The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 11, 2002, Image 12

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    About one person every
MINUTE is injured
in a traffic accident
involving alcohol.
That's an average of 59 people per hour,
or an estimated 513,000 people each year.
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12
Friday, October 11. 2002
NEW
THE BATTALlj
Seventh death linked to snipe
Aogielifi
MANASSAS, Va. (AP) —
The death toll from the
Washington-area sniper rose to
seven Thursday as authorities
said ballistics evidence linked the
killer to the slaying of a man
gunned down at a Virginia gas
station.
Dean Meyers, 53, of
Gaithersburg, Md., was felled by
a single shot Wednesday night,
moments after filling his car’s
tank, the latest victim to die since
the attacks began Oct. 2. Two
people have also been wounded.
Prince William County Police
Chief Charlie Deane said the
results of an autopsy on Meyers
and ballistic evidence “has linked
these cases.”
Deane also pleaded for the
killer to give up: “There’s enough
damage been done.”
Police had said they were
searching for a white minivan
seen leaving the gas station, but
Deane downplayed the lead and
said the occupants had a “reason
able” explanation of their actions.
He refused to say whether there
were surveillance cameras at the
gas station but said some cameras
were in the area.
Manassas is about 35 miles
southwest of the Maryland sub
urbs where most of the attacks
happened. The attack is the sec
ond in Virginia: A woman was
wounded by the sniper Friday in
Fredericksburg, 30 miles south of
here.
In a drizzling rain, police in
yellow slickers walked shoulder
to shoulder near the crime scene,
looking for evidence. Deane did
T
Man shot in Virginia
A man was fatally shot at a Virginia
gas station Wednesday night. A
possible link to previous shootings
is under investigation.
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Man killed at
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VIRGINIA
MARYLAND
j-j # Fredericksburg
Spotsylvania
SOURCES: Associated Press; ESRI
not say whether they had found
anything. But he said there had
been no communication from the
killer.
A tarot death card with the
taunting words “Dear policeman,
I am God” was found near a shell
casing outside a school in Bowie.
Md., where a 13-year-old boy
was critically wounded by the
sniper Monday.
Investigators say the sniper, or
snipers, fired from a distance with
a high-powered hunting or mili
tary-style rifle. Like Meyers, all
the victims were felled by a sin
gle bullet.
Neighbors said Meyers lived
:
alone in a two-story brick u
a town house complex
Gaithersburg. They said
worked in Virginia, though te
did not know where.
Carol Iverson, 79, lived net
door to Meyers for 15 years t
Gaithersburg before she rwei
away. The former neighbor]
stayed close, with Meyers
ing last week to Iverson's hone
for dinner.
“He was perfectly delighttii:'
she said, her voice breaking
can’t say enough good tin
about him. He alwayshadal
word. He always had time toif
and talk.”
Four thousai
__ receive an
ihem to fill out
current 5
lemic integrity.
It should onl
. to fill out,
vice preside
“Students w
tceive this e-
rey, click on
lone,” he said.
The effort ct
students i
Backpacks are history at Calif, schoo
Something’s missing at the new Sun Valley
Charter High School in Ramona, Calif. There are
no textbooks, only computers.
That means students there don’t have to lug
heavy backpacks — a familiar ritual for many
young Americans who carry books from class to
class and home at day’s end.
Growing back pain complaints prompted a new
California law limiting textbook weight. But some
say assignments drawn from the Internet, “e-
books” or CD-ROMs will be the real solution.
Officials at Sun Valley High, a public school
near San Diego, used money normally spent on
textbooks for computers.
The new school’s first students — about 60
incoming freshmen — get assignments from
such services as Questia.com, an online library,
and Interactive Mathematics, curriculum on
computer CD.
It sounds nice, but unrealistic to Monika
Rohall, a 15-year-old Chicagoan. “What about
kids who don’t have fast-running computers at
home?” she asks.
By S<
THE
Burr
A freshman at Chicago’s towering LaneTsi
High School, she’s stuck navigating four flight
stairs with all her books because she has
to get to her locker between classes. Bi
from her overloaded pack has caused her to (in
the volleyball team.
Such health problems are increasingly coil;
mon. says Grace Walker, a registered physica
therapist in Orange, Calif.
Each year, she and other practitioners ^
they're seeing more young people with backp
related pain. In severe cases, it can lead tool:'
ture of the spine.
Walker’s 12-year-old son uses a rolling baa
pack, dragged on wheels behind him. His ®
also buys extra textbooks to keep at home.
“Fortunately, I can afford to do that, Wt
says. “Most people can’t.”
That’s not an issue at Sun Valley High
California school. Sometimes, students therep
out assignments to take home. And it home^
requires a computer, they can use the
machines after school.
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Friday, October 11, 2002, 7:30 am - 4:00 pm
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