-. The Michigan Daily - Friday._October 9, 1998 - 7 -Nobel Prize awarded to Portugese playwright LISBON, Portugal (AP) - Portuguese novel- ist Jose Saramago, whose exuberant imagination and playfulness have made him popular but whose bluntness sometimes can offend, won the 1998 Nobel Literature Prize yesterday. 9 After years of being nominated and not win- ning, Saramago saw no reason to stick around the book fair in Germany he was attending and wait for the award's announcement. Instead, the 75-year-old writer left for the air- port, and his publisher caught him five minutes before he was to board his plane. Beaming with pride, he returned to the fair in Frankfurt and gra- ciously answered reporters' questions - even those that irked him. Asked what he'd do with the $978,000 prize, the tanned and balding man with wispy white hair iked why star athletes are never questioned about w at they will do with they money they earn. "We are so used to the fact that writers should be poor, so that every time that a writer gets more money than is normal for his day-to-day life, they are asked what they will do with it," said Saramongo, the first Portuguese writer to win the Nobel. /I a pt Saramago is most frequently compared reserved, I with Colombian writer gus Gabriel Garcia ===E Marquez because his prose is often rooted in recognizable settings but at the same time tinged with magical elements. He has never courted the kind of fame offered by literary prizes, and his blunt opinions and athe- istic outlook have frequently clashed with the £ f1 establishment and the general public. S 1 am skeptical, reserved, I don't gush, I don't go around smiling, hugging people and trying to make friends," he once said. Even on the day he won the prize, the Vatican rcaIf newspaper LOsservatore Romano attacked the ron I Swedish Academy's choice, describing Saramago as an "old- - Jose Saramago school communist" who Nobel Prize winner had a "substantially anti- .religious vision." Saramago was born into a poor family in Azinhaga, a small town near Lisbon. He never finished university but contin- ued to study part-time while supporting himself as a metalworker. His first novel, published in 1947- "Terra do Pecado," or "Country of Sin" - was a tale of peasants in moral crisis. Sales were poor but the book got enough recognition to propel him from the welder's shop to a literary magazine. For the next 18 years, Saramago, a commu- nist who opposed the 41-year conservative dicta- torship of Antonio Salazhed wrote only a few travel and poetry books while he worked as a journalist. He returned to fiction only after Salazar's regime was toppled by a military uprising in 1974. Since the 1980s, he has been one of Portugal's best-selling contemporary writers and his works have been translated into more than 20 languages. He lives in Lanzarote on Spain's Canary Islands. He first won critical acclaim abroad with his 1982 historical fantasy "Memorial do Convento, published in English in 1988 as itas and Blimunda." It is set during the Catholic-spired mquisi- tion and explores the war bet een indviduals a nd organized religion, picking up ara maps recur- ring theme of the loner stnugling against authori- ty. The Nobel citation praised his work that "with parables sustained by imagitio.;cmpssi0n and irony continually enables us to apprehend an elusory reality" Saramago remains a prominent nonconformist through his regular newspaper and radio comrnen- taries, though his views are always inspired by his deep concern for his fellow man. Brazilian writer Jorge Amado, a close friend of Saramago and an author who also was believed to be a Nobel favorite, said thc prize did justiCe to Portuguese literature. m.-." Glenn trains for .the NASA flight Iran said to beat back Afghan attack ® Famous Florida launch site prepares to send off upcoming mission CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA.