The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 15, 2001 - 7A For Afghan people, life goes on despite bombing JALALABAD, Afghanistan (AP) - Horns blare as cars weave to avoid horse- drawn carts. Cows saunter across the street, pushed by young herdsmen. Women con- cealed from head to toe carry infants through Jalalabad's dusty bazaar. A week after the United States and Britain began their bombardment of Afghanistan, life appeared relatively nor- mal yesterday in this capital of the eastern province of Nangarhar. Residents said nightly raids have been relentless in the area until Friday. "But the Afghan people are not afraid," insisted one 1 man, Mohammed Agjan. Still, many residents of this city of 500,000 have left. fleeing, he said, to nearby villages or to the countryside to stay with relatives. U.S. raids have struck around all of Afghanistan's major cities during the cam- paign. In the Jalalabad area, Osama bin Laden, the top suspect in the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States, is believed to operate camps of his al-Qaida terror net- work in the charcoal-gray mountains visi- ble in the distance. This past weekend, the ruling Taliban militia allowed foreign journalists into their besieged nation for the first time since the campaign began Oct. 7. The goal: to demon- strate the effects of the bombing campaign upon Afghan civilians. The Taliban say 200 people died in Karam, some 25 miles from Jalalabad over a road that resembles a dried river bed. The parched plain shows no sign of water; even the tumbleweed seems thirsty. In the bright daylight yesterday, the bombing campaign seemed a long way off. In a dirty stream that runs along the road- side, small girls, struggling with head scarves that keep tumbling down, wash fire-blackened pots. On a cart piled high with sugar cane, two young boys sit cross-legged, cutting the unwieldy cane into pieces. Buses cramped with villagers careened around city corners. Men clung to the vehicles' sides, hugging the railing on the roof to stay on. The backs of pickup trucks were packed with men coming in for the day. Outside Jalalabad, farmers tilled the fields, many of them women wrapped in giant shawls. Beyond them, apple orchards sat in the dusty distance. But the reality of war is never too far away. Taliban soldiers on rooftops clean a bandolier of bullets and ready their machine gun, perched on a shaky tripod. Dozens of turbaned men, beards long and unkempt in keeping with Tal- iban directives against shaving, roar through the streets on pickup trucks packed with rocket launchers. Suddenly a group of children from a reli- gious school in Surkho, on Jalalabad's out- skirts, come running. They have been told of the arrival of foreign journalists. "Death to America!" they scream at the for- eigners. "Death to Bush! Long live Islam!" A teacher at the religious school, Shafiq Ullah, screamed passionately, his fists clenched. "Why are you doing this? Our life is miserable. All the night we stare at the sky, waiting for the bombs. There is no life here for us. Why? Why?" An old man, his front teeth missing and the remaining ones yellow, rips his dirty white tur- ban from his head and begs. "Please stop," he beseeches. "You are killing us. We don't know where Osama is. We have nothing to do with Osama." The demonstration was staged by the Tal- iban, and emotion takes over. The young stu- dents pound the bus, roaring their condemnation of America. Heavily armed Tal- iban guards rush to regain control and hustle the journalists onto the bus. The Taliban have refused access to jour- nalists until now, insisting they couldn't guarantee their safety because Afghans are angry. But in a country at war for more than two decades, there is a sense of weary resig- nation. "Everything always comes down on our heads. It is always the same. It never changes," said Amir Khan, a Jalalabad resident. KOESTNER Continued from Page 1A several weeks and had become close with. "When I was 18, date rape did not exist,"Koestner said. Koestner used her story to implore students to recog- nize that rape can occur easily on college campuses and that they have the chance to try to prevent it. "It is very easy to stand for any cause when dignity is at stake," she said. The event also featured attorney Brett Sokolow, pres- ident of the National Center for Higher Education Risk Management, who specializes in sexual assault policy and law. He spoke with students regarding the role that alcohol plays in date rape and the definition of sexual consent. ' Many students who attended said they left with posi- tive feelings about Koestner's account. "It struck a lot of emotions because she told her story through a voice that I could relate to," said LSA freshman Marina Katz, a member of Alpha Epsilon Phi's pledge class. Although students pledging fraternities