I-" LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 30, 2001- 3 SAPAC director to be appointed shortly Man discovered viewing porn is removed from Ugli A man was seen looking at pornog- raphy on a computer at the Shapiro Undergraduate Library on Thursday afternoon, according to Department of Public Safety reports. The man was also trying to entice students to inter- act with him while viewing the images. Officers located the man and removed him from the building. Men enter room, steal purse A student in South Quad Residence Hall awoke Thursday afternoon to find two unknown men in her room, accord- ing to DPS reports. The men took her denim purse and fled the scene. DPS was unable to locate the sus- Lunch bag stolen from office A College of Pharmacy employee's lunch bag was stolen from his office about 2:30 p.m. Thursday, according to DPS reports. His boss said he saw a man coming from the area near the office. The man is in his early 20s and was wearing a hooded sweatshirt. Drunk driver hits sign, goes to jail A vehicle driving on the 1300 block of East Ann Street early Friday morn- ing was spotted leaving the roadway and striking a sign, DPS reports state. Officers located the vehicle at about 2 a.m. and the driver was arrested for driving under the influence. The dri- ver was taken1 to jail and was released at 4:30 a.m. oh bond. Peeping Tom spotted in MoJo A student in Mosher-Jordan Resi- dence Hall said.a large man was seen in the women's restroom on the fourth floor Friday afternoon, according to DPS reports. She said she heard a scream coming from the restroom, which is directly across the hall from her room. An officer met with the vic- tim and the resident. DPS was investi- gating the incident. Jacket stolen from CCRB A student's jacket was stolen after he left it unattended in a Central Cam- pus Recreation Building locker room Friday afternoon, DPS reports state. He said he left the jacket hanging for an hour and a half in the locker room because it was too big to fit into a locker. The jacket, valued at $200, and $20 cash from the pockets were taken. DPS had no suspects. Women begs for money in Union An employee of an office in the Michigan Union reported that a men- tally ill woman entered their office Friday morning, DPS reports state. The woman claimed she worked for West Quad's Cambridge House but was asking the staff in the office for money and housing. She was not threatening to the employees but refused to leave. DPS officers located the woman and removed her from the building. People attempt to enter vehicle A person said he saw two people trying to break into a black Honda outside Bursley Residence Hall early Sunday morning, according to DPS reports. He yelled out the window and the suspects fled the scene and ran toward the Pierpont Commons. Resident threatened by Instant Message A South Quad resident reported a threatening instant message Friday afternoon, according to DPS reports. An officer took a statement from the student. Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jacquelyn Nixon. By Jacquelyn Nixon Daily StaffReporter The Sexual Assault and Prevention Center hopes to finish its national search for a new director in about one month. Latresa Wiley has been filling the posi- tion in an interim capacity since former director Virginia Chitanda left the position in January to take a job with the Internation- al Human Rights Law Group in Washington. SAPAC's director is in charge of develop- ing plans and policies, coordinating programs workshops and surveys, referring con- stituents to community agencies and main- taining a healthy relationship with University offices such as Counseling and Psychological Services, the Department of Public Safety and the Office of Student Conflict Resolu- tion. Kathleen Donohoe, head of the search committee and director of the Sexual Harass- ment Policy Office, said the committee is looking for a person who can multi-manage. "It requires someone who has a clear understanding of the issues of sexual assault," Donohoe said. The Division of Student Affairs selected the committee earlier this semester, Donohoe said. Undergraduates, graduate students, rep- resentatives from University Housing, CAPS, Greek Life, DPS, resident education, profes- sors and a nurse from the University Hospi- tals make up the conimittee. "We tried to make sure we were touching each constituency," Donohoe said. There are 12 committee members, two of whom are students. LSA junior Elizabeth Anderson and Rack- ham student Michael Woodberry will repre- sent the student voice on the committee. Anderson served on the Michigan Student Assembly's Women's Issues Commission last year and Woodberry is a Music School grad- uate student instructor. Donohoe said th'e candidates' ability to work in an academic culture will be a critical factor in the selection. "We have an educational responsibility here in the arena of sexual assault," Donohoe said. "Certainly SAPAC has a component of response for victims, but they also have a very large effort in prevention. "They teach young people how to go about educating their fellow students on rape pre- vention ... and involve men in that educa- tional process. They can play an important part in preventing rape." Following the Nov. 30 deadline for applica- tions, the committee plans to begin meeting during the first few weeks of December. CAPS interim Director Todd Sevig said the position is