THE BATTALIOK edible lints of civil, liberties violalio? ■deral law enforcementol ” But he added that thekI / small number of credilj jlaints makes it “prettycltt his is not a huge problei ut Anthony Romero, exec- director of the Amenci Liberties Union, report shows “there wasi rn of violating immi] s” by the J rtment after the Sept. . attacks, ic latest report follows os ne in June that was hit a I of the departmeo; tion of 762 p gration violations after fe ;s. That report said ices were held for as log; ht months, sometimes mi d and kept confined fori a day. /ill the Justice Departme: idmit that it has gone c said Rep. John Conyerss gan, senior Democrat ouse Judiciary Committe ree previous complaint igated by Fine’s closed during the sit- time frame because it tions could not be substar,- These included an imt i detainee who saidh eaten and denied ent and a prison .aid a guard slammed •ay into his face, causing eed. Volume 109 • Issue 174 • 6 pages Saddam’s sons killed in U.S. raid people what the pn fixed it. h Texas Project m nished their repairs ani le cause to two pt he nuclear plant update: y think caused theuact ; term monitoring an: a meeting last weelt i Sports: Aggie archer captures first world title • Page 3 Opinion: Sexual discrimination? • Page 5 nr ur t? J- JL JL JLi 109 Years Serving Texas A&M University www.thebatt.com Wednesday, July 23, 2003 U.S. forces killed Saddam’s sons Saddam Hussein's sons Qusai and Odai were killed in a massive firefight in Mosul on Tuesday when U.S. forces surrounded and then stormed a palatial villa. The sons were Nos. 2 and 3 on the U.S. list of 55 most-wanted Iraq officials. By Sarmad Jalal THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MOSUL, Iraq — Saddam Hussein’s sons Odai and Qusai died in a blaze of gunfire and rockets Tuesday when U.S. forces, acting on a tip from an Iraqi informant, stormed a palatial villa in northern Iraq. The U.S. military claimed their deaths will blunt Iraqi resistance to the American occupation. The six-hour raid was the most successful American operation since the war and comes as a much-needed tonic for U.S. troops, who recently have suffered a dozen attacks a day by Saddam loyalists and other anti- American groups. News of the sons’ deaths touched off celebratory gunfire in Baghdad and at least one southern city. But L. Paul Bremer, Iraq’s top civilian administrator, cautioned “there will be some people who will be pretty unhappy that we killed these two guys.” Four coalition soldiers were wounded and two other Iraqis were killed in the raid, but Saddam was not among them. The house belonged to Nawaf al-Zaydan Muhhamad, a Saddam cousin and tribal leader in the region. “We are certain that Odai and Qusai were killed today,” Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez told reporters in Baghdad. “The bodies were in such a condition where you could identify them.” The identifying marks included Odai’s scars from a 1996 assassina tion attempt, a senior defense official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The daily attacks on U.S. occupa tion troops are thought to be the work of former military officers and Baath Party leaders loyal to Saddam and his family — especially the sons, who played primary roles in the military and feared security services. “Outstanding,” said 1st Lt. Greg Wilson, 33, with the Florida Army National Guard in Baghdad. He clapped his hands and said: “One step closer to getting home.” Both Odai (pronounced oh- DEYE) and Qusai (pronounced koh- SEYE) ranked second only to their father in the deposed regime. They were Nos. 2 and 3 on the U.S. list of 55 top former Iraqi officials wanted by Washington. The United States had offered a $25 million reward for information leading to Saddam’s cap ture and $15 million each for his sons. The White House applauded the action. “Over the period of many years, these two individuals were responsi ble for countless atrocities committed against the Iraqi people and they can See Sons on page 2 Qusai Saddam Hussein Saddam's second oldest son, 37; headed the country’s intelligence and security services, his father's personal security force and the elite Republican Guard ^ Qusai ► Nicknamed “The Snake" for his bloodthirsty but low-profile manner ► Used mass executions and torture to crush the Shiite Muslim uprising after the 1991 War ► Helped engineer the destruction of the southern marshes in the 1990s ► Chief of the army branch for the ruling Baath party in 2000 ► Oversaw notorious detention centers and is believed to have initiated “prison cleansing” - arbitrary killing to relieve overcrowding ► Married the daughter of a