NATION/WORLD Congress NEWS IN BRIEF HA, S. " MiikI S' anorove s .._ . -~1. j.-- intel CtC T Ul tin o Vc ISo i4 o: r W p fO i n S a C e t th t H - Pr a~ti 8 b .... , 'y4 ti y i & p - - II c a se - a g d th a S J ' t fo s a At Lehman Brothers, our g reatest investment is in our human capital. e We hsire smarter - a nd have earned a reputation for targeting 1h hig h-potential mene and women. P And we train smarter, too- off er ing one of the mnost intensive it training and development programs in -te industry, e C A ttention Michigan Juniors s si a Lehman Brothers Summer Analyst Information Session Please Join Lehrnan Brothers t b representatives for a One Firm presentation, h Y K to a ThursdayDc br,,204t "w 5:00 P.M. W y pk #e Anr The Brown Faculty Club n V Pahtom ad wS "b r 2nd floor a Business attire t t a S To learn more, visit us online aP al ai wwwJebr amcorn/careers i a a 9 a] Si j S fi 0 1 S( 1 9 h cverhlaul WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress esterday ordered the biggest overhaul f U.S. intelligence in a half-century, ,placing a network geared to the Cold Var fight against communism with a ost-Sept. 11 structure requiring mili- iry and civilian spy agencies to work )gether against terrorists intent on oly war. The Senate overwhelmingly passed he legislation 89 to 2, one day after the louse easily pushed through the com- romise strongly endorsed by Presi- ,nt Bush. "The world has changed," said Sen. oseph Lieberman (D-Conn). "Our ter- orist enemies today make no distinc- on between soldiers and civilians, etween foreign and domestic loca- ons when they attack us." The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks three ears ago on New York City and Wash- ngton, which killed nearly 3,000 eople, proved that the intelligence peration established in World War I and modified afterward to fight ommunism wasn't effective enough gainst the threats of the new century, enators said yesterday. "We are rebuilding a structure that as designed for a different enemy at different time, a structure that was esigned for the Cold War and has not roved agile enough to deal with the hreats of the 21st century," said Sen- te Governmental Affairs chairwoman usan Collins, (R-Maine). Sens. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) and ames Inhofe (R-Okla.) voted against he bill, with Byrd saying that it was oly to expect a law to make America afer from foreign terrorists. "No legislation alone can forestall terrorist attack on our nation," Byrd aid. Outside the Senate doors were sev- ral of the family members who had obbied Congress carrying pictures of heir loved ones who died in Pennsyl- ania, the World Trade Center or the entagon. "I don't think we've really digested yet," said Mary Fetchet, a social orker from New Canaan, Conn., hose 24-year-old son Brad died at he World Trade Center. "It's been very :motional." KING ontinued from page 1A tumbling through rearranged clas- ics and mediocre new material in a oice strangled by years of substance buse. Last night, King made it clear e has no intention of dedicating his areers later years to weakness. After an extended instrumen- at introduction by his eight-piece ackup group, King gracefully escended onto the stage. Putting his ustom guitar, affectionately labeled Lucille," on his lap, King took to is center-stage throne. The fact that ing remained seated did nothing o mute the energy of the mature nd passionate sounds that echoed hroughout the performance. The sounds of King's guitar as well as the seasoned horns, drums, .eyboards and bass were more than nough to affirm the legitimacy of King's near-deity status in the musi- al world. The backup crew did a ery credible, and at times impres- ive, job of keeping up with the blues ehemoth, but King made certain, vith his lively delivery of jokes and iffs, that all eyes remained stead- astly on him. While King's graceful playing nd resonant voice will always be he highlight of his performances, he most surprising aspect of his presence was his rejection of the arrogance typical of acts of his tatus. Throughout the show, King playfully cracked jokes about his age, his music and his audience. The audience responded to this banter, as well as a number of physical antics ncluding kissing the microphone, nd hoisting a glass of beer to the audience before downing it in one gulp, with continuously increasing applause and excitement. He had the audience clapping and inging along to a quickly improvised am before launching into his clas- ic, "When Love Comes to Town,' first made popular by its inclusion on U2's 1988 release, "Rattle and Hum." The opening licks of this song were enough to clear away any ingering doubt that the gracious and heartfelt sounds of King's patented guitar have hardly deteriorated since his career was born in the studios of Memphis. One look at the sometimes KIEV, Ukraine Parliament approves election reforms Parliament approved reforms yesterday to ensure a fair ballot in Ukraine's repeat presidential election as tens of thousands of opposition supporters, many of them haggard and shivering after 17 days of round-the-clock street protests, chanted and danced in triumph. The surprise vote in parliament was part of a compromise package that also included constitutional amendments to transfer some presidential powers to parlia- ment - but only after parliamentary elections in 2006, when backers of opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko hope to win a majority. Yushchenko had earlier denounced the amendments as an attempt to render his likely election victory meaningless, but he appeared to have ended up strengthen- ing his political standing by demonstrating an ability to find common ground with his opponents and solve a crisis that could easily have turned violent. "During these 17 days we have gotten a new country," Yushchenko told the roar- ing crowds on Kiev's main Independence Square. "We have realized that we are a European nation. We have grown confident that Ukraine's future can't be stolen." JERUSALEM Settlers ask to keep communities together Residents of some Jewish settlements in the northern Gaza Strip have pro- posed that their entire communities be moved to locations inside Israel under Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's plan to withdraw from Gaza next year, a law- maker said yesterday. A resident said the settlers want to remain together outside Gaza, a sign that a significant number of the 8,200 settlers slated for evacuation next year are resigned to leaving Gaza, despite vocal opposition by settler leaders. Some have quietly formed committees to negotiate their exit. Nissim Slomianski, a lawmaker with the pro-settlement National Religious Party, who met with settler representatives on Tuesday, said they remained opposed to Sharon's withdrawal plan, but want to remain together if they are forced to leave. "I don't want to give the impression that they are ready to leave," he said. "How- ever, if there is a situation where they are taken out by force, then they want to move as an entire community." CAMP BUEHRING, Kuwait Rumsfeld hears soldiers' criticism of U.S. Army In a rare public airing of grievances, disgruntled soldiers complained to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld yesterday about long deployments and a lack of armored vehicles and other equipment. "You go to war with the Army you have," Rumsfeld replied, "not the Army you might want or wish to have." Spc. Thomas Wilson had asked the defense secretary, "Why do we soldiers have to dig through local landfills for pieces of scrap metal and compromised ballistic glass to up-armor our vehicles?" Shouts of approval and applause arose from the estimated 2,300 soldiers who had assembled to see Rumsfeld. "We do not have proper armored vehicles to carry with us north," Wilson, 31, of Nashville, Tenn., said. SAN ANTONIO New breast cancer drug shows better results A newer drug prevented far more breast cancers from recurring in older women, with far fewer side effects, than the old standby tamoxifen doctors said yesterday, cit- ing a new study. Cancer specialists said Arimidex is likely to become the first-choice treatment for most women who have had the disease, and they predicted a wider role for similar drugs of its type, called aromatase inhibitors. New research suggests Arimidex might be able to prevent 70 percent to 80 percent of the most common type of tumors that occur in women after menopause, compared with the 50 percent that tamoxifen is credited with warding off. - Compiled from Daily wirkreports MARKET UPDATE . WED. CLOSE CHANGE DOW JONES 10,494.23 +53.65 NASDAQ 2,126.11 + 2.99 S&P 500 1,182.81 -5.74 I I www.michigandaily.com The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. 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