2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 7, 2001 NATION/WORLD Worker opens fire in Ind. actory GOSHEN, Ind. (AP) - A man returned to the factory where he worked after a dispute and opened fire yesterday, killing a co-worker and wounding six others, authorities said. A SWAT team later found the gunman dead inside the simulated-wood factory with an appar- ently self-inflicted gunshot wound. A shotgun was under his body. "All I'm aware of is there was a dispute, and he left the property and came back," Police Chief Terry Schollian said. The gunman had apparently just been fired or was about to be fired from the Nu-Wood Decorative Millwork, police said. His name and those of his victims were not immediate- ly released. Six people were wounded, the chief said. Most were "walking wounded," and one victim in critical condition was upgraded to serious condition late yesterday. As many as 35 were inside the plant at the time of the shootings, but most escaped unharmed, Schollian said. Earlier, the mayor and hospital administrators said they feared 30 to 35 people had been shot. One employee called police from inside the fac- tory to advise what route the SWAT team should use to enter the building, the chief said. Tammy Funderburk of nearby New Paris said she spoke briefly by cell phone with her 18-year- old son, who worked at the factory and escaped uninjured. "He saw the gunman coming and he had a big rifle," Funderburk said. "He saw the gunman shooting people and he ran out the back door as fast as he could." The shooting jolted this northern Indiana com- munity of 29,000 about 100 miles east of Chicago. AP PHOTO Paramedics tend to a shooting victim yesterday afternoon at the Nu-Wood Decorative Millwork plant in Goshen, Indiana. NEWS IN BRIEF HEADLINES FROM AROUND THE WORLD WASHINGTON Leahy, Daschle letters look identical A newly opened letter to Sen. Patrick Leahy contained suspected anthrax and handwriting that appear identical to an earlier letter to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, the FBI disclosed yesterday. With the letter and the powder undergoing laboratory analysis, "We hope to learn ... who did this and how they did it," said FBI official Van Harp. The suspected anthrax in the Leahy letter "appears to be consistent with that found in the letter sent to Senator Daschle," Harp said. The Leahy and Daschle letters state in part, "09-11-01 You can not stop us. We have this anthrax" and conclude, "Allah is great." It will take weeks to complete all testing, because "there is a finite amount of material in that letter" to Leahy, necessitating "a very cautious analytical approach," Harp, assistant director in charge of the FBI's Washington field office, said in a statement. The FBI posted photographs on its website that detailed Wednesday's open- ing of the Leahy letter at the Army's biodefense laboratory in Fort Detrick, Md. The first step in dealing with the Leahy letter was to cut a small opening in the envelope and use a machine to suck out the suspected anthrax. WASHINGTON Struggling economy sends mixed signa1s The number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits took the biggest plunge in 18 years in late November while orders to American factories in Octo- ber posted the first increase since May. Balanced against those government reports yesterday, the nation's retailers said the all-important holiday shopping season had gotten off to a disappointing start with sales below expectations. The lackluster sales reports from major retailers had a dampening effect on Wall Street in early trading with the Dow Jones industrial average struggling to hold on to strong gains posted over the past two sessions. The Dow closed above the 10,000-level on Wednesday for the first time since Sept. 5 based on investor optimism that the current recession, the first downturn in a decade, will be short-lived. The Commerce Department reported yesterday that factory orders rose by 7.1 percent in October following a 6.5 percent drop in September and a 0.1 percent decline in August. Orders for both durable and nondurable goods had not regis- Israel bombs police post in Gaza GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) - Israeli warplanes bombed a police post in Gaza early today, increasing pressure on Yasser Arafat to step up efforts to arrest suspected terrorists. At least 20 people were wounded, Palgstinian officials said. The renewed military action came hours after a crackdown by Arafat on Islamic militants met angry resis- tance in his own territory, as 1,500 Hamas supporters battled Palestinian riot police for hours outside the home of the group's leader. One Hamas supporter died in an exchange of fire. The Israeli army said in a statement that today's attack targeted the "Pales- tinian security apparatus that supports and aids terrorist operations. The army will continue its operations in order to defend the safety of Israeli citizens and soldiers." Two police buildings were com- pletely destroyed - one a police dormitory, the other office space, including that of a women's police division. Rescue workers used dogs to search the wreckage for anyone trapped. There were no reports of anyone being found. "This new Israeli crime came while the Palestinian police are exerting maximum efforts to safeguard securi- ty," a police statement said. Arafat says his forces have arrest- ed 180 militants since suicide bombers blew themselves up in Jerusalem and 1-laifa on Sunday, killing 25. But Israel accuses him of acting in bad faith, charging that those apprehended are low-level figures, not the real planners of attacks. At Shifa Hospital, doctors were treating at least 20 people injured in the strike, including 18 police and two civilians. Medical workers said the injuries did not appear to be life- threatening. In another Israeli response today, three army tanks entered the south- ern Gaza Strip town of Abssan dur- ing the night, witnesses said. Israeli soldiers searched 10 houses and arrested a number of people, leaving