Nation & world briefing ANEW VAUDEVILLE devised by UP students & faculty THIS SHIP poSls SOMETHING NEW FOR THE PUBLIC MAY 30,324 JUNE 5,6,7*8PM*JUNE 1*2PM EXCLUSIVELY IN THE MAGNIFICENT THEATER viMVfcKSIl I . _ _ _ . . . . 4J tort* EMU 346-4363 riT v%SsHult Center 682-5000 THEATRE ™* UT Ticket Office Night of Shorn 346-419' Enter to win CASH! *100 • *50 • *25 UP Campus Cash On the Internet go to... www.pulseresearch.com/ dailyemerald The online reader survey is fast, fun and easy to do. Just type in the web address and answer the questions. Your opinion is extremely important to us. Winners will be selected from all survey respondents in a reader survey being conducted by paper. v English as usual Introduction to Ken Kesey ENG 199. CRN 42271.10:00-11:50 a.m. MUWH. Mark Chilton. JUNK Z.'5-Jl IKY 18 English in Summer 2003 SUMMER SESSION • JUNE 23-AUGUST 15 Register on DuckWeb now. Pick up a free summer catalog in Oregon Hall or at the UO bookstore. It has all the information you need to know about UO summer session, http://uosummer.uoregon.edu UNIVERSITY OF OREGON o diversity of Oreft0^ Iraqi doctors say rescue of Lynch was exaggerated Hugh Dellios and E.A. Torriero Chicago Tribune (KRT) NASIRIYAH, Iraq — Despite her pain and fear, Jessica Lynch sipped juice and ate biscuits under the watchful eye of Iraqi doctors and nurses who shielded her from thugs during her eight days of captivity in an Iraqi hospital in March. On her last night there, when she would hide beneath her sheets as the sounds of battle erupted, everyone at the hospital knew that the feared Iraqi Fedayecn fighters had fled by the time U.S. Special Forces troops arrived to rescue her. Nonetheless, over the next 24 hours, the world would be intro duced to Lynch as a plucky heroine who had “fiercely” fought off her Iraqi captors before being rescued in a daring raid by commandos who purportedly snatched her from the clutches of Saddam Hussein’s nastiest henchmen. Her limb frac tures were reported as “multiple gunshot wounds.” It was the stuff of legend, nour ished by myth. The story of Jessica Lynch is the tale of how a modern war icon is made, and perhaps how easily offi cials and journalists with different agendas accepted contradictory, self-serving versions of what hap pened to her. Seven weeks after her dramatic rescue marked a turning point in the public relations campaign of the Iraq war, a return to Nasiriyah raises questions about the telling of her story, and about the roles of the Pentagon and the U.S. news media in turning the petite 19-year-old Army private from West Virginia into the face of good battling evil in the Iraq war. The final story has not been told, and no one contests Lynch’s brav 1 He came to my car window at the stop sign. He screamed that if he saw me kissing a guy in his neighborhood again, he would kill me. He told me I was disgusting. When I saw my father at home I had to explain to him why I was crying. “Disgusting,” he said. Years later, my six-year-old cousin said to me, “My father says you’re disgusting.” I replied, “Your father’s wrong.” Join your local queer community at our Love-In Against Hate, a protest against the recent anti-gay sentiments expressed on our campus. This celebration of queer relationships and affection will be held Wednesday, May 28th from 11:00-1:00 in the EMU Amphitheater. Come support your queer friends. Allies, now is when we need you. 1 ery during a horrifying ordeal. But the Iraqi doctors who treated her tell a less Hollywood-ready version of her rescue: They say they worked hard to save her life, they deny reports that she was slapped by an Iraqi officer and they say there was no resistance when the U.S. forces raided the building. “The Americans were jumping over fences and running around,” said Hassan Hamoud, who lives nearby. “They could have walked into the hospital and no one would have stopped them.” The Pentagon insists it did not embellish the Lynch tale when it first announced the rescue at its Central Command headquarters in Doha, Qatar. But a few targeted whispers to reporters by anony mous U.S. officials —- about Lynch’s “to-the-death” gun battle before she was captured, her sup posed gunshot wounds and her mistreatment at the hospital — set the plate for a feast by televi sion networks and newspapers that could not resist such