2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 11, 2003 NATION/WORLD 4 Bush calls NEWS IN BRIEF fHEADLINES FROM AROUND THE for tighter WASHINGTON PLACE.: EIBEL FIELD - Intersection of Hoover & Division Sts. TIME:10:30 A.M., rain or shine! Come to the Nokia Mobile Entertainment Zone, enter the sweepstakes and demo the Nokia 3300 music phone, Nokia 3650 camera phone and Nokia N-Gage mobile game deck. Check it all out at hearseeplaytour.com Nokia, Nokia Connecting People, Nokia 3300, Nokia 3650, and N-Gage are trademarks or registered trademarks of Nokia Corporation. Other names mentioned herein may be trademarks of their respective owners. terrorism le islation WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush told Congress yesterday to "untie the hands" of law enforcement officials and arm them with wider legal powers to combat terrorists, saying the groups that struck America two years ago are wounded but still dangerous. He specifically called for expanding use of the federal death penalty, tougher bail restrictions and greater subpoena powers that he said are avail- able for other crimes, such as drug traf- ficking and embezzling, but can't be used against terrorism. "This disparity in the law makes no sense," Bush said in a speech at the FBI Academy in nearby Quantico, Va. Bush's appeal threw the White House into a growing debate over the anti-terrorism USA Patriot Act enacted after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Crit- ics say the law is too intrusive and a threat to civil liberties and fear that the administration is trying to pass a sec- ond version of the measure in piece- meal fashion. Even some House and Senate Republicans have talked about rolling back portions of the Patriot Act. "For the sake of the American peo- ple," Bush said, "Congress should change the law and give law enforce- ment officials the same tools they have to fight terror that they have to fight other crime." Bush acknowledged that not all mem- bers of Congress agree with the need to tighten the law but said a lot of them do. The White House indicated Bush sup- ports tougher laws in other areas beyond the three instances he cited. The American Civil Liberties Union said that "further erosions of judicial oversight and the basic checks and bal- ances ... are the wrong path to take." The president's speech vied for attention with new video and audio tapes of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden and his deputy, broadcast on the Arabic satellite channel Al- Jazeera. A voice said to be that of bin Laden praised the Sept. 11 attacks for causing "great damage to the enemy." Another voice attributed to bin Laden top aide Ayman al- Zawahri called on Iraqi guerrillas to "bury" American troops in Iraq. "Haven't heard it yet," Bush said about the tape as he toured a ballistics room and a chemistry lab at Quantico, where he saw sensitive equipment used to identify material from explosions at the USS Cole, embassies in Africa and the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad. On the eve of the second anniversary of Sept. 11, the White House issued a progress report on the anti-terrorism war and Bush renewed the national emergency he declared two years ago to mobilize reserve military forces and take other steps. Nearly two-thirds of al-Qaida's key leaders have been cap- tured or killed, the report said, and ter- rorist networks have lost access to $200 million. "We've thwarted terrorists in Buffa- lo, and Seattle, Portland, Detroit, North Carolina and Tampa, Fla.," Bush said, drawing from information in the report. "More than 260 suspected ter- rorists have been charged in the United States courts; more than 140 have already been convicted." Hamas s home bombed, sonkiled GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) - Israel bombed the home of a Hamas leader yesterday, killing his eldest son and a bodyguard in retaliation for two suicide bombings. The Palestinian prime minister- designate said he will quickly form a government to forestall even harsher Israeli reprisals. Israeli Prime Minis- ter Ariel Sharon cut short a visit to India and arrived home this morning, planning to convene senior Cabinet ministers and security commanders for urgent talks after the two blasts killed 15 Israelis. An official on Sharon's plane said the Israeli leader would consider far-reaching options, such as forc- ing Yasser Arafat into exile or ordering a large-scale invasion of Most Americans do not believe their individual freedom has been eroded by post- Sept. 11 laws to combat terrorism, but two-thirds are worried that it could happen, according to an Associated Press poll. The survey also found sharply partisan differences on how people view Attorney General John Ashcroft, an ardent supporter of the