8 Monday, September 27, 2004 THE BATTALII ' I Top Pakistani al-Qaida suspect killed in raid By Zarar Khan THE ASSOCIATED PRESS KARACHI, Pakistan Paramilitary police killed a suspected top al-Qaida op erative Sunday in a four-hour gunbattle at a house in south ern Pakistan that also led to the arrest of two other men, the in formation minister said. Amjad Hussain Farooqi had been wanted for his alleged role in the kidnapping and be heading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in 2002 and two assassination attempts against President Gen. Pervez Musharraf in December 2003. “I as chief spokesman for the government of Paki stan confirm that our forces have killed Amjad Hussain Farooqi,” Information Min ister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed told The Associated Press by phone from Amsterdam, where he has gone on an of ficial trip with Musharraf. Ahmed said “two or three other people were also ar rested during a big gunfight.” le declined to identify them but said they were still being questioned by authorities and were “very important.” An intelligence official Karachi identified the ar rested men as Abdul Rehman and Yaqoob Farooqi. It was not clear what relation, if any, Yaqoob Farooqi had to Amjad Hussain Farooqi. Pakistan is a key ally of the United States in its war against terrorism and has arrested more than 600 al-Qaida suspects, in cluding several senior figures in the terror network. Many of them have been handed over to U.S. authorities. Since mid-July, Pakistan says it has arrested at least 70 terror ist suspects, including Moham med Naeem Noor Khan, an al leged al-Qaida computer expert and Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, Tanzanian suspect in the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in east Africa that killed more than 200 people. Earlier Sunday, intelli gence officials said authorities launched a raid on the house in Nawabshah, a town about 125 miles northeast of the main southern city of Karachi, after police received a tip that Farooq was hiding there. A paramilitary official speaking on condition of ano nymity, said the siege lasted four hours. The official said the suspect who was killed — presumably Amjad Hussain Farooqi — had shouted in Urdu, the main lan guage in Pakistan, that he’d prefer death to capture. The sus pect also pointed to the sky and shouted: “I fulfilled my promise to Allah,” he said. Farooqi was believed to have been an associate of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the reput ed al-Qaida No. 3 captured in Pakistan last year. Farooqi had been missing since Pearl was abducted in Ka rachi in January 2002. Farooqi is also suspected of taking part in the hijacking of an Indian airliner to Kandahar, Af ghanistan, in 1999 that resulted in a hostages-for-prisoners ex change that freed British-born militant Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh from an Indian prison. Sheikh has been sentenced to death for his role in setting up the Pearl abduction. Relief efforts in aftermath of Jeanne topple those of 9-11 By Deborah Hastings THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HUTCHINSON ISLAND, Fla. — Jeanne, Florida’s fourth hurricane in six weeks, piled on destruction in already ravaged areas Sunday, slicing across the state with howling wind that rocketed debris from earlier storms and torrents of rain that turned streets into rivers. At least five people died in the storm, which was a cruel rerun for many still trying to recover from earlier hurricanes. Jeanne came ashore in the same area hit three weeks ago by Hurricane Frances and was headed for the Panhandle, where 70,000 homes and businesses remained with out power because of Hurricane Ivan 10 days earlier. The storm peeled roofs off buildings, toppled light poles, destroyed a deserted commu nity center in Jensen Beach and flooded some bridges from the mainland to the Atlantic coast’s barrier islands. More than 1.5 million homes and businesses were without power. “The last three weeks have been horrific,” said Joe Stawara, owner of a Vero Beach mobile home park where about half the 232 trailers were damaged. “And just when we start to turn the comer, this happens.” Until Sunday, no state had suffered a four-hurricane pound ing in one season since Texas in 1886. And the hurricane season still has two months to go. Rain blew sideways in wind that reached 120 mph when the hurricane’s eye hit land shortly after midnight; by 5 p.m. EDT it had weakened to a strong tropi cal storm, with sustained wind near 65 mph. At least a foot of water rushed through some streets in Vero Beach, where a mattress floated through one neighborhood. The hurricanes have prompt ed the largest relief effort in the Federal Emergency Manage ment Agency’s history, eclips ing responses for the 1994 earth quake in Northridge, Calif, and the 2001 terrorist attacks, direc tor Michael Brown said. Frances was larger, while Charley and Ivan were more powerful. But Jeanne was bad enough, once again sending the Sunshine State into a state of emergency. Gov. Jeb Bush sought to re assure weary Floridians. “This will become a memory,” he said. “This (will) come to an end, and when it does we can probably use the term ‘normal’ again.” Seawater submerged the bot tom floor of condominiums on Hutchinson Island, where Josh Lumberson rode out the storm. The parking lot was under 5 feet of sand and water, and sand rose to the kitchen cabinets inside first-floor condos. The ocean, once 75 yards away, lapped at the foundation. “It sounded like the whole building was coming down,” Lumberson said. “You could hear every metal screw coming out of the walls.” As the wind subsided, the clang of metal siding could still be heard on the barrier island. Jeanne made landfall as a Cat egory 3 hurricane with winds of up to 120 mph just before mid night Saturday at Hutchinson Island, 35 miles north of West Palm Beach. Frances struck in almost the same spot. Once inland, Jeanne’s 400- mile