The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, September 26, 2007 - 7A INPUT From page 1A Sullivan said the sentence was "far too generic" and said she did not want to tie the administration to a policy that might not work in every instance. In response, SACUA Chair Charles Smith, a professor in the pharmacology department, asked Sullivan if she could come up with language that would work in every instance. She said she doubted it. Some SACUA members ques- tioned whether Coleman even under- stood the sentence in question. "It is a simple idea," Smith said in an interview last week. "When the University was contemplating some sort of major expenditure, they would consult the faculty. But it was interpreted by the president to give us the position of giving approval, and that's not what the statement said at all." Instead, the SACUA board mem- bers said they simply wanted the FORUM From page 1A the winter to brainstorm ways to keep the University diverse. It met with other universities where affir- mative action is banned - like the universities of California, Texas and Georgia - to come up with rec- ommendations on how to maintain diversity while still staying within the new legal restrictions. Monts and Assistant Gen- eral Counsel Maya Kobersy both stressed that one of the main strat- egies the University is employing in order to continue to promote diver- sity is educational outreach to pub- lic high schools. Other ways the University is reaching out to would-be applicants include entering into partnerships with high schools and launching summer programs. PresidentColemanhas alsogiven commencement addresses at sev- eral high schools. Over Fall Break, the University is sending a group of students to interview and talk with students and administrators at universities without affirmative action programs so they can come back with ideas on how to shape the University's outreach programs. Gurin pointed out that promot- ing diversity at the University was administration to consult them about spending decisions regarding large amounts of money. "And my perception is that they do that pretty much," Smith said. By the end of the meeting, though, Sullivan agreed to work with Coleman to find language that would be acceptable to both the administration and the faculty. Smith says the faculty's request is simple. "We want to know when the University is planning some sort of major expenditure," he said. "The way that the University spends its money. affects the overall well- being of the University." University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said in a written statement that the faculty plays a key role in advising University administrators. "We have no examples of instanc- es when the faculty is not involved or consulted," she said. "Faculty serve on committees to advise the administrationthroughout alllevels of the University." about more than just achieving the right racial balance in Ann Arbor. "Our leaders must come from all sectors of society," she said. One of the biggest problems the University faces in trying to avoid a drop-off in minority enrollment is that it might be perceived by admit- ted students as hostile to minorities because of Proposal 2. "We need to figure out how to convert our admits into enrollees," Monts said. But Monts and other speakers were careful to point out that it's not yet clear what Proposal 2 meant for the number of minority stu- dents in this year's freshman class, because the University doesn'thave final enrollment numbers yet. "We think we did fairly well," Monts said. "But we'll have an accu- rate count in a few weeks." State Sen. Liz Brater (D-Ann Arbor) opened the forumby talking about another issue that has been at the forefront of the University's attention in the last few weeks: Michigan's budget crisis. Brater said the current budget negotiations were something she couldn't ignore, even at an event about Proposal 2's effects on the University of Michigan. "It's like having a death in the family," she said. "I can't ignore it." EMMA NOLAN -ABRAHAMIAN/Daily Christen McArdle, the executive director of the Ann Arbor Film Festival, says the testival wont be shut down. FILM From page 1A controversial for their supposed pornographic intent. Former state Rep. Leon Drolet (R-Clinton Twp.) singled out the films "Booby Girl" and "Chests" as "pornography so bad, no one will buy it." "Booby Girl" is a comical, ani- mated story about adolescent girls struggling to feel comfortable with their body. "Chests" explores mas- culinity and machismo and con- tains no sex. The state legislature placed restrictions on MCACA's funding in 1996 over concerns that the council would fund works showing sexual acts and desecration of the flag or religious objects. The Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a Michigan-based libertar- ian think tank, lobbied the state government last year to cancel funding for the festival altogether. Mike LaFaive, the center's direc- tor of fiscal policy, wrote an essay describing the festival as a "cess- pool of silliness." LaFaive said in aphone interview DONATIONS From page1A above and 14 gifts of $10 million to $25 million. Every one of the top 10 single gifts to the University was given in the last 10 years. May said news of a major dona- tion - whether to the Univer- sity of Michigan or other schools nationwide - encourages alumni to give. yesterday that the public should bear the responsibility for funding the film festival if it believes the event has value. "The question of whether or not it's anassetis different fromwheth- er or not it should be