THE BATTALI® Sports: 'Clydian Curse' still haunting Rangers • Page 3 Opinion: Funding public education • Page 5 THE BATTALI0 109 Years Serving Texas A&M University www.thebatt.com [Volume 109 • Issue 160 • 6 pages System employees await ruling Monday, June 30, 2003 l_oc|i?ilr»t:iori iifffoc:tincj A&IVI MRLOYEE BENEFITS By Karen Yancey THE BATTALION Texas A&M University System employees are awaiting a ruling from Texas Attorney General Gregg Abbott concerning their eli gibility to receive state insurance benefits after retirement. The Texas Legislature passed two bills this session that change age and years of service requirements for A&M System employees who want to retire with full insurance benefits. Only the A&M System will be affected by these bills. Under the old law, employees who are at least 55 and have at least five years of state service can retire by Aug. 31 with full health bene fits. But under the new law, any employee who wants to be eligible to receive full health benefits and retires after Aug. 31, must be age 65 and have at least 10 years of state service. A memo from the Human Resources Department sent out to A&M employees last week said that the new bills have not been signed by Gov. Rick Perry, but could have an impact on A&M employees who plan to retire in the future. Bob Wright, director of commu nications for the A&M System, said one of the new bills has a grandfather clause that allows cur rent A&M System employees to remain under the older law even after Aug 31. is can nent! pled! n limits Israeli troops set to withdraw as Mideast truce announced By Ibrahim Barzak 1HE ASSOCIATED PRESS GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — The militant Hamas and Islamic Jihad groups and Yasser Arafat’s Fatah movement declared immediate suspensions of attacks against Israel on Sunday, and Israel began pulling troops out of Gaza, breakthroughs in attempts to end almost Hiree years of fighting. The militant groups announced three-months Iruces and Fatah’s cease fire was for six months. At sundown Sunday, Israeli troops and tanks began pulling out of northern Gaza, in keeping "'ith an agreement to hand ftsponsibility for security ■n Gaza over to the Palestinians. An Israeli pullout is a condition of the U.S- backed “road map” to peace and a Palestinian state by 2005. The Bush administra tion welcomed news of the cease-fire, but said it wants to see more progress. “Anything that reduces violence is a step in the right direction,” White House spokeswoman Ashley Snee said. “Under the road map, parties have an obligation to dismantle terrorist infrastructure. There is still more work to be done.” The truce was first announced by the two militant groups. The tim ing came as a surprise, after Palestinian officials said it would be delayed at least until Monday because of political infighting in Arafat’s Fatah movement, a part ner in the three-way deal. Hamas and Islamic Jihad apparently did not want to wait for Fatah to resolve its internal agree ments. Abdel Aziz Rantisi, a Hamas leader, read the truce announcement in a phone call to The Associated Press. “The two movements (Hamas and Islamic Jihad) decided to suspend military operations against the Zionist enemy for three months, starting today,” Rantisi said. Islamic Jihad leader Mohammed al-Hindi con firmed that the truce took effect Sunday. “This is a joint declara tion between Islamic Jihad and Hamas and I think our brothers in Fatah are going to declare their Mideast truce The militant Hamas and Islamic Jihad groups and Yasser Arafat’s Fatah movement declared a suspension of attacks against Israel on Sunday. Two of the militant groups announced three- month truces and Fatah’s cease fire was for six months. © Timing The truce was first announced by the militant groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad. It came as a surprise after Palestinian officials said that it would be delayed until Monday because of political infighting in the Fatah movement. Troops pullback Sunday night Israeli troops began the pullout from northern Gaza, according to the agreement giving responsibility for Gaza security back to the Palestinians. The demands Hamas and Islamic Jihad want Israel to halt all military strikes, including targeted killings of wanted militants and the release of Palestinian prisoners. Also, Palestinians are to have the freedom to travel the length of the main road in Gaza occupied in parts by Israeli forces. SOURCE: Associated Press AP position soon,” al-Hindi told the AP. See Truce on page 2 However, Wright said, A&M officials are waiting for a decision from Abbott on whether the grand father clause applies to both bills. Wright said there are several hundred potential retirees in College Station and several thou sand in the TAMU system. “A lot of people are trying to figure out what they want to do and time is running out,” he said. Sen. Robert Duncan, the pri mary author of one of the bills, could not be reached for comment. Bofore August 31, 2003 To receive full health benefits, must be: • 55 years of age with five years State service Oft mmmmmmmmm • Meet Rule of 80, where years of service added to age is equal to 80 Aftsr August 31, 2003 Must be 65 years of age with 10 years of state service credit to receive full benefits RUBEN DELUNA • THE