The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Profs want more input on athletics Tuesday, October 2, 2007 - 7 TAKING NAMES ATHLETICS From page 1 report was writtenbecause athletic departments need to be more con- nected with their respective aca- demic institutions. "There are always decisions in any unit of a university that will need to be made by the leaders without our knowledge," she said. "Butwith an operationasbig as ath- letics that controls so much of our public image, our financial health, our giving, it would certainly be healthy to have more transparency and honesty." One of the main reforms in the SACUA report recommended the University athletic department budget be integrated into the Uni- versity general budget where pos- sible. University bylaws stipulate "separate accounting and financial statements will be made for depart- ment funds." At a SACUA meeting yesterday, Athletic Director Bill Martin said the University Athletic Depart- ment budget is reviewed annually by the University's chief financial officer, the University Board of Regents and President Mary Sue Coleman. "Our whole budgeting process is totally integrated with the Univer- sity," Martin said. x The four recommendations in the report - titled "Framing the Future: Reforming Intercollegiate Athletics" - focus on academic integrity in athletic departments, the student-athlete experience on campus, campus governing of ath- letics and fiscal responsibility in athletic departments. The faculty-endorsed report says "no academic programs should be designed specifically for student- athletes" or created for the pur- pose of allowing student-athletes to maintain their eligibility. The Athletic Department's aca- demic integrity was in the spotlight this summer when former Uni- versity football player and Stan- ford football coach Jim Harbaugh accused University advisors of steering student-athletes into what he said were less rigorous programs like the College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts's general studies degree. SACUA members also questioned athletics administrators at yester- day's meeting about what they said was a disproportionate amount of student-athletes in the Bachelor of General Studies program compared to regular students. "If the BGS program is so flex- ible and appealing, why are there so many football players in the BGS program compared to the general student body?" asked Law Prof. Richard Friedman. Shari Acho, an associate athletic director, said the General Studies program affords student-athletes flexibility in their course selection. "The General Studies degree lets students sample different classes and lets students find something that they're interested in," she said. The recommendations also call for the merger of academic student- athlete advising with existing aca- demic advising structures. In an interview yesterday, Sue Shand, an associate athletic direc- tor, said athletic academic advising is critical because it offers students extra help in scheduling classes around sports schedules - some- thing that the University's other advising offices don't do. "We're focused on making sure that student-athletes don't miss classes and that they graduate and get their degree," Shand said. The third section of the pro- posal recommends that the chair of the University's Advisory Board on Intercollegiate Athletics - a governing body comprised of fac- ulty members, students, alumni and staff - be a "senior (tenured) faculty member," not the athletic director. University regent bylaws make the athletic director - a job cur- rently held by Bill Martin, who is not a faculty member - the chair of the board. DOCUMENTARY From page 1 Stewart said he hopes to generate discussion on the effects the ballot initiatives have on college campuses and the country in general. "The premise is togeteverything out on the table because we have an issue with (Proposal 2) on both sides, and on both sides we have a mission to educate," Stewart said. Stewart declined to give his per- sonal stance on affirmative action, saying that he wants to let the doc- umentary speak for itself. The film, titled "Separate but Equal," will feature interviews with high school and college stu- BUDGET From page 1 The institutions should get pay- ments this month that were delayed from the last fiscal year, according to Greg Bird, a spokesman for Dem- ocratic House Speaker Andy Dillon. The Legislature still has to act on the budget plan, and it's likely uni- versities will argue they should get some sort of funding increase. "I will be very disappointed if there's not some type of an increase for higher education," said Mike Boulus of the Presidents Coun- David Potter, SACUA's vice chair, said replacing Martin with a facul- ty member as chair of the advisory board would be one of the most vis- ible changes that could come from the recommendations. The SACUA proposal also rec- ommends that the overall growth rate in the Athletic Department's operating costs be no greater than that of the University's operating costs. The University's general bud- get grew 1.9 percent between the 2006-2007 fiscal year and the 2007-2008 fiscal year. The Athletic Department's budget, meanwhile, increased 17.6 percent during that same period. The University Athletic Depart- ment funds its operating budget entirely from its own revenues. Shepherd said the COIA report - and pressure from groups like SACUA at universities around the country - will hopefully hold ath- letic departments more fiscally accountable. "It's difficult to justify the con- tinued upward, seemingly out of control spending on athletic sup- port services," Shepherd said. "Many places have locker rooms and training facilities for our ath- letes found nowhere else in the world, with state of the art technol- ogy. Is this kind of spending neces- sary?" dents, lawyers, college administra- tors and activists on the subjects of education and admissions reform. Stewart spent much of this sum- mer shooting in Los Angeles. He said people there were enthusias- tic to be interviewed because there has been a "dramatic and huge" effect on California after Proposi- tion 209. "The phone rang off the hook," Stewart said. Stewart said he hopes to screen the documentary at the Detroit Film Theatre at the Detroit Insti- tute of Arts sometime in January, but a date has not been set. Larry Baranski, the associate curator for the DIA's Department of Film and Theatre, has yet to cil, an organization representing Michigan's public universities. "We haven't seen an increase in years." Cynthia Wilbanks, the Univer- sity of Michigan's vice president for government relations, said she doesn't anticipate any changes that