2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 5, 2001 Cheney moved, Capitol evacuated NATION/WORLD I Actions are part of tightening D.C. security, N.Y. airports closed WASHINGTON (AP) - Two days after the worst terrorist attack in Ameri- can history, officials widened the secu- rity buffer around the White House, moved Vice President Dick Cheney to Camp David and closed New York's three airports to incoming flights. The Capitol was evacuated as well, lawmakers and aides streaming down the front steps in haste. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer declined to describe the reasons behind the change at the White House. Cheney's spokeswoman, Juleanna Glover, said the vice president had been moved as a "purely precautionary measure." The president remained in the White House, according to Fleischer. Federal Aviation Administration spokesman William Shumann said planes scheduled to flyto LaGuardia, Kennedy or Newark could not take off from their departing airports. He cited FBI activity as the reason. The Capitol was ordered evacuated during the middle of a Senate vote, and as lawmakers in the House were receiving a briefing from FBI and CIA officials about the terrorist attacks that hit New York and Washington on Tuesday. It was not clear whether the Capitol evacuation was connected to the other steps, since members of Con- gress said they had been told that police dogs had picked up suspicious scent inside the Capitol. In a further sign of concern, the Lin- coln Memorial and Jefferson Memori- al also were closed after being reopened earlier in the day for the first time since terrorist attacks earlier in the week. The events unfolded in a capital still reeling from the attacks that leveled the World Trade Center twin towers and left the Pentagon badly damaged - and as Bush was just beginning his efforts to marshal a worldwide cam- paign against terrorism. Fighting back tears, the president vowed earlier in the day to "lead the world to victory" in a struggle that he termed the first war of the 21st century. Secretary of State Colin Powell identified Osama bin Laden as the prime suspect in Tuesday's attacks. "There is a quiet anger in America," Bush said, adding he would travel tomorrow to- New York, site of the World Trade Center twin towers oblit- erated in fearsome attacks earlier in the week. Some 4,763 people were unaccount- ed for in New York, where terrorists on Tuesday flew hijacked jetliners full of fuel into first one tower and then the other. The death toll was likely to reach 190 at the Pentagon, which took a similar hit. The nation's anger rising as the death count climbed, Congress hastened to vote $20 billion as a first installment on recovery and anti-terrorism efforts. There also was discussion about pas- sage of legislation authorizing a military response to the attacks, although admin- istration officials made clear they believed the president already had the authority he needed. Two days after the terrorists hit, offi- cials said they believed there had been' 18 hijackers in all on four planes-one crashed in a field in Pennsylvania- and were pursuing thousands of leads in the investigation. NEWS IN BRIEF: Y HEA LINS FOMAROUND T EWORLD JERICHOWest Bank Israelis kill 3 Palestinians, wound 21 Israeli tanks and bulldozers shelled buildings and exchanged fire with Pales- tinian gunmen in the West Bank towns of Jenin and Jericho early yesterday, killing three Palestinians and wounding at least 21 others. The Israeli army said the latest incursions into Palestinian territory, which lasted several hours, were intended to "root out terror." Palestinians accused the government of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon of exploiting the world's preoccupation with terror attacks in the United States to escalate its military strikes. Amid the tensions, Secretary of State Colin Powell called Sharon and Pales- tinian leader Yasser Arafat late Wednesday. Arafat agreed to a Powell request that he meet as soon as possible with Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. Meanwhile, Peres said there was tentative agree- ment on a meeting for truce talks, but details were not yet finalized. The prospect of truce talks did not calm the highly charged atmosphere. Sharon compared Arafat to accused terrorist Osama bin Laden, a leading sus- pect in the attacks against the United States this week. "Everyone has his own bin Laden. Arafat is our bin Laden, Israel radio quot- ed Sharon as saying in his telephone conversation with Powell. SKOPJE, Macedonia Macedonian peace process moving slowly