2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 23, 2002 NATION/WORLD I'A Palestinian open JERUSALEM (AP) - A Palestin- west Jerusalem's busiest streets. ian gunman fired on Israelis waiting at "You can certainly expect an Israeli a Jerusalem bus stop yesterday, fatally reaction," said Israeli government wounding two people and injuiring 14 spokesman Avi Pazner. "Israel has done others. Israeli commandos hours earli- very little until now. Apparently this er stormed an explosives lab and killed was not strong enough Medicine and four Islamic militants in the West maybe a strong reaction is needed." Bank. But Ahmed Abdel Rahman, the. The violence provoked outrage and Palestinian Cabinet secretary, said ] warnings of retaliation on both sides. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon Mideast tensions are again surging "has to blame himself for pushing the after several weeks of relative calm, Palestinians to react against this con- with the Israelis effectively keeping tinuous aggression." t Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat under In the Jerusalem shooting, a Pales- house arrest at his West Bank govern- tinian gunman opened fire with an ment compound, and militant Pales- assault rifle on Israelis waiting in the tinians abandoning an informal truce. rain for a bus and walking along one The Israelis said they launched yes- of the city's main arteries, Jaffa Street. terday's commando raid in the West Witness Akiva Harari said the Bank city of Nablus and other pre- attacker, wearing a heavy coat, emptive operations because Arafat emerged from a parking lot. "I saw repeatedly refused to act against mili- him shoot two women and they fell,"; tants. They also held Arafat responsi- he said. Police then chased the gun- ble for the shooting attack on one of man back into the parking lot, fol- s fire at bus stop "(Sharon) has to blame himself for pushing the Palestinians." - Ahme Abdel Rahman Palestinian Cabinet secretary NEWS IN BRIEF i lowed by several minutes of sporadic gunfire," Harari said. "The terrorist tried to run away, but after a short chase, police succeeded in hitting him and killed him," said Jerusalem police chief Mickey Levy. Sixteen people were shot. Two women later died of their wounds, while four others remained in serious condition. In addition, more than 20 people were treated for shock, police and rescue workers said. The gunman, Saeed Ramadan, was a member of the Al Aqsa Brigades, which is linked to Arafat's Fatah movement, said the man's uncle, Adnan Ramadan. The shooting was retaliation for last week's killing of an Al Aqsa Brigades' leader, sources in the group said. "We are at war," Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmert told Israel television after viewing the carnage. "This war is not taking place in some far-off battle- ground, but is happening here, at home, in shops, restaurants." Marwan Kanafani, a spokesman for Arafat, said yesterday on MSNBC that cycle of violence resulted from the "wicked policy of Sharon" and that the only way to stop the retaliatory attacks was for Sharon to talk to Arafat. WASHINGTON Rumsfeld deems treatment humane * Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, under fire from human rights groups, said yesterday the United States is treating foreign prisoners detained at Guan- tanamo Bay, Cuba, "humanely," and in accordance with Geneva Conventions. The prisoners, mostly suspected al-Qaida fighters flown to the U.S. military base in Cuba after being captured in Afghanistan, are being given treatment that's "proper, it's humane, it's appropriate, and it is fully consistent with interna- tional conventions," Rumsfeld said. As Rumsfeld spoke yesterday, American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh began his journey home from the war in Afghanistan to face charges he con- spired with Islamic radicals to kill fellow countrymen. Also yesterday, the Pentagon said another unmanned Predator spy plane crashed. The aircraft - at least the second Predator lost in the Afghan war - went down in Pakistan while returning to base. Rumsfeld said the United States has not decided if the detainees should be treated as prisoners of war, and for now calls them battlefield detainees. Rumsfeld said the Geneva Conventions call for so-called "unlawful combat- ants" to be treated humanely, and the United States military is treating them humanely. Mghan govt. officials receive pay KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ,- Afghanistan's civil servants were paid for the first time in six months yes- terday - an $8 million total payout that will virtually wipe out money earmarked for a U.N. start-up fund. Pressing ahead with its anti-terror struggle, mean- while, U.S military officials began bringing American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh home to face charges he conspired with Islamic radicals to kill fel- low countrymen while in Afghanistan. U.S. special forces and Afghan anti-Taliban fighters also staged a fruitless hunt for the Taliban supreme leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, in house-to-house searches during six hours through four villages in the southern province of Helmand, Afghan sources said. As Afghan officials turned to the work of rebuild- ing their