2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 27, 2005 NATION/WORLD Rice to be new NEWS IN BRIEF .. secretar of stateGLENDALE, Calif.ta Suicidal man causes train to derail WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- doleezza Rice won confirmation as secretary of state yesterday despite blistering criticism from Senate Democrats who accused her of misleading statements and said she must share the blame for mistakes and war deaths in Iraq. The tally, though one-sided at 85-13, was still the largest "no" vote against any secretary of state nominee since 1825. Separately, a Senate committee narrowly voted to send Alberto Gonzales' attorney general nomi- nation to the full Senate. And Jim Nicholson and Michael Leavitt won confirmation as the new secretar- ies of veterans affairs and health and human services respectively as President Bush's second-term Cabinet began to fill out. Rice, Bush's national security adviser for four years and perhaps his closest adviser on the war and terrorism issues that dominated his first term, becomes the first black woman to be America's top diplo- mat. She succeeds Colin Powell, a former Army general who clashed privately with some of the stron- gest hawks in Bush's inner circle. Although Rice's nomination was never in doubt, Democrats mount- ed a lengthy and biting protest that showed she will not immediately match Powell's collegial relation- ship with Capitol Hill. Democratic senators denounced Rice's job performance and truth- fulness. Most criticism focused on Rice's role planning for war and explaining the threat posed by Saddam Hussein. Some accused her of avoiding accountability for the absence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Others said she seemed unwilling to acknowledge errors in planning or judgment. "In the end, I could not excuse Dr. Rice's repeated misstate- ments," Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said of his vote against Rice. Durbin said Powell had been "a voice of moderation," and he expressed "hope that the respon- sibility of leadership will inspire Condoleezza Rice to follow his example." The 11 other Democrats who voted against Rice included some of the Senate's best-known names, such as Mass. Sens. Edward M. Kennedy and John Kerry, the unsuccessful candidate for presi- dent against Bush last year. Independent Sen. James Jeffords of Vermont also voted no. Thirty-two Democrats voted to confirm Rice, although several said they did so with reservations. Rice won support from all 53 Republi- cans who voted. Two Republican senators did not cast votes. A suicidal man parked his SUV on railroad tracks and set off a crash of two. commuter trains yesterday that hurled passengers down the aisles and turned rail" cars into smoking, twisted heaps of steel, authorities said. At least 10 people were killed and more than 180 injured. The collision took place just before daybreak on the outskirts of Los Angeles, creating a scene of carnage: Employees at a Costco store rushed to the scene and. pulled riders from the tipped-over double-deck cars before the flames reached them. Dazed passengers staggered from the wreckage, some limping. One elderly man on the train was covered in blood and soot, his legs and arms apparently broken. "I heard a noise. It got louder and louder," said passenger Diane Brady, 56. "And next thing I knew the train tilted, everyone was screaming and I held onto a pole for dear life. I held on for what seemed like a week and a half it seemed. It was a complete nightmare." Dozens of the injured were in critical condition, and more than 120 people were sent to hospitals. JERUSALEM Israel, Palestine peace talks progress. Israeli and Palestinian negotiators achieved significant progress yesterday toward ending violence and resuming peace talks, completing a plan for deploying Palestinian forces in the southern Gaza Strip and aiming for a summit within two weeks between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders. New violence, however, underscored the fragility of the new momentum for peace. A Palestinian preschooler in southern Gaza was killed by Israeli gunfire after militants fired a rocket at Israel. Israeli troops shot a Palestinian militant to death and wounded two others in a West Bank arrest raid. About 100 Jewish settlers disrupted a meeting between Israeli and Pales- tinian commanders in southern Gaza, throwing stones and slashing tires of participants' vehicles. None of this appeared to spoil a new flurry of peace moves offering the prospect of an end to four years of Israeli-Palestinian bloodshed, following the Nov. 11 death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. WASHINGTON House votes to restrict congressional medals Only about 300 people have received the Congressional Gold Medal since George Washington got the first one - recent names include Ronald and Nancy Reagan, Nelson Mandela and Peanuts creator Charles M. Schulz - but some law- makers say too many are being handed out. The House voted yesterday to slow the gold rush by restricting the medal, its highest award, to two a year. Groups could no longer be honored - that would have excluded the Navajo code talkers of World War II, winners in 2000 - and posthumous medals could be presented only during a 20-year period beginning five years after a person's death. NEW YORK Hip-hop label head part of criminal enterprise The hip-hop label behind music superstars Ashanti and Ja Rule was part of a murderous criminal enterprise that protected its interstate