The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 28, 2006 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Justice Department investigates spying program The Justice Department has begun an internal investigation into its handling of information gathered in the government's domestic spying program. However, Democrats criticized the review as not going far enough to determine whether the program violates federal law. The inquiry by Glenn A. Fine, the department's inspector gener- al, will focus on the role of Justice prosecutors and agents in carrying out the warrantless surveillance program run by the National Secu- rity Agency. Fine's investigation is not expected to address whether the controversial program is an unconstitutional expansion of presidential power, as its critics and a federal judge in Detroit have charged. LOFTY ASPIRATION Bona Kim, an architecture graduate student, drafts a project on a computer in the on North Campus last night. TAWN, ESTNIA Ford reaches I-u u Bush to meet with RIL~.Jt qS SHAY SPANIOLA/Daly lofts in the Art and Architecture Building tdeadline with further unspecified reduc- tions in 2009. Ford has announced plans to close 16 plants as part of its "Way Forward" restructuring plan. Nine of the plants have been identified, but the company has not named the remaining seven. Under the buyout or early retire- ment plans, workers can choose between eight packages that offer from $35,000 to $140,000 depend- ing on their years of service, age and how close they are to retirement. One package offers up to $15,000 per year for four years of college tuition, plus half of the workers' salaries and health benefits for four years. There's also an offer that pays 70 percent of their salaries and tuition, both for two years. Deutsche Bank analyst Rod Lache, in a note to investors, said he expects a relatively low number of workers to take Ford's offers, in the range of 10,000 to 15,000. That's because only 28,000 of Ford's 75,000 hourly workers are eligible for retirementunder the company's offers, he said. Because it won't get enough workers this round, Ford likely will have to negotiate a new and potentially more costly buyout and early retirement plan as part of the upcoming 2007 labor negotiations. Iraqi prime minister President Bush intensified diplomatic efforts yesterday to quell rising violence in Iraq and Afghanistan, turning to allies as his national security adviser said the conflict in Iraq had entered "a new phase" requiring changes. "Obviously everyone would agree things are not proceed- ing well enough or fast enough," National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley told reporters aboard Air Force One as Bush flew eastward. The president was spending last night in this tiny Baltic nation ahead of a two-day NATO sum- mit in Riga, Latvia, expected to deal with deteriorating conditions in Afghanistan, where NATO has 32,000 troops. Bush will head to Amman, Jordan, for talks tomorrow and Thursday with Iraqi Prime Min- ister Nouri al-Maliki and King Abdullah of Jordan. JERUSALEM Israeli leader calls for negotiations with Palestinians Prime Minister Ehud Olmert reached out to the Palestinians yesterday in one of his most con- ciliatory speeches yet, saying he was prepared to grant them a state, release desperately needed funds and free prisoners if they choose the path of peace. Olmert's remarks sealed a dra- matic policy shift and built on a day-old truce meant to end five months of violence in the Gaza Strip, but new rocket attacks by Palestinian militants threatened Group home blaze kills 10, injures 24 Company still needs 20,000 employees to take deals DETROIT (AP) - Time is run- ning out for 75,000 Ford Motor Co. production workers to make one of the biggest decisions they'll ever have to make: Whether or not to leave the company by taking buy- out or early retirement offers. Ford, faced with lower demand for its products than in previous years, is hoping 25,000 to 30,000 workers will take one of eight pack- ages so itcan reduce manufacturing capacity to better match demand. The deadline was late yesterday night. Ford will announce the num- ber of people taking the buyouts later this week. Ford officials won't say how many workers have signed up for the offers so far, but they say they are pleased with the num- bers. President of the Americas Mark Fields has said the company expects fewer than 40 percent of the workers to leave. Before the latest round of buy- outs was announced, Ford had made offers to workers at a limited number of plants, including those scheduled for closure, and about 5,200 workers decided to go, Ford said. That means Ford needs about 20,000 more workers to take the new round of buyouts and early retirements to reach the low end of its target range. Workers who sign up for a pack- age can change their minds up until the day the package takes effect, the company said. Guy Hamilton, building chair- man for United Auto Workers Local 1250 at an engine plant in Brook Park, Ohio, near Cleveland, said it's too early to tell how many workers will take the packages. Some could sign up today so they have the option to leave, but with- draw later, he said. Local 1250 represents about 3,800 workers at the complex near Cleveland. Ford lost $7 billion in the first nine months of the year, and yes- terday the company announced that it plans to get about $18 billion in financing due to help staunch its cash flow losses and to pay for its restructuring. Ford's share of the domestic market has declined from around 26 percent in the early 1990s to 17.6 percent at the end of October. The company expects to cut its costs by $5 billion through 2008, Authorities consider criminal investigation into mysterious fire ANDERSON, Mont. (AP) - An