2 - Tihe Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 14, 2001 NATION/WORLD Freshman arrested for 2 killings 4 __ _ - F t WASHINGTON (AP) - A freshman at Gallaudet Univensity, the nation's only liberal arts university for the deaf, was charged yesterday with killing two fellow students over the past five months. Polike Chief Charles Ramsey said robbery was the motivie in both killings. He said Joseph Mesa Jr., 20, of Guam, was expected to be arraigned today on two counts of felony murder in the deaths of Benjamin Varner and Eric E. Plunkett. Ramsey told a press conference last night that police had searched Mesa's room earlier in the day, but he would not say whether any evidence was recovered. Varner, 19, of San Antonio, was found dead of mul- tiple stab wounds Feb. 3 in a fourth-floor residence hall room of Cogswell Hall. Plunkett, 19, of Burnsville, Minn., also a freshman, was found beaten to death in a first-floor room of the same hall Sept. 28. The killings shocked the close-knit community of M 2,000 students at Gallaudet, which was established by Congress in 1864 as the country's only four-year liber- al arts university for the deaf and hearing impaired. After Varner's death, university officials decided to close the building for the rest of the semester. Security has been tight at the campus since Varner's death. University police had been checking student IDs and writing down the license plates of vehicles enter- ing the campus. IRS xoseizes church for failigto pay taxes INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A church that challenged the authority of the IRS was seized by the govern- ment yesterday to satisfy a $6 mil- lion tax debt, with federal marshalsi wheeling the former pastor out on a gurney as he prayed in protest.I "I pray for you that God will for- give you!" shouted the Rev. Greg J. Dixon, pastor emeritus of the Indi- anapolis Baptist Temple. "Welcome to communism, America!" It is believed to be the first timeI the federal government has ever seized a church in a tax dispute. The move peacefully ended a 91- day vigil that had drawn the atten- tion of constitutional scholars and4 right-wing militia members. Five church members were inside when 85 federal marshals arrived, supported by 70 city police officers. No one was hurt or arrested, though some church supporters had to be carried out, among them Dixon, who was strapped to a gurney and wheeled out into the street.< "David got Goliath," church mem-I ber Susie Wallen said. "But if our; Goliath had bullets, we could've whipped their butts." The dispute began when the Bap-i tist Temple stopped withholding fed- eral income and Social Security taxes from employee paychecks in 1984.; Dixon said his unregistered New Tes- tament Church was governed only by God's law and was not subject to taxa- tion. Registered churches are exempt from certain taxes but still must pay employee1 withholding taxes. Dixon refused even to apply for tax- exempt status, saying taxing any church violates the First Amendment separation of church and state. Kournikova Vi-ustraced to Dutch computer NEW YORK (AP) - An Internet account in the Netherlands emerged yesterday as the possible source of the Anna Kournikova computer virus that clogged e-mail service this week. "OnTheFly" posted a claim of responsibility on a Dutch website, say- ing the virus was released as a warning to Internet users who are lax about security. "I never wanted to harm the people (whol opened the attachment," the person wrote. "But after all: it's their own fault they got infected." "OnTheFly" then encouraged victims to update their anti-virus software. The virus, which carried the signa- ture "OnTheFly," was traced by the Excite(at)Home computer network to one of its subscribers in the Nether- lands. The network said it is trying to find out if the account holder wrote the virus or if "OnTheFly" merely used the account to spread the virus. "We're looking at the situation and determining what action to take," said Alison Bowman, a company spokes- woman. Mikko Hypponen, manager of anti- virus research at F-Secure Corp. in Espoo, Finland, said he believes the message is authentic, but finding the person could prove difficult. He also said the Netherlands does not appear to have any law outlawing Internet virus crimes. Dutch officials said no investigation was planned. "We have no indication that it was started here," said Wim de Bruijn, spokesman for the National Public Prosecutors office. "If any indications arise nointing to the Netherlands, then NORFOLK, Va. Bush plans to seek funds for weapons President Bush yesterday said he would ask Congress to spend an additional $2.6 billion to develop high-tech weapons for the U.S. arsenal, and called for cooperation among NATO allies to confront ter- rorism and weapons of mass destruction. In the post-Cold War era, Bush explained, the allied nations' adver- saries have grown less predictable and more diverse. So new weapon- ry must be developed to counter the long-term dangers posed by terror- ism and by nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. "With advance