and sorori- ties this semester were required to attend the event, members of the Greek system said they did not feel that the event was stereotypically geared toward them. Mann said the Greek system was included because a large portion of University community is Greek. "I don't -know if I would say (date-rape) is more prevalent in the Greek system," she said. Other students felt that more members of the Univer- sity should have been involved. "While fraternities are given a negative reputation, I think this is something that non-Greeks could have benefited from," said Kinesiology junior Brad Spiegel after the presentation. AFGHANISTAN Continued from Page 1A States launched the bombardment of Afghanistan on Oct. 7 after the Taliban refused for weeks to comply. Al-Qaida has released three videotaped state- ments since the start of the air campaign, the lat- est on Saturday, warning of new terror attacks against the United States. Kuwait decided yesterday to strip the citizen- ship of the spokesman who appeared in the tapes, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, a former Kuwaiti teacher. Once Kuwait's emir approves the government decision, Abu Ghaith will share the same state- less status as bin Laden, who was stripped of his Saudi citizenship. Meanwhile, a commander in the coalition bat- tling the Taliban said opposition leaders have organized a 2,000-strong security force to main- tain law and order in Kabul if they capture the city. The lightly armed force would secure the city until a new government can be established, Gen. Haji Almaz Khan said in Charikar, an alliance stronghold 25 miles north of Kabul. The United States and its partners have been urging the opposition to avoid launching an all-out attack on Kabul until a broad-based government can be formed to replace the Tal- iban. Most of the Taliban are ethnic Pashtun; the alliance is dominated by ethnic Tajiks and Uzbeks. Taliban intelligence chief Qari Ahmedullah appealed to opposition fighters yesterday to join in the battle against America for "our religion and country." "We will forget our past differences with those who join us now' he said in a statement distrib- uted by the Afghan Islamic Press. Since last month, the Taliban have banned most foreign journalists from entering the rough- ly 90 percent of Afghanistan under the religious militia's control. This weekend, however, they allowed a group of international journalists to visit Nangarhar province in eastern Afghanistan, where U.S. jets allegedly destroyed a village last week. When the journalists arrived under Taliban escort at the village, Karam, angry residents pointed to ruined mud and stone homes and freshly dug graves as evidence of the purported American attack. "What do I have left? Nothing," said one villager, Toray, in the roofless hut where he said his wife and five children died. He waved a shard of jagged metal, which had the words "fin-guided missile" printed in English on its side. Taliban officials insisted there were no military targets in the area. However, bin Laden was believed to operate terrorist training camps in the. province. Reports of civilian deaths have caused unease in Pakistan, where small but vocal Islamic politi- cal parties that admire the Taliban are already enraged by government support for campaign on Afghanistan. Yesterday thousands of Muslim extremists converged on the city of Jacobabad, site of one of two airfields that Pakistani officials privately say the Americans have been allowed to use to sup- port the campaign, though not to launch attacks on Afghanistan. After the bombing .. , . . .. ANTHRAX Continued from Page1A is taking antibiotics after displaying possible symptoms of the disease. The anthrax scare began Oct. 4 when it was confirmed that a Florida tabloid editor had contracted the in'haled form of the bacteria. His death a day later was the first result- ing from the disease in the United States since 1976. Seven other employees of Ameri- can Media Inc. have tested positive for exposure and are being treated with antibiotics. None have devel- oped the disease. A second round of blood tests for more than 300 of the company's employees is expected this week. News of the exposures has caused jitters around the world, with a num- ber of false or pending cases report- ed over the weekend. Among them: In Hawaii, hazardous-materials teams were called to Lihue Airport after passengers on a flight from Los Angeles discovered a white powder on their luggage after they arrived. Tests were being conducted on the powder. In Uniontown, Pa., a 49-year- old woman was given Cipro, an antibiotic for anthrax, and was tested for exposure after receiving an enve- lope containing a powdery sub- stance. She was later released from a hospital. In England, several hundred people were evacuated from Canter- bury