BATTALION SOURCE: TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SYSTEM Baylor campus awaits word on missing athlete By Angela K. Brown THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WACO, Texas — As the FBI jdins the search for a missing Baylor basketball play er, some of his friends say their fears that he won’t be found alive are growing. Patrick James Dennehy, 21, hasn’t been heard from in more than two weeks, and police suspect that he was killed in the Waco area. His sport utility vehicle, its license plates missing, was found aban doned in a mall parking lot in Virginia last week. John Cunningham, a speech communications professor at Baylor, said Dennehy was working on an independ ent study project for his class this summer. He said Dennehy was a “solid B student” who dreamed of playing for the NBA and then working in public relations for his favorite team, the Sacramento Kings. “It’s been unbelievably hard,” Cunningham said Sunday. “Right now, the hardest part is not knowing. We’re trying to stay positive, but it’s been hard as more DENNEHY time passes.” Waco police say Dennehy’s teammates and others have been questioned about the disappearance of the 6-foot-10, 230-pound center and junior speech communications major from Santa Clara, Calif. Police declined to comment Sunday, saying a news conference was planned for Monday afternoon, Rene Salinas, a spokesman in the FBI’s San Antonio office, said Sunday that the FBI was helping Waco police in the investiga tion. He declined further comment. Dennehy often sat in the front row so he could concentrate and didn’t talk much to his teammates, who sat in the back, Cunningham said. But the professor said he was surprised about reports that basketball players may be suspects. “I’ve taught those guys, and there’s no way in my mind that any of them are capa ble of doing anything like that,” Cunningham said. Dennehy’s stepfather, Brian Brabazon, told the Waco Tribune-Herald someone had See Baylor on page 2 Africana Studies approved By Lindsay Broomes THE BATTALION This spring, the College of Liberal Arts approved an undergraduate minor in the field of Africana Studies to increase the globalization of the curriculum of the College of Liberal Arts, said Julia Kirk Blackwelder, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “The minor will con tribute to the cultural under standing among our stu dents,” she said. Africana Studies is an interdisciplinary area that focuses on Africa, the peo ple of Africa and the cul tures and experiences of Africans who have migrated around the world, Blackwelder said. “History, literature, soci ology, anthropology, the arts ■ Must complete 18 hours i.,, ■ Courscwork in classes 5 such as: ♦ African American History V • Modern Africa and Sociology of Black Americans • Rhetoric of the Civil Rights Movement |I | ”'■ ■ First courses offered in Spring 2004 RUBEN DELUNA • THE BATTALION SOURCE: COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS, NOVA DEVELOPMENT and other disciplines con tribute to Africana Studies,” she said. Blackwelder said the minor is comprised of 18 hours of course work with classes such as African American History, Modem Africa, Sociology of Black Americans and Rhetoric of the Civil Rights Movement as some points of focus. In addition to courses already offered, three See Africana on page 2 Chicago porch collapses, 12 killed By Brandon Loomis THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CHICAGO — Natalie Brougham was crowded onto a third-floor porch with dozens of friends early. Sunday when the floor dropped out from under them, sending wood and bodies crashing through two other decks to the ground. Twelve people died, most of them crushed on the porches below. At least 57 others were injured, authori ties said. “There were people covering me. It was pitch black and people were yelling, Tm dying.’ I was assuming I was going to die,” Brougham, 22, said. “I guess I got lucky and only had two or three people on top of me.” Brougham walked away with injuries to her hip and shoulder, in pain but alive. As many as 50 people, most of them in their early 20s, had crammed onto the apart ment porch for a party in the city’s affluent Lincoln Park neighborhood when the floor fell at about 12:30 a.m., police said. Seven men and five women, most of them appar ently on the porches directly below, were crushed between the falling floors and killed, said Larry Langford, spokesman for the city’s Office of Emergency Management. “There was no warning,” said Simon Rasin, a University of Chicago law student who attended the party. “I fell through both the second and the first floor decks into the basement area in just a pile of bodies.” His friend Henry Wischerath was among those killed, he said. “There was chaos,” Chicago Fire Commissioner James Joyce said. “There were people screaming and crying in the alley.” Partygoers who had been safe inside the apartment said they tried to rescue their friends from the pile of lumber and bodies, while people poured out of a nearby tavern to help. “They were bloodied and covered in rub ble, their clothes were ripped. Women were looking for husbands, men were looking for wives. It was horrible,” said Geraldine Schapira, 33, who lives nearby. Eleven people were pronounced dead at See Chicago on page 2