Friday,January 13, 2006 News 3 FBI looking into accusation of poisonous handshake Opinion 4 Poet congratulates Coke protesters CAGERS LOOK FOR VICTORY IN CHAMPAIGN ... SPORTS, PAGE 8 One-hundredffteen years of editorialfreedom Arts 5 The Hard Lessons make Halfass debut www.michirandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 54 62006 The Michigan Daily Lighting up RODRIGOU GAYA/Daily Rackham student Connie Pagedas works with muscle cells in a lab at North Ingalls Building yesterday. Cuts put ' U grants at ris Scientists are worried that eliminating $286 million in federal budget could jeopardize research By Michael Kan Daily News Editor The University is bracing itself for a scarcer year in science grants. Last month, the government eliminated $286 million from the 2006 budget of the National Institutes of Health, the nation's foremost provider for medical research funding. The NIH is a major funding source for University doctors. Last year alone, it award- ed a total of $368.1 million in grant and fel- lowship money to the University. University of Michigan doctors forecast a grim fallout for medical research nation- wide. Scientists will likely spend countless hours competing for grant money in lieu of conducting research, and they say science funds may be at risk of disappearing. "Nationally we are going to see a real drop in the advancement of science," Medi- cal School Prof. Steven Goldstein said. On Dec. 30, President Bush approved a 1- percent reduction to nearly all government programs in order to support the War in Iraq, hurricane recovery efforts and flu pandemic preparation. NIH's 2006 budget dropped to $28.3 billion as a result. Because of the budget cut, previously awarded research grants will see a 2.4-per- cent decrease in yearly funding, said Norka Ruiz Brazo, NIH's deputy director of extra- mural research. She added that NIH plans to offer fewer grants this year, but she could not See FUNDING, page 7 PAj After 7-5 season, will alums drop ball on fhnds? Football's drop-off season raises question of whether alumni donations will too By Ian Herbert Daily Sports Editor Go ahead. Blame Lloyd Carr. It's what everyone else is doing. With the Michigan football team coming off its worst season in more than 20 years, people close to the University are pointing fin- gers every which way. But what about fundraising? Does a win- ning football team make a difference for development? That's the million-dollar ques- tion after a year that saw the football program finish with a 7-5 record and a loss to Nebraska in the Alamo Bowl. Bob Groves, associate vice president of development at the University, says it is a com- plex issue. Happy alumni are giving alumni, but whether a winning football season directly affects donations is still up in the air. "Always, when the team is playing bet- ter and people are feeling good, when we're undefeated, those things do buoy up people's spirits and it's' a positive effect," Groves said. "But to say that we are hurt by (a bad season), I would say that's too hard of a statement." How potential donors are affected by the success of the football team might be difficult to quantify, but how many alumni made the trip to Alamo Bowl is not. The number was a lot smaller this year than it has been recently. Just over 5,000 tickets were sold for this year's bowl game - down from 35,000 just a year ago. The Alumni Association organized a vari- ety of tours of the city and major landmarks for alumni who made it down to San Antonio. It also held a pep rally, seminars and a tailgate with drinks and food for alumni to mingle in the hours leading up to the game. Separate from the Alumni Association, University President Mary Sue Coleman hosted her own dinner for select donors, as well as a special reception for Presidential Society members - people who have given more than $15,000 to the University in their lifetime. Turnout was down for all of the activities. This year, only 20 people attended Coleman's dinner and just more than 100 came to the reception. Last year in Pasadena, Coleman held a luncheon with 100 guests, and the pregame tailgate attracted about 500 people, according to Chacona Johnson, the associate vice president for development who helped coordinate Alamo Bowl activities. The events organized by the Alumni Asso- ciate also had a lower turnout than in the past. Kurk Lutz, the event organizer for the Alumni Association, said the week before the game that they were expecting about 300 people for the tour and just over 1,000 for their tailgate - down from the roughly 1,300 and 3,500 who went to the similar events last year. The year before saw even more guests See DONATIONS, page 7 CAITLIN KLEIBOER/Daily Engineering sophomore Chris VanDeusen takes a break outside for a cigarette. VanDeusen began smoking during his freshman year. Alarming number of students start smoking freshman year By Ashlea Surles n a grave voice, University Vice President for Student Affairs E. Royster Harper presented a shocking pair of statistics to the University Board of Regents at its meeting last month. About 3 percent of incoming freshmen reported smoking cigarettes when they came to the University, Harper said. But by the end of freshman year, the number of smokers had leaped to an eye-widening 25 percent, Daily Staff Reporter she said. After Harper read the numbers, a murmur rose in the room among both the audience and the regents, who seemed stunned by the statistics. University officials link the dramatic increase to a variety of causes. Robert Winfield, director of the Uni- versity Health Service, said students may begin smoking during their fresh- man year as a result of increased alco- hol consumption, the stress of being away from home, heightened social pressures and late nights that are part of the college lifestyle. "Colleg is a tim when p experin - Carol Tuc UHS Educa alcohol consumption of students transitioning from high school to college may be a factor. "Oftentimes smoking behavior travels with alcohol behavior," Matney said Carol Tucker, an educator for UHS, said "col- lege is a time when people experiment," speculat- ing that most people who smoke in college do so socially and are not heavy smokers. "Unfortunately, some become addicted," she said. There is some dispute over the accuracy of the numbers presented to re the regents. Kenneth Warner, dean of the School e of Public Health, has done significant research on smoking trends and said, eople based on other surveys, that 3 percent ,, is far too low to be correct. ient. "There's no way that's accurate," he said, adding that he suspects freshmen Aker, taking the surveys may have been reluc- tor tant to report tobacco use. There is also a discrepancy between dates of the two surveys Harper used. The 3 percent figure likely came from the University's annual student life survey on fresh- men who entered the University in 2004 - this year's sophomore class, Matney said. The 25 percent figure likely came from a University survey conducted among See SMOKING, page 7 P a. "~ : P ,, a "When I talk to smokers about smoking they usually say they smoke because it's a habit, they use it to take breaks, and they do it socially," Winfield said. Malinda Matney, senior research associate for the division of student affairs, agreed that the increased 3% of students smoke before college 25% of students smoke after freshman year Directors dodge controversy with Don't forget victims of quake, relief worker says 'colored' "Vagina Monologues" production was under charges of reverse discrimination By Carissa Miller Daily Staff Reporter cast identifications." Some cast members' self-iden- tifications match their skin color. Others don't. One cast member identifies herself as pink. "It's a very colorful production," Raynor said. Written by playwright Eve Ensler, the play is part of a larger political movement, the V-Day College Campaign, which aims to .,tn violnea ainst women. - Islamic Relief coordinator speaks at fundraising dinner, the first of six events to raise money for quake By C.C. Song Daily Staff Reporter caused by the devastation. He told how at one point during the mission, he looked into a pile of debris and thought he saw a face, only to discover that it was a rock. "You think you see dead people everywhere," Shahid said. Organizers said the main point of the dinner was to remind students that relief efforts are ongoing in response to the disaster that killed more than 79,000 people and left three million homeless. "It's amazing how people didn't know where the region is until the earthquake," said LSA junior Sana Kazi, who helped organize the dinner. Although the earthquake initially garnered inter- national media coverage, the world stopped paying attention as soon as the media stoned reporting University of Michigan-Dearborn alum Misbah Shahid can't forget the rubble. Shahid went to Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, in November, just weeks after an Oct. 6 earthquake that registered 7.6 on the Richter scale devastated large areas of South Asia. Shahid told his story last night in Rackham There's an "all-color" cast for tic venr'c nrnini n of"T et ci mm, - Imll I