Thursday. Octobers, J I iKII set,IS ( >C|mIxT NATION THE BATTALION Page 5B is CPS |Murder suspect kills herself tigates ble Woman kills another to steal unborn child, police say gence — A Dallas Child Pro ieworker said the molt r who climbed out offc loving.car to her dealt hi Id had fallen from Ik riving home, ausible that a mote ealthy active 3-year4 irtothe point that she - Tide,” case worker Alt- nick said in an affidavitj ic two living children of I ames Estrada, i died Sept. 24 aftei . driven by Suarez,aoc iment of a bridge span j er. The Dallas Count; Office ruled the deatt| force trauma, but there) her the child diedupd mentor by beingbitbj CPS are conducting nil ncident to see whetherl senting the family olid people,” Gary Pj lias Morning News ini s. “The cops and the I me the facts in a wa\| tl to them. These par i :cused.” , a 2-year-old girl arii j re placed in a foster| y on Friday, tine whether the child foster home is sched-1 records reviewed byf omplaints have bepn ily in the last three omplaint came four Ts death and allege RAVENNA, Ohio (AP) —A baby was in good condi tion Wednesday after he was removed from his slain moth er’s womb by another woman, who passed the child off as her own until committing suicide as police closed in. The infant was in the temporary custody of the Portage County Department of Human Services. DNA tests were conducted to verify paternity. The case was uncovered Tuesday'when police ar rived at Michelle Bica’s home to question her about the week-old disappearance of Theresa Andrews, who lived four blocks away. Before police could reach her, Bica shot herself. ' The 8-pound, 6-ounce baby boy was found in her home. The body of Andrews, 23, was found buried in Bica’s dirt-floor garage. Portage County Coroner Roger Marcial said Andrews was shot once in the back and likely died instantly. The .22-caliber bullet matched ammunition in the gun Bica used to kill herself. i Marcial said the straight cut of the crude Caesarean section on Andrews led him to conclude that the baby Was removed after the shooting. “I just figure if the cut ting was done before she died, there would have been a lot of struggling,” he said. Andrews’ due date was Wednesday. , The baby was listed in good condition Wednesday at Robinson Memorial Hospital. ,, Andrews’ husband, Jon, was awaiting DNA tests to (jonfirm that the healthy infant is his son. The results of those tests could come Wednesday, said Andrews’ attor ney, Nicholas Phillips. “He’s a long way from facing reality,” Phillips said of his client. “It’s such a difficult, unique situation where you’re enjoying your newborn son and mourning the loss of your wife.” Prosecutor Victor Vigluicci said the baby probably was delivered Sept. 27, the day Andrews disappeared in Ravenna, a city of about 12,000, some 30 miles south east of Cleveland. Marcial said traces of blood found in the Bica house indicate Andrews was shot in the first-floor laundry room there. On the day she disappeared, Andrews had paged her husband at work and said a woman had called inquiring about a 1999 Jeep Wrangler they were trying to sell. Andrews, a sheet-metal worker, told police that when he got home at 4:30 p.m., the house was open, the vehi cle gone and his wife missing. Police found the vehicle about a block away and later found the Jeep keys in Bica’s purse. There was no indication whether the women had known each other. A series of cellular phone calls to the Andrews’ house led police to Bica. On Monday, officers questioned Bica about the Sept. 27 calls. When police returned that night, they heard a gunshot and found her body in an upstairs bedroom. Her husband, Thomas Bica, 41, a county corrections officer, was questioned and released. t Hot Dogs Dr. Peppers ry Night! ssional 3 and ■ Sex offenders’ release causes victims alarm DENVER (AP) — A court ruling that could free more than 100 Col orado rapists, child molesters and other sex offenders from prison has alarmed victims of sex crimes and sent law enforcement officers scram bling to undo the damage. uNine inmates were turned loose before Colorado Attorney General Ken Salazar stepped in and halted the releases Saturday. Authorities were still looking for them on Wednesday. ^' “1 frankly was outraged that this number of offenders could be given the green light to walk without taking as much time as could be taken under the law to make sure victims were notified,” Salazar said. •'He has asked the state Supreme Court for another hearing to reconsider its Sept. 18 ruling. Corrections Department officials tried to calm dozens of victims fearful that their attackers are free to strike again. “This is-ridiculous,” Rebecca Nye, whose two young daughters were molested by a neighbor five years ago, told The Denver Post. “The laws freed to work for kids.” Allison Morgan of the agency’s victim notification unit said callers are told the agency must follow the ruling. “They fully understand that this comes down from the Supreme Court," Morgan said. “They are shocked that the court would do this.” The ruling threw out mandatory five-year parole sentences for rapists, child molesters and other sex offenders convicted between 1993 and 1996. Corrections officials responded by releasing nine inmates and notifying 84 paroled sex offenders