6A Friday, April 25, 2003 NATIfl THE BATTAli Student kills principal, self in junior high school By Marc Levy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RED LION, Pa. — A 14- year-old boy shot and killed his school principal inside a crowd ed junior high cafeteria Thursday morning, then killed himself with a second handgun, authorities said. The shootings happened about 15 minutes before classes started at Red Lion Area Junior High School. “Everyone ran out of the cafeteria yelling, ‘He has a gun!’” said eighth-grader Danny Dulin. Principal Eugene Segro, 51, who was shot once in the chest, was pronounced dead at a hospi tal. James Sheets, 14, died at the scene of a shot to the head. Coroner Barry Bloss said. Sheets apparently carried the weapons in his backpack, according to Bloss, who said he saw the backpack in the cafete ria. The principal was killed with a .44-caliber weapon, while the student was believed to have been killed with a .22-caliber weapon. Police do not believe anyone else was involved and were investigating where the boy got the guns. Sheets was not known for being a disciplinary problem, and police and Red Lion Area Superintendent Larry Macaluso did not know him to have any specific disputes with Segro. Sheet’s parents were helpful and said they had no reason to expect anything was wrong, according to police. Segro had been at the school more than a decade, a school official said. “He tried to find the most lenient way to punish the kids. It wasn’t just a job for him. He truly loved the kids,” said Nicole Wisor, 16, a 10th grader who had attended the school. Autopsies were being con ducted on both victims Thursday. Bloss said a third shot was fired, but apparently hit the floor. The room fell silent after the shootings, then students began running outside or toward their homerooms, said Angel Williams, 14, a seventh-grader. Officials dismissed the school’s nearly 900 students for the day, and also sent home stu dents from the high school and elementary school. Students who witnessed the shooting met with counselors, police said. The junior high was to Student shot and killed his principal, then killed himself 0 1/4 mi 0 1/4 km I 1 Red Lion Area J. H. S. Red Lion N.V. PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh Harrisburg* Red Lion* \ MD - Ai 0 50 mi 6 50'Urn 71 Philadelphia-4 Judge: state need no prove who fired sho for death penalty By Matthew Barakat THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SOURCES: Associated Press; ESRI AP remain closed Friday. The school does not have metal detectors but does have security cameras, according to Terry Robinson, the school dis trict’s business manager. The same school district was the site of a machete attack on a kindergarten class that injured a principal, two teachers and 11 of the 23 pupils in 2001. r v Worship (Directory J Adventist Christian (dpn-^Denominationai Seventh Day Adventist 1218 Ettle St., Bryan (corner of Coulter) 775-4362 Pastor Bill Davis Saturday 8:15am- Spanish Worship English - 11:00 am Sabbath School - 9:45 am First Christian Church 900 South Ennis, Bryan 823-5451 Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Robert D. Chandler, Minister ‘Baptist Parkway Baptist Church 1501 Southwest Pkwy (979) 693-4701 Sunday Worship 8:1510:45 & 6PM Sunday School 9:30 AM Wednesday: Meal 5:30PM College Bible Study Wed. 6:30PM www.pbccs.org Cfturch of Christ Fellowship Free Will Baptist Church College & Career Class You are invited to a Bible Study especially for students. Sunday mornings at 9:45 Wednesday night supper at 5:30, followed by Bible Study at 6:30 1228 W. Villa Maria 779-2297 For more information contact Marcus Brewer: 731-1890 m-brewer@tamu.edu httpyAyww.fellowshipfwb.org A&M Church of Christ 1901 Harvey Mitchell Pkwy. (979)693-0400 Sunday Assemblies: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m., College Bible Class 9:30 a.m. Sunday Night: 5:45 p.m. Mid-Week 7:00 p.m. Aggies for Christ Call for on-campus pick-up info www.aggiesforchrist.org ‘EpiscopaC MANASSAS, Va. — A judge ruled Thursday that prosecutors will not necessarily have to prove that sniper suspect John Allen Muhammad fired the shot that killed a man to get the death penalty. Circuit Judge LeRoy Millette Jr. also ruled that prosecutors do not have to tell defense attorneys their theory about whether Muhammad or fellow sniper suspect Lee Boyd Malvo fired the shot. Muhammad is charged with capital