NEWS NA1 I THE BATTr )A Vednesday, April 2, 2003 iOngS Missing its’ livjournalists -safe, out promise for sickle cell an? furea. usually given for the treatment a tOuce pain and lower death rates amot: ;kle cell anemia, according to a 0 The disease Sickle oaM anemia is an disorder caused by mpropay hemoglobin, the part of a i cell that carries ox body The result« blood cells * Symptoms By Frank Eltman HE ASSOCIATED PRESS ELVILLE, N.Y. (AP) — Newsday journalists and wo tive lance photographers « t-’.r.icms yeio». tvho were missing for more than ' 1 iweek in Iraq sent word ^^®sday that that were safe and JH left the country. A sister of tr* k '. T,y Tne of the journalists said he uotK.mdsoiyi-.ire^aj'fold her that they had been but were ->- treated well. Origin Thegenetc suvived the matanaxte to study rdroxyuree was found to lower i »ong people suffering from the yever taken hydro) 36 >e drug over a nira r period l‘We’re just euphoric,” Nev/sday publisher and chief executive Raymond Jansen said in la statement on the newspa pers Web site. The two Newsday staffers told their col leagues they were crossing into Iordan. The two freelancers were with them Newsday corre- -spondent Matthew McAllester, 33, and photographer Moises iic but should k Saman, 29, had been out of con- Tjjact since March 24, when they MTiailed the Long Island-based leukemia , .^rHewspaper from Baghdad to say ch could mal :he > would be filing material. it* potent drug may be un ore work for doctors,’ visits to adjust dosages i ns don't develop, eneraliy advised to take tit y participants took eitherli y pills in the first phase 2 follow-up. from 1996-1 rved results in patients wti >r started taking hydroxyui I just shrieked at rim, because he was {alive. Icouldntstop ving. It was the best news we could wish for. 99 —Janey McAllester sister of one of the missing journalists IFT ore jift PLUS: rd’< The journalists used a satel lite phone to call their loved ones. McAllester called his sis ter, Janey McAllester, in London, where she works at an art gallery. ■ ‘‘I just shrieked at him, because he was alive. I couldn’t stop crying. It was the best news we could wish for,” the sister said. B“He said they had been held in prison, but they had been treated OK. I asked him if he was held by people from Iraq’s Ministry of Information and he just said: ‘That’s a nice name for them.’” Teachers on leave due to war posters ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Two high school teach ers said Tuesday they have been placed on leave for refusing to remove war-related student art work posted in their classrooms. Highland High School teach ers Allen Cooper and Geoffrey Barrett said they were told Monday night that they would be suspended if they did not remove the posters. Barrett, who teaches history and current events, said the stu dent art carried both anti-war and pro-war messages, and was created as part of a class assignment. f “I think this is mostly a vio lation of the students’ rights to have a voice and express their opinions,” Barrett said. “Asking me to take down the posters was taking away the voice of the stu dents and I was not going to do that.” Cooper said one of the signs in question in his classroom read “No War Mr. Cooper.” It was written by an Afghani student who has had family members killed in U.S.-led bombings in Afghanistan, he said. | “I really agonized over this,” said Cooper, an English teacher. “I don’t want to be suspended. I just want to teach my classes.” Both teachers said the posters in question were taken down by school officials before classes began Tuesday. THE BATTALION NEWS IN BRIEF Air Force Academy agrees to outside investigation DENVER (AP) — The Air Force Academy, which has been urged to sub mit to an outside investigation of its sex ual assault scandal, has agreed to turn over files to local prosecutors. Academy officials told the El Paso County District Attorney’s Office it would be givendhe sexual assault reports it had requested last week. They, howev er, did not say when the records would be sent over. The Defense Department and Air Force are investigating how the academy dealt with 20 cases of rape and 36 cases of sexual assault reported since 1993. Cadets who say they were raped say that they were blamed and punished by their superiors and ostracized by classmates. The district attorney’s office began its investigation last month at the request of a female cadet who was not satisfied with military’s handling of her complaint. A number of senators have also called for an independent investigation. New center to guard against bioterror attacks ATLANTA (AP) — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a new $7.1 million emergency operations center to guard against bioterrorist attacks and help it track outbreaks of emerging diseases such as West Nile virus or severe acute respiratory syndrome. The center allows health officials to receive data and information from disease detectives in the field, and officials can quickly confer with international and federal agencies during a health crisis. “This is a war room for health,” said Gov. Sonny Perdue. “Any forensic or criminal investigator will tell you the best thing they can have at their fingertips.”s our people At Ernst» " revolves sfO Here, you will be listened to, respected, trusted and recognized for your achievements. We not only value your individuality and what it can bring to our firm, we encourage it. And we give you challenging opportunities so you feel empowered to succeed. 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