The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 10, 2009 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, March 10, 2009 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Senators vote to preserve personal home-state projects Members of both parties yester- day voted to keep their cherished home-state projects as the Senate resumed debate on a spending bill covering foreign aid and domestic agency budgets. By a 63-32 vote, lawmakers rejected a bid by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., to effectively strip about 8,000 of those earmarks from the $410 billion measure. "If the president really wants to change Washington, as soon as this bill reaches his desk, he should veto it and send it back and say, 'Clean it up,"' McCain said. Instead, the White House says President Barack Obama will sign the measure, despite all the proj- ects. During last year's campaign, Obama he promised to cut the number of earmarks way back and institute other changes. But lawmakers in both parties defend the practice, and 10 Repub- lican joined most Democrats to defeat McCain's amendment. "Yes, I fight for funds for my state. That's what I came here to do," said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Commit- tee, which doles out the earmarks. "Candidly, why be an appropriator if you can't help your state?" WASHINGTON Top Obama officials meet to talk about d.osing Guantanamo TopofficialsoftheObamaadmin- istration met privately yesterday to discuss how to close the Guantana- mo Bay detention facility. Attorney General Eric Holder hosted the first Cabinet-level meet- ing of President Barack Obama's Guantanamo task force. Partici- pating in the meeting, among oth- ers, were Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Defense Secre- tary Robert Gates, CIA Director Leon Panetta and FBI Director Robert Mueller. Obama has pledged to close the facility for terror suspects within a year, and officials must decide which suspects to ship away to for- eign countries and which to bring to trial in U.S. courts, or tried and held by the U.S. in some other fashion. At Monday's high-level meeting, the group discussed standards for reviewing detainee cases, which detainee decisions will get priority, and what has been done to date. WARREN, Mich. Autos task force tours Chrysler, tests GM electric cars Four members of President Barack Obama's autos task force spent much of their day yesterday driving General Motors Corp. elec- tric vehicles and touring a Chrysler LLC pickup truck factory. The members, led by Wall Street financier Steven Rattner and Steel- workers union official Ron Bloom, traveled first to GM's tech center in the Detroit suburb of Warren, Mich., and then drove to Chrysler's Warren Truck plant. GM and Chrysler are living on a total of $17.4 billion in govern- ment loans, and the task force is trying to determine if they will get more money. The companies have requested a total of $39 billion as they try to survive the worst U.S. auto sales downturn in 27 years. Task force members first visited the sprawling GM tech center, where they were greeted by Chief Executive Rick Wagoner and test-drove white and silver Chevrolet Volt electric cars, according to shots taken from television news helicopters. DETROIT Detroit schools settle with former chief The Detroit Public Schools has settled a lawsuit with a former superintendent who claimed he was wrongfully fired. Emergency financial manager Robert Bobb says in a release that the district has settled with Wil- liamColemanIII foranundisclosed amount. Coleman was replaced in 2007 by former Superintendent Connie Calloway, now on adminis- trative leave. Coleman alleged he was fired after asking federal authorities to investigate financial irregularities. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Ford workers approve UAW contract deals Professor Stanley Wells, chairman of the Shakespeare Birthplace trust and one of the world's leading experts on Shakespeare studies, poses next to a newly-discovered portrait of William Shakespeare in central London yesterday. Portrait of Shakespeare unveilIed, but is it him?. Painting is thought to be the only one created during his life LONDON (AP) - The Bard, or not the Bard? That is the question posed by yesterday's unveiling of a centuries-old portrait of a dark- eyed, handsome man in Elizabe- than finery. Experts say it is the only portrait of William Shakespeare painted during his lifetime - in effect, the sole source of our knowledge of what the great man looked like. But they can't be certain. In the shiftingsandsofShakespeareschol- arship, where even the authorship of the plays is sometimes disputed, nothing is written in stone. "We're 90 percent sure that it's Shakespeare," said Paul Edmond- son, director of learning at the Shakespeare Learning Trust, which plans to exhibit the portrait in Stratford-on-Avon. "You'll never be entirely certain. There will always be voices of dissent." Incredibly, the portrait has been in private hands for several centu- ries but the owners - the Cobbe family - had no idea the man in the painting was responsible for so many enduring masterpieces. All that changed three years ago, Edmondson