2A - Monday, April 19, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 f *TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: THURSDAY: "- Professor Profiles Before You Were Here Campus Clubs CAR MSU panty raider caught FRIDAY: Photos of the Week INIVAL IN CRISLER Michigan State University police have identified an infamous panty- thief on MSU's campus, according to an April 14 article in The State News. The suspect, a 19-year-old male student, was caught in the act while attemptingto steal underwear from an MSU residence hall laundry room on April 7, according to the article. A witness said he saw the suspect placing women's thong underwear into his laundry basket, according to the article. Upon investigation, the suspect was reportedly found with 79 pairs of women's thong underwear valued at more than $200. "I think (the theft) is really weird, because you don't know what that person is capable of or what they're thinking," Advertis- ing junior Sunni Schoenberg told The State News. LSU PROFESSOR DISMISSED FOR TOUGH GRADING POLICY A biology professor at Louisiana State University was removed by school officials for being too hard on students, accordingto an April 15 arti- cle published on insidehighered.com. The professor, who teaches an entry-level biology course, does not use curves for her tests and, among other methods, gives students 10 possible answers on multiple choice questions, as opposed to the expect- ed four, accordingto the article. According to a statement released by Kevin Carmen, dean of the Col- lege of Basic Sciences at LSU, more than 90 percent of students in the class were either failing the class or had dropped it by the midterm. "The extreme nature of the grad- ing raised a concern," Carmen said in the statement, which was pub- lished in the article. "We felt it was important to take some action to ensure that our students receive a rigorous but fair education." TEXAS STUDENT SETS MULTITASKING RECORD A student at the University of Texas at Austin has set a new multi- taskingrecord, accordingto an April 12 article in The Daily Texan. Lauren Moore, a liberal arts hon- ors and philosophy freshman, was able to recite successfully the first 100 digits of pi, while simultaneously balancing 15 books on her head and solving a Rubik's cube, according to the article. Moore can balance 21 books on her head without doing the other tricks and can also solve a Rubik's cube in 40 seconds, according to the article. Moore performed the trick on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" lastFriday - VALIANT LOWITZ Organizers of the K-grams Kid's Fair compete in tug- of-war at Crisler Arena on Friday. 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Winer term(January through April)is $115,yearlong (September through April is 1S95.University affiliates are subjectio aresiedesubscriptionrate. Or-campus subscriptinsfor falelterm are $35. Subscriptions mu t be repaid. The Michigan Daily isre ernier ofOTheOAsociated Fress and The Associated tollegiate res 0 CRIME NOTES Man watches porn in Angell WHERE: Angell Hall WHEN: Saturday at 3:30 p.m. WHAT: An older man unaffili- ated with the University was looking at pornographic web- sites on a computer in Angell Hall, University Police report- ed. An officer issued the man a warning for trespassing. Officer assaulted after giving MIP WHERE: Vera Baits I Resi- dence Hall WHEN: Saturday at about 11 p.m. WHAT: A male student assaulted a DPS officer after the officer issued him a MIP, University Police reported. The student was jailed and will be arraigned today. CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Two injured in 'U' Symphony Chess club football game Orchestra practice session WHERE: Palmer Field performance WHAT: Members and non- WHEN:Friday atabout 5:40p.m. WHAT: Two male students were injured while play- ing football on Palmer Field, University Police reported. The students were treated for lacerations at the scene of the incident. WHAT: The University Sym- phony Orchestra will play the Copland Third Symphony under the direction of Dean Christopher Kendall. The concert will be USO's last performance of the season. WHO: University members alike are invited to drop in and play chess for as long, or short, as they want. WHO: University of Michigan Chess Club WHEN: Tonight from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. WHERE: Michigan Union Tap Room Symhn Ochestra Gate crashers at WyEN: Tonight at8 p.in. Anonymous WHERE: Hill Auditorium the Big House HIV Testing Documentary WHERE: Michigan Stadium WHAT: Free and anonymous WHEN:Friday at about 3:30 am. screeningHIV testing for students. WHAT: Two college-aged W documentary WHO: Spectrum Center individuals tried to climb over WHAT: A dum essars WHEN: Tonight from the fence at Michigan Stadi- about a Muslm professor's 6p.m. to 8 p.m. um, University Police report- visit