Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2006 OUTKAST'S FILM STUCK IN I OWN TIM RP ... ARTS, PAG 9 News 3 Ford CEO resigns____ from postWO Opinion 4 Jared Goldberg: New Orleans's bel ib j uia u black flight Sports 16 Adams adds punch to 'M' secondary One-hundred-sixteen years ofjedtorialfreedom w ww. m ieh iandaiy. com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVII, No. 2 2006 The Michigan Daily AAPD: Lock your doors. Now. About 55 percent of Ann Arbor burglaries involve unlocked doors or windows By Drew Philp Daily Staff Reporter After spending the weekend with his parents, LSA senior Dave Hull returned home to find an unfamiliar man leaving his room via the third-floor fire escape. His 11 unsuspecting housemates were downstairs. The stranger told Hull he had been over to see a friend and was leaving. The stranger was leaving, but he wasn't there to see a friend. The man had stolen Hull's laptop and carried it out in a backpack, which was also Hull's. Because the doors and windows of Hull's apartment were unlocked, the thief was able to walk easily in and out with his computer, despite the people downstairs. "Everyone was home," Hull said. "They happened to be on the first floor, and my room was on the third." The Ann Arbor Police Department, along with the Department of Public Safety, Michigan Student Assembly and the Washtenaw Area Apartment Asso- ciation, have come together to combat local theft like Hull experienced. Their message: Lock your doors and windows. Fifty-five percent of theft in Ann Arbor involves unlocked doors and win- dows, according to police. Police and area landlords say that simply keeping doors and windows locked - even when By the numbers Since Jan. 1, 150 aptops have been stolen in Ann Arbor. 90 percent of crime in Ann Arbor is property-related. 55 percent of thefts in Ann Arbor involved unlocked doors. 45 percent of thefts occurred in student areas. SOURCE: ANN ARBOR POLICE DEPARTMENT it seems safe - greatly reduces property crime. The groups are instituting a "Lock Out Crime" campaign to educate new and returning students about protecting their homes in the Ann Arbor area. "Students think they live in a small university community and they can have an open-door policy," said AAPD Depu- ty Chief Greg O'Dell. "But you can't." The campaign was launched in the fall of 2005. Since then, robberies went down 36 percent from Jan. 1 to Sept. 2 compared to the same time period the year before. In addition to area land- lords stepping up tenant education, the AAPD has been hand-delivering flyers to houses in student neighborhoods and working with MSA to reach students. The campaign also reminds students to immediately call the police, rather than landlords, if they discover any sus- picious activity. "Often students will call the landlord the next day," landlord Lelahni Wessing- er said. "If you call the next day, the trail will be cold." For information on how to lock out crime, visit www.a2gov.org/goblue. SUPER MARIO In defense of Facebook s instant gossip N ews flash. more. Just type in facebook. As of 2:28 a.m. com and keep track of your yesterday, "Adap- friends' every movement. tion" is no longer one of As of 11:18 p.m. yesterday, Greg Cybulski's favorite Julie Nguyen was attend- movies. As of 11:05 p.m., ing "Squinty Eyed Reunion Oliver Luke Bostian is At Bar Louie." As of 7:55 no longer in a p.m., Cybulski relationship. was watching And as of 1:02 the season p.m. Monday, premiere of Facebook.com House. may have lost its It's the ulti- last foothold on mate stalker the mountain of tool. It's sanity. another step There's a new toward the kind of news on shock-and- Facebook, which awe invasion yesterday added KARL of privacy that a feature that STAMPFL experts have provides updates been predict- on what your friends are ing the Internet would doing in the online com- cause. munity. On the site, a small "It updates a personal- rebellion seems to be ized list of news stories growing against the new throughout the day, so features. Groups are you'll know when Mark sprouting up with names adds Britney Spears to his like "Facebook should Favorites or when your seriously change its name crush is single again," to stalkbook" and "We Ruchi Sanghvi, Facebook's hate the new Facebook" Feed project manager, Thousands of people have wrote on the site's blog. signed an online petition to The News Feed serves eliminate the new features. as the new Facebook home You can sign it at www.peti- page. There is also a Mini- tiononline.com/mod..perl/ Feed on each individual signed.cgi?faceb00k. Either profile that details the that or you could just not owner's latest Facebook turn on the feed or adjust endeavors. your privacy settings, which It takes stalking to a new the site gives you the