NEWS Thursday, September 7, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 3A ON CAMPUS Men's Glee club to hold auditions Students interested in apply- ing to the Men's Glee Club must attend the mass meeting today at 6:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Auditions include vocalization and sight-singing. The club is the oldest student organization on campus. Free billiards lessons offered in Union Free pool lessons are offered every Wednesday and Thursday night from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in the Billiards Room of the Michigan Union. Scrabble Club to meet tonight Scrabble Club will meet tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Michigan Union's Tap Room. Membership is free, but club organizers sug- gest you invest in a Michigan Scrabble t-shirt. The club meets every Monday and Thursday night. CRIME_ Mirror taken off of 'U' vehicle near Big House A mirror was taken from a Uni- versity vehicle Tuesday while it was parked on State Street adja- cent to the Michigan Stadium, DPS reported. The mirror has not yet been located. Suspect in aggravated assault arrested A male suspect who was want- ed on DPS warrant was arrested Tuesday morning. Jackson Coun- ty's Sheriff Department turned the suspect over to DPS after he was picked up near Chelsea. The suspect was taken directly to the 15th District Court. Backpack stolen from West quad lounge A black backpack was stolen Tuesday at 9 p.m. from the east lounge in West Quad Residence Hall. Police have no suspects. THIS DAY In 'U' History ROTC branches see 30-percent increase in enrollment Sept. 7, 1980 - ROTC pro- grams at the University are cele- brating a 30-percent enrollment increase in the Army, Navy and Air Force programs. There is now a total of about 530 stu- dents in the three branches, a leap from the 390 last year. The Army program has increased from 78 students last year to 111 students. Lt. Col. Joseph Blair, chair- Man of the Army Officer Pro- ram, said this year's enrollment of first-year students is the high- est in 10 years. After several year's of declining enrollment, Blair said he is ow hopeful for the future. Blair said that the cause for growth may be the "whole con- servative swing" the United States is experiencing. Although Blair said the ROTC is on a path hack to conservatism, he also said the draw to the ROTC may be in part because of increased lenien- cy concerning the dress code. Almost one-third of Army RsOTC students receive some type of scholarship. In the Air Force, up to 75 percent of the students receive a scholarship. Bob Bedford decided to join because he said he thought the recruiting officer was a nice guy. Bedford also said he is not worried about being drafted now. REMEMBERING KATRINA Schools under fire for evicting suicidal students Lawsuits challenge universities' policies on attempted suicides NEW YORK (AP) - A depressed Hunter College student who swallowed handfuls of Tyle- nol, then saved her own life by call- ing 911, was in for a surprise when she returned to her dorm room after the ordeal. The lock had been changed. She was being expelled from the dorm, the school informed her, because she violated her housing contract by attempting suicide. The 19-year-old was allowed to retrieve her belongings as a security guard stood watch. Policies barring potentially sui- cidal students from dorms have popped up across the country in recent years as colleges have struggled to deal with an esti- mated 1,100 suicides a year. But some of those rules have come under legal attack. Hunter College announced last month that it was abandoning its 3-year-old suicide policy as part of a settlement with the student. The student, who was allowed to continue attending class, claimed in a lawsuit that her 2004 ouster from the dorms violated federal law protecting disabled people from discrimination. The school, part of the City Uni- versity of New York system, also agreed to pay her $65,000. Hunter spokeswoman Meredith Halpern said the college may still consider temporarily removing troubled students from its resi- dence halls, but such evictions will no longer be automatic. College officials say such expul- sions are not punitive; Halpern said Hunter's policy was aimed at protecting students' privacy and shielding them from schoolmates' prying eyes. At George Washing- ton University in the nation's capi- tal, spokeswoman Tracy Schario said the idea is to give suicidal students a break from the stresses of university life and encourage them to seek help. But some activists suspect such evictions are an attempt by colleges to avoid legal liability if someone commits suicide in the dorms. Up until recently, the prevail- ing legal theory had long been that adult students were respon- sible for their own behavior, and that colleges could not be held liable. But that philosophy was undermined by a pair of court rulings involving the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology and Ferrum College in Virginia. In both cases, judges ruled prior to out-of-court settlements that colleges might have a duty to prevent a suicide if the risk was foreseeable. The cases prompted some schools to be more aggres- sive about sending troubled stu- dents home. Some industry observers say new Ford CEO was inspired by a failed approach CEO to translate airline expertise to auto industry DETROIT (AP) - Alan Mulally, the man Ford Motor Co. has tapped to revive its stalled turnaround, helped revolutionize product devel- opment at Boeing Co. in part by taking inspiration from the broad, team-based approach Ford used to create the hit Taurus in the 1980s. Ironically, those ideas failed to catch on at the automaker, some industry observers say. Mulally's role in the 1990s man- aging the development of Boeing's enormously successful 777, a proj- ect to which he applied the Taurus model, may not be the most signifi- cant of the credentials that led to his appointment Tuesday as Ford's new chief executive. But the story illustrates how his experience in the aviation industry could transfer well to the auto world. As head of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, Mulally, 