The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 14, 2001 - 7 KIM Continued from Page1 "I encourage all of us to love each other, to support each other and to have compassion. The only thing to not make this a total waste is to change students' behavior," Harper said. Park said that in addition to honor- ing the memory of her son, the orga- nizers of the memorial also hoped to prevent such a tragedy from happen- ing again. Her husband, Ha Young Kim, said the University should deal with the issue of excessive alcohol consump- tion. "We need to start a campaign against heavy drinking, which is a bad habit, and need to educate fresh- men especially," he said. While LSA freshman Jimin Oh, an international student from Korea, said she thinks Kim's death has reduced the pressure to drink at parties, Harp- er is still doubtful. "It's not as if people don't under- stand drinking is risky. I want stu- dents to know it doesn't just happen to the others. It can happen to you," Harper said. Pak said the University has made a commitment to do more research on alcohol-related deaths of ethnic and international students, but he already has a theory as to why drinking seems to be such a problem among foreign students. "The students feel disconnected with the community, from other stu- dent groups, from the faculty. The challenge we face now is how we connect (these students) to the com- munity," Pak said. Harper said in addition to an increase in available counseling ser- vices, students will also receive a birthday card on their 21st birth- days. The card, constructed by the leaders of the Michigan Student Assembly and the Greek communi- ty, points out the dangers of exces- sive drinking and encourages people to use caution when drinking, she said. Park said her son may have felt forced to consume so much alcohol on his birthday. "The custom of forcing a person to drink 21 shots for his or her 21st birthday is somewhat similar to Kore- an college students' drinking cus- toms. Perhaps, my son ... believed that he had to drink the same number of alcohol shots to be accepted as an adult." Harper agreed that peer pressure seems to be a central reason as to why students drink. But the solution, she said, is "understanding what it means to love and have compassion for oth- ers. (It means) I don't let you do things' that'hurt you. Andit'sa matter" of loving them more than you want to be accepted," she said. As people lined up to pay their respects to Kim's family, they received small crosses to wear around their necks. "If we cannot overcome death, let us live by faith," Bae said. Park concluded her sentiments by expressing what her son might have said if he had been at the memorial. "In heaven, perhaps Byung-Soo is saying something like this: 'Mom and Dad, I came here leaving so many things behind. ... Please ask someone to carry on for me. You taught me how to drive so carefully, but why didn't you teach me that alcohol can kill a person?"' the michigan c Taliban captives reportedly taken to Kandahar KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Fears for the safety of two captive Americans and six other for- eign aid workers grew yesterday after the fleeing Taliban yanked them from their cells and hustled them to the south along with the retreating allies of Osama bin Laden. "Obviously to me this is rather devastating news," John Mercer, the father of American Heather Mercer, 24, said from Islamabad, the capital of neighboring Pakistan. "We were hop- ing that the trial would have been concluded this week." Mercer said he had been told by the Taliban At lea CRASH have be Continued from Page 1 over the tage or other potential causes but said eral Av the evidence so far suggests it was an obtaine accident - perhaps a catastrophic the Free mechanical failure in the engines. Most The General Electric engines on the happene Airbus A300 model have drawn close 587 too scrutiny since the spring of 2000, when reported planes reported engine failures that sent whichi metal fragments flying. include However, NTSB chairman Marion hominga Blakey said yesterday that the engines a jackra were largely intact. For y In 1995, an Air Force AWACS sur- York ar veillance plane in Alaska sucked at least the airp four geese into its engines during take- makers off and crashed in a forest, killing all 24 birds a people aboard. Adminis Large flocks of gulls, geese and other to kill b birds abound around Kennedy Airport, bird ac which is next to Jamaica Bay and a fed- Authori erally protected wetlands. Feder embassy in Islamabad that the workers had been taken to Kandahar, where the Taliban are based, for their own safety. The Taliban "felt that if they ... were left there that harm may come to them from some of the extremists" in the opposition, he told NBC's "Today" show. "The Taliban has continually assured us that they will be kept safe," he said. The eight were hustled out of a Kabul prison in the dark early yesterday