spot »ss.t.«|'yESDAYAPRIL 2 2002 till VOLUME 108 • ISSUE 121 THFP R ATT AT m i ilT O/i 1 I ATI vT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY srael fights back as bombs continue hAMALLAH. West Bank (AP) — |eli troops backed by armor intensi- an offensive across the West Bank Monday, pounding a Ramallah ing with anti-aircraft guns, briefly |nng into Bethlehem and sending deafening echo of tank shells ugh Palestinian streets, ipurred by a wave of bloody suicide ks that claimed more than 40 lives in five days, Israeli leaders said the military drive was meant to smash a Palestinian terrorist infrastructure. Palestinians, for their part, said Israel’s tactics amounted to a campaign of state terror against the civilian population. Troops searching for Palestinian militants and weapons caches carried out house-to-house searches and engaged in running battles with gun men. In the center of Ramallah, sol diers used vehicle-mounted anti-air craft guns to pulverize the facade of a building where Palestinian gunmen were holed up, sending chunks of masonry plunging into the street. Israeli forces also moved into the northern Palestinian towns of Qalqilya and Tulkarem on Sunday night and Monday. In the sixth Palestinian attack in six days, a car bomb exploded near down town Jerusalem. Police said a policeman stopped the car and the driver, a Palestinian, set off the bomb. The Palestinian was killed and the policeman seriously injured. The A1 Aqsa Brigades, a militia linked to Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat’s Fatah movement, claimed responsibility. Sporadic gunfire rang out after dark in Ramallah, a few miles to the north, where a tight curfew and continued fighting have turned a busy commercial center into a ghost town. The boom of tank shells was heard after night fell. Eight Israeli soldiers were injured — two seriously — in Ramallah and See Israel on page 6 Faculty member performs in protest ?-70 win over> game. ;he had sho»^ •s' final sir he clock, sheari Another iandlw 1, 86, St King Charl«; disc mobs dy published : irLAnimak Graffiti was found early Monday morning on the Sul Ross Statue outside the Academic Building. Members of the Corps volunteered their class time to clean the statue JOHN LIYAS •THE BATTALION before a professional was called in. The University Police Department said it received several vandalism calls on campus, but did not release further details. By Melissa Sullivan THE BATTALION Emerging from a metal trash can dressed as a homeless person with dirt on his face and a bottle of alcohol in his right hand, music professor Dr. Howard Fredrics perfonned a protest performance of “The Mockingbird” in his class Thursday afternoon. Fredrics was scheduled to perform the piece at the faculty talent show on March 22, but due to the dramatization it contained, the Memorial Student Center Opera and Performing Arts Society (OPAS) put a disclaimer on it, saying it contained subject matter that would be inappropriate for young audiences. In protest of the disclaimer, Fredrics withdrew his performance from the program. “No one [in OPASJ saw it. They had the program notes and the text and I told the organizers it wa?r an ‘in-your-face’ performance because I came into the audience and I was wearing a disgusting costume,” Fredrics said. “I think they should have seen it with unbiased eyes and ears and judge it for themselves.” “The Mockingbird” is a theatrical setting of Charles Bukowski’s poem scored for baritone voice, actor and electronic tape. “The reason why we put the dis claimer on it was because of the description he provided and how he intended it to be vulgar, intense and shocking,” Elaine McClurken, coordi nator for OPAS said. “We encouraged him to still perform and it would have been great if he did.” Other themes portrayed during the show included adultery and sui cide, however, organizers chose to put the disclaimer only on Fredrics’ performance, he said. “Someone could have been offended with anything performed,” Fredrics said. Fredrics has performed this piece several times, most recently at Southern Methodist University, which is known for its conservative atmosphere. He said there were no problems with the performance at the Ft. Worth campus. “I think instead of saying it was inappropriate for young audiences they should have said it depicted alcoholism and homelessness and it contained audience participation in some ways,” Fredrics said.” “I did n’t know this was supposed to be a family