Reader Survey Tell us what you think and enter to win cold hard cash! 1st prize: $100 cash 2nd prize: $50 cash 3rd Prize: $25 U0 Campus Cash Cash deposited to your account Mondayn May IT You can check out our survey online. If you fill out the entire surveyi you will be entered in the contest to win cold hard cash! Your opinion matters! (The link to the online survey will appear in Monday's paper-) 016544 Link continued from page 1 become a confrontation.” Asked what the administration’s options would be in that case, an other senior official conceded that trying to seize al Adel and others would be extremely difficult, but added: “The military option is never off the table.” The Iranian government has expelled more than 500 lower ranking al-Qaida members and denies harboring any of the group’s senior leaders. But the U.S. officials, who all spoke on the condition of anonymity, said there was evidence that members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard were sheltering al Adel, the younger bin Laden, other al-Qai da leaders and some other mem bers of bin Laden’s family. The officials emphasized that no hard evidence has been found that al-Qaida fugitives in Iran had a hand in the Saudi bombings. But the suspicions have given a new urgency to United Nations sponsored talks between White House aide Zalmay Khalilzad and Iranian officials in Geneva. The suspicions of a link be tween Iran and the bombings are focused largely on al Adel, who some U.S. officials think is now the head of al-Qaida operations in the Persian Gulf. Some officials think that Khaled Jehani, the leader of the al-Qaida cell in Saudi Arabia that is sus pected of carrying out the attacks, began reporting to al Adel after former gulf operations chief Abdul Rahim al Nashiri was captured last November. Nashiri is now in U.S. custody. Other officials, how ever, think Jehani may have taken over from Nashiri and also is run rung the Saudi Arabian cell, which Saudi intelligence officials think may have had more than 100 members, on his own. Saudi intelligence officials said suspected al-Qaida members who were arrested before the bomb ings have told interrogators that Jehani’s group was planning to ini tiate a major operation in Saudi Arabia during the U.S. invasion of Iraq, but that the invasion came sooner than they expected. Several times recently, one U.S. official said, Osama bin Laden ex pressed frustration to his lieu tenants in Iran that al-Qaida had struck no significant blows as the United States invaded Muslim Iraq. “The fact that his frustration was directed toward those in Iran is interesting,” one official said. © 2003, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. 4 bedroom, 2 bath starting at $335 2 bedroom, 2 bath starting at $405 1 bedroom, 1 bath starting at $610 ✓ Clubhouse w/ game room ✓ Fitness center ✓ Ample resident and visitor parking ✓ Resort-like swimming pool ✓ Lighted volleyball and basketball courts ✓ Outdoor gas grills & bbq ✓ Decked out kitchen kitchens ✓ Cable/internet hookups ✓ Emergency alarm buttons ✓ Individual leases ✓ Roommate matching service ✓ On bus route to campus Come check us out! un iversiTY COMMONS apartments Open Monday - Saturday www.universitycomnnons.com Bring this bill in and receive $100 off on your security deposit. limited time offer