Wednesday, September 13, 2006 T"l EL CE N )R A) -o s I um TAEMENT News 3A Harvard abandons early admissions program Arts 8A Indiv rock veterans grow up Sports 10A Friendly competition pushes Woodley One-hundred-sixteen years ofeditoril freedom www.michikandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVII, No. 8 ©2006 The Michigan Daily ''to sell insurance programa U Fate of 400 jobs uncertain after Blue Cross Blue Shield Michigan buys M-Care for undisclosed sum By Kelly Fraser Daily Staff Reporter The University is in the final stages of a deal to sell M-Care. Officials announced yesterday that the Univer- sity-owned nonprofit health care provider will be purchased by Blue Care Network of Michigan, a sub- sidiary of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. A proposal will be presented to the University Board of Regents during its Sept. 22 meeting. Until then, the University will not release the finan- cial details of the sale, said Robert Kelch, chief execu- tive officer of the University Health System and vice president for medical affairs. M-Care insures more than 200,000 people, about 60,000 of whom are University employees, retirees and graduate students, as well as their dependents. The hundreds of Michigan jobs M-Care provides may or may not be eliminated if it is sold. Kelch said it is an appropriate time for the Univer- sity to consider selling M-Care. To stay competitive in the health care industry, the University would have to make large capital invest- ments in M-Care, which would drain the Health Sys- tem's core projects and research, he said. "The University of Michigan Health System has a complex and critical mission and we need to stay focused on it," Kelch said. The two nonprofit organizations have a similar mis- sion, making the pairing a good match, Kelch said. Talks of the potential sale began late this spring, said Kevin Seitz, Blue Care Network president and CEO. The idea, he said, was not proposed by either provider but grew out of their established working relationship. Dean Smith, a professor of health management and policy, said similar deals between insurance provid- ers are common in the industry. "Mergers and acquisitions are going on all the time, but the thing is, people don't notice it until it's their company," he said. Smith said the industry's demand for consumer- driven health care, which requires large investments in information systems, may contribute to more merg- ers so that providers can share costs. M-Care also employs about 400 workers in the Ann Arbor and Southfield areas. See MCARE, page 7A - r ,. .., ,, F' J l V.u BEDNE First you pay tuition. Then room and board. Then for a laptop. And when you think you just can't spend anymore, you see the line outside Shaman Drum and realize that you, too, will soon have to wait in that line for the privelege of overpaying for the Riverside Shakespeare. Textbook prices are up. Way up -186 percent over the last 20 years. Here's a look behind the scenes at the lucrative business (Ulrich's made $169 million last year) as well as answers to the questions you've been asking for a while but never got answers to. FOR FULL COVERAGE, SEE PAGE 5A According to one gamblino website, these are the odds President Coleman will take Harvard's top job: By Karl Stampfl Managing News Editor University President Mary Sue Coleman says she won't abandon her post anytime soon, but Bodogcom isn't so sure about that. On its slate of odds on who will become Har- vard University's next president, the Costa Rica- based gambling website lists Coleman at18 to 1. The site has accepted several hundred bets of up to $50, said Bodog founder Calvin Ayre. When asked about the odds during an inter- view last week, Coleman laughed. "I think it's funny," Coleman said. "But I'm sure the folks at Harvard are doing a serious search." Coleman said she does not want to leave. The University Board of Regents this summer voted to extend Coleman's contract for another five years. "I'm not going anywhere," she said. She declined to comment on whether she has been contacted by a Harvard search committee about the job. Coleman, who was president of the University of Iowa before coming to Ann Arbor in 2002, said when she was a professor becoming a top administrator was not one of her goals, but that it has since become her dream job. Of the 17 candidates gamblers can bet on, Coleman's odds fall in the middle. Elena Kagan, the Harvard Law School dean, is the favorite at 3 to 1. Former University of Michigan President Lee Bollinger - who left in 2001 to take the top job at Columbia University - is deemed one of the least likely, at 25 to 1 odds. The Harvard job is widely considered to be the top in academia. "The Harvard president is very influential," Coleman said. "It's important for all of higher education." Unlike the vast majority of Harvard presi- dents, Coleman has never attended the univer- sity in Cambridge. The presidents have all been men, though several of the candidates considered front-runners to replace Summers are female. Experts say the university is likely to choose a female president for the first time. Coleman is considered a top candidate because of her leadership of the University through the 2003 admissions lawsuits. Like many of the