Monday, October 2, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 7A FBI looks into Mark Foley e-mail scandal IN DRAG WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI is examining former Rep. Mark Foley's e-mail exchanges with teenagers to determine if they violated federal law, an agency spokesman said yester- day. House Speaker Dennis Hast- ert asked yesterday for a federal investigation into the case - a lurid scandal that has put House Republicans in political peril. "I hereby request that the Department of Justice conduct an investigation of Mr. Foley's conduct with current and for- mer House pages to determine to what extent any of his actions violated federal law," Hastert (R-Il.) wrote in a letter to Attor- ney General Alberto Gonzales. FBI spokesman Richard Kolko confirmed Sunday that the FBI is "conducting an assessment to see if there's been a violation of federal law." He had no further comment. The White House and Demo- cratic leaders in Congress also called Sunday for a criminal probe. White House counselor Dan Bartlett called the allega- tions against Foley shocking, but said President Bush hadn't learned of Foley's inappropri- ate e-mails to a 16-year-old boy and instant messages to other boys before the news broke last week. "There is going to be, I'm sure, a criminal investigation into the particulars of this case," Bartlett said. "We need to make sure that the page system is one in which children come up here and can work and make sure that they are protected." Foley (R-Fla.) quit Congress on Friday after the disclosure of the e-mails he sent to a former congressional page and sexually suggestive instant messages he sent to other high school pages. A law enforcement offi- cial, who asked for anonym- ity because the investigation is ongoing, said agents from the FBI's cyber division are look- ing into the text of some of the messages and checking to see how many e-mails were sent and how many computers were used. They are also looking to see if some of the teens who were sent messages will cooperate with the probe. Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada called the Foley case "repugnant, but equally as bad is the possibility that Republican leaders in the House of Representatives knew there was a problem and ignored it to preserve a congressional seat this election year." Reid said the case should be handled outside Congress. "Under laws that Congressman Foley helped write, soliciting sex from a minor online is a federal crime," Reid said. "The alleged crimes here are far outside the scope of any congressional com- mittee, and the attorney general should open a full-scale investi- gation immediately." Ron Gushwa, a resident of Indiana, waits for a competition to begin at the Michigan Sand Dragway in Mears, Mich. on Saturday. Gushwa races every SDetainees at secret prison held indefinitely KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Capt. Amanullah, a former muja- hedeen commander, smooths his black beard with his palm and gives a deep and ironic laugh as he recounts his 14 miserable months in Bagram, the U.S. prison for terror suspects in Afghanistan. "There were lots of stupid questions and accusations with no proof," said the 56-year-old veteran of combat against the Soviet occupation. He insists he was there only because Afghan rivals lied about him to the U.S. Army. He's far from alone in his assertion of innocence - or his inability to make that heard for so long. Like many who have passed through the secretive jail set up after the fall of the Taliban regime, Amanullah found himself entangled in a system where he had no protection and no rights, and not even the pressure of pub- lic scrutiny that helped inmates at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, or Abu Ghraib, Iraq. "There's been a silence about Bagram, and much less political discussion about it," said Richard Bennett, the chief U.N. human rights officer in Afghanistan. Originally intended as a short- term holding pen for al-Qaida and Taliban suspects later shipped to Guantanamo, Bagram has expanded and acquired its own notoriety over abuse allegations though attracting much less inter- national attention than the U.S. detention facility in Cuba. The U.S. plans to turn over the Afghan nationals in its custody to the Afghan government by next summer. They will be sent to a new high-security wing at the Afghan government's main Poli- charki prison in Kabul - scene of repeated deadly riots and escapes in recent years. But non-Afghans currently held at Bagram will stay in U.S. custody, officials say. Bagram's estimated 500 inmates are mostly Afghans, but also are believed to include Arabs, Pakistanis and some Cen- tral Asians. They wear the same orange jump suits and shaven heads as the "enemy combatants" at Guantanamo, but lack even the scant legal rights granted to the inmates at that facility, such as the right to appear at military hearings that assess whether they pose a security threat. In some cases, they have been held with- out charge for three to four years, rights workers say. New legislation would extend anti-torture protections to all prisoners in U.S. custody. But only those hand-picked by the president or the military would get rights to legal representation and a hearing. So far, that has been accorded to only a handful of men at Guantanamo, and none held at Bagram or in Iraq, where more than 13,000 are in U.S. cus- tody without charge. At least two of the eight peo- ple reported to have died in U.S. custody since the invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001 were