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Columbia Teacher Comments Irk Some
ISSUE 62
FRONT PAGE
Feature
Somalia and Survival in the Shadow of the Global Economy - Part 5
Headlines
Hargeysa Mayor Orders Payment of Subsidies for Maandeeq

Funding Somaliland's Poll

Continuity Or Change In Somaliland?

Health
Drug - The Double Edged Knife (Part 2)
Culture
Sahra Siyad: The First Lady of Song
Editorial & Opinion
War May Render Iraq Ungovernable

Flawed Election Might Derail Recognition

Kulmiye is winning; A true President is waiting in the wings

Why We Shouldn’t Elect Rayale Kahin As President

Consider Other Things $75 Billion Can Do

Peace Talks
Women Peace Delegates Lobby For Their Rights

Rocky Road to Peace

International News
Marines Recover Bodies Of Slain Comrades

Ex-Wife Of Former POW In Somalia Recalls What It Was Like

Saudi Arabia Donates Dates To WFP For Somali And Sudanese

Columbia Teacher Comments Irk Some

Amnesty International Condemns 'Safe Haven' Scheme

UK Defends New Asylum Proposals

Out Of Africa, On To A Fresh Start


NEW YORK, March 28, 2003 (AP) - A Columbia University professor told an anti-war gathering that he would like to see "a million Mogadishus" - referring to the 1993 ambush in Somalia that killed 18 American servicemen. 

At Wednesday night's "teach-in" on the Columbia campus, Nicholas De Genova also called for the defeat of U.S. forces in Iraq and said, "The only true heroes are those who find ways that help defeat the U.S. military." And he asserted that Americans who call themselves "patriots" are white supremacists. 

De Genova's comments about defeating the United States in Iraq were cheered by the crowd of 3,000, Newsday reported. But his mention of the Somali ambush - "I personally would like to see a million Mogadishus" - was largely met with silence.

A call Friday to De Genova, 35, an assistant professor of anthropology, was answered with a recording that said his voice mailbox was full. 

Columbia spokesman Joe Kennedy said the university was preparing a statement about the event. 

History professor Eric Foner, who helped organize the teach-in and spoke after De Genova, said Friday, "I disagreed strongly and I said so. If I had known what he was going to say I would have been reluctant to have him speak." 

He said De Genova was a last-minute invitee, was just one of about 25 speakers and "did not represent the general tone of the event, which was highly educational." 

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