NEW SHIPMENT OF LOOSE DIAMONDS! ROUND DIAMONDS MARQUISE DIAMONDS 2.26 1.56 1.45 1.35 1.32 1.31 1.16 1.16 1.15 1.13 1.12 1.11 1.11 1.09 1.02 1.01 1.01 1.01 1.00 1.00 .98 .92 .88 .80 .78 .76 .75 .74 .72 .71 .71 .66 v64— I H E D G G E G H H H L H F I VS- SL SI, VS SI 2 vs, SI I SI H K K H H G *2 VS 2 Sl 2 >1 vs, SI SI' S'2 vs: si, 'i Sl 2 Sl2 vs' VS -St .59 .55 .54 .51 .50 .50 .48 t47- I I F G G H H +- S'3 13,000 00 3675°° 5950 00 73 50 00 EGL Cert. 6900 00 EGL Cert. 29750° Zenhoyko Cert. 5500 00 EGL Cert. 460Q 00 EGL Cert. 5250°° EGL Cert. 4900 00 EGL Cert. 4800°° EGL Cert. 1 850°° 2700 00 Zenhoyko Cert. 5750 00 EGL Cert. 3875 00 EGL Cert. 2950 00 Zenhoyko Cert. 2 5 00 00 1 79500 29500 0 43SO 00 EGL Cert. 3750 00 EGL Cert. 4327 00 EGL (Ideal Cut) 1700 00 3250°° EGL Cert. 2975 00 EGL Cert 2700°° EGL Cert. I I 50°° Old European Cut 2450°° 1890°° 245000 2650 00 EGL Cert. 850 00 Old Mine Cut —1595 M EOLce.r SOLD 1.21 1.00 .90 .88 .75 .75 .68 .54 .54 .49 .37 .31 K F E G G I K G I F E K Sl 3 51 2 51 3 vs, si, Sl 2 S', vvs 2 vvs 2 S«, S', vs, 3450 00 4 I 30°° EGL Cert 2900 00 3675°° EGL Cert. 1980®° ^SO 94 99500 1450 00 1100°° 1450°° 675' >0 395°° PEAR DIAMONDS -Tr46- 1.05 1.00 .92 K/L G H ■+T- Sl 3 S-t^OOO^ 1 SOLD vs, SI, 2350 #<, 5 880®® GIA Cert. 2965®° PRINCESS CUT DIAMONDS 1.02 .86 .72 I VVS 2 F VVS 2 E VS 2 3825*® giacm. 3400®® 3 I 00®® EGL Cert. EMERALD CUT DIAMONDS t47- .42 .37 'S| Sl 2 v^, h S‘2 -n— 950®° 850°® Old Mine Cut 1575®° 950°° ,575°® 650“® 700“® 470 m SOLD -S4- -45^SOLD 1.52 1 VVS, 6490®® EGL Cert. 1.02 K VS| $3975°° eglctl .68 1 SI, 1275°° EGL Cart. .62 E vs, 1675®° EGL Cart. OVAL DIAMONDS 1.13 H h 1975®° 1.06 F • i 2400“® 1.00 1 si 2 3200°® .54 H Sl 2 95 0 oo .32 H SI, 550°® SI 2 '1 550“® 375°® Old Mine Cut John D. 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I 309 S.Texas Ave. Bryan,TX 77803 SERVICE SPECIALS « OIL CHANGE SPECIAL including up to 6 Qts. & filter BRAKE SPECIAL per axle, includes pads & resurfacing rotors 19.95 99.95 + tax + tax some SUV’s and trucks slightly higher WINTERIZE YOUR CAR EARLY Including coolant replacement inspection of belts and hoses 59.95 + tax — — ~ — ~ — j I 10% OFF i 60,000 / 120,000 miles TIMING BELT REPLACEMENT: Includes new timing belt, balance belt (if applicable) cam shaft & crank shaft seals, new water pump and thermostat. 10% OFF 30,60,90,120K miles MAINTENANCE SERVICE Includes oil & filter change, rotate & balance tires, inspect clean & adjust front and rear brakes, replace engine coolant, replace PCV valve throttle body, flush fuel injectors, inspect all belts and hoses, lubricate all door hinges & locks, includes a complimentary wash & vacuum. Call to schedule your drop off time or arrange for pick-up and delivery in the Bryan-College Station area (979)822-5454. Must present coupon at time of drop off. Service hours are from 7:30-6:00 Monday thru Friday. You can order your Mitsubishi or Suzuki, parts or make service appointments online at www.tranumimports.com News Page 6B THE BATTALION Tuesday, Novenil):'| NY mourns 1st anthrax fatality Bus rol over NEW YORK (AP) — More than 300 people turned out Monday to mourn the city’s First anthrax fatality at a funeral arranged by friends and neighbors who remem bered her as a quiet, hard working woman. Kathy Nguyen, 61. a stock- room worker at the Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital, died Wednesday of inhalation anthrax. Officials have not determined how she contract ed the disease. “She was just a well loved individual,” the Rev. Carlos Rodriguez said during the service in the South Bronx neighborhood where she lived for two decades. “We couldn’t find any fami ly members to claim her, but this is her family.” Nguyen was eulogized Monday in English, Spanish, Chinese and Vietnamese. A choir sang hymns in Vietnamese and the casket was wrapped in the old red- and-yellow flag of South Vietnam, the nation Nguyen left