country, interim Prime Minister Hamid Karzai urged the quick arrival of $4.5 billion in assis- tance that was pledged over the next several years at a conference of nearly 60 donor nations in Tokyo. "We are happy with the results of the conference," Karzai said. In a nod to concerns that the money would not reach Afghanistan's poor, Karzai pledged to be "a samurai against corruption." Not all were upbeat, however. The money promised was less than half the $10 billion over five years that U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan had hoped for. European Union representative Klaus-Peter Klaiber said the money pledged was a "rather miserable amount," compared to Afghanistan's needs. Abdul Qadeer Fitrat, acting governor of Afghanistan's central bank, said the pledges were "not enough to reconstruct Afghanistan." -LO-RD OlE lER-IN-GS Wednesday, January 23,1:08- 8:30 P.m. Presenter: Dr. Christopher Mitchell Chris Mitchell is director of the Wade Center at Wheaton College, Illinois, which houses a major research collection of the books and papers ofJ.R.R. Tolkien and others. An eight-week book club on "Lord of the Rings" willfollow this special presentation. Everyone is welcome and all events are FREE! For additional information, please call 248.374-5937. Vlriwxim Evangelical Presbyterian Chutrh 40000 Six Mile Rd: Northville - Just west of 1-275 . U ~ R ICH A RD G E R E LAURA LINNEY In Kabul, for civil servants owed months of back pay, the billions pledged in Tokyo were less a cause for rejoicing than yesterday's wage payments, which were less than $30 each. "I am very, very happy," said Finance Ministry employee Abdel Jami, clutching a thick stack of afghanis, the Afghan currency - his pay for the sec- ond half of December and the first half of January. The pay packet, disbursed from a start-up fund to help begin basic government operations, was 1.4 million afghanis, or $28, an average monthly government salary. The government has no money to pay back salaries yet, officials said. Some Afghan government employ- ees have not been paid in eight months, well before the Taliban government fell. Rabbans pr nesence stll felt, at ace KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - When Afghanistan's interim govern- ment was sworn in a month ago yes- terday, the ceremony included a symbolic departure from the presiden- tial palace by former President Burhanuddin Rabbani. But it turns out he didn't go far. Rabbani, who was Afghanistan's last leader before the Taliban took over, maintains spacious quarters in the palaceand turns up'almost every day. One Afghan official jokingly uses a Dari-language phrase, roughly trans- lated as someone who has unfurled his bedroll, to describe the ex-president's near-constant presence. Rabbani publicly professes loyalty to Afghanistan's new leader, Hamid Karzai, the head of Afghanistan's interim administration. Any time he spends in the palace is at Karzai's behest, he says,and he is only there to offer support and counsel. Some in Kabul, however, think Rabbani's hankering after his former digs underscores something that has been plain from the moment the Tal- iban fell: He believes he belongs in the seat of power. "It's up to the people of Afghanistan who they will choose as their leader," Rabbani said in an inter- view Monday with The Associated Press. "I struggled on behalf of Afghanistan, and the people are appreciative of this." White-bearded and clad in his cus- tomary black-and-gold turban, seated in an ornate chair with arms like those of a throne, the 62-year-old Rabbani has not lost his taste for the trappings of office. Aides address him as "Excellency." He calls himself "We." His residence, on a roped-off street in Kabul's most exclusive neighborhood, is guarded by a sizable contingent of northern alliance soldiers wielding Kalashnikov assault rifles - even though all armed men except the police have been ordered off the streets of the capital. "Of course I have to have my per- sonal guards," Rabbani said when asked about them - just after he had declared that all military groups except the national army should be abolished. "They are necessary for me. I have enemies, such as Osama bin Laden." Western diplomats in Kabul, trying to foster a peaceful transition to Afghanistan's next government when Karzai's six-month mandate expires, are keeping a close eye on Rabbani. Speaking privately, several said his WASHINGTON AOL sues Microsoft for harming Netscape AOL Time Warner sued Microsoft in federal court yesterday seeking damages for harm done to AOL's Netscape Internet browser, which had ruled computer desktops until Microsoft began giving its competing browser away. Many of Microsoft's business practices, including ones in which the com- pany encouraged computer manufacturers and Internet providers to distrib- ute its Web browser instead of Netscape, were found to be anticompetitive by a federal appeals court last year. AOL, which bought Netscape in 1999, wants Microsoft to cease its contested business practices and pay damages. AOL executive John Buckley noted that court ruling and said, "This action is an attempt to get justice in this matter." Jim Desler, a Microsoft spokesman, said the company had no immediate comment. AOL filed the lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Colum- bia. Under federal law, AOL would be entitled to triple any actual damages found by the court. 