The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 4, 2009 = 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS UNITED NATIONS Darfur pullout rejected by key U.N. council members Key U.N. Security Council mem- bers rejected Sudanese pressure to withdraw thousands of peacekeep- ers from Darfur yesterday, even as the U.S. reported a wave of govern- ment air strikes near a rebel-held town. U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice said the United States is "gravely concerned by reports of intense aerial bombardment" - at least 28 bombing raids Tuesday morning alone - by Sudanese forces on the outskirts of the town in southern Darfur. Sudan's government on Sun- day asked the U.N.-African Union peacekeepers, on a mission known as UNAMID, to leave the town before bombing began, but U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has said they won't go. While Sudan has regularly chal- lenged the U.N.'s fragile presence in the country, the request was the first of its kind from Sudan, U.N. officials said. U.N. and Sudanese officials meet in Khartoum to dis- cuss the request, a spokeswoman for the U.N. mission has said. WASHINGTON Obama plans to limit executive pay The Obama administration plans to issue new limits on executive pay today for companies that receive help from the government's finan- cial sector bailout program. "One of the things that that we're going to do tomorrow is talk about the need to control executive com- pensation for companies that are taking money from the federal gov- ernment," President Barack Obama said in an interview Tuesday with "NBC Nightly News. "If the taxpayers are helping you, then you've got certain responsibili- ties to not be livinghigh on the hog," the president added. The administration will make its announcement as congressio- nal lawmakers work on their own proposals to restrict compensa- tion for companies that get money from the $700 billion government rescue fund. One legislative plan would set the highest salary at a government-assisted institutions at $400,000. BOSTON Mass. couple who led gay marriage fight to divorce A lesbian couple who led the fight for gay marriage in Massachu- setts have filed for divorce. Julie and Hillary Goodridge were among seven gay couples who filed a lawsuit that led to a court rul- ing making Massachusetts the first state to legalize same-sex marriag- es in 2004. The couple became the public face of the debate in the state and married the first day same-sex marriages became legal. The divorce case was filed last week in Suffolk Probate and Fam- ily Court and was not unexpected. The couple announced they were separating in 2006. Messages left for the Goodridges were not immediately returned Tuesday. GRAND RAPIDS Dow Chemical posts $1.5B loss in fourth quarter Dow Chemical Co. reported a $1.55 billion fourth-quarter loss yesterday as a deteriorating global economy led to a 23 percent drop in sales and huge job cuts. The loss was larger than expect- ed and revenue came in below Wall Street expectations. "We are planning for a global recession throughout 2009 and will continue to take actions on manag- ing our cash and controlling our costs,"said Andrew N. Liveris, Dow's chairman and chief executive. Dow slashed operating rates h to 64 percent in the fourth quar- ter with demand for its products evaporating. Diminished produc- tion led to operating rates not seen in more than 25 years, according to the company. The nation's largest chemical maker said its loss amounted to $L68 per share in the three months ended Dec. 31. It had earned $472 million, or 49 cents per share, dur- ing the last quarter of 2007. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Daschle leaves, health reform uncertain South Dakota Sen. will not be Obama's HHS secretary WASHINGTON (AP) - Tom Daschle's decision to withdraw his nomination as health and human services secretary clouds hopes that President Barack Obama will make significant progress on health reform in his first 100 days in the White House. But the problems of unafford- able medical bills and millions of uninsured aren't going away, and a deepening recession has more Americans feeling worried about their jobs and insecure about their health benefits. So even if Obama's hand-picked architect of health reform sud- denly leaves the political scene, the president himself still has an opportunity to refocus the nation's attention on its health care woes and on his own program for mak- ingthings better. "It's a real blow to the effort because Tom really was knowl- edgeable," Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who himself is deeply involved in health care issues, said Tuesday. "This is an issue I had hoped would be a priority, and that we could deal with it very quickly." He added: "It hurts. It slows things down. So this has been a setback." At the White House, spokesman Robert Gibbs put on a brave front. "I