to mosques in 75 WHERE: Michigan Union ed. The individuals were given WHO:ican cities. Md verbal trespassing warnings. WHO:reer for iddle CORRECTIONS Rntr niNrh Afri Several scheduled acts at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio Valley, California were forced to cancel their con- certs at this weekend's festival because of a cloud of ash from an Icelandic volcano, MSNBC. com reported. Sophomore quarter- back Denard Robinson impressed the 35,000 fans during the Michigan Spring football game at the Big House Saturday. Robinson threw a 97-yard touchdown pass. >>FOR MORE, SEE SPORTSMONDAY, INSIDE A Japanese man was arrested on Saturday for allegedly stabbing five members of his family, killing two, and setting their home on fire, The Japan Times reported. The man reportedly went on the rampage because his father cancelled his internet service. MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? Get more online at michigandaily.com/blogs/the wire ,atr nu wm ia Studies WHEN: Today at noon WHERE: School of Social Work Building . Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. PRAHALAD From Page 1A done (with his class)," Dolan said. "You were going to have higher aspirations and more confidence in yourself." Prahalad was born in the Tamil Nadu province in southern India. His father was a well-known scholar and judge in Chennai, India. Prahalad earned a Bach- elor of Science degree in physics at Loyola College and the Uni- versity of Madras and received a postgraduate degree in busi- ness administration at the Indian Institute of Management. While in school, Prahalad worked as a manager of a Union Carbide Co. battery plant. During his time at the Indian Institute of Management, Pra- halad met his wife Gayatri, and the couple later had two children. In 1975 Prahalad graduated from the Harvard Business School with a Doctor of Business Manage- ment and wrote his doctoral thesis on multinational management. According to Business Week, Prahalad's thesis was one of the first studies to claim corporations needed to restructure so that they could employ global strategies while addressing local concerns. After graduating from Har- vard, Prahalad went back to India to teach at the Indian Institute of Management for two years before joining the faculty at the Business School here at the University of Michigan in 1977. In 1990, Prahalad and colleague Gary Hamel published "The Core Competence of Corporate Strat- egy" in The Harvard Business Review, which explained the idea of "core competency," - a concept businesses now identify as a cru- cial factor in how they and their employees work. Among Prahalad's many pub- lications, he had several interna- tional bestselling books, including "Competing for the Future," "The Future of Competition" and "The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyra- mid: Eradicating Poverty through Profits." Dolan spoke highly of "Fortune at the Bottom" and said the book has had a profound impact in the business world. "('Fortune at the Bottom') ... is one of the most influential man- agement books ever written," he said. The book offered new models for providing goods and services to people in third world countries. In the book, Prahalad claimed people at the "bottom of the pyra- mid," who were often dismissed as outsiders of the international economy, were actually the future of the global market. "If we stop thinking of the poor as victims or as a burden and start recognizing them as resilient and creative entrepreneurs and value- conscious consumers, a whole new world of opportunity will open up," he wrote. According to Dolan, Prahalad wanted to involve students in his research for "Fortune at the Bot- tom," so he conducted 10 field- based projects through which students could "document phe- nomena throughout the world." A 2006 article in Business Week said the book "turned Prahalad into a celebrity in the field of inter- national development." Throughout his career, Pra- halad received a number of honors and awards. In 2009, he received the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman - an award given by the president of India to men and women who make exceptional and praisewor- thy contributions in their respec- tive fields. In the same year, the Indian government honored Pra- halad with the Padma Bushan the third highest civilian award in India - for his distinguished service to the nation. The Times of the United Kindom also named Prahalad the most influential busi- ness thinker on its The Thinkers 50 List in October 2009. 0 Andrea Beauchamp Prize Robert F. Haugh Prize Frank and Gail Beaver Script Writing Prize Kasdan Scholarship in Chamberlain Award for Creative Writing Dennis McIntyre Prize Helen J. Daniels Prize Meader Family Award Geoffrey James Gosling Prize Arthur Miller Award Paul and Sonia Handleman Poetry Award Leonard and Eileen Ne t