Macedonia's peace process inched forward yesterday, with NATO completing the second phase of weapons collection and parliament deflecting a move to put proposed concessions to ethnic Albanians to a referendum. Under the peace accord, ethnic Albanian rebels surrender their weapons to NATO troops in three separate batches. The completion of each phase is to coincide with the passage of new legisla- tion giving ethnic Albanians more rights, a key pillar of the effort to end the six- month-old conflict. Formally announcing the completion of phase two, Maj. Gen. Gunnar Lange, commander of NATO's arms-gathering mission, said he informed President Boris Trajkovski that more than two-thirds of the 3,300 weapons slated for col, lection had been handed over. "We hope we can continue with the momentum in this process," Lange said as he left parliament. NATO spokesman Mark Laity described yesterday as "another day of hope, another good day." AP PHOTO Secretary of State Colin Powell meets with reporters at the StateDepartment in Washington yesterday to discuss Tuesday's terrorist attacks. Powell identified Osama bin Laden as a prime suspect in the attacks. Pentagon promises sustained strikes Congregation! Seed of Abraham Zera Avraham A Messianic fewish Congregation Services Sabbath - Saturdays at 10 am a Rosh HaShana-Mon.9/17,7:30pm' Tues. 9/18,1Oam Yom Kippur - Wed. 9/26, 8pm Thurs. 9/27, 1 Oam Meeting at 3630 Plaza Drive in the Airport Plaza south of Briarwood WASHINGTON (AP) - The Unit- ed States will launch sustained mili- tary strikes against those behind the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington as well as their support systems, a senior Pentagon official said yesterday. In the most explicit description yet of the Bush administration's inten- tions, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said the military retaliation would continue until the roots of ter- rorism are destroyed. "One has to say it's not just simply a matter of capturing people and hold- ing them accountable, but removing the sanctuaries, removing the support systems, ending states who sponsor terrorism," he told a news conference in a Pentagon briefing room that still smelled of smoke and soot. Other defense officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the administration was considering options that included the use of air, sea and land forces over a lengthy period. They said it was clear the administra- tion would go ivell beyond the limited strikes of recent years against Iraq, Afghanistan and Sudan. "This is not going to be a short pro- gram," said Navy Secretary Gordon England. In comments at the White House, President Bush was less explicit about the military's role but emphatic that action would be taken in response toa attacks that he has called acts of war. "Now that war has been declared, we will lead the world to victory," Bush said. Wolfowitz made clear the adminis- tration is not thinking of a limited response. "One thing that is clear is you don't do it with just a single military strike, no matter how dramatic," he said. The Navy has two aircraft carrier battle groups - each with 75 war- planes aboard -- in the vicinity of the Arabian Sea, said Adm. Vern Clark, the chief of naval operations. That is twice the usual number for that part of tQe world. The USS Enterprise, which was due to return home after being relieved earlier this month by the USS Carl Vinson, has been ordered to remain in the area indefinitely. Those battle groups normally include cruisers and submarines, which could be used to launch long- range cruise missile strikes, perhaps as part of a prelude to attacks by manned aircraft such as B-2 stealth bombers or B-i Lancers. There were no indications yesterday of a buildup of American forces in the Middle East or elsewhere. Neither Wolfowitz nor other defense officials hinted at when the United States might begin military strikes. On Capitol Hill, some lawmakers urged the administration to gather more information about the perpetrators of Tuesday's attacks and their supporters. "This has got to be a very sophis- ticated inquiry," said Sen. Dick Lugar (R-Ind.) a senior member of the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee. Lugar was asked whether he beljevge the United $,tates should, launch a massive military response. "There's no way of being able to decide that prior to knowing how. extensive the harboring or aiding and abetting and organizing is," he said. "That is why I would counsel that we'd better know that before we begin sug- gesting particular tactics of retalia- tion." Wolfowitz