NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 30, 2003 - 5A Hey hey we're the monkeys f 'ax ;~ F 1" ,~ 14-year old who was shot by sniper testifies in trial VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) - The only child shot during last year's sniper spree calmly told a jury his story yester- day in remarkably succinct fashion: "I put my book bag down and I got shot." Iran Brown, 14, was cut down by a bullet on his way to his middle school in Bowie, Md., last October. He recalled the horror of the shooting during two minutes of testimony at John Allen Muhammad's murder trial, answering prosecutors' questions in a relaxed, mat- ter-of-fact manner. "I walked out (of the car) and I put my book bag down and I got shot," the boy said. He then walked back to his aunt's car, who drove him to a nearby urgent care treatment center. Tanya Brown, the aunt, testified that she was dropping Iran off at school because he had been barred from the school bus for a few days for eating candy. She said she heard a loud noise, and then heard Iran calling for her. "He told me, I've been shot.' I didn't believe him at first," she said. Then she saw a hole in his shirt and a dark stain, apparently blood. Brown, a nurse, said she made the decision to drive her nephew to the urgent care center almost instinctively. She wept on the stand while prosecu- tors played the 911 tape in which she calmly explained to the dispatcher that she was driving Iran to the clinic, with his cries audible in the background. "He was extremely pale" by the time they arrived at the clinic. "He told me that he loved me." Martin Eichelberger, the doctor at Children's Hospital in Washington who later operated on the boy, said he removed the spleen and parts of his liver and pancreas. But the bullet that entered Brown's left chest missed the heart and lungs. "This young boy had the good Lord riding on his shoulder that day," Eichel- berger said. Iran, who was not cross-examined by defense lawyers, testified that the shoot- ing "brought me closer to God." Eichelberger said Brown had lost a tremendous amount of blood. He said Tanya Brown's decision to transport her nephew herself rather than wait for an ambulance helped save his life. A police cadet also testified yester- day that he found a ball-point pen bar- rel in a field less than 100 yards from the shooting scene. Court records indi- cate that Muhammad's DNA was on that barrel. Muhammad and fellow sniper suspect Lee Boyd Malvo have been accused of shooting 19 people, killing 13 and wounding six in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C. Malvo goes on trial next month. Muhammad, a 42-year-old Army veteran, is on trial for the shooting of Dean Harold Meyers outside a Virginia gas station on Oct. 9. But prosecutors must prove multiple murders to obtain a capital murder conviction on one of the two death penalty charges against Muhammad. In other testimony yesterday, a Balti- more police officer said he encountered Muhammad on Oct. 8, the day after the Brown shooting. The officer, James Snyder, said Muhammad was sleeping in his Chevrolet Caprice while parked at a service station. At first glance, this could look like the early beginnings of Halloween fun, but LSA sophmore Yosief Gheresus is actually spreading the word about the Michigan Animal Rights Society in the Diag yesterday. Iran cites means to improve relations TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - If the United States wants better relations with Tehran, it could start by ending accusations that Iran supports terror- ism, a government spokesman said yesterday. "They have to avoid making irrele- vant accusations against us," govern- ment spokesman Abdollah Ramezanzadeh said, referring to the terrorism charges. He also urged U.S. officials to "release our assets blocked there and lift sanctions." Iran says billions of its dollars of its assets were blocked by the United States after the 1979 Islamic revolution. "These are the preliminary practi- cal measures to win the confidence of the Iranian nation. We need to jus- tify better ties with America for our people," Ramezanzadeh said after a Cabinet meeting. He was reacting to what some saw as a new conciliatory tone on Iran emanating from Washington a day earlier. Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, speaking to the Senate For- eign Relations Committee on Tuesday, quoted President Bush as saying with regard to Iran: "Not every policy issue needs to be dealt with by force. Secre- tary (of State Colin) Powell also noted last week that we do not seek conflict with Iran." DEATH Continued from Page 1A said before returning to her seat in the East Hall auditorium, where she put her left hand in front of her eyes to hide her tears. Minutes later, a line of a dozen people formed to her left - a line of students, faculty and strangers, all waiting to offer her embraces and their condolences, more than six years after the fact. During the event, clips of news broadcasts on the day of Tamara's death were played. The broadcasts featured witnesses of the attack, friends of Tamara who described her as "a senior on her way out," and Nelson's sister, who tried to gain sympathy for her brother's death. The clips were played in an attempt to show students the proximity of the tragedy, University Housing spokesman Alan Levy said. "Some of what you will see is dis- turbing. All of what you will see is dis- turbing," he told the audience, adding that it was important "to see that this particular horror occurred not in some other community, but in our own. ... It was intensely personal." The lecture, given by human and women's rights activist Loretta Ross and titled "Freedom from Violence is a Human Right," followed the broadcasts. "I started off life being very pissed off about the things that happened to me," Ross said, describing an incident that happened when she was 11 years old, when she was kidnapped, taken to a nearby woods, raped and then returned to her home. Ross, who founded the Center for Unmani DRights 1F1d~i"ti in Atlarita m i i Mm - u aU - -