2 - The M ichigan Daily - Tuesday, February 5, 2002 NATION WORLD Subpoena coming in Enron case NEWS IN BRIEF" _ . .: 4 WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional commit- tees took steps yesterday to subpoena Enron's no-show former chairman, while the Justice Department reject- ed a Democratic call for a special prosecutor to investi- gate the collapse of his energy-trading company. Former chairman Kenneth Lay was to have been the star witness at congressional hearings this week, but he abruptly backed out Sunday night. The Senate Commerce Committee scheduled a vote today on a subpoena to force Lay's appearance. Rep. Michael Oxley (R-Ohio), said the House l1 L11V liJ t'PV.lYI hIVV ll 1V U 111 L' VV VPLL 'h Financial Services Committee would issue a subpoena to compel Lay's appearance "at the earliest practical date." Lay, who resigned as chairman on Jan. 23, quit his remaining position as a director yesterday. "It's not possible to figure out what caused this huge Enron ship to capsize if you can't hear from the cap- tain," said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.). Sen. Ernest Hollings (D-S.C.), chairman of the Sen- ate Commerce Committee, said a special prosecutor was needed because the Bush Justice Department could not be relied on to investigate objectively. The Justice Department said in a statement that it sees no reason to appoint a special counsel to investi- gate Enron. "No person involved in pursuing this investigation has any conflict, or any ties that would require a recusal," the department said. Attorney General John Ashcroft stepped aside from the investigation last month because he had received campaign donations from Enron in his failed 2000 Senate bid. The probe is being led by Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson. Bush wants increase in defense EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (AP) - On the day he submitted his new budget to Con- gress, President Bush called on lawmakers to rally behind his $48 billion increase for the Pen- tagon just as they've supported him in the war on terrorists. "We're unified in Washington on winning this war," Bush told military personnel. "One way to express our unity is for Congress to set the military budget and the defense of the United States as the No. 1 priority and fully fund my request." For his tough-talking speech to promote his defense budget, Bush wore a leather bomber jacket with an American flag patch stitched over his heart. Air Force personnel in camou- flage fatigues welcomed him into a hangar with a deafening cheer. Back in Washington, lawmakers began review- ing the four-volume, $2.12 trillion spending plan fu nding1 that Bush formally submitted yesterday. In it, he asked Congress for a $48 billion increase in Penta- gon spending. The money would build new high- tech weapons and equipment as well as improve military salaries and health benefits. The successful campaign in Afghanistan proved the value of precision weapons, not only in defeating the enemy but in sparing innocent lives, Bush said. "And the budget I submit makes it clear we need more of them." "We need to be agile, quick to move. We need to be able to send our troops on the battlefields in places that many of us never thought there would be a battlefield. We need to replace aging aircraft and get ready to be able to defend freedom with the best equipment possible," he added. Bush said the Sept. 11 terrorists were getting more than they perhaps bargained for when they struck the World Trade Center and Pentagon. KfARACHI, Pakistan Editor pleads for Pearl's safe return After a series of hoax e-mails, the managing editor of The Wall Street Jour- nal issued an open letter yesterday to the group he believes responsible for the kidnapping of reporter Daniel Pearl, asking for a private dialogue to "address your concerns. Pearl's wife, meanwhile, issued an impassioned appeal for his life and said she was willing to die in his place. Paul Steiger, the Journal managing editor, addressed the letter to the National Movement for the Restoration of Pakistani Sovereignty. That organization signed the first e-mail sent on Jan. 27 claiming to have abducted Pearl who disappeared four days earlier. Attached to that claim were photographs of the journalist - one with a gun pointed at his head, another with Pearl holding a newspaper dated Jan. 27. That communication demanded that Washington return Pakistani prisoners held at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for trial in Pakistan. The Bush administration has ruled out any negotiations. "I know that the National Movement for the Restoration of Pakistani Sovereignty is very serious and wants others to know about its movement. To assure that this happens it is important for you to respond to this message," Steiger's letter said. JERUSALEM Five Palestinians slain in surge of violence The Israeli military's legal adviser reportedly proposed tightening criteria for targeted killings of Palestinian extremists - just as five members of a