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If that does- match up to their its t Get Enough ofy« atience to apprecife, te as the perfect id I n the bright s/de, //is| er siblings sticky fm- -Nishi Fatima By Mark Fritz THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PITHAVE, Afghanistan — A Soviet bullet entered his skull behind the left ear and exited via the nearest eye socket, leaving nothing but lid. Two decades later, a permanently winking Maj. Mulla Naimatullah beams with pride when his command ing general tells this story. Then there is Col. Talib Hayatallah, who literally ate it Taliban slug. It crashed into his mouth and pulverized every tooth on the left side of his (ace before bursting out his cheek bone. He, too, smiles in satisfac tion about the flesh-and-bone medal of valor. These are America's allies in the south-central Afghan precinct of the worldwide war on terrorism, just two of the 220 men who recently began an open-ended mission to hunt for Taliban fighters who have gained a foothold back inside the country. The United States toppled the ’s darkly repressive regime in 2001, payment for harboring the headquarters of Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida terror group, which pulled off the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. The Bush administration's plan to rebuild this Texas-sized place includes the creation of a new national army and the dis arming of a veritable army of warlord militias — including the relatively elite 1818 Advanced Special Operations, an oft- ambushed intelligence task force to which Naimatullah and Hayatallah belong. U.N. teams plan to begin the disarmament program on Oct. 18, offering cash for weapons. But few expect much coopera tion from the warlords who have bankrolled their own armies to fight 23 years worth of wars in Afghanistan. To the commanding officers of this unit — run by the secular ruler of southern Kandahar Province and various other regional Sunni Muslims — the disarming idea triggers more perplexity than anger. “We're fighting the Taliban and they want us to disarm?” asked the hulking Gen. Atta Mohammad, director of Kandahar Special Forces and leader of this patrol, which con sists of 20 commanding officers NEWS IN BRIEF of other units, each with 10 of their own hand-picked men. Their mission, is to patrol the rugged and isolated area that forms the apex of three hot provinces: Zabol, Kandahar and Uruzgan. Scores of aid workers and others affiliated with the Western presence in Afghanistan have been murdered in recent weeks in the region. The guerrillas, shrouded in robes over their camouflage fatigues, traveled in 10 light pickups and two larger trucks filled with fuel, spare tires and other supplies. They were on a loosely planned mission to fly the flag for the isolated, impres sionable people of the flyspeck villages that are often hideaways for the Taliban — a term that has been loosely used of late to include any enemy of the U.S.- backed central government. The Afghan government is try ing to rein in warlords who con trol most of the countryside while it builds an entirely new army, which so far numbers only about 5,000. The militias are proving difficult to control, and even those who support the post-Taliban gov ernment have waged war with each other over local disputes. Government rolls out new vehicle safety test WASHINGTON (AP) — After years of using a dry, mathematical formula to predict rollover risk, the government is adding a wheel-squealing road tesl intended to give consumers more information about a vehicle’s handling capabilities. Automakers say the road test will reward the best-handling vehicles in each class by highlight ing performance measures the formula could not assess.One example is stability control, a system tet applies brakes to specific tires and deceler ates if it senses a driver is veering off course. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the government’s auto safety is considering two different road tests announce its decision Tuesday at its test facility in Ohio. In the future, the govern ment’s five-star rating system for rollover risk will factor in both road tests results and the mathematical approach. Oldest American dies in sleep at age 114 TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Elena Slough, docu mented as the nation’s oldest person, -died Sunday at the nursing home where her daugh ter died three days before. She was 114. Slough died in her sleep at the Victoria Manor Nursing Home, where she and her 90-year-old daughter, Wanda Allen, lived, according to Judy Moudy, a supervisor at the Lower Township facility. Slough lived through 21 presidents and seven U.S. wars. ■ * ONLY SUPERSTAR ATHLETES SHOULD COME OUT OF RETIREMENT. There’s nothing romantic about lacing up the wingtips for your big comeback. An SRA is an economical, tax-deferred way to ensure you don’t run out of retirement savings. Contact us before you decide to hang it up. TIAA-CREF.org or call 800.842.2776 Managing money for people with other things to think about. RETIREMENT I INSURANCE I MUTUAL FUNDS I COLLEGE SAVINGS I TRUSTS I INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc. and Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc. distribute securities products. For information and prospectuses, call (877) 518-9161. 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