The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 17, 2003 - 5A SOLE joins Borders patrol ~' .r U.S. officials: Iraq's lead missile expert fled to Iran after war The Associated Press TUN uINGuaily Engineering junior Michael Lear, a member of Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality, stands with Borders employees on strike Friday outside the store on East William Street. Energ companies that donated win big under Republican b1l WASHINGTON (AP) - Energy industries that have invested millions of dollars in law- makers' campaigns would reap billions in tax breaks and potential new business from com- promise Republican legislation. President Bush took office promising to develop a new energy policy. Since then, ener- gy-related businesses have contributed nearly $70 million to lawmakers and political parties, with about three-fourths of it going to Repub- licans, according to an analysis of Federal Election Commission records by the Center for Responsive Politics. The energy sector also gave an additional $67 million - $50 million of it to Republi- cans - during the 2000 election cycle, when Bush won the presidency and Republicans regained control of the Senate. The House and Senate are expected to vote this week on the final compromise developed by GOP negotiators. The measure is designed to boost energy production, improve reliability of the electricity grids and make it easier for energy companies to develop oil and gas on federal land. Energy interests have been "giving heavily to the Republicans for a long time, and this is what it's all about in the end. It looks like they got an energy bill that they wanted," said Larry Noble, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, a bipartisan research group. Environmental groups, which lobbied unsuccessfully for measures to cut energy use or promote cleaner renewable energy sources such as solar and wind power, made only $2.3 Szmulator zwi SIMULATION Continued from Page 1A researchers had to design a preliminary program, showing off the interactivity pos- sibilities available with Virtual Reality, said 3D Lab Director Peter Beier. The preliminary program shows a basic artist's rendition of a building before and after an explosion, complete with five peo- ple sitting in an office who become victims of the explosion. A person can then walk through the room in order to gain a different perspec- tive of each victim. The vision of the complete program includes more victims with more injuries "(Energy interests have been) giving heavily to the Republicans for a long time, and this is what it's all about in the end. It looks like they got an energy bill that they wanted:' - Larry Noble Executive director, Center for Responsive Politics million in political contributions during the past three years. One of the biggest political contributors over the years has been Illinois-based Archer Daniels Midland, the largest producer of corn-based ethanol. The company was one of the biggest winners in the energy agreement, which doubles the use of ethanol as a gaso- line additive to 5 billion gallons a year. Since 1999, ADM has given $2.4 million in unregulated donations to political parties, $1.5 million to Republicans and $874,000 to Democrats. Such soft money donations were outlawed by the campaign finance law that took effect last year. The company also has contributed $371,450 directly to federal candidates since 1999, including more than $200,000 to Republicans. There was bipartisan support for the ethanol provision among farm-state lawmak- ers. Two major proponents were Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) the lead Senate negotiator, and Minority Leader Tom Daschle, whose home state of South Dakota has nine ethanol plants. Manufacturers of the gasoline additive MTBE, which has been found to contaminate drinking water, also won big when congres- sional negotiators agreed to protect them from product liability lawsuits. The bill also authorizes $1.75 billion over seven years in "transition" assistance to MTBE manufactures, including oil compa- nies and refiners, as they scale back produc- tion because of state bans on the product. The bill would extend a Senate-proposed federal MTBE phaseout from four years to 10 years. About three-fourths of the MTBE pro- ducers are based in Texas and Louisiana, and the liability protection was championed by three Republicans from those states: House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas, Rep. Billy Tauzin of Louisiana, the lead House negotiator, and Rep. Joe Barton of Texas. Major MTBE producers include Lyondell Petrochemicals of Houston, which has con- tributed $41,500 to federal candidates this year, including $10,000 to DeLay, $5,000 to Tauzin, $3,000 to Barton and $2,500 to Grassley. The Iraqi scientist who headed Saddam Hus- sein's long-range missile program has fled to neighboring Iran, a country identified as a state sponsor of terrorism with a successful missile program and nuclear ambitions, U.S. officers involved in the weapons hunt told The Associated Press. Modher Sadeq-Saba al-Tamimi's departure comes as top weapons makers from Saddam's deposed regime find themselves eight months out of work but with skills that could be lucrative to militaries or terrorist organizations in neigh- boring countries. U.S. officials have said some are already in Syria and Jordan. Experts long feared the collapse of Saddam's rule could lead to the kind of scientific brain- drain the United States tried to prevent as the for- mer Soviet Union collapsed. But the Bush administration had no plan for Iraqi scientists and instead officials suggested they could be tried for war crimes. "There are a couple hundred Iraqis who are really good scientists, particularly in the missile area," said Jonathan Tucker, a former U.N. inspec- tor now with the Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute in California. "In the chemical and biological areas, their work wasn't state of the art but it was good enough to be of interest to other countries." Only now is the State Department exploring the possibility of a government-funded program to block a scientific exodus and prevent Iraqis from doing future research in weapons of mass destruction. Initial cost estimates for the pro- gram run about $16 million, according to a Nov. 3 draft proposal obtained by AP. U.S. Army soldiers remove the wreckage of a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter yesterday, a day after it crashed Into a > residential area in Mosul, Iraq. Seventeen soldiers died In f- the crash,: which the military is Investigating. > (AP PHOTO) m>>Yfu: e Two members of the Pentagon's Defense Intel- ligence Agency involved in questioning scientists in custody told AP the Iraqis continue to deny the existence of illicit weapons programs in Iraq. Dozens of Iraqi scientists have been questioned and less than 30 remain in custody. All of them, including senior members of Saddam's regime, have been subjected to lie-detector tests, which have come up clean on weapons questioning, the DIA officers said. But U.S. scientists and weapons experts, who all spoke on condition of anonymity, said they're having trouble finding some Iraqi experts and have no way of tracking ones they've met. "They could leave Baghdad tomorrow and we'd never know," said one senior official involved in the hunt. "Very few are obligated to tell us where they're going or what they're up to." U.N. inspectors spoke with Modher in Baghdad a week before the U.S.