radical Palestinian group were slain yesterday in what Palestinians said was the latest Israeli assassination of suspected militants. Israel remained silent about its role in yesterday's deaths, but the development focused new attention on the controversial Israeli policy in which dozens of Palestinians accused of terrorism have been killed. Palestinian security officials said Israeli helicopters fired missiles at a car car- rying five members of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine near Rafah in the Gaza Strip. The attack left the car a mass of twisted, smoldering metal and killed four passengers instantly; a fifth died later. "I heard a huge explosion and then I saw fire coming from the car" said Suleiman Abu Arza who said he saw "bodies, arims of people spread all over." Israel had no comment on the strike, but the DFLP, a radical wing of Palestin- ian leader Yasser Arafat's PLO, threatened revenge in a leaflet that promised to "very soon... shake the land under the feet of the occupiers." 0 0 AP PHOTO President Bush waves to servicemen and their families as he visits Eglin Air Force Base in Florida yesterday. LOOKING FOR GREAT INTERN HOUSING THIS SUMMER IN NEW YORK CITY I ' C I WITH US! We've got a great place for you to live this Summer. Spacious, safe, affordable and convenient off-campus housing with all the cool stuff... cable TV, internet access, fully furnished and ready for fast easy move in! The perfect place to really enjoy your intern or summer study program. But space is limited and demand is high. Check us out right now. Call the Hotline at 800-297-46941 Go online at www.studenthousing.org. If you are in New York visit us at our new Student Housing Center @ Lexington Avenue and 24th Street. EDUCATIONAL HOUSING Student Housing for Real Living NEW YORK'S # i RESOURCE FOR STUDENT HOUSING Ilan- p" n Acihigan LUni Visitor omeplt fora fistng f pricipating organizations~ rtgourcts CPP 00 ,fib "764 _'746w0 a x MAZAR-&ESHARIF, Afghanistan Afghan warlords withdraw from city Two warlords in northern Afghanistan are ready to withdraw from the region's main city, a spokesman for one of the factions said yesterday. Between them, the warlords control the volatile north and pose some of the biggest challenges to Afghanistan's interim government as it tries to assert its authority. Envoys for Atta Mohammed and Gen. Rashid Dostum, a longtime rival, agreed to the pact mediated by a third faction led by Muhammad Mohaqqeq, according to Wasiqullah, a top aide to Atta Mohammed. Wasiqullah said the factions agreed to pull out of Mazar-e-Sharif and forge a new security force. They also pledged to eventually demobilize tens of thousands of fighters who have protected the war- lords' interests for years, said Wasiqul- lah. WASHINGTON U.S. may fight Iraq without allies' help Allies who strongly support the war on terror are squirming as the Bush administration debates whether Iraq should be the next target. Russia, the Europeans and Arabs - even NATO - all have made clear they won't necessarily support military attacks on Iraq. America must identify "real dangers rather than imaginary," Russia's prime minister said yesterday after meeting with President Bush. And Germany's deputy foreign min- ister, noting "the United States has old scores to settle with Iraq," warned, "This terror argument can't be used to legit- imize old enmities." U.S. officials have, in turn, made clear they would be willing to act alone. Iraq, one of three nations along with Iran and North Korea that Bush termed "an axis of evil;' poses such a dangerous threat that pre-emptive action might be need- ed, they say. WASHINGTON McCain diagnosed with melanoma Sen. John McCain has been diag- nosed with another case of melanoma, the most serious form of skin cancer, and was scheduled to undergo surgery last night in Phoenix, according to 'his office. It's the third time McCain, R- Ariz., has been diagnosed with skin cancer. Thelesion, which is a tiny freckle on the left side of McCain's nose, is not related to any melanoma that McCain has had before and is not life-threaten- ing, according to his office. McCain (R-Ariz.) had a lesion removed from his upper arm in 1993 and his temple during his 2000 presi- dential campaign. He was headed to the Mayo Clin- ic Hospital yesterday evening for the surgery, according to an aide who spoke on condition of anonymity. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. I cospor rJdwJi ; HAt M W nisan The Uriveaity 00.4k.4110 ~ Career Planning lc ent e} csx" ocf Student ears al 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 dailyJetters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. NEWS Usa Koivu, Managing Editor EDITORS: Rachel Green, Lisa Hoffman, Elizabeth Kassab, Jacquelyn Nixon STAFF: Jeremy Berkowitz, Kay Bhagat, Tyler Boersen, Ted Borden, Nick Bunkley, April Effort, David Enders, Margaret Engoren, Michael Gazdecki, Rob Goodspeed, Christopher Johnson, C. Price Jones, Elizabeth Kassab, Shabina S. 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