Buy your railpass before ^^and save! UcA«(s. Gr«<\( VlC« Think Spring Break! Book now and save! No time to shoo for the holidays? Low on funds? Great gift ideas at Council Travel 70% OFF Great travel gear Eurailpasses issued on the spot! Travel ~_ Council CIEE: Council on International Educational Exchange 877 1/2 East 13th Street, Eugene [54IJ-344-2263 222 East 13th Street, EMU Building, Univ. of Oregon, Eugene [541J-344-2263 www.counciltravel.corn ARMY MEDICINE'S CHALLENGE TO HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS. The Army Medical Department is the largest comprehen sive system of health care in the United States. It has a tradi tion of medical break throughs, advances in health care tech mques and leadership respected throughout the world of medicine. It is this team we invite—we challenge—health care profes sionals to join. You could be involved in a wide variety of vital, interesting and rewarding assign ments. They’ll range from administrative management to direct patient care. We offer unique advantages to professionals in these disciplines: PRE-MED As an Army Officer you’ll receive sub stantial compensation, annual paid vaca tions and participate in a noncontributory retirement plan. The challenge is yours. Look it over. Then call: Captain Burt (360) 891-4938 ARMY MEDICINE. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. www.goarmy.com AIDS crisis hits hard in South Africa 1 JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — AIDS has rapidly crept up on South Africa and pos es a tragedy worse than apartheid, the United Nation’s top AIDS offi cial said Monday. "We are faced with an unprece dented crisis,” said Dr. Peter Piot, head of the U.N. AIDS program. He said the scourge is worse than South Africa’s former system of white minority rule or natural tragedies like drought. "None of them will claim so many victims,” he said. About two-thirds of the 33 mil lion people worldwide who are infected with the HIV virus that causes AIDS live south of the Sa hara. An estimated two million people will die of the disease in sub-Saharan Africa this year, four times the total for the rest of the world. Apartheid, which ended in 1994, helped isolate South Africa and made it a latecomer to the AIDS epidemic. But it is fast catch ing up with its neighbors. An esti mated 3.2 million South Africans are HIV positive, or about 12 to 14 percent of adults. More than 1 million South Africans will have died of AIDS by 2001, bringing the life expectancy down from 68 years to 48 within the first decade of the new millen nium, the U.N. Development Pro gram said. Mother pleads guilty to strangling her children 2 ST. PAUL, Minn. — A sobbing mother pleaded guilty Monday to murdering her six children, ages 5 to 11, in what her attorney said was a fit of suicidal distress. “I strangled their necks,” said Khoua Her, a Laotian-born Hmong woman who spoke through an in terpreter as Ramsey County prose cutor Chris Wilton asked her to describe the Sept. 3 killings. The 24-year-old pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, agree ing to a 50-year sentence that would make her eligible for parole in a little more than 33 years. "This was her only opportunity to cut a deal where she may get out someday,” said defense attorney Bruce Wenger. “She’s doing way, way, way too much time, hut the risks were too great should we go to a jury and lose.” Her stared at the floor and cried through much of the hearing as the prosecutor sought details about the deaths of her three sons and three daughters. Each of the six times she was asked whether she intended to kill her victim, she replied: “Yes.” She said the children were out side playing on the evening of the murders. She called them in one by one and tied a piece of black cloth around their necks. Under questioning from Wenger, Her said she was suicidal the day of the killings and mur dered the children because she Winter Registration Begins December 3rd podwqrkmg was worried about what would happen to her children after she died. "If I died, then nobody would love my children,” she said. Death row inmate evades authorities 3 HUNTSVILLE, Texas — Inves tigators found a hacksaw blade they believe was used by convict ed killer Martin Gurule to begin his escape from death row, prison officials said Monday. Gurule remained free for a fourth day despite the efforts of 500 prison guards and 70 tracking dogs who crisscrossed heavily wooded and swampy areas around the state’s death row. "We’re going to go on the as sumption he’s still here until we find evidence he’s not,” said Sgt. Tommy Freeman, who manages the dog teams at the prison. Gurule and six other con demned killers likely used the hacksaw blade to cut through a recreation yard fence at Ellis Unit about 85 miles northeast of Hous ton. They made it onto the roof, but six of the inmates were caught after guards starting firing. Gurule, 29, went on to scale two fences topped with razor wire and dashed across a grassy area to dis appear into heavy fog. He’s the first inmate in 64 years to escape from the state’s death row. —The Associated Press ALL DAY TUESDAY s p A G H E T T I . ALL : you CAN EAT EVERY TUES! (|JP includes Garlic Bread 11:30am-10pm $025 student ID 0042081 PIZZ* ?£Teg 2673 Willamette • 484-0996 "this location only”