at Bagram. At least 15 American servicemen have been charged with prison abuse following the December 2002 deaths of those two Afghan nationals, Dilawar and Habibullah. The heaviest punishment handed down has been five months in jail. CAMPAIGN Continued from page 1A mined to hold onto their six-seat margin. Six members of the University's College Republicans also traveled to the 13th District Saturday to campaign for Pappageorge. "This could be the winning vote right here in this house," said Jor- dan Fennema, vice chair of the University's chapter of the College Republicans, as he bounded up to the door of a modest two-story home in the middle-class suburb of Royal Oak. Like Republican campaigns nationwide, the Pappageorge cam- paign is armed with data from the Republican National Committee's Voter Vault database. The cam- paign equipped the College Repub- licans with detailed information about the voters they were meeting, such as whether they are anti-abor- tion or own guns. The visits from the College Republicans and College Demo- crats come amid a torrent of campaign advertising targeted at undecided voters in Oakland County. When the Democrats knocked on one Berkley door, the agitated resident who answered gave a terse response. "I'm voting for (Granholm), that's it," he said, confused about for whom the volunteers were cam- paigning. Pappageorge campaign manager Justin Winslow acknowledged the barrage of campaign material that voters are facing. "You're sort of walking into ground zero for a lot of people there," he said. "Everyone is vying for those votes" The Michigan Democratic Party is running advertisements on cable TV in support of Andy Levin. The Michigan GOP recently sent mail- ings to voters in the district trying to paint Levin asa liberal interloper from Washington. Levin moved to the district in May, but he grew up in Berkley and went to graduate school at the University of Michigan. Levin's last name will be help- ful in the November 7 contest. His father, Sander Levin, has represent- ed parts of the district since 1982. The elder Levin also mounted two unsuccessful campaigns for gover- nor in 1970 and 1974. Andy Levin's uncle, Carl Levin (D-Mich), is an influential U.S. senator. But Andy Levin isn't relying just on his name to beat Pappageorge. "People do love my dad and my uncle out there and that is great," he told the College Democrats on Saturday. "But they need to learn to love me." The 13th District race highlights many of the issues facing Michi- gan. Reeling from the effects of lay- offs and a stagnant state econo- my, jobs are a key issue. While the district is currently held by a Republican, the traditionally con- servative county has been trending Democratic over the past six years. In 2004, Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry won 47 per- cent of the vote in the district. As in the race for governor, can- didates in Oakland County are shy- ing away from potentially divisive social issues. "It's funny how on the west side of the state (campaign) literature is like 'pro-life, pro-gun' and the economy is at the bottom," said Fennema, an LSA senior from Grand Rapids. "It's more danger- ous to talk about (social issues) over here." But the importance of social issues wasn't lost on Fennema and his campaigning companion, Kine- siology junior Allison Schneider. They hesitated before knocking on one door on their list because of a rainbow flag a symbol of gay pride - planted in a flower pot outside. Sander Levin said that because the election will be close, the cam- paign cannot afford to take any votes for granted. "If this is a close race, and it's likely to be, the person-to-person work you're doing makes a differ- ence of 3 to 4 percentage points," he said. CRIME Continued from page 1A gency room the morning after the assault and had surgery six days later. Zatkoff told police the next morning that he could not remember what happened the previous night. Last Wednesday, Truth Cau- cus posted pictures of a disfig- ured Zatkoff under the headline "Hate Crime: College Republi- can Allegedly Beaten By Lib- eral Thugs." The post cited a source close to Zatkoff who said he may have been attacked by members of the pro-affirmative action group By Any Means Necessary or a gay rights group. The story attracted national attention and was soon picked up by other sites like Wonkette.com, a Washington gossip blog, and dailykos.com, a well-known liberal blog. Last Thursday, Don Carlson, state chair of the Michigan College Republicans, issued a statement urging students to "Keep (Justin) in your prayers" during his surgery and to "Travel in groups when pos- sible, especially until the elec- tions are over." Carlson also included a link to the post on truthcaucus.com alleging that it was liberals who had beaten Zatkoff. The police report tells a much different story. Police said Zatkoff received his puffy purple left eye during a fight with a high school friend. Zatkoff was at a friend's party on the 1100 block of White Street on Sept. 23 when he engaged in what the police report called "horseplay" with a friend. Fueled by alcohol, Zat- koff was belligerent. "When Zatkoff drinks, he gets a little out of control," the report quoted one of Zatkoff's friends. "At this particular party Zatkoff was being obnoxious." Another one of Zatkoff's friends eventually admitted to police that it was he - not a gang of angry liberals - who punched Zatkoff. After learning of the friend's confession, Carlson said his statement had not been politi- cally motivated. "I wanted people to be warned of it and be careful," he