IN BRIEF Indonesia steps up hunt for blast masterminds BALI, Indonesia — Investigators on Monday hunted for the two sus pected masterminds of suicide bomb ings on the resort island as Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Australia and other nations went on high alert to protect their beaches from a repeat of the weekend attacks. Newspapers published graphic photographs of the three alleged bombers’ severed heads, evidence that investigators hope will lead them to the two Malaysians believed to have plotted Saturday’s attacks at crowded restaurants that killed at least 22 people and wounded 104, in cluding six Americans. “It is our hope that people will recognize the faces and call us,” po lice Brig. Gen. Sunarko Dami Artan to said. The men suspected of master minding the attacks — Azahari bin Husin and Noordin Mohamed Top — allegedly are key figures in Jemaah Islamiyah, a regional Islamic militant group with links to al-Qaida that is blamed for the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings that killed 202 people, mostly foreigners. Palestinian police storm parliament for firepower GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Dozens of disgruntled Palestinian police offi cers stormed the parliament building Monday, complaining they do not have enough firepower to confront Hamas, and legislators upset over the growing chaos demanded that Pales tinian leader Mahmoud Abbas reshuffle the Cabinet and fire his se curity chief. The protest and parliament’s re buke of Abbas came a day after the worst fighting between Hamas and police in nearly a decade. Three peo ple were killed, including the deputy police chief in the Shati refugee camp near Gaza City, who was shot in the head after he and his men ran out of bullets during a Hamas assault on their station. The violence underscored the dif ficulties Abbas and his ill-equipped security forces face in trying to con trol unruly Gaza. Since Israel’s pull out from the coastal territory last month, the Islamic militant group Hamas has become increasingly brazen in challenging Abbas. EU, Turkey agree on terms for membership talks LUXEMBOURG — TUrkey and the European Union agreed Monday to start talks on Ankara’s eventual membership in the organization — a historic first step that would trans form the bloc by taking in a pre dominantly Muslim nation and ex panding its borders to Asia and the Middle East. T\irkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul flew to Luxembourg for a late night ceremony to formally open en try talks following an agreement reached after two dramatic days of diplomacy that included strong U.S. lobbying for Turkey’s candidacy. “We have reached a historic point,” Gul said in Ankara before departing. “Full membership negotiations will, God willing, begin tonight.” Bush chooses Harriet Miers for Supreme Court WASHINGTON — President Bush named White House counsel Harriet Miers to a Supreme Court in transition Monday, turning to a longtime loyalist without experience as a judge or pub licly known views on abortion to suc ceed Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. Miers “will strictly interpret our Constitution and laws. She will not legislate from the bench,” the presi dent said as the 60-year-old former private attorney and keeper of campaign secrets stood nearby in the Oval Office. U.S. offensive continues forward in Iraq QA1M, Iraq — With snipers on rooftops and helicopters hovering overhead, U.S. forces clashed with insurgent fighters Monday while searching homes in a town near the Syrian border. In Baghdad, Iraq’s oil minister nar rowly escaped an assassination at tempt when a bomb hit his motorcade. While U.S. forces pushed ahead with their offensive further west, fighting erupted in the capital of Iraq’s Anbar province, with masked militants attacking an Iraqi patrol and sparking a gun battle in the streets of Ramadi. Oil Minister Ibrahim Bahr al Uloum was headed out of the capital to attend the opening of a rebuilt re finery to the north when the roadside bomb hit his seven-car motorcade Monday morning, killing three of his bodyguards, the ministry said. Bahr al-Uloum was unhurt. State may pay extra for soldiers on Katrina duty SALEM — The Oregon Military Department may have to cough up an extra $2.5 million to pay the 2,000 or so Oregon National Guard soldiers sent to Louisiana to help with the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The state promised soldiers head ed to the Gulf Coast that they’d be paid the same state active-duty rate as if they were fighting fires within Oregon’s borders, according to a re port in The Oregonian. But then the Department of De fense ordered that guardsmen on hurricane duty be paid at the lower federal-duty rate, about $80 a day, rather than about $250 a day. If the department has to make up the difference — roughly 15 percent of its $16.7 million two-year budget from the state general fund — the National Guard will have to ask for more money from the Legislative Emergency Board. “We’re hoping like heck we can go to FEMA,” Col. Mike Caldwell, the Oregon National Guard’s deputy di rector, told The Oregonian. “We’re going to send them a bill.” The apparent pay cut prompted angry phone calls and e-mails among soldiers and family members. Cald well said Oregon Adjutant General Fred Rees went to the governor’s of fice to ask for permission to make up the difference. After getting approval, the Military Department sent final checks fate last week. Police seek witness to alleged rape EUGENE — Police in Eugene want to speak with a driver who may have witnessed a man impersonating a po lice officer rape a woman in the Santa Clara area. The alleged assault occurred in the early morning hours of last Monday, Sept. 26, when the impersonator per suaded the woman to pull over her vehicle. The woman, who was then beaten and raped, told investigators that a vehicle drove by during the assault, Lane County Sheriff Lt. Randy Smith told The Register-Guard newspaper of Eugene. The attacker’s car appeared to be a four-door Chevrolet Caprice from the early 1990s with white doors and roof and black hood and trunk, re sembling an old or retired police car. Sheriff Russ Burger, who attended the news conference, said the bogus police car doesn’t resemble any vehi cles currently in use by local officers. But Springfield police have said they are aware of at least three out-of date vehicles they’ve sold that could possibly match the description of the attacker’s car, Burger said. The woman’s attacker is described as a white male in his late teens or early 20s, with shorter dark hair and standing 5 feet 9 inches tall with a thin build. Search for Katrina bodies ends in Louisiana NEW ORLEANS — The search for bodies of people killed by Hurricane Katrina has ended in Louisiana, and more searches will be conducted only if someone reports seeing a body, a state official said Monday. All agencies conducting the searches have finished their sweeps for remains. But Kenyon Interna tional Emergency Services, the pri vate company hired by the state to remove the bodies, is on call if any other body is found, said Bob Jo hannessen, a spokesman with the RUF Christian Fellowship Longing For Relationship Is there an answer to my loneliness ? www. Oregon, ruf. org Weekly Gatherings o Tuesdays 8 p.m. g Room 276, Education write for the Oregon Daily Emerald For more information about freelancing call 346-5511. v state Department of Health and Hospitals. Last week, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said it had completed its role in the search, be cause its specialties were no longer needed. Those services include get ting to bodies in attics or other hard to-reach places or in buildings that may be structurally unsound. FEMA did nearly 23,000 secondary searches in New Orleans with about a dozen teams. As of Monday, the Katrina death toll in Louisiana stood at 964. Stocks mixed as inflation, rate worries persist NEW YORK — Stocks turned in a mixed performance Monday after a report showed that the nation’s man ufacturing sector is expanding but facing even higher costs, triggering worries about inflation and rising in terest rates. The market made a brief advance in early trading, lifted by lower oil and a pair of multibillion-dollar ac quisitions, but retraced its steps as in vestors mulled the latest industrial data from the Institute of Supply Management. Meanwhile, news that global computer chip sales grew 1.7 percent in August bolstered gains in technology stocks. While the ISM’s index was better than expected and signaled that manu facturing has so far withstood the ef fects of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, companies reported another steep rise in raw materials prices last month amid record energy costs. 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