DISNEY DISASTER" Miley Cyrus made a movie. It's just as amateurish and pointless as her show. SEE ARTS, PAGE 5A SECOND NEVER FELT SO GOOD At this weekend's NCAAs, the Wolverines shocked the field and took home second place. U SEE SPORTSMONDAY, INSIDE my id i an Batl;. )NE H17 'UNDR SED r { 1N1.NETEEN 1 Tft t jy TYEARS OF ,(EDI, S T RIA 1.FREEDOM Ann Arbor Michigan Monday, April 20,2009 michigandailv.com --, -r . __, - ,..,, o ,wu ,1 ., DUNKIN' ON THE DIAG A SECOND TRANSITION For transfer students, a struggle on N. Campus SAID ALSALAH/Dsly LSA senior David Dennis tries to dunk Michigan hockey defenseman Tristin Llewellyn on the Diag on Friday. The dunk tank was part of a charity event sponsored by Sigma Chi that raised money to purchase school supplies for underprivileged children in the Dominican Republic. THE END OF AN INDUSTRY? After a newspap er collapse For tough transition, 76 percent of transfer students placed on North Campus ByVERONICA MENALDI Daily StaffReporter When LSA sophomore Lauren Mosena transferred to the Uni- versity of Michigan from Pitzer College in Claremont, Calif. in the fall, she had two major challenges ahead of her. ° Not only did she have to struggle through Michigan's harsh winters, but she also had to adjust to a com- pletely new university - with new professors, new classes and, hope- fully, new friends. But because she was placed on North Campus, Mosena said that those were more difficult tasks. "It has been extremely hard to meet people around me in North- wood," Mosena said. "Everyone who lives up here already has their life here at Michigan figured out and aren't necessarily looking for new friends - alot of them keep to themselves." And Mosena's experience is not an isolated one. According to figures obtainedby The Michigan Daily from Univer- sity Housing, 76 percent of trans- fer students for the fall 2008 term - 199 of the 262 students - were placed on North Campus in either Bursley Hall, Baits I and II or the Northwood Community Apart- ments.- And of -those students, 91 percent - or 181 - lived in North- wood. University Housing Spokesman Peter Logan said this trend is due to the fact that the kitchen and apartment-style living that North- wood offers is appealing to older students, and also that many trans- fer students request it. But Logan said the decision is ultimately dictated by space. Because the University is respon- sible for supplying housing for first-year and returning students, transfer students aren't always placed in ideal locations, he said. "Transfer students are placed where space is available in Uni- versity Housing facilities that they have requested or would be appro- priate to their age and university experience," Logan said. "We can't always give a transfer student a placement that they prefer, but we See TRANSFER, Page 3A p What becomes of a community when its local paper closes? By CHRIS HERRING Daily StaffReporter When it became known late last month that Ann Arbor's primary daily newspaper, The Ann Arbor News, would be closing its doors in July, the obvious question fol- lowed: Who's going to provide local news content for the area? And with dozens of papers hav- ing closed since the start of the year, it's a question that's being asked across the country. At best, the print newspaper industry is. in a state of flux. At worst, it's in a state of emergency. To reduce costs, the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News just scaled back home delivery to three days a week. In the last two months, two big-city dailies, the Rocky Mountain News in Denver and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, have closed and gone exclusively online. The San Francisco Chroni- cle and The Boston Globe have also recentlyreceived threatsofclosure from their parent companies. Understandably, the fate of major papers and their respective cities has been the primary topic of discussion when it comes to the future of the industry. But little has been said about how smaller cities like Ann Arbor - and even smaller towns -are being affected when they lose their main source of news. In many cases, industry experts and newspaper veterans say, small communities have much more to lose than major cities when their primary newspapers fold. With no apparent outlets to plug the news holes left behind, residents of small and mid-sized towns are more likely to be uninformed about the developments taking See NEWSPAPER, Page 7A UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION A look inside how the 'U' formulates its' annual budget. CAMPUS SOCIETIES Order of Angell releases list of 2010 members University officials discuss how they finalize the budget By KYLE SWANSON Daily StaffReporter The University's budget is mas- sive, to say the least. With totals of more than $5.2 billion in operating revenues and expenses at the Uni- versity's three campuses, including the University of Michigan Health System and the Athletic Depart- ment, it's easy to see why devel- oping the University's budget is almost a year-long process. Despite the budget's enormity and vast importance for life at the University, very little about its for- mulation is known to many mem- bers of the University community. Over the past two months, through several interviews, University President Mary Sue