after about 90 minutes. Yesterday's protest involving Hamas supporters was a violent back- lash to an intensified roundup of Islamic militants ordered by Arafat. It came as a U.S. envoy and the Egyptian foreign minister shuttled between Israel and the Palestinian territories, trying to stop more than a year of Palestinian-Israeli clashes and bring about a truce. Arafat faces pressure from the United States and continued strikes by Israel if he fails. to stop militants who have carried out a wave of dead- "The president remains deeply concerned that Palestinian jails. are still built with bars in front with revolving doors at the back," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said. Palestinians insisted their efforts were sincere and for their own good. "The Americans did not impose anything on us," said West Bank security chief Jibril Rajoub. "We know exactly what our interests are and what our duty is." Arafat said yesterday that the United States had given him a list of 33 militants, and most of them had been arrested. He said his police were looking for the others. The United States has been trying to cool the Mideast conflict to keep it from interfering with its operation in Afghanistan. Since the Sept. 11 terror attacks on New York and Washington, Arafat has been trying to distance himself from Islamic mil- itants. Arafat met yesterday with U.S. peace envoy Anthony Zinni and Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher. Both diplomats also saw Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. Surgical accident numbers increase The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The number of surgical calamities in which a doctor operates on the wrong part of a patient's body, and occasionally on the wrong patient, appears to be increasing, according to the organization that accredits U.S: hospitals. Reports of "wrong-site surgery" have risen from 16 in 1998 to 58 this year, including 11 in the last month, accord- ing to the president of the Joint Com- mission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO). It is unknown whether this reflects a true increase in this most notorious type of surgical accident or simply more complete reporting of cases. About 80 percent of events cata- logued by JCAHO were reported voluntarily, with the balance com- ing from patient complaints and news reports. "I think it's real," said Dennis O'Leary, a physician who heads JCAHO, which accredits about 95 per- cent of the hospital beds in the United States. "If you look at the trend line, you see an increase in every single year" since 1995. The organization requests that hospitals thoroughly investigate each case of wrong-site surgery to determine the sequence of events leading to it. Although the reasons are many, the trend toward high- volume, same-day surgery appears partly to blame. "The preponderance of cases are in ambulatory surgery centers. I think patients are churning through these places" O'Leary said. "People are busy and patients are being put to sleep before there is an opportunity to verify who the patient is, what procedure is going to be performed and on what site." The mistakes include operations on the wrong finger, replacement of the wrong hip joint, fusion of the wrong spinal disk, cataract removal from the wrong eye and biopsy of the wrong side of the brain. A small number resulted in death. Some had serious consequences, such i tered an increase since May. WASH INGTON Bush's global trade authority increased In a victory for a wartime White House, the House narrowly approved legislation yesterday giving President Bush stronger authority to negotiate global trade deals. The vote was 215-214, and came after House Speaker Dennis Hastert made a forceful, last-minute plea for supporting a commander in chief who is leading the worldwide fight against terrorism. "This'Congress will either support our president who is fighting a coura- geous war on terrorism and redefining American world leadership or we will undercut this president at the worst possible time," said Hastert, (R-Ill). Shot back Rep. Charles Rangel, (D-N.Y.): "We'll fight on this floor but we'll salute the flag just like anybody else. To infer ... that we're not as patriotic as the next person is wrong." WASHINGTON Armed man arrested near White House Secret Service agents, operating on a heightened alert since Sept. 11, arrested a man concealing a large knife as they patrolled near White House gates early yesterday, officials said. The man, identified as William Thomas Duncan, led officers to a 1991 Dodge pickup, bearing Idaho license plates, where they said they found an assault rifle, an additional rifle with a scope, an armored vest, a Kevlar hel- met and a handgun. The assault rifle, described as an SKS with semiautomatic capacities similar to an AK-47 or M-16, was "in plain view" in the car, Secret Service spokesman Marc Connolly said. Connolly also said officers found 1,000 rounds of ammunition in the truck, as well as several knives and items that could be used in an explosive device. FREEHOLD, N.J. New Jersey teachers jailed for strike By midday yesterday, more than 160 striking teachers in well-to-do Middletown Township had been jailed for violating a back-to-work order. They are the first New Jersey teachers to be locked up in 23 years, and some 600 more could follow suit. It is the biggest mass jailing of strik- ing teachers since 1978, when 265 were locked up for 18 days in Bridge- port, Conn., according to National Education Association spokeswoman Darryl Figueroa. It is so busy at the courthouse that hearings have been.assigned to three judges. The teachers, who make an aver- age of $56,000 annually, are fight- ing a move to increase their health care premiums by up to $600 per person, per year. Currently, they pay $250. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 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 $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. 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