven out by a Russian bombing blitz in tended to crush Islamic rebels in the breakaway republic. “I wish I were dead,” mourned Tamara Aliyeva, 70, whose house in Grozny was destroyed by Russ ian bombs. “I don't know what to do or where to go.” Aliyeva joined tens of thou sands of Chechens who headed for the neighboring republic of In gushetia in hopes of finding refuge — only to find the border closed. In Grozny, Russian airplanes were raining bombs and missiles for the fifth straight day. Witness es said oil refineries in Grozny were ablaze, blanketing the capital in choking black smoke. Russian jets also struck other cities and villages throughout Chechnya, targeting suspected rebel bases along with oil derricks and other industrial facilities. Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov claimed yesterday that 300 people had been killed in Grozny alone. The figure could not be independently confirmed. Many Chechen refugees trapped on the Russian border were in a state of shock. “Where is my Mama?” 8-year old Liza Temirsultanova kept ask ing between sobs. Her grandfather. Ayup Temir- sultanov, said Liza's mother, baby sister and two brothers had been killed by Russian bombs in Grozny yesterday. The bombing is aimed at weak- Russians continue bombing campaign CHECHNYA O 'he loci in§= lb open , almos lat do i lire the iloyee t<= “Do vo it fries A; -' itfut?” ing qum ening Islamic rebels ’his ma twice invaded ther|t|ieU_ Russian republic of Daj dnfc at i cent weeks from theirnlejitere < in Chechnya. They also sidpntia for a series of bombings fciderin^ and other Russian ciiiesHp fl u *- claimed 300 lives. rlooked Russian Defense M risma. < Sergeyev said yestenW e | n ex bombing of Chechm: of ,ex ^ continue “until thelasi: n> ^ at dest royed, ^ according an terfax news agency. K or F ch less rh> Lawyers present Pinochet cf LONDON (AP) — With supporters and opponents of Gen. Augusto Pinochet clamoring outside, lawyers for Spain laid out their case against the former Chilean dictator yester day, saying it constituted “some of the most serious allegations of crime ever to come before English courts.” On the opening day of a long-de layed extradition hearing, lawyers for Spain urged the magistrate to con sider not only 34 allegations of tor ture, but also the anguish of relatives imp Dei ft men br th ?y. B( eenl and demoralization,” Alun Jones, a BritishX ^ ^ j ing for Spanish prosecutors, said. g 0 Pinochet, who did not attend the hearing,® w j t | 1 detained in Britain since his arrest Oci.162 :e and \ .Jfc PINOCHET of the 1,198 people who allegedly disappeared during Pinochet’s 17-year rule. “It is our case that the continuing offense of con spiracy to torture has, as one of its objects, that the fate of these people would continue to be concealed from families causing severe mental pain, suffering Iraqi military sites bombed ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — U.S. warplanes bombed Iraqi military sites yesterday after Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery opened fire on the planes, the U.S. military said. The aircraft came under at tack over Iraq while patrolling north of the city of Mosul, 250 miles north of Baghdad, a statement from the Germany- based U.S. European com mand said. U.S. and British planes have been enforcing no-fly zones over northern and southern Iraq since the 1991 Gulf War. don hospital. Spanish ma Meside wants to put the 83-year-old generalnfinedtoettiaditil on t0 and issues of jurisdiction rather thancriniiiiaJeviftg n i ze Under orciers from Britain’s HouseolLoriil p eTS0 court may only consider charges oflawieawftns.b spiracy to torture after December lA'-nta Jructer ternational convention against tonrcameriilt is tin feet in Britain, li made torture anftpationa/cit poi,;, that could be prosecuted anywhereskprideslenjoy basis for Spain's case. :Budia lut) is v, fe are % iM 'Stan peal Vatican restates st on reproductive issul ICain VATICAN CITY (AP) — Re sponding to a U.N. official’s state ment the Vatican had conceded de feat on reproductive issues, a spokesperson reiterated yesterday the Church’s opposition to abortion and the “morning-after” pill. The U.N. Population Fund’s di rector, Nafis Sadik, said Wednesday that the Vatican has “accepted that the international community has ac cepted that family planning is one of the human rights of women.” “They believe the debate has been lost,” Sadik said in London as she presented her agency’s yearly report on world population. Vatican spokesperson | Navarro-Valls issued a i statement yesterday insiscl Holy See has not changed: well-noted position,” reitd opposition to abortion an:| the “morning-after” pill’ considers to be abortive. This summer, five yfcj world governments m Cairo, Egypt, to a program population growth, theli'l eral Assembly, over the obi of the Vatican and a fewcol tive governments, approve| posals providing for greater to abortions and sex educasI ID m yOUB CAREER yflTH COOPERATIVE EDUCATION! iti ■I ree g spar te an Next igen r *-C.'7-< r'-'A ; X irVr, i ATTEND ORIENTATION ke the DATE TIME LOCATION IV THURSDAY, SEPT. 30 1 :30 P.M. 502 RUDDER FRIDAY, OCT. 1 12:00 P.M. 502 RUDDER TUESDAY, OCT. 5 2:00 P.M. 342 ZACHRY WEDNESDAY, OCT. 6 1:00 P.M. 502 RUDDER THURSDAY, OCT. 7 3:30 P.M. 502 RUDDER WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13 2:30 P.M. 502 RUDDER THURSDAY, OCT. 14 4:00 P.M. 502 RUDDER TUESDAY, OCT. 19 2:30 P.M. 502 RUDDER FRIDAY, OCT. 22 10:00 A.M. 502 RUDDER MONDAY, OCT. 25 3:00 P.M. 502 RUDDER veah >bef The )wth CO-OPWEB. TAMU.EIJU EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS • 209 KOLDUS • 845-7725 First