Coleman, Provost Teresa Sullivan and Phil Hanlon, vice provost for academic and budgetary affairs, have offered insight onto this rarely discussed process. The University's budget plan- ning begins in the fall of the previ- ous academic year. Upon direction from the office of the Provost, the dean of each of the University's schools and vice presidents of each executive office begin formulating budget recommendations for their respective units. In an interview last month, Cole- man said deans and vice presidents are directed each year to look for ways to cut costs. "We understand that we're going to have to take between land 2 percent out," she said. "We're just goingto have to cut." Coleman said the cuts proposed must impact the quality of edu - cation at the University as little as possible, so as not to harm the experience students receive on campus. In an interview last month, Sul- livan said in addition to the cuts, deans and vice presidents are asked to reallocate an additional 1, to 2 percent from low priorities to higher priorities - to put emphasis. on each unit's bigger goals. Once this has been done and the propos- als are completed, the budget rec-- ommendations are then reviewed in budget conferences with the provost. In that March interview, Sul- livan said this year's budget con-, ferences began in January and were expected to finish near the end of March. She explained that the budget conferences provide an opportunity for deans and vice presidents to present their budgets and justify the amount of money they're requesting. See BUDGET, Page 7A Group includes 22 leaders of campus organizations, teams By EMILY ORLEY Daily StaffReporter Most students are fairly famil- iar with the many clubs on campus that comprise "the leaders and the best" of the University. However there is one club made up of prom- inent leaders on campus that pre- fers to work in silence. Order of Angell, the senior honor society started by and named after former University president James Burrill Angell, announced its new- est class, "Pride of 2010," to The Michigan Daily on Saturday. Every year, a new group of prominent organization leaders, sports captains and influential Greek representatives are select- ed, or "tapped" by the outgoing class to join the club and continue its mission. "It is an organization to advance exceptional leadership through a lifelong loyalty to and engagement with the University of Michigan," See ORDER, Page 3A 2010 ORDER OF ANGELL CL Ashley Sauer: Women's Golf Christopher Brady: Men's Swimming and Diving Pascal Carole:National Societyof Black Engineers David-Jonathan Chan: Men's Gymnastics AndrewDalack:StudentsAlliedfor Freedom and Equality John Federspiel: Solar Car Team Alisa Goldman:lDance Marathon rSashaGribov:TAMID IsraelInvestmentGroup Julia Hawley: Solar Car Team AnujLal:IndianAmerican Student Association Mike Michelon: MUSKET Salimah Mohamed:Ypsilanti HealthlInitiative David Moosman: Football Meha Pandey: Society of Women Engineers AriParritm:Inter-Fraternity Council Scott Roffman: Men's Glee ub Fiona Ruddy: Human Rights Through Education Michael Sears: Wrestling Frank Shotwell:Men's Track and Field Katy Wallander: Blood DriveslUnited Jason Waller:Army ROTC LaurenWashington:NationalPan-Hellenic Council Honorary Member David Brandon: Chair man and CEO of Domino's Pizza SOURCE:Order of Angell CR IM E FORKING OVER YOUR MONEY Kappa Sigma vandalized by intoxicated student By TREVOR CALERO Daily StaffReporter Ann Arbor police officers responded to a call at a fraternity house early Friday morning after -a 20-year-old University student reportedly smashed multiple windows in the front of the house, an Ann Arbor Police Department official said. Sgt. Andrew Zazula said when' the officers arrived at the Kappa Sigma fraternity at 806 Hill St. at around 2 a.m. they found a front glass door shattered and broken windows on the front and side of the house. "The student said somebody from that residence was giving him a problem earlier," Zazula said. Kappa Sigma President Greg Carmody said he was in-his room with a couple of friends when he learned of the vandal's presence at the front of the house. "Someone comes in my room and says that someone is outside with a metal pipe," Carmody said. "I went downstairs and was try- ing to calm him down and at this point he started going off on me. He was just in a state of uncon- trollable rage." The man, who was apparently drunk, claimed that someone from the fraternity had been yell- ing at him from across the street, Carmody said. Carmody said after the man See CRIME, Page 7A SAID ALSALAH/Daily LSA freshman Sari Krumholz replaces a fork with a quarter on the Diagon Saturday as part of a programto raise money for Washtenaw County's 3,000 homeless. WEATHER HI:50 GOTANEWSTIP? NEWONMICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS...............................2A SUDOKU.............-.-...-.5A Call 734-763-2459 ore-mail Zoltan Mesko picked as a preseason All-American. Vol. CXIX, No.133 OPINION ............................4A CLASSI FIEDS h..A..................6A TOMORROW LU:37 news@michigandaily.comand letus know. THEGAME.BLOGS.MICHIGANDAILY.COM ©2009TheMichigan D ARTS................................5ASPORTSMONDAY..............1B wichigandailycow RS - - ASPESODY S ;S trt- dl' r; , . 4 w iS