and a guard said the for- eigners seemed to think they were being freed. They were not. Fleeing the Afghan capital as their northern alliance foes closed in, the Taliban put the foreign captives into a blue pickup truck and drove away, guards said, taking them south to Kandahar. The eight aid workers have been held by the Tal- iban since August on charges of proselytizing Christianity in Muslim Afghanistan. They were moved so quickly that their suitcases, toiletries and drying laundry were left behind in the squalid prison. "They were very happy, because they thought they would be released," said Abdul Raouf, a guard who said the foreigners' captors hustled them into ast 726 birds and other animals een hit by aircraft at Kennedy past decade, according to Fed- iation Administration records d by The Associated Press under dom of Information Act. of the incidents at Kennedy d at Runway 31L, where Flight k off. Pilots using that runway d 139 incidents, at least 62 of involved gulls. Other animals d barn owls, larks, sparrows, pigeons, a peregrine falcon and bbit. ears the Port Authority of New ad New Jersey, which operates ort, has used cannon-like noise- and trained falcons to scare away. The Federal Aviation stration also uses sharpshooters irds. The airport reported "light tivity" on Monday, said Port ty spokesman Alan Morrison. ral investigators, meanwhile, pored over a 20-foot-high chunk of fuselage that had sheared off the front of a home and was found on a front lawn. Investigators also pulled a section of wing out of a tree and examined other charred and twisted plane parts. A crane was brought to the scene. The flight data recorder was found on the same street where four homes were destroyed. The crash Monday engulfed houses in flames and rained debris on the neighborhood, an enclave of police and firefighters that lost dozens of residents in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. "To have them hit a second time is very, very difficult," the mayor said. But Giuliani praised the neighborhood -- which is largely Irish Catholic, Italian and Jewish - and said of the people of Rockaway: "They're the strongest peo- ple you're ever going to be meet because of their strong religious faith." KABUL Continued from Page 1. recorder blaring out the musi favorite Afghan folk singer. Zul Gai, the owner of a bar lined up with men looking to 14 beards, smiled broadly. "This h my best business day in mar years' he said. Most women, however, weret tious to shed their all-encoml burqas, unsure what the nev would be. Hundreds of northern alliance hunted down lingering Taliban eigners who came to Afghanista al-Qaida. At least 11 Arabs and nis were slain and their bodies ed. Alliance fighters roamed the taxis, pickup trucks and cars, bl ing Kalashnikov rifles andg launchers. Troops set up roadb neighborhoods where Arabs a istanis lived. Five Pakistanis, who were fir domly from trees in a public pa killed by alliance soldiers. A Re official, who spoke on cond anonymity, said the bodiesv pieces when volunteers remov for burial. Four Arabs died when their truck was blasted by a rocke charred bodies were dragged fr vehicle by residents who kic poked at them. Two other Ara killed outside a military baser U.N. guest house. There were signs of a break Taliban control in Kandahar birthplace of the hardline Islami ment. A U.S. official, speaking on c the truck during the night. Some guards said they left around midnight, other said closer to dawn. Columns of Taliban troops headed south overnight, abandoning the capital as fighters from the northern alliance entered. The aid workers, six women and two men from German-based Christian organization Shelter Now International, had been detained in Kabul since Aug. 3, and Taliban judges had been trying them on proselytizing charges. In Washington, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said he could not confirm that the detainees had been transferred. of anonymity, said an armed force of Pashtuns were moving against the Tal- iban near Kandahar. The official would c of his not elaborate. At least 200 Pashtun fighters ber shop mutinied in Kandahar, and fighting ose their broke out by the city's airport, said a has been Taliban official, Mullah Najibullah, at ny long the Pakistani border at Chaman. Abdullah said the situation in Kanda- too cau- har was "chaotic." He said "Taliban passing authorities are not seen. ... There is no w rules responsible authority to respond to the needs of the people." e troops The Taliban supreme leader, Mullah and for- Mohammed Omar, made a radio n to join address denouncing deserters and urg- Pakista- ing his followers to fight, the Pakistan- mutilat- based Afghan Islamic Press reported. "This is my order: that you should streets in obey your commander," Omar said, randish- according to the agency. Deserters grenade "would be like a hen and die in some locks in ditch" The agency quoted him as saying nd Pak- he was in