One hundred eleven years of editoriil freedom ,:4 40b t NEWS: 76-DAILY q* CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 Wwww~michigandally.com Tuesday January 8, 2002 Council supports detainee By Jacquelyn Nixon Daily Staff Reporter 0 Detained Ann Arbor Muslim leader Rabih Haddad gained the city's support yesterday evening after City Council members approved by a partisan 9-2 vote a resolution proposed by community members requesting due process and open hearings for his case. Haddad, co-founder of the Global Relief Foundation, an Islamic charity suspected to have terrorist ties, was arrested Dec. 14 by the Immigration and Naturalization Service for *an expired visa and is being held at the Mon- roe County Jail. An immigration judge denied Haddad bond at a Jan. 2 hearing because it was ruled that as the owner of a licensed hunting rifle, Haddad posed a threat to society. An appeal has been scheduled for Thursday. Councilman Christopher Easthope (D-5th Ward) said the city had an obligation to Resolutiorn requests kearinzgs for Rabik Haddad be open address and pass the resolution based on the needs of the community. "This resolution recognizes the concerns of our Islamic community," Easthope said. "That's not just an obligation of our federal government." In a presentation to the council, community members stressed that the handling of Had- dad's case had been "un-American" and con- trary to the fundamental values and liberties set forth by the U.S. Constitution. Phillis Engelbert, a representative from the Ann Arbor Ad Hoc Committee for Peace, said due process and equal protection for citi- zens were issues the city needed to stress to other government agencies. "This is Haddad's 25th day behind bars ... our 25th day of uncertainty of what America is becoming'" Engelbert said. "'We have before us a local issue with national implications." The terms of Haddad's arrest and detain- ment were also major concerns to community members, since Haddad's bond hearings had been closed to the public and media. Also in contention is the expiration of Haddad's visa, despite his application for permanent residen- cy in 2000. Human Rights Commission Chair Helen Fox, urged council members to make the pro- posed resolution personal - and to directly name Haddad. Councilwoman Jean Carlberg (D-3rd Ward) said although the United States is fighting terrorism outside of the country, it may be causing a different kind of terrorism within its borders. "The issue of terrorism effects everyone individually and personally," Carlberg said. "We are in a very difficult time in this coun- try:' And when human and civil rights for any member of this community are denied, "we lose ultimately' she said. Councilman Joseph Upton (R-2nd Ward) said he opposed the resolution because it should be dealt with on a federal level. But six-year councilwoman Cowing Her- rell (D-3rd Ward) could not agree. Herrell said when she joined the council she took an oath to uphold the Constitution. "A citizen has been denied due process... . I think it is directly our responsibility," Herrell said. JONATHON TRIEST/Daily Supporters of detained Muslim community leader Rablh Haddad hold a sign during last night's City Council meeting. The council passed a resolution in support of open hearings for Haddad, who has been In jail since last month. Following the flame Comeast users feeling a little disconnected By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter First it was Ameritech, and now it's rival telecommunications giant Comcast that's frustrating University students and others in the Ann Arbor area with ser- vice outages and slow response to com- plaints. Comcast, the major Internet and cable television provider to Amn Arbor residents and off-campus students, has experienced several glitches in its Inter- net services since leaving the Road Runner network and transferring to its own high-speed network late last month. Many University students and Ann Arbor residents have been able to con- nect to the Internet infrequently, if at all, since the transfer. "We're very aware of (the problems),' said Mary, a Comcast supervisor, yes- terday. "The technicians are working on the problem. It is taking longer - a lot longer, I should say - than we thought it would." Although Comcast representatives said the problems were limited to a small percentage of users, Ann Arbor resident Helayne Beavers said she believes that was an understatement. Beavers said she had Internet access on transition day, but "at about 250 kps max for several days, and brownouts and periods of 350 kps service continue as of today" Other students, such as Business junior Deepa Challa, experienced prob- lems with the company's new software, which included CD-ROMS not compat- ible with newer software. The CD- ROMS caused some computers to malfunction if customers used Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 or Win- dows XP operating systems. "That's why I'm here:' Challa said last night while working on a computer in Angell Hall. "(The CD-ROM) wasn't working. It kept saying 'illegal failure.' We installed it four times." Complaints about modem incapabili- ty, e-mail inaccessibility and crashing systems were also numerous yesterday. Students who tried to correct the prob- lems by calling Comcast's customer support line were put on hold for lengthy periods while technical repre- sentatives talked others through the rebooting process. Challa said her housemates repeated- ly tried calling Comcast, but to no avail, because the phone kept disconnecting. "They just hung up on us;' she said, adding that her Internet has been out for more than a week. Comcast supervisor Mary, who would not give her last name, said that despite the effort to fix the problems sprouting from the transfer, there was no estimate available as to when high- speed Internet access would begin working. Many students in Challa's situation have resorted to using campus com- puters for e-mail and Internet access. See 'COMCAST, Page 2A I LEMMA IFOSDICK/Daily One of the runners in the Olympic Torch Relay carries the flame on East Stadium Boulevard near Michigan Stadium yesterday. After