don't think the effort slows down for health care reform, and I think Sen. Daschle and others would admit that the effort is far bigger than any one individual." "We'll miss Sen. Daschle's lead- ership," said White House senior adviser David Axelrod, "But this issue has great power of its own." Obama has a chance to recover some lost momentumright away.As early as Wednesday, he's expected to sign legislation to expand health coverage for uninsured children of low-income working parents, a major priority for Democrats. The president's words at the signing ceremony will be closely followed. The White House has been plan- ning a health care summit early in the spring to kick off the health reform campaign, but that may now be delayed. Obama must quickly select a new HHS nominee who can be confirmed smoothly. The list of possible picks includes Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius and others with state and national leadership cre- dentials, including Howard Dean, the former Democratic presiden- tial candidate and party chairman, Vermont governor and medical doctor, Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Ren- dell and Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland. Not only could prospects for health reform dim further if the choice is delayed, but it means that problems at HHS agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration could continue to fester. Agency heads are not usually named until a cabinet secretary is in place. The loss of Daschle hurts Obama in two ways. Daschle knows both the details of health care policy and the ways of the Senate. If a bipartisan deal is to be struck on health care, the best chance is in the Senate, which is not as polar- ized as the House. "He brought special traits to the job that were tremendous advan- tages," said Judy Feder, a health care policy expert who was a top HHS official in the Clinton admin- istration. "But the commitment of the president is the key here. You can't underestimate that." Most health care reform advo- cates say conditions are still favor- able to get a bill passed. Interest groups from insurers to small busi- nesses, to the seniors lobby AARP say the time has come. Key com- mittee chairmen in the Senate and the House remain committed. SenateFinanceCommitteeChair- man Max Baucus, D-Mont., whose panel will write much of the bill, said he's not slowing down. "It will take a couple, three weeks at best, not alot longer, to get health care reform leg- islation up and ready," Baucus said. "So this has no effects on our efforts in the Congress." But false starts do take their toll in Washington. You don't get back lost time. Other crises flare, compet- ing for time and attention. Former President Bill Clinton's delay in get- ting a health care bill written and delivered to Congress is widely seen as a major factor in the subsequent collapse of the legislation. And the Obama administration has no short- age of serious problems to confront. Between the loss of Daschle and continuing economic problems, "I don't see how we get to health care reform until the fall," said Robert Laszewski, a policy analyst and con- sultant for health care companies. Militants bomb U. S. supply route in Afghanistan, PAUL SANCYA/AP Ex-Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, center at rear, leaves the Wayne County Andrew C. Baird Detention Facility in Detroit yesterday after serving 99 days in jail. Kilpatrick will serve five years of probation after a plea to two criminal charges. After 99 das, ex-Detroit mayorreleasedfrom jai Kilpatrick to pay $1M in restitution to the city DETROIT (AP) - Kwame Kil- patrick regained his freedom early yesterday morning, emerg- ing from jail after a 99-day sen- tence and stepping back onto the cold, dark streets of the city he once ruled as mayor. The 38-year-old Kilpatrick, about 25 pounds lighter than when he entered jail at the end of October, left the downtown Detroit facility wearing a dark suit just after 12:30 a.m. Before leaving the building, Kil- patrick stood for several minutes in the jail lobby, consulting with lawyers and friends on the other side of the glass front doors. As he stepped onto the side- walk, Kilpatrick stood for a long moment amid bright television camera lights, a crush of await- ing reporters and swirling snow- flakes, smiling occasionally to those in the crowd who called his name and shouted: "We love you, Kwame. Detroit loves you, baby!" Flanked by a number of men, several dressed in fedoras and long coats, Kilpatrick then was rushed to a waiting blue Chev- rolet Suburban. The Democrat waved from behind tinted win- dows as he was whisked away as part of a multi-vehicle caravan. Kilpatrick made no statements to the media during his release, upon the orders of new defense attorney Willie E. Gary. "He's not bitter. He said he learned a lot," Gary said a short time later during an impromptu sidewalk