The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS HOUSTON Enron CEO sentenced to 24 years in jail Former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skill- ing, the most vilified figure from the most notorious financial scan- dal of the decade, was sentenced yesterday to 24 years, four months in the harshest sentence yet in the case that came to symbolize corpo- rate fraud in America. U.S. District Judge Sim Lake - ordered Skilling, 52, to home con- finement, wearing an ankle moni- tor, and told the U.S. Bureau of Prisons to recommend when Skill-, ing should report to prison. Lake recommended no date, but suggest- ed Skilling be sent to the federal facility in Butler, N.C. Skilling, insisting he was inno- cent yet remorseful in a two-hour hearing, was the last top former offi- cial to be punished for the account- ing tricks and shady business deals A For that led to the loss of thousands widen of jobs, more than $60 billion in comp Enron stock and more than $2 bil- lion in employee pension plans when Enron collapsed. Lake denied Skilling's request F for bond. JERUSALEM Israel's Olmert q strikes deal with hard-liner o Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, in a bid for political sur- vival, struck an alliance yesterday with a hard-liner who has called DE for stripping Israeli Arabs of citi- Co.'s zenship, executing lawmakers for red ii talking to Hamas and bombing Pal- the c estinian population centers. lion l Taking the hawkish Yisrael Beit- Nort einu party into the government costs would shore up Olmert's coalition, restr weakened badly by the war with It Hezbollah, but probably ends any loss hope for a unilateral Israeli with- the n drawal from much of the West make Bank. predi Yisrael Beiteinu's leader, Avigdor in th Lieberman, announced the deal share yesterday after meeting Olmert. furth "We are joining the government," manu the smiling Lieberman said. dema Th TREMONT, Penn. manc Explosion kills one the y billion in eastern Penn. coal last y . 2 The mine; four escape ried squee -A coal mine explosionkilled a ize sa miner yesterday, but four others closur escaped, authorities said. restr The blast happened at the "It R&D Coal Co. anthracite mine in those Schuylkill County, about 80 miles ter en northwest of Philadelphia. Mood "We have one confirmed fatal- Bruce ity," said Kurt Knaus, a spokesman Ford for the state Department of Envi- saving ronmental Protection. "I believe it Foi is a recovery and not a rescue oper- the e ation." strike State and federal investigators tiate were trying to determine the cause, ers us he said. Regulators ordered the "It mine closed until an investigation envir is complete. Four miners who were under- ground at the time were able to get out, said Kate Dugan, a spokes- womanforthefederal occupational N Safety and Health Administration. DEARBORN R Four thousand Ford workers take buyout, retirement offers Bt About 4,000 Ford Motor Co. hourly workers at former Visteon W Corp. plants have taken the com- pany up on buyout and early retire- to ment offers, a Ford official said yesterday. The deadline for workers whose plants are run by Automotive Com- W ponents Holdings LLC to take the lican offers was Friday. gress Ford President of the Americas Bush Mark Fields said in a conference supp call with reporters and industry two analysts that about 40 percent of tions about 10,400 former Visteon work- In ers agreed to leave the company Repu under the offers. cate The acceptance rate was slight- Hou ly better than the company had a be expected, Fields said. ter Earlier this year, Ford took the cours plants back from Visteon an formed Re aholdingcompany.VisteonisFord's of Vi former parts wing, but it was spun ate off as a separate company in 2000. seem GOP -Compiled from wart Daily wire reports war cours warrc SITE OF TH g E AYIn: .S If there's one thing (R-T in the sports world that supp makes die-hard fans cheer know against their own team, of m it's fantasy sports leagues. prop Fantasycongress.com has part the same effect, just with elected .V officials. Geor Here, political masterminds pecte craft teams of congressmen, earn- tle ing points as their officials sponsor Jams and pass legislation. In the end, the the-t team with the most points wins. cann But play at your own risk: The sit- thini has the potential to make lifelong We h Marxists Grin at tax cuts. adan Tuesday, October 24, 2006 - 3 More time was needed for WTC ° body recovery d Motor Co. assemblyman works on the Ford Mustang at the Auto Alliance Plant in Flat Rock. Ford Motor Co.'s loss s to $5.8 billion in the third quarter, weighed down by the costs of its massive restructuring plan aimed at reshaping the any and cutting expenses so it can compete better against lower-cost rivals overseas. ord loses $5.8b in third uarter due to sagging sales Quarterly loss is mpany's largest in 14 years ARBORN (AP) - Ford Motor blue oval continued to bleed nk in the third quarter, with ompany posting a $5.8 bil- oss yesterday due to sagging h American sales and huge associated with a massive ucturing plan. was the largest quarterly in more than 14 years for ation's second-biggest auto- r, and company officials cted things would get worse e fourth quarter as market drops and Ford pays for er plant closures to bring its facturing in line with lower nd for its products. e July-September perfor- e brings Ford's losses to $7.24 n for the first nine months of ear, compared with a $1.87 n profit for the same period rear. e loss had some analysts wor- that Ford could face a cash ze before it begins to real- avings from job cuts, plant res and other aspects of its ucturing plan. 