2
Thursday, October 25, 2001
Anthrax Investigations Continue
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The FBI has
investigated 2,500 reports of possible
anthrax exposure but has found no links
yet between them and the Sept. 11
hijackings, bureau Director Robert
Mueller said Wednesday.
Telling the nation’s mayors of the chal
lenge facing his investigators, Mueller
said the FBI is responding to every report
of an anthrax attack even though the vast
majority are hoaxes or false alarms.
The largest investigation in FBI histo
ry now invokes more than 7,000 bureau
personnel - about one in four employ
ees - looking into the hijackings and the
subsequent anthrax attacks. Much is still
to be learned about the bioterrorism
assaults, which have produced a growing
number of anthrax cases.
“At this point, it is not clear if the few
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The APPLES Service-Learning Program
Looking for a course? Interested in service?
If so, APPLES WANTS YOU!
These Spring 2001 courses have a service-learning component, giving
you the opportunity to volunteer 3-5 hours per week in a community
nonprofit organization.
ARMY 6E: Leadership in the 21st Century Abbott, Section 1
BUSI100: Business Communication Tisdale, Sections4&s
COMM 123: Organizational Communication May, Section 1
EDUCIOO: Adult Literacy, Learning, and Teaching Sikes
GEOGI46: Health Geography Gesler
GEOLI6: Prehistoric Life Carter, Section 1, Lab 401, Lab 402
JOMCI32: PR Writing 4 Sections
PSYC 80: Behavior Disorders Snyder, Section S
PSYCIO4: Autism Williams, Section 1
PUPA 160: Race, Poverty, Public Policy Schwartz
SOCI128: Sociology of the Arts Blau, Section 1
SOWO180: Advocacy Strategies for Change Staff, Section 1
SPAN 3: Intermediate Spanish Tolman, Section 14
SPAN 50A: Advanced Grammar and Composition Lindquist, Section 1
For more information contact Jenny Huq at 962-0902 or
apples@unc.edu or stop by the APPLES office, Suite 108 Union.
Western Opera Theater's
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memorial hall, unc-ck
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confirmed anthrax exposures were moti
vated by organized terrorism,” Mueller
said in a speech to the U.S. Conference
of Mayors. “But these attacks were clear
ly meant to terrorize a country already
on the edge. We’re responding swiftly to
each and every incident.”
In an interview with the Associated
Press, Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said the
anthrax spores that killed two postal work
ers were so small and finely milled that
they suggest “more than a casual scientist”
is behind the attacks through the mail.
Frist, who was a surgeon before
becoming a senator, predicted “there will
be more illness.” Whoever mailed the
anthrax-laced letters wanted to “person
alize the terror” by making Americans
fearful to open their mailboxes, he added.
Anthrax spores that spewed into the
air of a Capitol Hill office and a
Washington postal facility were
Carolina
union
performing
arts
series
2001-2002
january 28
ny gilbert & sullivan
players' h.m.s. pinafore
march 19
chanticleer
aprll 12
chamber music society
of lincoln center
april 25
gyuto monks
tibelan tantric choir
Carolina union
box office
919.962.1449
aerosolized - manipulated to a tiny size
and finely milled - in a very sophisti
cated manner, said Frist.
“The aerosolization of this product,
of the weapon itself, had never been
done before to the degree that it has,”
he said. “It suggests more than a casual
scientist is involved in its manufacture.”
“I would not use the word
weaponized,” he cautioned.
Regular masks will not protect postal
workers or anyone else from such small
bacteria, Frist said.
“The masks we use in surgery are no
good, that’s false security,” he said.
Even the better-filtered masks doctors
use around tuberculosis patients won’t
work, according to Frist.
New recommendations from the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention will advise the U.S. Postal
Service that several specially fitted respi
rators with spore-trapping filters can be
Field Hockey vs. Virginia
Thursday, Oct. 25 at 4pm
Francis E. Henry Stadium
First 100 students (with a UNC OneCard)
get a FREE Carolina Field Hockey T-shirt!
Hard Art sports shorts
Students <6 Faculty Admitted FREE w/ID!
breakfast * funcb • dinner
since 1988
free delivery to TIfNC
At M. StudcAt Stenct
tdt UNC 'H'Ack t*4.
4201 University ‘Drive, Durham
489-5/76 • www.safadeCia.com
Bull's Head Bookshoop in
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# Phone Calls From
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Friday October 26th
3:30 pm
Bullshead Bookshop
962-5060 • bullshead@store.unc.edu
News
used, and to offer the battery-operated
kind when workers can't be properly fit
ted with others.
go to dailytarheel.com
r n rfrtn‘ Trxlrnr fiHfl
Oat of Awkward issues a
By Joe Monaco
■
m ijftir n n i* Tuxmic
By Chris Gilfillan
Campus Calendar
Today
5 p.m. - The Association of English
Majors will host a peer advising session
in Gaskin Library of Greenlaw Hall.
5 p.m. - Come to a National
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People meeting in Union 226.
5:30 p.m. - Come to the Union
Cabaret to eat and talk about being
friends, couples, and hooking up. It is
sponsored by Living with Compassion
Initiative and the Carolina Union.
6 p.m. - Delta Sigma Theta sorori
ty will host an investment workshop with
the Investment Club in 8 Gardner Hall.
6 p.m. - BoUNCe Magazine,
Carolina’s humor magazine, is holding
an interest meeting in downstairs Lenoir.
6:30 p.m. - Anders Gylienhaal, the
senior vice president and executive editor
of the News & Observer, and Margaret
Blanchard of the journalism school will
lead a discussion on newspaper coverage
of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. It is spon
sored by the Society of Professional
Journalists and will be in 33 Carroll Hall.
7 p.m. - Come eat free Peppers pizza
Cqrrboro
(across from
Weaver St Market)
Durham
” (next to Francesca’s)
I of S2O or more I
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Carolina Men’s Basketball
Blue-White Game
Thursday, Oct. 25 at 7:3opm
Dean E. Smith Center
UNC students
Hard Art sports shorts
Students & Faculty Admitted FREE w/ID!
UNC Student's Pizza Headquarters
92Q*€X2,W6
Lunch, Dinner, Late Night
J* 1 -Topping Pizza
Medium i-Topping Pizza & 1 Coke
jjjf Small 2-Topping Pizza & 1 Coke
Ji Lio Wings, Breadstix O' s CSofce
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Su.n-Th.urß 3.lam-lam • Pri ©■ Sat llam-2am
We accept Master Card, Visa, American Express and UNC One Card
Batly (Ear HM
and watch “Battle of Algiers,” a film
about Algerian resistance to French rule.
Discuss terrorism, violence, gender and
nationalism. The event, sponsored by the
Association of English Majors in the
lounge on the second floor of Greenlaw.
7 p.m. - American Music Awards
Concert Tour, sponsored by Carolina
Athletic Association, is at Memorial
Hall. Tickets are free at the door. Two
students will win a trip to see the AMAs.
7 p.m. - “Beyond Myth & Tradition:
The world cries out for the end of con
flict.” A half-hour video followed by dia
logue is sponsored by the Association for
India's Development in 203 Dey Hall.
10 p.m. - Bloody Bob’s Halloween
Bash, Habitat for Humanity’s fall fund
raiser organized with Pi Lambda Phi and
Delta Zeta, is at Pantana Bob’s. Those
under 21 should arrive before midnight.
Tickets and T-shirts are sls in the Pit
(Eljr Saily (Ear Hcrl
P.O. Box 3257. Chapel Hill. NC 27515
Katie Hunter. Editor. 962-4086
Advertising & Business. 962-1163
News, Features, Sports. 962-0245
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