technology," the president sa-id, "we must confront the threats that come on a missile. With shared intelligence and enforcement, we must confront the threats that come in a shipping con- tainer or in a suitcase." SAN VICENTE, El Salvador 128 killed by second quake in El Salvador A powerful earthquake shook El Salvador yesterday, toppling hundreds of buildings and killing at least 128 people in a country still mourning more than 800 who died in an even stronger quake exactly one month ago. The quake flattened much of the heart of San Vicente, a small farming com- munity of 40,000 about 35 miles east of San Salvador. Its streets were buried under mountains of debris when dozens of adobe homes collapsed in the quake. "My house just came tumbling down," said Maria Aguilar, 80, her eyes filled with tears as health workers treated her injuries on a patio at San Vicente's central hospital. "Part of a wall collapsed on top of me, but my grandchildren rescued me quickly." At least 128 people were killed and more than 1,200 were injured, said Salvadoran Red Cross spokesman Car- los Lopez. ISTANBUL, Turkey Brawl in parliament results in death It started with verbal mudslinging across the marble chamber of t Grand National Assembly, Turkey's parliament. It graduated to pushing and shoving and teacup throwing, then exploded into a melee of fisticuffs. It ended with a 55-year-old mem- ber of parliament - who'd been beat- en about the head and chest by fellow lawmakers - dead of a heart attack two legislators charged with involuA tary manslaughter, and the dead man's family vowing revenge. The Jan. 30 death of Mehmet Fevzi Sihanlioglu, following a debate on whether the time allotted for parlia- mentary speech-making should be reduced, has provoked a kind of national soul-searching. Political observers bemoan the fate of a coun- try whose leaders are struggling to establish Turkey's place in the world. 0 - Compiled from Daily wire reports. NEWS IN BRIEF HONOLULU Civilians were at helm during crash Two civilian guests were seated at controls of the USS Greeneville when the submarine surfaced and sank a Japanese fishing vessel off the Hawaiian coast, a Navy spokesman said yesterday. "There were two civilians at two separate watch stations under the very clost supervision of a qualified watch stander," said Lt. Cmdr. Conrad Chun, a Pacific Fleet spokesman. He declined to identify which stations were involved, but said they could include the helm, sonar or the ballast control. The Navy has refused to identify who was aboard, but Chun said the 16 civilians included business leaders. A defense official in Washington said one of the civilians was at the helm. However, there is no indication the civilian played any role in Friday's collision, said the official, who is familiar with the investigation and spoke only on condi- tion of anonymity. A Pentagon spokesman, Rear Adm. Craig Quigley, said no information about the circumstances at the time of the accident would be released until the Na has completed its investigation. The Pentagon said it has not given up searchi for nine people missing from the Japanese vessel, a 190-foot ship owned by Uwajima Fisheries High School in southwestern Japan. GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip Rival Israeli parties agree to coalition Israeli helicopters targeted a member of an elite unit in Yasser Arafat's police force and killed him with a missile as he drove on a busy street yesterday, mark- ing a return to Israel's policy of slaying suspected Palestinian militants. A 13-year-old Palestinian boy was shot and killed in central Gaza and 60 ot* people reportedly were wounded by gunfire in the latest escalation of Mideast violence. The Israeli military said its soldiers did not shoot the boy. On the political front, Israel's Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharon and his defeated predecessor, Ehud Barak, moved closer to forming a coalition government that would seek only a partial peace deal with the Palestinians, a Sharon spokesman said Sharon, who must form a government with majority support in the 120-mem- ber parliament before assuming power, can expect to face a Palestinian popula- tion angered by the renewed violence and the diminished prospects for a comprehensive peace agreement. Israel, which has killed several suspected Palestinian militants in recent months, sent a pair of helicopter gunships to strike at Massoud Ayyad, 54, ashe drove on the outskirts of the Jebaliya refugee camp, just outside Gaza City. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 7640552' Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to dailydetters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. ,d !rb 1 1:1-r#' Im'IItT } , rug v s tiu; a xrr aCV Cy aaa uv i GUgIVl ll v...vs u NEWS Nick Bunkley, Managing Editor EDITORS: David Enders, Usa Koivu, Caitlin Nish, Jeremy W. Peters STAFF: Kristen Beaumont, Ted Borden, Anna Clark, Courtney Crimmins, Whitney Elliott, Jen Fish, Samantha Ganey, Jewel Gopwani, Ahmed Hamid, Lisa Hoffman, Elizabeth Kassab, Andrew D. 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