6 6 WASHINGTON Self control essential for offenders' release The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that states may keep violent sexual offenders locked up beyond their prison terms only if they prove that the offend- ers lack some self control. Justices, in a partial victory for Kansas, threw out a ruling in favor of a convicted sex predator because a jury did not consider whether he could stop himself from committing a new crime if allowed to go free. The high court said states have to address an inmate's lack of control. Jus- tices did not say specifically how that should be done. "It is irresponsible to leave the law in such a state of utter indeterminacy".Jus- tice Antonin Scalia, joined by Justice Clarence Thomas, wrote in a dissent. More than 1,200 sex offenders are confined in 19 states with laws resem- bling the 1994 Kansas statute at issue in this case. GOMA, Congo Volcano and quakes leave many homeless Thousands of Congolese lined up for water at a church and other points around this wrecked city yes- terday as relief agencies trucked in food and tents for some 90,000 peo- ple left homeless by a volcanic eruption. Aid workers were setting up water distribution systems and plan- ning to start delivering food today in Goma, where tens of thousands fled the streams of lava that cut through the lakeside city from Thursday's eruption of Mount Nyi- ragongo. "We are finally getting some momentum" on distributing aid, said Michael Despine, the head of the International Rescue Commit- tee's operation in Goma. Earthquakes related to the erup- tion continued to rattle the region yesterday. NEW YORK AT&TLrevokes 900 number services AT&T is bailing out of a major part of the pay-for-service telephone busi- ness, dealing a serious blow to psy- chics, sex lines and other companies that use 900 numbers. "This could be the final death knell for the 900 business," said Ed Lavergne, a Washington lawyer who has worked with the telecommunica- tions industry. AT&T stopped providing billing services for new 900 customers as of Jan. 1, and will discontinue billing for all such numbers on Dec. 31. The decision was primarily a financial one, said AT&T spokeswoman Jean Hurt. "The market has kind of changed," she said. But she acknowledged that the tawdry reputation of some 900 ser- vices and concerns about AT&T's image may have played a part. "I think that entered into it, probably." - 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. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- tions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Colle- giate 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.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. I 1 mt .1i WIK- .r t L sNiT~U mrITT m I GYI I VR A . 71RPr' aa V n v-y vww nvn a av n vn A A M P[[IN6ION THE MOTH MAN PROPH ECIES What do you see'" SCB[[N GEMS ANOlAI([SBR[ [NI[ARAINM[NI P81[S[HIA AK[SOR[[ENIERIAINM[NI PRDDCIlmIGAMARK PIO[LtNGIG[ I RICHARO [AffMRA IHN[Y 'Ih[EMOIHMAN PROH[cIES' WILE PAIION G[HA M[SSING OCINDA JENN[Y AND AAN DAI[S "11SHEILA JA[, n.A. PllPCIS(ICIIAHD HAIM JAMES MCOAIOW m"."IMNOAND 16111SVSAN "I'"' MAN ULIIEf AC E. HIMKORICHARH BOOV[R rNOPERFOMOyRBY, AS IMCEIIt AEI AIIIANNE IAUM RICHARD P WS IG. T IERRY A MClAY ""l(CllOM [ DOPUDtiGAR i GCCESI GARY GlD Si IN l" I 1 GA. AKEL SIIAi PG-13I"""" W" mQ A "I """" AOiv ...TERROR, SOME SEXUALITY LANGUAGE * www.themothmanlives.com SCREN O BASEiD ON T RAUE E VE.N6TS In Theaters January 25 th NEWS Nick Bunkley, Managing Editor EDITORS: David Enders, Lisa Koivu, Caitlin Nish, Jeremy W. Peters STAFF: Jeremy Berkowitz, Tyler Boersen, Ted Borden, Anna Clark, April Effort, Margaret Engoren, Michael Gazdecki, Rob Goodspeed, Rachel Green, Lisa Hoffman, Christopher Johnson, C. Price Jones, Elizabeth Kassab, Shabina S. Khatri, Kylene Kiang, Daniel Kim, Tomislav Ladika, Louie Meizlish, Jennifer Misthal, Jacquelyn Nixon, Shannon Pettypiece, Stephanie Schonholz, Karen Schwartz, Sarah Scott, Jordan Schrader, Maria Sprow,LKelly Trahan, Kara Wenzel CALENDAR: Lisa Koivu EDITORIAL Michael Grass, Nicholas Woomer, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Johanna Hanink, Aubrey Henretty, Manish Ralil STAFF: Howard Chung, Kevin Clune, Rachel Fisher, Seth Fisher, David Livshiz, Garrett Lee, Christopher Miller, Paul Neuman, Ari Paul, Zachary Peskowitz, Jess Piskor, Rachel Roth, Jim Secreto, Lauren Strayer, S. Nauman Syed CARTOONISTS: Sam Butler, Chip Cullen, Thomas Kujurgis COLUMNISTS: Peter Cunniffe, David Horn, Rebecca Isenberg, Steve Kyritz, Dustin J. Seibert, Josh Wickerham, Amer G. Zahr SPORTS Jon Schwartz, Managing Editor SENIOR EDITORS: Raphael Goodstein, Arun Gopal, Jeff Phillips, Joe Smith NIGHT EDITORS: Chris Burke, David Horn, Steve Jackson, Seth Klempner, J. Brady McCollough, Naweed Sikora STAFF: Rohit Bhave, Dan Bremmer, Eric Chan, Kareem Copeland, Josh Holman, Bob Hunt, Melanie Kebler, Shawn Kemp, Matt Kramer, Courtney Lewis, Kyle O'Neill, David Oxfeld, Charles Paradis, Swapnil Patel, Dan Rosen, Mike Rosen, Brian Schick, Brian Steere, Jim Weber ARTS Luke Smith, Lyle Henretty, Managing Editors EDITOR: Jeff Dickerson WEEKEND, ETC. 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