2C - New Student Edition - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 5, 2001 Important information for 'U' White House scientist to head SNRF Campus operator on campus off campus General information Counseling services Nite Owl Bus Service Northwalk Safewalk Sexual Assault Crisis Line U-M Hospital Emergency U-M Public Safety and Security Undergraduate library Law library Media Union Financial Aid office Office of the Registrar dial 0 764-1817 763-INFO 764-8312 764-3427 763-WALK 936-1000 936-1000 936-6666 763-1131 764-7490 764-9322 936-3191 736-6600 647-3507 763-2113 763-9066 647-3507 763-3497 764-8320 764-8325 764-7387 By Elizabeth Kassab Daily News Editor University President Lee Bollinger and Provost Nancy Cantor announced Wednesday their recommendation of Rosina Bierbaum, an advisor to former President Clinton and the acting director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, to lead the School of Natural Resources and Environ- ment. Bierbaum will assume the position of dean as the SNRE prepares to undergo major inter- nal changes. The University announced a ten- tative plan to merge the SNRE's undergraduate program with the larger Col- lege of Literature, Science and the Arts. "A number of things are ... ripe for atten- tion" Bierbaum said, citing the need to stabi- lize graduate student funding and examine core courses. Bierbaum said she plans to speak with fac- ulty and students about possible alterations in the school. "I believe the first job of the School is education, so I wanted to focus very much on the students," she said. SNRE Prof. David Allan, who chaired the search committee for the new dean, said he felt Bierbaum is fit to handle the changes fac- ing SNRE. She has shown ."enthusiasm for the challenges and suggestions of how we can meet them,"he said. Bierbaum said her experiences in the White House in public policy will help in multiple ways. As acting director of the OSTP, Bier- baum had to reach across different govern- ment agencies, an act she likened to dealing with different departments within the Univer- sity. "She has a marvelous ability to cut through to the essence of a problem," Allan said. Bierbaum said part of b e her experience lies in ' b live h identifying problems and assessing the timeliness of the .Sch of a solution, taking into account the impact it education. might have on other environmental issues. This skill could be com- municated to students and was lacking in her own education, she said. "I came out with the science but not nearly the understanding of policy, law ... and tech- nology that I think students ought to have," Bierbaum said. Before serving as acting director of the OSTP in January, Bierbaum was the associate director for environment in the OSTP, which she had held since 1998. She was the Clinton Administration's senior scientific advisor on environmental research and development in many areas. Bierbaum is also the former senior associate in the environment program L' of the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment. "In her roles as policy analyst and senior science adviser in Washington, she has worked tirelessly to advance sound environ- mental policy based on scientific values," Bollinger said in a statement. "Her energy and commitment will surely infect faculty and - dents within the School and throughout e University." he first jo Bierbaum, Allan said, j embodies leadership, oi is scholarship and vision - all characteristics the search committee 'was - Rosina Bierbaum looking for. Her experi- ences, he added, during the eight years of Clin- ton's tenure are a unique asset to the position. Allan also mentioned that Bierbaums not only Worked with the top specialists a number of environmental fields but is well- known and well-respected among them. Bierbaum's appointment "sends a message to peopld who are interested in the environ- ment and the School that we have a dynamic new leader," Allan said. Bierbawm's term is scheduled to begin Oct. 1, pending the approval of the University Board of Regents. She will also be a fullI- fessor of natural resources and environmnl pclicy with tenure. Registration Scheduling Diploma ordering Transcript info Residential Halls Association University Health Service General Appointments Pharmacy _:x. , , , , 4 B U T 1 Q U E ku °. . 