The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, September 29, 2011 - 7A AL-HASHIMI From Page 1A magnetic resonance allows Al- Hashimi, who is the University's Robert L. Kuczkowski profes- sor of chemistry, to see how the atoms and nucleic acid move in three dimensions. "The advantage of using this nuclear magnetic resonance method is that in principle, it can provide us with insight as to how the atoms jiggle and wiggle and not just the static arrangement of how they look in a structure," he said. By getting a detailed picture of the atoms "dancing," AI-Hashimi said he and his team examined the RNA molecule for HIV and identified the compound that can stop HIV replication. Al-Hashi- mi compared the imaging meth- od to identifying the proper lock or molecule shape, so research- ers can determine which key or drug can unlock it. "By imaging the whole image of the lock ... we increase our chances of finding the key," he said. This method of imaging can also be applied to finding the proper drug to combat multiple diseases found in RNA including cancer and Alzheimer's. As his experiment progresses, Al-Hashimi said he would like to begin imaging larger pieces of the cell and eventually take 3-D images of the entire cell in order to see large-scale movements. The goal, Al-Hashimi said, is to make a movie of a cell and anoth- er of a drug interacting with the cell. "It's a big game changer," he said. Al-Hashimi said he found out about his Popular Science award in an e-mail and was honored to hear that he was selected. "It's wonderful to be recog- nized," he said. "It's great to share this with my students and collaborators." Al-Hashimi said the Univer- sity community, including his wife, Allison Aiello, the John G. Searle assistant professor of epi- demiology in the School of Pub- lic Health, has encouraged his work. "It's nice to be at the Univer- sity of Michigan where you're in a very supportive environment," Al-Hashimi said. Al-Hashimi added that he also received support from LSA, as the college purchased more space for his research expan- sion. In turn, Al-Hashimi said he likes to use his research to better engage his students. "I love teaching and I often try to mix (research and teach- ing) together," he said. "I have lots of undergraduate students, for example, doing my research and learning science by doing science at the lab, and it's a nice compliment to the lecture mate- rial." When he teaches about ele- ments, for example, Al-Hashi- mi doesn't teach the concept abstractly. Instead, he likes to focus on one or two elements that he's currently researching to make a more interesting and concrete connection for stu- dents. Al-Hashimi added that he also makes an effort to have an undergraduate student work on each of his academic papers. "I often in the lectures talk about science from a research perspective ... I present the material in a way that a scientist might think about it," he said. AATA From Page 1A Program, which supports the increase of clean fuel technolo- gies for transit buses. However, the AATA isn't the only transportation service plan- ning an environmentally friendly revamp. As part of the Univer- sity's new sustainability plan, the University will add seven hybrid buses to serve the campus com- munity. Construction on Blake Transit Center, located on East William Street and South Fourth Avenue, is scheduled to begin in spring 2012 and will triple the space from 2,000 square feet to approximate- HOSPITAL From Page 1A with two children, didn't real- ize the importance of cervical cancer screening until it saved her life. "I was very lucky that I had an excellent OB/GYN who explained to me that pap smears were a necessity to me once a year, and I was obedient, so I did that," she said. "But the truth is I knew pap smears were important, but I wasn't exactly sure what they were for. Then it turned out that this pap smear was positive for cervical cancer." Hope Haefner, a professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the Medi- cal School, said having access to and knowledge about cervi- cal cancer tests can be the dif- ly 6,000 square feet. The projectis estimated to cost $5.5 million. The $2.7 million grant will be divided into $1.013 million for improvements to Blake Transit Center and $1.697 million for the cost of the 10 hybrid buses. The $2.7 million is part of the $4.195 million that has been allocated to AATA for the proj- ect thus far. In Oct. 2010, AATA received a $1 million federal grant for the Blake Transit Cen- ter renovation. AATA has also applied for an additional federal grant to aid the project. Dingell wrote that updating TheRide and other modes of pub- lic transit are integral to the lives of Michigan residents. "As travel time is becoming a ference between life and death. Haefner described that in some countries, women have to travel by foot three days to get a pap smear. However, women abroad and in the United States often don't follow up on their test and die of cervical cancer. "We've done a great job in the United States, but still 4,300 women die of this cancer in the United States, which I think is atrocious," Haefner said. "But of that number, 50 percent were never screened." To decrease these numbers, Haefner suggested doctors reach out to women who don't typical- ly receive treatment for cervical cancer, like women in impover- ished areas. "I saw a woman 45 minutes away who had advanced cervical cancer," Haefner said. "If we'd have gotten to her earlier maybe. key quality of life issue for Michi- gan workers, public transit is an accommodating transportation option to provide access to jobs and school while alleviating car congestion," Dingell wrote. This $2.7 million federal grant follows last week's announcement that TheRide plans to expand its services between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. AATA spokeswoman Mary Stasiak told The Michigan Daily last week that the proposal to extend the TheRide's services and make transportation more efficient in the next few years is in response to the needs of Ann Arbor residents. The proposal also includes the creation of a shuttle from Ann Arbor to the Detroit Metro Airport. she would be doing better. We need to go to the people in Pon- tiac (and) Detroit that are not too far from us here in Ann Arbor." Vivian Pinn, founding direc- tor of the Office of Research on Women's Health at the Nation- al Institutes of Health, said researchers need to help the general population better under- stand the causes of cervical cancer and why it progresses so quickly. The health care indus- try can then be informed, and women can gain access to qual- ity health care offered at places like the Von Voigtlander Wom- en's Hospital. "Access to health care is extremely important," Pinn said. "It doesn't matter how much research we have. If the results go into the test book and don't go into the medicine, then it is all for naught." 