The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 16, 2001, Image 8

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i 2th Man Towel Week
Show your support at the Texas A&M vs.Texas football game
on November 23 with a 12th Man Towel!
The week of november 12-16, you can buy a 12th Man Towel at
these locations on campus:
8-10 a.m. @ the Zone Plaza
I 1-2 p.m.@ Rudder Fountain,
the Academic Plaza,
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UNIVERSITY
Who’s Who Arnon^ American
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Com.in County Community Coi.i i oi: District
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WE'VE GOT YOUR NUMBER
2001-2002 Texas A&M University
Campus Directory
Listings of departments, administrators, faculty, staff, students,
and other information about A&M, plus yellow pages.
S TUDENTS: If you ordered a 2001-
2002 Campus Directory, stop by the
basement of the Reed McDonald Build
ing to pick up your copy. (Look for the
distribution table.) Please bring Stu
dent ID. If you did not order a Campus
Directory as a fee option when you
registered for Fall '01 classes, you may
purchase a copy for $3 plus tax in
room 015 Reed McDonald Building (by
cash, check or credit card).
D EPARTMENTS: If you ordered
Campus Directories and requested
delivery, deliveries will be made within
the next few days. If you did not order
Campus Directories, you may charge
and pick them up at 015 Reed McDon
ald. Cost is $3 per copy. Please bring a
Student Media Work Request.
Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon-
day-Friday
World
Page 8
THE BATTALION
Friday, November!
fa/’
fs[o ven
Cuba seeks food,
supplies from U. 7
UNITED NATIONS (AP) —-
Cuba’s foreign minister said
Thursday a U.S. offer of assis
tance after Hurricane Michelle
was Washington’s first positive
gesture toward the communist
island in 40 years, and he hoped
it signaled a change in policy.
Felipe Perez Roque told The
Associated Press that while
Cuba turned down the proffered
U.S. aid, it has opened talks
with Washington for a one-time
cash purchase of food and med
icine to replenish stocks deplet
ed by the hurricane.
“The government of the
United States offered assistance
to us. They offered to send some
people from the United States to
make an assessment on the dam
age, and then provide assis
tance,’’ the foreign minister
said.
“We replied that it was very
positive that for the first time
ever after 40 years, the United
States was going to have a ges
ture of this nature towards
Cuba,’’ Perez Roque said.
Cuba has been under a U.S.
embargo for 40 years, though
purchases of medical supplies
have been allowed since 1992.
Exports of food to Cuba were
authorized by Congress last
year. However, Cuban President
Fidel Castro had ruled out food
purchases because no American
financing was permitted.
But Castro has made an
exception because of the devas
tation of Hurricane Michelle,
which destroyed hundreds of
thousands of houses and vast
tracts of farmland. Perez Roque
called it the worst hurricane to
hit Cuba in a half century.
Perez Roque said a next pos
itive step from Washington
should be “to allow Americans
to travel freely to Cuba.” U.S.
citizens, unless granted waivers,
are banned from Cuban travel.
Perez Roque said the fact that
the highest levels of the Bush
administration must be called on
to authorize a special dispensa
tion for the shipmenis
how irrational the bkx
the United States agains
is, and how pointless t,
maintain the current li
restrictions.”
He said he was “m
ly optimistic” that an
merit would be reai
allow the shipments o:
and medicine.
Perez Roque saidO
cials have presented
goods for examination b
officials. Cuba also hast!
ed 15 agricultural
ceutical companies inIht
States, he said.
U.S. sources estim
value of the products
at between $3 million
million, but Perez Roque
n’t confirm the figures
On Nov. 1
|ied while try
iat was av
teek, a smal
ggies will r
iat legacy.