61, success- fully guided a major manufacturer through crisis, cutting costs and improving efficiency. Executive Chairman Bill Ford, who relin- quished the CEO post to Mulally, expressed confidence that Mulally will do the same at Ford. Ford shares rose 16 cents yester- day to close at $8.55 on the New York Stock Exchange. After the 2001 terror attacks devastated Boeing's airline cus- tomers, Mulally streamlined its commercial jet-making business operation and managed to keep it in the black. He trimmed the work force by more than half to 50,000 employees, revised assembly-line operations to make production quicker and introduced the popular 787 jet, which has snagged record orders well before its first flight. Dearborn-based Ford, mean- while, has been battered by rising healthcareandmaterialcosts,tough competition from Asia and, perhaps most ominously, the rapid decline of the market for pickups and sport utility vehicles - the high-margin products that for years have sus- tained U.S. automakers' bottom lines. The company, which lost $1.4 billion in the first half of 2006, said in July that it was caught off guard by the speed of this shift, which it attributes to high gas prices. Mulally's Boeing experience should transfer well to Ford, said James P. Lewis, a project man- agement consultant and author of "Working Together," a book that chronicles the development of the 777 and for which Mulally wrote a forward. Bill Ford cited the book in Tuesday's announcement. "Ford's in crisis right now. What better kind of person to take over than someone who's been through it and survived it?" Lewis said. Lewis' book describes how the 777 project, unlike previous prod- uct programs at Boeing, involved not just engineers, but all stake- holders - manufacturing people, pilots, machinists - right from the early stages, making it possible to eliminate flaws early. In one example, baggage han- dlers were brought in to look at a mock-up of the cargo bay door. They told them the door's handle was poorly designed and would be impossible for a gloved hand to open, Lewis said. The team rede- signed it. According to Lewis, the concept originated with the Taurus. Boe- ing officials were introduced to it by Don Petersen, then president of Ford and a member of Boeing's board of directors, who put them in touch with Lew Veraldi, the engi- neer leading the Taurus project. Like the 777, the Taurus, intro- duced in 1985, was a home run. It was the top-selling car in the U.S. from 1992 through 1996. David Cole, president of the Center for Automotive Research, said the team approach used on the Taurus never spread through the company because health problems sidelined Veraldi soon after the Taurus came out. He died in 1990. In recent years, the aging Tau- rus has been more a symbol of the automaker's product woes and its shortage of fresh sedan models than the innovation it once stood for. Production is scheduled to stop later this year. Today, product development is key to Ford's long-term recovery, but Mulally's recent cost-cutting experience will come in handy in the near term. Amid faculty strike, EMU classes begin Teachers continue to picket with classes held as scheduled YPSILANTI (AP) - Classes at Eastern Michigan University were held as scheduled yester- day, despite the university's failed attempts to reach a con- tract agreement withastriking faculty. Talks betweenythe 'm afraid university I and faculty going to Tuesday with your night after the union instructor rejected an offer that experienc included a 3-percent will hurt t increase in salary in - each of the EMU s five years of the proposed County's1 contract. Teachers continued to picket yesterday, the first day of school. "We are disheartened that they made this decision," uni- versity Board of Regents Chair Karen Valvo said in a state- ment. "There will be someone to greet the students in every class," she told The Ann Arbor News. University officials were pre- pared to use nonunion instruc- tional staff, adjunct professors and other qualified educators in the absence of professors. Professor Zenia Bahorski pick- eted outside of her classroom building at 8 a.m. as her honors computer science class met inside. "Here I am standing outside," she said. "I'd much rather be in there." Striking faculty have also been instructed to e-mail stu- dents before the start of classes with information on the classes n r. , t r .e { and assignments, said How- ard Bunsis, president of East- ern Michigan's chapter of the American Association of Uni- versity Professors. Students had mixed feelings about the strike. "As long as they have teach- ers to cover my classes, it's no big deal;' said Jared Gierycki, a junior transfer student from Saline. Melissa Bloehenek, we're a senior get stuck from ae Wayne County's iger Canton s with less Township, said she e, and that understood ,, professors' the classes."complaints about facil- Melissa Boehenek ity condi- enior from Wayne tions. "The Canton Township classrooms are falling apart and need help," she said en route to an 8 a.m. chemistry class. "I'm afraid we're going to get stuck with younger instructors with less experience, and that will hurt the classes." The union says the $65,000 median salary for faculty ranks near the bottom of other pub- lic universities in Michigan. Other key issues include hir- ing more professors and ensur- ing regular input on facilities and planned renovations. The union offered several counterproposals, but the uni- versity broke off talks at about 10 p.m. Tuesday, Bunsis said. "We're making progress. We're not that close, but we're making progress," he said. In addition to the salary increase, the university's offer would have retained current health care options for faculty with an understanding that the plans would phase out. Jager Bombs. College Tursdays $2 Miller Lit. All Night $2 Vodka Drinks All Night $3 Miller Lite Pitchers before 1130 Girls FREE with MCard before 1130 1/2 off ALL Drinks before 11pm 3 for $10 Jagerhlerr t Bombs Al Night Necto Nightclub 516 E. Liberty St. WWW.NECTO.COM Voted Best Dance Club 2006 by Michigan Daily Readers