©2000 Southwest Airlines Co. Page 6B Thursday, September 21 THE BATTALION Yugoslavian president, Milosevic, lashes out as 150,000 attend rally for challenger Yugoslavia elections BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — More than 150,000 people jammed the streets outside parlia ment Wednesday, jeering at Pres ident Slobodan Milosevic and chanting, “He’s finished,” in an election rally for his top opponent that dwarfed a pro-Milosevic gathering nearby. Opposition candidate Vojislav Kostunica promised a “different Serbia” in an address to the crowd outside Belgrade’s Federal Parlia ment building in a boisterous dis play of anti-Milosevic sentiment before presidential and parliamen tary elections Sunday. Many shouted, “He’s fin ished,” waving signs with the same slogan or pictures of Milo sevic headed out the door. Others chanted, “Save Serbia from this madhouse, Kostunica,” or jeered loudly at any mention of the pres ident’s name. “There is a great chance and hope that after (Sunday’s) elec tions, we will begin a new life in different Serbia,” Kostunica told the joyful crowd, concluding his speech with: “May God help you to have enough courage ... to win freedom! For Serbia!” Milosevic labeled his oppo nents “rats and hyenas” while on a campaign stop earlier Wednes- • day in Montenegro, the smaller of Yugoslavia’s two republics, where pro-Western leaders have urged residents to boycott what it con siders an unfair vote. In Belgrade, the president later addressed about 10,000 support ers in a sports hall across, the Sava River while Kostunica prepared to speak. Although the size of the hall limjted the crowd, the turnout for the candidates’ rallies backed the message of recent polls. Opinion surveys show Kostu nica with a double-digit lead on Milosevic. There are fears, how ever, that Milosevic would not concede a loss and could try to stay in power by rigging the vote or imposing martial law. At the sports hall, in a gather ing complete with standing ova tions and the orchestrated rhyth mic clapping, Milosevic said the opposition is “incited (by the West) to spread terrorism and crime ... and destroy families through religious sects, spy groups and drug lords.” He vowed to fight jthe “evil” opposition “which wants to de stroy the minds of our children and youth ... just like we fought the aggressors,” during last year’s NATO bombing that forced Milo sevic to cede control of Kosovo to the United Nations. In his last day of campaigning before Sunday’s election, Yugoslavia’s President Slobodan Milosevic referred to his opponents as “rats and hyenas." His toughest rival, Vojislav Kostunica, tells his supporters that a vote for him would end a decade of authoritarian misrule that led the former Yugoslavia into civil war. S. Korea, U.S. work Vojislav Kostunica Age: 56 Personal: Married; no children President Slobodan Milosevic dismissed from Belgrade Law School for anti-Communist stance; member of Serb parliament in 1990; no scandals or affiliation with ruling officers Position: Country should adhere to rule'of law; democratic reforms; Serb patriotism; appeals to traditionalists, nationalists, fanners and average voters Position toward the West: Yugoslavia should “make our peace with Europe and the world” Hnirsday, Septembi to hold ties J Party: Socialist Party of Serbia (evolved from Communist Party) Experience: President of Yugoslavia since 1997; president of Serbia since 1989 Position: Serb nationalism; higher wages for factory workers, reconstruction after NATO* bombings; better education and health facilities; favors isolation Position toward West: Scorns the West and labels opponents traitors and NATO puppets Source: Fads on File Your mom is going to hate our low fares. southwest.com One-way with 7-day advance purchase when you purchase at southwest.com You can now fly home anytime you want, even if it’s just to do laundry. Just log on to southwest.com and you can get flights for $99 or less one-way. Be sure to purchase your tickets at least seven days in advance and by September 28, 2000. Seats are limited and won’t be available on some flights that operate during very busy travel times and holiday periods like Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's. You can only take advantage of this deal online, so visit southwest.com for low fares. And don’t forget to warn Mom. The Fastest Way To Free Travel Receive free travel twice as fast as a Rapid Rewards Member when you purchase Ticketless Travel on our web site. That means you earn a free ticket after only four roundtrips! To become a Member, sign up on southwest.com after purchasing and start enjoying Rapid Rewards. southwest.com a symbol of e-freedom FROM HOUSTON(HOBBY OR INTERCONTINENTAL) TO: (One-way with 7-day advance purchase) Albuquerque $99 Oust an hour away from Santa Fe) Amarillo $91 Dallas (Love Field) $51 El Paso $99 Little Rock $82 Lubbock $71 Midland/Odessa $79 Oklahoma City $82 Tulsa $83 FROM HOUSTON (HOBBY) TO: Albany $99 Austin $42 Baltimore/Washington (BWI) $99 (29 miles to downtown Washington, D C.) Birmingham $95 Boston (See Manchester or Providence) Buffalo, NY $99 (25 miles to Niagara Falls) Burbank • $99 Chicago (Midway) $99 Cleveland $99 Columbus $99 Corpus Christ! $42 Detroit $99 Ft. Lauderdale $99 (22 miles to downtown Miami) Hartford/Springfield $99 Indianapolis $99 Jackson $42 Jacksonville $99 Kansas City $99 Las Vegas $99 Long Island/Islip $99 Los Angeles (LAX) $99 Louisville ( $99 Manchester, NH $99 (A better way to Boston) Miami (See Ft. Lauderdale) Nashville $99 New Orleans . $53 Oakland $99 (18 miles to downtown