diameter system trudged across the state, passing north east of Tampa. It then headed to ward the Panhandle, which was still recovering from Ivan. Max Mayfield, director of JIM forem; Column its football university f Bonfire v primarily b( tion but of t EGHAN MCCARTHY Department of Transportation workers survey the damage to the old Jet Beach Causeway Sunday. Large portions of the road were washed a* during Hurricane Jeanne. the National Hurricane Center in Miami, described the similar paths of Jeanne and Frances as perhaps unprecedented. The toll from the latest storm extended as far north as Day tona Beach, where the famous beach was ravaged by erosion, and south to Miami, where one person was electrocuted after touching a downed power line. Two people died when a sport utility vehicle they were driving plunged into a lake beside Sawgrass Expressway south Boca Raton. In Brevard County, a manm found dead in a ditch in PalmBi in what police called anapp® drowning. In nearby Micco, 60-year-old man was found (fa after a hurricane party at a ho He was lying in water after house had flooded; police i the death may be alcohol-rel some part ir (lapse, there Most sch< one that is t A&M shut < ranked Tige become frie might even game again In one of Byrne ment passes had 1 This year or drop. Not si home footb more than 7 As if thei some studer portant Agg ging down, traditions th ‘‘People u yells, and th son, ajunio since we shi to go to the or the man may have drowned] flip-floppi Fox News bias. It is < kettle blac While n spoke freq protection that polls' the board, forth in hi; that if elec establish r EV E R Y Ti STUDENT REC CENTER Services emissions o dioxide, niti carbon diox ing in to the ness, Bush Chuck Hage however, th Fall Fitness with Rec Sports ON THE MOVE with TAMU Outdoors FACULTY/STAFF MEMBERSHIPS—Rec Sports makes living a healthier life even easier with payroll deductions for membership payments. Come by and see what Rec Sports has to offer or visit hffp://recsports.tamu.edu. BANQUET AND EVENT SERVICES—Have your next meet ing, party or presentation at the Rec. Rec Sports now offers banquet and event services for Texas A&M affiliated organ izations and departments. For more info call 845-7826. Aquatics-Dive In the Water's Great Program Basic SCUBA Adult Learn to Swim Springboard Diving Polar Bear Club Registration TODAY, Sept. 27 NOW-Oct. 11 NOW-Oct. 11 AH semester Cost $250/$275 $30/$40 $40/$50 FREE Marathon Training Program—Info meeting is on Sept. 22 at 6:00 p.m. in Rec rm 281. Registration begins immedi ately after meeting. First Run is Saturday September 25 at 8:00 am starting at the Rec. FREE Healthy Living Lecture Series—DeAun Woosley MS, Rec sports Fitness Director, discusses the myths and facts of exercise and how you can start seeing results! Tips on diet, nutrition, strength training, cardio and stretching. Join us Wednesday Sept. 29, 5:30-6:30 p.m. in room 281. RELAX With Massage Therapy—Relieve, relax, & renew with Rec Sports Swedish massage. It's always a great time to unwind and treat yourself to a full hour of therapy. Visit Member Services to make your appointment today. Upcoming Events Lead Climbing Clinic Kayak Roll Instruction Clinic Rafting Day Trip Bike 101—Flats and Maint. Inter. Fly Fishing Clinic Rock Climbing Day Trip Sea Kayak the Texas Coast Fly Fishing Day Trip Rafting Day Trip Event Sept. 28 Oct. 1-3 Oct. 3 Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. 5 5 9 9 10 3 10 Register TODAY Sept. 21 NOW- Sept.2? NOW - Sepf. 28 NOW - Oct/ NOW - Oct. NOW - Od. NOW-Od.5 NOW - Od. 5 NOW-Sepi 28 CPR, AED, & FIRST AID GET CERTIFIED Get a job!-With Rec Sports CPR, AED, & First Aid—Don't miss out on this opportunity for personal development learning a life saving skill. Next class is Oct. 13th. Visit Member Services for more information. Personal Trainers—Now hiring certified persona! trainers Contact Jerod Wilson at 845-3058 for more info. Rec Center Lifeguards-—Applications available in Rec rm 202, in the Natatorium or at http://recsports.tamu.edu. Rec Center Medics—Seeking qualified EMT/medics. Apply at the Medic Station or http://recsports.tamu.edu. Intramural Officials—Make money in the midst of excite ment and while having fun! No experience needed. Attend the Volleyball meeting tonight. Sept. 27th, 7:00 p.m. in room 281 of the Rec Center to be hired. Intramurals-Fall Sports Excitement If you are thirsty for an outdoor adventure, then come i< TAMU Outdoors for a day of rafting the Hill Country' 5 beautiful Guadalupe River! Horsepacking Big Bend Nov. 24-28 NOW-Nov.8 Join TAMU Outdoors this Thanksgiving break on a horse back adventure through Big Bend. Explore Buenos Suerte, colorful desert landscapes, scenic mountain-top vistas and the beauty of a West Texas sunset. Spots are limited! El Cap Club—Sign-ups for El Cap Club are going on now. Don't miss this new team challenge at the Rock Wall. impose on p sions reduct One of Bi ments durin when he sta The following IM sports CLOSE registration on Sept. 28th: Texas Hold 'Em Tournament $5/team Handball FREE Golf Tourn. Charge The following IM sports OPEN registration on Sept. 27th: Volleyball $45/team Sign up at Member Services by Oct. 5th at 6:00 p.m. Supported by YOUR Rec Sports Fee. * recsports. tomu.edu • DRIVE ON Texas A&M Golf Course • NEW Full Length Driving Range—Come by and enjoy the Golf course's new addition, the full length driving range! • Lessons with the Pro—On your own, or in a group, lessons with the Golf Course Pro will get your game on track. Open to the public! We ore located on the south side of the A&M campus- Call the Pro Shop at 845-1 723 & visit us online at http://recsports.tamu.edu. ing our troo nation-builc going to ha ing down th Bush had ta Three years Bush procla the regime Iraqi people Days late Caffrey, wh the first Gu Army was t ing point, ragged,” he nounced his from South beginning t< has shown to terrorists has the Uni from a nucl made in a n ger to the U Gay man this electioi proposed fe