event.” However, McClurken said several faculty members could have brought See Censorship on page 2 asma-etching could improve semiconductors By Brittany Hooten THE BATTALION computer industry has been searching for l ear $ to better its most basic component, the 'conductor, and a Texas A&M chemical engi- sa ys he may have the solution. )°w Professor of Chemical and Electrical •ncering Yue Kuo has worked in the plasma semiconductor field for more than 20 years. - Sa,t * he has worked periodically during those with - [ s to tind a way to plasma-etch copper. )e miconductors, key elements in computer teJ r processors and other electric circuits, need tiny components, transistors, connected to each other with wire lines to operate. As computers process information faster and faster, the number of transistors and number of wire connections has increased, meaning that smaller and thinner lines are needed to etch the transistors together. Scientists have been looking to integrate copper into the connection system using plasma-etching. Today chips are being made more and more powerful, Kuo said. Advanced chips can contain tens of millions of transistors, and as more tran sistors are added to each microscopic chip, more lines are needed to connect them. For many years the lines were made of alu minum because of its high conductivity. Kuo said that as aluminum is made smaller it becomes more resistant instead of continuing conducting. The most common solution is to use copper, he said. But to make the copper lines smaller, plasma-etching must be used. “When we come to very small geometry, we can only use the plasma-etching,” Kuo said. In 1998, IBM disclosed a method that can make a very fine copper line, but not by the plasma method. This method, chemical mechanical polishing, is the most common method used by companies today although it is problematic, Kuo said. “This method has a lot of problems that need to constantly or continuously be studied. It’s a very tedious process,” he said. The chemical mechanical polishing method involves many steps, requires constant attention and uses expensive equipment, he said. Another potential problem is that the process can have a See Semiconductor on page 2 iov. Perry thanks reservists ORT HOOD, Texas (AP) — Gov. Rick Perry thanked is military reservists and National Guardsmen and I them Monday for temporarily giving up their jobs f P protect America in the war on terrorism. h e enemies of America have gotten a powerful dose lefu| l f Ur y of a freedom-loving people. I am proud of r 0rk you have done to protect America from this evil r w kn ow as terrorism,” Perry told a group of mostly l as reservists. He delivered his remarks from a podium near where his helicopter landed to bring him to the post. Maj. Gen. Daniel James III, Texas Adjutant General, stood nearby as the soldiers sat in bleachers and listened. Perry said he wanted the troops to know that he was proud of them and said he wanted to remind their employers of the work the soldiers were doing. See Perry on page 6 ER TAPS I Gay Awareness Week & to support diversity Bluebonnet Drive As spring arrives, Bluebonnets begin to grow on the corner of Wellborn JENNIFER WIDENER • THE BATTALION Road and University Drive across from Northgate. Night an E at imp.Oy*’’' Catfish 1 •ON BRIAN flOROWUX •cachtncj. Learning and Culture PAIGE TAYLOR MIXON Economics CARMELA nCATRICE IZAGUlRRC Psychology 10:30 p.m ACADEMIC PLAZA By Tanya Nading THE BATTALION Several organizations at Texas A&M say they are going to spend this week reminding students that homosexuals live, work and go to school in Aggieland. Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgendered Aggies (GLBTA) and other campus organizations will sponsor Gay Awareness Week this week. The week will celebrate its 18th year of recognition at A&M with a collection of activities, demonstrations and discussions. “The point of this week is to try and let people know that there are gay people on this campus,” said Justin Anderson, a senior psycholo gy major and president of GLBTA. “We just want to be treated like everyone else and be respected for who we are.” The week begins with a diversity workshop with facilitator Magdalen Hsu-Li, who will be speaking on diversity and sexuality, Monday See Awareness on page 2 IkSIDlS Sports Pg. 7 Terps outlast Hoosiers, 64-52 Dixon leads Maryland to first NCAA title Opinion Pg. 11 Public accessibility? Cl PA should not be enforced wmmm HIGH 82° F I LOW _ ^ 60° F EZmZEEEEB FORECASTS COURTESY OF