-NATION/WORLD TOASTY WARM SANDWICHES 300 SOUTH STATE [Corner of State and [iberty) Terrorist attacks on Singapore prevented WASHINGTON (AP) - When al- Qaida leaders decided an attack on a U.S. military shuttle bus was not spec- tacular enough, the Singapore-based operatives who proposed the idea meticulously planned to hit more dar- ing targets. They laid out plans to blow up embassies of the United States and three other nations and had a chemist buy four tons of ammonium nitrate - four times the amount of explosive that Timothy McVeigh used to bomb the Oklahoma City federal bilding. In chilling detail, Philippine intelli- gence reports obtained by The Associ- ated Press also revealed plans to attack U.S. corporations and warships in Sin- gapore and crash a hijacked plane at the country's international airport. The embassy attacks were foiled by U.S. investigators and allies in South- east Asia as they entered the final stages - a mostly untold success dur- ing the war on terrorism. The success was tempered by the discovery that the explosives were not recovered. "Singapore, for one, is a perfect tar- get for attacks as some 17,000 Ameri- cans are residing in the city-state and about 6,000 multinational companies, several of which are American, are among its biggest employers," one of the two Philippine reports said. SARS Continued from Page 1A ed a SARS patient. "My friend who's in nursing ... all of her classes have been cancelled," Williams said. LSA sophomore Ivan Tsang, whose home is in Toronto, said he is not sure if he is going to go home over the summer. "I'm scared that if I go home that they won't let me back in the coun- try," Tsang said. Tsang said he became aware of SARS a month ago, when he received a phone call from his parents. "My dad advised me to stay in my dorm room,"'he said. Tsang said his family has been stay- ing home as much as possible. His father, a medical doctor, has stopped taking walk-in patients, while his mother has been staying extra hours at the hospital where she works, helping to quarantine SARS patients. "I had originally hoped it would be over before school ended," he said. "I'm staying at school an extra week but I don't know what I'm supposed to do," he added. SARS is a respiratory disease that is spread through the inhalation of droplets from an infected SARS patient who sneezes or coughs. As of Saturday, the World Health Organiza- tion reported that a cumulative total of 2,416 SARS cases and 89 deaths have been reported from 18 countries. The WHO issued an alert on Friday advising travelers to postpone all but essential visits to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and Guangdong Province, China, where outbreaks of the disease have been most severe. The United States has reported 115 cases of the disease, 2 of which are in Michigan's Kent County. IRAQ Continued from Page 1A tal and killing perhaps several thou- sand Iraqi shooters, by rough U.S. estimates. Pace said the Republican Guard's main weapons systems are gone and the force probably cannot assemble more than 1,000 men in any one place. On another vital front, British troops thrust to the center of Basra, Iraq's sec- ond largest city, with a sense they were finally shaking Saddam loyalists loose. British Desert Rats went into the city of 1.3 million with more than three dozen tanks and armored cars, a col- umn similar in size to the American unit that probed suburban Baghdad, then got quickly out. But the British found resistance softer than expected, picked up reports that the local Baath Party leadership was crumbling and fought into the core, losing at least three soldiers and finding their arrival cheered by hundreds of citizens. "We have a lot of it occupied," British Maj. Gen. Peter Wall told the BBC. He said it might take days to put down renegades. In chalking up military gains, the United States accelerated a campaign of persuasion, too, aimed at getting the Iraqi Republican Guard to give up. And Washington's attention began turning to postwar Iraq. Pace said the United States would welcome Republican Guard division NEWS IN BRIEF' jttl)lU rUv U H EW uUinnuZt U~A Zv i U UiCNVUZL a NAIROBI, Kenya More than 950 people killed in Congo attacks At least 966 people were killed in attacks on more than a dozen villages in northeastern Congo last week, U.N. officials said yesterday after a preliminary investigation. It is not clear who carried out the attacks, which occurred in Ituri province, the scene of some of the most vicious battles in Congo's 4 1/2-year-old civil war. Rival tribal fighters, rebel factions and Ugandan troops all have been involved in the fighting in the mineral-rich province. Witnesses told the U.N. investigators that the attackers