crack and heroin opera- tion with calculated street assassinations, federal authorities charged yesterday. Label head Irv "Gotti" Lorenzo and his brother Christopher surrendered to the' FBI on money-laundering charges yesterday as federal prosecutors unsealed an indictment seeking to confiscate Irv Gotti's real estate and business holdings. Gotti's childhood friend, Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff, one of New York's most. notorious drug kingpins, was charged with murder, racketeering and other crimes' that prosecutors said were intended to eliminate and intimidate potential witnesses. - Compiled from Daily wire reports e a0 AP PHOTO Senator Carl Levin (D-Mich.) takes part in a news conference on Capi- tol Hill yesterday, after the Senate voted 85-13 to confirm Condoleezza Rice as Secretary of State. Levin was one of 13 Senators voting against Rice's confirmation. Bush pleads for Americans 'patience Pres. responds to mounting death toll in Iraq WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush pleaded for Americans' patience yesterday on what he conceded was "a very discouraging day" of death and violence for U.S. troops in Iraq. He urged Iraqis to defy terrorist threats and vote in Sunday's elections. Bush held a White House news conference hours after more than 30 American troops perished in a helicop- ter crash in western Iraq and insurgents killed five others in the deadliest day yet for U.S. forces. The deaths pushed the American toll above 1,400. Unwavering in the course he has set, Bush pledged: "We'll have the troop lev- els necessary to complete the mission. And that mission is to enable Iraq to defend herself from terrorists - home- grown or terrorists that come in from outside of the country." He made clear that Iraq is nowhere near ready to han- dle its own security, and he talked about U.S. involvement over the next year. Four days before Iraq's elections and a week before his own State of the Union address, the president grappled with pointed questions about the war's heavy price and growing doubts that a stable, democratic Iraq will ever emerge. In money alone, Iraq is costing taxpayers more than $1 billion a week. Democrats registered their unhappi- ness with Bush's handling of Iraq in the Senate's 85-13 vote to confirm Condo- leezza Rice as secretary of state. It was the strongest negative vote against a secretary of state at least since World War II. Bush said Americans are not alone in their qualms. Iraqis are "losing a lot of people" in bombings and assassinations, he said, and "some are feeling intimidat- ed" about threats against voters. More- over, Bush said: "The Iraqi people are wondering whether or not this nation has the will necessary to stand with them as a democracy evolves. "The enemy would like nothing more than the United States to precipitously pull out and withdraw before the Iraqis are prepared to defend themselves." It was the 18th full-blown news con- ference of Bush's presidency and the first of his second term, covering issues ranging from Social Security to ques- tions raised by his inaugural address. Bush made these points: He recognizes tha some people are worried about the political risks and financial costs of overhauling Social Security by creating private invest- ment accounts - a step that could cost $1 trillion to $2 trillion in transition costs. "What you're hearing a little bit is whether or not it is worth the political price. I think it is," he said. He pledged to lead a battle in Congress and travel across the country to convince Ameri- cans the system is in trouble. His inaugural address promising to spread freedom and end tyranny around the world was not intended as a state- ment of new policy but rather a reflec- tion of the strategy he pursued in his first term. Even some of his supporters have been nervous that it signaled plans for global U.S. intervention. Bush said he has raised human rights concerns with China and will be direct with Rus- sia's Vladimir Putin when they meet next month in Slovakia. "I will remind him that if he intends to continue to look West, we in the West believe in Western values," Bush said. The Education Department was wrong to pay conservative commenta- tor Armstrong Williams $240,000 to plug its policies. "I expect my Cabi- net secretaries to make sure that that practice doesn't go forward," the pres- ident said. The bloodshed in Iraq and Sunday's elections framed much of the questions of Bush's news conference. He said he lacked details about the helicopter crash in Iraq's western des- ert. "The story today is going to be very discouraging to the American people," Bush said. "I understand that. ... But it is the long-term objective that is vital, and that is to spread freedom." Sunday's elections in Iraq repre- sent a major test for Bush, who has staked his reputation on spreading democracy across the Middle East. "I anticipate a grand moment in Iraqi history," he said. ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS WITH CROHN'S DISEASE OR ULCERATIVE COLITIS Please join Dr. Ellen Zimmermann Associate Professor of Gastroenterology, U of M for the first IBD student group meeting of 2005 Thursday, January 27th at 7pm in Mason Hall 3314 Our informal discussion will *7 'E - D w NAS M ARK ET UPDA'TE WED. CLOSE CHANGE JONES .10498.59 _.+373 DAQ 2,046.09 +26.14 >500 1,174.07 +5.66 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. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. 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