2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 8, 2001 N ATION/W ORLD Indiana man fires shots outside White House; no one armed WASHINGTON (AP) - A middle-aged accoun- tant with a history of mental illness fired several shots outside the White House yesterday and then was shot by the Secret Service as he waved his hand- gun menacingly, authorities said. The tense, noon- time standoff sent tourists running for cover. The midday drama unfolded just outside the fence at the edge of the South Lawn, 200 yards from the building where President Bush was inside exercising. The man, wounded in the knee and hospitalized under guard, was identified by law enforcement sources as Robert W Pickett, 47, from Evansville, Ind. He had been fired by the Internal Revenue Service in the mid 1980s, and neighbors said he kept to himself, resented the IRS and was obsessed with West Point, where he had dropped out after a semester in 1972. Pickett had acknowledged in court records suffering from mental illness and trying to commit suicide. Bush, working out in the White House residence, was alerted by Secret Service agents "but understood that he was not in any danger," spokesman Ari Fleis- cher said. First lady Laura Bush was in Texas. Vice President Dick Cheney was working in his White House office. The shooting was the latest in a string of security scares that have brought tighter protection for U.S. presidents. In 1995, then-President Clinton ordered Pennsylvania Avenue closed in front of the White House following the Oklahoma City bombing. Earlier that year, a man was shot on the White House lawn after scaling a fence with an unloaded gun. The latest incident, shortly before noon on a sunny, springlike day, triggered a tight security clam- pdown. Tourists were evacuated from White House rooms, and police in riot gear took up positions around the executive mansion and beyond its gates. Dan Halpert, a tourist from Queens, N.Y., was on the National Mall nearby, when officers told him to get down and clear out. "We were all running away. It was scary," said Halpert. The confrontation occurred on E Street where tourists gather along the White House fence to snap photos of the executive mansion and hope for a glimpse of Bush jogging on the track encircling the South Lawn. There is an unobstructed view from the fence to the mansion. Secret Service officers on routine patrol in a car "heard shots fired and proceeded to surround a subject who was wielding a weapon, a gun," White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said. A 10-minute stand- off ensued in which witnesses said they heard officers try to persuade the man to put the gun down. "It doesn't have to be this way, put the gun down," one witness recalled police warning the suspect. "He was waving it in the air - it was pointed at the White House at one point - and pointing it in all directions," said Park Police spokesman Rob MacLean. At another point the man placed the gun in his mouth, MacLean said. Pickett was shot in the right knee by a member of the Secret Service's Emergency Response Team when he "raised the gun again and started aiming it at people," a Secret Service source said, talking on condition of anonymity. The officer fired from inside the White House compound, through the wrought- iron fence. NEWS IN BRIEF . WASHINGTON Race relations, AIDS offices won't close President Bush scrambled yesterday to defend his commitment to race rela- tions and helping people with AIDS after his chief of staff mistakenly said the offices devoted to those issues would be closed. White House officials insisted the chief of staff, Andrew Card, had been mis- informed when he told USA Today that the offices, both created by Presid1e- Clinton, would be shuttered. The officials said he plans to keep an AIDS office, although with a smaller staff, and to continue a focus on race relations with a Task Force on Uniting America that will not have its own office but will involve senior officials from several parts of the White House. The confusion marked the first significant stumble of a White House that has basked in mostly favorable reviews for its smooth and disciplined performance. Bush was confronted with the issue when he appeared on the South Lawn t 9:30 