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BREAKING NEWS
UCA board to meet, discuss Hardin's future
LOG CABIN DEMOCRAT

The University of Central Arkansas Board of Trustees will hold a special meeting today to discuss president Lu Hardin's future with the university.

The meeting will take place at 11 a.m., and Rush F. Harding III, vice chairman of the board, told the Associated Press that Hardin offering his resignation may be one of the university president's options.

Vice president for university communications Warwick Sabin said he hasn't heard of any plans for Hardin to resign and said he has not been able to confirm the 11 a.m. meeting of the Board of Trustees as of 7 p.m. Wednesday.

"I'm confident the president has the votes to stay, if he would choose," Harding said. "However, I know the president cares deeply about the institution and he's assured me that he wants some resolution to this issue and he will put the interest of the university above his own."

The controversy began when it was reported that Hardin secretly received a $300,000 deferred-compensation bonus in May. Hardin has since repaid the money and said he would not accept it until faculty members receive salary increases and enough private funds are acquired to cover the early payment of deferred-compensation.

UCA administrators first said the money used to pay the bonus was public funds, but Attorney General Dustin McDaniel said in an advisory opinion that the money used to pay the bonus was public money because it came from student book and food sales.

"The board is having a meeting in the morning to sit down with the president and figure out how to get this behind us," Harding told the Associated Press.

Information later surfaced that a memo had been distributed with typed names of three university vice presidents containing talking points on why Hardin's bonus should be kept secret. All three vice presidents denied authoring, or seeing, the document before it was distributed.

The university Faculty Senate met last week where faculty addressed concerns about Hardin and the administration. A Faculty Affairs Committee was to review and deliberate the facts considering Hardin's bonus and, if they feel action is necessary, recommend it to the senate. Faculty senator Ed Powers was selected to chair the committee.

A vote of confidence and a request for Hardin's resignation are two of the options Powers said the committee could suggest to the senate. A closed meeting of the committee was scheduled to take place today.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.




For the economy, finally some news not half bad


WASHINGTON After weeks of one negative report after another, the economy finally got some news Friday that wasn't half bad.

Wall Street, which suffered a stomach-churning drop Thursday, managed a modest gain. Oil prices hit their lowest point since early June, and gas fell to a seven-week low. Military spending helped boost big-ticket factory orders in June, and new home sales fell less than expected.

Still, private economists cautioned that a few better-than-expected data releases did not mean the economy's problems had disappeared.

The Commerce Department reported that a second straight double-digit increase in orders for defense capital goods had pushed total orders for big-ticket manufactured products up by 0.8 percent in June, the strongest gain in four months and much better than the 0.4 percent decline that economists had been expecting.

In a second report, Commerce said that sales of new homes dropped by 0.6 percent in June, less than half the decline that had been expected. May sales were revised to show more strength than originally thought although they were still down. New home sales have fallen in seven of the past eight months as the nation endures the steepest slump in housing in a generation.

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But economists were encouraged that the pace of the decline has slowed significantly and two regions of the country the Northeast and the Midwest actually posted sales gains in June. Sales fell in the South and West. The inventory of unsold new homes also fell to a 10 month supply at the June sales pace, still high, but down from the peak of 11.2 months in March.

Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist at Global Insight, said despite the positive flickers in the housing report, "the housing market remains extremely fragile."

Evidence of that came in a separate report showing that the number of households facing foreclosure more than doubled in the second quarter, compared to a year ago. Nationwide, 739,714 homes received at least one foreclosure-related notice during the quarter, or one in every 171 U.S. households, according to Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac Inc.

Wall Street, which had plunged by more than 280 points on Thursday following news that existing home sales had dropped more than expected in June, chose to be more optimistic on Friday. The Dow Jones industrial average rose by 21.41 points to finish a volatile week at 11,370.69.

On the energy front, oil prices declined $2.23 settling at $123.26 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange Friday as gas prices dipped to $4.006 per gallon, the first time pump prices have been that low in nearly seven weeks, according to a survey by AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express.

AAA spokesman Geoff Sundstrom said prices at the pump should slip below the $4 mark over the weekend and could drop by at least another 25 cents by Labor Day, if oil stays on its downward path. However, analysts said it was too early to tell whether the decline was here to stay.

At the same time, investors were encouraged by some slightly better news about consumers. The Reuters/University of Michigan index of consumer sentiment for July came in at 61.2, beating expectations and slightly better than the 28-year low of 56.4 hit in June.

Still, private economists cautioned that a reading at 61.2 was still in recession territory and far below the level of a year ago when the confidence index was at 90.4.

They said the economy faces sizable headwinds from the prolonged housing slump, which has driven mortgage foreclosures higher and resulted in billions of dollars of losses for financial companies. On top of that, the economy has shed nearly a half-million jobs since January as economic growth has stalled because of the troubles in housing, the credit crunch and soaring energy prices.

Congress is moving to pass its most sweeping response to the housing crisis. Supporters say the bill could help 400,000 at-risk homeowners avoid foreclosure while offering tax breaks for first-time home buyers and providing federal support if needed to stabilize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two companies which own or guarantee nearly half the nation's mortgages.

Industry analysts said they believed the housing rescue bill, which passed the House on Wednesday and cleared the last major hurdle in the Senate on Friday, will help combat the housing downturn and should result in a rebound in activity, but not until next year.

Bernard Markstein, senior economist at the National Association of Home Builders, said that offering first-time buyers a tax credit worth up to $7,500 should encourage fence-sitters to get back into the market as long as banks do not overreact to their mortgage losses by making loans too difficult to obtain.

"Unfortunately, we are now seeing excessive caution on the part of lenders," he said. "We have gone from lending too wildly to excessive caution."

Markstein predicted that new home sales will drop to 537,000 for all of 2008, which would be the slowest pace since 1991. But he forecast a rebound beginning in 2009.

The report on new home sales showed that the median price of a new home sold in June fell by 2 percent compared to a year ago.

 

  More Stories from Martin Crutsinger:

    · For the economy, finally some news not half bad - 07/26/08
    · Paulson says financial stability is top priority - 07/23/08
    · Inflation jumps by biggest amount in 6 months - 06/14/08
    · Incomes and spending both slow in April - 05/31/08
    · Finance officials pledge revamped financial regulations to deal with severe credit crisis - 04/13/08


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