NEWS The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 13, 2004 - 5A Institute'sfuture uncertain after slow start L. SI Continued from page 1A from across the biomedical sciences, LSI was founded in May 1999 from Uni- versity and University Hospital reserve funds. Two co-directors were named - Scott Emr, a researcher at the Univer- sity of California at San Diego, and Jack Dixon, a medical sciences professor at the University. Then, in 2002, President Bollinger left to become president at Columbia Univer- sity. His decision precipitated a series of departures among LSI's leadership. First, Emr, who had not yet moved to Ann Arbor, chose to remain at UCSD. "My decision was based on two main issues," Emr said in an e-mail message. "The decision of Lee Bollinger to resign as President of UM, which put my plans to move my lab to UM on hold, and ... a need to protect the interests of the stu- dents and postdocs in my lab who could not easily put their lives/careers on hold while the UM began to search for a new President. Subsequently, in July 2002, Dixon resigned to take a faculty position at people you're trying to recruit," Mat- thews said. "When you have a big change in leadership, you're really starting from square one." After a search for a new director, the University selected Saltiel, former director of the Department of Cell Biol- ogy at Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Division (now Pfizer Global Research) in Ann Arbor. FIERCE COMPETITION During the leadership turnover, numer- ous top-level universities such as UCSD, Princeton, Harvard and Stanford started similar projects in the life sciences, steep- ly increasing the competition for star fac- ulty, said pathology chair Peter Ward. "Suddenly the competition has taken a quantum leap forward," Ward said. "The pool of individuals who are highly sought after is extremely small, and that's going to be the basic factor in limiting these institutions - not how much money you can invest in bricks and mortar." Princeton, for instance, has invested $50 million in its Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Ward said. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Duke University, the University of Penn- sylvania and the University of Missouri at Columbia are among others that have begun LSI-like insti- tutes on their cam- puses. to its promise," Matthews said. Coleman promoted the idea of the LSI charter faculty to speed recruiting and fundraising efforts, Matthews added. Although establishing such a seed group of University researchers had been dis- cussed prior to her arrival, Coleman confirmed that she specifically pushed to make the charter faculty a reality. Like all LSI faculty, charter faculty hold joint positions in the institute and in a standard academic department. "When you're recruiting people from outside, you need to make sure you have lines of communication back to the departments, and I think (a charter faculty) is a good way," Coleman said. Charter faculty have been heavily involved in recruiting since moving into the institute this year, Matthews said. She explained that all LSI faculty mem- bers meet each potential faculty recruit to ensure that recruits finds two or three colleagues in the institute with whom he would like to collaborate. But the anonymous senior Medical School professor criticized the choice to create a charter faculty. "In an institution this large, everybody thinks their work is the most important," he said. "They should have kept those egos aside and PETER SCHOTTENFELS/Daily Rackham student Abby Fahim does research at the Life Sciences Institute, a drain. Saltiel added that criticism of the institute is unavoidable. "It's inevitable that there will be people who think we should have spent the money another way," he said. THE VISTA AHEAD Overall, many faculty are optimistic about the institute's future. "I don't see enormous obstacles," Mat- thews said. "What I feel very strongly about is (the institute) is not only beau- tiful for us the faculty, but it's a beauti- ful environment for our students as well. We're able to recruit really top people - it's really a draw." She said her own research has already grown in unexpected ways from new collaborations with other LSI faculty, and she predicted that other research- ers will form similarly successful part- nerships. Likewise, Ward said he believes the institute will enhance biomedical sciences at the University. "I think beyond any question, ulti- mately the judgment will be that this was a very good initiative on Bollinger's part," he said. However, he cautioned that it might take 10 or 20 years before a final assess- ment can be made. "You can only speculate now what it's going to be like down the road," he said. "You just have to wait and watch things unfold." devel- oped early on among faculty who feared the institute would take resources away from existing biomedi- cal departments. However, he said he expects that through the joint appoint- ment process, LSI will eventually become "a tribute to the departments" rather than UCSD. Dixon said he chose to leave part- ly due to Bollinger's departure and partly to move closer to family in the southern California area. Prof. Rowena Matthews, a member of the institute's charter faculty, said Bol- linger, Emr and Dixon's departures "set back the pace of recruiting." The term charter faculty refers to a group of researchers selected from within the University to populate the Institute. "Recruiting is a very personal inter- action between the directors and the the University of Michigan, President Mary Sue Coleman's arrival in 2002 helped stabilize LSI, Matthews said. Coleman, a professor of biological chem- istry, brought her own scientific expertise to the table during discussions on LSI's future. Matthews said White, who was the University's interim president until Coleman arrived and subsequently has served as an LSI charter faculty member, was also "enormously supportive." "(Coleman and White) kept this place from becoming a shell and not living up The anon- ymous profes- sor also said the institute should have searched more intensively outside the University for senior-level stars in the biomedical sciences by looking for hidden talent as well as big names. He claimed he is not alone among University faculty in criticizing LSI. However, of eight additional faculty members contacted by the Daily, five did not respond to repeated attempts to contact them, and three declined to be interviewed. Chemistry Prof. David Lubman, in dear E mom o dad o santa D0___ all i warrmt a hanukkah a christmas a kwanzaa a graduation o my birthday m w . 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