- Standing on a precarious access arm 195 feet above launch pad 39-B at the Kennedy Space Center, Sen. John Glenn and his Discovery crewmates ame face to face yesterday with the complex beast that will rocket them into orbit later this month. After about eight months of prepa- ration, mostly in simulators at NASA's training facilities in Houston, the seven crew members got down to final busi- ness with launch pad escape training and a full-dress countdown rehearsal that will conclude today as Glenn, 77, nd his colleagues are strapped into their seats on the shuttle. The rehearsals, which methodically go through all the steps normally taken on launch day, are routine for shuttle missions generally, although nothing about Glenn's much-publicized return to space - scheduled for Oct. 29 - can quite be called routine. Yesterday, more than 100 reporters and photogra- phers were on hand for a crew media briefing at the launch pad that typically Will draw a dozen or less. And almost every question was directed at Glenn. Eventually - and only partly in jest - Glenn felt obliged to "castigate the press," calling for more attention to the scientific experiments he and other crew members will partic- ipate in during the nine-day flight of the shuttle Discovery. Besides payload specialists Glenn end Chiaki Mukai, the crew includes commander Curtis Brown, pilot Steven Lindsey and mission specialists Stephen Robinson, Scott Parazynski and Pedro Duque. Asked whether the success of his flight might boost the fortunes of the troubled international space station, Glenn said, "I don't feel like a knight in shining armor." He also brushed aside criticism from former astronaut Story Musgrave--the oldest person in space at age 61-who told a reporter last week that he was "bothered by the fact that Senator Glenn is not giving it all he's got, that he's taking a part-time approach to it." Musgrave called Glenn "a legislative passenger." "I'm not back as a legislative pas- senger;"Glenn said. "I'm back as a sci- ence passenger." Asked how he felt preparing for another launch compared to his Mercury flight in 1962 - when he became the first American in orbit - Glenn said, "Back then I was scared to death I might catch a cold or something and be replaced. I feel the same way right now I'm really looking forward to this, as you can imagine." During the trip to orbit, Glenn will be seated on the shuttle's mid-deck, where he'll lack even the limited view afforded by the small window of his old Mercury capsule. "On the mid-deck, there are no win- dows, so you can't look outside," said Rick Linnehan, an astronaut who is helping in launch preparations. The mid-deck passengers are surrounded by white stowage lockers, he said. The shuttle's engines will not be fired during the practice countdown. The crew will practice an emergency Los Angeles Times TEHRAN, Iran-Iran claimed yes- terday to have beaten back an attack on a remote border post by Afghanistan's ruling Taliban militia, saying it inflicted heavy casualties in what would mark the two sides' first armed face-off after more than a month of threats and saber- rattling. But the Taliban dismissed the Iranian claims of a three-hour battle as propaganda, denying that any such engagement had even taken place. And Iran's report of fighting could not be verified independently because observers have been denied access to the border areas. Even if some encounter did occur, it appeared doubtful by late yesterday that it represented the start of a much-feared war between Shiite Muslim-ruled Iran and the mainly Sunni Muslim Taliban. Iranian spokesmen said calm condi- tions had resumed all along the border between the two countries. Iran and the Taliban, an extremist force that claims to be promoting the world's purest form of Islam, have become bitter rivals over differences in their interpretation of Islam and charges that the Taliban - which con- trols 90 percent of Afghanistan's terri- tory - has oppressed the Shiite minor- ity in that country. Antipathy flared into open hostility last month after the Taliban admitted that its soldiers had killed eight Iranian diplo- mats and an Iranian journalist after con- quering Mazar-i-Sharif, a northern stronghold of resistance to the Taliban. Iran's report of the battle yesterday came as a senior U.N. envoy was leav- ing Iran for Pakistan, where he hoped to meet with Taliban and Pakistani offi- cials to try to defuse the danger of a regional conflict. By making public the reported clash, one Western observer here spec- ulated, Iran may have hoped to con- vince U.N. special emoy L akhdar Brahimi,Taliban leaders in fghanistan and their Pakistani friends that a real war is imminent unless the Talban responds urgently to Iran's de mands to end the crisis. Iran wants the Taliban to surrender 40 Iranian prisoners it holds and to put on trial and punish the sohliers respon- sible for the killing of the Iranian diplo- mats. To back up its demands, Iran mar- shaled a force that it claims numbers 270,000 army troops and Revolutionary Guards along its eastern border with Afghanistan. Since last week, it has been staging air and ground military exercises that appear clearly intended to pressure the TalIiban. Iranian President Moh ammad