2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 13, 2002 NATION/WORLD FBI: More attacks are possible NEWS IN BRIEF WASHINGTON (AP) -The FBI warning about a put under orders to detain any of them immediately. Officials acknowledged they did not know JERUSALEM possible terrorist attack against the United States or against Americans in Yemen lists individuals with suspected ties to Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida, U.S. officials said yesterday. Attorney General John Ashcroft, speaking in San Antonio, Texas, urged citizens and law enforcement officers across the country to "be on the highest alert." The FBI distributed photographs of men believed to be involved and police nationwide were Ashcroft described the men as "individuals who may be associated with Osama bin Laden and the al- Qaida network." The warning identified one possible attacker as Fawaz Yahya al-Rabeei, a 22-year-old from Yemen. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said al-Rabeei is believed to have links to al-Qaida but is not believed to have been involved in the attack against the USS Cole in the Yemen port ofAden in 2000. whether al-Rabeei was in the United States and could not be sure even that he was still alive. A hurried review of U.S. immigration records indicated al- Rabeei has never been in the United States, a Justice Department official said yesterday. Internationally, allies were trying to determine where al-Rabeei and his associates have traveled recently, but those efforts were being hampered by aliases the men might be using. Peres promotes Palestinian state plan I Attention: Pre-Med/Pre-Nursing Students Excellent opportunity to work with doctors in a camp infirmary setting, as a Camp Health Officer.We will pay for the short certification course. Enjoy working in a beautiful Northern Michigan setting. Consider Living Next Fall in THE ICC STUDENT HOUSING CO-OPS Approx. $415/month Includes utilities, laundry, parking, social activities and all the food you can eat. 662-4414 Student Owned - Democratically Run ContractsAvailable NOW! www.icc.umich.org Campaign finance laws will Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres yesterday revealed details of a plan he worked out with the Palestinian parliament speaker to try to halt the bloodshed of the past 16 months and clear the way for Palestinian statehood. Before Peres went public, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, who heads Peres' Labor Party, dismissed the plan as a nonstarter, and other ministers in Sharon's coalition government were skeptical. Peres said the three-phase plan starts with a cease-fire, soon after which a Palestinian state would be declared, with the borders still to be defined. It would be recognized by Israel while Palestinians would recognize the Jewish state. The borders of the Palestinian state would be worked out in the final stage, a process Peres said he envisages as taking up to a year. The plan would be imple- mented in the course of a second year. "We will recognize a Palestinian state, they will recognize the State of Israel," Peres told Israel Radio. He said the new state initially would comprise territory already ruled in full or part by the Palestinian Authority. That would amount to about two-thirds of the Gaza Strip and 40 percent of the West Bank. al not change LAyefNGTON R~t angLay refuses to testiy in front of Congress WASHINGTON (AP) - Sponsors of a sweeping campaign finance bill agreed yesterday to leave current free-spending rules in effect until after this fall's election as they labored to solidify support before a House showdown. "The time for reform has arrived," said Rep. Martin Meehan of Massa- chusetts, as he lobbied fellow Democ- rats by phone. "It's time for the members (of the House) to stand up and be counted." "I think it will be very close tomor- row," said Rep. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), a member of the GOP leadership united in its opposition to the bill. House Republican critics readied a series of amendments aimed at frac- turing the coalition behind the bill, fearful its passage would threaten their hold on power. They claimed support from inside the White House, but worked without overt help from President Bush. "The president is not lobbying, no," White House spokesman Ari Fleisch- er told reporters. At the same time, though, Republi- can party chairman Marc Racicot cir- culated a memo to lawmakers declaring that certain aspects of the bill were of "vital concern" to the GOP, and urged them to take Bush's views into account. Republicans are particularly con- cerned that organized labor would be permitted to continue using dues money for political purposes without getting permission from members of the rank and file. Apart from objections on political grounds, lawmakers on both sides of the bill agree it is open to constitu- tional challenge. The bill is "clearly unconstitution- al," argued Rep. Robert Ney (R-Ohio) sponsor of an alternative that limits soft money donations without ban- ning them. In particular, he cited a provision banning a certain type of late-campaign television commer- cials. The measure, long advocated by Sen. John McCain and his allies in both houses, provides for the most sweeping overhaul of campaign finance laws since the