's going to take a while for benefits to be evident in bet- arnings and cash flow," said dy's Investors Service analyst Clark, who predicted that would not see substantial gs until 2009. rd could be in dire shape if conomy slows or if there's a as the auto companies nego- with the United Auto Work- nion next year, Clark said. 's going to be a very tough onment. They are going to ervous epublicans lallenge ush on Iraq 'lute House seems be searching for a better course have to deliver in a number of areas," Clark said. Moody's said Ford's perfor- mance was consistent with expec- tations that led it to downgrade Ford's long-term rating to B3, six notches below investment grade, on Sept. 19. Ford's new chiefexecutive, Alan Mulally, called the latest results unacceptable, but said he was encouraged by Ford's progress in turning itself around. "This is a critical time," said Mulally, a former Boeing Co. exec- utive who has been with the com- pany a little more than a month. "We clearly recognize it and plan to deal with the business realities we are facing," he told reporters and industry analysts in a confer- ence call yesterday morning. Also yesterday, Ford said it plans to restate its earnings for 2001 due to accounting errors involving derivative transactions in its credit company. The restate- ment is expected to affect finan- cial results from 2001 until the third quarter of this year. The company expected the restatement would improve results for 2002, but said other periods are under study. Ford's net loss of $3.08 per share in the third quarter was larger than last year's third-quar- ter loss of $284 million, or 15 cents per share. Revenue fell 10 percent to $36.7 billion from the same period a year ago. Excluding restructuring and other special charges, Ford said it lost $1.2 billion, or 62 cents per share, from continuing opera- tions. Excluding special items in the third quarter of last year, Ford lost $191 million, or 10 cents per share. Without the special items, Ford nearly met Wall Street expecta- tions. Analysts surveyed by Thom- son Financial had been expecting a loss of 61 cents per share for the quarter. Ford shares fell 11 cents to close at $7.90 on the New York Stock Exchange, where they have trad- ed in a 52-week range of $6.06 to $9.48. Ford also said it had $23.6 bil- lion in cash available at the end of the quarter, but it was exploring the possibility of usingits automo- tive assets as collateral to borrow cash to maintain liquidity as loss- es and restructuring costs mount. The company expects to spend about $3.5 billion more of its cash by the end of the year. "We have plenty now," said Chief Financial Officer Don Leclair. "We do expect to have some significant cash outflow." Ford expects to spend $9.5 bil- lion to $10.5 billion in restructur- ing and other costs, with the bulk of that coming next year, Leclair said. Because of the prospect of more secured borrowing, Fitch Ratings placed Ford's senior unsecured debt on "Rating Watch Nega- tive." Additional Ford secured debt "would impair the position of unsecured debtholders," Fitch said yesterday in a note to inves- tors. Dearborn-based Ford's turn- around plan aims to cut $5 bil- lion in costs by the end of 2008 by slashing 10,000 white-collar workers and offering buyouts to all of its 75,000 unionized employees. A better performance in 2007 is unlikely, given production cutbacks, a slowing economy, enhanced competition in the critical pickup segment, and lack of new impact products," Fitch's note said. Officials thought more of the 2,749 dead could be found NEW YORK (AP) - As the city agency overseeing the removal of the World Trade Center rubble was wrapping up its work in 2002, sever- al officials handling the painstaking recovery of human remains warned that things were movingtoo fast. They believed that more pieces of the 2,749 dead could be found, and that the city shouldn't be rushing such an important task. But they were overruled, two of those offi- cials told The Associated Press this week. Over the past few days, dozens of bones have been discovered in underground passages at ground zero, more than five years after the tragedy. "I knew that this was going to happen - they really just wanted us out of there," said retired Lt. John McArdle, the Police Depart- t went f ment's ground zero commander. rescue to "There was not a good exit strategy ery to a c for some of these . p places, and if there Lion proj was, it was poorly came a pc done." A utility crew