will affect tuition. "I think it's pretty close to what we assumed," she said. "Of course, everything is open to change these days." She said she doesn't the 2.5 per- cent increase in higher education appropriations will pass, but she is hoping for at least a slight change. "I'm optimistic that there might 'SHAY SPANIOLA/Dail} Stadents participate ain nes and Walls n the Michigan Usnion last night. At the event, which was designed In raise awareness at camoas assampttans abaut groups and identities, students played the role of an immigrant forced to take an American name. Daily names rpublic editor. DAILY From page 1 the paper published and make sure that it stood up to ethical standards," Okrent said. His appointment came after the discovery that reporter Jay- son Blair fabricated all or parts of dozens of stories. A committee createdin response to the scandal recommended the appointment of a public editor to investigate allegations of wrongdoing or unfairness by the paper. The Daily has also dealt with scandal and controversy. Since 2004, the Daily has fired three staff members for plagiarism. In 2003, some stu- dent groups boycotted the Daily, accusing the paper of racial bias in its reporting. "Racism is difficult for a lot of papers to handle," said Johnson, who covered race relations for The Bergen Record. "Part of my role is to help the staff become more sensitive to the needs of the community." Okrent said a public editor is a good addition to the Daily in part because it will increase the amount of contact between the paper and the people it covers. He said that having a public edi- tor helped to heighten conscious- ness among the Times' staff about issues important to its readers. He joked about how a public edi- tor would have improved his ten- ure at the Daily. "It's good for reporters, editors and readers," Okrent said. "I wish there had been one when I was around so I didn't make so many mistakes as a lousy reporter." Some public editors have been met with resistance by the staffs they're charged with monitoring. EARN CASH FOR COPYING AND PASTING. Join the Daily's online uploading staff. E-mail cesere@michigan- daily.com "Getting people used to the idea that someone will be looking over their work and being critical might be a challenge," Johnson said. But Stampfl said it is important that the public editor do just that. "My hope is that it will serve as yet another check, as a deter- rent," he said. "So in the event that anyone might be thinking about doing something unethical it would make'him or her unlikely to." . Kimberly Chou, an associate Daily arts editor, said she sup- ports the move. "There are a lot of people who have issues or problems with the Daily," Chou said. "I think it'd be good to have a link between the people that make the paper and the people we make it for." The Michigan Daily is not the first university newspaper to appoint a public editor. In March 2007, The Harvard Crimson appointed second-year Harvard law student Michael Kolber to the post. "I thought it'd be an inter- esting experiment," said Kris- tina Moore, the president of The Harvard Crimson. "There had been a lot of criticism about the Crimson not responding to read- er feedback." But Moore said she is having second thoughts about just how valuable the position of public editor has been to the Crimson and that the paper will likely reevaluate his role when it elects new editors next month. - Karl Stampfl, who usually edits stories that appear on these pages, did not edit this story because he is quoted in it. see the film, but said he believes a screening in the 1,100-seat theatre will allow for a large-scale discus- sion. "Particularly after showing something controversial, after the lights come back on the audience erupts in conversation," he said. Rachael Tanner, a University alum who campaigned against Proposal 2 as a leader of Students Supporting Affirmative Action, supports Stewart's goal. "If he is able to produce the type of film he hopes, his success in cre- ating a conversation around the topic of education, particularly dis- parities in education along racial and gender lines will depend upon his ability to reach a wide and var- be a modest increase," she said. Reduced state funding contrib- uted to average tuition increases of roughly 10 percent at Michigan's 15 public universities this fall. Local K-12 education may get a 1 percent funding increase, not enough to cover inflation or give relief from five years of stagnant or reduced funding. Both Democrats and Republicans say they would like to spend more on education, but the best they might be able to do is hold funding relatively steady. R Granholm originally had proposed at least twice that much. "We don't have the same state ied audience," Tanner said in an e- mail interview. The Michigan State University chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom, a right-wing group that vocally supported Proposal 2, declined to be interviewed by Stewart. Kyle Bristow, the group's chairman, said the group refused the interview after finding out that some people working on the film had worked against Proposal 2. Stewart said his film needs more commentary from people against affirmative action. Stewart said the only anti-affir- mative action rhetoric in his the film is video footage of Connerly debat- ing David .Strauss, the dean of stu- dents at Wayne State University. we used to have. Present revenues are not there," said Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop (R-Rochester). "You have to identify your priori- ties and be able to fund them as we can." The $440 million in cuts or the elimination of planned spending increases are being used along with the income tax increase and new sales tax on services to erase a $1.75 billion shortfall the state would have faced without the changes. -Emily Barton and The Associated Press contributed to this report. RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS Force of Ideas I6 2 Bedroom Apartment Homesz Ground Floor Ranch Style! High Velocity Coreerso C CB Private Entrance! Patio! Spacious Kitchen! learn. Learn about our unique business Air Conditioning! orooto 14'brsns aCndoe and challenging opportunities Facilities! durin the upcoming career lair on 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! Octo er 3rd. Pets Welcome! And much, much more! Call today to reserve your new address! app ly. 73 -97=-2828 Sales Associate Position Resumes Due: October 9th Equal Housing Opportunity m r ----------- I I I I I Check out the Fall Realty section on Nov.Is I I i because it's NEVER too early I to start looking for I I next fall's housing! 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