The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, January 11, 2010 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, January 11, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Ford unveils 2012 Focus, designed as its first 'world car' Ford Motor Co. is unveiling the 2012 Focus, a small sedan that is the company's first truly global car. The new Focus, due in European and North American showrooms early next year, was designed and engineered to be sold worldwide using almost all the same parts, unlike past versions. It'll be sold in Asia, the Americas, and Europe. The aim is to keep costs down and make money on small cars, a segment that used to be a loser. The Focus also shows that gas mileage is a prime motivator now for more frugal car buyers, and that small- car owners still want performance, quality and a lot of features. Pricing will be announced closer to the date it arrives in showrooms. Ford unveils the new four- and five-door Focuses on Monday at the Detroit auto show. The cars are equipped with a new two-liter four-cylinder engine and six-speed automatic transmission. The com- pany wouldn't reveal gas mileage, but said it will be significantly bet- ter than the current North Ameri- can Focus, which gets up to 35 mpg on the highway. EUREKA, Calif. N. California avoids major damage in 6.5 magnitude earthquake Residents of a Northern Cali- fornia county gingerly cleaned up Sunday after the area dodged a catastrophe, escaping a 6.5 magni- tude earthquake with little more than bumps, cuts and broke glass. Eureka's Bayshore Mall had entrances blocked off as engineers surveyed for damage. Area bridges suffered some bent rails, and local stores reported messy aisles where bottles and jars flew from shelves and shattered, authorities said. But the Saturday afternoon temblor - centered in the Pacific about 22 miles west of Ferndale - caused no major injuries, only limited structural damage and just a few hours where thousands of residents were without power. "I think we can attribute some of this to being prepared," said Phil Smith-Hanes, Humboldt County spokesman. "Folks in this area are used to living in earth- quake country." BAGHDAD Iraqi in Blackwater case turns down compensation deal An Iraqi injured by the U.S. pri- vate security firm once known as Blackwater said Sunday he would not accept a compensation deal for injuries he suffered after com- pany employees opened fire in a crowded Baghdad square because the amount of money offered is too low. Mahdi Abdul-Kadir was speak- ing about a civil lawsuit that is separate from the criminal case brought against the company, whose dismissal has become a lightening rod for Iraqi resent- nient over the behavior of private security companies and prompted Iraqi politicians to denounce the U.S. justice system. Abdul-Kadir said Blackwater's offer of compensation to those who had been injured or had fam- ily members killed was too low. MANILA, Philippines Philippine police arrest 18 after gun ban goes into effect About 50,000 Philippine policemen began enforcing a five- month ban on carrying guns in public Sunday in hopes of avoid- ing bloodshed in the buildup to May elections, arresting 18 vio- lators at checkpoints across the country. The Philippines is a lively democracy and elections are often marred by violence and fraud. In the 2007 local and congressional elections, 108 people were killed in election-related violence, including 15 candidates, national police spokesman Chief Supt. Leonardo Espina said Sunday. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Southern Pakistan hit by wave of politically-charged killings Violence apparently an attempt to destabilize country's ruling coalition KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) - Dozens of people have been killed in Pakistan's largest city including four found Sunday - three of them headless - in a wave of targeted attacks amongrival political groups that some sayis aimed at destabiliz- ingthe country's ruling coalition. Political violence is common inKarachi, but the shootings and decapitations since Jan. 1 have terrorized parts of this teeming southern metropolis, prompting the government to send in para- military forces to restore order. The political infighting comes at a time when the government is facing a raging Taliban-led insur- gency that has spread to Karachi and killed more than 600 people across the country in the past three months. The growingunrest in the financial capital threatens to spark further instability. "We have found four bodies of LEOa From Page 1A t faculty salary funds that would s not. LEO claimed such activi- t ties constituted a breach of the t University's agreement with s the union. t The University denied r wrongdoing, though it eventu- ally settled with LEO and gave a lecturers a pay raise. Accord- t ing to a June 12, 2009 settle- a ment agreement signed by Jeff Frumkin, senior director of s academic human resources, L LEO agreed to withdraw itsd grievance in