The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 11, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT After brief strike, UAW reaches deal with Chrysler The United Auto Workers union reached a tentative four-year con- tractwithChrysleryesterday,hours after going out on strike and the same day General Motors workers ratified a separate four-year pact. Next up: Ford. UAW President Ron Gettelfin- ger said the strike against Chrysler LLC would end immediately and workers should report for their next available shift. "This agreement was made pos- sible because UAW workers made it clear to Chrysler that we needed an agreement that rewards the contri- butions they have made to the suc- cess of this company," Gettelfinger said in a statement. Gettelfinger wouldn't release any details of the contract, but Chrysler said the tentative agree- ment includes the establishment of a UAW-managed trust that will administer retiree health care. The newly private company didn't say how much money it will contribute to the trust. DETROIT UAW, GM reach 4-year deal The United Auto Workers union said yesterday it has ratified a his- toric four-year contract with Gen- eral Motors Corp. Sixty-six percent of production workers voted in favor of the deal, while 64 percent of skilled trades workers approved it, the UAW said in a statement. The union typically does not release vote totals. The deal, reached Sept. 26 after a two-day nationwide strike, estab- lishes lower pay for some work- ers and puts GM's massive retiree health care debt into a UAW-run trust in exchange for promises of future work at U.S. plants. The pactcoversmore than74,000 active workers and about 340,000 retirees and surviving spouses. The deal will expire on Sept. 14, 2011, the union said. Under the contract, GM would put its retiree health care obliga- tions into a trust to be managed by the UAW. The trust is known as a voluntary employees beneficiary association, or VEBA. WASHINGTON State Dept. may stop using security firms The State Department may phase out or limit the use of private secu- rity guards in Iraq, which could mean canceling Blackwater USA's contract or awarding it to another company in line with an Iraqi gov- ernment demand, The Associated Press has learned. 'Such steps would be difficult given U.S. reliance on Blackwater and other contractors, but they are amongoptions beingstudied during a comprehensive review of security in Iraq, two senior officials said. The review was ordered after a Sept. 16 incident in which Blackwa- ter guards protecting a U.S. Embas- sy convoy in Baghdad are accused of killing 17 Iraqi civilians. TEHRAN, ran Former Iran official comes out against nuclear policy Iran's former chief nuclear nego- tiator delivered an unusually sharp rebuke to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's policies yester- day, saying they are turning more nations against Iran and failing to fix the struggling economy. The comments by Hasan Row- hani were the harshest yet against the hard-line president by a promi- nent figure in the Iranian leader- ship, and came after critics had grown muted in recent month as the government stirred up fears of conflict with the U.S. and warned against dissent. - Compiled from Oaily mire reports *{ 3,820 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the War in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The following service mem- ber was identified by the Depart- ment of Defense yesterday: Cpl. Gilberto A. Meza, 21, of Oxnard, Calif. Student opens fire in Cleveland school 14-year-old shooter injures five before killing himself CLEVELAND (AP) - A 14- year-old suspended student opened fire in a downtown high school yesterday before killing himself, and five people were taken to hospitals, authorities said. After the shooting, shaken teens called their parents on cell phones, most to reassure but in at least one case with terrifying news: "Mom, I got shot." Mayor Frarik Jackson said the three teens and two adults were hurt. He said the children were in "stable, good condition," and the adults were in "a little elevated condition." The shooter was enrolled at the SuccessTech Academy alter- native school but had been sus- pended Monday for fighting, said Charles Blackwell, president of SuccessTech's student-parent organization. Blackwell said the shooter entered the high school, a con- verted five-story office building, and gradually worked his way up through the first two floors of administrative offices to the third floor of classrooms. "Nobody knows how he got in," he said. Student Doneisha LeVert, who hid in a closet with two other students after she heard a "Code Blue" alert over the loudspeaker, said the shooter had threatened students Friday. "He's crazy. He threatened to blow up our school. He threat- ened to stab everybody," she said. Ronnell Jackson, 15, said he saw a shooter running down a school hallway. "He was about to shoot me, but I got out just in time," he said. "He was aiming at me I got out just in time." LeVert said she heard about 10 shots. "I heard gunshots but I just thought someone was banging a book on the desk," said Rasheem Smith, 15. He soon realized there was a shooting and told his classmates to flee down the stairs. Tammy Mundy, 38, who has a son and daughter at the school, told The Plain Dealer that her daughter called when the shoot- ing started. "She said, 'Mom they're shoot- ing in here, kids are running out, I'm hiding in the closet,"' Mundy told the newspaper. Then she called her 18-year- old son, Darnell Rodgers, on his cell phone, and he told her he had been shot in the arm. "He said, 'Mom, I got shot,"' Mundy told the newspaper. with the U-M School of Information The SCHOOL OF INFORMATION offers NINE master's degree specializations in a MULTIDIS- CIPLINARY curriculum. Our students represent more than 70 ACADEMIC MAJORS. We even offer the flexibility to TAILOR your own program. And we have DUAL DEGREES with six U-M schools and colleges. Our DOCTORAL PROGRAM prepares stu- dents to become the next generation of profes- sors and researchers. 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