The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 17, 2001 - 7 Some hijackers may not have khown they'd die ALBRIGHT Continued from Page 1 "From a foreign policy perspective, this might be one of the most fluid and dynamic occurrences since the Cold War's end," she said, alluding to the new alliances that have formed as other issues are put aside. She called on all nations to work together toward ending the use of Afghanistan as a safe haven and training ground for terrorists. In the future, she said, nations should be willing to work with the United Nations and leadrs of ethnic communities to develop a peaceful process for self- determination in Afghanistan so the people can live free from strife. Albright also discussed the Middle East, where she said Israelis and Palestinians are living in fear -- Israelis fearing that every backpack they see could contain a bomb and Palestinians fearing they're doomed to be without a home- land. Although the scope and drama of the recent confrontation have led many people to conclude that everything has changed, Albright said she's not sure they've really trans- formed the situation. "They haven't really created a new framework for look- ing at the world," she said, recalling the past conflict between the United States and the Soviets, with democracy on one side and communism on the other. But she warned against the danger of giving the terrorists the idea that they are on one extreme of a bipolar world. "We kept score on the map of the world and we judged other nations mostly on where they stood in that fight. And it's tempting now to think we've returned to such a world with the terrorists taking the place of the communists," she said. The Washington Post Shortly after hijacked jetliners crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, U.S. officials quickly con- cluded that the terrorists involved were, to a man, murder- ous zealots bent on suicide. But nearly five weeks later, FBI investigators and their European counterparts are considering another scenario: that many of the hijackers did not know they were going to die.. Some evidence, combined with knowledge of how Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network has operated in the past, has led some investigators to suggest that as many as 13 members of the four terrorist teams may have believed they were part of a traditional hijacking operation aimed at landing somewhere and issuing demands. "The reality is that we may never know for sure, but we are viewing that as a real possibility at this point," said one U.S. government official. "It could explain many things. Getting six or seven people who want to kill themselves is a lot easier than 19." Officials stress that they have reached no conclusions. And many terrorism experts unconnected with the investi- gation still believe it is likely that all the hijackers had agreed to die. But emerging clues have led some investigators to believe that it is just as likely that many did not willingly roar into the twin towers or the Pentagon. The scenario provides an alternate view of a terrorist plot that was so chilling, in part, because of what appeared to be the unwavering dedication of its cotspirators. Unlike the leaders of the plot - the pilots of the four hijacked aircraft and at least two others - the remaining hijackers arrived in the United States later and served primari- ly, in the words of one top U.S. official, as "the muscle." None of these men, most from middle-class backgrounds in Saudi Arabia, appears to have left his family with a cryp- tic farewell, as some of the lead hijackers did, officials said. One source said that unidentified items found among the possessions of some hijackers suggest preparation for jail rather than death. Several of the footsoldiers seemed jovial within days of the hijackings, witnesses have said, partying and shopping for adult videos. Investigators also have been puzzled to find only three full or partial copies of a set of final instructions apparently penned by Mohamed Atta, who is believed to be the ring- leader. of the plot, urging hijackers to crave death and bring along their wills. If all 19 had copies, sources said, authori- ties would expect to find more remnants. Investigators also have found no wills other than the one drafted by Atta and left in his luggage, which was found at Boston's Logan International Airport. "It's all soft evidence," one U.S. official said. "But there are too many inconsistencies to ignore." Yet many experts on al-Qaida said it is wishful thinking to believe that bin Laden's network, which may have trained hundreds or even thousands of would-be terrorists at its camps in Afghanistan, would have trouble finding less than two dozen men willing to kill themselves for their cause. Hamas and other groups participating in ter- rorist attacks in Israel, they noted, have had little problem over the years finding young, dispossessed men willing to die for what is perceived as martyrdom in some parts of the Middle East. "I think they took great pains to select these guys and indoctrinate them for a long period of time," said Robert Blitzer, a former FBI counterterrorism official. "I'm sure they all knew they were going to die. They were all con- vinced they were going to nirvana." Indeed, investigators themselves say there are strong arguments to be made in favor of the idea that all 19 hijack- ers were on a suicide quest. One example is the various accounts of cell phone calls Sept. 11 between passengers on the hijacked flights and family and friends on the ground. Many of these accounts indicate that three or more ter- rorists on each plane participated in stabbings, which might not be the case in a conventional hijacking where passengers are viewed as valuable to securing demands. Eric Davis, a terrorism expert at Rutgers University, said that uninformed hijackers might mutiny once they discov- ered that they were on a suicidal mission, possibly imperil- ing the entire operation. "I think they all knew from the get-go," Davis said. "Some of them might have thought they were going to the Middle East. That's certainly possible. But I personally find that hard to believe." ECSTASY Continued from Page 1 Ann Arbor Police Department Sgt. Michael Logghe said several officers were present as reinforcements but the operation was carried out by the DEA. University alum Stephanie Ballan- tyne said she watched as the officers trekked in and out of the apartment. "They had a male student in custody and they had him by the arms and kept leading him around from the truck and back to the apartment door," she said. "The student seemed to be talking to a someone inside the apartment." Ballantyne said DEA officers were still unloading what looked like card- board moving boxes from the apart- ment complex