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   January 28, 2002   QUOTE OF THE DAY "I was a lot luckier last time. This one involved my whole family."  MARK SOKOLOW, who escaped unhurt from the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, but was injured in a bombing in Jerusalem.   NATIONAL Efforts to Track Foreign Students Are Said to Lag  Despite promises to tighten controls after Sept. 11, the government is at least a year from making the student visa system safer from terrorists.   Cheney Is Set to Battle Congress to Keep His Enron Papers Secret  The White House is prepared to go to court to fight the release of documents demanded as part of an investigation into any influence that Enron had in formulating energy policy.   In a Sign of Changing Times, Bush Calls for More Spending  President Bush's new budget will propose a   spending increase of 9 percent for next year, more than any big-government Democrat would dare to put on the table.     MORE NATIONAL NEWS    Advertisement    Sign up now for DealBook for Breaking News and Market-Moving Intelligence  Your source for daily briefings on the latest and most comprehensive news about market-moving mergers and acquisitions, IPOs, private equity  transactions, venture capital deals and Wall Street maneuverings, all delivered before the market's  opening bell.  Edited by Andrew Ross Sorkin.  Sign up now!   [IMAGE]   INTERNATIONAL Sept. 11 Survivor Wounded as Jerusalem Bomb Kills 2  A New York lawyer was one of 113 wounded Sunday when a Palestinian bomber triggered an explosion in Jerusalem, killing herself and an 81-year-old man.   After Green Beret Operation, Townspeople Have Questions About Bound Bodies  In dozens of interviews, residents of Oruzgan, Afghanistan, said a two-hour American raid last Thursday was an error.   American Reporter Held Captive in Pakistan, a Message Says  A Wall Street Journal correspondent has been kidnapped in Karachi, Pakistan, according to an e-mail message sent on Sunday to news organizations.     MORE INTERNATIONAL NEWS    BUSINESS Cheney Is Set to Battle Congress to Keep His Enron Papers Secret  The White House is prepared to go to court to fight the release of documents demanded as part of an investigation into any influence that Enron had in formulating energy policy.   American Reporter Held Captive in Pakistan, a Message Says  A Wall Street Journal correspondent has been kidnapped in Karachi, Pakistan, according to an e-mail message sent on Sunday to news organizations.   For a Hewlett, Merger Raises a Basic Fear  Hewlett-Packard, led by Carleton S. Fiorina, plans to increase sales to large corporate customers. But that could lead it down the same path as the troubled PC industry, worries  Walter B. Hewlett.     MORE BUSINESS NEWS    TECHNOLOGY For a Hewlett, Merger Raises a Basic Fear  Hewlett-Packard, led by Carleton S. Fiorina, plans to increase sales to large corporate customers. But that could lead it down the same path as the troubled PC industry, worries  Walter B. Hewlett.   For IDT, the Big Flameouts Light Its Fire  IDT, an offbeat New Jersey telecommunications company, has made something of a specialty of capitalizing on the flashy flameouts of the telecommunications crash.   Fast Hookup With Cellphone Is Expected From Verizon  Verizon Wireless is expected to announce the availability of the nation's first commercial "third-generation" wireless service.     MORE TECHNOLOGY NEWS    POLITICS Cheney Is Set to Battle Congress to Keep His Enron Papers Secret  The White House is prepared to go to court to fight the release of documents demanded as part of an investigation into any influence that Enron had in formulating energy policy.   In a Sign of Changing Times, Bush Calls for More Spending  President Bush's new budget will propose a   spending increase of 9 percent for next year, more than any big-government Democrat would dare to put on the table.   Hoping to Run California, and Recast the Republicans  Los Angeles' ex-mayor says he is trying to steer his party leftward as he seeks the Republican nomination for governor of California.     MORE POLITICS NEWS    SPORTS Bledsoe Leads Patriots to Super Bowl Against Rams  New-age quarterback Tom Brady went down with an injury, retro quarterback Drew Bledsoe took over, and New England beat Pittsburgh in the A.F.C. Championship.   A Grouchy Warner Blitzes the Eagles  St. Louis quarterback Kurt Warner picked apart Philadelphia and pushed the Rams to a win in the N.F.C. Championship.   No. 1 Duke Rolls On  Shaking off an up-and-down first half, No. 1 Duke came through when it mattered on its way to a win over No. 7 Virginia.     MORE SPORTS NEWS    ARTS Recapturing a Spirit of Daring  Christoph von Dohnanyi and the Cleveland Orchestra   proved that music  making can be both intellectual and thrilling in recent concerts at Carnegie Hall.   Standing In for New Yorkers: Expressions of Grief Over Sept. 11  A new play about a fire captain who lost  eight of his  men on Sept. 11 has the impact -- half-relieving, half-agonizing -- of a chill salve on an open wound.   Hometown Boy Makes Waves  The truly achieved writers are  the ones one who deceive themselves so well that they  can pursue a lie that becomes true in spite of its   implacable falsity.     MORE ARTS NEWS    NY REGION Police Shift Focus to Terror With Spymaster and a Marine  Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly has added two deputy commissioners as he reshapes the department to thwart terrorism.   New Jersey to Rule on Keeping Sex Offenders Locked Up After Prison Release  New Jersey's highest court is expected to determine who among the state's convicted sex offenders may be institutionalized after completing their prison sentences.   With Reservoirs Low, Mayor Plans to Issue Drought Warning  With the reservoirs that supply the city at only half capacity, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg called on Sunday for a series of voluntary measures to cut consumption.     MORE NY REGION NEWS    OP-ED  What's a Recovery Without Jobs?   By BOB HERBERT  While it may be true technically   that the economy is executing a modest turnaround, it doesn't translate into more jobs for Americans.   Colin Powell Dissents   By WILLIAM SAFIRE  What legal rights should be accorded   to the terrorists now being interrogated at the American military base in Cuba?   A Symbionese Family Reunion   By TIM FINDLEY  The main players of the Symbionese Liberation   Army will be assembled in court, on trial for   the 1975 murder of Myrna Opsahl, to  tell of old delusions in a pointless  spasm of violence.     MORE OP-ED  NEWS    About This E-Mail You received these headlines because you requested The New York Times Direct e-mail service. To sign up for other newsletters, cancel delivery, change delivery options or your e-mail address, see http://www.nytimes.com/email .   Check or un-check the headlines you would like to receive or cancel and remember to go to the bottom of the page and click on "Save Selections."  Suggestions and feedback are welcome at feedback@nytimes.com .   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