-led war began on March 20. Two U.S. weapons investigators say they believe he crossed the Iraq-Iran border on foot at least two months after U.S. forces took Baghdad. His activities in Iran are unclear and may explain why his disappearance hasn't been pub- licly disclosed. The CIA declined to discuss its efforts with Iraqi scientists or identify individuals. Thought to be in his mid-50's, the Czech- educated scientist specialized in missile engines. He met numerous times with U.N. inspectors during the 1990s and earlier this year when he argued that the Al-Samoud mis- sile system under his command wasn't in vio- lation of a U.N. range limit. The inspectors determined otherwise when tests showed it could fly more than 93 miles. They quickly began destroying the Iraqi stock, much to his frustration. " ike/p trainfl and more life signs - chests rising, people moaning and screaming, while others are running and panicking - as well as a more scientific view of what would happen to a building if a bomb went off from different locations, Schumann said. The program will help train medics in triage - quickly assessing which victims are alive, which are dead and which are in the most need of immediate medical attention. "(The simulations) are going to be pret- ty intensive. We hope to simulate the chaos that surrounds these sorts of situa- tions so that we can immerse the trainees in them so they learn how to communi- cate, how to triage - all of the things that they are taught to do in a disaster situa- r'st responders tion," Woolliscroft said. The program should take about six months to complete, Beier said. At that time, recruitment first responder training should start. If University researchers can prove the program's success, then more disaster simulations will be created, Beier added. "This funding is about half a million dollars, which is very small initially for a simulation center," he said. "We will use this money to show this idea is really working. We will have the first training simulator ready, and we hope that based on that we will get enough funding to develop a real, complete simu- lation center." GEPHARDT Continued from Page 1A recognize couples and none recognize gay marriage. The Bush administration has forthright- ly opposed gay marriage. Where same-sex couples have formed civil unions - which carry some legal ben- efits but not as many as official marriages - the process pales in comparison to the decorated ceremony of a heterosexual union, Chrissie Gephardt said. t "Civil unions will accomplish equality under the law and I think that's what the government is in the business of doing," she said. "But it doesn't give the same status (as marriage)," which she hopes to have some- day with her current partner. Social equality, she said, has remained the centerpiece of her platform. Apart from seeking parity for the gay communi- ty, Chrissie Gephardt has sought to improve the status of the mentally ill. Shortly after receiving her master's, Gephardt began counseling homeless women with a history of trauma at the Anacostia Community Outreach Center in Washington. She added that her experiences there served as a sobering introduction to the maltreatment received by many victims of mental illness. "We need to just take mental health ill- ness more seriously and not stigmatize it," she said. "The majority of the mentally ill are incarcerated. We like to incarcerate people in this country who don't demonstrate the model of people who are treatable." During her address to University social work students, Chrissie Gephardt said mental health patients have had a particu- larly hard time gaining coverage for treat- ment. "Under our health care policy, (mental illness) needs to be treated as any illness is treated," she said, adding that victims of mental illnesses should have access to the same amount of care as cancer patients. The younger Gephardt said her commit- ment to assisting the socially disadvan- taged is also a staple of her father's campaign. Objectives of his presidency include establishing an international minimum wage to protecting affirmative action pro- grams at colleges and universities. "He says, 'I just want to fight for people like my parents, who just want to earn an honest living and get up everyday and sup- port their family,'" she said. Mditary begi; iizto elicopter, BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The U.S. military tried to determine yesterday whether insurgent gunfire caused the crash of two Black Hawk heli- copters, killing 17 soldiers in the worst single loss of American life since the war in Iraq began. Meanwhile, an audio tape purportedly by Sad- dam Hussein urged Iraqis to escalate attacks against the occupation and "agents brought by for- eign armies" - Iraqis who support the coalition. The speaker on the tape, aired on Al-Arabiya television, said the only way to end the chaos in Iraq was for Saddam and his now outlawed Baath Party to return to power. U.S. soldiers, meanwhile, took the offensive with the military mounting operations in Bagh- dad and Saddam's home region of central Iraq. The military fired a satellite-guided missile with a 500-pound warhead at a suspected guerrilla training base. Four insurgents were killed in a separate clash. "Any of those groups that are working against the best interest of the Iraqis are going to be tar- geted," said Lt. Col. William MacDonald, spokesman of the 4th Infantry Division. ,s fatal crash Strong explosions thundered through central Baghdad after sundown yesterday, apparently part of "Operation Iron Hammer," a new "get tough" strategy of going after insurgents before they can strike. Late yesterday, a large number of U.S. troops, backed by armored vehicles and heli- copters, moved into the Sunni Muslim neigh- borhood of Azamiyah, sealing off a 20-block area and searching vehicles in a show of force. The CIA said it would review the purported Saddam tape for its authenticity. But President Bush dismissed the recording. "I suspect it's same old stuff. It's propaganda. We're not leaving until the job is done, pure and simple," Bush said. "I'm sure he'd like to see us leave, if in fact it's his voice. I know the elements of the Baathist party, those who used to torture, maim and kill in order to stay in power would like to see us leave." The voice in the recording resembled Sad- dam's, but was huskier and the speaker appeared tired. ...ifhi an emDerr SPRING TERM IN MAINE writing, camping, reading, hiking, music, canoeing, art £r r #! l lol I m I I