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Show 2 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2. 2001 THE DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE n V.7$$i;; i J People think it's some scantily clad woman ..who jumps out of a birthday cake, or runs d at restaurants. around J half-nake- CASSANDRA RUST, DANCE INSTRUCTOR CHRONICLE NEWS EDITOR JARtO WHITLCY JWHlTLEYCHRON!CLE.UTAH.EDU CHRONICLE WIRE EDITOR SHEENA MCFARLANO SMCfARLANDtCHRONlCLE.UTAH.EDU ON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT BELLY DANCERS OCTOBER 2 !$ hosting a UsterJrvj Lounge party with free food, CDs, posters and passes to the new club Powerpiant between 11:30 &jm. and 1230 p.m. on the fourth floor of the Union by the station. K-U- President Bush has approved to plans help groups inside Afghanistan that the Taliban militia and oppose to aid Afghan refugees fleeing to neighboring the war on terrorism. He spoke at a ceremony honoring Army Gen. Henry Shelton, who is retiring as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. As part of the repositioning of U.S. forces, the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk left its base near Tokyo, Monday. Navy spokesman Hidcmi Nagao said the carrier was participating in the campaign against terrorists, but declined to elaborate and WASHINGTON terrorist-harborin- g Pakistan, U.S. officials said Monday. The government also plans to announce later in the week the reopening of Washington's Reagan National Airport, the only airport still closed after the Sept. n terror attacks, said a senior administration official. The airport, close to many national landmarks, will reopen under vastly tightened security, including limits on flights and requiring armed air marshals on those flights, said the official, r peaking on condition of anonymity. Nearly three weeks after the devastating attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani appealed to the world community not to give in to terrori- would not say where it was going. The Kitty Hawk had steamed out of Yokosuka Sept. 21 on an undisclosed mission but returned Sunday. On Monday, administration officials said Bush has approved new relief aid to prevent unrest in Pakistan as thousands of refugees flee Afghanistan. The New York Times reported that the package would amount to $100 million, but White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said the dollar figure was still uncertain. Bush approved a plan to provide covert aid to groups operating inside Afghanistan, administration officials said. sm. "The United States must hold accountable any country that supports or condones terrorism, or you will fail in your primary mission as peacekeepers," Giuliani told representatives from more than 150 countries. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, meanwhile, declared America's armed forces ready for anti-Talib- The Taliban has been harboring Saudi-bor- n Osama bin Laden, whom the United States suspects of masterminding the terror attacks. Fleischer declined to say which groups would receive U.S. support. "The purpose of the mission is to eliminate those who harbor terrorists...We will work with a variety of people, all of whom have an interest in establishing an Afghanistan that is peaceful and does not practice terrorism," Fleischer said. He said the administration was not interested in putting any particular government in power. As to reopening Reagan National Airport, Fleischer said the president "is very hopeful that action can be taken that finds the right balance between the livelihoods involved" and security concerns. Earlier, Attorney General John Ashcroft warned of a very serious threat of additional assaults and the administration has rejected the latest overture by the Taliban government in Afghanistan. A Taliban envoy said discussions might be possible to ease the impasse over bin Laden if the United States offers evidence linking him to the Sept. 11 attacks in New York and at the Pentagon. . White House chief of staff Andrew Card said on "Fox News Sunday": "They've got to turn not only Osama bin Laden over but all the operatives of the organization" that bin Laden The Women's Resource of Seeds of Violence 2001, Allies in Healing: Breaking