ibies tors in Norfolk, she.witi the in-house libran Mrth. : or Wirth’s company in May. he held me like a i beautiful baby,”stif h to contact him and the beautiful letter lie I have read so man;, igs seemed tough." to have her go to ali ort to reach me,"said who’s now a neona- t at the Reading al and Medical in Pennsylvania saved hundreds of n’s lives, and none of ave bothered to even . I’m overwhelmed, their meeting, Cart t Wirth a signed f an infertility book ich she wrote the •d, and a newspaper she wrote about her id connections to i. h gave her a neck- ago — a round plate id child — and this azine, which had a list of greatest inno- i, 1981, three yean ■tube baby, Louise d. About a million rn since. iered what kind of a ;t intellectually, but When she talked to I went ‘ka-ching’,” e a testament to the :rgy that we have in 7A Thursday, September 25, 2003 WORLD THE BATTALION Roadside bomb attack misses U.S. patrol, kills Iraqi civilians By Steven Hurst THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BAGHDAD, Iraq — A home made bomb exploded Wednesday along a road in the Iraqi capital, missing a U.S. military patrol but killing at least one Iraqi and injur ing 18 others as it destroyed two civilian buses, police and hospital officials said. Also Wednesday, U.S. troops killed four Iraqis in two separate engagements near Saddam Hussein’s hometown Tikrit and seized about 1,000 rounds of ammunition in a raid around the nearby village of Uja, where the ousted Iraqi leader was bom. The bombing took place in the Azamiyah district, a commercial and residential neighborhood of north-central Baghdad. The American vehicles escaped dam age but two buses were destroyed, according to Iraqi police Lt. Awas Ibrahim. Hospital officials report ed that five of the injured were in critical condition. U.S. troops face a growing threat of attack by roadside bombs, most of them remotely controlled so that attackers can detonate them from a distance as convoys pass. Such devices are discovered almost daily around this city of 5 million people. The presence of improvised bombs marks a new and dan gerous tactic in Iraqi resistance against the U.S. military occu pation. U.S. and Iraqi officials blame the resistance on rem nants of Saddam’s regime, which was toppled by the U.S.-led coalition in April. In the Tikrit area, U.S. troops came under fire twice early Wednesday but suffered no casualties, according to Mtij. Hbshlyn Abdrte, woman for the - 4th Infantry Division. U.S. troops called in an AC-130 gunship after seven draqis attacked an oil pumping (Station near Balad, just south |of Tikrit. At least one Iraqi % TURKEY •f* Mosul A bomb exploded in a sex-film theater, killing two and wounding seven. Mosul Beiji SYRIA JORDAM -- Around Tikrit ' U.S. troops aborted two ambushes and clashed with anti- American forces. Nine Iraqis were killed. • Tikrit Baghdad O Bombing suspect arrested* -p? U.S. troops (arrested an Iraqi j 3 responsible for blowing up an oil pipeline near Beiji last week. h “Location of . ' arrest not known Bombings, attacks rattle Iraq Bomb blasts and ground clashes marked one of the bloodiest days of combat in weeks. U.S. troops also arrested an Iraqi suspected of sabotage _ «■ . . , IRAN Baghdad