San Francisco) Ontario $99 (Easy access to Southern California) Orlando $99 Phoenix $99 Providence $99 (A better way to Boston) Raleigh-Durham $99 Reno/Tahoe. ., $99 Sacramento $99 St. Louis $99 Salt Lake City $99 San Antonio $42 San Diego $99 San Francisco $99 (Also check service to nearby Oakland) San Jose $99 Seattle $99 South Padre Island (Harlingen) $42 Tampa Bay $99 Washington, D.C. (See Baltimore/Washington) Fares do not include federal excise tax of up to $2.75 that will be imposed on each flight segment of your itinerary. A flight segment is defined as a takeoff and a landing. Offer applies to published, scheduled service and includes nonstop, direct (same plane), t and connecting service. Fares do not include airport taxes of up to $9 roundtrip. Fares are combinable with other Southwest fares. If combining with other fares, the most restrictive fare’s rules apply. Tickets are nonrefundable but (except for tickets purchased through our Group Tickets program) may be applied toward future travel on Southwest Airlines. Travel through January 7, 2001. Fares are subject to change until ticketed. Any change in itinerary may result in an increase in fare. FREE TICKET OFFER: Double credit offer requires purchase and travel through June 30, 2001. Changes to your itinerary may eliminate the double credit offer. After enrolling online, your plastic membership card will be mailed within 14-21 days and you must present it at the gate upon check-in each time you fly to receive credit toward a free ticket. All Rapid Rewards rules apply SEOUL. South Korea (AP U.S. Defense Secretary WilliaraC hen and South Korean Presida Kim Dae-jung agreed Wednesdj that their nations must maintain strong military alliance despite! easing of tensions on the dividf Korean Peninsula. Cohen paid a courtesy call onK before an annual security meed; with South Korean Defense Minis': Cho Sung-tae on Thursday. “The advancement of inter-Kon an relations should help stabilize! (Northeast Asian) region, not only! Korean Peninsula,” President Kin; aides quoted him as telling Code: But for that to happen, “the U.S South Korea military alliances remain strong,” Kim said. Cohen agreed, saying a stroii U.S.-South Korea military allianc: together with further development North-South relations, will contrite to regional stability, the aides said "The advance ment of inter-Ko rean relations should help stabi lize the region, not only the Kore an Peninsula.” — Kim Dae-j South Korean presided Cohen arrived in Seoul lateTue? ' ets °* America. day from Bangkok. Thailand, when he urged the l Inited States and Scull )ne m ight be im Korea to remain vigilant against con iS man y critics c tinuing military threats from tl pornographic m North despite the recent thaw in rels ev ery issue does tions between the two Koreas. )ne or many sea Inter-Korean relations have a(^ n its cover, vanced significantly since their leaf Inside every i ers held a historic summit in June y"'the most interest Max] s ince the ac vent of Maxim magazine in 1997, publisher: have jumped on the bandwagon of magazines aimed at men ages 17 to 30. Though cons clsm for its racy subject matter, f home in the don lor pads of Arne it one of the fast zines in the worl Even televisii the newfound lil opinion. Comec the testosterone- Show” — a pro£ needs of men in “The Man Sh male audience d the dancing of tf ‘Juggies” — a ti clothed women. Magazines lil vision programs Show” are not th tions that critics They are sim] of the ever-popu esque magazines bap operas that d the news rack Looking at th agreed to work toward eventual unification. peace w Ten articles on tin imaginative, hun In the latest sign of easinam- sions, defense ministers of thewt Koreas plan to hold their first tai Cheju, a resort island off South Ko rea’s southern coast. On Wednesday. President Kin said he expected North Korea's No 2 man. Kim Yong Nam, to visit Seou in December to prepare for promised visit by the North’s leade: Kim Jong II. straight to the po that men really d the articles. Unlike its fem Cosmopolitan, o any “Is she the o celebrity gossip, focuses its attenti Jason's Deli 764-2929 LUe deliver everyday until 9 pm. $10 minimum EL GRITO celebration 9/22/2000, 6-7:30pm Rudder Tower fountain area Expressions VanceStuAio Inc, Venter Instruction, Lyrical Ballet &. Ja,zz 8 Hreeks $60 1 Classes Begin, Oct. 3 rd 9 ym - lOjm Registration, VeaJline, Oct. t* 2045 Harvey Mitchell, CS A 693-1153 or 693-0249 Tes' Colley hen it co lege adrr seems le has been placed c exams and more i dents’ overall abi It’ CLICKRRDIO Don't listen. Choose. Paid internships for college students to promote ClfckRadlo on and around campus. Passion for music, marketing & cool technology necessary. experiences. Students have that one test will their future, but; tipn of their over shape their lives American Colley Scholastic Aptiti only keys to coif Before 1997, f Send resume to Intern s @ elf ckradio.coni www.cucKRnDio.com ■scores were esser jhission. Many st ;'were not extreme ■dents, teachers an dors looked for w; ■“single test” mem ! Students soon scores improved; jyas taken more ti this got out of bar dents began takin as early as seventl assure them a pla< once the time cam - The Talent Ide Program (TIP), sp Duke University, ehth-grade studen SAT and identify Teachers also p dfider too much pi lege. At many higl teaching to the tesi studies necessary 1 Taking this am college entrance s single test score b and experiences. > With less emph teachers and stride factors that encour college entrance s< they are not accuix ’ Average overal increased because