'LIKE' THE DAILY ON FACEBOOK CARLOSOSORIO/AP ' Alan Mulally, president and CEO of the Ford Motor Co., stands with United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger, far left, and Ford Motor Co. Executive Chair Bill Ford after the executives signed the auto workers contract in 2007. Ford's success stirs UAW resentment in labor talks Union employees looking to get raises, bonuses DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) - Ford's turnaround over the last five years has resulted in big profits and won its CEO a repu- tation for brilliant management. But those same achievements are stirring resentment among many of its factory workers. And that is complicating contract talks between the company and its union employees. At The Rouge, Ford's massive, 94-year-old factory complex in Dearborn, Mich., there's talk along the assembly lines of win- ning back raises and bonuses lost when the company was near financial collapse in 2007. Work- ers, who assemble F-150 pickup trucks at the site, are upset that Ford is trying to cut labor costs, especially after nine straight profitable quarters and a $26.5 million pay package for CEO Alan Mulally. A few miles to the north, inside Ford's 13-story headquarters known as the Glass House, exec- utives are worried because work- ers, on average, cost the company $58 an hour in pay and benefits, the highest in U.S. auto industry. Both sides are trying to find a compromise this week while work continues at Ford factories under a contract extension. A top union bargainer told workers on a telephone recording Monday night that talks are accelerating and he is "hopefully optimistic" a deal can be reached this week. Ford's profits and the possi- bility of a strike could force the company into a deal that's more generous to workers than the one already negotiated with General Motors Co. Chrysler, meanwhile, continues to negotiate its own contract with the union. Differences between Ford and the union date to 2007, when all three Detroit automakers were on the verge of financial ruin. The year before that, Ford lost $12.6 billion, and U.S. sales were down 8 percent. Worried that the company would collapse, Ford workers began a series of givebacks. Like workers at GM and Chrys- ler, they eventually gave up cost- of-living pay raises, performance bonuses and other benefits. GM and Chrysler needed government bailouts and bankruptcy protec- tion to stay in business, but Ford took billions in private loans and endured on its own. As a result, Ford became a consumer favorite and the com- pany prospered. It paid Mulally for engineering the turnaround and restored merit pay and some other benefits for white-collar workers, angering union, mem- bers. "The compensation for the CEO has been widely publi- cized, and those kinds of things wend their way up and down the assembly line," says Harley Shai- ken, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley and a specialist in labor issues. "It cre- ates higher expectations." At Ford, bargainers are expect- ed to use the deal with GM as a template. But it's unclear if its provisions will be acceptable to Ford or its union workers. Under the deal, GM workers would get a $5,000 bonus for ratifying the contract, more profit sharing and higher pay for entry-level work- ers. Although the deal has no pay raise for most workers, it appears headed for approval. It's the lack of raises that has rankled many of Ford's 41,000 factory workers. "Ford has to do a lot more," says Gary Walkowicz, a worker at the company's Dearborn plant, the epicenter of union dissent. Walkowicz says many work- ers are ready to strike, especially in Dearborn. Workers there led the rest of the company in reject- ing a round of concessions in 2009. Ford sought the conces- sions to match deals given to GM and Chrysler as they were going through bankruptcy protection. Ford is the only Detroit auto- maker where the union can strike, something it has not done at Ford since 1976. Walkouts over pay are banned this year at GM and Chrysler Group LLC under the terms of their government bailouts. At Ford plants, workers are making picket schedules in case they need to strike. But get- ting ready is standard procedure during contract talks. Gary Chaison, a professor of labor relations at Clark Univer- sity in Worcester, Mass., says Ford can cut the risk of a strike if it doesn't stray too far from the GM contract. But if Ford tries for big labor cost cuts, the odds of a strike rise to 50-50, he says. UAW President Bob King has said he's not thinking about a strike. But he thinks workers should get a piece of the profits because they have each given up $7,000 to $30,000 a year in concessions since 2007. He also has called Mulally's pay "outra- geous." Mulally, in a recent inter- view, defended his compensa- tion, saying it was determined by the company's success and the free market. He said much of his pay is "at risk" because it comes in stock that can rise and fall in price based on Ford's per- formance. Mulally's salary is $1.4 million, with the rest coming in stock and a bonus. Robins on's red mption la(Is Blue How it ended: The Last 5 Minutes ' 4:57 3:14 1:22 p I £ r