open to people of all different pro- fessions and is not limited to people within the University. Donohoe said whether the candidate comes from within the University will not be a fac- tor in the committee's decision. "It's not necessarily a plus or minus. ... We'll look at the whole person and what they bring," Donohoe said. The selection should come in mid-Decem- ber and involving the new director with staff will take place fairly soon afterwards. Donohoe said they were hoping to bring the new director to the University at the beginning of January. "That might be problematic based on where they are working. I am hoping mid- winter semester," Donohoe said. Ringtones Ford CEO Nasser forced out; William Clay Ford Jr. set to take over job today JOHN PRATT/Daily bells at noon yesterday. DETROIT (AP) - William Clay Ford Jr. will replace Jacques Nasser as chief executive officer of Ford Motor Co., a company official told The Associated Press. Nasser's departure, as well as other management changes, were to be announced today, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The move puts a Ford family member in charge of the automaker's day-to-day management for the first time since 1979, when Henry Ford II resigned. William Ford Jr., 44, started taking more operational control of the company in July, when the board created the Office of the Chairman and CEO. He and Nasser met regularly to review company operations. Ford is the son of William Clay Ford Sr., who is a grandson of company founder Henry Ford and brother of former chair- man and CEO, the late Henry Ford II. For some weeks, Ford has been looking outside for a suc- cessor to Nasser, who had been under pressure for months for Ford's loss of market share and tumbling profitability. The financially troubled company has been preparing a turnaround plan expected to be revealed in December. A handful of top industry executives had been contacted about the job of CEO, the trade publication Automotive News reported yesterday. Ford worked for the automaker for several years until he resigned in 1995 to assume the chairmanship of the board of directors' finance committee. He became board chairman in January 1999 when Alex Trotman retired as chairman and CEO, while Nasser was named president and CEO. In addition to Nasser's departure, Nick Scheele, 57, current- ly group vice president for North America, was expected to be named Ford's chief operating officer. Scheele recently moved to North America after a brief stint as head of Ford Europe; he has been credited with turning around Ford's Jaguar unit. Jim Padilla, 55, group vice president for manufacturing and quality, will reportedly take over Scheele's job as head of Ford North America. Carl Reichardt, the retired chairman and CEO of Wells Fargo & Co., was expected to be named vice chairman, and David L. Murphy, Ford's vice president of human resources, was expected to leave the company, the source said. Nasser joined Ford in 1968 as a financial analyst at its Aus- tralian unit. He took over as president and CEO in January 1999, when the company seemed poised to overtake General Motors Corp. as the world's No. 1 auto company. But 18 months later, Ford's momentum was shaken by the recall of 6.5 million Bridgestone/Firestone tires after federal officials found safety defects in some Firestone ATX, ATX II and Wilderness AT tires. Many of them were on the popular Ford Explorer sport utility vehicle. The tires were linked to 271 deaths and hundreds of injuries. in accidents in which the tread separated from the tire. Ann Arbor resident Norm Roller plays the Kerrytown IFC sponsors anti drinking lecture by recn " By Maria Sprow Daily StaffReporter A recovering alcoholic shared some sobering experiences last night at Cliff Keen Arena as he revealed the hazards of drinking to members of the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Association. Mike Green, who took his last drink 23 years ago and has made a career out of traveling nationwide to schools and universities, appeared at the University for the 10th time last night to talk about what he called the "one-night problem." "Just because I can't drink doesn't mean you can't, and I sincerely mean that," he said. Green, while assuring members of the Greek system that the majority of them would not become alcoholics, said alcoholism is not the only prob- lem associated with drinking. He spoke of his personal experi- ences, as well as those of others. He said a girl who got "drunk and hungry" one night went out to eat, jumped a guy wearing a chicken cos- tume outside a restaurant, stole his costume and was arrested. When a question on the bar exam years later asked if she had ever been arrested, she had to admit it. The girl was unable to practice law. Another example: After drinking Everclear, an especially potent alco- holic beverage, a man passed out while sitting at a bar. The three females he was speaking with, instead of taking him home or to the hospital, took him to a tattoo parlor. When he woke up, he had a tattoo on his forehead. The one-night problem, he said, was "a short term problem of one night that can have lifelong conse- quences." Green also advised students against smoking marijuana and drinking alcohol in the same night. He said he had learned his lesson from a personal experience. He had been smoking and drink- ing at a party one night when several police officers knocked on the door of the