One hundred eleven years of editforialfreedom ti NEWS: 76-DAILY i CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www~michigandally.com Monday January 14, 2002 Voi GXiI, No. 7 .!lean rbory , dlit tti n, 000211 IVMic1#gan_ ally- I Ford c Dearborn automaker is the largest employer of University 0 engineering graduates By Shannon Pettypiece Daily Staff Reporter ---- - ------- 1' uts ticularly concerning toi according to the Col annual report for 2000 University Engineering any other employer, sa the Engineering CareerI "Last year wasn't ap and Ford did pretty go dents," Redwine said. Ford spokeswoman A although openings are still have an opportunit jobs at the company. "We are having a sum we are recruiting interns " . worryutu many students, because we always are - looking for the best people," lege of Engineering's said Gattari. "There will be offers made, but as I -2001, Ford hired more said, the number of people we hire this year will students last year than depend on our business needs." id Cynthia Redwine of Gattari said there might even be an increase Resource Center. in job opportunities in the area of product particularly stellar year, development as the company tries to restruc- od with attracting stu- ture production. "Our clear area of need is product develop- Anne Marie Gattari said ment because this is a product revitalization limited, students will plan," she said. y to intern and take on While Gattari said it is difficult to assess the future needs of Ford, its main supplier, Visteon, imer intern program and is no longer hiring from the outside and cannot s, and we are still - as guarantee its co-op students a job after gradua- I re engineers tion like it has in the past, said Engineering In the past, even when companies have ma senior Tom Hudson, a co-op student at the cutbacks in production they normally conti company. ing their recruiting efforts, Redwine said. "They can't even take care of their people "Those just coming in after graduation inside the company," he said. something companies want to maintain so t Despite a slowing economy, Ford recruiters have fresh ideas and keep people coming up1 visited the University's campus last semester, ladder," Redwine said. but according to Ford's recruiting website, Hudson said that although opportunities there are no scheduled visits to the University Ford are especially limited, it is difficult to f this semester. a position at General Motors or Daiml Gattari said Ford plans to continue involve- Chrysler as well. ment with the University at this time. "It is especially difficult at Ford," Huds "We are continuing to keep our relationship said. "I have several contacts there and ev with universities and our recruiting efforts will using my contacts I have had trouble finding be adjusted as the market dictates," she said. in there." ade inu- are hey the at md er- son ven an Friday's announcement by Ford Motor Co. that it expects to lay off 22,000 workers in North America and eliminate 5,000 white-collar jobs, is causing many students who had hoped to work for the Dearborn-based automaker to rethink their future. The financial troubles Ford is facing are par- Surgeon to delver MLK address By Christopher Johnson Daily Staff Reporter Taliban captive identifies photo of Shoe bomber Dr. Benjamin Carson, a prominent neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins Med- ical Institute in Baltimore, will speak a week from today as the keynote speak- er for the University of Michigan's Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium. Carson's speech at 10 a.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium is the main event of the symposium, which is the largest at any uni- versity nation- wide. Events began last week and will continue through February, although most are scheduled for next Sunday and Mon- Carson day, when classes are canceled for Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Damon Williams, one of the chief organizers of the symposium, explained the selection committee chose Carson for a variety of reasons. "Dr. Carson was selected because he is an alumnus of the Medical School, he's ... from Detroit, he is probably one of the top five neurosurgeons in the world (and) he has also been laud- ed tremendously for his commitment to the issues of social justice, urban education, a lot of the issues and val- ues that are consistent with the work of Dr. King," Williams said. In addition to his success in the medical profession, Carson has taken considerable effort to encourage underprivileged and minority children to rise above impoverished surround- ings. Carson has traveled around the world to convince others to use their innate talents to overcome poverty and with his wife co-founded the Carson Scholars Fund, which provides educa- tional grants to students who demon- strate remarkable academic and humanitarian accomplishments. Carson has strived to help under- privileged youths because he had simi- lar disadvantages during his childhood. He described in a written statement his experience in his mostly See CARSON, Page 7A KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) - Guarded by U.S. troops and attack dogs, a second group of suspected Osama bin Laden supporters departed yesterday for a U.S. prison camp in Cuba as U.S. bombers flew their most punishing raids in weeks on caves near the Pakistani border. The 30 prisoners, shackled and with their faces covered, shuffled in the darkness onto a C-17 transport plane for the flight to the Guantanamo Bay Naval Station in Cuba. The men were among nearly 400 Taliban and al-Qaida suspects interned at Kandahar. A U.S. military official said one of them had identified Richard Reid, accused of trying to blow up a trans-Atlantic flight with explosives hidden in his sneakers, as someone he had trained with at a camp run by bin Laden's al-Qaida network. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Reid was identified from a pho- tograph, but had no further details. The 30 detainees flown to Cuba will join 20 others who arrived from Kandahar on afriday. Hundreds are to be eventually flown to Guan- tanamo Bay. Lights at the Kandahar base were shut off except for low-intensity red and green lighting as the men were marched onto the plane. Security was tight, with attack dogs and Humvees with 50-caliber machine guns patrolling the area. In Kabul, state-run television reported that Afghanistan's interim government had ordered provincial officials to recruit 6,000 men to become the backbone of a professional military free of the ethnic and territorial divisions that have led to years of conflict. In Pakistan, ahead of his departure for Kabul, Fazal Hadi Shinwari, Afghanistan's newly appoint- ed chief justice, vowed to sentence bin Laden and fallen Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar to death if they were brought before him. The war remained very much alive in the rugged hills of Paktia province along the Pakistani border. Daylight bombing that began in the morn- See WAR, Page 7A Afghan soldiers loyal to Kandahar provincial governor Gul Agha arrive for a meeting with tribal factions In Spinboldak yesterday. Robot to aid UM HS surgical procedures Papered panes By Kylene Kiang Daily Staff Reporter The University of Michigan Health System's Department of Surgery will officially add a robot to its surgical team on Feb. 1. The da Vinci robot, a seven-foot tall, $1 million device created by Intu- itive Surgical Inc., will assist in vari- ous surgical procedures which will apply less traumatic and minimally invasive surgery techniques to patients, making recovery time much faster. Since the approval of robot-assisted surgery by the Food and Drug Admin- istration in July 2000, UMHS has been one of the few hospitals in the nation to utilize the advanced surgical approach. Since UMHS's acquisition of the robot last year, the da Vinci has suc- cessfully assisted in several surgeries including kidney donations for trans- plants, and prostate and gynecological procedures. Dr. Juan Arenas, assistant professor of surgery at UMHS, was one of the first surgeons in the nation to use the robot for laparoscopic living kidney donations. Conventional laparoscopic surgery allows the physician to observe and operate on internal organs by inserting surgical instruments and a tiny video camera directly into the body through keyhole incisions. During robotic surgery, Arenas applies the same technique while oper- ating comfortably from an ergonomi- cally designed console a few feet away from the patient. There he is able to view a three-dimensional image pro- jected by cameras inside the patient while controlling surgical instruments. The camera and instruments are insert- ed by the robot through small incisions in the patient that are less than 1 cen- timeter wide and result in minimal scarring. Manipulating the instruments is comparable to controlling computer joysticks. Dr. Arnold Advincula, director of minimally invasive surgery for the department, recently performed one of the first robot-assisted laparoscopic hysterectomies in the country. "The use of robotics will allow us to more accurately replicate what is being done with traditional open cases, but in a less invasive manner," Advin- cula said. Arenas said the only downfall to using the robot is the surgeon's loss of touch during operation. However, pro- See ROBOT, Page 7A Architecture senior Kai Orion views postings at the North Campus bus stop next to Pierpont Commons. 'Aernes'pill Study: Americans - nicer since 9/11 terrorist attacks not designed for all-night studying By Jordan Schrader Daily Staff Reporter It's become cliche to say that Sept. 11 brought America together, but a new study indicates Americans may really be more kind and loving since the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The study, based on responses to an online survey, was conducted by Uni- versity psychology Prof. Christopher Peterson. Created to classify and mea- sure character strengths, it gained new meaning after Sept. 11 as a way to Of the 24 virtues measured by the study, Peterson said six showed a sig- nificant rise: love, kindness, teamwork, hope, gratitude and spirituality. These character traits all "involve other people as well as reflecting beliefs about the meaning of life," he said. Peterson attributed the change to a greater presence of death in peoples' minds after Sept. 11. "(Americans) are confronting the possibility that life is short ind life can be snuffed out, and it's kind of hard to have that front-and-center in your By Shabina S. Khatri Daily Staff Reporter Imagine all the benefits of a caffeine pill, but without the harmful conse- quences. Sound too good to be true? The reality may not be too far off. Studies are being conducted on a drug called Modafinil, which was approved by the Federal Drug Admin- istration in 1998 to treat narcolepsy, a sleep disorder characterized by uncon- trollable sleepiness and frequent day- time sleep. Unlike other stimulants, Modafinil, also known as Provigil, has been found to increase alertness and focus in subjects without leaving them feeling wired or anxious. Most studies of the drug have been performed on subjects mimicking the ..~t -.I r .. a r.-A_1:4.. A night shifts. The military has also con- ducted similar experiments, based on the rationale that soldiers who sleep less can perform better. But is the drug safe enough for healthy, non sleep-deprived individuals who are just looking for a way to stay up at night? Dr. Ronald Chervin, director of the University's Sleep Disorders Clinic, doesn't think so. "Modafinil is not a drug that stu- dents should take to cram for a test or write a paper," he said. "I have not seen published reports about its use for people without chronic sleep disor- ders." This lack of information involving the long-term effects of the drug on normal individuals has led many Photo iustration by YONI GOODSTINF/Daily Art sophomore Toria Marquard is thankful for the companionship of her friend, Michigan State University student Laura Mulkoff following the Sept. 11 attacks. The more than 300 questions on the survey asked for agreement or dis- agreement with statements including "I have never deliberately hurt any- in a universal power, a god." The last question indicates spiritual- ity, which according to Peterson is the conviction that life is sacred, including