oth- ers on Bodog's list, she also has experience as See COLEMAN, page 7A 14 Ford to attend Weill Hall opening event Former president, alum has watched progress of new Public Policy building through webcam University President Mary Sue Coleman Washtenaw County MCRI Chair Ryan Fantuzi Rachel Tanner is a member of Students answers questions in C.C. Little on April 6. poses in the Law Quad. Supporting Affirmative Action. COURING THE How both sides of the MCRI debate are vying for the 16 UNDECIDED percent who've yet to decide By Karl Stampfl Managing News Editor Wave to Gerald Ford. If you're walking near the new Gerald Ford School of Public Policy's Joan and Sanford Weill Hall at State and Church streets, the former president and University alum may be able to see you on his com- puter monitor. Ford checks a live video feed of the build- ingeveryday,UniversityPresidentMarySue Coleman said in an interview last week. Faculty and staff moved into the new location last month. It will be dedicated at a ceremony Oct. 13. Provided that his health is strong, Ford has agreed to attend the ceremony. "We're crossing our fingers," Cole- man said. Ford, 93, is the oldest living former presi- dent.His lasthospital stay inthe hospital was just overtwo weeks ago. Doctors performed eliminate blockages in his coronary arter- ies. Ford returned to his home in Rancho Mirage, Calif. after 10 days in the hospital. Coleman said Ford told her that the thought of the new building has been the secret to his longevity. "He's told us that the building is what's been keeping him alive for the last two years;' Coleman said. Ford is the University's most prominent alum. He playedcenter for the football team, most notably during the undefeated seasons of 1932 and 1933. He was also a member of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity and Michigamua, the controversial secret soci- ety of the University's elite. Following graduation, he refused offers from the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Pack- ers, choosing to attend Yale Law School. Ford attended the 80,000-square-foot building's groundbreaking in November 2004. At the ceremony, Ford spoke for less than five minutes. He told stories about his time on campus. "I came to U-M in 1931 and brought a $100 check from the principal of my high school, who wanted to be damn sure I went to Ann Arbor,'Ford said at the groundbreak- ing. "I have always been proud - very, very proud - of my association with this Walter Nowinski Daily Staff Reporter Polls are at a dead heat and there are only 55 days remaining before voters decide on a ballot proposal that would ban many types of affirmative action in Michigan. The key to whether the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, or Proposal 2, will be successful may lie in the 16 percent of voters who were undecided in last week's Detroit Free Press/Local 4 poll. On campus, both sides of the debate are working desperately to sway that 16 percent. MCRI SUPPORTERS Young Americans for Freedom and the Washtenaw County MCRI organi- zation kicked off their campus cam- paign yesterday with a speech from State Rep. Leon Drolet (R-Macomb Township), who chairs the MCRI. Although attendance was sparse, the mass meeting's organizers prom- ised a vigorous campaign on campus and around Ann Arbor in the coming weeks. Ryan Fantuzzi, co-chair of the Washt- enaw County MCRI, said supporters of the initiative face an uphill battle in Ann Arbor, but that he was optimistic about the election. "This is the bastion of liberalism," Fantuzzi said. "But I believe that there is a lot of silent support for the issue on campus." In order to tap into that support, Young Americans for Freedom and the Washtenaw County MCRI plan to exploit all the traditional campus campaigning techniques, including painting the Rock, flyering on the Diag and holding politi- cal tailgates before the Michigan State and Wisconsin football games. Organizers said they would also like to bring Ward Connerly to town for a debate or a rally, though nothing has been finalized yet. Connerly is the former University of California regent who brought MCRI to Michigan after a successful campaign in California. "It is hard to stand up for the MCRI on this campus," Fantuzzi said. "But there are a lot of people who will vote for this - we just need to make sure they vote." MCRI OPPONENTS an angioplasty to reduce or completely University." For over a year, Students Support- ing Affirmative Action and the College Democrats have been plotting to defeat MCRI, which will appear as Proposal 2 on November's ballot. College Demo- crats chair Jamie Ruth said his organi- zation will work closely with Students Supporting Affirmative Action as well as the Michigan Democratic Party. The College Democrats have already planned an anti-MCRI rally for late October featuring Debbie Dingell, a" candidate for Wayne State's Board of Trustees and an outspoken advocate of affirmative action. Rachel Tanner, a member of Students Supporting Affirmative Action, said the group will do everything it can to educate voters about the issue. AARON I Their efforts will include setting up The inside of the new Gerald Ford School of Public Policy's Joan and Sanfc See MCRI, page 7A State and Church streets. t Alt &