a made for-TV plot. “I recognized the pattern: She was being made into an important sym bol,” said Robert I vie, an expert in communication, culture and the rhetoric of war at Indiana Universi ty. “She stood for the narrative that the Bush administration was telling.” Ultimately, Lynch may not be able help sort out the real story: Doctors say she has lost her memory, at least about the incidents that put her into the Iraqi hospital. For the past several weeks, British and Canadian journalists have been casting doubts on the Pentagon’s version of the Lynch rescue. An intensely skeptical tele vision documentary aired last week by the British Broadcasting Corp. PHOTO I SPECIALS] MAY 26 - JUNE 1 2ND SET FREE! 3x5 prints: 12 exp $2.25 24 exp $4.25 36 exp $6.25 4x6 prints: 12 exp $3.25 24 exp $6.25 36 exp $8.25 From"35rmTC 41 full frame, c oloi; film. !l ’attotic. /1tlMrame, 20% OFF APS PROCESSING: 1 5 exp. (one set) $4.40 25 exp. (one set) $6.66 40 exp. (one set) $9.40 Allow 1-■',?(%; foi APS ■ |.!io. i- Go:.'-., A matte finis! i. • • FUJICOLOR IMHiHIIMH UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE www.uobookstore.com alleged that the affair was, in the words of the presenter, “one of the most stunning pieces of news man agement yet conceived.” Pentagon officials say any sugges tion that the Lynch rescue was con cocted, or that U.S. commanders would send troops into the path of danger solely for a publicity stunt, is “ridiculous.” They blame any exag gerations on the media. In its handling of the story, the Pentagon was taking its cues from the White House, which had dis patched a former Bush election campaign official to the GENTGOM base in Doha to manage the daily briefings to 700 journalists at a me dia center with a specially built, $250,000 stage. Lynch’s April 1 rescue came at a critical time. Field commanders were expressing surprise at the Iraqi resistance, and Lynch went missing during one of a number of ambush es that gave the impression that the U.S. advance was bogging down. That day’s newspaper front pages featured a disturbing story of how U.S. soldiers wiped out an entire Iraqi family at a road checkpoint. Just after midnight on April 2, GENTGOM summoned journalists back to the base and, after a several hour wait, informed them about the first successful rescue mission of an American POW since World War II. The next day — the drama en hanced by night-vision video footage shot by the rescue team -— Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks described the mission as “a classic operation, done by some of our nation’s finest war riors, who are dedicated to never leaving a comrade behind.” “There was not a firefight inside of the building, I will tell you, but there were firefights outside of the build ing, getting in and getting out,” Brooks said, describing how the hos pital had been converted into an Iraqi paramilitary base. Seven weeks later, the staff at Sad dam Hussein Hospital in Nasiriyah tell a much more subdued story about the dangers Lynch faced and how she was rescued. Harith al-Houssona, an Iraqi doc tor, said Iraqi soldiers brought Lynch into the hospital with a bro ken right arm, fractures of both legs, a dislocated right ankle and a finger-long gash in her head — all wounds he said were common in road accident victims. “There was never a bullet wound,” said al-Houssona, who operated on Lynch to install a metal plate in her leg. “It’s a myth if (someone said) there was.” The staff also dismiss as false a well-publicized story told by an Iraqi lawyer about how he had seen a dark-clad man slapping Lynch in her hospital bed. The lawyer, who claimed to have sneaked in and spoken to Lynch, was credited with saving Lynch’s life after alerting U.S. soldiers to her whereabouts. He has since been given asylum in the United States, a book contract and a job offer in Washington. “I never saw any strangers near Jes sica,” said Furat Hussein, one of the nurses. “She was never mistreated.” At the hospital, the doctors, nurses and drivers have not seen the dramatic reports about how Lynch was saved. They just wish for some acknowledgment of how they helped her. “Just a thank you,” said Hannoon, the second ambulance driver. “That would make us very happy.” © 2003, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune information Services.