a.m. for a reunion of the "tax families" he uses to illustrate the benefits of his tax proposal. Against the photogenic backdrop of racially diverse families and their 20 children in their Sunday best, Bush was asked: "Mr. President, could you tell us how it is, sir, that your chief of staff didn't know what. your plans were for the Office of National AIDS Policy and the President's Initiative for O America?" WASH INGTON Clintons return items to White House Former President Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton returned about $28,000 worth of sofas, lamps, a needlepoint rug and other furnishings yesterday because of questions over whether the gifts were meant for them or the permanent White House collection..4 "As a result of the questions being asked, the property is being returned to ernment custody until such time that the issues can be resolved," said J McDaniel, the National Park Service's liaison to the White House. "It may'Well turn out that that property is rightly the personal property of the Clintons. I think those questions have yet to be resolved." After they were criticized for taking $190,000 worth of china, flatware, rugs, televisions, sofas and other gifts with them when they left, the Clintfis announced last week that they would pay for $86,000, or nearly half the amount. Their latest decision to send back $28,000 in gifts brings to $114,000 the value of items the Clintons have either decided to pay for, or return. McDaniel discussed the matter yesterday with Betty Monkman, the White House curator, and Gary Walters, the chief usher, or executive manager of the White House. Seeking a REWARDING SUMMER Job? \ a Sum er or Payment Is room & board plus stipend. ExTRA TIME ON YOUR HANDS? WRITE FOR THE DAILY. COME DOWN TO 420 MAYNARD OR CALL 76-DAILY. s Activate a Cingular Home'" plan with access of $29 and higher and get unlimited mobile to mobile calling and mobile to mobile messaging to any Cingular customer within your local calling area. t2$ 99 t$3949 Home Plan: 250 minutes 400 minutes 600 minutes Long Distance Included. Other Home plans are available. Offer available to new and existing customers. For more information or local delivery; call 1-866-CINGULAR. www.cngularcom JAKARTA, Indonesia Indonesian president delays impeachment Embattled Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid appeared yesterday to have shored up enough political sup- port to stave off an immediate impeach- ment hearing after military leaders said they would join the country's two largest political parties in supporting a lengthier, constitutionally outlined process to remove the president. The military's decision came as tens of thousands of Wahid's sup- porters in Surabaya, the country's second-largest city, briefly took over the parliament complex and burned down a building belonging to the former Golkar ruling party. The protest was the biggest show of support for Wahid since the politi- cal crisis erupted last month and it suggests that any effort to oust the president could lead to a new wave of violence across this Southeast Asian archipelago. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Atlantis to deliver space station piece Space shuttle Atlantis blasted off yesterday with the most expensive and pivotal piece of the international space station: a $1.4 billion science laborato- ry. Atlantis and its crew of five soared into a clear sky at 6:13 p.m. "We wish you luck as you deliver the heart and soul of the international space station - and have fun," launch director Mike Leinbach told the aitr* nauts moments before liftoff. The future of the space station, Alpha, is riding on the 11-day mission, three weeks late because of the need to inspect wiring on the shuttle's booster,. NASA's Destiny laboratory is the first of at least three research modules planned for the station. It is so expen- sive that the space agency could rnit afford to build a backup. If the lab damaged or destroyed in flight, t.ie space station will be set back for years. MIAMI - Mayor charged with battery of his wife. Mayor Joe Carollo was charged with battery and arrested yesterday for allegedly hitting his wife in the .heq with a teapot. Maria Ledon Carollo, 42, suffered a golf ball-size lump and bruise on'tlhe side of her head, according to police. Carollo, 45, was denied an emer- gency bond hearing on the misde- meanor charge and was to wait for Thursday's hearing in jail. "I see no reason to treat Mr. Carollo differently than anyone else,' saidir- cuit Judge Mark King Leban. If convicted, Carollo is unlikely o face the maximum penalty of a year in jail because he has no prior record. said spokesman Ed Griffith of the Miagi- Dade County State Attorney's Office. "This could go into a diversion porb- gram, with counseling and anger contiol classes to avoid escalation of violence t any time in the future," Griffith said:. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Nokia 5125 FREE Requires 2-year service commitment and $20 activaton fee. NOKIA cumTr PsFo"P Give her a ring this Valentine's Day I. 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PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-Q55,2 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764.0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. NEWS Nick Bunkley, Managing EdIitor EDITORS: David Enders, Usa Koivu, Caitlin Nish, Jeremy W. Peters STAFF: Kristen Beaumont, Anna Clark, Courtney Crimmins, Laura Deneau, Whitney Elliott, Jen Fish, Samantha Ganey, Jewel Gopwanr,, Ahmed Hamid, Lsa Hoffman. Elizabeth Kassab. Jane KruIl, Tovin Lapan, Hanna LoPatin, Susan Luth. Louie Meizlish, Jacquelyn Nixon, lames Restivo. Stephanie Schonholz. Nika Schulte, Karen Schwartz. Maria Sprow, Carrie Thorson, Jaimie Winkler. CALENDAR: Lindsey Alpert; GRAPHICS: Amanda Christianson, Scott Gordon. EDITORIAL Michael Grass, Nicholas Woomer, Editbr* ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Peter Cunniffe, Manish Raiji, Josh Wickerham STAFF: Ryan Slay. Kevin Clune, Sumon Dantiki, Rachel Fisher. Rob Goodspeed, Jessica Guerin, Justin Hamilton, Johanna Hanink. Aubrey Henretty, Henry Hyatt, Shabina Khatri, Fadi Kibiawi, Waj Syed. Ben Whetsel. CARTOONISTS: Dane Barnes. Aaron Brink, Chip Cullen, Thomas Kulgurgis. Jason Polan, COLUMNISTS: Emily Achenbaum. Gina Hamadey. David Horn. Chris Kula. Branden Sanz, Dustin Seibert, Mike Spahn. Amer Zahr. SPORTS Jon Schwartz, Managing Ed SENIOR EDITORS: Raphael Goodstein, Michael Kern, Joe Smith, Dan Williams NIGHT EDITORS: Kristen Fidh, Arun Gopal Steve Jackson, JeffPhillips. Ryan C. Moloney. BeNamin Singer.' STAFF: Rohit Bhave. Michael Bloom, Chris Burke. Kareem Copeland. David Den Herder. Chris Duprey. Mark Francescutti. Rhonda Gilmer Richard Haddad, David Horn, Nick Kacher, Adam Kaplan. Shawn Kemp. Albert Kim, Seth Klempner. Adam McQueen, Nathan Linsley, Peter Lund. James Mercier, Stephanie Often, Swapil Patel. David Roth, Naweed Sikora, Jeb Singer, Jim Weber.'"4 ARTS Ben Goldstein, Managing Edtor EDITORS: Jennifer Fogel, Robyn Melamed WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Jenni Glenn, Elizabeth Pensler SUBEDITORS: Lyle Henretty (Film), Jim Schiff (Fine/Performing Arts) ,Lisa Ralt (Books), Jeff Dickerson (TV/New Media). Luke Smith (Music). STAFF: Charity Atchison, Gautam Baksi. Matthew Barret, Ryan Blay. Leslie Boxer, Rob Brode, Christopher Cousin. Katie Den Bleyker, Kiran Divgla, Gabe Faun, Melissa Gollob, Matt Grandstaff, Joshua Gross, Christian Hoard, Chris Kula. Jenny Jeltes, Matt Manser, Willhelmina Mauritz, Sheila McClea. W. Jacad Melton, Shannon O'Sullivan, Bex Oxenburg, Darren Ringel, Dustin Sebert, Jacquelene Smith, Andy Taylor-Fabe, Kelly vile, John Uhl. PHOTO Louis Brown, Jessica Johnson, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: David Katz, Marjorie Marshall ARTS EDITOR: Abby RosenbaumI STAFF: Rachel Feierman, Tom Feldkamp. Sam Hollenshead, Jeff Hurvitz. Joyce Lee, Tom Un, Danny Moloshok, Brendan 0 Donnell. Brad Quinn, Brandon Sedloff, Khang Tran, Elie White, Alyssa Wood. ONLINE Kiran Divvela, Paul Wong, Managing Editors STAFF: Rachel Berger, Lisa Cencula. Dana M. Goldberg, Sommy Ko, Mark McKinstry vince Sust. CONSULTANTS: Toyin Akmnmusuru, Mike Bibik, Satadru Pramanik DISPLAY SALES Sarah Estella, Manager ASSOCIATE MANAGER: Brent Traidman STAFF: Matt Andrews. Jessica Cordero. Jacob Fenton, Julie Glaza, Jared Halajian. Jon Houtzer, Jennifer Kaczmarek, Kelie Kinney. famie .,,__ ,.- n.......,e..e.w... _- . n,.1- nn~n. - - - D - 10 1- - A - C ae 4( ii , 0 il