NAIIG THE BATTALII quarto Sports: 'Unbelievable' • Page 3 Opinion: A sign of the Times • Page 5 THE BATTALION itruction ding a look at monthly ;tion spending—Ty 0 j ume JQ9 . J ssue 144.5 pages y adjusted l *“ n 109 Years Serving Texas A&M University www.thebatt.com Monday, June 2, 2003 Brazos on watch for West Nile West Nile Virus epartment of Commerce ked the highest levti a year, persistent high level ms for unemployit ; suggests that be finding it poss eir customers’ in demand withalti orce,” Federal Resea i Alan Greenspans ay, when he pr lawmakers wii licture on theeconou steadili By Rob Munson THE BATTALION No immediate threat from the potentially deadly mosquito- bome West Nile Virus exists in Brazos County, local health offi cials said, but they continue to warn residents to remain alert for signs of the virus. Don Plitt, assistant director of the Brazos County environ mental health division, said the county is implementing West Virus prevention measures include a TV commercial and door hangers. "We didn’t have any prob- is last year, and we’d like to keep it that way,” Plitt said. The county health depart ment will place door hangers on Bryan homes in the Haswell Park area where dead birds, test ed positive for West Nile Virus, were found last August. Plitt said county workers have collected dead birds in Bryan and College Station, but none have been sent to the Texas Department of Health in Austin. Last year, two blue jays, one crow, two horses and 13 mos quito sampling areas were found containing West Nile Virus, Plitt said. The county routinely looks for barrels of standing water and will dump them or put screens on them to guard against mos quito larvae, Plitt said. “We also take reports of leak ing septic systems and fix them,” Plitt said. “They (mos quitoes) love to breed in that kind of water.” Dr. Jim Olson, an entomolo gist at the A&M College of Veterinary Medicine, said he is working with the health depart ment to ensure the safety of res idents. “We’ve expanded surveil lance and are now working in cooperation with the county health department,” he said. Olson said he will monitor new areas as dead birds are reported. “Early rains created a lot of standing water,” he said. “They are turning stagnant and gener ating the Culex mosquito we’re concerned about.” Olson said Southern House and Asian Tiger mosquitoes are the species that are potentially dangerous. “We still look to the Southern House as the source of urban vectors,” he said. “The Asian Tiger is an auxiliary vector but will help spread the virus in an infected area.” Olson said Bryan and College Station residents can I PRECAUTIONS Use yellow yard lights containing sodium vapor | Wear protective clothing ¥ Avoid being outdoors at 1 dawn and dusk when mosquitos are most active Ruben Deluna • THE BATTALION Source: BRAZOS COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT, DR. |IM OLSON take precautions to avoid mos- themselves first and foremost quito-bome infections. from mosquito bites by wearing “The first line of defense rests with people protecting See West Nile on page 2 Dejection (5 major gay rights The court is con as Texas may ban ils that are legal Supreme Court is si ace, an issue thatoffl of the 20th students, e solved everything nor said. “We we have cases n h affirmative a m 'posits Texas A&M catcher Craig Stinson hangs his head after the Aggies lost in the 10th inning against the University JP BEATO III • THE BATTALION of Houston on Sunday night. The 7-6 loss ended A&M's season. See related story on page 3. Palestinians demand return of ruined lands By Stqve Weizman THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DEHEISHE REFUGEE CAMP, West Bank — A shrine of sorts fills a corner of Fatima Jafari’s living room. Two well- worn coffee pots, a water jug used for washing hands and some squares of embroidered fabric are all that remain of the home her family left in July 1948 as Israeli guns closed in on her village. More than half a century later, she still dreams of returning to that land south west of Jerusalem and now inside Israel’s borders, even though she was only 40 days old when she left, and even though that home is now rubble. Jafari was one of about 700,000 Palestinians who lost their homes in the fighting that followed Israel’s independ ence in 1948. Their fate, and that of their descen dants — 4 million by U.N. estimate, like ly will be one of the toughest issues to resolve in a new Mideast peace effort powered by the United States. For Israelis, even the most committed doves, the so-called “right of return” to a country already populated by 5.5 million Jews and 1.2 million Arabs is a non starter. Many Palestinians, some of whom PEACE PLAN The fate of refugees Palestinians want the right to return to homes they lost when Israel became a state in 1948, or to receive compensation. This "right of return" is one of the toughest issues facing the new round of peace talks. U.N. estimates ■ 100,000 refugees; * Palestinian estimates ■ ■■ Gaza Strip ■ ■■ ■ ■■ Syria ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■■■ still have the keys to the houses their fam ilies left, feel just as strongly that it is a matter of principle to redress their nation al catastrophe. Some argue that Palestinian leaders, including Yasser Arafat, made the issue the cornerstone of the liberation move ment for decades and would look like traitors if they caved in. On a subject so touchy there are whis pered ideas, too: Palestinian leaders qui etly say Israel can afford to accept the idea because most Palestinians would, in reality, opt for compensation and stay where they are. Israelis say most nations were born in upheaval, they have taken in almost a million Jewish refugees from Arab coun tries, and that if the Palestinians suffered an injustice they should learn to live with it as other refugees have. They maintain that they, too, have returned to what was their homeland after 2,000 years of exile and persecution. 