option level. You don't even have of doing. to do any of the work any- See DEFENSE, page 7 First impressions of roommates are now digital Students request room switches after seeing Facebook profiles By Dave Mekelburg Daily Staff Reporter It used tobe a rite of pas- sage into college life. You'd call up or e-mail your freshman roommate, trying to glean whatever details you could about him or her during brief conver- sations. This year's freshmen have familiarized them- selves with their roommates without doing either. Social networking sites like Facebook.com and MySpace.com give new stu- dents the chance to check out their roommates for the upcoming year. And some students and their parents are unhappy about what they see. University Housing spokesman Alan Levy said the University received about a dozen complaints from parents and students based on prospective room- mates' Facebook profiles. Students were able to find out whom they would be liv- ing with at 4 p.m. on a day in late July. The first call came before 8 a.m. the next morning from a concerned parent who had immedi- ately checked the Facebook profile of his child's room- mate, Levy said. Levy said that when he talks to a new student who wants to switch room- mates, he asks him not to judge based on the pro- file. There is "a certain drama attached to Face- book entries," and students should not jump to conclu- sions, he said. Even if students are unhappy after meeting their roommates in per- son, they are not allowed to change rooms until two weeks after moving in. LSA freshman Zach Mar- tin said he was concerned after his first glance at his two roommates' Facebook profiles - he wasn't sure they shared the same politi- cal beliefs or interests. But his concerns melted away as soon as they spoke. "I had the opportunity to talk to them," he said. "Everything worked out fine." One of his roommates, LSA freshman Shahniwaz Labana, said Facebook was helpful because he didn't have to go into the process completely in the dark. Labana said Facebook is "a surface impression" and that there were differences between his expectations and the person behind the profile. See FACEBOOK, page 7 Mario Manningham isn't used season in two decades. Now, to to losing. From pee-wee football wash that taste out of his and his all the way to the high school teammates' mouths, Manning- gridiron, he'd never come close to ham is ready to take matters into a five-loss season. Last year, his his own hands. first at Michigan, he experienced Literally. just that during Michigan's worst FOR FULL STORY, SEE SPORTS, PAGE 15 Liberal profs unwelcome in Iran Ahmadinejad calls for purge to strengthen Islamic fundamentalism TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran's hard-line presi- dent urged students yester- day to push for a purge of liberal and secular univer- sity teachers, another sign of his determination to strengthen Islamic funda- mentalism in the country. With his call echoing the rhetoric of the nation's 1979 Islamic revolution, Ahmadinejad appears determined to remake Iran by reviving the fundamen- talist goals pursued under the republic's late founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho- meini. Ahmadinejad's call was not a surprise - since tak- ing office a year ago, he also has moved to replace pragmatic veterans in the government and diplomatic corps with former military commanders and inexpe- rienced religious hard-lin- ers. Iran still has strong moderate factions but Ahmadinejad's adminis- tration also has launched crackdowns on indepen- dent journalists, websites and bloggers. Speaking to a group of students yesterday, Ahma- dinejad called on them to pressure his administra- tion to keep driving out moderate instructors, a process that began earlier this year. Dozens of liberal univer- sity professors and teachers were sent into retirement this year after Ahma- dinejad's administration, sparking strong protests from students, named the first cleric to head Tehran University. The country's oldest institution of higher educa- tion remains home to doz- ens more professors and instructors who outspo- kenly oppose policies that restrict freedom of expres- sion. "Today, students should shout at the president and ask why liberal and secu- lar university lecturers are present in the universities," the official Islamic Repub- lic News Agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying during a meeting with stu- dents. The president complained that reforms in the country's universities were difficult to accomplish and that the edu- cational system had been See IRAN, page 7 Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad waves as he arrives at his office in Tehran yesterday. Ahmadinejad called for an antWilberal campaign in universities. I