when she passed by the scene at 12:30 p.m. ATTACKS Continued from Page 1 injuring one security guard and setting two of the seven buildings on fire. Afghan staffers ran through thick smoke and flames to try to salvage blankets, tents and plastic tarps meant to help Afghans through the winter. The other warehouse, which was also damaged by fire, contained wheat, Red Cross workers said. "There are huge needs for the civil- ian population, and definitely it will hamper our operations," Robert Monin, head of the International Red Cross' Afghanistan delegation, said in Islamabad, Pakistan. The Pentagon acknowledged that U.S. bombs accidentally hit warehous- es in Kabul used by the International Committee of the Red Cross. A Navy F/A-18 Hornet dropped 1,000-pound bombs on the warehouses, the state- ment said. A Pentagon statement released last night said the Red Cross buildings were among a series of warehouses targeted because U.S. forces believed the Taliban was using them to store equipment and military vehicles had been seen nearby. "U.S. forces did not know that ICRC was using one or more of the warehouses," the statement said. Red Cross officials have protested the bombing and said that the ware- houses, holding wheat, blankets and shelter materials, had the organiza- tion's symbol painted on their roofs. The Pentagon statement said the U.S. military regrets any innocent casual- ties and tries hard to strike only mili- tary targets. ENROLLMENT Continued from Page 1 higher education admissions was acceptable, Lehman said. Lawsuits challenging the interpretation of the Bakke deci- sion in Texas and Washington resulted in split decisions at the appeals court level. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the Univer- sity of Washington's interpretation of Bakke, but a voter initiative blocked the use of race as a factor in admis- sions. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear the case. The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in the Hop- wood case in 1997 that the use of race as a factor in admissions is unconstitutional, and the University of Texas system was required to alter its admissions poli- cies. The decision stood after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case. The effect of the Hopwood ruling varied across Uni- versity of Texas undergraduate and professional schools. Minority enrollment throughout the system plummeted after the Hopwood ruling. Texas' Law School enrolled four black, students into a first-year class of hundreds the year after the Hopwood case was decided. Enrollment for Hispanic students also dropped drastically that year. Laycock said the overwhelmingly white classrooms may have made it difficult for minority students to express themselves in class, especially in regard to any racial issues, because "they appear to be speaking for an entire race." Laycock said the university is recovering "by virtue of intense recruiting efforts": individual phone calls, alumni efforts, private scholarships and bringing students to the campus. Undergraduate minority enrollment is comparable to pre-Hopwood levels, Laycock said. The University of Texas system employs a "top 10 percent" plan, which makes the highest 10 percent of every graduating class in the state eligible to enroll if they also fulfill other guidelines. "The top 10 percent plan by itself didn't do much. It had to be backed up by recruiting," Laycock said. But the professional schools in the University of Texas cleaning and c HOUSING About 20 women Continued from Page 1 House, including campus, other houses, including those Irby. in the Inter-Cooperative Council, "Like most co blend living and learning into one set- own meals, clea ting. each resident has Telluride House and the all-female chores each wee co-op Henderson House ask students bathrooms or cor to meet a special set of requirements to said. live there. "Henderson Ho "The main mission here is cen- able as well, as i te-re around community service and ment that in my system are not able to use a similar system. "It works because high schools continue to be so segregated," Lay- cock said. The University of Washington has also turned to a process that emphasizes recruitment. "We have a direct charge from our board of regents to increase applications from underrepresented minority groups by 5 percent this year," said Leo Pangelinan, Wash- ington's coordinator for student outreach ambassadors and community relations. Pangelinan and others were hired by the university to head efforts to increase diversity. One recruitment effort that Pangelinan oversees is a group of 16 students who work part time to visit under- represented minority middle- and high-school students in the state to encourage them to apply.to the university. "I think it really got the students active in wanting to make a change," Pangelinan said. "It was a time of activism." The University of California system's board of regents symbolically rescinded a 1995 ban on affirmative action. Race still cannot be used as a factor in admis- sions in California because of Proposition 209, a voter initiative similar to the one that banned affirmative action in Washington. The effect of California's ban on affirmative action has differed from Texas and Washington but has not been disas- trous, Trow said. "Since the end of racial preferences, the numbers of minority students in the University of California has risen, though the proportions have somewhat declined in a couple of the campuses, notably Berkeley," Trow said. "We are a system of nine campuses, and what happened was that most of the minority students who could not be admitted to Berkeley with the ending of preference were enrolled in other UC campuses which were not up against their enroll- ment caps." UC's law and medical schools experienced marked declines, but other graduate schools were not as affect- ed, Trow said. "On balance, the ending of preferences in the UC has been an enormous success, though you might not know this from the press." he added. king activities, meals and services for Jewish stu- ive at Henderson dents that would like to have these LSA junior Rana experiences, but if someone is not Jewish and would like those experi- ops we cook our ences, they're welcome too," said the house, and Chabad House Director Aharon do five hours of Goldstein. like cleaning the Amenities at Chabad House "range mons area," Irby from classes on Judaism, Hebrew and Jewish philosophy, with staff, a library, se is very afford- a lounge and counseling services" offers an environ- Goldstein added. inion makes that The Greek system, although not Merrill Lynch Gain an edge on planning your career. Ask the questions you want. Hear the answers you need, straight from Merrill Lynch. 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