said, when one of the Cobbes (he won't say which one) walked into the National Portrait Gallery in London's Trafalgar Square to see a travel- ing exhibit called "Searching for Shakespeare." One of the first things he saw was a famous portrait of the Bard that usually hangs in the renowned Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington. "Hisjawdropped,"saidEdmond- son. "He realized he had one at home. And the one he had at home turned out to be the original." Edmondson said the portrait is far superior to the copies made after Shakespeare's death, includ- ing the famous 1623 engraving that graces the cover of the First Folio collection of Shakespeare's plays. "This is Shakespeare alive, with fresh blood pumping through his veins, painted in his lifetime," Edmondson said with obvious pride. "The copies look dead by comparison." He said scholars are convinced it is Shakespeare because so many copies of the painting were made, including the one at the Folger, and because the painting was handed down through the generations along with a portrait of the Earl of Southampton, Shakespeare's main patron. The Cobbe collection curator, Mark Broch, spent three years researching the painting, and sev- eral sophisticated tests, includ- ing X-ray examinations, tree-ring dating on the wooden frame, and infrared imaging, were made to determine its age. At the Folger Library, art and special collections curator Erin Blake agreed that their Shake- speare portrait is based on the one unveiled Monday, which officials have dubbed "the Cobbe portrait." But she said it is impossible to verify beyond all doubt that the person in both portraits is Shake- speare, although circumstantial evidence suggests it is. Contract changes include freezing wages and benefit cuts DETROIT (AP) - Unionized workers at Ford Motor Co. have approved contract changes that include freezing wages and cut- ting benefits in a move aimed at helping the automaker remain competitive. The United Auto Workers said yesterday a majority of hourly workers voted in favor of modifi- cations to the 2007 contract with Ford, eliminating cost-of-living increases and cash bonuses. The agreement is expected to be a model for Chrysler LLC and Gen- eral Motors Corp., which need to bring their labor costs in line with those of foreign auto companies' plants in the U.S. as a condition for the $17.4 billion they have received in federal loans so far. Under terms of their loan agreements, progress must be made by March 31. The companies are seeking an addition- al $21.6 billion in government aid. Dearborn, Mich.-based Ford, which has not sought government funding as its rivals have, is the first U.S. automaker to come to an agreement with the union. The company said that it did not want to be at a disadvantage should its competitors negotiate lower labor costs with the UAW. The UAW pact also allows Ford to use company stock to make pay- ments to a union-run health care trust, called voluntary employee beneficiary associations,orVEBAs. Ford can use stock to pay up to 50 percent of its payments, which would pay retiree health care ben- efits. Ford owes $6.3 billion to its VEBA at the end of this year. Chrysler, however, may not be able to match Ford's guarantee of issuing additional shares for the trust if Ford's share price drops, according to a person briefed on Chrysler's negotiations. The person asked not to be identified because the talks are private. Chrysler is a privately held company and would have to grant partial ownership to the union, since there are no public shares of the company. Chrysler must pay around $9.9 billion to its trust at the end of the year, while GM has to pay about $20 billion. The UAW said 59 percent of Ford's production workers and 58 percent of skilled-trades work- ers voted for the concessions. At least two local unions rejected the measures. "By working together with our UAW partners, we identified solu- tions that will help Ford reach competitive parity with foreign- owned auto manufacturers and that are important to our efforts to operate through the current economic environment with- out accessing a bridge loan from the U.S. government," said UAW President Ron Gettelfinger in a written statement. Base wages for UAW workers will remain the same, but the deal limits supplemental pay that laid- off workers receive whiletheycol- lect unemployment benefits. The ratified deal also ends the contro- versial jobs bank program that let workers collect most of their pay from the company when laid-off. "Now the pressure is on to get a similar agreement at GM and Chrysler. Time is running out," said Aaron Bragman, an auto ana- lyst with the consulting company IHS Global Insight in Troy, Mich. "It's ironic that Ford was able to accomplish it, being the one that doesn't have an agreement with the government." Shares of Ford rose 4 cents, or 2.4 percent, to close at $1.74 in the regular session. After hours, the stock gained 6 cents, or 3.5 per- cent, to $1.80. We can help! Advising appointments available same day! Call 764-7460 for more information. Open Monday nights in March for additional assistance. The reer Center The ltiarsituy ofuMichiganD sion of Studet Affairs