anti-terrorism laws that he says have been instrumental in preventing another attack against the United States. About two-thirds of respondents said they are somewhat or very concerned about the possible loss of freedom from such measures. On a separate question, only 31 percent said they think people's legal rights have been violated while 58 percent said they had not, according to the poll conducted for the AP by ICR/International Com- munications Research of Media, Pa. "They have to restrict some freedoms to keep the majority of the people safe, said Blair Palm, a 48-year-old conservative from Stafford, Va., who considers herself politically independent. "I hope we'll be able to nip the terrorism threat before things go too far." ANOAHAR, Afghanistan Four aid workers killed in Afghanistan Suspected Taliban rebels on motorcycles stopped a car filled with aid workers, tied them up and executed them by the side of a dusty road in southeastern Afghanistan, raising fears in the aid community that vital reconstruction work is becoming too risky to carry out. The attack follows intense fighting in the south and east of the country that has killed four American soldiers and thrown into question the ability of the U.S.-backed government to control this war-shattered country. Yesterday, the United States and Germany asked NATO to consider expanding the mandate of its 5,000-strong peacekeeping force beyond the capital, Kabul, to help protect reconstruction teams outside the capital. Aid agencies, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and President Hamid Karzai have long called for the International Security Assistance Force, now commanded by NATO, to expand its operations throughout the country. The four aid workers, Afghans who worked for the Danish Committee for Aid to Afghan Refugees, were killed Monday afternoon in the Mokur district of Ghazni province, Gov. Haji Asadullah told The Associated Press. a aui vey snows uconcerni IWUUL ireeuomI HOUSTON Enron exec sentenced to five years in prison Enron's former treasurer pleaded guilty to conspiracy and was led away in handcuffs and ankle chains yesterday to begin serving five years behind bars - the first executive to go to prison in the scandal that brought down the energy company and rocked Wall Street. Federal prosecutors said that Ben Glisan Jr. made no deal to implicate higher-ups such as former Chairman Kenneth Lay but that the sentence - the maximum under the law - should send a "somewhat chilling message." Glisan, 37, admitted helping design financial deals that enriched him and illegally kept losses off Enron's books. "I think I would simply like to say I take full responsibility for my actions," Glisan softly told U.S. District Judge Kenneth Hoyt. WASHINGTON Senate stops rewrite of overtime pay rules The Senate voted yesterday to halt the administration's effort to rewrite decades-old rules on overtime pay, risk- ing a veto showdown with President Bush and heeding labor's claims that the changes would harm millions of work- ers at a time of economic uncertainty. The 54-45 vote marked a rare defeat for business interests in the GOP-con- trolled Congress and left the fate of the emerging Labor Department regulations unclear. The House backed the new rules this summer, and congressional negotia- tors will have to resolve the issue. "The Bush administration proposal is not only anti-worker and anti-family; it is bad economic policy," said Demo- cratic Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, who led the assault on the regulations. "If will take money out of the pockets of hardworking Americans and will npt create one new job." a STOCKHOLM, Swedenw Official stabbed during shopping trip Swedish Foreign Minister Anna Lindh, one of the country's most popular politi: cians, was stabbed repeatedly yesterday while shopping at an exclusive depart- ment store in downtown Stockholm. Police said they did not believe the attack was politically motivated and were searching for a man wearing a camou- flage jacket who fled the store. Lindh was undergoing surgery at the Karolins- ka Hospital and her wounds were setriots but not life-threatening, a Foreign Min- istry spokesman said. Lindh, who is No. 3 in the govern- ment, often has been touted as a possible successor to Prime Minister Goeran Pers- son. She did not have bodyguards. The attack comes just days before Swedes decide whether to adopt the euro, which polls show faces strong opposition in the country. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 6 I WWW.MICHIGANDAILY.COM The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by stu- dents 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. Subscriptions 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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