One hundred ten years of edtrlzfzfreedom }r Y .I NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www~michigandaily.com Wednesday March 14, 2001 I a _- ~, _4 I Searc "This has been an extremely difficult decision end one I made only after careful assessment of the entire program." Bill Martin Athletic director begins for n AIIMM ew coach "I am confident I fulfilled the guidelines established by President Bollinger and Tom Goss by running our program with integrity." Brian Ellerbe Basketball coach ftside Covenae of yester ay's ring of coach Brian Ellerbe: Yesterday marks the beginning of a turnaround for the basketball program. Page 10 Others in the college basketball world react to news that Ellerbe won't return next season. Page 10 0 A look at the candidates to lace Ellerbe. ge 10 A look into the NAACP's reaction to Ellerbe's firing. Page 12 0A glance into the future of the Michigan program. Page 14 By Michael Kern Daily Sports Editor After weeks of speculation, Michi- gan Athletic Director Bill Martin announced yesterday that Brian Ellerbe would no longer coach the Michigan basketball team and that a search process to find a replacement would begin immediately. Martin refused to specify what his exact reasons were for dismiss- ing the coach other than to say that the team had not made the nec- essary improve- ments over the past four seasons that he had hoped Martin for. "Sunday afternoon during a meet- ing in my office I asked Brian Ellerbe to step down as head coach of the University of Michigan men's basket- ball team," Martin said in a written statement. "This has been an extremely difficult decision and one I made only after careful assessment of the entire program." Ellerbe will receive $447,000 in compensation, which Martin said is consistent with the terms of his con- tract that call for a three-year payout of his base salary. In a statement he released to the Detroit Free Press, Ellerbe thanked those who had worked with him while he was coach and maintained that he believed he had met the stan- dards set forth when he was given the job. "When I took this assignment, I knew our program faced several issues that were left for us to deal with," Ellerbe wrote. "I also knew that returning the program to com- petitive standards commensurate with Michigan's rich athletic tradi- tion would not be done overnight. I am confident I fulfilled the guidelines established by President Bollinger and Tom Goss by running our pro- gram with integrity." Basketball players had a final team meeting with Ellerbe yesterday after- noon to say goodbye to their coach. Martin outlined the process for searching for a new coach, which said he hoped to begin as soon as this weekend. While choosing not to name any specific candidates, Martin said he was looking for someone with Division I head coaching expe- rience, who could represent the Uni- versity well with "strong public speaking skills." "First and foremost, I want to make certain we have a coach who recruits kids that by and large want to stay in school four years, will gradu- ate and bring honor to the institu- tion," Martin said. "Beyond that, I want a coach who understands the game of basketball, Xs and Os, has been a winner at the Division I level and somebody who can be a part of the Michigan family." When asked if former Boston Celtics coach Rick Pitino, who won a national title with Kentucky, was the man for the job, Martin simply said that "Rick would be someone we would like to look at." To bring in a big name coach like Pitino or Seton Hall coach Tommy Amaker, the Athletic Department can expect to spend around $1.5 million per season, a sum that would exceed that of Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr. Considering the depart- ment's recent budgetary woes, Martin was unclear as to whether that type of money would be available, but didn't rule it out. "You see what the market is at this time, you evaluate your own budget, you look at what are the increased revenue potentials with particular coaches in terms of refilling Crisler (Arena), in terms of increasing the sponsorship capabilities that we would have with a revitalized pro- gram, and you go from there," Martin said. See ELLERBE, Page 7 FILE PHOTO After four seasons during which he failed to significantly improve the winning percentage of the Michigan men's basketball team, Brian Ellerbe was forced out yesterday by Athletic Director Bill Martin. MSAe ections Part four of a six-part series about campaign platforms~ Candidates promise to resign i ! !e ineffective * Carrie Thorson Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan Party calls its plat- form for this winter's Michigan Stu- dent Assembly elections the "New Deal." Candidates pledge that if they are elected and do not work on all of their issues in one semester, they will resign their posts. *'Telling this to students has been fun," said presidential candidate Doug Tietz. "When I tell them I'm going to resign if I don't get things done, they're interested." The first thing the Michigan Party plans to do is rid MSA of internation- al resolutions. "We will pass a resolution that bans any resolutions that deal with a for- eign country," Tietz said. "MSA has no business dealing with *eign affairs," said vice-presidential candidate