Cathedral after a worker said he saw a man dropping a white powder in one of the chapels. Workers wear- ing chemical protection suits cleared up the powder and took samples for analysis. In New York, Giuliani said the officer and two technicians were exposed while working on the anthrax case involving Erin O'Con- nor, 38, the assistant to NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw. O'Connor is expected to recover from the infec- tion. O'Connor was exposed when she opened a letter, containing a brown granular substance, that was mailed to Brokaw from Trenton, N.J. It was postmarked on Sept. 18, one week after terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. Federal officials in New Jersey were continuing efforts yesterday to trace the letter, but acknowledged it would be difficult. At first, O'Connor thought she had thrown away the letter, but remembered it Friday while being interviewed, New York postal inspec- tor Peter Nash said yesterday. Investigators had initially focused on a second letter - postmarked in St. Petersburg, Fla. - as the likely source of the anthrax. Giuliani said the police officer had the bacteria in his nose, as did one lab technician. Another technician had a spore on her face. Both work for the city health department, which conducted the tests. One-year-old Jan Bibi lies on her bed in the city of Jalalabad, Afghanistan yesterday. The image was captured when Taliban officials brought journalists to the village to see what officials say was devastation caused by U.S. airstrikes. Learn More About the Peace Corps Join us for a Peace Corps Information Meeting And Video Tues., Oct. 16, 7 to 9p.m. Int'l Cir, Rm. 9, Michigan Union, 603 E Madison St. Interviews: Drop by the UMich Peace Corps Office (Interna- tional Center), or call the Peace Corps Campus Recruiter at 734-647-2182 to schedule an INTERVIEW! A look at the underside of U of M www.universitysecrets.com http://www.peacecorps.gov HOAXES Continued from Page 1A assault will mark the beginning of the third world war. According to Urbanlegends.com, a website dedicated to debunking rumors, Nostradamus died in 1566 and such a prophecy is not included in any of his writings. A rumor circulating in the Middle East blames Israel for the terrorist attacks, claiming the Israeli govern- ment warned 4,000 Jews not to go to work in the World Trade Center on Sept. 11. "This is an irrational, very damaging and very dan- gerous rumor inciting hatred of Israel for no reason whatsoever," said communication studies Prof. Antho- ny Collings, who received the e-mail. Psychology Prof. Rowell Huesmann said there are several human motivations for forwarding these types of letters including making the sender feel as if he is doing something important by warning friends and the michigan daily annOUnCE organize Group & Go Free. m Free Parties & flours of - FREE Drinks., r FREE Meals for imited Time! For Details and the Best Rotes visk: wwwmslashtours.col family of future danger. "Passing the rumor on is intended to prevent future harm to people or make people feel less guilty," he said. "The people passing the rumor on think of it as warning friends not as passing rumors." Mass e-mails also fill voids in people's basic knowl- edge of what exactly happened, Huesmann said. "They often build on most people's desire to blame 'bad things' on powerful forces over which we have lit- tle control to believe that these forces hide the truth from us," he said. Communication studies Prof. Nicholas Valentino said he believes the speed and the anonymity provided by the Internet allow these letters to become so wide- spread and well known. "We are not very good at judging the credibility of information we get over the Web or via e-mail," he said. "Information gets passed around from person to person until the original source is no longer identifiable." CURRY Continued from Page1A offered medical attention and refused it." Curry, who was held in the Washte- naw County jail Friday, was arraigned that morning and released on $25,000 bond later that evening. In a statement released by the athlet- ic department Friday afternoon, Foot- ball Coach Lloyd Carr said, "This is a serious issue and it is very important there be no rush to judgment. An .investigationwill be made, the facts will be revealed and a judgment will * SORORITIES be made based on those facts." DENT GROUPS Carr made no mention of the situa- his semester with the tion in his press conference Saturday. s nothree nv hourcredit Curry's brother, Julius, is a senior oes na ingodae re tr y brndraising dates are strong safety on the football team. 1 1-800-426-77-10 ยข j FRATERNITIES CLUBS * STU Earn $1,000-$2,000 t easy Campusfundra fundraising event. D( card applications. Fu filling quickly, so a Camnusfundraiser.cor a m I & a call today! Contact m at 888-923-3238. or r m