4 4. o r C0'X ~TtQ E ' . J.HIOfor WA n~~Work . ..MEMWEN r4x. nd. WO M EN FOR JOSEPH JECTION R the ongina tee} Harvard's Dolan to head Business school By Elizabeth Kassab Daily News Reporter Robert Dolan, a professor of busi- ness administration at the Harvard 'University School of Business, has been selected to head the University of Michigan Business school, Uni- versity of Michigan President Lee Bollinger and Provost Nancy Cantor announced this May. "It is a great honor and thrill to be the next Dean of the Business School. I have been a long-time fan of the School," Dolan said. Dolan will assume the position following approval by the University Board of Regents. "Bob Dolan is known for his own personal scholarly achievement and dedication to teaching students, his support of aca- demic values, and Wtan his nurturing of young faculty," Bollinger said in a statement. Dolan said he is committed to cultivating a link between.acade- mics and research, which .is also a primary focus of the Business School. "I am very comfortable with the 'fit' between the School and myself," Dolan said. "We are along the same wavelength on what a great business school should be about." Dolan also said he felt comfort- able working with University facul-P ty. "The spirit of scholarship and research excellence just comes through and the University's history, of effective collaboration across thei different Schools within the Univer- sity is ... a real asset for us in, addressing the most important busi-r ness problems of today," he said. "Within the business school, I rea liked the obvious commitment special feelings that the faculty had about the place." 'Dolan will be a tenured professor of marketing and a Gilbert and Ruth Whitaker Professor of Business Administration. * Dolan's appointment comes after an eight-month search chaired by Prof. Joel Slemrod. The search con- sidered more than 100 candidates *"I think he's an excellent match," Slemrod said. "He has a record of outstanding scholarship." Outgoing Dean B. Joseph White will finish his second five-year term and plans to work with Dolan in the transition. ""I am extremely pleased and excited about Bob Dolan's accepting the appointment as our next dean" White said. "I am confident he g1 provide us excellent leadership' take the School to the next level of achievement," he said in a state- ment. White opted not to seek a third erm at the helm of the Business School, choosing to take a leave of absence and then return as a regular merrber of the faculty... Dolan, a specialist in product pricing and policy, will be* Barcelona, Spain, on a visiting pro- fessorship until the end of June. He would have served Harvard Busi- ness School's Division of Research as senior associate dean and director beginning this summer. Dolan has taught at Harvard since 1980. At Harvard, he was the chair of the MBA program faculty from 1996-97, taught marketing to senior executives in Harvard's Advanced Management Program from 199 and chaired Harvard's marketing area from 1986-94. Dolan taught at the University of Chicago's business school from 1976-80. !i G RASS. Continued from Page 1C "Carpe Diem." Seize every opportu-: nity you can while you're at the University. And as I enter my senior year, I wish that I was back on the sixth floor of Fisher House in Mary o Markley (it's a girls hall now). Life goes by quickly, especially your four years in Ann Arbor. I'vet gone from the high school life of 6th Fisher throwing ice cream cones out the window to now, living an. attic apartment down the street from Border's, rooming with a Marxist.' Who'd ever think that'd happen? Sot don't get hung up that you're from Winnetka, Ill. or were a member of the state championship cheer team; try to move beyond who you were and where you came from. It's a tough lesson I had to learn., Being in Ann Arbor and what you do with yourself now is what's important now. What you do, what you encounter in your short college years will change you. Some embrace this. But some find it diffi- cult to transition. And others never get it. If you truly have a passion accounting, then use that passion get into the B-School. If you have an obsession for creative writing, then pursue that. And if you have zero clue what you want to do when you are here, then explore and find your place. It could just reshape your life for the better. Be true to yourself. You and your fellow classmates will be better for it. Michael Grass is editorial page A for of The Michigan Daily. If he would have been in the 1998 fresh- man face book, he would have said he was from East Grand Rapids, Mich., interested in journalism, his- tory and screwing with his fellow classmates'heads. He can be reached via e-mail at mgrass@umich. ed. MSA Continued from Page 1C term. Nolan and Cash will be taking over what Cash referred to as, "an MSA on life support." Last year was an unusually turbu- assembly members such as vice president Jim Secreto, but this year's assembly is still left with the task of repairing the damage. MSA is directly or indirectly involved in every student's life. From funding student events to ifli I,