The foreign minister:* ^ renegad
ed that if approved. !)ie|f onstructed
will be shipped on U.S.«® Ca ^ on - AI
country vessels. The l: ' an ^ s ma y
k\! .! ( T"
that the goods be transpM
Northern alliance captures soni
Taliban leaders, others defected
S ee doing is
ion of everytl
ao Aggie. The
BANGI, Afghanistan (AP) — Northern
alliance forces and Pashtun tribesmen encircled
two of the Taliban’s last remaining strongholds at
opposite ends of the country Thursday. The
Taliban’s supreme leader vowed to fight to the
death and to seek the “extinction of America.”
Backed by U.S. warplanes, the alliance laid
siege to the northern city of Kunduz, where the
defenders include an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 for
eigners loyal to Osama bin Laden.
In the south, the Taliban clung to tenuous con
trol of its birthplace, Kandahar. Opposition leader
Hamid Karzai said his sources told him there was
“turmoil” in the city; other sources said local
Pashtun tribesmen had surrounded the city.
A U.S. official, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said there were spurts of fighting near
the city center as the Pashtun fighters advanced.
Most of Kandahar province, outside of the city, is
in the hands of anti-Taliban rebels, he said.
Gen. Tommy Franks, the U.S. commander of the
Afghanistan campaign, said American special
forces were operating near Kandahar. Inside the city,
Franks said, “we do see signs of some fracturing”
within the Taliban ranks. Pashtuns are Afghanistan’s
largest ethnic group, and served as the backbone of
the Taliban's harsh five-year regime.
Pakistan strengthened its border defenses clos
est to Kandahar with tanks and extra troops, wor
ried that unrest — and bin Laden supporters —
could spill across the frontier.
In other developments:
• Eight international aid workers arrested three
months ago for preaching Christianity in
Afghanistan were reported in good condition in
Pakistan after being helicoptered to safety by U.S.
special forces. The women in the group, including
two Americans, signaled to their rescuers by burn
ing the body-covering burqas they had been
forced to wear.
• U.S. Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge
confirmed that documents that would be helpful in
making a nuclear device were found in a building
in Kabul, described as an al-Qaida safe house. But
Ridge said'the documents contained information
taken off the Internet that could have been widely
These
from th
vi
egregated 1
family
hose who c
ionfire. If tf
id to serve ;
he 1999 Ag
On Nov. 1;
more c
neteor sho'
r ating the e;
le Polo Fie
The shoo
.onlookers tf
how Ag
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;ince the 1!
lapse. And
hould be a
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• British troops arrived at the Bagramai
north of Kabul, on what the Ministry ofDtL
said was a mission to prepare the facilit)-foris
a future humanitarian mission.
• In Washington, the Pentagon said sanest
Taliban and al-Qaida leaders were He
airstrikes this week, hut had no evidence:—
Laden was among them. Defense to |M S inapP 1
Donald H. Rumsfeld told a news confer®*® ac ^ s *
United States will find bin Laden even if he
Afghanistan.
• The northern alliance has capturedspu^
ior Taliban military leaders, saidaluA
speaking on the condition of anonwlM
senior Taliban officers also have sffll
official said. The official declined .
U.S. officials had interviewed the prisi
President Bush launched airstrikes it*
Afghanistan on Oct. 7 after the Talibanrett
surrender bin Laden, wanted in the Sept 11*
rorist attacks on the World Trade Centeto
Pentagon.
The Taliban supreme leader,
Mohammed Omar, sought to portray the 1*
recent retreats from urban centers as partoW
er strategy aiming to destroy America.
“If God's help is with us, this
within a short period of time —keep in
prediction,” he said in an interview
conducted over satellite phone. “The real milt
the extinction of America, and Godw""
fall to the ground.”
Omar ruled out taking part in a
government like the one the United
proposed for Afghanistan.
“The struggle for a broad-based goveic
has been going on for the last 20 years,but!
ing came of it,” he said. “We will not a®
government of wrongdoers. We r .
to be a part of an evil government.
Kandahar came under heavy bombai*^."^
Thursday, the Pakistan-based Afghan Isli * t ?’
Press said. It said eight civilians were kill^ 1 f ° CUS
22 injured, a report that could not be indepea!
ly verified.
O/