Down Barriers, Building Our Lives. The session, titled "Violence Against Women: A Cross Cultural Perspective" takes place at noon in Union 293. The physics department is hosting a colloquium titled "Using Supercomputers to Collspss Gravitational Waves, Collide Black Holes (and Study Other Cataclysms)" at 4 p.m. in Room 102 of Fletcher Building. Refreshments will be served at 330 p.m. The Union Free Film Series is hosting a itm screening of Tha Blues Brothers" at 8 da runs." p.m. in UTAH in CITY-Dres- scd bearing images of a revolver and a dove, about a dozen people gathered at the edge of Great Salt Lake on Utah's fourth annual Peace Day Sunday. They collected a sample of the salty water and join in prayer. The alliance members put on jogging shoes and ran 17 miles to the International Peace Gardens in Salt Lake City. They poured the lake water symbolic of the tears shed over violence into a gourd they carried to the park, where about 100 people joined the celebration and memorial for Mohandas Gandhi, India's pacifist statesman born on Oct. 2, 132 years ago. SALT LAKE CITY- -A growing number of educators arc reaching retirement age at the same time the state is expecting a hefty increase in student population numbers. In accordance with the current national trend, one in five of the state's teachers will be eligible for early retirement by 2005, according to the Utah Educator Supply and Demand Report produced by Utah State University. "Much of our teacher population is in its last five to 10 years of service," said Phyllis Sorcnscn, president of the Utah Education Association. "That's certainly a large number that arc getting close to baby-boom- er " UNIVERSITY WEATHER TUESDAY: SUNNY AND 7855 PLEASANtD 7651 7549 KDIESBM: SUNNY THUISDW: SUNNY FISDAY: PARTLY CLOUDY 7350 SATURDAY: SUNNY 7448 Courtesy Chris Jordan, www.mft.utah.edujimsteenams . the Union Theater. if Citizens Celebrate Retiring Teachers U.N. Says 'Global Supreme Court Annual Peace Day Create Shortage Unity' Won't Fade Suspends Clinton SALT LAKF Cen- ter is hosting a session Did You Know... The Union desk stamps fliers you want to hang up around campus advertising events, contests, etc. Fliers without date stamps arc taken down. You can get fliers n stamped any time, but the dates arc the 7th and 22nd of UNITED NATIONS New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani urged the United Nations on Monday to hold any country that supports terrorism accountable. And U.N. chief Kofi Annan said the global unity displayed after the attacks on the United States must not fade. "Unanimously, we must say we will not give in to terrorism," Giuliani said in an impassioned speech before the U.N. debate on start of a week-lon- g international terrorism that will hear the views of more than 150 countries. If the world's nations do not stand together in the fight against terrorism, the mayor said, terrorists will succeed in destroying freedom, democracy and the principles of the United Nations. "This is not a time for further study or vague directives," he said. "The evidence of terrorism, brutality and inhumanity is lying beneath the rubble of the World Trade Center less than two miles from where we meet today." The meeting is the first global forum on terrorism since the Sept 11 attacks. Cels The RtputL'ccr.s re event at hasting; a ttck-ef- f 12:30 pjn. in the Hinckley , Caucus Room, Orson Spencer Hall 255. Refreshments will WASHINGTON The Supreme Court on Monday suspended former President Clinton from practicing law before the high court and gave him 40 days to say why he should not be permanently disbarred. The order likely means Clinton could not argue a case before the high court should he ever return to private law practice. Most lawyers who are admitted to the Supreme Court bar never actually argue a case, but the right to do so is considered an honor. The court did not explain its reasons, but Supreme Court disbarment often follows disbarment in lower courts. The court acted after it was notified by the Arkansas Supreme Court that Clinton's Arkansas law license was suspended for five years, and he paid a $25,000 fine. Clinton agreed to the Arkansas fine and suspension Jan. 19, the day before he left office, as part of an