I Thursday, September 7,2006 FALL INTO AUTUMN RELEASES THE B-SIDE News 3A Schools change suicide policies4v } Opinion 4A From the Da f: Fall rush should Sports 1C Daily kicks off the football season in special section One-hundred sixteen years of editorial, freedom www.michiganday.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVII, No. 3 2006 The Michigan Daily Stadium staff to fix ticket problem Mob of people in a long line due to new ticket-taking technology, late students obstructed ambulance By Anne VanderMey Daily News Editor Shortly after kickoff at Saturday's football game, Mike Stevenson, a University executive associate athletic direc- tor, stood on the sidelines of Michigan Stadium looking up at the stands. They were unusually empty for the first game of the season. Twenty minutes into the game, more than two-thirds of student seats were empty as 15,000 students tried to crowd into the stadium, waiting in lines that extended into the streets, impeding traffic and briefly holding up an ambulance on its way to an accident that police described as "bicyclist versus bus." The bicyclist, 58, was riding without a helmet and was taken to the hospital with several broken bones. The jam - caused by a new digital ticket-scanning sys- tem - was exacerbated by the large number of students who came late, Stevenson said. "It's physically impossible to get that many people through the stadium and not have it be a problem," he said. To alleviate the problem in time for Saturday's game against Central Michigan, Stevenson said ticket-takers, accustomed to tearing ticket stubs, will receive more train- ing with the new technology. Stadium staff will also use bullhorns to evenly disperse the crowd among all the exits. Many major venues, including Comerica Park and the football stadium at Michigan State University, have switched to some form of an electronic ticket- taking system. "We really believe, after we get the mechanical bugs worked out, that the process will go faster than tearing tickets will," Stevenson said. The new system is also designed to cut down on forged tickets. But crowding and lines at the entrances will likely remain a problem. "The majority of students have historically come late and probably always will," Stevenson said. When asked if the University could be held responsible for a problem such as delaying an ambulance, Stevenson said, "I guess I'd blame the 15,000 students. There's noth- ing to do about it." Geese roaming freely in Argo Park yesterday. Geese could be the carriers of avian flu if it were to come to the University. Avian flu would hit college students hard It could happen soon. And if it strikes, chances are col- lege students would be among the most affected. The next 10 years could yield a U.S. flu pandemic, many researchers believe. But should students be worried about falling ill to the H5Nl virus - widely known as the avian flu - while walking to class this fall? "Everybody in the public health world is worried," said Robert Win- field, director of the University Health Service. Winfield is responsible for planning and preparation for all pandemic- related emergencies at the University. Unlike with the common flu - which mostly affects the very old, the very young and those with weakened immune systems - Winfield said college students would be part of the group most vulnerable to bird flu. That means you. WHAT COULD HAPPEN Examining clues from the past to By Arikia Millikan ( For the Daily find keys to the future, public health experts say the H5N1 virus is compa- rable to the Spanish flu of 1918. During the 20th century, there were three major influenza pandemics in the United States. Most recently, mild pandemics struck in 1968 and in 1957. But the Spanish flu of 1918 was by far the most lethal. Between 50 and 100 million people were killed, with half of them between the ages of 20 and 40, Medical School Prof. Sandro Cinti said. When the Spanish flu entered the human body with a healthy immune system, it caused an extreme immune reaction called a "cytokine storm," in which the body's defensive pro- teins (cytokines) overproduced. The immune response was so intense that it caused damage to bodily organs - and death soon after. Younger people are more likely to experience this violent fate. This response is also characteristic of the H5N1 virus. Researchers believe the current strain of avian flu virus activates the same kind of immune response as the Spanish flu virus, which would put college-aged people at great risk in the case of a pandemic. According to the World Health Organization, half of all avian flu cases thus far have occurred in people under 20, and 90 percent in people under 40. HOW REAL IS THE THREAT? Winfield and Cinti agree that there is a consensus in the medical world that there will be some U.S. pandemic flu in the next 10 years, but they are not sure the avian flu virus would cause it. Only in the event that the avian influenza virus - which has killed more than 100 people and millions of chickens - were to mutate into a form that could spread easily from person to person would the threat of a pandemic emerge. Winfield said this is unlikely, because the virus has been around since 1997 and has yet to mutate. "But the stakes are so high," he said, "that we cannot afford to be unprepared." PREPARATION University public health experts recognize the dangerous possibili- ties of an outbreak on campus, and they have been mobilizing a pan- demic response unit since the SARS outbreak in 2003 in order to prevent large-scale infections. The effort involves an intricate net- work of subcommittees prepared to work with the administration, county and state departments in the case of an emergency. These committees would facilitate communication to the pub- lic; surveillance; isolation and quar- antine for those infected; and medical care, including vaccinations. The preparations are being made in anticipation of a worst-case sce- nario with massive numbers of the