-- -- - - - - x 3r"&Lw Thursday 02002 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 13 One-hundred-eleven years of editorzilfreedom TODAY: Isolated thun- derstorms throughout the day and contin- uing throughout the night. r84 LOWM 67 Tomorrow, 81 i4 www.michigandaily.com Saltiel expected to be new LSI director By Tyler Boersen Daily Staff Reporter For the third time before the Life Sciences Institute has even opened its doors, the Univer- sity has selected new leadership for the research initiative rising along Washtenaw Avenue. Alan Saltiel will likely be approved as director of the LSI, alongside six "charter faculty," at today's meeting of the University Board of Regents. "I am excited. It is a great challenge, but also a great opportunity for me to have a major impact," Saltiel said. Saltiel follows Jack Dixon and Scott Emr, who were originally slated to serve as co-direc- tors of the LSI. Emr left before he arrived because of uncertainty after former President Lee Bollinger resigned to become president at Columbia University. Early this summer, Dixon announced he would leave the University to become dean of scientific affairs at the University of California at San Diego. Former Deputy General Counsel, Liz Barry has ben serving as managing director of the LSI since January. University President Mary Sue Coleman con- sulted with Dixon during Saltiel the search for a new director. She said she chose to hire from within the University after Dixon showed her what Saltiel could "bring to the table" as a highly regarded researcher. "I am extremely happy because (Saltiel) is a very distinguished scientist, and with this char- ter faculty, I think they are going to give us the jumpstart we needed," Coleman said. "I think it is a tremendous asset to heave someone from the inside because they can hit the ground running," Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R-Ann Arbor) said. She.said she plans to vote in favor of Saltiel's appointment. "He will be setting the scientific direction of the institute, administering and developing its resources, helping with education, research, outreach and building links to the other aca- demic departments in the University," she said. Saltiel has spent most of his career doing pri- vate sector pharmaceutical research. Most recently, he was the senior director of cell biolo- gy at the Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research Division in Ann Arbor. Most of his research has focused on uncovering how insulin controls cel-. lular sugar levels, but this research has emerged into a study of cell signaling. In 1995 he co- authored a paper on cell signaling which remains the most cited paper from the Proceed- ings of the National Academy of Sciences. In March 2001, he was appointed the first faculty member of the LSI. Saltiel, who will earn $270,000 a year, said it will be difficult to continue this research while serving as director of the LSI, but he plans to ensure that his lab continues to move forward. "I think it is impossible to be a director with- out doing research yourself because you (would) lose touch with the critical issues in sci- ence,"he said. While at Parke-Davis, Saltiel had to work to coordinate researchers trained in different disci- plines. Barry, who has worked with Saltiel since her appointment to the institute, counted this experience as one of his strong qualifications to take this administrative position. "I have been working closely with Alan since I came on board and I am extremely impressed with his leadership abilities," she said. "I think he is going to ensure that the institute is a suc- cess. He is an experienced leader in the private sector, and he has led multi-discipline science teams. So that experience will certainly benefit us." See LSI, Page 7A Cancer center begins lung screening trial By Kylene Kiang Daily Staff Reporter In its early phases, the symptoms of lung cancer are virtual- ly imperceptible - a chronic cough or chest pain may not be enough to send most people to see a doctor. Yet when symp- toms do become noticeable, the cancer is often in its advanced stages. In an effort to improve lung cancer detection, the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center announced yester- day its participation in a national lung screening trial headed by the National Cancer Institute. The trial, which involves the participation of other cancer study centers across the nation, will recruit 50,000 smokers and ex-smokers between the ages of 55 and 75 whose health will be journalized for the next sev- eral years. The study will focus primarily on evaluating the strength of spiral computed tomography scans and X-rays in detecting small tumors in the lungs. Researchers will scan patients' lungs for the first three years and then follow their health pro- gression for up to eight years. If the findings show significant effects in detection and mortality rates, it will serve as a stimu- lus for doctors to encourage smokers to get their lungs scanned regularly. "In the last few years, CT scans have been shown to pick up small cancers, and it's become much easier to see those small cancers with a CT scan than with a chest X-ray," said Ella Kazerooni, study leader and director of thoratic radiology at the University. Effective and reliable detection are ultimately what the study hopes to achieve in the face of the nation's high mortali- ty rate for lung cancer. Eighty-five percent of people diag- nosed with lung cancer will die from it. "People may be familiar with mammography, used to screen for breast cancer, or physical exams, blood tests and endoscopy that are done to look for prostate cancer or colon cancer," Kazerooni said. "But currently there is no way to screen for lung cancer." Kazerooni said that oftentimes lung cancer is found when symptoms like a new cough arise. She added that "the majority of people with lung cancer are diagnosed when the disease is advanced, making a cure very difficult. Unfortu- nately, when lung cancer is very small, say the size of a fin- See CANCER, Page 7A KELLY UN/Daily John Payton, lead counsel for the University in the, lawsuits challenging its admission practices, speaks during an affirmative action forum at the Michigan League. 