understanding with Independent Counsel Robert Ray to end the Monica Lewinsky be served. V:.' Tte CI from 330 to 5 initial" in Hell. p.m. Kingsbury OCTOBEO KUED is 5 hosting a free serf tnllng cf the Greit jPerri; fermcr.css FS3 t?zdd "lido Pzlz," a Hawaiian dance performance. A discussion with Holo Mai Pele participants and a Polynesian choral performances will follow. The event starts at 630 p.m. in the Union Theater. Please Mcl RSVP to 5S5-352- Refresh- 3. ments will be served. OCTOBER 0 The U Women's Club Is hasting a c;:r.erd mcstlng for cur- tear-dow- every month. The Middle East Center Is hosting Thomas Friedman, foreign affairs columnist for The New York Times. He will C&u'Icnsss cf speak on Pakistan Expects Car Bomb Hurts U.S. Attacks Soon Mid-EaTruce ' rent and prospective members at 1 p.m. at Red Butte Garden. st "sr -- r 111tt T1 THE s TT Jrn ui CHRONICLE 1 ' jus ii I 1 A y iRqc" CHRONICLE is an incicppndcM student newspaper published daily Monday through fnday during Tall and Spring semesters (excluding test weeks and holidays) and weekly during Summer Term. Chronicle editors and stall are University ol Utah students and are solely responsible lor the newspaper's conlenl funding comes Irom advertising revenues and a dedicated student tee administered by the Publications Council, Subscriptions must be prepaid Forward all subscription correspondence, including change ol address, to the Business Manager To respond with your gues-tmncomments or complaints call (801) 581 7041 or visit chronicle utah edu on the World Wide Web. THE DAILY UTAH Editor in Chief News Editor Sports Editor Feature Editor Opinion Editor RED Magazine Editor Photo Editor Production Manager MATT CANHAM mcanhamiichronicle utah JARED WHITLEY edu hilley(chronicle utah.edu ERIC "WALLY" WALDEN eaiden?chronicle Utah edu CASSANDRA HARTLEY chartlfychronicle utah edu LAURA B. WEISS lmschro:iicle utah edu KATHRYN COWLES kathrynred mag com JEREMY HARMON jharmonPchronicle utah edu DAVE HOWELL dhowell9chromcle utah edu MARK OGDEN mogdenchronicte utah edu Online Editor Business Manager ADAM WARD iwrdchronicle utah edu Accountant KAY ANDERSEN layPchronicle utah edu Advertising Manager JASON COOMBS jcoornbs(h(onicl utah edu Pakistan PakISLAMABAD, istan's president said Monday he believes the United States will launch a military strike against Afghanistan, after the Taliban's supreme leader told the Afghan people that "Americans don't have the courage to come here." Asked by the British Broadcasting Corp. if the Taliban's days are numbered, the Pakistani president, Gen. Pervcz Musharraf, replied: "It appears so." "It appears that the United States will take action in Afghanistan, and we have conveyed this to the Taliban," Musharraf told the BBC, referring to the Islamic militia that rules most of Afghanistan and refuses to hand over Osama bin Laden. He added that Pakistan had tried its best to head off a confrontation over bin Laden and the Saudi exile's lieutenants. car bomb explodresidential area of Jerusalem, causing no serious injury but damaging truce JERUSALEM- -A ed Monday in a Israeli-Palestini- an efforts. Islamic Jihad, a small militant Palestinian group, claimed responsibility for the blast, which left two bystanders lightly hurt by glass shards. Islamic Jihad and its larger sister group, Hamas, have said they would not honor a truce declared by both sides last week at the urging of the United States. Even before Monday's bomb, the cease-fir- e was shaky. The Palestinians have accused Israel of using excessive force, despite pledges that it would show restraint in dispersing Eighteen Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire in the past six days, including six boys age 17 and under who were shot dead while throwing stones at stone-thrower- s. OCTODERJOijll;; The College of Science is hosting a session cf its Tren- tiers cf Scfcnca t!:d "SI:; Our Specks Arcs? end Ccta-nlztha Earth" at 730 p.m. ed In the Skaggs Biology Build- ing. OCTOBER 11 The Clack Student Ur.!:n Is kicking eft with a fret ml- term lunch at 11:30 a.m. in Union 313. , The department of mining eng'neerhg is hosting a lec- ture titled "N: Dsvcr?;-r.:r.?- 3 h Ci!:rp"::r Cxesvit-- 'l rcr;.-r.- r V 3 Crc at 11:S0 a.m. r."j JLS3ITISXAL LUSTS CH |