2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 7, 2005 NATION/WORLD Anti-war sentiments increase in NEWS IN BRIF a Italy with shooting of journalist Italians demonstrate in front of U.S. embassy in Rome, protesting the killing of an Italian agent ROME (AP) - Italy demanded answers Saturday as former hostage Giuliana Sgrena was taken off a flight from Iraq hooked to an intravenous drip for a shoulder wound inflicted when American troops fired on a car taking her to the Baghdad airport. The Ital- ian agent who negotiated her freedom was hit and died in her arms. The shooting at a U.S. checkpoint in Bagh- dad stoked anti-war sentiment in Italy, where the public was widely opposed to the govern- ment's decision to send 3,000 troops to help U.S.-led efforts to secure the country from a violent insurgency. President Bush promised a full investigation. About 100 demonstrators outside the U.S. embassy in Rome blocked traffic and one banner read: "USA, war criminals." A few dozen communist demonstrators at the U.S. Consulate in Milan handed out leaflets read- ing, "Shame on you, Bush." Sgrena, a 56-year-old journalist for the communist newspaper Il Manifesto, was flown from Baghdad on an Italian govern- ment plane. She was taken by ambulance to a military hospital in Rome, a day after under- going surgery at a U.S. military hospital in Iraq to remove shrapnel from her shoulder. Doctors said late Saturday that another opera- tion was not needed. From her hospital bed, Sgrena recounted the ordeal that unfolded shortly after she was released by insurgents in Iraq after a month in captivity. She gave no details about the cir- cumstances surrounding her release. "We thought the danger was over after my rescue," she told RAI News 24 television by telephone. "And instead suddenly there was this shooting, we were hit by a spray of fire. I was talking to Nicola ... when he leaned over me, probably to defend me, and then he slumped over. That was a truly terrible thing." Pier Scolari, the journalist's boyfriend, said she told him: "The most difficult moment was when I saw the person who had saved me die in my arms," the ANSA news agency reported. The slain agent, Nicola Calipari, 50, was the brother of a priest who serves on a Vatican advisory body, Vatican radio reported Satur- day, and Pope John Paul II sent a message of condolence to the family. The Italian govern- ment awarded Calipari a medal of valor. Italy said two other agents were wounded. One was seriously injured and remained hos- pitalized in Iraq, while the other returned on Sgrena's flight, Italian state television said. Calipari's body was flown back to Italy late Saturday. His coffin was carried out of the military plane wrapped in an Italian flag and blessed by his brother and a military. BEIRUT, Lebanon Syran troops to begin pullback today Lebanese officials said Syrian troops will start moving toward eastern Lebanon today in a pullback that will take two or three days, while Syrians - not unexpectedly - backed President Bashar Assad's decision and insisted yesterday he was not bow- ing to international pressure. . . The withdrawal from central and northern Lebanon toward the Bekaa Valley will begin right after a meeting in Damascus, Syria, of the presidents of the two countries, Lebanese Defense Minister Abdul-Rahim Murad told The Associated Press. Assad and Lebanese President Emile Lahoud will decide on the timetable of the pullback and repositioning of forces. "The Syrian withdrawal will begin today directly after the meeting in Damasc*_ of the Syrian and Lebanese leaderships," Murad said. Assad told his parliament Saturday that the redeployment of 14,000 Syrian troops to the Bekaa Valley is the first phase of a two-step pullback, but he left unclear whether troops eventually would leave Lebanon or remain near the border. He also said nothing about pulling out intelligence officials, who the United States said also must leave.- BAGHDAD, Iraq First elected parliment to meet this month Iraqi politicians set March 16 for the opening of the country's first democratically * elected parliament in modern history as a deal hardened yesterday to name Jalal Taja- bani, a leader of the minority Kurds, to the presidency. The more powerful prime minister's job will go to Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a deeply.don- servative Shiite who leads the Islamic Dawa party. His nomination, which the Kurds have agreed to, has been endorsed by the most powerful Shiite cleric in Iraq - Cand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. "This was one of our firm demands and we agreed on it previously. The agreement states that Jalal Talabani takes the presidential post and one of the United Iraqi Alli- ance members takes the prime minister's post," Talabani spokesman Azad Jundiyan told The Associated Press. He added, however, that the clergy-backed United Iraqi Alliance also reached a preliminary agreement with the Kurds on their other condi- tions -including extending their territories to include Kirkuk. Jundiyan said they wanted the deal on paper before going though with it, while alli- ance officials, including Ahmad Chalabi, said those negotiations were not over. Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena is helped while disembarking from the plane that took her from Baghdad to Rome Saturday. Sgrena had been freed in Iraq Friday evening and later was wounded when U.S. troops fired on the car she was in. JERUSALEM Leaders celehrate hlack su]ffrn o4yp Israelis,Jordanianmeetforfirsttimeinyears - w ww w w - w L Nb/ w - w 1.A- W i y R. iMW ,I i3- -% llw ii o& \~ Coretta Scott King, wife of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., joins in celebration Selma, Ala. (AP) - Aging civil rights- era figures and a bipartisan congressional delegation walked across an Alabama bridge with a throng of thousands yes- terday to commemorate the 40th anni- versary of the Selma voting rights march that opened ballot boxes to blacks across the South. Among those participating was Coretta Scott King, whose husband, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., led the historic march in 1965. "The freedom we won here in Selma and on the road to Montgomery was purchased with the precious blood of many," said King, who crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge in a car. Police estimated the crowd at nearly 10,000. Others on hand to, commemorate the march across the bridge included singer Harry Belafonte, who also took part in the demonstration 40 years ago, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and Lynda Johnson Robb, whose father, President Lyndon Johnson, signed the Voting Rights Act into law in 1965. "President Johnson signed that act, but it was written by the people of Selma," said Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) who was clubbed on the head during the "Bloody Sunday" attack on marchers by state troopers and sheriff's deputies on March 7, 1965. He was among 17 blacks hospi- talized as that march was turned back. A second march two weeks later, under the protection of a federal court order and led by the Martin Luther King Jr., went 50 miles from the bridge over the Alabama River to the steps of the state Capitol in Montgomery. The attack and the march inspired passage of the Voting Rights Act, which barred obstacles such as literacy tests that were set up by segregationists to keep blacks from registering to vote. "(The legislators') presence here is a mockery unless they go home and do the right thing." - Rev. Joseph Lowery Southern Christian Leadership Conference head A -re-enactment of the five-day march is planned this week, culminating with a rally at the Capitol on Saturday. In a service at Brown Chapel, six blocks from the bridge, Lewis cited former President Bill Clinton, who crossed the bridge with Selma march- ers in 2000, and former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman as white politi- cians who have greeted modern civil rights concerns with open arms. "Five years ago, this governor had all the state troopers line up on that bridge. Five years ago, state troopers, black and white, men and women, stood and saluted us," Lewis said amid applause for Siegelman. Certain provisions of the Voting Rights Act, such as the use of federal examiners and a requirement for Justice Department approval of election law changes; will be up for renewal by Congress in 2007. The Rev. Joseph Lowery, longtime head of the Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference, urged the nearly three dozen House and Senate members who participated to renew those portions of the law. "Their presence here is a mockery unless they go home and do the right thing," said Lowery, who also joined King on the 1965 march. The crowd on the bridge included many young people such as Teresa Prevo, 29, of Selma, whose four children came along for the observance. Jordan's foreign minister met Israeli leaders yesterday in the first such visit in more than four years, signifying renewed diplomatic efforts to resolve long-stand- ing regional conflicts involving Israel, the Palestinians, Syria and Lebanon. Jordanian Foreign Minister Hani al-Mulqi called for intense peace efforts in meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Vice Premier Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom, who left soon after for Washington. U.S. officials said Sharon would visit the White House next month followingthe first trip to Washington by Mahmoud Abbas as Palestinian leader - a reflection-of renewed U.S. involvement in Mideast peacemaking in the post-Yasser Arafat erd. Also, Israeli officials said Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz will meet Abbas this week for the first time. JERSUALEM Israel could resume West Bank pullout today A senior Palestinian commander said yesterday that Israel would begin pulling its troops out of the West Bank town of Tulkarem tomorrow. Israeli officials said it was still up to the Palestinians to show they could stop violence in the West Bank, and government approval remained necessary before troops would leave Tulkarem. The transfer of five West Bank towns was frozen after a Palestin'ian suicide bomber killed five Israelis in Tel Aviv on Feb. 25. Contacts resumed yesterday. The senior Palestinian participant, West Bank commander Hajj Ismail Jabber, told The Associated Press after meeting Israeli army officers, "It was agreed in principle that the Israeli army will begin Tuesday withdrawing from Tulkarem and the areas around the town, and afterward we will discuss the Israeli withdrawal from the otlier towns in the West Bank." - Compiled from Daily wire repbrts Look ing for a career that defies the law of gravity? Then talk to someone who knows science. 