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IMAM BADI ALI and others in North Carolina 
Remember 
KHALID MUHAMMAD
By TIM WHITMIRE
Associated Press Writer
March 7, 2003, 2:20 AM EST
GREENSBORO, N.C. -- North Carolina A&T University 
has long been famed for the 
students who began the civil rights sit-in 
movement in 1960, and for 
distinguished alumni including the Rev. Jesse 
Jackson and Challenger 
astronaut Ronald McNair.
But another graduate -- suspected 
Sept. 11 
mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed 
-- has now brought unwelcome attention to this 
city of 210,000, where about 
1,000 Arab-Americans are fighting speculation 
that Greensboro was a terrorism 
seedbed.
Mohammed, who A&T officials said graduated in 
1986, is one of three men 
accused of terrorist activities who studied in 
North Carolina and were active 
in Greensboro's small Arab-American community in 
the 1980s.
Sami Al-Arian, who studied at North Carolina 
State University in Raleigh, is 
a former University of South Florida professor 
arrested last month with seven 
others on charges they operated a terrorist cell 
at the Florida school and 
funneled support to the 
Palestinian 
Islamic Jihad.
His brother-in-law, Mazen Al-Najjar, who spent 
more than 3 1/2 years in 
prison on secret evidence linking him to 
terrorists before he was deported 
last year, also studied at North Carolina A&T. He 
graduated before Mohammed 
arrived at the historically black school in 1984.
A&T officials say the alleged terrorist 
activities of Al-Najjar and Mohammed 
are not a reflection on the school.
"North Carolina A&T has graduated over 40,000 
alumni who are all over the 
world making significant contributions," said 
spokeswoman Mable Scott. "It's 
our mission to provide the best academic 
education possible, and we hope and 
pray our graduates do the best thing when they 
leave the university."
Prominent members of the city's Arab community 
vehemently deny Al-Najjar and 
Al-Arian are terrorists.
"I know these guys," said Wajeh Muhammad, a 
Greensboro businessman and 
treasurer for the Islamic Center of the Triad. "I 
ate with them. I know each 
and every one of" the eight arrested in Florida.
Mohammed was arrested Saturday in 
Pakistan. 
U.S. officials have said he is 
al-Qaida's No. 3 official and that he is believed 
to have plotted the Sept. 
11 attacks in New York and Washington, as well as 
the bombing of a synagogue 
in Tunisia, a planned bombing of airplanes over 
the Pacific Ocean and other 
attacks.
Muhammad and Badi Ali, head of the Islamic 
center, said Mohammed was not part 
of their circle of friends.
"I cannot say that I really knew him," Ali said. 
"I knew of him. He was 
quiet, likable, always smiling, deeply 
spiritual."
Still, he doubts U.S. government claims about 
Mohammed. "Every time the 
American authorities are talking about the arrest 
of an alleged al-Qaida 
member, they accuse him of everything. 'He is the 
brain. He is the 
mastermind,'" Ali said. "How many right-hand men 
did Osama bin Laden have?"
Muhammad also said the alleged Sept. 11 
mastermind was not overtly political 
during his time in Greensboro.
"Did Khalid show any leadership qualities then? 
No," he said. "He was someone 
who will tell you a joke. He will make you 
laugh."
He speculated Mohammed may have changed when he went to 
Afghanistan 
late in the 1980s to fight the Soviet occupation. It is 
there investigators believe 
Mohammed met bin Laden.
Muhammad and Ali both said they have been 
interviewed by federal agents since 
the September 2001 attacks. North Carolina FBI 
officials declined to comment 
this week on any ongoing investigation in 
connection with Mohammed or 
Greensboro's Arab community.
The men said there were hundreds of Arabs in 
Greensboro in the 1980s, and 
that the community was comprised primarily of 
Kuwaitis whose engineering 
studies were subsidized by a government that 
desperately needed engineering 
expertise.
"The money was coming from the oil-rich 
countries," said Kenneth Murray, now 
interim dean of graduate studies at A&T. As an 
engineering professor at Old 
Dominion University and A&T during the 1980s, 
Murray worked closely with many 
foreign students.
"Engineering really is a bootstrap type of 
industry," he said. "If you can 
get a bunch of engineers in, you can really raise 
the standard of living 
quickly."
Scott said when Mohammed graduated there were 283 
foreign students out of 
A&T's total student body of 5,865.
Muhammad and Ali, both now in their early 40s, 
said in the 1980s, members of 
the Arab student community gathered for prayers 
and food on Friday evenings 
and to play soccer on the weekends.
"It was like an angel's society," Ali said. 
"People used to love each other, 
care for each other. If someone actually 
graduated from school and went home, 
before he went he would give his belongings to 
the other students -- his 
furniture, his car." 
Ali said the group was far from a breeding ground 
for terrorists.
"Like any (student) group, we discussed 
politics," he added. "And we 
discussed the best way to make pizza."
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2003-03-10 Mon 12:17ct