news conference. "He said this has been an experience he'll never forget, and he thinks because of it he'll be a better person. Right now, he's just con- cerned about getting home to his mom, his sister, and of course his other family. "The former mayor ... he wishes the city well, all the peo- ple of Detroit well and that there are no hard feelings one way or the other." It's been more than a year since a text-messaging sex scandal first reported by the Detroit Free Press started the long process that ended in Kilpatrick's disgraceful arrest, plea, jailing and release. Now, the man who quickly rose from a state representative to mayor of a city of 900,000 people simply is looking for work. Kilpatrick was expected to meetwith stateprobationofficials before heading to a job interview Wednesday with an unnamed company at an undisclosed loca- tion in Texas. His wife, Carlita, and three young sons, already have left Michigan. A judge has ordered that he return by Feb. 9. "The job prospect is very, very, very favorable," Gary told report- ers. "We want to make sure he can get, and land, the job. That's his first thing. He wants a job. That's what he is concerned about now. He wants to get with his family, get with his kids so he can start his life again." Bridge in Khyber Pass collapsed from explosion KABUL (AP) - U.S. troops in Afghanistan saw their supply lines squeezed from the north and east Tuesday after militants blew up a bridge in Pakistan and Kyrgyz- stan's government said it would end American use of a key air base fol- lowing Russia's announcement of new aid. Securingefficient and safe supply routes into Afghanistan has become a top priority for U.S. officials as the Pentagon prepares to send in up to 30,000 more American soldiers this year. Some 75 percent of U.S. supplies travel through Pakistan, where militants have stepped up attacks on truck convoys destined for U.S. bases. Attackers yesterday blew up a bridge in northwestern Pakistan in a fresh salvo in an escalating cam- paign seeking to cripple Washing- ton's war effort in Afghanistan. The red metal bridge in the Khy- ber Pass partially twisted and col- lapsed on one end, with chunks of concrete scattered about. A trailer truck caught on the span - about 15 miles northwest of Peshawar - fell on its side and spilled dozens of bags. While U.S. officialshavelongsaid they are seeking fresh supplyroutes, they have never hinted publicly at any concern about running out of food or fuel. American forces stock- pile enough supplies to last 60-90 days in the event that their supply chain is severed, U.S. officials say. The top U.S. military spokes- man in Afghanistan shrugged off any supply worries after Tues- day's events, saying that traffic was already flowing again in Paki- stan after the attack. "They made a bypass," said Col. Greg Julian. He also dismissed Kyrgyzstan's threat to close access to the Manas air base as nothing but "political positioning." Gen. David Petraeus, who oversees the wars in Afghani- stan and Iraq, met with officials in Kyrgyzstan last month and "came away with the sense that every- thing was fine," Julian said. "We have a standing contract, and they're making millions off our presence there. There are no plans to shut down access to it anytime soon," Julian told The Associated Press. Pentagon spokesman Geoff Mor- rell said: "I have seen nothing to suggest, other than press reports, that the Russians are attempting to undermine our use of that facility." Pentagon planners and logistics officers have a variety of alterna- tive supply routes into Afghanistan, although defense officials acknowl- edged that Manas is singularly important. "There are other ways to resupply via air or land if need be, but Manas is well situated, it's well-appointed, it's well run and it well serves our troops in Afghanistan," Morrell told The Associated Press. "We think it's in everybody's interest to continue our operations there." Petraeus, chief of the U.S. mili- tary's Central Command, said last month that agreements had been reached to use supply routes through Central Asia, but details of the deals have not been announced. Kyrgyzstan President Kurman- bek Bakiyev's statement that U.S. forces would have to stop using Manas air base came after Russia said it was providing the poor Cen- tral Asian nation with billions of dollars in aid. The Kyrgyz government "has made the decision on ending the term for the American base on the territory of Kyrgyzstan and this decision will be announced tomor- row or the day after," Bakiyev said in televised comments. The United States set up the Manas base and one in neighboring Uzbekistan to back operations in Afghanistan after the Sept. 11 ter- ror attacks. Chrysler sales plunge 55 Killefer withdraws percent; GM, Toyota down bid for Obama post, Automakers hurt by unemployment and tough credit market DETROIT (AP) - Chrysler's U.S. vehicle sales plunged 55 per- cent