Why you're safer than you think The Statement £ 1Mdtga C hi ,)ljj Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, September 19, 2007 michigandaily com 'U,'helped lure firm to area Aerospace company says it will bring 600 jobs just outside of Ann Arbor By EMILY BARTON Daily Staff Reporter A Spanish aerospace company announced yester- day plans to open a new engineering facility just out- side of Ann Arbor, in part because its proximity to the University. The company, Grupo Aernnova, says it will invest about $10 millon in a Pittsfield Township facility that could provide up to 600 jobs for recent graduates and experienced workers. One of the reasons the company chose Michigan as its first United States location is because of the many universities in the state with renowned engineering programs, said Daryl Weinert, senior director of cor- porate and government relations for the University's College of Engineering. Weinert said Aernnova first contacted him about a year ago and the company said it wanted to be near universities that could provide constant sources of tal- ent and opportunities for research. He said he is beginning to work with Aernnova to provide internships and part-time positions to engi- neeringstudents.Asthe companygrows, hesaid,there will be opportunities to collaborate on research. The facility isn't completed yet, and Weinert said it won't be open for students for at least a year. He said the company should appealnotonly to aero- space engineers but also mechanical engineers who might be interested in working for the auto industry, because the company will be building planes and aero- nautical parts. See COMPANY, Page 7A PETER SC The only passenger train to Ann Arbor is the Amtrak, which runs to Detroit and Chicago. Rail line waits for funding Howell to Ann Arbor link on schedule, but waiting for grant By ARIKIA MILLIKAN Daily StaffReporter A commuter rail line from How- ell to Ann Arbor is still waiting for a $1 million federal grant that would help with startup costs. The line would stop in Howell, on Chilson Road near Brighton, Whitmore Lake, Hamburg and at Plymouth Road in Ann Arbor. Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje is confident that the line will be up and running by.2009, his target completion date for the project. In the meantime, other organiza- tions like the state of Michigan, the Environmental Protection Agency and the University of Michigan are contributing to the project. The projecthas received $1.7 mil- lion in funding from the Michigan Department of Transportation. Diane Brown, parking and trans- portation services spokeswoman, said the University is committed to pay for tickets for every staff mem- ber who wants to ride the train to work. The University would pay 100 percent of the total cost of tick- ets for the first year of the railroad's operation, 75 percent the second year and 50 percent the third year. The University hasn't committed to paying anything after the third year. Ticket prices have not been set. "The University has been a big player," Hieftje said. Brown said that out of 14,400 University employees with zip codes listed along the US 23 cor- ridor who responded to a survey conducted in the winter, more than 1,200 participants said they would be interested in riding the train to work - some as many as five days a week. Brown said the University's con- See RAIL, Page 7A MSA to send Homecoming parade, carnival to return letter, to admittees Assembly seeks to soothe post-Prop 2 worries by mailing assurance to admitted students By JILLIAN BERMAN For the Daily At last night's meeting, the Michigan Student Assembly unanimously voted to send an open let- ter to all newly admitted students assuring them that the assembly's commitment to racial diversity has remained unchanged after state voters. passed Pro- fposal2 last year. The constitutional amendment banned the use of affirmative action by public institutions in Michigan. The move follows a resolution passed inFebruary in which MSA demanded that there be no drop in the enrollment of underrepresented minority students at the University. The letter is titled "A Statement of Our Commitment to Diversity," and MSA plans to distribute it to students offered admission to the University's class of 2012. Inside the letter, the MSA reemphasizes its commit- ment to diversity by highlighting some of the steps the assembly has taken to ensure campus remains diverse, like the Diversity Blueprints program. MSA also pledges to make campus a welcoming environment, reiterating the importance of a diverse student body as part of the University experience. Also in the resolution, MSA created an e-mail address that will serve as away for admitted students to voice their concerns about student life and the atmo- sphere at the University. The e-mail address, msa.stu- dentlife@umich.edu will be included in the letter. MSA tries to revive tradition after 11-year absence By CATHE SHUBERT Daily Staff Reporter For the first time in 11 years, Mich- igan's homecoming football game will be preceded by a parade around Cen- tral Campus and State Street. The Michigan Student Assembly approved plans at last night's meeting to fund the first homecoming parade and celebration since 1996. Homecom- ing weekend was a much larger event in the 1960s and '70s. The parade will begin at 3 p.m. on Oct. 11. For about 35 minutes, it will wind its way from the Chemistry Building on North University Avenue to the intersection of Madison and State streets. MSA set aside $5,000 to rent the streets, provide pickup trucks for the parade and give a stipend of up to $100 for-student groups to create their own floats. Gibran Baydoun, an MSA represen- tative and one of the coordinators of the event, said he is expecting about 20 floats from Greek organizations and student groups all over campus. That money will also go toward the other weekend events, such as a carni- val on the Diag with jousting and cot- ton candy, a showcase of student dance and a cappella groups and a homecom- ing king and queen election. A committee made up of students and administrators will pick 10 can- didates for both king and queen, who will be elected by a general election See PARADE, Page 7A Fraternity members with their homecoming float at the 1981 parade. MSA is trying to revive the homecoming parade this year. DATA TpH EFT Sensitive paient data stolen from nursing buildig 'U' stresses timely reporting of theft By EMILY BARTON Daily StaffReporter Since 8,585 tapes were stolen from the School of Nursing two weeks ago - the third data theft in the last year - University officials are stressing the importance of protecting against data theft. The tapes were used as backups for the school's computer database. They contained patient information like social security numbers and patient how the University deals with data relations office. names and addresses. theft, any faculty or staff member who Howell said even with an extensive One of the most important steps to notices a breach of technology secu- security system in place, data theft can take in cases of theft is quickly report- rity should immediately report it to an still occur. ing it to the University's Information information security coordinator. All He said the nursing school theft, Technology Security Services office, serious incidents involving unauthor- which took place in the North Ingalls said Paul Howell, the University's chief ized data access or data theft should Building over the weekend of Sept. 7, information technology security offi- then be reported to the ITSS. was the first of its kind at the Univer- cer. When a theft like the one at the nurs- sity. In the past, databases have been He said the University's Information ing school occurs, ITSS usually assem- hacked. The most recent of these inci- Technology Security Services office bles a security response team. Those dents was in July when two School of has numerous processes to prevent teams are made up of different officials Education databases containing stu- data theft, including technology prod- depending on the incident, Howell said. dent information were accessed. ucts and training to help implement the That means they might include rep- The tapes were "ina locked box, in a best practices. .. resentatives from the Department of locked cabinet, in a locked room," Uni- According to a policy outlining Public Safety or the University's media See DATA, Page 7A TODAY'S WEATHER H:B84 GOT A NEWS TIP? LO: 56 Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON T HE DA ILY BLOCS Obesity in college students rises MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/THEWIRE INDEX NEWS .............. Vol.cxVii, No. 12 OPINION....... may 07The Michigan Daily CLASSIFIEDS... michigondailyrom ........2A ARTS................ A ............4A SPO RT S ............................10A ............6A THESTATEM ENT..................18 4 Pt