included women and children while others were men in military uniforms, said Manodje Mounoubai, a spokesman for the U.N. mission in Congo. "This is the worst single atrocity since the start of the civil war." Mounoubai told The Associated Press by telephone from Kinshasa, Congo's capital. The killing spree occurred over a period of just a few hours Thursday in the Roman Catholic parish of Drodro and 14 surrounding villages in Ituri. "The attack started with a whistle blow and lasted between five and eight hours" Mounoubai told The Associated Press by telephone Lubanga, who is head of the rebel Union of Congolese Patriots, or UPC, said Ugandan troops and Lendu tribal fighters used mortars, small arms and machetes to attack three towns in Ituri, killing 942 people. WASHINGTON U.S. prison population reaches record high The number of people in U.S. prisons and jails last year topped 2 million for the first time, driven by get-tough sentencing policies that mandate long terms for drug offenders and other criminals, the government reported yesterday. The federal government accounted for more inmates than any state, with almost 162,000, according to a report by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, part of the Justice Department. That number includes the transfer of about 8,900 District of Columbia prisoners to the federal system. California, Texas, Florida and New York were the four biggest state prison systems, mirroring their status as the most populous states. But Texas, California, New York, Illinois and five other states saw their inmate populations drop compared with the year before as prison releases outpaced admissions. Some states modified parole rules to deal with steep budget shortfalls, leading to an overall growth rate in state prison populations of just under 1 percent from June 2001 to June 2002. The federal prison population grew by 5.7 percent. .4 LA CERBA, Honduras Honduras prison riot kils 69, injures 31 A search for fugitives was called off yesterday, a day after a prison riot in northern Honduras that left 69 people dead, including three visi- tors, and 31 others injured. Authorities said all inmates had been accounted for and were back in their cells at the El Porvenir prison in the town of La Ceiba, 220 miles north of the capital, Tegucigalpa. The prison remained locked down. Authorities originally thought an unknown number of inmates had escaped and soldiers and police searched nearby streets and fields through the night. Meanwhile, a bloody picture emerged of the battle between members of one of Central America's toughest-street gangs, who were armed with guns, clubs and even hand grenades, and other inmates, including some from rival gangs. JERUSALEM Palestinian leader's murder trial begins The murder trial of Palestinian upris- ing leader Marwan Barghouti began yesterday, but his top aides refused to cooperate on the stand with prosecu- tors. One witness covered his ears to block out questions. In the Gaza Strip, Israeli troops killed a Hamas gunman and a 14-year- old boy in a raid on a small village. Also yesterday, an American activist shot in the jaw a day earlier, allegedly by Israeli troops, was conscious in an Israeli hospital, communicating with visitors by writing notes. Barghouti, seen as a possible suc- cessor of Yasser Arafat, is the most senior Palestinian to be tried by Israel in 30 months of fighting. He is a Palestinian legislator, and until his capture a year ago, he was the leader of Arafat's Fatah movement in the West Bank. BLACKSBURG, Va. Va. Tech reinstates aflinative action Virginia Tech reinstated its affir- mative action policy yesterday, despite assertions from the attorney general's office that some of its diversity programs are unconstitu- tional. The school's Board of Visitors voted 7-5 with one abstention to rescind a March 10 ban on prefer- ences for racial minorities and other underrepresented groups in hiring, admissions and scholarships. The vote came after a four-hour meeting punctuated by outbursts from a crowd of about 250 people, most supporters of affirmative action. The board called yesterday's special meeting after weeks of protest over its resolution in closed session to dismantle affirmative action. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 0 ..gffRt{.p. ..... .. T )JC:' i~f~Iivmilor The University of Michigan-Dearborn invites you to be a guest student for the Summer 2003 semester. We have three options to accommodate students who are home for summer vacation: The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. 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 Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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