The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 12, 2009 -- 3A NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Lawmakers agree on stimulus bill Moving with lightning speed, key lawmakers announced agree- ment yesterday on a $789 bil- lion economic stimulus measure designed to create millions of jobs in a nation reeling from recession. President Barack Obama could sign the bill within days. "The middle ground we've reached creates more jobs than the original Senate bill and costs less than the original House bill," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, one of the participants in an exhausting and frenzied round of bargaining. The bill includes help for vic- tims of the recession in the form of unemployment benefits, food stamps, health coverage and more, as well as billions for states that face the prospect of making deep cuts in their own programs. It also preserves Obama's signa- ture tax cut - a break for millions of lower and middle income tax- payers, including those who don't earn enough to pay income taxes. WASHINGTON Peanut*Co. owner refuses to testify See the jar, the congressman challenged Stewart Parnell, hold- ing up a container of the peanut seller's products and asking if he'd dare eat them. Parnell pleaded the Fifth. The owner of the peanut com- pany at the heart of the massive salmonellarecall refused to answer the lawmaker's questions - or any others - yesterday about the bac- teria-tainted products he defiantly told employees to ship to some 50 manufacturers of cookies, crackers and ice cream. "Turn them loose," Parnell had told his plant manager in an inter- nal e-mail disclosed at the House hearing. The e-mail referred to products that once were deemed contaminated but were cleared in a second test last year. Summonedbycongressionalsub- poena, the owner of Peanut Corp. of America repeatedly invoked his right not to incriminate himself at the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing on the sal- monella outbreak that has sickened some 600 people, may be linked to nine deaths - the latest reported in Ohio yesterday - and resulted in one of the largest product recalls of more than 1,900 items. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Two satellites collide 500 miles above Siberia Two big communications sat- ellites collided in the first-ever crash of two intact spacecraft in orbit, shooting out a pair of massive debris clouds and posing a slight risk to the international space sta- tion. NASA said it will take weeks to determine the full magnitude of the crash, which occurred nearly 500 miles over Siberia on Tuesday. "We knew this was going to hap- pen eventually," said Mark Matney, an orbital debris scientist at John- son Space Center in Houston. NASA believes any risk to the space station and its three astro- nauts is low. It orbits about 270 miles below the collision course. There also should be no danger to the space shuttle set to launch with ' seven astronauts on Feb. 22, offi- cials said, but that will be re-eval- uated in the coming days. LONE GROVE, Okla. Rescuers search for more victims of Oklahoma twisters Rescuers sorted through bricks and shattered plywood yester- day in search of more victims of a deadly tornado that blasted through a small Oklahoma town where many people in a trailer park had nowhere to escape the howling winds. Some people were killed by fly- ing debris. One man died when a pickup truck fell on him. At least eight bodies were recovered. There were also miraculous tales of survival: People taking shelter in a closet pulled a woman to safety after the tornado blew part of the roof off and threatened to carry her away. Another woman was found injured but alive beneath an over- turned mobile home. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Banks agree on greater accountability vIi ues to spiral downward in an ever- worsening recession. Taxpayers are furious with big banks that benefited from the fed- eral bailout designed to get credit moving again, but which also spent lavishly on executive bonuses, company retreats and office redec- orating. Lawmakers also are feeling the heat for signing off on the bailout package plan, which was conceived last year under President Bush and now is in the hands of President Barack Obama. Across Capitol Hill, senators pressed Treasury Secretary Tim- othy Geithner on whether the Obama administration will need to request more money to fund its financial industry rescue plan. Obama's finance chief declined to speculate and told the Senate Bud- get Committee that more requests are possible. "So you have no clue," Sen. Lind- sey Graham, R-S.C., told Geithner. "Why not just ask for more? We know you will." A day after unveiling an effort to pump up to $2 trillion into the financial system, Geithner defended the lack of detail in the plan that caused fresh heartburn on Wall Street and Capitol Hill. He said the plan was presented in mistakes of the past 12 months where things *were rushed out before they were ready, and strat- egy had to be adapted because of that Over more than five hours in the House, the CEOs were met with deep skepticism from law- makers who aggressively quizzed them on how they have used more than $160 billion in taxpay- ers' money. Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the panel, told the CEOs as the hearing opened. "There has to be a sense of the American people that you understand their anger ... and that you're willing to make some sacrifices." Frank, D-Mass., also asked banks to impose a moratori- um on mortgage foreclosures until Geithner comes up with a system- wide mortgage modification. The panel's top Republican, Spencer Bachus of Alabama, said the bankers and Congress must sway people by "winning back their trust and their confidence." Repeatedly, lawmakers were scornful and treated the financial heavyweights almost like naughty schoolchildren, ordering them to raise their hands to indicate their responses to blanket questions about their own use of perks and any policy changes made since accepting the bailout money. "You created the mess we're in," scolded Michael Capuano, D-Mass. "And now you're saying 'Sorry. Trust us.' ... America doesn't trust you anymore." MANUEL BALCE CENETA/A3 P Morgan Chase & Co. CEO James Dimon, speaks to lawmakers at the conclusion of testimony before a House Financial Ser- ces Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, yesterday. .t Eight top bankers tae appear before out. financial committee hav oft: WASHINGTON (AP) - Facing offi a disgusted- public and Congress, Mor bank CEOs agreed with demands Fin: for greater accountability yester- tee. day in the first testimony on how A y're spending money from the payer-funded $700 billion bail- Both our firm and our industry e far to go to regain the trust axpayers, investors and public cials," John J. Mack, head of rgan Stanley, told the House ancial Institutions Commit- dded JP Morgan Chase & Co.'s Jamie Dimon: "We stand ready to do our part going forward." The eight top bankers appear- ing before the panel were gener- ally contrite and conceded they have work to do to win over a bitter public and an exasperated Con- gress. They had little choice but to acknowledge as much, given intense anger and anxiety as the troubled financial system contin- Madoff's wife pulled out $15 million before arrest Bank withdrawals included $10M the day before her husband's arrest BOSTON (AP) - The wife of disgraced money manager Ber- nard Madoff withdrew more than $15 million from a firm co- owned by her husband - includ- ing $10 million on the day their children turned her husband over to authorities for oversee- ing an alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme, the top securities regu- lator in Massachusetts said yes- terday. Secretary of State William Galvin said Ruth Madoff, 67, withdrew $5.5 million on Nov. 25 and $10 million on Dec. 10 - the day before Bernard Madoff was arrested - from Cohmad Securities Corp., a New York firm co-owned by her husband. The secretary cited wire transfer records produced by Cohmad as proof of the with- drawals. They came as Madoffs' scheme was unraveling as inves- tors filed $7 billion worth of redemption requests. They also appeared to fol- low what authorities consider a disturbing trend on the part of the Madoffs to hide money that could be used to reimburse burned investors. Prosecutors have already said investigators found 100 signed checks worth $173 million that Madoff was ready to send out to his closest family and friends at the time of his arrest in Decem- ber. Two weeks later, during the Christmas holidays, Madoff sent more than $1 million in jewelry and heirlooms to family and' friends. "We're not accusing her of anything wrong," Galvin spokesman Brian McNiff said of Ruth Madoff. "It's just one of the things that came out in the response, such as it was, from Cohmad" to a subpoena from Massachusetts officials. "Now, what someone in New York or the feds may think of it may be entirely different." A telephone number listed to Ruth Madoff in Palm Beach, Fla., rang busy and a number in New York had been disconnect- ed. A Cohmad spokeswoman in New York said the company had no comment. Ira Sorkin, a law- yer for Bernard Madoff, said he had no comment on the with- drawals. In New York, meanwhile, the government and lawyers for Madoff agreed to a 30-day delay in the Wednesday dead- line for obtaining a grand jury indictment against the money manager. The new deadline is March 13. As he had during a similar extension a month ago, Assis- tant U.S. Attorney Marc Litt wrote that the government requested the extension "for the purpose of allowing time to conduct additional discussions regarding a possible disposition of this case." Egyptian workers unveil perfectly preserved mummy Mummy sealed in 2,600-year-old limestone sarcophagus SAQQARA, Egypt (AP) - Illu- minated only by torches and cam- era lights, Egyptian laborers used crowbars and picks yesterday to lift the lid off a 2,600-year-old lime- - , , stone sarcophagus, exposing - for the first time since it was sealed in antiquity - a perfectly preserved mummy. The mummy, wrapped in dark- stained canvas, is part of Egypt's latest archaeological discov- ery of a burial chamber 36 feet x (11 meters) below ground at the ancient necropolis of Saqqara. The find, made three weeks ago, was publicly announced Monday and shown to reporters for the first time yesterday. Egypt's archaeology chief Zahi Hawass has dubbed it a "storeroona Egypt's antiquities chief Zahi Hawass (left) brushes away the sand to reveal a wood- for mummies," because it houses en sarcophagus at the ancient necropolis of Saqqara, yesterday. eight wooden and limestone sar- cophagi as well as at least two tional media yesterday into the the shaft, holding on to a rope- dozen mummies. burial chamber, supervising as one pulled winch turned by workers Hawass-led a group of interna person at a time was lowered into above ground. C:ar RepaoIr * Co .etitiVe prxces * RF 4Tax% bade to campus * "Fsa'U owwed - 3t 3 ears ProfessIonal utomoti ue ProAutoTechs.com . . . echnicians 734.665.9707 The Driving Force in Auto Repair , S U D O K U