Khatami has repeated that his country strongly prefers a diplomatic settlement to the matter. But Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi had warned Wednesday that Iran is willing to use force if diplomatic means fail. Meanwhile. Brahimi, the U.N. spe- cial envoy, was continuing his shuttle diplomacy to try to reduce the likeli- hood of a war breaking out bet ween Iran and the Taliban. After four days of talks with senior Iranian officials in Tehran, Brahimi said he felt more optimistic that "the threats of a regional crisis will lessen." But he saw the accumulation of large numbers of forces from both sides along their mutu- al border as a potential powder keg. According to the Iranian news agency I RNA, yesterday's attack cam!ne when Taliban militia struck the Salch- Abad border post in Iran's Khorasan province with mortar and machine guns. Brig. Gen. Azizollah Jaafari, the ground force commander of the Revolutionary Guard, said that Iranian troops fought back for three hours and destroyed three Afghani border posts used by the Taliban, IRNA said. AP rPHO Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio) hugs STS-95 Payload Specialist Chiaid Mukla at a news conference yesterday at Kennedy Space Center's Launch Complex 39-B. escape from the spacecraft at the end of the exercise. If the crew must leave the shuttle quickly for any reason dur- ing the last minutes before launch, they would evacuate the orbiter -- a process Linnehan said takes at least tvo minutes - and would scramble into basket-like devices to zip down 1200-foot-long escape wires. They would then run for a bunker at the base of the launch pad. "They're on their own the last 45 minutes' said George Hoggard, a NASA fire safety official. Crews do not actually try out the escape slides, which are certified for use and are not dis- turbed unnecessarily. The ride takes about 30 seconds. Study: Colombian forces break war rules Los Angeles Times BOGOTA, Colombia-Civilians here are under attack from three guerrilla forces, seven private armies and even the national army and police force, which all *ematically violate the rules of war, according to a two-year study released yesterday. The report by Human Rights Watch found that civilians are now the biggest casualties of Colombia's prolonged conflict. Last year, 2,183 civilians were killed for political reasons, compared with the 1,250 lives lost in actual combat. "Indeed, battles between armed opponents are the exception," the study noted. "Instead, combatants berately and implacably target and kill the civil- i they believe support their enemies." The lack of respect for civilian lives and rights does not bode well for the success of this country's nascent efforts to end three decades of fighting, human rights activists warned. "For Colombia to build a lasting peace, it is imperative to incorporate protec- tions for civilians," said Jose Vivanco, executive direc- tor of Human Rights Watch/Americas. The report is the first to strongly criticize all par- ties involved in Colombia's civil war. Previous docu- ments had focused on the role of the army and police, and increasingly called attention to abuses by the pri- vate armies that call them sel ves"sel f-defense forces," while noting violations by insurgents less prominent- ly. "All parties to the con- flict say they are interested in international humanitar- ian rights," Vivanco said. But they also try to justify their abuses by twisting the concept of those rights, he said. For example, he men- tioned that the country's leftist guerrillas - who are believed to rely on ransoms and extortion for about half of their income - call kidnap- pings "retentions," using semantics to try to justify their actions. Still. Vivanco saved hisl ",,, o bt2 deliberately implacably t kill the ci viii believe supp enemies,,' Human Rigr harshest criticism for the armies)," he said. But the criticism had little effect on supporters of the armies in their stronghold of Monteria in northern Colombia. "Their barbarism is a result of the enemy that they are confronting," said Rodrigo $ iS Garcia, a rancher who sur- vived a bombing attempt two and years ago that he attributes to his outspoken admiration for the private armies. "You can- not respond to (the rebels) with prayers." Port their The report found that all sides are recruiting children under 15 to fight. "Minors who surrender to the armed - Anonymous forces are used as guides and hts Watch study informants, putting them at great risk," Vivanco said. Equally worrying, he said, is the reluctance of the