said. "That's just good advice." Rob Scott, chair of the Michi- gan College Republicans, said it is an unfortunate situation and he is glad no one was attacked for their personal beliefs on pol- itics. "It sounds like a lot of people who didn't know the full story started talking about this and it got blown out of proportion," Scott said. "It's the importance of real journalism over blog- ging, I guess." r Study: Ads for high-fat dfoods target toddlers CHICAGO (AP) - When Susan Connor's 3-year-old son started humming the McDon- ald's jingle, a research project was born. Connorknew where he'd heard the fast food giant's catchy tune - on the Disney Channel dur- ing "The Wiggles," a show for preschoolers. "He had absorbed that from watching TV," said Connor, whose study on food ads aimed at toddlers appears in the Octo- ber issue of Pediatrics. "It would be a marketer's dream to know they were that successful." Messages for high-fat, high- sugar foods permeate pro- gramming for preschoolers on Nickelodeon, the study found. On the Disney Channel's shows for the youngest children and even on Public Broadcasting Service shows such as "Ses- ame Street," companies woo tots' loyalty by linking logos, licensed characters and slogans with fun and happiness. Disney and PBS promote themselves as ad-free, but fast food companies dominated sponsor messages during pro- gramming for toddlers, Connor found, making up 82 percent of sponsor messages on PBS preschool programming and 36 percent of messages on Disney's toddler block of shows. The clown character Ronald McDonald appears with shows for toddlers on Disney and PBS. And the cartoon mouse Chuck E. Cheese pops up alongside preschool programming on PBS. Connor, research manager of Cleveland's Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, said adults who haven't seen children's pro- grams lately will be surprised by the findings. FARM Continued from page 1A tuning to ensure that they grow as fat as possible, as fast as pos- sible. Seeing this kind of misery, Davies and Jackson became vegans. Their convictions and beliefs expanded along with their collection of animals. They began raising goats for their son's 4-H Club. The goats began breeding. They grew attached. Because of their convictions, they couldn't sell them. "We had some people say 'I'd like to buy a goat - could we slaughter it in your yard?"' Davies said. Eventually, they began rescu- ing more animals, like Gulliver, a coffee-colored horse that was used for veterinary research at Ohio State University. Or Tiberius, one of several cats that came from a Virginia prison. Several years ago, inmates rioted over the warden's attempt to trap and kill about 300 over- bred tabbies. They even considered tak- ing two cougars from Detroit, but decided against it to avoid angering their community. Jackson - the self-described "maintenance man" - still works his old job, driving trucks from Rockford, Mich. to Apple- ton, Wisc. But the farm is what's impor- tant to him. "We've poured our whole lives into this," he said. The result of their efforts could be an Andrew Wyeth painting, a relic of pre-highway Middle America. Vintage farm equipment rusts on the hills. The air is filled with the excited chirps of turkeys and the low keening gurgle of pigs. It has become one of about 10 major farm animal sanctuaries in the country, and the largest in the Midwest. In rural Michigan - where hunting and barnyard slaughter are cultural norms - it can be hard to maintain such beliefs. But vegans make up only 0.2 percent of Americans and are generally used to being a tiny minority. In front of a wall full of post- ers proclaiming "Pigs are Beau- tiful" and defaced images of Ted Nugent, visitors gather, eat dairy-free cheese and potatoes, sip cider and chat. During the Fall Festival this past weekend, they went on mushroom hunts and listened to live Celtic music around a bonfire. They are drawn together by a common set of beliefs that sepa- rate them from many of their communities. One common factor is their tendency to humanize the ani- mals. Many discussions at SASHA about turkeys or cows could easily be about a nieces or nephews. "They're just like people," said Davies, describing the sight of cuddling pigs. "Their eyes look just like ours." Each member has a different approach to living as a vegan in the Midwest. Volunteer Sunday Harvey drives an hour from Milford to the farm every Friday. She wears a pin urging others to vote "no" on a November ballot proposal that would allow dove hunting in Michigan. Being vegan in a hunting state like Michigan can be frustrat- ing, she said, but is ultimately rewarding. "It's a struggle, just like any- thing else," Harvey said. Jenny Gordon used to carpool with friends from Royal Oak to volunteer. She now comes from Ann Arbor, where she teaches baton-twirling courses. "Every time it was like I never wanted to leave," she said. Her experiences on the farm have a particular significance. "I'm not a religious person, but I feel spiritually high," she said as she pantomimed holding a baby pig in her arms. SASHA will continue to grow, rescuing animals and encourag- ing others to come "meet their meat." They're hoping to see more to young people - like those from the University - with similar interests. "We've got a lot of potential," Davies said. "But I'm trying to be realistic, given our age." The challenge now is to con- vey their values to a new genera- tion. "You can't preach it to peo- ple," she said. "They haver to come to it themselves." Like everything at SASHA, the process will have to be organic. i I 1