Febii
arsday • February 12, 1998
The Battalion
ighanistan relief efforts delayed
k ^ ‘ ZER,[Afghanistan (AP) — Pro-
bl1 only by blankets, earthquake
- on gif: 3 rs shivered in freezing weath-
ca ' r their crumbled homes yes-
as mi >re snow disrupted relief
1: in ik ntheast Al'ghanistan.
pease help us, we have lost
l! ' ; hing," a veiled woman shout-
bumbling down the muddy
lr romthe village of Kezer as aid
t!; rsfrom Doctors Without Bor-
rove past. A man standing at
i r le wept.
c e week after a magnitude-6.1
f>‘ : |uake and subsequent after-
^ s killed more than 4,000 peo-
llving how, log, mud and civil war
| ir:: ' lued o I rusl rale rescue efforts.
s c 3 Ri&taq district, including the
lideDtStrairsii ip, was buried under a
stigat: snow. Aid workers feared sur-
of e would die of exposure,
ler ie snow has added an enor-
“tary disadvantage,” said Alexander
let jfthe International Commit-
?tary the Red Cross. “Most of the
?ros. e are still trapped in their
here tain villages. We worry that
imtTgc: '
[bbitt
lareer
Ic ser:
I has
they will die if we cannot get them
down for help.”
As of yesterday, relief teams had
only reached 14 of the 27 villages
devastated by the Feb. 4 earthquake
and its aftershocks. Doctors With
out Borders physician Sheila Hall
said her agency estimates that more
than 4,300 have perished.
Officials in Ghanji, eight miles
east of the town of Rustaq, said that
they had pulled 700 bodies from the
debris that marks where the village
once stood. Officials earlier estimat
ed 2,000 people died. But they
stressed that many bodies have yet
to be found.
The snow forced the Red Cross
and the United Nations to cancel re
lief flights to the isolated mountain
ous region for the second day in a row.
Relief supplies piled up in neigh
boring Tajikistan, Pakistan and In
dia, awaiting some way to reach the
more than 15,000 people left home
less by the tremors.
Aid workers were loading sup
plies on donkeys for the quake-hit
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p!an WANT TO MEET /TONS OF NEW FRIENDS ?!?!?
WANT TO HELP THE CLASS OF 2002 ?!?!?
ORIENTATION LEADER!!!
I
it-
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BUILDING ROOM 314. DUE 2/13 BY 5 PM.
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hamlets perched on the Hindu
Kush and Pamir mountains that
ring Rustaq, the district capital.
A World Food Program truck
convoy arrived in the quake zone
Tuesday after a two-day, 70-mile
journey over icy mountain passes,
only to find that whole villages on
the map had virtually disappeared.
Survivors used shovels to search
the rubble for lost relatives in the vil
lage of Kezer, 10 miles east of Rustaq.
“We buried 200 people in this vil
lage and we sent another 100 to the
hospital in Rustaq,” said Sher Mo
hammed, stepping around the bod
ies of sheep and goats that lay on
the muddy ground. “We put 15 to 20
people in each grave, because there
weren’t enough people left to dig.”
The mountain looming over the
village was split in two by the quake,
sending thousands of tons of rocks
and muddy earth crashing down
onto sleeping villagers, he said.
Children were coughing and
feverish. “If they don’t get help soon,
they will die,” said Mohammed.
De Niro questioned in prostitution trial
According to French police, actor's name turned up in confiscated address book
PARIS (AP) — Sure he meets a
lot of beautiful women. That does
not mean Robert De Niro had any
thing to do with a call girl ring, said
his lawyer, who contended today
that a French judge was using the
actor to draw attention to his case.
De Niro was questioned as a
witness in the case Tuesday. His
name turned up in an address
book seized in the inquiry, accord
ing to police sources who spoke on
condition of anonymity.
“It’s possible,” Georges Kiejman
said when asked if investigators have
an address book containing De Niro’s
name. “If you know the number of
women who are pretty and ravishing
who have his phone number...”
The lawyer said it was likely “some
of these young gil ls who were ques
tioned by police or by the judge said
one day in a hotel ‘we met Robert De
Niro and we met many people.’
“But the name of Robert De Niro is
like a jewel for a judge,” said Kiejman.
He filed a lawsuit Tuesday
against Judge Frederic N'Guyen
for “violation of secrecy in an in-
“But the name of
Robert De Niro is like
a jewel for a judge.”
Georges Kiejman
Lawyer
vestigation” and “obstruction of
freedom of movement.”
Kiejman called the questioning
“a nonevent, but which had to be
marked as an infraction on the in
dividual freedom of a citizen....”
De Niro was “not anxious. He’s a
little angry, but he wants to forget.
Though he’s not ready to forgive.”
“Six or eight policemen went to
the hotel” at about 9 a.m. Tuesday,
Kiejman said. During the entire
day “they never let him free. He
could phone me, he was not un
der formal arrest, but without
freedom all day, until 9 p.m.... he
was never summoned.
“He kept repeating the same
answers to the same questions,”
Kiejman said.
French law does not require
the presence of an attorney unless
a suspect is placed under formal
investigation, one step short of
being charged.
French celebrities also have
been questioned about the call girl
ring, which allegedly charged up to
$8,000. Prostitution is legal in
France, though procuring is not.
De Niro, who won the Acade
my Award for best actor for Rag
ing Bull, and most recently ap
peared in Wag The Dog and Jackie
Brown. He was in Paris to work on
the action film Ronin.
EXAS BEST MUSIC » BEST PARTY
WHAT INSPIRED THE MOUNTAIN MEN?
George Washington:
“Whereas it is the duty of all nations
to acknowledge the providence of
almighty God, to obey His will, to be
grateful for His benefits, and humbly
to implore His protection and favor.”
Abraham Lincoln:
“Intelligence, Patriotism, Christianity,
and a firm reliance on Him who has
never yet forsaken this favored land
are still competent to adjust in the
best way all our present difficulty.
...As was said three thousand years
ago, so still it must be said, ‘the
judgments of the Lord are true and
righteous altogether’”
Thomas Jefferson:
“God who gave us life gave us liberty.
Can the liberties of a nation be secure
when we have removed a conviction
that these liberties are the gift of God?
Indeed I tremble for my country when I
reflect that God is just, that His justice
cannot sleep forever.”
Teddy Roosevelt:
“There are those who believe that a
new modernity demands a new
morality. What they fail to consider is
the harsh reality that there is no such
thing as a new morality. There is only
one morality. All else is immorality.
There is only true Christian ethics over
against which stands the whole of
paganism. If we are to fulfill our great
destiny as people, then we must return
to the old morality, the sole morality.”
FACULTY FRIENDS
We are inspired by Jesus Christ who said: “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not
perish but have eternal life.” We are a group of professors, instructors, lecturers, and administrators united by their common experience that Jesus
Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers to life’s most important questions. We are available to students, faculty, and staff who
might like to discuss such questions with us. If you would like to be a part of the FACULTY FRIENDS ad, please contact Murphy Smith 5-3108, Steve
Crouse 5-3997, or Lee Lowery 5-4395. The Faculty Friends website is http://www2.cy-net.net/~lowery/faculty_friends/
Natalie L. Allen
Accounting
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Veterinary Physiology
NOTE: This ad presents the personal convictions of the individuals listed herein; the ad does not represent or support any view or position of Texas A&M University or
any academic department. The ad does represent and acknowledge the diversity of academic contributions to Texas A&M University by men and women of various race,
ethnic group, and cultural background who share the Christian faith.