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Show 2 2002 WEDNESDAY. JUNE 5. THE SUMMER UTAH CHRONICLE 3 I I ' 3 tHCCNA MCFAfiLAhD htS tCiTC EDlTOS MtKCL CAJKOWSKI CROK'CU ChRCNiCLC jr" ' 1 W;fi if. ...... I jit's hke i COU SMCFARUNCJChRONICLE.UTAH MGAJKOA'SKif CHRONiCLE.UTAH.EDU ' taking the pieces from four or five puzzles without pictures on them and try-ing to figure out which ones fit together DAVE JABUSCH, MUSEUM VOLUNTEEff S? jig-f$- af it Q O ON RECONSTRUCTING EXCAVATED & m r ru r vr n m if ri t ANASAZl POTTEITY KJ It h 4 w k k 1 j I ' JUME 6 Red Butte Garden will pre- WASHINGTON President Bush said Tuesday the CIA and FBI failed to communicate adequately before Sept. n. Congress began extraordinary closed-doo- r hearings into intelligence lapses with bipartisan promises the inquiry will search for facts, not scapegoats. "We're up and running with momentum," said chairman of the House Rep. Porter Goss, Intelligence Committee, who will run the first week of the joint Senate-Hous- e intelligence committee hearings. "We will be a inquiry," Goss said as he stood next to Sen. Bob Graham, the Florida Democrat who will run the hearing on alternate weeks, under the rules the joint committee adopted during its first meeting Tuesday. Hours before the committee met for the first time behind closed doors, Bush, in his most explicit criticism yet of FBI and CIA actions before the attacks, said: "I think it's clear that they weren't" communicating properly. But, speaking at the National Security Agency, Bush also said there is no evidence that U.S. officials could have averted the attacks, even if agencies had worked together better. The House-Senat- e intelligence committee will examine just that point, and others, as it seeks to fact-driv- en uncover what clues might have pointed to .t airplane attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, and how to prevent lapses in the future. "We need to be aggressive and rigorous in this inquiry, asking the right questions like who knew what? And if they didn't know it, why? And what did they do with the information they had?" said Sen. Barbara Mikulski, Investigators owe it to the victims and their families to be "serious, thorough and credible," Mikulski said. Open hearings will begin June 25. g some CIA and Criticizing the FBI officials have engaged in recently, Rep. Saxby said on CNN: "This blame game Chambliss, does nobody any good. We're not head hunters over here on the Hill." The president made his comments when asked about an assertion by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak that U.S. officials were warned about a week before Sept. n that al Qaeda operatives were in the advanced stages leading toward an attack on an unspecified American target. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said, "This was credible but not specific information that pointed to al Qaeda threats against U.S. interests, Egyptian interests and others as well." Bush also said any additional inquiries into Sept. D-M- d. finger-pointin- R-G- a., UTA Sex Abuse Lawsuit Hits LDS Church SALT LAKE by the Utah's work force technology sector, grew by 42 percent during the 1990s, twice the national average, according to census figures released Tuesday. The figures came from the "long form" filled out by one of every six households nationwide. By 2000, Utah had more than 1.1 million people in the work force, compared to 784,501 in 1990. The jobs pay more, too. Median household income in Utah increased to $45,726, several thousand dollars higher than the national average. U.S. Census officials said Utah ranks admirably in virtually every category they surveyed, including education an4 poverty. CITY-Fue- led 8354 Q MOSTLY FIIDW: PARTLY SUNNY CLOUDY SUXOJtT: CLOUDY ' 8958 8461 CLOUDY UTtI?rk0STLY PARTLY ... " "7556 7149 Courtesy Christine McCue, www, Did You Know... summer free of charge with your U card at the You can shape up for U's Field House. The facility is located just south of the Marriott Library and boasts cardio equipment, weights, an indoor track and more. met.utah.eduiimsteenams DWiUtah. Voice Since 1800" THE DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE is an independent student newspaper published daily Monday through Friday during Fall and Spring