One hundred ten years ofed:torfreedom NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www.michigandailycom Thursday March 8, 2001 I ---------------- -------- - I s Martin addresses athletics 'deficit By Benjamin Singer Daily Sports Writer On the one-year anniversary of becoming the University's interim Ath- letic Director, now permanent Athletic Director Bill Martin gave a lecture yes- terday at the Busi- ness School on managing his department's bud- get and the NCAA as a whole. Martin said ath- letics are "the most highly visi- ble department" at the University, Martin accounting for "99 percent" of Michigan's public image. I'm not saying that is right, I'm saying that is life," Martin said. A 1965 graduate of the Business School, Martin discussed the reasons for the Athletic Department's $5 million deficit and how he plans to erase it. As one of his proposed solutions to eradicating the deficit, Martin said very limited advertising in Michigan Stadium is being considered and made it clear Sfurther commercialism throughout chigan athletics is a possible step. Martin said the problem of over- spending on athletics exists across the country because of pressure to com- pete with each other. Martin cited several schools cutting teams as casualties of the need to increase revenue. Michigan, meanwhile, has added men's soccer and water polo to this year's list of varsity clubs. Salaries for coaches in revenue sports *also escalating, a trend that Martin said he does not see any way to reverse. "Lloyd Carr earns every penny of his salary," he added. Martin reiterated that football ticket prices were on the rise. "Prices are going up, and they're going up for everybody' he said. When asked if students were included in ''everybody,'' he lied: "If students want to come the games, why shouldn't they go up for students?'' He also praised the new Nike contract signed earlier this year. Martin said the money from that deal alone is sufficient for funding seven varsity sports and the cheer- leading squad for the year. Equiva- lent to that amount of money, Martin added, would be a $5 dollar increase on every football ticket. goal for Michigan is to do a better J~on the endowment of scholarships. Martin said he was jealous of Stanford, where companies donated stock years ago, and now total $125 million. Martin wants to reconnect with for- mer athletes who he hopes will also donate money for the endowment of scholarships. Michigan, he said, has not gone out of its way to maintain good itions with its players. He pointed out *Michigan has retired just one bas- ketball jersey, that of Cazzie Russell, a player in the mid 1960s, as opposed to a school like Duke which, as he put it, may run out of numbers. By Jon Fish Daily Staff Reporter up for Harvard University was expected to name its new president by today, although the school's search committee has given little indication of when an announcement will be made. Two weeks ago, The Boston Globe quoted sources close to the process as saying the commit- tee was poised to announce their choice by today, adding another rumor to a search plagued by numerous leaks and endless speculation in recent weeks. That report came only days after University of Michigan President Lee Bollinger was inter- viewed by the committee for the third time at a Manhattan hotel. Bollinger is rumored to be the committee's top choice for the post out of the three finalists. Officials at the Cambridge, Mass., university told The Michigan Daily yesterday they had no knowl- edge of any announcement today, a statement Uni- versity spokeswoman Julie Peterson and other University officials reiterated. Bollinger appeared to be at home last night, and earlier in the day he refused to comment. A woman who answered the phone at the New York City home of one search committee mem- ber last night said he was unavailable because he was traveling to Cambridge. Another search committee member declined comment. Several members of the University Board of Regents said they had no knowledge that Harvard had extended an offer to Bollinger, saying they have been operating under the assumption that he laxTrard would remain at the University. "Right now, Lee's the president, and I look for- ward to seeing him at our meeting next week," said Regent Dan Homing (R-Grand Haven). Horning and several other members of the board expressed some impatience about the issue, saying they were looking forward to having the issue resolved as soon as possible. Regents Larry Deitch (D-Bloomfield Hills) and David Brandon (R-Ann Arbor) said the board has not had any discussions as to who would be named the interim president if Bollinger were to depart. But Bollinger still maintained his silence about his candidacy at Harvard. "I really can't talk about the search process,"he said yesterday. Bollinger also refused to comment on whether he search would accept the position if it were offered to him. Princeton University President Harold T. Shapiro, who served as the University of Michi- gan's president until 1988, said last night that his decision to leave Ann Arbor for an Ivy League university was a "tremendous struggle." "It was very difficult to leave the people and places that had meant so much to me," he said. In addition to Bollinger, the other top candi- dates for the Harvard post are former U.S. Trea- sury Secretary Lawrence Summers and Harvard Provost Harvey Fineberg. Harvard education pro- fessor Judith McLaughlin, an expert on presidential searches, told The Harvard Crimson last week that the search committee is likely to ensure that their nominee will accept the position before submitting