V WORLD Sports: Aggies dominate Iowa State 66-54 • Page 1 B ACGlEUFi; Bartender, pour the wine • Page 3B THE BATTALION :ills 120 rushed to the scene after b Vlin Shim-eun, called hei suffocating. Then the line TUI7 UATTATTnW 1 illi JdAI 1 ALlUiN ^lume 109 • Issue 100 • 16 pages Texas A&M University www.thebatt.com Thursday, February 20, 2003 any problems. She was a his have to happen hef r ic pavement near the scent. , she’s probably dead" were interrogating Kin S6, who witnesses said car- iilk carton into the subway ding to Kim Byong-hab itenant in Daegu. Another icial said the suspect had x\ for mental illness, i the man tried to useaciy- ter to light the box, somt s tied to stop him. y a scuffle erupted and the led into flames,” the officer ities said the fire was pal ,m.. about three hours after but toxic gas in the tunnel esc ue efforts, the Yonhap cy said. The acrid odor of astic still wafted over the hours after the flames had >ut. the fire began, thick blad entilator shafts of thesnh ime to a standstill as amhti' me. Orange suit-clad fire- tanks rushed into the sub YTN aired footage of the ospital reportedly shown? d to by nurses. The mansai •ing a hospital smock, hit from soot from the fire. m Depressed milk prices and increased operational costs forced center past budget during last fiscal year l Will shut down effective Aug. 31, Z003, though Dairy Science Academic Program will continue 0 Built in I9$2 • updated in 1980 and 1987 ^ 400 acres • has 11s milk cows RANDAL FORI) AND TRAVIS SWENSON • THE BATTALION Source: A&M Dairy Center, AP Senate opposes deregulation here 21 people were killed ampede, because a court irdered the club to be Mayor Richard M. Daley esday. / rejected the contention nets of the E2 nightclub ey had a deal to stay open, ; a list of building codevio- including failure to pro- tough exits, freds of people packed te second-floor E2 club eded down a stairwell y after guards broke up a id someone sprayed pep ; or Mace. By Rolando Garcia THE BATTALION The Student Senate approved a resolution Wednesday expressing opposition to tuition deregulation. no debate, the resolution, introduced by Senator Kevin Capps, sailed through with nosenators voting in opposition and five absten- , Under a deregulation plan, caps on tuition d be removed and the Board of Regents 1 raise tuition without approval from the state Legislature. The purpose of the Legislature is to detemiine 4t price the people can afford to pay,” Capps "As unelected representatives, there are no ttfor people of Texas to hold them directly accountable for the cost of education.” Although the Legislature has not yet taken up deregulation measure, Capps said the senate mist act now so that the voice of students are hrd in the upcoming debate on the issue. While the resolution opposes the state xgislature giving complete authority to regents set tuition rates, it leaves open the possibility it the student senate will support a limited deregulation plan, such as for summer school or graduate school, and recommends legislators )uld maintain at least some contraints on how ichthe regents can raise tuition. “The reality is they don’t have the money in Austin (to adequately fund A&M), and we’re ing to have to address a way to pick up the ck,” Capps said. The resolution also recommends legislators See Senate on page 7A A&M Dairy Center shuts its doors By Melissa McKeon THE BATTALION Texas A&M’s Dairy Center which has been housed at A&M since 1886, will close its doors this August after more than 50 years, leaving dairy workers out of a job and putting A&M’s dairy sci ence program in jeopardy. Twenty-five people will lose their jobs because of the closing announced Wednesday, and many say this could be the end of the dairy science pro gram at A&M. Laura Hamilton, calf manager at the center, said the mismanagement that has been cited as a reason for the closing could have been prevented. “There are plans for a new Dairy Center dating back to 1980 that was never built,” she said. “There weren’t any improvements made to the existing center or equipment with the money that was set aside.” The current center has not had major renova tions since 1952, when the center was first built, she said. To help pay for improvements, the Dairy Center sold several cows in 1996 to replace asbestos shingles on the buildings. “The money from those cows did not go toward improvements like it should have,” Hamilton said. Dr. John McNeill, head of the animal science department, said the center will still be selling cows and equipment until it closes. Financial reasons are to blame for closing the center. College Station is not a good place to milk cows because of the weather, McNeill said. “We are not reducing our commitment by these actions — we are simply going to cease milking cows in College Station,” according to The Associated Press. “Current state budget recissions just accentuat ed the need to close the center,” McNeill said. Cody Martindale, head feeder at the Dairy Center, said the financial and environmental rea sons McNeill gave for closing the facility are unfounded. “We lost $40,00 last year but we made it all up,” Martindale said. “We have passed all state See Dairy on page 2A Does a tiger good RANDAL FORD • THE BATTALION ZooCats Zoological Systems employee Nia Segovia feeds milk to a 5- the advertising for the Housing Fair at the MSC. The non-profit organ- month-old Bengal Tiger Nikita in front of the MSC on Wednesday