would not discuss specif- ic military options. "We're going to keep after these people and the people who support them until this stops," he said. LOUISVILLE, Ky. Second person gets artificial heart A man was implanted with a self- contained artificial heart yesterday, becoming only the second patient in the world to receive the experi- mental device. Tom Christerson, 70, was resting comfortably at Jewish Hospital, spokeswoman Barbara Mackovic, said. The first implant was done at the same hospital in early July. "The patient is now recovering in the intensive care unit at Jewish Hospital," Abiomed Inc., the device's maker, said in a news release. The procedure on Christerson, of Central City, Ky., was performed by University of Louisville,,surgeons Laman Gray Jr. and Robert Dowl- ing, who also implanted an Abio- Cor artificial heart in the chest of Robert Tools on July 2. BAGHDAD, Iraq U.S. accused of attack in southern Iraq An official Iraqi news agency accused U.S. and British warplanes of dropping bombs in southern Iraq on yesterday - a claim denied by the Pen- tagon. The official Iraqi News Agency said an attack on villages in Wasit province, 115 miles south of Baghdad, caused no casualties, but "led to the destruction of several houses and the frightening of children and citizens." At the Pentagon, spokesman Navy Lt. Cmdr. Jeff Davis said the United States had not attacked Iraq. British officials did not immediately com- ment. U.S. and British planes started enforcing a "no-fly" zone in southern and northern Iraq following the 1991 Gulf War. Iraq disputes the legitimacy of the zones and regularly contests allied patrols by firing missiles and artillery guns. BEAUMONT, Texas Convicted killer still at large in Texas The FBI issued a nationwide alert yesterday for a convicted killer who remained at large for a second day after escaping from a Texas prison through.a hole he widened around a ceiling light fix- ture. Harold Laird, 26, was believed to be driving a pickup truck reported stolen shortly after he fled early Wednesday from the state prison near Beaumont, about 80 miles east of Houston. Inside the truck was a .22-caliber rifle and 500 rounds of ammunition. Authorities reported no sightings yesterday of Laird or the truck. "The inmate is extremely agile, cun- ning and persuasive," prison spokesman Larry Todd said. "He is probably desperate at this stage, and knowing that he is armed, we consider him very dangerous." - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Belle ving that Yeshua (Jesus) is The Promised Messiah Dr. Mark Kinzer, Congregational Leader For more information contact: Congregation Zera Avraham PO Box 2025, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106 734-663-3573 1Attacks will alte events i1 Mideast Los Angeles Times 0 r n fJ Itt iit[ m1w- F, rs The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-0552; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.etters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. p ~i ml h (.1.] ,1 w " , q-y JERUSALEM -The catastrophe that struck the United States this week will significantly shift the dynamics of war and peace in the Middle East, for good or for bad. Israelis and Palestinians, witnessing the extremes reached by terrorism on American soil, may find new impetus for ending their own carnage. Or, with attention riveted elsewhere, the bloodlet- ting here could escalate. The Israeli government believes its_ military and diplomatic hand is strengthened. Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat, aware of mounting anti-Arab sentiment through- out the West, sees his position weak- ened. Many here think he may be at a crossroads that will determine his own political relevance. With some people casting this con- flict as a clash of civilizations, Israel is eager to join what it sees as an emerging Western alliance against Islamic radical- ism. In official statements, commen- taries and radio broadcasts, Israel is attempting to tar the Palestinian Author- ity with the same brush as the terrorists who crashed hijacked'airplanes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. "Arafat is our Osama bin Laden," r _ s o .__X A:.--A ;A O nrnn +t 1A L' IMvIIvrnE L oimrr ueoTrrey uagnon, castor in curet A NEWS Nick Bunkley, Managing Editor EDITORS: David Enders, Lisa Koivu, Caitlin Nish, Jeremy W. Peters STAFF: David Baybik, Kristen Beaumont, Kay Bhagat, Ted Borden, Anna Clark, Lizzie Ehrle, Whitney Elliott, Rachel Green, Lisa Hoffman, Elizabeth Kassab, Shabina Khatri, Louie Meizlish. 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