senior military commander; separated; two daughters Odai Saddam Hussein Saddam's eldest son, 39; controlled propaganda in Iraq and allegedly oversaw the torture of athletes who failed to perform ► Head of the paramilitary Fedayeen Odai Saddam, and helped eliminate opponents ► Iraqi exiles say he murdered at will and tortured with zeal ► Routinely ordered his guards to snatch young women off the street so he could rape them ► London-based human-rights group claim he ordered prisoners to be dropped Into acid baths as punishment ► Headed the Iraqi Olympic Committee which was accused of torturing and jailing athletes ► Ran Iraq’s most popular newspaper and Youth TV channel SOURCE: Associated Press Aggie study hall SHARON AESCHBACH • THE BATTALION Senior construction science major Sarah Henricksen studies for her afternoon. Students often study in the shaded outdoor hallways of the finance class at the Jack K. Williams Administration building Tuesday Administration building. Proposed $9 per credit hour tuition increase Regents to weigh tuition increase By Jodi Rogers BOARD-of-REGENTS THE BATTALION The Texas A&M Board of Regents will vote on whether to increase tuition by $9 per credit hour Thursday and Friday at Texas A&M University- Commerce. The board will also receive input from Student Body President Matt Josefy and a representative for A&M President Robert M. Gates on the tuition hikes. The proposed tuition increase would take effect January 2004. Gates said tuition would again increase in the fall of 2004 because the University wants to invest more in its faculty. Bob Wright, A&M System spokesman, said Gates’ representative will ask the board for approval of the tuition increases. “All they’re going to do is basically present it to the Board, just like they pre sented it to the students. Then (the board will) ask questions, and then they’ll vote on it,” he said. Authorization for A&M President Robert M. Gates to sign an agreement to transfer the Athletic Ticket Office operations to the 12th Man Foundation RUBEN DELUNA • THE BATTALION SOURCE: TEXAS A&M SYSTEM Wright said he is unsure of how the board will vote. “You never know with the board. I couldn’t tell you one way or the other,” he said. Joey Perot, a senior speech communication major, said he looks at the tuition increase like an investment. “To get a quality educa tion from a university like A&M, when afterward you know how much that See Regents on page 2 ejcis can rtment! ■ .-s.j ept«! ith limits! $ Dairy Center still slated for closure By C.E. Walters THE BATTALION The Dairy Science Center, which Texas A&M offi cials announced would close in February, is still semi functional, said J.W. McNeill, associate head of exten sion for the animal science department. Although cow milking has ceased, the heifer devel opment program is still active, McNeill said. McNeill said there was nothing else he could have done to change the administrators minds. “(The decision to close) was largely economic driv en,” he said. McNeill said the program employed two full-time employees and 15 part-time student workers. In a memo, McNeill said all laid-off employees who asked for jobs would receive them. So far, two or three former employees have requested work and have been found new jobs, he said. Cody Martindale, a former employee of the depart ment and a junior agricultural development major, helped organize a petition to keep the department open. Martindale said the petition was signed by more than 6,000 people, including students, former students and dairy industry employees. The petition was presented to administration officials including A&M President Robert M. Gates. “(Gates) appreciated support for the program and said he trusts the administration below him to make the decision,” Martindale said. Waco police continue hunt for missing player’s body Lynch returns home to West Virginia By Allison Barker THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ELIZABETH, W.Va. — A deli cate-looking Jessica Lynch returned home in a wheelchair Tuesday to a flag-waving, red-white-and-blue cel ebration that was pure small-town America, modestly saying in her first public appearance since her rescue: “It’s great to be home.” “I’d like to say thank you to every one who helped and prayed for my return,” the 20-year-old former POW said in a girlish voice. Lynch received a standing ovation as she entered a media tent in a wheelchair and made a brief state ment with a large American flag as a backdrop. She wore a beret and a crisp Army dress uniform adorned with medals awarded Monday, including the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart. The