semesters (excluding test weeks and holidays) and weekly during Summer Term. Chronicle editors and staff are University of Utah s'.udents and are solely responsible for the newspaper's content. Funding comes from advertising revenues and a dedicated student fee administered by the Publications Council. Subscriptions must be prepaid. Forward all subscription correspondence, including change of address, to the Business Manager. To respond with your guestions, comments or complaints call (801) or visit dailyutahchronicle com on the World Wide Web. RED Editor in Chief News Editor Sports Editor Feature Editor Opinion Editor Magazine Editor Photo Editor LAURA B. WEISS lweiss?chronicle utah edu SHEEN A MCFARLAND smctarlandchronicle RORY BRUNNER rbrunnertchromcle utahedu utah.edu WYNNE PARRY wparrychronicl(.utah.du JOHN MORLEY jmorley9chromcle utahedu JERr' ' " AT HEWS jeremyred-ma- com MATT HATFIELD mhatfield9chromcle.utah.edu Production Manager JEREMY WOJCIECHOWSKI YORK-De- nnis Kozlowski, the dealmaking titan who built Tyco International into a huge conglomerate, was charged Tuesday with illegally avoiding more than $i million in sales taxes on paintings, including works by Renoir and Monet. Kozlowski, who resigned as chairman and chief executive Monday amid news of the investigation, pleaded innocent Tuesday and was released on $3 million bail. Neither Kozlowski nor his lawyer would comment outside court. Kozlowski was charged with sales tax violations and falsifying business records on roughly $13 million in paintings. Prosecutors said he and others agreed to create phony invoices and shipping documents to make it appear as if the artwork was to be shipped out of state and was therefore not covered by New York state sales tax. Each of the 11 felony counts could result in four years in prison. n p.m. 7 The Utih f'jstv.n cf fin? Arts Viliprcstrt A::.--. :l exhibition a ,t, of flors! ert hs;: ' c J by the museum's permanent collection. . wojotchromde utahedu Graphic Artist STEPHANIE CEERLINCS sgeerhngsf chronicle Online Editor MARK OCDEN mogdenPchromcle utah edu Business Mansger ADAM WARD awardPchronicle.utahedu Accountant KAY ANDERSEN kaychromcle utah edu Adverti'T Manager JASON COOMBS jcoombsPchromcle utah edu utah edu ti-anr- .u C!-C- Red C-- Gan tta vvi:l pre- sent its annual lsss ZtAvi at the garden's visiter's center. June o The Museum cf Ntjrl History wfU host an exclusive showing of vessels end ether WASHINGTON The Bush administration threatened Tuesday to veto the Senate's $31.4 billion bill, setting up an election-yea- r duel over a package that the White House says has grown too costly. The bill's mostly Democratic defenders pressed ahead anyway, and fired back at Republicans who promised to offer amendments cutting the bill's price tag. President Bush asked Congress in March for $27.1 billion in spending for the rest of the federal fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. Like the Senate measure, his plan is dominated by funds for defense, intelligence and aid to help New York rebuild from the attacks. Most Senate add-on- s are for domestic security programs. ft!?5t3 rt covert i frcm th? C,:n C:.ty-- n area f. rlor to Uls Pms'.l Visiters csn e!so take a - anti-terroris- m anti-terr- or Projects the administration found objectionable include $100 million to secure Russian nuclear weapons and $315 million for Centers for Disease Control and Prevention constructionwhich the White House said could not possibly be spent this year. fcehind-th5-sccr.- pek at th museum's ecllec tlon cf Native American rugs. The event runs from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. JUHE 13 The Co!!3ge cf Science will host t faculty,' l.v; r staff and studrrts v '.th a free screen:.- - cf f ncI? - , i:. "XJiZi-r- " itacis-cuis'o- n , :th tzrr.zio expert VatlJcff Stsva from Ust'or.t-Severe Storms Ubcretcry. Vk l event vsii! Ufca 'scs- in The auditorium cf tr.? Ccc.'-.- s hstltut? cf Hur-'-Genetics at 6:30 p.m. tr-.- n JUIIE 15 Khsry Hail v,!'! present its annus! fundraiser, fliza Sr: :t, In front cf the tui'd-ir.