they no longer had to attend mandatory therapy sessions or make visits to parole officers. ' — News in Brief - LARD officers’ trial to begin LOS ANGELES (AP) — The first trial stemming from the largest police corruption scandal in city history opened Wednesday with at torneys for four accused offi cers calling a former co-work er — the prosecution’s key witness — an evil, lying thug. The statements were un usual because they came on the first day of jury selection. Superior Court Judge Jacque line Connor offered lawyers the chance to give state ments to inform the jury pool about what might lie ahead in a trial that is expected to last three to four weeks. Attorneys for the accused — Sgt. Edward Ortiz and offi cers Brian Liddy, Paul Harper and Michael Buchanan — used the chance to attack for mer officer Rafael Perez, whose accusations sparked the scandal. TAMU Career Center Applying to Grad School Get input from university representatives about how to tackle the job of applying to a graduate program. Tuesday, Oct. 10 5:15 p.m. Rudder 308 For more information contact the Career Center at 845-5139, come by 209 Koldus, or check us out on-line at http://careercenter.tamu.edu Aggies don't* driJife ets much as sou filtinfe- it s a tact... Villi rnj A HfcMW THE MAJORiTT or iieeiEf DRINK ? OR FEWER DRINKS mwm wppi/ PEIc WEEK Data from Spring, 1998 CORE survey on an anonymous, random sample of 861 students http://studentlife.tamu.edu Die lives and divorce ~ :ause they have the UfTlC^o t ] ie Olympics, there oblem that needs to be dicrous to consider the ; sport of women’s itics. Charles A, Sippial, Sr. :se little girls are by no Vice President ition women. When a ear-old is considered to te last years of her 3ic competition, some- is wrong with the way Games are structured. No matter what, the ipics should be revered cessful and re- ^ „ , „ „ ble athletic events. Dear Faculty, Staff and St athletes who partici- these Games are the :heir sports, but some I am pleased to an) young. 2000 Conference for the J be some regulation of During this time, approxiTP ians ' .— T ——-— campus for this event. ( J J ma - or education, and we are esj men and women to our cat This large number Jse ' am a senior from our physical resources, transportation. I am cqjft anC j even a few employees will do their ame to this University. students. I am therefore § there was a P 055 '’ 3 ' 1 " r , i , j lings back in a Univer- from standard procedure i B ° nfire because they success. dorm life and unity. Brandon McDermott Class of ‘01 letters to the editor. Letters id include the author's name, es the right to edit letters for Letters may be submitted in laid with a valid student ID. to: n - Mail Call McDonald I University TAMU i, Texas 77843 . fail: 1111 84S2647 rs@hotmail.com Jaring in The Battalion express ily. They do not necessarily re- elion staff members, the Texas idministrators, faculty or staff. discrimination. Motivated by this realiza tion, I spoke with an African-American stu dent in my dormitory, and got his opinion on racism on campus. Under terms of anonymity, he told me, “I feel like I should not be judged just because of who 1 am. I do not think that I should be accepted into this University because I am black. I do not feel like any organization should accept me just because I am black. I do not feel like anyone should give me any special treatment just because I am black.” When affirmative action was brought up, his comment was, “I do not think there will ever be complete equality because ... by af firmative action [life] is racist.” Another subject discussed was whether a certain hostility existed on campus toward minority students, whether by other students or by the administration. “I do not think that [hostility] has any thing to do with this University, because anywhere 1 go there is always going to be one ignorant person in the group that has something to say. I came here not because this is a black school, 1 did not come here be cause it is a white school, l came here be cause I wanted to get an education,” he said. Granted, this one person does not necessarily reflect the views of all minorities on this cam pus. However, his opinions do provide insight. Certainly, today’s world is not perfect, for any race. How can it be right for people to be judged on the basis of their skin color, one way or the other? The University recently did a study of mi norities who were accepted to A&M but chose not to attend. The top reasons that were cited were lack of financial aid and lack of personal attention. This raises the question, “Why should any students be sin gled out for special treatment?” There is definitely no easy solution to the problems of discrimination and reverse dis crimination, but a start would definitely be to remove the little boxes that are checked on any forms students and prospective em ployees fill out. The fact that A&M gives prospective stu- * dents little special treatment is a good thing. * It shows that the University is doing its best | to look at each student as an individual, not as a race. Once everyone begins to view people simply as who they are — not what color they are or where they are from — it will bring society one step closer to unity. Andrew Stephenson is a sophomore environmental design major.