Chip Englander. "We have to deal with issues that matter to stu- dents here on campus." The Michigan Party also plans to improve MSA relations with the Greek community. Their plan, "Greeks govern Greeks," will increase representation of fraternity and sorority members on the assem- The Greek community has been trampled by MSA," Tietz said. They plan to improve facilities and extend the hours of the North Cam- pus and Central Campus recreation buildings. Longer hours and improved equipment are necessary to Celebrating diversity UniversityHealth System to get $33.6M from INIH By Louie Melzlish Daily Staff Reporter The University Health System reported yesterday that it will be receiving its largest grant ever - $33.6 million dollars from the National Center for Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health. The grant will fund stud- ies at the University Health Sys- tem's General Clinic Research Center. The grant, awarded after a 3,000- page yearlong application process, will be spread out over five years and is 14 percent larger than the most recent grant that the Universi- ty received from the NIH. "Every new therapy that reaches the general public today gets there only through multiple steps of clini- cal research," Vice President for Medical Affairs Gilbert Omenn said in a written statement. "Academic medical centers such as ours generate many new medical discoveries, and our GCRC provides U-M researchers the space and expertise needed for a comparative advantage in NIH- and corporate- sponsored clinical studies in patients and volunteer participants," he said. GCRC Administrative Director Dorene Markel said one of the advantages of the grant is that it will provide support for magnetic resonance imaging and a biomed- ical imaging core that can be used for research studies. "The hospital provides imaging for clinical purposes but only for tried and true procedures," Markel various aspects of the research including tests and long term stud- ies, Wiley said. He gave the example of Universi- ty genetics Prof. George Brewer who developed a treatment to lower the possibly toxic amounts of cop- per in the blood of Wilson's Disease sufferers. "The only way to tell if medica- tion was successful was if he could monitor the changes over a long (about eight-week) period of time," Wiley said. Brewer was able to use the GCRC's facilities to study the effec- tiveness of the treatment. The grants are used to offset he costs of impa- tient residences at the hospital, which can cost several hundred dol- lars per day. The funding will also support a See GRANT, Page 7 JEFF- HURVITJ/Da~iy Lynden Kelly and Stephanie Moore-Fuller speak yesterday during Gender Diversity Week, which includes events that last though Friday. said. The grant will cover the costs of Students read names of Holocaust victims By Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporter Name by name, student volunteers began reading a list of people who died in the Holocaust yesterday at noon as people chatting on cell phones and talking to each other bustled past indifferently. But for the students reading, the Memor- ial of Names is an intensely personal expe- rience, said co-chair Josh Samek, an LSA junior. LSA freshman Jacqueline Wulwick cane across her own name while she was read- ing, immediately followed by her sister's, which she said made her understand her own family could have been affected by the Holocaust. sands of names, only a fraction of the six million who died in the Holocaust. The vigil culminates in a memorial service at noon today as part of the University's 22nd Annual Conference on the Holocaust. "It helps to put a face to the name or at least a name to the number," Samek said. He said the magnitude of the Holocaust registers with students after they have spent half an hour reading and realize they have only seen a fraction of the names of those who died. "Some last names continue for pages and pages," said RC junior and co-chair Shari Katz. The names are listed in six bound volumes with additional information, such as year of death, age at the time of death, place of death and country of origin. 'U' implements ( W' 'o fwor suppliers By Anna Clark Daily Staff Reporter The University has taken action to implement its new labor code in all contracts with apparel, souvenir and supply companies, among others. Yesterday, the University mailed a letter to all companies supplying University apparel, informing them of the new standards that were formally adopted by University Presi- dent Lee Bollinger at last month's meeting of the University Board of Regents. "The letter was just to inform them of a new condition for the contracts with UM," said Social Work Prof. Larry Root, who chairs the permanent Committee of Labor Stan- dards and Human Rights. But Nike, the biggest supplier of University goods, is JEF HURVIT Z aily RC junior Dena Stein yesterday reads names of Jews who were killed during the Holocaust. The 24-hour Memorial of the Names vigil on the Diag concludes at noon today. names," he said. "Out of a half hour of reading there wasn't a single name over 17." He added that it was especially poignant to read those names and ages as a 22-year-old. The Memorial of Names has been included in the University's annual Confer-