state-funded," LaFaive said. Festival planners have $190,000 of the $350,000 they hope to even- tually raise, McArdle said. The group has started a fundrais- ing drive aimed atraising$75,000by the end of the year. Called "endan- gered," it compares the film festival to endangered species like the giant panda and the mountain gorilla. McArdle said she's trying to receive grants from alternative sources, including the American Film Institute and the Sundance Institute, the sponsor of the Sun- dance Film Festival. "The festival is living hand-to- mouth," she said. "We're raising our paychecks one week at a time, pulling out all the stops in looking for grants." "There are legislators who obvi- ously don't see the value in what we do," McArdle said. "Getting shut down is not an option." "When Steve Ross made his com- mitment of $100 million to name the Ross School of Business, all kinds of other wealthy alums had to say to themselves, 'If Steve Ross is going to give that kind of gift, then I need to stretch myself as well,' " May said. Since its inception, the Michigan Difference campaign has received more than $2.6 billion. Last year, the University brought in $425 million in gifts, gift pledges and bequest intentions. CARS From page 1A in social sciences, the main reason is its location near the headquarters of the three largest American auto- makers. Numerous studies suggest that if all the cars in the country switched from burning fossil fuels to running on electric power, more than 80 percent of the electricity demand from the vehicles could be met by making use of the idle generation capacity from power companies. This is one reason the Department of Energy is looking into producing these cars. DTE Energy spokesman John Austerberry said in an interview that it takes DTE 12,000 mega- watts of power to generate electric- ity on the hottest day of summer when demand is greatest but that the company usually produces much less energy on a daily basis. If DTE only needed to produce 7,000 megawatts on a 60 degree day in October, the idle generation capacity that could go to powering PHEVs could be as much as 5,000 megawatts. Austerberry said electricity demand drops at night - leaving plenty ofsurplus energy to recharge the batteries of electric cars. These claims are based on the assumption that there would be a very low initial demand for PHEVs, he said. Kolevar said he recognizes that there will be a lot of challenges in getting PHEVs on the road, but the benefits are apparent. Plug-in electric vehicles have the potential to drastically reduce carbon tailpipe emissions, but one concern of implementing this tech- nology is the potential demand for energy it would cause. If the majority of people were plugging PHEVs into the grid, the demand for power could rise so much that more coal and oil-dependent power plants would have to be built, offsetting the environmen- tal benefits. But the demand for energy is growing at a rapid rate in the United States, and more power plants willbe built regardless of whether PHEVs are factored into the equation. Austerberry said DTE is con- sidering building a second nuclear power plant and Consumer's Ener- gy will likely build another coal plant to meet the energy demands of the future. As more consumers want to see their power coming from renew- able sources, wind and solar energy is starting to become more appeal- ing to electric companies as well. Austerberry said it would be a combination of all these things that would allow DTE to meet the ener- gy demand. This is another reason why the "zero-impact" vehicles are looking more attractive. Kolevar said rising oil prices are driving the administration's inter- est in PHEVs. "When gas prices increase, the focus on alternative technologies will increase correspondingly," Kolevar said. The Michigan Memorial Phoenix EnergyInstitute will lead the study, which will be conducted over the next two years. The institute will also allocate portions of the grant to various University departments. Although the auto industry has been criticized for sabotaging the success of the electric car, Kolevar said the industry is willing to push this technology forward. The University's Energy Insti- tute and Transportation Institute will work with GM and Ford to explore technological obstacles to the optimal construction and per- formance of plug-in hybrid vehicles and how to make them affordable for the average consumer. The Institute forSocialResearch will help tackle a critical problem with getting this technology on the market by conducting surveys on the attitudes potential custom- ers have concerning PHEVs to see how a hybrid electric vehicle should be crafted so people will buy them. The Center for the Study of Com- plex systems will conduct research to develop economic models for the sales and distribution of these vehicles. Initial findings of the study will be presented at the Detroit Auto Show in January of 2008, and the final results of the study will be published in 2009. Phoenix Energy Institute spokes- woman Adrienne Losh said the results will detail the concept for the optimized PHEV, an analysis of varying consumer perspectives about PHEVs, multiple economic models for the PHEVs to succeed on the market. ,xyu i i i _ _ _ _ k, _ ._...._ ...._ i i . '; '' n e I ad , v k: "v . wi.a i What is a lawyer? A debater? A fighter? Or more than that? A creative problem solver. A principled advocate. A rigorous and versatile thinker. Explore the wide scope of the law in a school devoted to the big picture. CALIFORNIA WESTERN SCHOOL OF LAW { San Diego What law school ought to be'"