The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 9, 2001 - 5A Taubman Bleeding for a cause: Week 2 Plaintiffs' study conspiracy trial set to start today Former Sotheby's chairman faces up to three years in prison . From staff and wire reports details types of bias in Ford suit 0 The benefactor and namesake of the University's architecture school is scheduled to go on trial in Man- hattan today as a scandal that exposed fine art auctioneers as price-fixing opportunists will go back on public display. A. Alfred Taubman, the one-time Sotheby's chairman, was charged with antitrust conspiracy for allegedly joining rival auction house Christie's in a conspiracy to set artificially high commission rates that ripped off sellers. Taubman donated $30 mil- lion to the Uni- RYAN LEVENTHAL/ Daily LSA freshman Justin Trauben gets his blood pressure taken before his blood is drawn yesterday at Mary Markley Residence Hall for the Michigan-Ohio State Blood Battle. The remaining schedule of donation sites for the Blood Battle is: Today: East Quad, Wednesday: University Friday: East Hall, 2 p.m.-8 p.m. Hospitals, 7 a.m.-7 p.m. 2 p.m.-8 p.m. Sunday through Friday: Friday: Chrysler Center, Saturday, Nov. 24: Michigan Union, 2 p.m.-8 p.m. noon-6 p.m. Presentation of Blood Drop U Tuesday: University Hospitals, Friday: Mosher Jordan, Trophy at Michigan-Ohio State 7 a.m.-7 p.m. 2 p.m.-8 p.m. football game DETROIT (AP) - An analysis of Ford Motor Co. statistics that was done for plaintiffs suing the automaker shows that older workers received lower grades on their eval- uations than younger workers, and fewer women than men received the lowest grades. Ford faces two class action and seven individual lawsuits by current and for- mer managers. The plaintiffs claim they were denied promotions or were termi- nated because of their age or for being white males. Attorney James Fett, who is repre- senting several Ford employees in the suits, hired statistician Malcolm Cohen to do the analysis. Two charts that Cohen put together show that as the age of Ford employees increased, the percentage of lower grades also rose. Cohen, the president of Employee Research Corporation of Ann Arbor, did not return a message yester- day seeking comment about his method- ology. "These raw numbers are meaningless and in fact the court acknowledged when it ruled the statistics could be released ... that the raw data in question are open to question and spinning," said Ford spokeswoman Anne Gattari. Under the Performance Manage- ment Process, employees were graded A, B, or C. Those receiving a C could lose bonuses and raises, and two consecutive C grades could mean dismissal. Initially, at least 10 percent of employees were to be graded C, but thAt later was low- ered to 5 percent. In July, Ford said it would discontinue its 18-month-old system of evaluating about 18,000 managers. On July 10 the letter system was replaced by three des- ignations: top achiever, achiever, and improvement required. There would also be no fixed percentages for the number of employees receiving each classification. Cohen's first chart shows 0.9 percent of those under the age of 30 received a C, the lowest grade. As the age of the employees evaluated rises, so does the number of workers receiving C's. Two percent of those age 35-39, 6.2 percent of those 45-49, and 28.2 percent of workers age 60-64 received C's, accord- ing to the analysis. Another chart shows 3.8 percent of women evaluated in 2000 received C grades, while C grades were given to 7.8 percent of the men. Gattari said the company is continu- ing to look at the figures and is confi- dent its evaluation system is fair and unbiased. "These people have very different job responsibilities and work histories. You have to consider all these variables before you get a truthful analysis;' she said. A judge granted plaintiffs the right to the Ford statistics on Oct. 26 when attor- neys argued the workers needed them to make a well-considered decision on whether to accept voluntary buyouts and retirement packages offered as part of Ford's move to reduce its salaried work force. The statistics were released Yes- terday - as talks aimed at settling the suits between Ford and plain- tiff.s' attorneys, other than Fett, broke down, according to a source requesting anonymity. Taubman versity's College of Architecture and Urban Planning in 1999, the largest financial gift of its kind ever given to any architec- ture school. The college was subse- quently named after Taubman, 76, of Bloomfield Hills. The University said last year after Taubman came under fire that it had no plans to reconsider having the school named after him. Jury selection in the case began yesterday. Taubman, an audio headset dan- gling from his ears, turned and nod- ded toward prospective jurors as he was introduced by U.S. District Judge George B. Daniels. Daniels said he hoped 12 jurors and three to four alternates could be chosen in time to begin opening statements today, followed by the government's first witness. The trial could last about a month, he said, drawing a sigh from several poten- tial jurors. The indictment accuses Taubman and his counterpart at Christie's, Anthony Tennant, of joining in a conspiracy that stole as much as $400 million in commissions from sellers from 1993 to 1999. Taubman has said he is "absolute- ly innocent" since charges were made public on May 2 by the antitrust division of the U.S. Department of Justice. Tennant, 71, of Andover, Eng- land, remains a fugitive, maintain- ing that he is innocent and being pursued as a "scapegoat for others." His lawyers have said he will not go to the United States to contest the charges. If convicted, Taubman faces up to three years in prison and could be fined up to twice the amount lost by customers. Last October, Sotheby's pleaded guilty to price-fixing charges along with its former chief executive offi- cer, Diana D. Brooks, the first woman to head a major auction house. Brooks' plea deal requires her te testify for the government against her former boss and say she was acting on orders from Taubman. Sotheby's has been sentenced to pay $45 million; Brooks awaits sen- tencing. Sotheby's said in a May statement that none of its current employees was involved in or aware of any breach in antitrust laws. It declined comment Wednesday. Christie's received amnesty from prosecution after it began cooperat- ing with the federal investigation. A grand jury began probing the scan- dal in 1997. Taubman lawyer Robert B. Fiske said to retain its amnesty, the auc- tion house must show that it shut down the price fixing once it was discovered and that Sotheby's initi- ated the scheme. The fallout from the scandal has walloped the companies financially, leading to a $537 million settlement of lawsuits brought by customers. The companies, which control more than 90 percent of the world's auctions of art, jewelry and furni- ture, will share the settlement costs. I I Lebanese native elected Wayne mayor WAYNE (AP) - Lebanon native Abdul Haidous has been wide attention. Haidous's campaign did not. elected mayor of this Detroit suburb of 20,000. Some other Arab-American and Muslim candidates also The 57-year-old city councilman said he is known as Al, so fared poorly in Tuesday's municipal elections. he chose to list his name on the ballot as A. Haidous. In Hamtramck, Shahab Ahmed, a Muslim immigrant "I'm proud of my Arabic name, and I'm proud of my from Bangladesh, finished sixth in a race for five city American name," he told the Detroit Free Press for a story council seats. Ahmed had come in third in the Sept. 11 yesterday."I didn't want to confuse voters." primary and blamed anti-immigrant flyers for his defeat. Unlike nearby Dearborn, Wayne has a small Arab-Amen- "I was very shocked," Ahmed said. "I thought the people can population. The unsuccessful Dearborn mayor's race of would see through that flyer. The opposition couldn't find a Abed Hammoud, an assistant Wayne County prosecutor, drew better time than the events of Sept. 11."