exchange for a 1.5 percent increase to the 2007- a 2008 full time salary rate. Aa settlement signed by Ronald I Dick, associate director of aca-v demic human resources, said a lecturers saw an additional a two-percent pay raise effective t Sept. 1, 2009.n The four funds used to pro- i vide pay raises to faculty mem- bers - known as the A, B, C a and D funds - each have spe- s cifically designated purposes. t The A fund is used to provide a merit increases - the most v common pay raise - for faculty f members. The B fund pays for pay raises that result from fac- t ulty promotions and retention , battles with other institutions. t The C and D funds are used i for correcting pay inequity, a rewarding faculty for special achievements and other spe- t cial circumstances, as deter- t mined by a school's dean. While the University is obligated to give proportional raises to lecturers as given to faculty through the A and B fund, language in the Univer- sity's agreement with LEO exempts the University from providing proportional raises to lecturers that are given to faculty through the C and D funds. The D fund is also com- monly known as the Super C fund. According to figures released to the Daily after a FOIA request was filed, the amount of money allocated to the C and D funds fell dramati- cally from last year's levels. In fact, while the D fund saw a 94-percent drop, the C fund was cut by 100 percent - elim- inating the fund this year. Meanwhile, the A and B fund saw significant increases as a fraction of the overall money spent on faculty pay raises, with the A fund increasing from 38 percent of the money spent on faculty raises in fiscal year 2009 to 67 percent in fis- cal year 2010. The B fund rose from 21 percent of the overall amount committed in fiscal year 2009 to 30 percent in fis- cal year 2010. Adjunct Associate Business Prof. Joe Walls, who serves as the press liaison for LEO, said he believes the shift in funds occurred in response to the grievance LEO filed last year. Walls said the shift falls in line with the numbers LEO officials were hoping to see when they originally filed the grievance. "I'd say that sounds more like what we would expect," he said "The B fund is for pro- motion and retention and the A fund is the normal quote on quote raises so we would hope to see more money in there." He said the shifts in funds indicated that the grievances our partyworkers today," said Fais- al Sabzwari, a provincial lawmaker from the Muttahida Qaumi Move- ment, the strongest political party in Karachi and one dominated by the minority Mohajir ethnic group. "Three of them were headless, and we found the heads later on," Sabzwari told The Associated Press on Sunday. Sabzwari blamed members of the ruling Pakistan People's Party for fueling the violence, saying much of it was being carried out by thugs from Lyari Town, a poor area of Karachi and a PPP stronghold. "They are the Lyari gang members and criminals who are killing our workers, and there are some elements within the ruling party who patronize them," he said. QaimAli Shah, the chiefminister ofSindh province, where Karachi is the capital,andamemberoftherul- ing party, seemed to.make similar allegations against the MQM. He did not name the group directly but said "a political party" was behind the killings of its workers. "Targeted killings are a con- spiracy against the provincial government, and sacrifices of PPP had some basis, adding that the organization won their grievance his summer. "We did win the grievance and omeone somewhere believed hat it was legitimate otherwise hat wouldn't have happened," he aid. "It seems they've changed heir policies based on that esult." However University spokes- man Rick Fitzgerald said the dras- ic cuts to the C and D fund were not an admittance of guilt by the University. Instead, Fitzgerald aid the shift was evidence of'the University's fiscal prudence in the down economy. "The reason is that there is less money overall available," Fitzger- ald said. "We've been aggressively holding down costs. The pro- vost, before the budget process, encouraged the units to keep sal- ary increases to certain levels and his is a recognition of doing the most good with limited resources n LSA." Because less money was avail- able for pay increases, Fitzgerald aid LSA administrators wanted to allocate more money to the A and B funds, since more faculty would be eligible to receive the funds. "It's a commitment to make :he limited resources available for salary increases available to he greatest number of faculty n LSA," Fitzgerald said. "That's really the only driving factor." "What LSA did with the funds his year really has no bearing on he LEO increase because of the workers won'tgo unrewarded," he told reporters Saturday. Although both parties are members of the ruling coalition, they have a tense relationship and a history of conflict that dates back to the arrival of Mohajir immigrants from India after Paki- stan gained independence in 1947. Native