m" 8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 6, 2001 BUSINESS Ford files countersuit in case alleging discrimination 4 DETROIT (AP) - Ford Motor Co. yesterday filed a countersuit against an employee who in a lawsuit against the automaker alleges reverse discrimination. In its complaint, Ford says John Kovacs vio- lated his signed employment agreement by removing and disclosing confidential company documents. Kovacs, who is white, is suing Ford in Wayne County Circuit Court, charging that he was passed over for promotions in favor of women and minority candidates. He was suspended April 9 from his manage- ment position in the Ford Motor Credit human resources department after his lawyer, James Fett, sent a letter on his behalf to chairman William Clay Ford Jr. asking him to end the company's diversity hiring measures. Attached to the letter were several internal documents including minutes of confidential human resources committee meetings and lists of employees being considered for promotions or transfers. Ford is not asking for monetary damages in its countersuit or for Kovacs to be fired. Kovacs has been transferred to the company library. "We're asking the court to require him to return all materials to his employer and to restrain him as well as his attorneys or represen- tatives from using the confidential and propri- etary information in any way," said Ford attorney Norman Lippitt. But Kovacs' lawyer says his client, as a human resources manager, had access to the documents and the right to distribute them within the context of his lawsuit. "You have the privilege as a civil rights com- plainant to gather evidence of discrimination," Fett said. "This is Bill Ford's way of shooting the messenger." Lippitt cited a 1998 federal appeals case, Kemcke v. Monsanto, where the panel of judges ruled that an employee loses that privilege if documents are received improperly or stolen. In that case, the plaintiff was fired when he refused to return documents he believed showed a pattern of age discrimination against him and other employees. Fett, however, says his client did not steal the documents. "If he had really done what they said, would- n't they have fired him already?" Fett said. Ford spokeswoman Anne Gattari said Kovacs was not fired "because we did not want to deprive him of making a living." Kovacs was not immediately available for comment, and Fett said he had not spoken with him yesterday. But, Fett said: "He's not going to be intimidated by this (countersuit). He sees it{ for what it is, a public relations ploy." Ford already faces two class action lawsuits and one individual suit filed by current and for- mer employees who say they were denied pro- motions or were terminated because of their age or for being white males. In July, Ford said it would discontinue its 18- month old system of evaluating approximately 18,000 managers. Under the Performance Management Process employees were graded A, B, or C. I HP-Compaq merger faces stiff opposition from shareholders; stock prices fall again I The Los Angeles Times , Shareholders of Hewlett-Packard Co. and takeover target Compaq Computer Corp. are so displeased with the planned acquisition that they might take the extreme step of rejecting the deal, investors and observers said yesterday. Stock in both companies fell for the second day since the deal was announced, with HP declining 66 cents yesterday to $18.21 and Compaq dropping 67 cents to $10.41. HP has now lost 22 percent of its value since announcing it would buy rival computer maker Com- paq for $25 billion in HP stock. Compaq's shares are off more than 16 percent. The proposed deal is now worth less than $20 billion. "Most people who are against the deal are voting with their feet" by selling their shares, said HP investor Thomas Rath of Safeco Asset Management Co. in Seattle. "We don't like what it does to the busi- ness mix." Compaq is already unprofitable in the PC business and the company is losing ground to market leader Dell Computer. Analysts also complain that it could take two years of cost-cutting and reorganization before HP shows any benefit from the deal. The HP-Compaq deal does not have a minimum price, or "collar," where either party can walk away if the shares continue to fall. The terms call for each Compaq share to be exchanged for 0.6325 shares of HP. But if either company changes its mind about the merger they must pay the other $675 million. "There is an outside possibility that unless both companies are able to articulate the story better and convince the investment community," a majority of shares will be voted against the transaction, said chief investment officer David Katz of Matix Asset Advisors in New York. That company owns 960,000 Compaq shares and 444,000 HP shares and opposes the deal. Ordinarily, even shareholders who don't like the terms of an acquisition vote to approve it, especially when no other deal is on the table. Five years ago, Kansas City Power & Light Co. shareholders rejected the company's plan for a friend- ly merger with UtiliCorp United Inc. And last year, Crown Central Petroleum sharehold- ers rejected a proposed takeover of Crown by Rose- more Inc., though a higher offer was in the wings. After a deal is announced, some long-term investors sell to arbitrageurs, who take the small risk that the deal won't close and generally root for the takeover. And a stock price drop after a planned merger's announcement may be only partially due to disagree- ments on the deal's benefits. The rest of the decline may be due to investors digesting the outlook by the two managements that led them to approve the union, said Stanford University law professor Joseph Grund- fest. If a takeover does fall apart, typically only the first piece of the stock decline is reversible, Grundfest said. But a continuing decline in market value can be too big to ignore. That happened last year when HP was in talks to acquire the consulting business of PricewaterhouseC- oopers for more than $17 billion. HP shares sank so much on news of the discussions that HP walked away. The two companies hope to close the deal in the first half of next year. By then investors may view the unpopular merger as their last and best hope. HP Chief Executive Carly Fiorina spoke at an investor conference in Boston on Wednesday and will continue making the rounds to shore up support for buying Compaq. Financial services feeling effects of slowdown Newsday Two thousand here. Four thousand there. People in financial services aren't just dropping like flies - but like whole squadrons. Look at the compa- nies that have announced - or increased the number of - job cuts recently: American Express, 5,000; J.P. Morgan/Chase, 8,000; Citigroup, 4,700. That doesn't count the dribs and drabs of layoffs and buyouts at small companies. But the consoling news is that the unemployment rate is still low - and that-people are still getting jobs. That's what you need to focus on - that and all the resources available to help, not on all that competition for jobs. This according to Kate Wendleton, president of the New York City-based job-search group the Five O'Clock Club (www.fiveoclockclub.com). The number of financial services types in her groups, both virtual and face-to- face, may have increased 30 percent this year, but on average, they're get- ting jobs in 10 weeks, many with raises to boot. Still, people are pretty "pan- icky," she says. Rick Carpenter of East Northport, N.Y., got his walking papers in June' from Citibank, where he was a vice president of strategy for Latin America. He sees the many job-listing Web sites as the "passive" route. "I went into warfare mode," he says of the more active approach, networking. "I even got my 80-year-old aunt to network for me at a function with a bank chief operating officer." A good networking resource, of course, is your professional associa- tion. And it's never too late to join. The number of attendees at the Financial Women's Association of New York's summer networking dinner doubled from last year to 100, says Betsy Wer- ley, president. The group (www.fwa.org) has about 80 pending prospects for membership, many of them out of work or worried by the possibility, all looking "to build a net- work in a hurry," she says. Membership is increasing, too, in the 4 Financial Executives Networking Group (www.thefeng.org), which sends regular job-lead e-mails to its constituents - all in the finance, accounting, controller areas - who make $100,000 and up. The New York City chapter is looking for a larger conference room, to accom- modate the 30 or so people showing up at meetings. 4 your future into something fantastic: UNLIMITED The decisions you're about to make regarding your future are, in a word, huge. Is there a company that will truly encourage your ideas? Will you really be able to get on the fast-track to success? The answers are "Yes," when you join the team at Eaton Corporation. We're an $8.3 billion diversified industrial manufactureq with 195 manufacturing plants in 24 countries. 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