2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 11, 2005 NATION/WORLD Beirut shows unity, no fear, with run BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - There were people in wheelchairs, fathers pushing strollers, young men in T- shirts and designer sunglasses, all in all at least 20,000 Lebanese took part in a run yesterday to demon- strate unity after two months of political turmoil. Under a warm spring sun, the runners set off from Beirut's Riad Solh Square on three-mile course that passed near the seafront boulevard where former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and 19 others were killed in a massive bomb attack on Feb. 14. They finished at Martyrs' Square, the scene of a demonstration that brought down the government and numerous other protests during the past seven weeks. Hariri's sister, lawmaker Bahiya Hariri, released 50 white pigeons to start yesterday's event, which was dubbed "United We Run." "There is no fear for this country as long as this great people are adamant on upholding their national unity, civil peace, independence, freedom and sovereignty," Hariri said in a speech before the start. The run is part of a series of activi- ties that will mark the 30th anniver- sary of the beginning of Lebanon's 15-year civil war on April 13, 1975. There will be concerts and exhibitions of art and photography. Most of the participants wore white for peace. Some wore T-shirts bearing Hariri's picture. Other runners carried Lebanese flags. Loudspeakers encouraged the run- ners with patriotic music and the national anthem, and soldiers stopped all traffic from entering the route of the run. Hussein Majid, who completed the course in a wheelchair, said: "I came to show loyalty to Lebanon and for the sake of unity among the Lebanese." The organizers, Beirut Mara- thon Association, said about 50,000 people took part, but The Associ- ated Press estimated the crowd to be about 20,000. The association said the run was "aimed at strengthening national unity, preserving civil peace, (and) highlighting Lebanon's cultural and civilized face." Norman R. Augustine Reted Chir man and CEO Lockheed Marin C orration Lessons Learned from a Lifetime of Trying to Dey the Law of Gravity Wednesday, April 13, 2005, 4 p.m. General Motors Conference Hall Robert H. Lurie Engineering Center North Campus, University of Michigan MichiganEngineering I 15th Annual Golden Apple Award Professor john Rubadeau of the Department of English Language and Literature Presents his Ideal Last Lecture: "My Life" Germans honor Holocaust victims WEIMAR, Germany (AP) - Elder- ly survivors of the Buchenwald con- centration camp laid flowers yesterday and observed a moment of silence for victims of the Nazis, 60 years after U.S. troops liberated the camp. Flags from some 30 nations hung in a cold drizzle to symbolize the nations from which the camp's 240,000 prison- ers came between 1937 and 1945. About 56,000 died - worked to death, shot or killed in medical experiments. German Chancellor Gerhard Schro- eder and U.S. veterans came to the camp memorial outside Weimar for the commemoration, which kindled vivid memories for the survivors, most of them in their 70s and 80s. Georg Sterner, a Hungarian Jew, recalled looking out from Barracks No. 37 when the first U.S. tank crashed through the barbed-wire perimeter fence on the morning of April 11, 1945. "We were hanging out of the win- dows," said Sterner, who was 17 then. "It came slowly, slowly. It stoppedmbetween the trees. It revved the engine ... made a lunge, and broke through." Inside, shocked soldiers from the U.S 3rd Army found some 21,000 starving survivors and piles of corpses, some only partially burned in the crematori- um ovens as the Nazi SS and their help- ers fled the camp. "It was so incredible - stacks of bodies, the smell, the total shock and confusion, people walking around by the thousands," said Jerry Hontas, who arrived the next day as a 21-year-old Army medic. "We were so shocked we couldn't talk to each other for days," said Hontas, of Boca Raton, Fla. "We had no concept of this kind of insane cruelty." Yesterday, some survivors came in wheelchairs. Others wore replicas of their striped inmate's uniforms and their old prisoner numbers. Schroeder recalled that Weimar stands for Germany's classical cultural heritage - Johann Wolfgang Goethe, the most revered German author and playwright, had his home there - and said the Nazis had turned it into "cold- ness and cruelty." FOOD FOR THOUGHT PTSD In ON KILLING: The psychological cost of learning to kill in war and society, psychologist Lt. Colonel Dave Grossman who studied the emotional price paid by veterans, comments on the effect the protest movement had on the returning American warrior: "/Never in American history, perhaps never in al/ the history of Western Civilization, has an army suffered such an agony of blows from its own people." Gary Lillie & Assoc.,Realtors www.garylillie.com g g gg g gg g g NEWS IN BRIEF ,. JERUSALEM Israeli police confront Jewish extremists Thousands of Israeli police mobilized at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site yesterday but confronted only a handful of Jewish extremists intent on scuttling a Gaza pullout by tying up security forces. In Gaza, militants fired dozens of mortar shells after Israeli forces killed three teenagers. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, speaking on a plane taking him to today's meeting with President Bush, said the mortar fire "is a flagrant violation of the understandings" reached at the February truce summit with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas. "And this will be a central issue to be raised in my talks with President Bush," Sharon said. Police arrested 31 extremist Jews who planned to demonstrate Sunday in the Old City of Jerusalem, along with a West Bank Hamas leader who spoke at the holy site. But the 10,000 demonstrators pledged by organizers never materialized. Only a few dozen showed up. Despite the low turnout, Israeli officials acknowledged the protesters appeared to have accomplished their goal of showing how easy it will be to divert large num- bers of troops from their main mission this summer - the planned Gaza pullout. WASHINGTON NIH ignored harassment, women testify Women at the National Institutes of Health faced sexual intimidation and repeated disregard of their concerns for the welfare of patients in AIDS experi- ments, according to testimony by two senior female officers and documents gath- ered by investigators. One longtime medical officer at the government's premier medical research agency alleges that the harassment and disregard for federal safety regulations are so widespread that employees are now afraid to hold up experiments even if they see a safety problem. Her sworn testimony and other documents were obtained by The Associated Press from a variety of sources inside and outside NIH. "It can be fairly uncomfortable," NIH medical officer Betsy Smith testi- fied in a recent civil case deposition that has been turned over to federal and Senate investigators. "There are a number of things that you really don't talk about." In such a work environment, "You don't hold up any projects even if you feel there are safety issues for certain projects," she said. WASHINGTON GOP rep says DeLay should step down Rep. Christopher Shays said yesterday that fellow Republican Rep. Tom DeLay should step down as House majority leader because his continuing ethics problems are hurting the GOP. "Tom's conduct is hurting the Republican Party, is hurting this Republican major- ity and it is hurting any Republican who is up for re-election," Shays told The Associ- ated Press on Sunday. DeLay (R-Texas) has been dogged in recent months by reports of possible ethics violations. There have been questions about his overseas travel, campaign payments to family members and his connections to lobbyists who are under investigation. A moderate Republican from Connecticut who has battled with his party's lead- ership on a number of issues, Shays said efforts by the House GOP members to change ethics rules to protect DeLay only make the party look bad. BAGHDAD, Iraq Iraqi militants kidnap Pakistani official The family of a Pakistani embassy employee kidnapped in Baghdad appealed yesterday for his captors to release him, and al-Qaida's ally in Iraq claimed to have kidnapped and killed a senior police official. Malik Mohammed Javed, a consular and community affairs employee at Paki- stan's embassy, went missing in Baghdad on Saturday after leaving home to pray at a mosque, officials said. The previously unknown Omar bin Khattab group claimed responsibility for his kidnapping and Javed called the embassy to say his abductors had not harmed him, Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said in a statement. - Compiled from Daily wire reports *I www.michigandaily.com The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $110. Winter term (January through April) is $115, yearlong (September through April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. 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