Army supply clerk appeared LYNCH nervous at first but seemed to gain confi dence as she went on, proudly saying she had read “thousands of stories” recounting that when she was rescued, she told U.S. commandos that she was an American soldier. “Those stories were right. Those were my words. I’m an American sol dier, too,” she declared. Afterward, she was moved to a red convertible for a motorcade through Elizabeth and the five-mile trip to her home in Palestine, a community of about 300. About 2,000 people lined the route. Lynch said that for a long time, she did not realize that her ordeal had captured the hearts of millions around the globe. “I read thou sands of letters, many of them from children, who offered mes sages of hope and faith,” she said. Lynch’s 507th Maintenance Company convoy, based at Fort Bliss, Texas, near El Paso, was ambushed March 23 near the Iraqi city of Nasiriyah in an attack that killed 11 soldiers. U.S. forces res cued Lynch at a Nasiriyah hospital April 1, while five other captured 507th soldiers, held apart from Lynch, were rescued April 13. Lynch’s rescue made an American hero out of the petite blonde who joined the Army to get an education and become a kindergarten teacher. Suffering from broken bones and other injuries, the private first class arrived at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in the nation’s cap ital on April 12 and spent more than three months there before she was released Tuesday morning. She arrived in Elizabeth aboard a Black Hawk helicopter, her left foot still in a cast. DENNEHY By Angela K. Brown THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WACO, Texas — Law enforcement offi cials searched a gravel pit near the Brazos River Tuesday for the body of missing Baylor basketball player Patrick Dennehy. Waco police Sgt. Ryan Holt said no body had been found by Tuesday after noon. Asked if he thought a discovery would be made soon, he said, “For the fam ily of Mr. Dennehy, we cer tainly hope so.” Former teammate and roommate Carlton Dotson, 21, was charged Monday night with murder after he confessed to FBI agents that he shot Dennehy in the head “because Patrick had tried to shoot him,” an arrest warrant released Tuesday said. “Mr. Dotson provided specific informa tion about the murder of Mr. Dennehy that would lead us to believe he committed the murder,” Holt said, declining to release more details. Holt said it’s early in the investigation, and he wouldn’t rule out any motive. Dennehy, 21, was last seen on campus on June 12; his family reported him missing on June 19. The next day, Waco police said Delaware police told them a police informant said Dotson told someone he shot Dennehy in the head after the two argued. Dotson was seen “during the late evening” on June 12 in Sulphur Springs, Texas, the hometown of his estranged wife, driving Dennehy’s Chevrolet Tahoe, and told some one he planned to go to Maryland, the warrant said. Dennehy’s Tahoe was found abandoned, without license plates, in a Virginia Beach, Va., mall parking lot on June 25. About a month later, Waco investigators teamed that Dotson contacted authorities in Maryland and requested to speak with FBI agents about Dennehy’s disappearance. He “made this telephone call voluntarily of his own free will,” the warrant said. “Investigators learned from FBI agents in Maryland that Carlton Dotson confessed to shooting Patrick Dennehy,” the warrant said. Dotson attorney Grady Irvin said Tuesday afternoon the he had not spoken to Dotson since his arrest. “I don’t think he’s in a mental state right now to be speaking to anyone in any lucid fashion,” Irvin said. Irvin said he would examine the arrest warrant and see if any comments that Dotson made in recent weeks were included. “If it is, there is a significant likelihood that his competency to make those statements are in question,” he said. The search for Dennehy’s body began Monday night after Dotson spent about two hours with authorities in Maryland, where Dotson lives in the small coastal town of Hurlock. Waco investigators, some on horseback, searched Tuesday the river banks and a grav el pit surrounded by pastures, tall grass and sunflowers just miles from the Baptist-affili ated university where Dotson and Dennehy both were on the basketball team last season. Baylor basketball coach Dave Bliss gave a brief statement Tuesday, saying the team and university were “shaken by the events that have occurred.” “We keep hoping this isn’t true. It seems unreal, especially that a 21-year-old who always wore that big smile and couldn’t wait for the season to begin might be gone,” Bliss See Player on page 2