Campus Service Center % 2091 Franklin Blvd. • 338-4641 'Featuring BP gasoline! ^Quality auto repair 66' We want your business! 99 ryzbuu Tired of looking at the same 4 walls? Find out for yourself why more students choose ^Ducks Village for their home away from home! We are now accepting applications for next year. Don’t miss out - stop by today! Our offices are open M-F, 8-5 and Sat 9-1, or email us at: ducksvillage@earthlink.net, 3225 Kinsrow Ave, 485-7200 visit our website www.ducksvillageapts.com wz rz Azrz for you c\i ik4 iy of Qrtji Fvcc seminar: “Europe on a Budget” Where: Fir Room, EMU When: 06 April 1999, 6:00pm to 8:00pm cheap travel to Europe errlev -free drawing dwrintj -the semimav -to y/irv... 15 day first class Eurail Pass • European Contiki Tour • And much, much more!, HURRY! Space is limited! Call Council Travel at 344-2263 or stop by our office at 877'/i East 13th Street (by the University Bookstore) or on the main floor of the EMU to reserve your space and confirm your participation. _ Free refreshments and snacks will be served! Council CIEE: Council on International Educational Exchange Travel university or uregon In the EMU Building Eugene 877 1/2 East 13in Street Eugene (541)344-2263 Proudly serving Orsini coffee & espresso Voted #1 pizza - in Eugene Weekly's People's Choice Poll, 1999 ^Pizza by the slice ♦ Large selection of microbrews ♦ Daily lunch specials 4 Outdoor dining available ♦ We accept UO purchase orders Watch your felWsFnlr© EVENTS on our TV Now open for a light, healthy breakfast! New hours AAonday-Friday: open at 7 a.m. Saturday, Sunday: open at 12 noon 14th & Alder 344-4471 * special events/meeting room available * for the Emerald For more information about freelancing for the Oregon Daily Emerald call 346-5511. U.S. sends attack arms to Albania By Laura Myers The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The United States agreed to send 24 Apache attack helicopters, 18 multiple rocket launchers and 2,600 troops to Albania so NATO can closely strike Serb troops and tanks in Kosovo and “tighten the noose around” Yugoslav President Slo bodan Milosevic’s forces. Although U.S. troops will be put at greater risk in escalating the nearly 2-week-old NATO airstrikes across Yugoslavia, Pen tagon officials said the Apaches could help halt the Serbs’ ethnic cleansing campaign. It already has cleared the province of more than 350,000 ethnic Albanians and could halve the estimated 1.9 million Kosovo population that once was only 10 percent Serb. “This will basically help NATO tighten the noose around Milosevic's neck,” Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said Sunday. “This will help NATO do more to kill armored forces quickly than we’ve been able to do so far.” Defense Secretary William Co hen said today, “We’re going after his tanks, his armored units, his artillery, those forces on the ground that are carrying out this horrific ethnic cleansing. They are going to be targeted now and taken out.” Cohen, in an interview with The Associated Press, said the United States will accept 20,000 refugees on a temporary basis. “We’ll have to decide whether they go to Guantanamo [Cuba, site of a U.S. Navy base] or possi bly Guam. That hasn’t been de cided just yet.” Pentagon officials said today the Army expects to send about 2,600 soldiers with the Apaches and aviation support forces from several headquarters in Germany. In addition to the 24 Apache heli copters offered to NATO, the Army also expects to send 26 sup port helicopters, including mede vac versions of the UH-60 Black hawk and some CH-47 Chinook cargo helicopters. The forces deploying from Ger many also might include Ml Abrams tanks from the 1st Ar mored Division, officials said. President Clinton, welcoming hundreds of children and their parents to the annual White House Easter egg roll, asked the crowd to “send our thoughts and prayers to our men and women in uniform in Kosovo, and our prayers and best wishes to the many thousands of refugees that have been generated by that terri ble conflict.” Although NATO airstrikes with cruise missiles and bombs have been unrelenting since they began March 24, bad weather has pre vented many allied pilots from reaching targets, which have moved closer and closer to Milo sevic’s power, hitting downtown Belgrade throughout the week end. The 18 multiple launch rocket systems will protect the all weather Apaches with short- and medium-range missiles, some armed with scores of "bomblets,” to take out Yugoslav air defenses throughout Kosovo, Bacon told reporters. Fourteen Bradley Fight ing Vehicles, military police and intelligence personnel will be among the U.S. troops sent to Al bania. “Obviously, close-in engage ment is, by definition, riskier than more distant engagement. But the Army is trained to cope with that,” Bacon said of the inherent danger. NATO leaders meeting today in Brussels, Belgium, must approve using the weapons, which were requested a week ago by Army Gen. Wesley Clark, NATO’s supreme allied commander. Pres ident Clinton would then need to approve the Apache gunship plan a second time, although Cohen has signed the deployment order, the Pentagon said. It could take a week to 10 days to deploy the Apaches from lllesheim, Germany, because many U.S. military cargo planes also are being used for humanitar ian aid, military officials said. U.S. and NATO officials have expressed surprise at how swiftly Milosevic's army, paramilitary and police forces have been able to sweep ethnic Albanians from Kosovo since NATO airstrikes be gan, creating a refugee exodus that has created a humanitarian crisis in the Balkans. In response, the United States said Sunday it will provide tem porary shelter for up to 20,000 ethnic Albanians fleeing Serb as saults while European nations take in as many as 100,000 — but just until they can return home under NATO-led international protection. “These people have to go back; otherwise, there are no people in Kosovo,” Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Meanwhile, The Washington Post reported today that the na tion’s top military commanders expressed deep reservations about the U.S. course in the weeks before the air campaign be gan. In closed-door sessions, the Joint Chiefs of Staff argued for more economic sanctions, ques tioned whether U.S. interests were sufficiently at stake and challenged Albright’s view that Serb actions could lead to wider destabilization in the Balkans and Europe, the newspaper said. It quoted unidentified sources fa miliar with the chiefs’ thinking. Cohen, in the AP interview, said, “Those stories are not cor rect. ... The chiefs presented their views, but they also ultimately decided — and unanimously — that they needed to support this air campaign, even with its limi tations, because of the issue of NATO’s credibility being on the line.” Calling for Clinton to keep his options open, Sen. Dick Lugar, R Ind., a senior member of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “The diplomacy won’t start until our president stops saying no ground troops.” But White House national secu rity adviser Sandy Berger said the administration would “stay the course” in the air-oriented cam paign. “Fighting village to village, there would be thousands of ca sualties,” Berger said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “We do not be lieve it is necessary to achieve our objectives.” “You don't have to pay more to get more!" &hemmtd OREGON'S BEST BUYS ON VOLKSWAGEN! NEW'99 VjJHTA $188 Month 48 mo. Lease #W99010 48 M°nth Uase eap eo51 $19,360. MSRP $19,360. $2058.39 cash or trade down. $198 1st pmt, $43 OR lic/bde fees, $35 doc fee $250 sec dep, +$450 acq fee totaling $2984.39 due at inception. Total lease charge $12,090.20 ind $0 fac rebate and $250 refund sec dep Jlesidual $12,003.20. $250 termination fee. 12,000 mi/yr. On approved credit NEW'99 PASS!IT 48 Month Lease. Cap cost $20,512. 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