One hundred ten years of edz'onl freedom a' NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wwwmichigandailycom Tuesday January 30, 2001 3% **r t cal fo appintd reent I By Louie Meizlish Daily Staff Reporter In his 11th annual State of the State dress tomorrow, Gov. John Engler plans outline a plan to add seven appointed members to the University Board of Regents as well as the Michigan State Uni- versity Board of Trustees, the Wayne State University Board of Governors and the State Board of Education. Engler's proposal, which would require a constitutional amendment, would bring the membership of all four boards to 15. The governor will deliver his address at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the chambers of the House of Representatives. Under Engler's plan, Shafer said, no governor could appoint more than four members from any party to each board. Appointees would have to be confirmed by the state Senate. Engler These changes are nec- essary, Shafer said, because in the elections to those boards it is often the case that "a lot of people are not aware of who is running." Along with making education a primary focus of tomorrow's speech, Engler also is expected to announce a proposal to replace the current system of electing Michigan Supreme Court justices with one in which the governor would appoint justices to a 14- year term. Nominees would be subject to Senate confirmation. Democrats, however, did not seem overly enthusiastic about Engler's proposals. "Why add an unneeded level of bureaucracy to a system that's not broken? We have not heard anybody complain about the way educa- tion candidates are chosen," said Dennis Denno, spokesman for the Michigan Democra- tic Party. Sen. Chris Dingell (D-Trenton) was equally opposed to the plan for appointed regents. "Look at the people he appointed to the Michi- gan Supreme Court," he said. Although Supreme Court justices usually are elected, in the event of a vacancy the governor has the power to fill those vacan- cies with his own appointments - an act Engler has performed several times in recent years. "You'll see they are all of one ideological bent and that they never dissent from each other," Dingell added. Dingell is one of the members of the Leg- islature who will participate in the Democ- rats' responses to the governor's address - one that will air on public television and another that will air on public radio follow- ing the speech. But Sen. Glenn Steil (R-Grand Rapids) said he agrees with Engler's proposals to reform education. "These candidates are chosen in caucuses by the Democrats or See ENGLER, Page 2 ord School gets $3M donation From staff reports An anonymous donor will give the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Poli- cy a $3 million gift to establish a Life Sciences Policy Center, the Universi- ty announced yesterday. The donation is the largest ever * ceived by the school. "I'm very excited about the prospect of building a component of the Ford School that deals with life sciences policy," Public Policy Dean Rebecca Blank said in a written state- ment. The donor, whose name will not be announced, told University officials that the gift is intended to develop a collaboration between public policy i esources already on campus and the fe sciences programs currently in development. "Technology breakthroughs in life sciences promise to transform our lives and social institutions even more profoundly than the information tech- nology revolution," the donor said. "These events also promise to explode the number of new public policy issues requiring thoughtful, *eative and disciplined analysis." Although the anonymous gift will help establish the new Life Sciences Policy Center, Public Policy Develop- ment Director Beth Johnson said a total of $10 million will be necessary to completely fund the project. The gift brings the total amount raised during the ongoing Public Poli- cy fundraising campaign to $12 mil- lion. The school hopes to raise $30 million for faculty endowments and aconstruct an addition to Lorch all. "This gift enables us to take the lead among other policy schools in this type of work," Blank said. "We are extremely grateful to the donor for having the foresight and imagina- tion to come forward to establish such an important center at the Ford School." Faculty get largest pay increases By Nick Bunkley Daily News Editor University faculty received an average salary increase of 5.1 percent last year, more than the average increase for exec- utive officers, deans and staff members, according to figures released yesterday. Salaries for the 13,441 members of the University's staff increased an average of 4.1 percent, the lowest among the four categories. Executive officers received average merit-based raises of 4.6 percent and deans saw merit-based pay increases this year averaging 4.7 percent. "Part of what we're doing is making sure the faculty under- stand their importance and that they'll be supported here at Michigan;' said Marilyn Knepp, associate vice president for the University