murder under two differ ent statutes. One is a new state antiterrorism law that requires no proof of who pulled the trig ger. But the law had never been used before the sniper shooting case and is subject to a constitu tional challenge. The other statute allows for the death penalty in cases of multiple murders. Typically, only the triggerman has been eligible for the death penalty under this law. But Millette agreed with prosecutors who argued that it is irrelevant who fired the weapon. Citing the wording in the multi ple-murder law, he agreed that prosecutors will have to demon strate only that Muhammad was “a principal in the first degree” to the crime to be eligible for the death penalty. “I agree with (prosecutor James) Willett. I think the term triggerman is used inadvisably,” Millette said. Defense attorneys disputed that interpretation and immedi ately filed a motion challenging Muhammad’s indictment under the statute. Unless someone is the trig- german, he should be for murder in the first desr and not capital murder, lawyer Jonathan Shapiro® before the judge. Shapiro also said “ indications are” that pulled the trigger. Hedeclindi elaborate after the hearing a Willett also refused to com® Prosecutors in Pi William County, wki Muhammad is being tried, not said if they have evfc implicating Muhammad as triggerman in the Oct. 9 deal* Dean Harold Meyers Manassas-area gas i Prosecutors have said o: Malvo’s fingerprints werefat on the Bushmaster rifle thai'i used during the three sniper spree last October. In all, Muhammad, 42,2 Malvo, 18, have been accuse!: 20 shootings, including deaths, in Virginia, Maryii Alabama, Georgia, Louisk and Washington Prosecutors have said thesta ings were part of a scheme extort $10 million fromthejf ernment. Also Thursday, defc lawyers were rebuffed in efforts to launch an investigate into the source of leaks aiu the case to The Washing!: Post. Millette sided with theP( in quashing subpoenas and four reporters who haveto ken stories in the investigate A recent story in the Pi cited anonymous sources »i provided details of Main demeanor when he confessed some of the shootings. Defc lawyers have said the an effort to taint the jury pi and that Malvo’s confess! should be tossed out of court. Israel will invite Palestinian premiei designate for talks First Baptist Church UNIVERSITY MINISTRY 2300 Welsh Ave. • College Station SUNDAY: 8:30 & 10:55-Worship Services 9:45-Bible Study WEDNESDAY: 7:00 p.m.-Bible Study Ty Cope, University Minister tyeppe@tca.net * 764* 1353 St. Thomas Episcopal 906 George Bush Dr. • College Station, IX 696-1726 Services - 8:00 (Rite 1), 9:00(Family Service Rite II) & 11:15 (Rite ll-for late sleeping Ags) 7:30 p.m. Evensong Next door to Canterbury House, the Episopal Student Center Pentecostal By Lisa J. Adams THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Train station attack Cart) as Ar Airlii By D THE ASS FORT V ’he einbat: chief execi Airlines resi the compar workers wit low cost eul world’s large tried to avoic The resig Carty came < balked at tf improves pc employees length of cor to five years, provide incei cash compe Darrah, pres union. The boan transport approved th package, but would have t company’s b The nev Gerard Arpe; officials of t union to h night, a unioi a (I W l confix emplo great terns Cornerstone Church Mid Week Small Group Meetings Sunday Service at 3:00pm on George Bush, ${pn-£>enominationaC just across from campus at the College Station Conference Center. 485-8744 CatfioCic St. Mary’s Catholic Center 603 Church Avenue in Northgate (979)846-5717 www.aqaiecatholic.ora Pastoral Team Rev. Michael J. Sis, Pastor Rev. Keith Koehi, Associate Pastor - Campus Ministers - Deacon Bill Scott, Deacon David Reed, Martha Tonn, Jullie Mendonca Dawn Rouen, Roel Garza Daily Masses Mon.-Fri.: 5:30 p.m. in the Church Tues.-Thurs.: 12:05 p.m. in the All Faiths Chapel Weekend Masses Sat: 2:00 p.m. (Korean), 5:30 p.m. (English), 7.00 p.m. (Spanish) Sun.: 9:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m., 5:30 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. Confessions Wed. 8:30-9:30 p.m., Sat. 4:00-5:15 p.m. or by appointment. Calvary Chapel AGGIELAND A Non-denomination*! church that teaches God's Word verse by verse. Contemporary praise & worship Come es you ere - casual atmosphere Currently meeting at: The Warehouse 1601 Groesbeck in Bryan just off 2818 north of campus Currently studying the Book of Acts Services at 10:30 a.m. Sunday Pufar Uff Haghet '95 (979)324-3972 www.aggiefand.ee Victory ' ? United Pentecostal Church Sunday 2:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m. 1808 - H Brothers (behind the C.S. Wal-Mart) 764-4180 PresSyterian ({pn-Pienominational Covenant Presbyterian Church 220 Rock Prairie Road (979) 694-7700 Rev. Sam W. Steele - Pastor Sunday Service: 8:30 & 11 a.m. Sunday School: 9:45 a.m. Students Welcome www.covenantpresbyterian.org communityCHURCH SUNDAYS: Prayer Service @ 10 a.m. Worship @ 11 a.m. To advertise on this page call The Battalion today! 