See FLU, page 7A Proposal could cost you more Skip this article Think tank's suggestions could hike tuition almost 10 grand, one estimate says By Andrew Grossman Daily Staff Reporter If Jack McHugh gets his way, in- state tuition at the University could increase by as much as $9,070, accord- ing to estimates compiled by Inside Michigan Politics, a biweekly political newsletter that covers state politics. McHugh, a legislative analyst at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, has written a proposal to revamp funding for state universities that is beginning to draw attention from state legislators and some higher education leaders. The plan would allocate the same amount of funding per student to each school. The Legislature would allo- cate research funding separately from instructional funding. Under the current system, the Leg- islature appropriates money to public universities based on a complex for- mula that changes from year to year and varies among universities. The for- mula lumps research and instructional funding together, rather than separat- ing the two types of appropriations. "Right now all the money is just thrown into a big appropriation, and there's no transparency, and there should be," McHugh said. Central Michigan University Presi- dent Michael Rao voiced his sup- port for the plan in a June op-ed in The Detroit News. Rep. John Stewart (R-Plymouth), who chairs the Appro- priations Subcommittee for Higher Education in the state House of Rep- resentatives, also favors the proposal, McHugh said. Stewart's office did not return calls for comment. See TUITION, page 7A at your own risk SAPAC recruits men to cause Diag root-beer pong draws 400 to 500 men to group's table on Diag By Sandy Liberman Daily Staff Reporter Of all the student group representa- tives trying to flag down students on the Diag yesterday, the Sexual Assault Pre- vention and Awareness Center may have had the right tactic: root-beer pong. It was part of the group's efforts to attract more men to participate. For 20 years, the group has counseled female victims of rape, advised women in abusive relationships and battled sexu- al violence on campus. Beware: Clogged dryer vents leading cause of house fires By Marlem Qamruzzaman Daily Staff Reporter Clearly your lint trap isn't near the top of your list of priorities. Maybe it should be. Clogged dryer vents are the leading cause of house fires nationwide, said Kath- leen Chamberlain, fire inspector for the Ann Arbor Fire Department. Here's how it happens: Every dryer has a lint trap that collects particles rubbed off from clothing during the drying process. When the trap is not cleaned, the lint accumulates and can cause the trap to become clogged. A clogged lint trap will cause less air to circulate in the dryer, which causes the motor to overheat, some- times causing a fire. Most students, who are often taking care of a home for the first time, have no idea. "I didn't think that dryers were very dangerous," LSA senior Elisabeth Close said. Lint traps should be emptied before and after each load. "I personally don't do it a lot," said LSA junior Emily Rollet, who estimates she cleans her lint trap about once every 10 loads. "I just forget." Clogged dryer vents caused about eight house fires in Ann Arbor from September 2005 to June 2006, according to the fire officials. CMB Property Manage- ment, which rents student houses and apartments in Ann Arbor, inspects all dryer vents on its property once every three months, but student house tenants are strongly encouraged to clean out their lint traps, said Amy Khan, the compa- ny's vice president. None of the houses CMB owns has burned down from a clogged dryer vent. In the event of a fire caused by a dryer, CMB said an insurance company would investigate and ulti- mately decide whether the tenant or the landlord is liable. According to Jones Properties, another local property company, fires caused by faulty piping in the dryer are the property owner's responsibility, while fires caused by a clogged lint trap are decided on a case- by-case basis. Chamberlain also stressed the importance of keeping the area around the dryer free of lint, clothes or any- thing inflammable. "By not keeping up with keeping the lint trap clean, you're just increasing the buildup of the particulate because you're re-sending the particulate into the air," Chamberlain said. She said that especially in gas dryers, those free-float- ing fibers can pose a fire hazard because the open flame can ignite them. If students have never cleaned out their lint trap and find it completely clogged, Chamberlain recommends calling the landlord or a rep- utable dryer repair company to inspect the dryer for other clogged areas. Rollet said new dryers include a sticker remind- ing consumers to clean out the vent, but most houses on campus have older dry- ers that don't include that reminder. "I don't think many peo- ple know about (cleaning their lint trap)," LSA junior Brandon Moss said. "It's just one of those things you overlook. It's either habit or not." How to minimize the risk Clean out the lint filter before or after every load. Keep the space around the dryer free of clothes and clutter. Make sure electrical cords on the dryer are in good working order. Clean around and under the dryer to make sure lint isn't matted or built up. BEN SIMON/Daily LSA senior Jeff Tremblay plays an afternoon game of root-beer pong at a table the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center set up on the Diag yesterday. Until 2004, the campaign was run The Men's Activism Program held almost entirely by women. Only a hand- its first open recruitment on the Diag ful of men volunteered at the center, and yesterday. Organizers hoped to attract there were no programs devoted to edu- new volunteers to teach other men about cating men on sexual assault. sexual assault and to participate in future SAPAC wants more testosterone. See SAPAC, page 7A 17 1111 1111111 MORE NONNI=