a name to the Board of Overseers for approval. I On the rise AATA, ' discuss free By Jacquelyn Nixon Daily Staff Reporter In an effort to broaden resources available to stu- dents, the Department of Parking and Transportation Services is considering a program named Unlimited Access, one which could increase the University's part- nership with the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority. Patrick Cunningham, director of Parking and Trans- portation Services, said if the department chooses to negotiate with AATA, the proposed program, which would cost more than $600,000 annually, would offer increased bus services to students. "Anyone with an M-Card would be able to ride regu- lar AATA buses fare-free;' Cunningham said. "Unlimited Access would offer transit routes seven days a week," Cunningham said. "Downtown Ann Arbor, Briarwood Mall, and other entertainment and social places in the city can be opened to students on See AATA, Page 7A SAM HOLLENSHEAD/ Daily The moon rises over the Business School yesterday afternoon. After growing from a small crescent last week, there will be a full moon in the sky this weekend. City rejects finalists, restarts search f r new oice 1 By James Restivo Daily Staff Reporter Ann Arbor City Administrator Neil Berlin announced this week that the city has decided to continue its search for a new chief of the Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment, even though it had narrowed down the list to five finalists last month. Since Carl Ent's resignation last January, the position has been occupied by former Deputy Chief Walter Lunsford acting as interim chief. The search commenced fol- lowing Ent's resignation and reached Janu- ary of this year without a decision. "Even though they were all good candi- dates, they did not seem to be a very good match," Berlin said. "The goal is to have a police chief at the earliest possible moment, but the right person." The Police Executive Research Firm, a national organization, was hired last year "The goal is to have a police chief at th earliest possible moment, but the right person." - Neil Berlin Ann Arbor city administrator to recruit from a national pool of appli- cants, eventually choosing 52 applicants for the position. PERF then submitted 14 semi-finalists, from which five were selected for extensive interviews in Janu- ary, but city officials felt none were a good fit. Berlin said that at this point the former candidates were not going to be reconsid- ered. Mayor John Hieftje, who participated in the questioning of candidates earlier this year said the city wasn't comfortable with the applicants. "We are a unique community," Hieftje said. "There are lots of issues that deal with students, diversity - when we started to look into backgrounds we didn't see them." Marcia Higgins (R-Ward IV) said she felt the characteristics Ann Arbor was looking for weren't evident in the first applicants. "We were all a little disappointed in the process," Higgins said. "I don't believe that some of the things we were looking for and for the community were represented in the See CHIEF, Page 7A Not enough faith in the government, Klein says SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daily Kathleen Frankovic talks in Angell Hall yesterday about problems during the 2000 election. CBS pollnsmg guru explinls missed calls By Ted Borden Daily Staff Reporter Four months after the 2000 presidential election, the specifics of the use of polling in the election still remain elusive to most of the American public. Kathleen Frankovic, a television news producer for CBS News, helped shed light on the subject last night with her speech "Polls and the Election of 2000: The Ambivalent Electorate." The speech was part of the Telluride Association's annual lecture series in which alumni of the nationwide honors program speak to "enrich the debate on issues of political and social content," said Telluride Association Program Director Tom Hawks. In her presentation, Frankovic showed the audience the exit poll used for Florida voters and the notorious Palm Beach County butterfly ballot. She went on to analyze the many results of nationwide exit polls, as well as election- related surveys conducted by CBS and The New York Times. The survey results revealed why the election battle was as close as it was. Overall, most respondents held contradictory feelings on By Louie Meizlish Daily staff Reporter "We as a nation put too much faith in the free market and not enough faith in government," Joel Klein said at the start of his lecture yester- day in Hutchins Hall. Klein, the former head of the Antitrust Divi- sion of the U.S. Department of Justice and now the chief executive officer of the Bertelsmann media company, gave the William W. Cook lec- ture at the beginning of a three-day conference at the Law School titled "Law, Policy and the Convergence of Telecommunications and Com- puting Technologies." Klein was the lead attorney in the Justice Court of Appeals. During the lecture, Klein said too many peo- ple underestimate or undervalue the role of gov- ernment. But he also stressed that there are certain limits as to where and when the govern- ment should begin to regulate business. Klein said what is important is "how we cre- ate a society where markets do what they do best and governments do what they do best," adding that without government intervention,, too many companies would be able to merge and thus gain a monopoly in their respective markets. He also said the two most important viola- tions of antitrust law that must be prosecuted are exclusionary behavior, which, he said, "is