passing through Detroit and Ann Arbor, the torch headed to Indiana on its way to the Feb. 8 Opening Ceremonies of the Winter Games in Salt Lake City. Tuition ucertain in 'recession By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily Staff Reporter Facing a recession, the University administration is already anticipating that the 2003 budget will be less flexible than those of previous years. Because 10.5 percent of the University's budget is comprised of state funding, administrators are hoping to mini- mize tuition increases. "We're 1ays trying to balance the need to hold tuition increases to a reasonable level, while still pro- viding students with a high quality education,' said University spokeswoman Julie Peterson. Regent Larry Deitch (D-Bingham Farms) said a revenue shortfall will be reflected not only in a tuition increase, but also in cuts across the board. "We'll try to keep any possible tuition increase that is low as possible, while balancing all the vari- ous priorities and needs within the University," he said. But interim Provost-Paul Courant has said that the University has had a long-running policy of making financial aid a top priority. "If tuition goes UP, financial aid will go up propor- tionally;' said Courant. Education has always been a priority for the state Legislature. When the budget was cut last year, hig er education as well as K- 12 programs received m, ginal increases. However, several state legislate said a budget equal to last year's would be a triun for the higher education subcommittee. "We are barely going to be able to hold our ovA said Rep. John Stewart (R-Plymouth). However, Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D-Sale Twp.) was slightly more optimistic. She said educ tion has faced a decrease in fu~nding in the past,a although "things look bleak;' cuts will be as miin as possible. See BUDGET, Page gh- Lar- .ors riph ca-l aylOutlook good for Seconomy in 2002 Surviving members of al-Qaida try to regroup Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Surviving leaders of the al-Qaida terrorist network are repeatedly trying to regroup at a warren of caves and bunkers in eastern Afghanistan, despite three attacks on the complex in four days by U.S. warplanes, senior Pentagon officials said yesterday. The most recent strike on the Zhawar Kili Al- Badr ttffiihing' cainp, late Sunday night, hit tanks and artillery, officials said. But military intelligence analysts say they believe the camp, which snakes down a narrow, winding, desert valley near the town of Khowst, still harbors terrorist militants. It is the same site hit by U.S. cruise missiles in 1998 in the Clinton administration's unsuccess- ful attempt to strike at Osama bin Laden and his top aides. It includes a number of caves built into the valley's sheer cliff walls and is difficult to eradicate, said Rear Adm. John Stufflebeem, deputy director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "We bombed again yesterday," Stufflebeem told reporters at a Pentagon briefing yesterday. "But we're not done there. ... Something's com- ing camp, and on other suspected terrorist hide- outs in recent weeks, Stuffiebeem painted a pic- ture of small bands of al-Qaida loyalists on the run throughout Afghanistan but persistently seeking to rearm and regroup where they can. "They are obviously widely dispersed," Stufflebeem said. "They are attempting to regroup so that they can amass for leadership and mischief purposes. ... They're just trying to find each other and then, obviously, to continue their war." Warplanes also struck Sunday in Khowst, about 10 miles from the training camp, destroy- ing what Pentagon officials described yesterday as a small cache of anti-aircraft weapons. Khow- st is known as the headquarters of a former min- ister in the ousted Taliban regime, Jalaluddin Haqqani, who is wanted by the United States. The strikes in Khowst and at the Zhawar Kili training camp were among 118 sorties flown by U.S. warplanes over Afghanistan on Sunday They were carried out by one B-52 and two B1-B bombers, one Navy F/A-18 jet fighter, and one low-flying AC-130 gunship, Pentagon officials said. By Ted Borden Daily Staff Reporter After two consecutive years of loss- es on Wall Street, investors and econo- mists are optimistic in the new year, predicting an end to the nation's cur- rent recession and forecasting growth in many areas of the economy. "The consensus is that we will see a modest recovery;' said John Schmitz, head of equity strategy at Fifth Third Bank in Cincinnati. "We faced 2001 as a year of restructuring. This year will be driven by inventories being replen- ished over the whole year." Schmitz noted that this recovery will be unlike its early- 1990s prede- cessor, in part because "debt level is high from consumer spending and val- uations are still high. What matters is how well earnings rebound." Thomas McManus, chief investment strategist at Bank of America Securities in New York, said he expected markets to increase by as much as 10 percent. Schmitz echoed this sentiment, pre- dicting "below-average market increases." Economists remain positive despite "The consensus is that we will 'see a modest recovery. " - John Schmitz Fifth Third Bank economist Friday that the nation's unemployment rate rose to 5.8 percent last month, a level not seen since August 1995. Also Friday, AT&T reported plans to lay off 5,000 employees in an attempt to reduce costs. But Schmitz pointed out that con- sumer confidence remains strong and the economy's loss of 124,000 jobs in December was the smallest decline since August, news seen by many as a sign that the job market may be stabi- lizing after drastic post-Sept. 11i cut- backs. Economists are also overlooking the federal government's failure to pass an economic stimulus bill. "I don't think the bill that was being talked about would have been very stimulative," said McManus. "What. stimulus there was appeared to be mis- AP PHOTO Abdul Ghias, 70, cries in despair as he holds a piece of grass bread in the remote northern mountain village of Bonavash, Afghanistan, yesterday. Besieged by the Taliban and crushed A