post-Watergate reforms of a quarter-century ago. The House bill, advanced by Mee- han and Rep. Christopher Shays (R- Conn.), would ban the unlimited, unregulated "soft money" donations, typically in five- or six-figure amounts, that corporations, unions and individuals make to national political parties. State and local parties would be permitted to raise soft money, but only in amounts of $10,000 or less. None of the funds could be spent on political commercials. The measure also would ban "issue ads" within 60 days of an election or 30 days of a primary. These ads are financed by soft money, and while they stop short of expressly advocat- ing the victory or defeat of a candi- date, they often are harshly critical. With debate scheduled to begin later in the day, the bill's main spon- sors set a strategy of standing aside for votes on one or two changes demanded by various members of their coalition. At the same time, they labeled other proposed changes as "poison pills" designed to stop them from passing the bill, winning quick Senate acquiescence and sending it to Bush's desk for his signature. The bill's supporters announced one change on their own. Officials said the effective date, originally set for 30 days after enactment, would be pushed back to Nov. 6, 2002 - the day after this fall's elections. Meehan said the change was a bow to reality, given that it would take several months for the Federal Elec- tion Commission to implement rules.But others said they feared an erosion of sunnort if the new rules Kenneth Lay, the presidential pal who built Enron into a darling of Wall Street only to see it collapse in scandal, exercised his constitutional rights yesterday and refused to testify to Congress. "I am deeply troubled about asserting these rights," Lay said. "It may be per- ceived by some that I have something to hide" But he said his attorneys had advised him not to testify. "I cannot disregard my counsel's instruction' he said. In a brief statement, Lay expressed a "profound sadness" about what had hap- pened to Enron. Before being called to the witness table, Lay sat glumly as he was criticized by senator after senator for maintaining his silence. "Obviously Mr. Lay, the anger here is palpable," said Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) William Powers, an Enron director and dean of the University of Texas Law School, who led an internal company investigation, later testified that documents shredded at Enron's Houston headquarters may have contained financial informa- tion that congressional investigators were seeking. VARACHI, Pakistan Reporter kidnappmg suspect detained Police arrested a British-born Islam- ic militant yesterday who they say masterminded the kidnapping of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl - the biggest break yet in the quest to free him. An official close to the investigation said the suspect told police Pearl is alive. Ahmad Omar Saeed Sheikh, 27, was arrested yesterday afternoon in the east- ern city of Lahore, according to Tas- neem Noorani, a senior official of Pakistan's Interior Ministry. Saeed was expected to be transferred to Karachi for further questioning. Following the arrest, police fanned out across this city of 14 million peo- ple, raiding homes of suspected Islamic extremists and searching settlements along the bleak and thinly populated Pakistani coast. Police cautioned that rescuing Pearl could still take time. FAIRFIELD,Conn. Ex-Fairfield student takes class hostage A former student claiming to have a bomb was holding six students and a professor hostage inside a universi- ty classroom last night, authorities said. At one point, there were 23 people inside the Fairfield University class- room, but the suspect released 16 of the students after several hours of negotiations with police, said police Detective Sgt. Gene Palazzolo. "He's been very calm throughout this entire ordeal," Palazzolo said. "He's speaking coherently and his demeanor is calm." The suspect took over the religious studies class at the Catholic school in southwestern Connecticut late yester- day afternoon, said school spokes- woman Nancy Habetz. Some 300 students were evacuated from the building, Canisius Hall. WASHINGTON FTC cracks down on spam e-mail More than 2,000 people involved in an Internet chain letter that prom- ises "$46,000 or more in the next 90 days" are receiving government warnings that the scheme is illegal, the Federal Trade Commission said yesterday. "This is the kind of activity that somebody's grandmother could be engaging in without fully appreciat- ing that it's illegal," said Eileen Har- rington, a director with the FTC's division of marketing practices. "The vast majority of participants will lose money." The warnings say the FTC has already sued people for being involved with the chain e-mail. Recipients of the warning are told that, to avoid a similar fate, they should stop promoting the chain and return any money they have received. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. GIVE 'EM THE BOOT II MTV2 HANDPICKED Various Artists Various Artists IV W9~ IV 13" 13" CITIZEN COPE LOSTPROPHETS Citizen Cope The Fake Sound Of Progress IV V IV 13" 13"9 II I 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. 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