house. Green said he ran out of the house and continued to run all the way home, where he immediately crashed on the couch and fell asleep. The problem came when he woke up in the morning without his clothes. "I found out, I was one house short of my house," he said, adding that it was a difficult situa- tion to explain to his children. "I've been hearing 'Mr. Naked' (from my neighbor) for 30 years." On a more serious note, he encouraged students to become "spotters" for friends who drink too much in one night by swapping drinks for car keys and by not pro- moting dangerous, hurtful or unlaw- ful behavior. "You never do a shot a minute for 21 minutes on your 21st birthday," Green said. "Nobody has the right to spike anybody else's drink to get them into bed. Kick them out of the party or call the police." He added that "one-night prob- lems" are everyday occurrences on college campuses because students always claim to have a reason to drink. Days he identified as having high drinking risks included Labor Day Weekend, Welcome Week, Monday Night Football nights, Halloween, the NCAA basketball playoffs - "that's a full month" - Spring Break, finals, New Year's Eve, study days, Greek Week, Super Bowl Sun- day, Valentine's Day, birthdays and paydays. Students were asked to measure themselves and add up the number of times they drink or get drunk each year. Jenny Opatik, a member of the Sigma Kappa sorority, said the pre- sentation showed her how common the one-night problem is at the Uni- versity. "A lot of my friends rate around 400," she said. The lecture was co-sponshred by the Interfraternity Council, the Pan- hellenic Association, University Health Service and the Athletic Department. Gas pnices hit lowest levels i'n months; drivers still complain EAST LANSING (AP) - Gas prices fell another 5 cents in the last week, down to an average of $1.17 per gallon statewide, AAA Michigan said yesterday. Prices have been in a free fall since the Sept. I1 terrorist attacks, plummeting 68.9 cents in the past seven weeks, AAA said. Drivers are paying an average of 44.7 cents a gallon less than they were one year ago. Not everyone is impressed. Rick Schreiber, a salesman for Jasco Chemical Corp., was paying $1.20 per gallon for premium gasoline on Monday at a Shell station in East Lansing. Schreiber, who drives 50,000 miles per year for his job, said he's seen lower prices in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. "It's higher here and it's even higher up north. I've got a stack of receipts in my truck to prove it," said Schreiber, who lives in Ann Arbor. "It's better than six months ago, but still." Others in Michigan say they're thrilled by the lower prices. "They've been so high for so long. It's a pleasant change," said Anita Blasius of the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, which runs a carpooling program in the Detroit area. Blasius said she has seen gas as low as $1.06 per gallon. AAA Michigan, which surveys 300 gas Drivers are paying an average of 44.7 cents a gallon less than they were one year ago. stations each week, said prices range from $1.01 to $1.39 per gal- lon around the state. The slow economy is one of the main reasons for the drop in prices, according to the Michigan Public Service Commission, which con- ducts seasonal studies of energy use. That slowdown was only ampli- fied by the attacks on Sept. 11. The commission predicts gas prices will remain at or near current levels for the next six months. There also has been a decline in crude oil prices. Mark Griffin, president of the Michigan Petrole- um Association, said this summer's supply shortages caused refineries to pump out gasoline longer than they would have, creating a glut of gasoline in the market. Griffin said diesel fuel prices remain high because refineries con- tinued to produce gasoline when they normally would have been switched over to diesel and heating oil. Another reason for the low prices is that demand for gas typically dips between the summer vacation season and Thanksgiving, AAA Michigan spokeswoman Nancy Cain said. But Cain said demand should definitely pick up in November. AAA expects more Thanksgiving travelers on the road this year, both because of the low gas prices and because the terrorist attacks have made many people jittery about air travel. "Many people are thinking, 'Instead of flying somewhere, we'll just drive to grandma's,"' she said. "Five hundred miles seems to be the cutoff." Gas prices have been a source of contention in Michigan, which saw spikes as high as $5 a gallon in the hours following the terrorist attacks. Attorney General Jennifer Granholm accused 46 service sta- tions of violating consumer protec- tion laws when they raised thefr prices after the attacks. Granholm spokeswoman Genna Gent said yesterday that Granholm is close to reaching settlements with all of those stations. The settlements will include restitution for customers who were overcharged as well as state fines, Gent said. U THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today EVENTS "Building for the Future;" Day-long confer- -, , ..: L-,rti -t n n berg Room, Michigan League "Reshaping Government Ethos in China;" Spon- snrr hy the Center for Michigan Heart and Vas- cular Institute auditorium, 5333 McAuley Drive ' "History and Memory: Prohems in Pursuit of SERVICES Campus Information Centers, 764-INFO, info@umich. edu, or l)gLin X(rkiU unmdiatvly? I