The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com A NEW LOOK NEWS BRIEFS BEIRUT, Lebanon . Students clash with supporters of Hezbollah University students loyal to Leb- anon's government clashed with Hezbollah supporters yesterday, setting cars ablaze and battling with homemade clubs and stones. The melee deepened worries that Lebanon cannot contain the politi- cal and sectarian rivalries threat- ening to push it toward civil war. At least three people were killed and dozens were injured before army troops backed by tanks and firing barrages of warning shots into the air dispersed most rioters. The military then declared Beirut's first curfew since 1996. But the fallout reaches far beyond the casualty count. The clashes, sparked by a cafeteria scuffle between pro-government Sunni Muslims and pro-Hezbollah Shiites, reinforced fears that Leba- non's sectarian divisions are erupt- ing into violence as they did during the 1975-1990 civil war. It was the third straight day of violence, sparked by a Hezbollah- led strike Tuesday that came ahead of a crucial gathering of donor nations in Paris. The conference Thursday raised pledges of $7.6 bil- lion to help Prime Minister Fuad Saniora's U.S.-backed government rebuild after last summer's devas- tating Israel-Hezbollah war. The money and show of inter- national support could boost the embattled Saniora. The Iranian- backed Hezbollah has vowed to bring him down unless the opposi- tion is given more power. The chaos has paralyzed the gov- ernment. Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah said Wednesday that donors were backing the wrong side in the standoff and that he could topple Saniora at any time. WASHINGTON No compromise seen between two Iraq resolutions The leader of a bipartisan effort to rebuke President Bush's Iraq strategy said yesterday he would not strike a compromise with a harsher Democratic resolution the Senate will debate next week. Sen.JohnWarner(R-Va.), former chairman of the Armed Services Committee, said he won't negotiate with Democrats to develop a single proposal on Iraq. His comments - along with the emergence of other resolutions the Senate might consider - underscored how a Con- gress largely against Bush's pro- posal to send more troops to Iraq remained divided over what to do about it. WASHINGTON Justice Department wants domestic spying suit dropped The Bush administration sought yesterday to drop its appeal of a federal court ruling that concluded the government's domestic spying program is unconstitutional, say- ing the entire issue is moot since the surveillance now is monitored by a secret court. Responding, lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union said they would continue to push for their day in court since President Bush retains authority to continue the warrantless spying program. The Justice Department's request has been expected since last week, when Attorney General Alberto Gonzales disclosed that the secret panel of judges who oversee the Foreign Intelligence Surveil- lance Act had begun reviewing and approving applications to spy on people believed to be linked to al- Qaida. The ACLU's lawsuit against the terrorist surveillance program "is now moot," the Justice Depart- ment wrote in a 21-page brief, filed yesterday with the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cin- cinnati. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 4 Number of states that have banned affirmative action at pub- lic institutions. Florida, Califor- nia, Washington and Michigan have been racial preferences by the hand of elected officials or bal- lot proposals like Proposal 2. Friday, January 26, 2007 - 3 New Ford chief faces reality of record loss Hairdresser Amber Smith of Ypsilanti gives Engineering senior Jeffrey Arin a hair cut yesterday at Douglas J. on East Liberty Street. Scientists tie part of brain to smoking A different approach: facturing operations. When asked about his priorities Less is more for fixing Ford, Mulally said in an interview this week, "At the top of the list, I would put dealing with By MICHELINE MAYNARD reality." The New York Times It is a harsh reality. Yesterday, Ford reported that it had the worst DEARBORN - Just 10 months year in its history in 2006, when it ago, William Clay Ford Jr. vowed lost $12.7 billion. In the last three that his auto company, despite its months of last year, it lost $5.8 bil- mounting losses, would "reclaim lion. our legacy" in the American car A big part of that was related market and "emerge stronger than to one-time charges from worker we've ever been." buyouts. But Ford's losses are also But there is a new message com- accelerating because of fallingsales ingoutof the chiefexecutive's office of its big SUVs and pickups, and its at Ford. Alan Mulally, recruited last inability to sell vehicles without fall from Boeing to run the Ford offering costly rebates. Motor Co., has signaled that the One Wall Street analyst, Jona- bigger-is-better worldview that has than Steinmetz, calculated that defined Ford for decades is being Ford's "terrible" 2006 performance replaced with a new approach: less was equal to a loss of $4,700 per is more. vehicle. Earlier this decade, Ford Instead of insisting that Ford earned profits of that size on its big reverse its slide, Mulally says that vehicles, a time when it held almost Ford will become much smaller. Its a quarter of the American car mar- forecasts show it may fall from sec- ket. ond to fourth place this year in the Ford, whose market share American market, behind