time Whei stumbled upon said 'We body parts lasts , week in an aban- to wrap t] doned manhole along the edge LT. JO of the site, and New York Poli forensic experts have since dug ground ze down and found more than 100 bones and fragments from skulls, ribs, arms, legs, feet and hands. The discoveries have angered and saddened relatives of the Sept. 11 victims. The notion that rescue work- ers were rebuffed by a city eager to finish the job could help shed light on why the remains are being dis- covered only now. The area where bones are being found is one where officials had raised objections. The officials said they repeatedly aired their concerns to the agency in charge, the Department of Design and Construction, which was later praised for its speedy, under-budget cleanup of 1.5 million tons of trade center debris, "The desire was driven by one thing, and that was, 'Get it done,"' said another official who protested, speaking to the AP on condition of anonymity because he is not autho- rized to discuss the work publicly. "Many a time the issue was raised about how fast it was going and things were being missed." Deputy Mayor Ed Skyler, who is overseeing the renewed search, said a review of such issues would be Fl C D r H is el premature, but noted that the Fire Department was designated as the lead agency for findingremains, and that DDC proceeded with its work only when the FDNY gave the go- ahead. The Department of Design and Construction had no comment. According to the two officials, FDNY rescue workers were among those who resisted the Department of Design and Construction. How- ever, Fire Department spokesman Frank Gribbon said yesterday that reports of objections were exag- gerated. Chief of Department Sal Cassano said in a statement that the FDNY "had final sign-off on areas where the recovery effort was deemed complete, and at no time was pressured to sayotherwise." Memos obtained by the AP show that DDC acknowledged at least some of the objections in the spring of 2002, but was concerned about "delayingthe sign-off." After the twin 110-story towers collapsed,police andfireofficialsled the backbreaking search for bodies while the Department of Design and Construction was assigned to exca- r a vate the debris, a recov- which stood 10 stories high at the onstruc- start. The agency, 'ct. There staffed by engi- neers, architects )int in and construc- tion profession- n they als, specializes in gotatry engineering and gotta t construction proj- his up."' ects, including emergency debris HN MCARDLE, removal. ce Department Each day, DDC convened plan- ro commander ning meetings with all the par- ties involved, including engineers, emergency responders and a range of other city agencies. The project finished months ahead of city officials' yearlong pre- diction, and cost about $750 million - just a fraction of the initial mul- tibillion-dollar estimate. But DDC was sometimes at odds with the res- cue workers, who frequentlyneeded to shut down or pause the operation as they recovered bodies. "It went from a rescue to a recov- ery to a construction project," McArdle said. "There came a point in time when they said, 'We gotta try to wrap this up,' and they tried to expedite it as much as possible, and they jumped the gun, and now you have all of these families hurt and they're finding all these body parts." Particular disagreements arose as the DDC was preparing to turn over the site, which belongs to the Port Authority. According to people involved in the process, DDC had created a grid map and asked those leading the remains recovery to walk through each area, and sign off, square by square. ForYour Best Choice in Financial Services -'M' checks " Free online banking 24/7 . ATMs on campus umcu.org S AThree campus branches emailumcu@umcu.org " Student~lSA credit card phone: 734-662-8200 " VISA Check Card NU - - ASHINGTION (AP) - Repub- s worried about losing Con- s are challenging President on Iraq, eroding his base of ort for the unpopular war just weeks before midterm elec- S. To play: Comple creasing calls from restive blicansfornew ideas to extri- and every 3 the U.S. come as the White se itself seems to struggle for tter course, or at least a bet- There is r way to describe the current just use logi .se. epublican Sen. John Warner irginia, chairman of the Sen- Difficulty Armed Services Committee, ned to open the floodgates to 8 4 criticism this month when he . ned after a trip to Iraq that the was "drifting sideways" and a se correction might soon be ranted. recent days: en. Kay Bailey Hutchison exas) said she would not have orted the invasion had she wn there were no weapons ass destruction, and she has osed splitting Iraq into three s. 'irginia Republican Sen. ge Allen, locked in an unex- redly difficult re-election bat- with Democratic challenger es Webb, dropped his stay- course mantra to assert, "We ot continue doing the same gs and expect differentresults. have to adapt our operations, t our tactics." te the grid so that e x3 box contains the 7 2 9 1 4 2 i I 4 96 -8 - - - - 4 5 4 q ~ Icationcorm i