early morning fire broke out in a group home for the elderly and mentally ill yesterday, killing 10 people and injuring two dozen oth- ers in a blaze that the governor said was being treated as a crime. The blaze reduced the pri- vately run Anderson Guest House to a skeleton of cinder blocks and stunned this rural community of about 1,800 people tucked in the Ozark hills of southwest Missouri. Gov. MattBluntsaidinvestigators were treating the fire as suspicious. "We're not saying it is definitely a crime scenebutwe are treatingitas if it is and trying to determine if the fire was set by somebody who had a nefarious motive," Blunt said. The home had 32 residents and two employees inside when the fire was reported at about 1 a.m. The dead ranged in age from early 20s to elderly. Another 18 people were taken to hospitals, and six were treated at the scene, authori- ties said. One of the dead was a worker in the home, and the other nine were residents, Blunt said. Authorities did not plan to release names until relatives were notified. Officials refused to say how the victims died or whether they had any warning of the flames. The home had fire alarms but no sprinklers. Asked whether two staff mem- bers were enough to look after 32 residents, Blunt said that was up to state health officials. "Again, it was late at night," the governor said. "That would impact to some degree the amount of care that is necessary." Neighbor Steven Spears, 47, saw the blaze erupt through security cameras posted outside his home. "I saw the front door blow open with fire," Spears said. "I know most of them (the residents). I've talked to all of them at one time or another. It still hasn't hit me." The home is operated by Jop- lin River of Life Ministries Inc. Owner Robert Dupont issued a statement expressing sadness and saying all displaced residents were being cared for with the help of local agencies." This is a very trag- ic situation that has saddened all of us at Joplin River of Life Minis- tries," he said. At the company's offices in Joplin, investigators interviewed Dupont and group home residents, including some survivors. A min- istries employee said Dupont was unavailable for further comment. Three people were in serious condition at hospitals in Joplin and Springdale, Ark. All the other survivors who went to area hos- pitals were either in good or fair condition, or had been treated and released. Authorities were tryingto deter- mine whether the blaze was linked to a smaller fire at the facility Sat- urday morning, said Assistant Fire Marshal Greg Carrell. No one was injured in the first fire, which was still under investigation when the second blaze began. Inspectors from the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, which licenses the facil- ity, found some deficiencies at the home in March, but none related to fire safety. The home is a residential care center licensed by the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. The facility also has a license from the state Department of Mental Health that allowed mentally ill residents to live at the home and receive treatment else- where. The facility was cited in March for grease buildup in the kitchen, uncovered fluorescent light fix- tures, allowing meat to thaw on the kitchen counter instead of in a refrigerator, allowing a resident to take more than the prescribed dose of an inhaler and not request- ing criminal background checks for new employees as quickly as required by law. All the deficien- cies were corrected within three weeks, according to the health department. 1 3 Online retailers launch promotions NEW YORK (AP) - After jam- other, shoppers are being bom- ming malls on Friday for dis- barded with even more generous counted flat-screen TVs and toys, discounts, free shipping offers shoppers clicked onto their com- and other enticements this holiday puters at work yesterday as retail- season. ers ushered in the start of the For the Monday after Thanksgiv- online shopping season with bar- ing, coined Cyber Monday by the gains and marketing hype. National RetailFederation, plentyof With an increasing number of retailers like Circuit City Stores Inc. online players tryingto outdo each offered special one-day coupons. The University of Michigan R Department of Recreational Sports SPORTS Intramural Sports Program SPORTS www.recsports.umich.edu IN ALS 734-763-3562 I. -I I 1. the latest rapprochement. NEW YORK CITY Mayor says police used excessive force during shooting Mayor Michael Bloomberg weighed in on the uproar over a deadly police shooting yester- day, saying bluntly that officers appeared to use excessive force when they fired 50 shots at an unarmed man in a confrontation outside a strip club hours before his wedding. "I can tell you that it is to me unacceptable or inexplicable how you can have 50-odd shots fired, but that's up to the investigation to find out what really happened," Bloomberg said at a news confer- ence. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Entries due: Entries due: Wed, 11/29 Thurs, 11/30 CR1E D T4:30 PM 4:30 PM IM Building IM Building ForYour Best Choice in ntr ee: n Financial Services $35 per team $35 per team -'M' checks Manager's Meeting: $5 per individual " Free online banking 24/7 MANDATORY Manager's - ATMs on campus umcu.org Thurs, 11/30 Meeting: - Three campus branches email: umcu@umcu.org 6:00 PM MANDATORY - StudentVISA credit card phone: 734-662-8200 IM Building Thurs, 11/30 -VISA Check Card Tua n7:00 PM Tournament IM Building Entries also Dates: Entries also Meet Dates: taken online 12/01 & 12/03 taken online 12/05 - 12/06 IMSB Sports Coliseum Dod geball Weti Signups for our NEW Bouldering competition ends Thursday 11/30. 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