- g cn Presidents Circle. As part cf its Lecture-Wai- k 5;r::s, Red Butte Gerd?n t wlil present a seminar on Tum-nv- .r rt rc.v.if:!j In th? etlO a.m. vH-tcr'sccn- ter Palestine Presents Iran Accuses U.S. New Security Plan Of Killing Afghans West RAMALLAH, to growing U.S. pressure to fight terror, Yasser Arafat presented CIA Director George Tenet with a plan Tuesday for restructuring he un A'ieldy Palestinian security apparatus. The Palestinian leader appointed a general to head the new security array, but Israel said the proposed changes are largely cosmetic because Arafat, who has done little to rein in militants in the past, remains in charge. Some Palestinians also Bank-Respo- nding chronicle Independent NEW : Perscr.il Enrichment Discussion Group for women who have faced cr currently experience livinj In a foreign country in the Wsrrr-n'-s Resource Center, Urcn Room 293, frc-- 4:30 to 6 I Wn ft , The International Women's Association will sponsor a Americans. i UfJIVERSITY HEATHER TKCS;t n by other congressional panels or by an independent commission that some in Congress favor could hinder efforts to prevent future terrorist strikes. "What I am concerned about is tying up valuable assets and time and possibly jeopardizing sources of intelligence," the president said. The Senate Judiciary Committee will hear Thursday from Minnesota FBI agent Coleen Rowley, who says FBI headquarters ignored her office's pleas in the weeks before Sept. n to aggressively investigate Zacarias Moussaoui, after his arrest last August Moussaoui, now charged as an accomplice in the hijacking plot, had come under suspicion by the FBI and was arrested on an immigration charge. At the intelligence committees, lawmakers spent Tuesday discussing procedural matters like the scope of the inquiry, said Rep. Jane Harman, who emerged from the hearing while it was still under way. Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said one purpose of the hearings is to ensure federal law enforcement agencies don't react the wrong way to current criticism and spy more on Record Job Growth Tyco CEO Charged Bill Shown in Census With Tax Evasion Faces Possible Veto ous MOSTLY SUNNY J Anti-Terroris- m SALT LAKE CITY- -A mother and son who say they were sexually abused by the same man arc suing the Mormon church, claiming the church knew the man's history of abuse but failed to tell police or other officials. The mother and son claimed George Tilson abused both of them when they were children. He was convicted of attempted child sexual abuse in 1996. It was not clear if the conviction was related to this lawsuit. He served six months in prison. The suit names The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints as a because church officials "refused to report the abuse to police or civil authorities knowing-numerchildren had been abused." WEDNESDAY: sent a lecture titled "Herb Gardening" at its visitor's center at noon. . were skeptical, because the reform would still leave six different security branches. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, meanwhile, gave in to pressure to prevent suicide bombings and approved construction of a fence between part of the West Bank and IsraeL Sharon is to travel to Washington to meet Monday with President Bush, their sixth visit. Arafat has yet to be invited to the White House. BEHESHT-E-ZAHR- A, Iran-Ir- an's supreme leader accused the United States on Tuesday of "massacring" innocent Afghans during its war on terrorism, and said Iran was ready to fight if attacked. Addressing thousands of people on the 13th anniversary of the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the father of Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the United States launched the war in Afghanistan to get rid of al Qaeda, but instead massacred civilians. "In Afghanistan,' in the poor and wronged country of Afghanistan, they entered the arena under the guise of combating a group or even a few individuals. They did not get their hands on those individuals, but they massacred many innocent people, bombarded them, killed them," Khamenei said. Amid chants of "Death to America," on Tuesday, Khamenei called the United States "the most hated regime in the world." at i H;d """ f E-- r G?.rc.; tte licturs cn C:r C:m at noon i ; rrfr.ts ' l. j h tha gar- den's visitor's center. SjT.mcr tuition piymcrt C- -5. RcdEutte Card mv,-;1j- : re- st r.t "An Cvcr.'r. i h tv3 Jt M f 'htm tmJf " kZ'MiZXJJL IVLKTS C.I a |