The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, January 9, 2007 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Bush expected to call for more troops in national address President Bush will address the nation at 9 p.m. tomorrow about his new approach for the war in Iraq, the White House said. Bush is expected to announce an increase of up to 20,000 additional U.S. troops. Bush's decisions, more than two months in the making, already are drawing criticism from new Democratic leaders in Congress who say it is time to begin ending the war, not to send in more U.S. forces. Now in its fourth year, the war has claimed the lives of more than 3,000 members of the U.S. military and was a major factor in the Republicans' loss of Con- gress in the November election. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif) told Bush in a letter last week that "we do not believe that adding more U.S. combat troops contributes to suc- cess." DETROIT Former Ohio imam arrested by Israeli authorities The former imam of Ohio's larg- est mosque who was deported to his native West Bank last week because of his aid to a group clas- sified as terrorist was arrested by Israeli authorities after crossing from Jordan, his brother said yes- terday. Fawaz Damra, 47,hadbeenjailed in Monroe County for a year while awaiting deportation for conceal- ing his ties to Islamic Jihad when he applied for U.S. citizenship in 1994. U.S. Immigration and Cus- toms Enforcement announced his removal Friday. His brother, Nabil Damra, said the Red Cross and the Center for the Defense of the Individual, an Israeli advocacy group for Palestin- ians in Israeli-occupied territories, informed him that Fawaz Damra was in custody and had been taken to Israel's Al Jalameh detention facility near Jenin in the northern West Bank. NABLUS, West Bank Gunmen release deputy mayor Fatah gunmen released the dep- uty mayor of Nablus unharmed yes- terday, two days after kidnapping him in a wave of factional violence spreading through the West Bank. But new unrest erupted else- where in the West Bank, as Fatah militants torched stores of Hamas supporters in Ramallah and shot at the house of a top Hamas official. The kidnapping of Mahdi al- Khamdali, a top Hamas official in the West Bank's commercial center, had raised fears that the violence could soon spin out of control. Al- Khamdali, unshaven and his shoes covered in mud, said he was not hurt in captivity. AUSTIN, Texas Streets closed after 63 birds found dead Police shut down 10 blocks in downtown Austin for several hours yesterday after 63 birds were found dead in the street, but officials said preliminary tests found no threat to people. Workers in yellow hazardous- materials suits tested for contami- nants in a cordoned-offsection near the state Capitol and the governor's mansion before authorities finally gave the all-clear in the afternoon. - Compiled from Daily wire reports SOUL SHOPPING At auto show, Big Three compete with Liebao Importer of Yugo looks to bring SUVs from China to U.S. DETROIT (AP) - A year ago, a lone Geely Automobile Co. sedan sitting outside the main exhibit halls marked the first time a Chi- nese automaker displayed at the North American International Auto Show. This year, Geely was absent from the Detroit show. But another Chi- nese automaker - Hunan Chang- feng Motor Co. Ltd. - was showing its cars in a more polished display, albeit one in a basement exhibit hall. Changfeng's Liebao brand cars, including a pair of small sport util- ity vehicles, are being built for the growing Chinese market. But the company is looking for a way to get them on U.S. roads. Regardless of whether Geely or Changfeng themselves make the jump, the Chinese auto industry represents a tenacious future com- petitor in America. Roadblocks remain, such as the cost of getting them here and consumer worries about the quality of Chinese cars, butsome observersexpectChinese- built cars to be competing for driv- ers before the end of the decade. "One of these days you're going to see Chinese cars all over the place," said American entrepreneur Malcolm Bricklin, who brought the Yugo and Subaru to this country and wants to export luxury vehicles from China to the U.S. as soon as 2009. While the U.S. market likely will be important for Chinese carmak- ers, surviving in their home mar- ket may be a shorter-term focus. Foreign automakers are compet- ing aggressively in China, where sales are expanding at double-digit annual rates and major U.S., Euro- pean and Asian producers have set up factories. The industry estimates that vehicle sales in China this year are expected to rise by 15 percent to 8 million, up from an estimated 7 million in 2006, compared with predictions the U.S. sales will be flat to lower after dropping to about 16.5 million in 2006 from just under 17 million in 2005. Africa, Asia and the Middle East have been major markets for Chinese exports. And Rebecca Lindland, an auto analyst at Global Insight, an economic research and consulting company, said Chinese companies need to balance efforts to satisfy their growing domestic market while looking to expand exports. "You need to see it as a credible - if long-distance - threat," Lind- land said yesterday at the Detroit show. Chris Bednash browses for books at Crazy Wisdom Bookstore on Main Street last eight. The bookstore specialzes in spirituality and alternative medicine materials. The store also hosts lioe moorc in its Tea teem. Bush to no-minate Iraq envoy to U.N. Pakistan ambassador Crocker to replace Khalilzad in Baghdad WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Bush will nominate Zalmay Khalilzad to be the U.S. envoy to the United Nations and veteran diplomat Ryan Crocker to replace ' him as ambassador to Iraq, the . administration said yesterday. Both changes had been revealed in news reports last week. "If confirmed, Ryan and Zal will have two of the hardest and most consequential jobs in the world," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said, announcing the chang- es. White House spokesman Tony Snow had confirmed the plans ear- lier yesterday. Khalilzad, who was born in Afghanistan, has also served as ambassador to Afghanistan. He will replace John Bolton, who could not win Senate confirmation I and resigned last month as his tem- porary appointment as U.N. ambas- sador was about to expire. Crocker, a four-time ambassador who is now U.S. envoy to Pakistan, will replace Khalilzad in Baghdad. Bush is shuffling his teams of military and diplomatic advisers as he plans to announce a new Iraq strategy tomorrow. "The next two years may well be the most significant ones in this mission so far," Rice said. "New challenges on the ground call for changes to our strategy." "There will be new leadership in both our military and our diplo- matic efforts, and the person Pres- ident Bush wants to lead Embassy Baghdad is Ryan Crocker," she said. Gen. John Abizaid, the top U.S. commander overseeing the mili- tary theater that includes Iraq, will be succeeded by Adm. William Fal- lon, now Abizaid's counterpart in the Pacific. Mysterious odor wafts over N.J., Manhattan Natural gas-like smell dissipates by early afternoon NEW YORK (AP) - They bom- barded 911 with calls, crowded the sidewalks in front of evacuated buildings and tuned to the news for word of what was happening. The question on the minds of many New Yorkers yesterday morning was: "What's that smell?" A natural gas-like odor hung over much of Manhattan and parts of New Jersey, confounding authori- ties. The smell seemed to be gone by early afternoon. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said there was no indi- cation the air was unsafe. "It may just be an unpleasant smell," he said. He said sensors did not show an unusually 'high concentration of natural gas, and the city's major utility company reported it found no gas leaks. The mayor said the smell may have been caused by a leak of a substance called mercaptan that is added to natural gas for safety rea- sons to give it a recognizable odor. By itself, natural gas is odorless. UMCRHE)IT UNIONe For Your Best Choice in Financial Services * 'M' checks " Free online banking 24/7 " ATMs on campus umcu.org " Three campus branches email: umcu@umcu.org " StudentVISA credit card phone: 734-662-8200 -VISA Check Card WWW.MUSICOVERY.COM To listen to tunes that corre- spond with your mood, visit this streaming music website. 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