845-2696 Meeting in Oakwood Intermediate School 106 HOLIK STREET fe F,RST I PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH I Helping Aggies grow in faith 1 New Fall Hours: 1 Worship 8:30, 11:00 a.m. ■ Church School 9:30 p Fellowship on the Patio 10:30 ” 1100 Carter Creek Parkway www.fpcbryan.org JUST OFF GEORGE BUSH Behind the College Station Conference Center FOLLOW THE SIGNS! United {Methodist Small Groups Meet Weekly www.CX)mCHURCT Lcom 260-1163 A&M United Methodist 417 University Dr. (in Northgate) • 846-8731 Sunday Worship: 8:30,9:45,10:50 College Sunday School: 9:30,10:45 Sr. Pastor Dr. Jerry Neff www.am-umc.org JERUSALEM — Israel will invite Palestinian Prime Minister-designate Mahmoud Abbas to Jerusalem to discuss restarting the peace process once a new Palestinian Cabinet is in place, an Israeli official said Thursday. Palestinian officials said that Abbas would agree to meet with Israel’s leaders and affirmed that the Palestinian Authority would accept a U.S.- backed peace plan. Israel, however, wants changes in the plan, including a stop to all violence as a precon dition for other steps. Underscoring that chal lenge, a Palestinian suicide bomber killed a guard and injured 10 bystanders in a rush- hour attack at an Israeli train station on Thursday. A breakaway faction of a militia linked to Yasser Arafat’s Fatah movement claimed responsibility for the attack in the town of Kfar Saba, near the West Bank. Abbas told Israel’s Channel 10 that he condemned the bombing and said “we oppose all such attacks.” On Wednesday, Arafat and Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, reached an accord on a Palestinian Cabinet. A Palestinian parliament vote on the new government is expect ed within a week. The United States and Israel hope the formal establishment of Abbas’ government will amount to a means of sidelin ing Arafat, whom they accuse of links to terrorism and failing to crack down on militias. The White House affirmed that once the Palestinian parlia ment has approved Abbas’ Cabinet, the peace plan — a A Palestinian suicide bombef killed a guard in a rush-hour attack at a train station Thursdsil in the Israeli town of Kfar Sate SOURCES: Associated Press; ESRI joint effort by the so-cal Quartet of the United Stall the European Union, ll United Nations and Russia- will be formally presented, The plan calls for an end! all violence and a full Jewi 1 settlement freeze in the W Bank and Gaza. It would afe demand that all settlemen! built after 2001 be dismantled Those actions could befol lowed, as early as this year,I the creation of a Palestine state with provisional border Final borders, the status Jerusalem and the fate f Palestinian refugees are to 1* decided in later stages. Raanan Gissin, spokesite'! for Israeli Prime Minister Art’ Sharon, said Thursday that 1 the Palestinian legislate approves the new Cabinet, “1 prime minister intends to inv the Palestinian prime minis to a discussion on ways i ( reach a cease-fire and resi the peace process.” But Israeli governmentofi 1 cials warned the road to ( coujd be long, espec because of terror attacks Thursday’s bombing. The spoke said the uni< latest de; about it of incentives board could Friday momi A $1.8 1 package tha last week employees le undisclosed including bai sions and hu Carty ap telling worl the executi company ei bonuses for fives that 1 their annual place the $' sion funding Arpey, th dent, replac while boarc A. Brennan chairman. Arpey sa to “restore employ( company.” It was n whether thu Carty’s res sweetened h enough to pi filing by tl carrier. AM who met £ declined to i questions to Adding t Carty was quarter fina AMR. whic than-expectei fuit 74e TVoa IQ t h e c I o 8 0 0 - TE> TRAP & The Trap & having a fu TX - Satun Participant welcome, include T Sporting Cl Prizes w Directio detail http://recspc Cost: s 25