Sindhis, who mostly sup- port the ruling party, resented the Mohajirs' attempts tosecure well- paying government jobs. Pakistan's Interior Ministry said Sunday that 41 people have died in targeted killings in Karachi since the beginning of the year, includ- ing 10 MQM workers, 10 from a breakaway faction -called Haqiqi, and 16 members of a committee set up by the ruling party in Lyari to control violence in the area. The five others were from a handful of political and religious groups, said the ministry's Crisis Management Cell. Karachi Police Chief Wasim Ahmed provided different figures and tried to play down the crisis. He said 50 people had been killed in Karachi during the first nine days of the year, but only 20 deaths were politically or ethnically motivated. way they made that change and how fiscal year '10 was handled when they settled that grievance last year," he said. Fitzgerald explained that by moving more money to the A and B funds, more faculty would be eligible for larger pay increases. "It's the A Fund that pays for the faculty pay raises - for the annual raises available to virtually all the faculty members of course based on their annual unit level evalua- tion process," he said. He added that the change in the B fund can vary from year to year based on the number of pro- motions and faculty retention battles. "The B fund is really promotion and retention dollars," Fitzgerald said. "That will vary from year to year because (administrators) know who is up for promotion and to respond to specific reten- tion situations that they know about." Asked whether this yer's shift of funds to the A and B fund would set a precedent for future years, Fitzgerald said he coldn't predict the future. "I think that'll be ayear-to-year decision for the leadership in LSA as they evaluate just like in any budgeting process," Fitzgerald said. "It's a matter of setting pri- orities and that's an annual pro- cess that every unit on campus will have to go through." - Managing News Editor Jillian Berman and Editor in Chief Jacob Smilovitz contributed to this report. Nigerian terror suspect pleads not guilty FBI says suspect attempted strike against the United States by an al-Qaida affiliate and. tried to destroy faults his administration for not. preventing it despite intelligence Detroit-bound flight reports A grand jury this week indicted- on Christmas Day Abdulmutallab on six charges. The most serious - attempting to use DETROIT (AP) - Wearing a a weapon of mass destruction - T-shirt, khaki-style pants and a could land him in prison for life if chain at his ankles, a somber-look- convicted. ing Nigerian man accused of trying He replied "yes" when asked Fri to blow upa U.S. airliner on Christ- day ifhe understood thecharges and, mas said he understood the charges said he had taken "some pain pills" against him, triggering the defense after the judge inquired whether he of a criminal case that could lead to had used any drugs or alcohol in the, life in prison. past 24 hors. He is being held at, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab's federal prison in Milan, Mich., and arraignment in federal court Fri- had been treated at a hospital for day took fewer than five minutes burns. and a not guilty plea was entered U.S. Magistrate Judge Mark, on his behalf. The 23-year-old said Randon entered a notlguilty plea for little, telling the judge simply that Abdulmutallab. It's a routine pracT he understood the six-count indict- tice in federal court for the defen- ment he faces and the maximum dant to allow the judge to enter a penalty. plea. Abdulmutallab's first court The defense team did not chal appearance came exactly two weeks' lenge the government's request to, after an Amsterdam-to-Detroit keep Abdulmutallab in pre-trial flight in which passengers rushed custody. After the hearing, one of to his seat and put out flames that his attor neys declined to talk about' could have caused a disaster. The the case. FBI says Abdulmutallab tried to "It's just too soon in the process destroy Northwest Airlines Flight to make any comment," Leroy Soles 253, which was carrying nearly 300 said at a nearby coffee shop. The. people, by injecting chemicals into date of the next hearing was not a package of explosives concealed in set. his underwear. A Detroit-area native who sat six The alleged attack has shaken up rows in front of Abdulmutallab on airport security worldwide. Presi- the plane watched the arraignment dent Barack Obama considers it an from the courtroom gallery. WANT TO JOIN THE DAILY? Come to our mas; meeting at 420 Mayniard. TONIGHT AT 8 PM PHceton Review 7 MCAT 10 Point - Avg Score Increase 12 Point -Top Quarter Increase 105 hours live instruction A 5 expert instructors MCAT COURSES START AS EARLY AS JAR 17! 8*n s -oeo .5-iesiy&S.Frs . Teach Engalish in Japan!. www.englIshlIub-jp.com *nglishcIubjapan4hotmai.com I READER KNOWS BST Vote for the Best of Ann Arbor before January 22 on our web site. michigandaily.com/best-201 0