•STUDENTS and FACULTY/STAFF •PLUS GUESTS* RIDE THE SHUTTLE BUSES TO KYLE FIELD The Texas A&M Athletic Department will be running student shuttle buses to home football games again this season! The buses will run on their normal routes. Students and Faculty/Staff plus their guests may ride FREE!! Just show your game ticket to board the bus. The Student shuttle buses will start their regular routes 2 hours before kickoff and depart campus for 1 hour after the game is over. RIDE THE STUDENT SHUTTLE BUS TO HOME FOOTBALL GAMES Page 4B WORLD Friday, September 8,2000 THE BATTALION Smugglers construct submarine FACATATIVA, Colombia (AP) — In a scheme worthy of Jules Verne that awed even veteran naval officers, Colombian drug traffickers were building a sophisticated submarine to smuggle narcotics, reportedly with help from American and Russian criminals. The 100-foot submarine could have crossed an ocean, surfaced off Miami or other coastal cities and sur reptitiously unloaded its drug cargo. Top officials flocked to the ware house Thursday to marvel at the lengths that Colombian drug traf fickers, who supply more than 80 percent of the world’s cocaine and a rising share of its heroin, go to export their illicit products. When police arrived, there was no one around. Surveillance cameras had been placed on the roof. No ar rests have been made. Navy Capt. Fidel Azula, a former submarine captain and member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said even the Colombian navy lacked the knowl edge to build such a vessel. “This is unmistakably of superb naval con- structiop,” he said. Seized documents, including ■blueprints, contained Russian- and American-sounding names. There were indications Russian engineers were involved, including “a very professional engineer who has con structed submarines before,” Ar- reguin said. Previously, smugglers have out fitted passenger planes and ships to transport drugs, and even built some tiny fiberglass “submersibles” to fer ry drugs to a mother ship. But they were mere contraptions compared to this sub, which measured over 11 feet in diameter. Officials believe the traffickers would have transported the sub in three sections to the coast aboard tractor-trailers. mm Here’s your chance to join the university surfing team. All you need is a knack for surfing the network and DSL- the always-on, high-speed connection to the university LAN. DSL from Verizon lets you do so much more. E-mail and chat with other students in real time. Conduct online research at breakneck speed. Submit and download assignments over the network. And, that’s just the beginning. For more details about DSL or to learn about special deals created just for students and staff, visit us online today. http://dsl.tamu.edu DSL service not available in all areas. Special equipment is required. DSL service is dependent upon local network conditions. Each phone line must be tested and qualified. Testing will be done at time of order. verijon Indonesia urged to quell uprisings Friday, September i KUPANG, Indonesia (AP) - Frightened U.N. relief workers were evacuated from West Timor on Thursday, fleeing rampaging mili tias, and the caskets of three slain workers were airlifted out, draped in blue U.N. flags and covered with tropical flowers. "This was done at a time when I am in New York, at the United Nations, in or der to embar rass me." — Abdurrahman Wahid Indonesian president With the suspension of interna tional aid operations, some 90,(XX) refugees were faced with potentially disastrous shortages of food and medicines in their squalid camps on the western side of the border that di vides Timor island into the Indone sian west and the U.N.-administered East Timor. At the United Nations, President Clinton urged Indonesia to “bring those responsible to justice, to disarm and disband the militias and to take all necessary steps to insure the safe ty of those continuing to work on hu manitarian goals there.” Indonesian President Abdurrah man Wahid, humiliated before scores of world leaders at the U.N. Millen nium Summit, promised he would work with the U.N. administration in East Timor on removing the hostile militias from the border region. "But to remove such a number of people needs time,” he said. He insisted his forces had tried to prevent Wednesday’s attack, which left three aid workers, including an American, and three civilians dead. Witnesses say soldiers stood by with out stopping the mob. “We protected them, but it's a problem of a cultural nature,” Wahid told journalists, saying tribal differ ences fueled the militia problem. Wahid has often blamed such rogue military' elements of triggerins bloodshed and mayhem in Timor and elsewhere in Indonesia to derail at tempts by his 11-month-old govern ment to build a new democracy after decades of authoritarianism. Indonesia’s official Antara news agency quoted Wahid earlier as say ing Wednesday’s attack was engi neered by his domestic political foes “This was-done at a time whenl am in New York, at the United Na tions, in order to embarrass me,”he was reported as saying. He did not re peat the accusations when speaking at the United Nations. PT1 Positi Dutch suspect arrested for immigrant trafficking THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The suspected leader of a smug gling ring connected to the deaths of 58 immigrants was under surveillance 1 before the bodies were found, but police had no clear proof he was involved in human trafficking, the justice minister said Thursday. Benk Korthals told a special parliamentary session that Dutch police had been watching the suspect and others. The suspect, whose name has not been released in line with Dutch pri vacy practices, was being “observed once or tw ice a week for some time.’ Korthals said. But, he said, the suspects were not being followed the day in June when the Chinese immigrants were packed inside a truck’s un ventilated refrigeration container for the trip to England. British customs officers in Dover found the bodies of the Chinese, who had suffocated in the back of the airtight truck during the five-hour ferry crossing from Belgium. Two immigrants survived. The truck was regis- child abuse. V tered in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam. During an hour-long debate, Dutch legislators cited an article in there- j not go away a spected magazine Vrij Nederland that identified one gang member as Gurzel O. and said he was of Turkish origin. The magazine said the rins had been under observation since mid-1998 after authorities received a tip that it was shipping Kurds from the Netherlands to England by yacht. Korthals told parliament that under the surveillance operation, groups I n the con ting regis ing class< ing financial ai hassles assoc i a beginning of s< freshing this y< something less than before. P fie and Transp< vices (PTTS) I would have so nizing and imp PTTSshoul have been imp red and blue p; pus are a thing dent parking, a the east side ol foot traffic and students. Blue are now locate ducing confusi Although tl marily in prep; PITS has sei/.i ciency. Unlike permits will nc permit-holders separate and e: longer be more red parking lot PTTS’s real blue and red 1c Additions to P near Zachry Ei hundred more ing red lots ha: student spaces Woody Iser with PTTS, sa able parking s| and 1,670 shar red lots. Compared 1 m ft men ing £ type abuse. Child o becoming a re lem, although not consider e childhood obe cessive baby I of illegal immigrants were allowed to leave the Netherlands to help gath- j she died from er evidence against the gangs who smuggled them But, he said, the Dover case was not among those allowed to proceed Korthals denied he was aware of any human trafficking activities by the organization before the incident in Dover. Six people are in custody in the case and an official close to the inves tigation said another major figure is being sought. Five other suspects were detained and conditionally released after questioning. A court hearing on the case was expected in September and full parlia mentary debate in October. Her mothe charged with i abuse. 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