Kandahar, though that could not be independently verified. ing ran- The U.S. official said the Taliban rk, were were in disarray in several areas in the ed Cross south. Field commanders were fleeing ition of and some were switching sides, the offi- were in cial said. There were signs the Taliban ed them were abandoning cities, possibly to fight a guerrilla war from the mountains. pickup Before northern alliance security t. Their forces entered Kabul at midday, armed om their gangs ransacked the offices of interna- ked and tional humanitarian organizations and bs were the Pakistan embassy in reprisal for that near the government's longtime support of the Taliban. down of By the afternoon, alliance military - the police arrived in the city and began to ic move- restore order. Guards were stationed in front of government and international ondition aid offices. REGENTS Continued from Page 1 This could lead to breakthroughs in understanding and treat- ing depression. Depression is a brain disorder, and some people are genetically predisposed to be more vulnerable than others to episodes of depression, Greden said, adding that there is also a strong correlation between depression and outside events in a person's life. "Too little attention is paid to early detection, appropriate intervention, getting people and keeping people well and even prevention," he said. But it doesn't have to be that way, he added. Recent research indicates that while 15 to 17 percent of a popula- tion at large can be expected to experience depression in their lifetime, measures can be taken to lessen or even pre- vent episodes of depression in those at risk. Greden said resources ranging from research opportuni- ties to screening and treatment services to help those suffer- ing from depression would be available to the University community. The center would also be open to people out- side the University. While the proposal the regents will be asked to approve tomorrow does not include plans for a physical facility, Gre- den said a building to serve as the center's home base could come before the regents in the next few months. The regents will also be asked to approve the state appro- priations requests from all three of the University's campus- es, as the University begins to prepare a budget for the 2002-2003 fiscal year. The state allotted the University a 1.5 percent increase in appropriations for the 2002 fiscal year, and as a result, tuition rose 6.5 percent. The University had requested a 7 percent increase. Planning for the 2003 fiscal year will be more complex than usual because of the weak economy, said Daniel Little, chancellor of the Dearborn campus. "We are at the beginning of a complex process," Little said. GREEKS Continued from Page 1 port." "(Alumni) want to see that the undergraduates are going to respect the facilities," said Interfraternity Council President Marc Hustvedt. "In return, fraternity houses will see more ThIimniinvolivement," he added. Alpha Delta Phi's renewed alumni support has brought offers of help in finding third-party vendors for host- ing parties, including the use of a boat on Lake Michigan, Kapoor said. In the last few years several fra- ternities have made the pledge to go dry nationwide, including Theta Chi and Delta Sigma Phi. Both are required to be alcohol-free by the year 2003. Sorority houses, which have always been alcohol-free, have begun to seek third-party vendors as well after 13 of the 15 sororities on campus chose to ban co-sponsorship of parties that involve alcohol. "National organizations have pushed sororities to hold events at third-party vendors where they have a liquor license and have the ability to make sure that only people over 21 are being served," said Panhellenic Association President Stephanie Deal. Hustvedt said IFC has already been working to find vendors along with the sororities, adding that the work will be no easy task. "It's going to take a lot of ground- work talking to bars and getting a commitment from them, but they are the pros at checking IDs and distrib- uting alcohol," Hustvedt said. While these changes may seem related to the recent rape allegations at Beta, fraternities say they have grown out of the Greek Summit and have been under consideration, for some time. Kapoor said the changes they will be making are positive first steps "for our fraternity and the Greek system." "Hopefully, something could be avoided," he said. TM 111:I1111 CONTACTSI I liafto We deliver. You sae.M ;L ag jARCUWu ', 'A-o Un... Save $8.00 on your first order. Use offer code C624 on the web or when you call. www. contacts.com/c8 Offer expires 1/31/02. Limit one offer per customer Offer valid on orders of $50 or more. SPRING BREAK: Cancun, Jamaica, All BACK AND NECK PAIN? Try Florida destinations. Best Hotels, free parties, Chiropractic. Dr. Jayson Epstein, 25 years lowest prices! www.breakerstravel.com experience. 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