'Under a plan put forward by then- President Clinton in December 2000, the Palestinians would have given up the right of return and Israel would have allowed in a small number of refugees for family reunifications. Arafat never accepted the proposal. The refugees are scattered throughout the region, many living in miser able camps and shanty towns in Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon and yearning to return to a land most only know from stories. Many more have prospered in Arab countries, but theirs has always been a tenuous existence, as evidenced by the mass expulsions from the Gulf following the 1991 war to free Kuwait. “To smell the soil of our land is SOURCES: ESRI; United Nations: PASSIA; Palestinian refugee organizations See Lands on page 2 Fails family takes A&M to court Fee statements go electronic By Justin Smith THE BATTALION A lawsuit has been filed against Texas A&M by the family of Brandon Fails, the A&M football player who died November from complica tions of a blood clot after a knee surgery. The lawsuit, filed May 19 in Brazos County, seeks unspeci- damages for Charles and Valerie Fails and states that Fails’ physicians and trainers were negligent in identifying the clot that formed after the surgery and eventually lead to his death. Along with A&M, the law suit names Fails’ doctors. Dr. Joe Paul Bramhall and Dr. Richard Smith, who treated him after he injured his knee. ■—Also named fails were A&M trainers Daniel Kniffin and David Weir, Assistant Athletic Director Timothy Cassidy, Assistant Athletic Director for Athletic Training or Therapy Karl Kapchinski, and The Physicians Centre and Central Texas Sports Medicine and Orthopedics, where Fails received treatment. University spokeswoman Cynthia Lawson said A&M does not comment on pending lawsuits. On Oct. 15, Fails, an 18- year-old 6-foot-3-inch, 275- pound lineman from Euless, Texas, injured his right knee in football practice and later underwent arthroscopic sur gery to repair his knee. See Fails on page 2 By Karen Yancy THE BATTALION Beginning in August 2003 Texas A&M will use online fee statements, known as e-state ments, to replace the paper stat- ments usually mailed to stu dents’ home addresses. Student Financial Services will send e-mail notices to stu dents’ Neo accounts to inform them to check their online fee statement. They will be posted at http://register.tamu.edu and linked at AggiE-pay on the SFS Web site. “We want to get the best available information to stu dents,” said Bob Piwonka, direc tor of SFS. “The electronic statement allows us to use the campus e-mail system to contact students about changes in their fee statements.” On July 1, SFS will send a letter to each student’s perma nent address informing him that paper copies of fee statements will no longer be sent through the mail. This letter will also include instructions on where to find fee statements online. “We hope this change will save the University a great deal of money,” Piwonka said. “We have estimated the University will save at least $50,000 during the first year. It costs 40 cents in postage and handling per state ment sent out. That is about $18,000 per semester and that doesn’t include the cost of print ing and envelopes.” Since 1999, SFS has been involved in a five-year transition from printed to electronic fee statements. “In the summer of 2000 we started encouraging people to claim their Neo accounts. Then in the spring of 2001 we began See Online on page 2 Poor security hinders U.S. weapons collections Disarming Iraq of weapons by mid-June The U.S.-led coalition has ordered most Iraqis to disarm by June 14 in an attempt t get weapons off the streets and to reUtm publ ic security to cdies under American occupation. The collection process begins June 1. By Sameer N. Yacoue THE ASSOCIATED ^RESS BAGHDAD, Iraq — Iraqis ordered by the U.S.-led occupa- W>n force to begin turning in their Capons showed little sign of c ompliance Sunday, the first day a two-week amnesty period Signed to make the streets of Postwar Iraq safer. In a land where gun culture runs deep and lawlessness is a serious concern, separating people from their firearms is no easy task — especially in Baghdad, a city occupied by heavily armed American forces. “During the Saddam era, few people used to keep weapons in their houses because there was real security, but now you have to protect your family by yourself,” said All Hassan, a 27-year-old fac tory worker. He says he won’t turn in his Kalashnikov assault rifle until a new Iraqi government is established and security is restored. While looting and crime have ebbed since American tanks rolled into the Iraqi capital April 9, secu rity remains a major issue across the city — particularly at night, when gunfire remains common and most streets are deserted soon after sunset. That’s why many Iraqis say they need to remain armed. Hassan has hidden his AK-47 in a place he says no one can find. Not the Iraqi police, not “even the Americans with their high-tech equipment,” boasted Hassan, who lives in al-Thawra, a poor neigh- See Weapons on page 2 Amnesty period — For 14 days Iraqis will be permitted to turn in unauthorized weapons. According to the order, no possess, conceal, hide or bury weapons. Bagging weapons — Iraqis must place unloaded, disassembled guns into a clear bag provided by coalttion forces and waft siowty to the collection point Weapon dropoff points — Guns will be collected during the day at police stations and other designated areas, jointly staffed by Iraqi officials and coalition forces. Repurposing guns — Guns and other weapons turned in will either be destroyed by officiate or used by the now Iraqi army and police. After June 14—Anyone found with an unauthorized weapon willi be detained and could face criminal charges Guns allowed — The peshmerga, a Kurdish force that helped the U.S., in some cases can carry guns. Coalition forces, police officers and uniformed officials will also carry weapons. SOURCf.. Associates Press