after- ization was there on behalf of Cambridge housing. The organization noon. Students were allowed to take pictures with the tiger as part of houses 23 tigers and works with Save the Tiger fund. City council considers age increase Filing for local office laties of College Station and Bryan accepting candidates Feb. 17-March 19 [college Station City Council considered raising candidates required age from 18 to 21 on Feb. 10 If interested, contact: -CollegeStation: 764-3541 ^ ^ -Bryan: 209-5120 W W W TRAVIS SWENSON • THE BATTALION Source: CITIES OP BRYAN AND COLLEGE STATION By Hedish Connor THE BATTALION The College Station City Council has suggested raising the age requirement to run for a city council position from 18 to 21. Connie Hooks, College Station city secretary, said coun cil members mentioned the pos sible change to the city charter last week, and will consider the matter further this summer. A new age requirement was suggested because, in the past, younger potential candidates who waited until the last minute to file for office were not aware of the complete running process, Hooks said. She said council members want candidates who understand how the council runs and know about current issues. The majority of 19 and 20- year-olds who ran for city office in the past did not even know what a council meeting was, Hooks said. “Someone who is 21 will make decisions based on the importance of the role, not nec essarily (the importance) of (Texas A&M),” she said. Any changes made to the city See Council on page 2A Powell waits for Turkey’s support in war By Barry Schweid THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Colin Powell interceded Wednesday with Turkish Prime Minister Abdullah Gul in an apparently unsuccessful effort to break a deadlock over a U.S. aid package designed to secure Turkey’s help in war with Iraq. At stake is the stationing of U.S. troops iuTurkey and the use of bases there. Powell gave no indication the tele phone diplomacy produced a break through. A Turkish official in Washington s aid Turkey wanted more than the United States had offered but the American side "'as holding firm. CNN reported that the United States gave Turkey 48 hours to respond to the proposed aid package, but U.S. officials had no con firmation of the report. “We are waiting to hear back from the Turks,” Powell told reporters. “I think they understand the importance of this issue to us, and to our efforts, and they’ve got it under consideration now.” Powell added: “Time is moving, but I don’t have a deadline I’d like to announce right now.” A senior U.S. official, also asked about the report, said the United States wants an answer right away but said he was unaware of a specific deadline. The dispute with Turkey is only one of many problems the Bush administration is having as it tries to line up support for a pos sible war with Iraq. A new U.N. resolution demanding Iraq’s disarmament — and testing the Security Council’s resolve — will be introduced soon, Boucher said. He dismissed two days of speeches by other governments at the council disapprov ing of force to disarm Iraq. “It’s a matter of the Security Council taking its responsibility,” Boucher said. “I know that a lot of speeches are being made by a lot of people.” Powell, in his conversation with Gul, “stressed the importance of reaching a deci sion very soon,” Boucher said. See Turkey on page 2A Terrorist receives 15-year sentence By David Rising THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HAMBURG, Germany — A Moroccan received the max imum 15-year sentence Wednesday for helping the al- Qaida hijackers who carried out the Sept. 11 attacks —- the first conviction anywhere of a suspect in the terror plot against the United States. Mounir el Motassadeq, 28, showed no emotion but occa sionally shook his head or checked his watch as he lis tened to the verdict finding him guilty of more than 3,000 counts of accessory to murder. El Motassadeq helped pay tuition and rent for members of the Hamburg-based al- Qaida cell —- allowing them to live as students as they plotted the attacks, prosecutors said. Judge Albrecht Mentz said el Motassadeq lied when he testified he was unaware of the plot despite being close friends with suicide hijackers Mohamed Atta, Marwan al- Shehhi and other cell members. Mentz said he agreed with prosecutors who earlier described the defendant as “a cog that kept the machinery going.” He “belonged to this group since its inception. ... He knew and approved the key elements of the planned attacks,” the judge said. Sept. 11 victims’ relatives who participated in the trial as co-plaintiffs — some offering emotional testimony that Mentz said prompted him to impose the maximum sentence — praised the verdict. Joan Molinaro of New York City said she was “thrilled.” “It’s the first small victory we’ve had since 9/11,” said Molinaro, whose firefighter son Carl was killed at the World Trade Center. “I kind of feel like, ’OK, Carl, we got one,”’ she said. “I think my son is smiling.” Another New Yorker, Kathy Ashton — whose son Tommy was killed at the World Trade Center — called the 15-year sentence “a drop in the bucket, especially for a young man, but at least it’s something.” Interior Minister Otto Schily hailed the verdict as a “success in the fight” against terror. “It is a warning to all those who think they can toy with the idea of aligning them selves with terrorist networks.” See Trial on page 2A