armed forces to punish members who are involved in human rights abuses. The one exception is the police force, which has taken action against officers convicted of viola- tions, he said. Full hearings not likely to begin until November self-defense forces, set up by ranchers and merchants to defend themselves against the rebels. "Massacres in Colombia are fundamentally committed by (private IMPEACH Continued from Page 1 More often than not, they harkened back to the ghosts of Congresses past, recalling the Founding Fathers at the nation's birth and Rep. Peter Rodino (D-N.J.) who just a generation ago presided over the House's impeachment review in Watergate. "We're not flying by the seat of our pants,"said Hyde, defending his deci- sion to use the Watergate model as his guide. "We're riding on Peter Rodino's shoulders." But Democrats argued that it was a rush to judgment; they demanded but did not get a limited inquiry, warning that an open-ended investigation would open the gates for a Republican stampede through the myriad scandals that have dogged the Clinton presi- dency. At one point, Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y.) climbed up from his seat and, speaking out of order, shouted into a microphone that the Republican proposal reminded him of a page from the old New England witch trials. "I submit;' he said, "that after we SORORITY Continued from Page 1. average-sized sorority to the smallest on campus. The sorority's 16 members, who will now be given alumnae status, are deal- adjourn, we move to Salem, a quaint village in Massachusetts whose histo- ry beckons us hence." Speaking for the Republican lead- ership, Hyde announced after the vote that the inquiry officially will begin with staff lawyers researching the law, conducting closed-door depositions with witnesses and undertaking other initial snadework. Full-blown public hearings are not expected until sometime . after Election Day, and nobody knows for sure who will make the witness list. If the inquiry leads to a House vote approving articles of impeachment against Clinton, the matter would then be sent to the Senate for a trial that could result in a verdict ordering his ouster from office. Even Hyde, normally praised by both parties for his fairness, got caught up in the rush of the moment and declared "victory" at a post-vote news conference. When asked later about his use of that word, he said he did not recall saying it. Then he explamned that he was not talking party politics. "It's a victory for the process' he main- tained. "It's 'a victory for the Constitution." ship. "They said that 16 members cannot be expected to reorganize a house; said Broderick, an LSA junior. The national organization should not be depicted as the villain because they were not at all happy with the closing, AAA! EARLY SPRING Break Specials! LESSONS-STRINGS-WIND-PIANO. You B as Party Cruise! 6 Days $279! can play today- Herb David Guitar Studio Insides Most Meals! Awesome Beaches, 302 E. Liberty 665-8001. Nightlife! Departs from Florida! 1998 BBB Award Winner! springbreaktravel.com - SPRING BREAK IN Acapulco! Leave High 800-678-6386. School crowds in Cancun & Mazatlan! Party RANKING Continued from Page 1 Business Administration, said that despite the drop in the rankings, the University is still in high standing in the business community. Business senior Josh Rosen said he is not deterred by the loss of two spots in this year's new BussinessWeek rankings. "I think that at this time there is less and less emphasis on the rank- ings," Rosen said. Decie said the University's pro- gram is top notch and students should be happy with the results. "It was good recognition for our Carlos Hernandez, a second-year MBA student, said business school rankings are subjective. "I am happy as long as we stay in the top five," Hernandez said. Rosen said he hopes prospective students "pay more attention to pro- fessors and their publications and success stories they hear from peo- ple they know." Rosen said that being ranked number four "does not affect my decision at all," to eventually apply to the University's MBA program when he completes his undergradu- ate business program. Rosen said he recently has noticed the school has been gaining national AAA! SPRING BREAK TRAVEL was 1 of 6 small businesses in the US recognized by Better Businesses Bureaus for outstanding ethics in the marketplace! sprin beaktrave.com 1-800-678-6386. Extravaganza includes: FREE cover, 40+ hrs. of Free drinks, Free parties, VIP service & more. 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