2 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 29, 2006 NATION/WORLD I 413 E. Huron St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104-1327 www.michigandaily.conm DoNN M. FREsARD ALEXIS FLOYD Editor in Chief Business Manager fresard@michigandaily.com business@michigandaily.com CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom: 763-2459 Office hours: Sun.-Thurs. 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The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The AssociatedCollegiate Press. U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld ges- tures during a news conference yesterday in Tirana, Albania. Rumsfeld's remarks came on the final day of the annual Southeastern Defense Ministerial meeting. Ru-msfeld: Intel report on Iraq misleading Defense secretary calls idea that the world might be safer if the United States were not in Iraq 'nonsensical' (AP) - It is impossible to know with any pre- cision whether the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have created more terrorists than they've killed, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said yesterday. In his first extensive remarks about a recent U.S. intelligence report saying the threat of terror- ism has risen, Rumsfeld told reporters at a NATO meeting that, in general, the value of intelligence reports can be uneven, and "sometimes it's just flat wrong." But he added that "the implication that if you stop killing or capturing people who are trying to kill you, then therefore the world would be a bet- ter place, is obviously nonsensical." His statements came a day after the White House refused to release the rest of a secret intel- ligence assessment that depicts a growing terror- ist threat. In the much-discussed National Intelligence Estimate initially reported last weekend, the gov- ernment's top analysts concluded that Iraq has become a "cause celebre" for jihadists, who are growing in number and geographic reach. If the trend continues, they said, the risks to the U.S. interests at home and abroad surely will grow. Rumsfeld did not specifically criticize or address the controversial intelligence report, but instead commented more broadly about the terrorist question that has gripped the political world since the report was disclosed last week. "Are more terrorists being created in the world? We don't know. The world doesn't know," said Rumsfeld, adding that there are no good ways to measure "how many terrorists are being trained at camps around the world." NEWS IN BRIEF BAILEY, Colo. School attack included sexual assaults The gunman who killed himself after fatally shooting one of six girls he held in a high school classroom methodically selected his hostages and had sexually assaulted some of them, the sheriff and a witness said yesterday. "He did traumatize and assault our children," Park County Sheriff Fred Wegener said. "I'll only say that it's sexual in nature" Wegener identified the suspect as Duane R. Morrison,53, and said was he from the Denver area but had been living in his car. He said investigators had not established any previous connection between him and the hostages. State records showed he was arrested in July in the west Denver suburb of Lake- wood on a charge of obstructing police in another suburb. He was also arrested for larceny and marijuana possession in 1973. Reached at their home in Tulsa, Okla., Morrison's stepmother said she and her husband, Bob Morrison, "have no record of him being, having any trouble before." WASHINGTON Republicans push detainee bill toward passage Senate Republicans fought off opposition yesterday to President Bush's plan to prosecute and interrogate terror suspects, pushing toward passage of a bill the GOP hopes to use as a campaign spotlight for its tough stance against terrorists. GOP leaders eased past attempts by Democrats and a lone Republican to change the bill, all but ensuring final passage by day's end. The House passed nearly identical legislation Wednesday and was expected to endorse the Senate bill on Friday so it could be sent to the president to sign. The bill would create military commissions to prosecute terrorism suspects. It also describes - at times vaguely - ways that CIA interrogators cannot treat detainees, in effect granting the president wide leeway to decide what is legally permissible. BAGHDAD Al-Qaida leader invites sciensists to join Al-Qaida in Iraq's leader, in a chilling audiotape released yesterday, called for nuclear scientists to join his group's holy war and urged insurgents to kidnap Westerners so they could be traded for a blind Egyptian sheik who is serving a life sentence in a U.S. prison. The fugitive terror chief said experts in the fields of "chemistry, physics, elec- tronics, media and all other sciences - especially nuclear scientists and explo- sives experts" should join his group's jihad, or holy war, against the West. LAKELAND, Fla. Police in Florida search for cop killer A man who had been pulled over for a traffic violation shot two sheriff's deputies yesterday, killing one of them and prompting an intensive manhunt that forced a lock- down at three schools, officials said. The shooter was first approached during a traffic stop, but he fled into a wood- ed area when the officer began asking him about his identity, Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said. That officer and a deputy who arrived seconds later with a police dog chased him into the woods. Shots were fired, and the two deputies and the dog were hit, Judd said. CORRECTIONS - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports A story on page 3B of yesterday's paper (Pixiesfill out Tate murder movie) mis- identified Pixies lead guitarist Joey Santiago as playing drums. H A story in Sept. 20's Statement (Impending crisis in the NIH) misidentified Charles Burant, a professor of internal medicine, as an associate professor. In the same story, the Journal of Clinical Investigation was misidentified as the Journal of Clinical Investigators. An article on page 9A of Tuesday's paper (Mayer revamped: New bluesy sound) incorrectly listed the number of stars the new John Mayer album Continuum received. The album received 3.5 stars. Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com. * 4 4 I I I ou've studied, if you are driven by energized by teamwork, or a leader elong skills, then we'd like to meet you! BOSTON CHICAGO EVANSTON FRANKFURT LONDON LOS ANGELES MILAN NEW YORK PARIS PHILADELPHIA PRINCETON PUNE SAN FRANCISCO value challenge respect opportunity growth i , J ,. A Af ;Au,11,.aeA Attention Graduating Seniors & 1-year Masters Come learn more about McKinsey when we visit campus this fall Patesfot2006 Presentation: Thursday, October 5 Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Building Room number 1500 EECS 6:00 p.m. All majors welcome Thursday, October 12 Apply online at www.mckinsey.com/usschools TO KY O students are invited to attend our presentation: Resume Submission Deadline: TORONTO Students are invited to apply for Business Associate Business - Kuenzel - Union Wednesday, October 4, 2006 5:00-6:30 pm BBA students, please submit your resume by Thursday, October 5, 2006. ZS A GLOBAL LEADER IN SALES & MARKETING CONSULTING APPLY ONLINE WWW.ZSASSOCIATES.COM a