budget, planning and administration. "Both the faculty increases and the staff increases capture our commit- ment to the people here." A 5 percent increase in President Lee Bollinger's salary makes him the sixth highest-paid employee at the University and the highest-paid outside of the Medical Campus. Bollinger will earn $326,550 during the current academic year, up from $311,000 last year. Previously, he had the sev- enth-highest salary. Vice President for Medical Affairs Gil Omenn's 2000-2001 salary of $556,973 is once again the highest at the University, with University Hospitals Executive Director Larry Warren, Surgery Department Chair Lazar Greenfield, Thoracic Surgery Prof. Mark Orringer and Cardiac Surgery Prof. Edward Bove rounding out the top five. Head football coach Lloyd Carr's salary of $278,000 is the ninth highest at the University. But coupled with $46,000 in See SALARIES, Page 2 MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily Police chief candidate Bruce Chamberlin (right) speaks with Wendy Woods and Heidi Cowing Herretl yesterday afternoon at Campus inn during a public forum where Ann Arbor residents interacted with four candidates for the Ann Arbor Chief of Police. 51 inunin four police chef By James Restivo Daily Staff Reporter City officials and community members questioned the five remaining candidates yesterday for the vacant position of Ann Arbor Chief of Police. The finalists interrogated were David Bostrom, Bruce Chamberlin, Bill King and Ronald Schebil. The fifth candidate, Mary Rabadeau, was unable to attend most of yesterday's proceedings. Council member Jean Robinson (D-Ward I) said the daylong questioning helped her get to know the diverse candidates. "It was an interesting experience see- ing both people who are local, as well as those from outside," Robinson said. "They all come from different experi- ences." The candidates, who hail from various parts of the country used their time to express ideas for the city and ways of interacting with the University. Their answers covered a range of topics including safety, domestic violence and racial profiling. Bostrom, who has worked in Washing- ton, D.C. with jurisdiction over several uni- versities, including Georgetown, said the number of students in Ann Arbor does not intimidate him. "The U of M has its own police force focused on student needs - but I'm look- ing forward to working with them," Bostrom said. "Students make up an impor- tant part of the city." Chamberlin, who has served as chief of police in Buffalo, N.Y., said he was very impressed by the city and if chosen, hopes to work together with students and residents. "My approach has been laid back, but to still maintain order with equality," Chamberlin said. "I'm not going to tailor action because of who someone is." King, who serves as deputy chief for the See CHIEF, Page 2 TEn garde GEO claims new LSA policy will discriminate By Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporter A change in a University accounting policy has the Graduate Employees Organization grievance committee members suggesting that their contracts have been violated. Grievance Committee Chair Alyssa Picard said under their old policy, the College of Lit- erature, Science and the Arts would give departments a number of graduate student instructor spots to fill however they chose. The new policy provides block grants with which to hire GSIs and allows departments to keep the money they don't spend on GSI- related expenses. "It puts the onus on departments to hire the cheapest teachers available," Picard said. "And if you're only looking at the cash you're never going to get to the question of who's more aalified." not agree with the conclusions the GEO has reached about the new policy," said Universi- ty spokeswoman Julie Peterson. The GEO said it plans to request that the University cease implementation of the policy and bargain with them instead. "If they don't bargain with us in good faith we'll file an unfair labor practice complaint with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission," Picard said. GEO organizer Mark Dilley said the change in policy will discriminate against many grad- uate students by favoring in-state GSI appli- cants and doctoral candidates because they cost less to hire. "It used to be each department would say how many GSIs they needed. It didn't matter if they were in-state, candidates or grad stu- dents," Dilley said. The University does not intend to affect the quality of GSIs, Peterson said. AP PHOTO Women line up for relief aid yesterday in Bhuj, a town in India which was devastated by last week's earthquake. Reli'efed to quake area. By Shannon Pettypiece For the Daily In an effort to aid Indian communities devastated by last Friday's earthquake, which is now reported to have caused as many as 20,000 deaths, several University student groups have joined forces to help collect donations. The University community includes 450 students from India as well as hundreds of American-Indian students with many family and friends living in India. I kZ