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. 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 $110. Winter term (January through April) is $115, yearlong (September through April) is - $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall ternM 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. E-mail letters to the editor to tothedaily@michigandaily.com. 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 LBD student group meeting of 2005 Thursday, March 10th at 7pm in Mason Hall 3314 Our informal discussion will include: NEWS Farayha Arrine, Managing Editor 763-2459, news@michigandalIy.com EDITORS: Melissa Benton, Donn M. Fresard, Michael Kan, Jameel Naqvi STAFF: Omayah Atassi, Liz Belts, Adrian Chen, Amber Colvin, Jon Cohen, Jeremy Davidson, Adhiraj Dutt, Victoria Edwards, Chloe Foster, Laura Frank, Magaly Grimaldo, Julia Heming, Tina Hildreth, Jacqueline Howard, Alexa Jenner, Anne Joling, Carmen Johnson, Genevieve Lampinen, Andrew Kaplan, EgVt Kraack, Rachel Kruer, Tomislav Ladika, Kingson Man, Kelly McDermott, Carissa Miller, Justin Miller, Naila Moreira, Mark Osmond, Kristin Ostby, Koutubh Patwardhan, Leslie Rott, Ekjyot Saini, Talia Selitsky, Sarah Sprague, Karl Stampfil, Abby Stassen, Phil Svabik, Karen Tee, Kim Tomlin, Laura Van Hyfte OPINION Suhael Momin, Sam Singer, Editors 763.0379, opinion@michIgandally.com ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Matt Rose, Christopher Zbrozek STAFF: Emily Beam, Katherine Cantor, Whitney Dibo, Daniel Faichney, Jesse Forester, Mara Gay, Jared Goldberg, Theresa Kennelly, Andy Kula, Rajiv Prabhakar, David Russell, Dan Skowronski, Brian Slade CARTOONISTS: Sam Butler, Colin Daly, Alexander Honkala COLUMNISTS: Daniel Adams, Jasmine Clair, Jeff Cravens, Joel Hoard, Sowmya Krishnamurthy, Elliott Mallen, Zac Peskowitz, Jordan Schrader, Dan Shuster SPORTS Ian Herbert, Managing Editor 764.8585, sports@michigandally.com SENIOR EDITORS: Eric Ambinder, Josh Holman, Megan Kolodgy, Sharad Mattu, Stephanie Wright NIGHT EDITORS: James V. Dowd, Jack Herman, Katie Niemeyer, Jake Rosenwasser, Matt Singer, Matt Venegoni STAFF: Scott Bell, H. Jose Bosch, Daniel Bremmer, Daniel Bromwich, Chris Burke, Gabe Edelson, Gennaro Filice, Seth Gordon, Tyler Hagle, Bob Hunt, Jamie Josephson, Max Kardon, Dan Ketchel, Dan Levy, Sara Livingston, Ellen McGarrity, Chastity Rolling, Brian Schick, Pete Sneider, Ryan Sosin, Anne Uible, Ben Voss, Kevin Wright ARTS Adam Rottenberg, Managing Editor 763-0379, artspage@mlchigandally.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Alexandra M. Jones, Melissa Runstrom WEEKEND MAGAZINE EDITORS: Ashley Dinges, Doug Wernert SUB-EDITORS: Victoria Edwards, Marshall W. Lee, Punit Mattoo, Evan McGarvey, Bernie Nguyen STAFF: Amanda Andrade, Rachel Berry, Lindsey Bieber, Jeffrey Bloomer, Zach Borden, Lloyd Cargo, Forest Casey, Cyril Cordon, Ian Dickinson, Will Dunlap, Andrew M. Gaerig, Chris Gaerig, Leah Hangarter, Brandon Hang, Lynn Hasselbarth, Joel Hoard, Kevin Hollifield, Andrew Horowitz, Megan Jacobs, Michelle -, Kijek, Matt Kivel, Garrick Kobylarz, Emily Liu, Jacob Nathan, Jared Newman, Sarah Peterson, Jason Roberts, Ruby Robinson, Niamh Slevin, Abby Stotz PHOTO Ryan Weiner, Managing Editor 764-2459, photo@michigandally.com ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Forest Casey, Jason Cooper ASSISTANT EDITORS: Trevor Campbell, Ali Olsen, David Tuman STAFF: Tony Ding, Amy Drumm, Alexander Dziadosz, Cristina Fotieo, Joel Friedman, Glenn Getty, Tommaso Gomez, Ashley Harper, Mike Hulsgbus, Jeff Lehnert, Shubra Ohri, Eugene Robertson, Peter Schottenfels, Julia Tapper GRAPHIC DESIGN STAFF: Patricia Chang, Matthew DanielsAshley Dinges, Megan Greydanus, Ashleigh Henton, Lindsey Ungar ONLINE Eston Bond, Managing Editor 763-2459, onln@michigandally.com EDITOR: Angela Cesere STAFF: Bethany Dykstra, Mira Levitan BUSINESS STAFF Jonathan Dobberstein, Business Manager DISPLAY SALES Christine Hua, Manager 764-0554, display@michigandally.com ; ASSOCIATE SALES MANAGER: Courtney Dwyer SPECIAL SECTIONS MANAGER: Lindsay Pudavick STAFF: Kat Abke, Robert Chin, Esther Cho, Emily Cipriano, Michael Cooper, David Dal, Daniel DiCamillo. Courtney Dwyer, Shannon Fink, Alexis Floyd, Ina Gjeci, Adam Gross. Mark Hynes, Betsy Kuller, Nicole Kulwicki, Katie Merten, Donny Perach, James Richardson, Jessica Sachs, Natalie Stolarski, An Tran, Michael Voice * Isaac Newton 1642-1727 -e If you want to head upward in the world of science, it's essential you don't leave your career to chance. At ScienceCareers.org we know science. We are committed to helping you find the right job, and to delivering 9