General dropped to 17.5 percent last year, is Motors, Toyota and Chrysler. in the middle of shedding 44,000 The hiring of Mulally, leaving workers, a third of its total staff It is William Ford as chairman, marked also closing16 plants, and has said it the first time any Detroit carmaker does not expect to make any money has reached outside the industry in North America until 2009. By for a new leader. And Mulally has then, it expects to sell only about 14 broken with tradition in a hurry. percent of the cars and trucks pur- He flew to Japan to meet with top chased in the United States. executives of its toughest competi- Mulally is trying to be both opti- tor, Toyota, to seek their advice on mistic and pragmatic, creating of ways to streamline Ford's manu- sense of urgency while reassuring Bad drugs blamed for Detroit-area death rise his anxious workers that the com- pany has a future. Mulally is in a honeymoon peri- od and has escaped any blame for Ford's poor results last year, even though the worst performance came last quarter, when he was in charge. Ford executives in the past also have made similar claims about breaking with tradition, installing new ways of working and accepting reality. In the end, Mulally will be judged as much by Ford's success or failure in the marketplace as for his management techniques. "The whole thing boils down to the product that's being sold," said Jan K. Brueckner, a profes- sor of economics at University of California at Irvine. "We can do everything - we can build great computers, put men on the moon. Why can't we design cars that appeal to people?" Some analysts also said that Ford's financial results could get worse before they got better, mean- ing Mulally might have to wait years to show improvements. "Ford will suffer the most severe market share decline among the Big Three in 2007," Brian Johnson, an auto analyst with Lehman Brothers, wrote in a research report yester- day. "We expect Ford's decade-long share loss to accelerate in 2007." Mulally is learning what a dif- ficult tightrope he must walk in managing expectations amid the dire news. PA I STS Flight Finder"T. SERVICES SsmssHun rdsoniSlprin~g Break PssskigsIii $300per pesn. BstDalsGu.atu ;.800.;8.484 wwwsttroelco Injury to specific area eliminates urge for cigarettes By BENEDICT CAREY The New York Times Scientists studying stroke patients are reporting that an injury to a spe- cific partofthebrain,nearthe ear, can instantly and permanently break a smoking habit, effectively erasing the most stubborn of addictions. People with the injury who stopped smoking found that their bodies, as one man put it, "forgotrthe urge to smoke." The new finding, which is to appear in the journal Science today, is likely to alter the course of addic- tion research, pointing research- ers toward new ideas for treatment, experts say. While no one is sug- gesting brain injury as a solution for addiction, the findings suggest that therapies might focus on the insula, a prune-sized region under the fron- tal lobes that is thought to register gut feelings and is apparently a criti- cal part of the network that sustains addictive behavior. Previous research on addicts focused on regions of the cortex involved in thinking and decision- making. But while those regions are involved in maintaining habits, the new study suggests that they are not as central. The study did not examine depen- dence on alcohol, cocaine or other substances. Yet smoking is as at least as hard to quitas any other habit, and it probably involves the same brain circuits, experts said. Most smokers who manage to quit do so only after repeated attempts, and the craving for cigarettes usually lasts for years, if not a lifetime. "This is the firstitime we've shown anything like this, that damage to a specific brain area could remove the problem of addiction entirely," said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which financed the study, alongwith the National Institute of Neurologi- cal Disorders and Stroke. "It's abso- lutely mind-boggling." Others cautioned that the study was small, and that scientists still knew little about the widely distrib- uted neural networks involved in sustaininghabits. "One has to be careful not to extrapolate too much based on brain injuries to what's going on in all addictive behavior, in healthy brains," said Dr. Martin Paulus, a psychiatric researcher at the University of Cali- fornia in San Diego, and the San Diego VA Medical Center. Still, he added, the study "opens up a whole new way to think about addiction." The researchers, from the Uni- versity of Iowa and the University of Southern California, examined 32 formersmokers, all of whom had suf- fered a brain injury. Beware heroin and cocaine laced with fentanyl DETROIT (AP) - There hasbeen a marked increase in drug deaths in the area, county health officials said yesterady, blaming the prob- lem on the spread of heroin and cocaine laced with the prescription drug fentanyl. The Wayne CountyDepartmentof Health and Human Services reported that 542 people died from drugs from Jan. 1 through Dec. 10, 2006. That is up 19 percent from the 457 drug deaths reported for all of 2005. Of the 2006 deaths, 178 were specifically attributed to fentanyl, 197 to heroin and 204 to cocaine. Because those drugs often are mixed, the numbers don't add up exactly, health department spokes- woman Teresa Blossom said. Com- parable figures for 2005 were not immediately available. ow, best of ann arbor 2007 vote online noiw!' www.michigandaily.com/aabest