in January, while General Motors' tumbled 49 percent and Ford's dropped 40 percent, start- ing 2009 at an abysmal pace for the whole auto industry as lower sales to fleet buyers like rental car com- panies weighed down the results. Toyota's sales dove 32 percent for the month, Nissan's dropped 30 percent and Honda's fell 28 percent, putting the overall indus- try on track for its fourth straight month in which U.S. sales plunged 30 percent or more. But Subaru bucked the trend of declines for a second month in a row, posting an 8 percent sales increase, and Hyundai said its sales jumped 14 percent. Hyundai credited its increase to its offer to cover a new vehicle's depreciation if customers return a car within 12 monthsbecause they are unable to make the payments. "This program gets to the root cause of today's economic con- cerns - fear of job loss," Hyundai regional general manager Peter DiPersia said in a statement. Chrysler's sales chief, Steven Landry, told reporters yesterday at a meeting with dealers that U.S. industry sales could drop as much as 35 percent in January. The annualized sales rate for the month could drop below 10 mil- lion for the first time in more than 26 years, he said. According to Ward's AutoIn- foBank, the last month in which the seasonally adjusted annual sales rate dropped below 10 mil- lion was August 1982, when it hit 9.9 million as the nation was mired in a recession. Domestic and foreign auto- makers have been struggling as unemployment rises, consumer confidence weakens and many people have a tougher time get- ting loans. General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC have received $13.4 billion in federal loans to stay afloat, and they hope to get more after they submit a viabil- ity plan to the government by Feb. 17. Ford Motor Co. has said it does not plan to use govern- ment aid. GM said earlier this month it is planning its turnaround under the assumption the entireindustry will sell 10.5 million new vehicles in the U.S. this year. Chrysler has said it's planning on 11.1 million units, and Ford last week reduced its forecast to a range between 11.5 million and 12.5 million. But few people were expecting the automakers to start 2009 at such a pace. January is typically a slow sales month, and many automakers and analysts are expecting the mar- ket to rebound in the second half of the year as the economy and access to credit improves. Detroit-based GM sold 128,198 light vehicles in January, while Ford's sales totaled 93,060 and Chrysler sold 62,157. Toyota Motor Corp. sold 117,287 cars and trucks. The automakers have rolled out hefty incentive offers to boost sales. Edmunds.com estimated the average automaker incen- tive at $2,714 per vehicle sold in January, down 5.2 percent from December but up 12.5 percent' from January 2008. Jesse Toprak, the auto Web site's executive director of industry anal- ysis, attributed the year-over-year increase to a greater number of lin- gering2008 model year vehicles. citing unpaid taxes Chief performance officer nominee owed $946.69 to IRS WASHINGTON (AP) - Nancy Killefer withdrew her candidacy to be the first chief performance offi- cer for the federal government on yesterday, saying she didn't want her bungling of payroll taxes on her household help to become a distrac- tion for the Obama administration. Killefer was the second major nominee to withdraw.Within hours, former Sen. Tom Daschle also with- drew his nomination to be secretary of health and human services. In a brief letter to President BarackObama,Killefer,theSS-year- old executive with consulting giant McKinsey & Co., wrote that she had "cometo realize inthe current envi- ronment that my personal tax issue of D.C. unemployment tax could be used to create exactly the kind of distraction and delay" that must be avoided in responding to urgent economic problems. She offered no further details of her tax difficulties. In announcing his choice of Sen. Judd Gregg to be commerce sec- retary, Obama took no questions Tuesday and left the White House lectern ignoring a shouted question about why so many of his nominees have tax problems. But White House press secretary Robert Gibbs later insisted Killefer and Daschle decided on their own to withdraw. "I think they both recog- nized that you can't set an example of responsibility but accept a differ- ent standard in who serves," Gibbs told a White House briefing. When Hillefer's selection was announced by Obama on Jan. 7, The Associated Press disclosed that in 2005 the District of Colum- bia government had filed a $946.69 tax lien on her home for failure to pay unemployment compensa- tion tax on household help. Since then, administration officials have refused to answer questions about the tax error, which she resolved five months after the lien was filed. It wasn't clear whether theadmin- istration was aware of Killefer's tax errorsbefore Obama named her. h A A A