in 1975 before it collapsed under a Communist onslaught. “Everyone that she touched loved her,” said friend Gina Ramjassingh. “She was an aunt to my chil dren and she was the best friend I ever had.” Co-workers, fellow union members, hospital executives and the governor’s wife attended the service at St. John Chrysostom Roman Catholic Church. Nguyen apparently had no close relatives in the United States. Neighbors and friends arranged the funeral; Nguyen’s union, 1199 Service Employees International Union, funded it. Officials have not deter mined the source of the anthrax that killed Nguyen. Seven cases of the easily curable cutaneous, or skin, form of anthrax have been confirmed by the city health commissioner; all of those cases are linked to news outlets. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which uses a stricter standard, has confirmed only four of the city’s skin anthrax cases in addition to Nguyen’s inhala tion anthrax. Also Monday, the federal government argued in court papers that there are no legal or public health grounds to close the Morgan mail distri bution center in Manhattan, where traces of anthrax were discovered. Filed in response to a lawsuit from a postal union, the papers said that health officials have declared the Morgan facility safe. strugg CASA GRANDE] (AP) — A Greyli passenger apparently! ed that he could tried to wrest controli steering wheel awayf driver, sending t! careening out ofconffij mph. The bus rolled o freeway, injuring .33 j one critically. It was the third i month that a passenseq commandeer one oftk) based company's buso Charles Georse Phoenix, who wasnoti was treated for fj Casa Grande Hospital and taken" j tody. George had iwij charged as of Monda; t noon, said Steve It spokesman for the : ;j Department of Public But Richard Plai criminal deputy for tk!j County Attorney’s Officii lie h.o authorized llh;^ ed assault charges George, and said otherd could be added in i “We believe there! some mental i were dealing with," ^ said. “He didn’t overt statements about * ing to hijack the bused anything in the name olj gion. It appears he wasi independently.” rail Kapp ipsilon u Investigai The Tau Kapp Brnity is under Ind disciplinar [nnamed offens aid Dean of St llave Parrott Tu Parrott said Igainst IKE we ]im in Septei leclined to disi jilt of the a I 3id his office h investigatior tended discif ans, but decli te decision un rocess has be< pe Batte {Online lai Inew Web Former Air Force sergeant plea( innocent to attempted espionag The Battalion luced its n Tuesday. Developed Partners of Line coordinated I l/ebmaster Ke 1 ie new site c asier accessib ation. The < Imatches that ol |sion of The Bat Battalion Oi (since 1996 wil in the online an ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) —A retired Air Force sergeant accused of attempted espi onage pleaded innocent Monday in federal court. Brian P. Regan, of Bowie, Md., could receive life in prison if convicted of the attempted spy ing. U.S. District Judge Gerald Bruce Lee set a trial date for March. The indictment against Regan alleges that he improperly used a classified government com puter network called Intelink to obtain secret images of missile facilities in two unidentified countries. The indictment does not specify the coun tries for which Regan allegedly attempted to spy. Intelligence sources had previou.' fled Libya as the poieiiha) bertfi ^ Regan’s alleged activities. But when he was arrested in Dulles International Airport as heMeEj^ 1 board a flight for Germany hecameJinl wallet the addresses of the Chinese and In embassies in Switzerland andAustritHti had the addresses hidden under th shoe, according to the indictment. Regan worked at the National Reconffl Office in Chantilly, Va., a military iiitefe agency that designs, builds and operatesilet network of spy satellites. He worked at SI from 1995 until fris arrest. i