'U' lawyers: Court should not hear lawsuit's appeal By Megan Hayes Daily Staff Reporter The U.S. Supreme Court should refuse to hear an appeal in the lawsuit challenging the Law School's admis- sions policy, outside counsel for the University said yesterday during the University Admissions Lawsuits pro- gram yesterday. "We will ask the court to deny the appeal and not to hear the case," Uni- versity attorney Maureen Mahoney said. She said the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals based its decision on the Supreme Court's 1978 ruling in Uni- versity of California Board of Regents v. Bakke, which found diversity to be a compelling interest, and therefore simply approved the status quo. "The Law School has won the case," she said, referring to the appel- late court's decision in Grutter v. Bollinger. "It just won't get any better than that no matter what the Court decides." The event headlined panelists including University interim Provost Paul Courant and General Counsel Marvin Krislov, as well as outside counsel for the University and those filing amicus briefs. "The whole country has a stake in these cases," President Mary Sue Coleman said. She said the event was a way to present an overview of where the admissions lawsuits cur- rently stand as well as a way to illus- trate the University's deep and unwavering commitment to diversity. "I am proud of Michigan's lead- ership in developing admissions policies that are fair and equal," Coleman said. Courant said there are enormous concrete educational benefits to a diverse student body, but these advan- tages require the University to have representatives from minority groups. "If you want to solve any problem, you need a team of people with many skills," he said. "A diverse student body provides our students an experi- ence within the world we live." In regard to the specifics of the admissions policy currently under consideration in the Grutter case, Law School Dean Jeffrey Lehman said the University desires in each entering class a "critical mass" of minority students who feel comfort- able in their environment. In doing so, he said the University looks at each application individually, using race as one of many factors in evaluating applicants. "It is important to us to be able to say unequivocally that anyone who is here is qualified to be here," Lehman said. The event marked the first oppor- tunity the public had to hear directly from the outside counsel representing the University in both the Law School See LAWSUITS, Page 7A Rumsfeld: Congress should O Iraq attack WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration pressed Congress to take the lead in authorizing force against Iraq yesterday after the U.S. campaign for a tough new U.N. resolution was undercut by Saddam Hussein's offer on inspec- tions. As the White House talked tough, United Nations weapons inspectors began planning their return to Baghdad. "It serves no U.S. or U.N. purpose to give Saddam Hussein excuses for fur- ther delay," Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld asserted. Iraq's announcement that it would accept the return of international weapons inspectors nearly four years after they left divided the Security Coun- cil. The United States and Britain pur- sued a resolution to force Iraq to disarm. But Russia and France were opposed, as were Arab nations. Rumsfeld, in testimony to the House Armed Services Committee, and Presi- dent Bush, in a White House meeting with top congressional leaders, dis- missed the Iraqi leader's 11th-hour over- ture as a stalling tactic. "He's not going to fool anybody," Bush said. Rumsfeld suggested that Iraq had See IRAQ, Page 7A PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY DAVID KATZ/Daily While many students on campus work, some choose alternative jobs such as nude modeling in the School of Arts. Work study 'offeirs students choices in unusua fields Peters: Atty. gen. should serve consumers By Kylene Kiang Daily Staff Reporter By Jordan Schrader Daily Staff Reporter As Michigan's "watchdog," one of the attorney general's most important jobs is to protect con- sumers from fraudulent business practices, state Sen. Gary Peters said. 0 The Democratic candidate for attorney gener- al, a Bloomfield Township resident, said by standing up for customers he would continue in the footsteps of the position's current occupant, Jennifer Granholm. Granholm is a gubernatorial County Prosecutor's Office, who wants to increase the office's violent crime prevention efforts and give greater assistance to county prosecutors. Peters said that while 83 prosecutors' offices handle criminal proceedings, the attorney general is the only official who is effective in restraining fraud. "The consumer protection "We have to represent all the other areas of state government, but I will continue to make that the focus of the office." Putting a stop to telemarketing scams and inflated prices are among the successes of the Granholm administration that Peters would con- tinue, he said. Although violent crime prevention is a local responsibility, the attorney general can aid pros- ecutors in cases that require specialized expert- ise or added manpower, Peters said. "I'm there to assist county prosecutors," he Students considering temporary or work-study employment should not feel their search is limited to merely slopping food to hungry students in the South Quad Residence Hall cafeteria. In addition to earning money toward educational and living expenses, some student employment opportunities can provide rare experiences that are unique to the University community. According to the University's Student Employment Office, the most popular student jobs include library assistants, recreational assistants, residence hall service workers and research assistants, which range from baking bread in the Michigan League to nude modeling in the School of Art - are often over- looked and lost in the employment list- ings. More than 1,500 jobs were posted on the SEO website last academic year. As a figure drawing model, Ann Arbor resident Kaite Ripple performs natural life poses for figure drawing and painting classes. Duration of poses may vary from a series of short "gesture" poses of two to five minutes, to longer poses of 20 to 30 minutes. Models are paid $10 per hour. At first, Ripple was apprehensive about posing nude in front of a class- room of art students. "I decided that I was comfortable with it so I decided to 8 I