~Ii4l6diigan 0aitj Ann Arbor, Michigan FINDING A NEW ATHIETIC DIRETR 'U' releases details about AD search Tuesday, November 24,2009 michigandaily.com Beilein, Sullivan on committee charged with finding Bill Martin's replacement By KYLE SWANSON Daily News Editor Though speculation has swirled rampantly about who will suc- ceed Bill Martin as athlecic direc- tor since Martin announced his intention to retire next year, little has been known about how his successor would be chosen - until yesterday. Information about how Mar- tin's successor will be selected was posted on the Vice President for Communication's website yester- day morning. The posting answers key questions about how the pro- cess will work and who will be involved in the search. In an interview last month, Uni- versity President Mary Sue Cole- man emphasized that she will seek advice from a small advisory com- mittee, but that the final decision would be hers and hers alone. Though at the time, Coleman said she did not have a committee assembled, the names of individ- ual committee members who will aid Coleman in the process were released yesterday. Provost Teresa Sullivan, Tim Slottow, executive vice president * and chief financial officer, and men's basketball Head Coach John Beilein will serve on the commit- tee to advise Coleman. Addition- ally, Education Prof. Percy Bates, the faculty athletic representa- tive, and Liz Barry, the managing director of the Life Sciences Insti- tute and a former University asso- ciate vice president and deputy general counsel, will serve on the committee. According to the information posted online, committee mem- bers were chosen because of "their knowledge of particular aspects of the athletic director role" and because of Coleman's "respect for their judgment." To coordinate the search and manage the application process, the University has contracted with an outside firm. The firm, Spencer Stuart, is one of the world's;leading executive search firms. According to information released yesterday, Spencer Stu- art has assigned Jed Hughes, an alum of the University, to lead the firm's efforts in the search pro- cess. Hughes is a senior partner-at the firm and is responsible for the company's sports-related searches. Hughes spent 20 years coaching intercollegiate and professional football and has worked under five Hall of Fame coaches, including Bo Schembechler. Yesterday's posting largely avoided defining when the search will be completed, citing only that the search will cease once a candi- date has been selected. "The search will remain open See SEARCH, Page 7 Democratic Gov. Jenriifer Granholm spoke yesterday at Eastern Michigan University about the future of the Michigan Promise Scholarship as part of her statewide tour of college campuses. Granholm has been lobbying for the return of the Promise Scholarship since it was cut from the state's budget last month. Granhoim pushes for Promise Governor seeks student support during EMU event By JOSEPH LICHTERMAN Daily StaffReporter YPSILANTI - Democratic Goy. Jennifer Granholm' spoke at Eastern Michigan University yesterday morning as part of her statewide tour of college cam- puses in an effort to restore the Michigan Promise Scholarship. The Promise Scholarship - which awarded students $500 to $4,000 based on performance on a merit exam - was elimi- nated from the state's budget last month. Since she signed the final budget bills that effectively cut the scholarship, Granholm has begun lobbying for the program's return, an effort that includes her current tour. To a standing-room-only crowd at the EMU Student Center, Gra- nholm vehemently emphasized the necessity of maintaining high- er education funding in the state. She said that inorder to transform the state's dire economy, workers must be better educated. "If we double the number of skilled adults who've got training and vocational certification, then we'll be the most educated state in the nation," Granholm said. "If we're the most educated state in the nation, we will have the most robust economy in the nation." Granholm urged state repre- sentatives to approve changes to the Earned Income Tax Credit that would provide the revenue necessary to revive the Prom- ise Scholarship. These changes would free up $120 million to be used at the state's discretion. Gra- nholm's pitch is that these dollars should go directly to funding the scholarship. The state legislature is cur- rently in a two-week recess for the fall deer hunting season and the Thanksgiving holiday. Students from Eastern Michi- gan University and the University of Michigan also spoke before the crowd at the event, explaining how the cut of the Promise Schol- arship, is making it difficult for them to pay for college. LSA junior Nathaniel Root said he is going to have to take classes this summer to stay on track for graduation because he needed to take fewer classes and work more hours this semester to pay for his tuition, books and rent. "I have to work almost 20 hours a week now as a full-time student," Root said, "which has led me to drop a class, which is leaving me academically behind in order for me to be on the pre- medical track." See GRANHOLM, Page 7 CAMPUS CRIME AAPD probing incident at Chi Psi Forrest: Time to rethink Fraternity president would not confirm details of incident By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily NewsEditor Police are investigating an inci- dent that occurred at Chi Psi fra- ternity early Sunday morning, Chi Psi president Michael Taub said in an interview yesterday. Detective Dave Monroe of the Ann Arbor Police Department told The Michigan Daily Sunday night that police responded to a report of alleged sexual assault at a party on the 600 block of S. State Street early Sunday morning. Chi Psi is located at 620 S. State Street, but Taub wouldn't confirm that the incident under investiga- tion is a sexual assault. "There's not much that I can say," he said. "The police have investigated an incident that was here." Taub didn't have any informa- tion that might identify the sus- pect, but added that the suspect is not a member of the fraternity. "The person that this affects is a person who is not affiliated at all See CHI PSI, Page 7 campus transportation Monorail among transportation options discussed at SACUA meeting By STEPHANIE STEINBERG DailyStaff'Reporter Imagine travelingfrom Central Campus to North Campus with- out stepping on a bus or waiting in traffic. While this currently sounds like a far-off dream, it could soon become a reality. Stephen Forrest, the Uni- versity's vice president for research, spoke to the Senate Advisory Committee on Uni- versity Affairs yesterday about transportation plans to move faculty and students to the North Campus Research Com- plex and other areas on North Campus in new, more innova- tive ways. "If you had a clean piece of paper, what would you do?" he* asked the faculty's leading gov- erning body. "I'm pretty sure you wouldn't come up with the situa- tion that we have today." Forrest said the opening of the NCRC has forced the admin- istration to look at new ways to revamp transportation between Central and North Campuses. "It has made those problems real and urgent," he said. The NCRC is scheduled to become fully operational for research purposes this spring. See SACUA, Page 7 PLAYING UP A CAUSE Event focuses on state's changing economy Health care, auto industry execs. lead discussion last night By TORREY ARMSTRONG Daily StaffReporter Corporate perspectives held sway in a discussion of health insurance reform and the auto- motive industry at Phi Chi Theta's fifth annual economic sympo- sium, "Our Economy Now," last evening in the University of Museum of Art in front of nearly 225 people. Adriana Karaboutis, global manufacturingandlaborrelations information officer at General Motors Corp., and Jim Slubowski, chief investment officer and vice presidentofenterprise operations for Priority Health - a Michigan health insurance company - discussed how their respective corporations have handled the nation's economic crisis and how the corporations plan to weather the imminent changes within their industries. Karaboutis, who opened the symposium, attributed GM's downturn to a combination of corporate hubris and uncontrol- lable factors like sudden changes in consumer behavior. "For one thing, we thought we were invincible. But for another, the industryjust tanked on us," she said, adding that over-confidence gave way to caution as the com- pany decided to accept the federal government's bailout offer. Karaboutis praised some of Ford Motor Company's tactics for See SYMPOSIUM, Page 7 AARON l U EUhSBUGRD LSA freshman Katie Uckele holds a sign as part of a student protest yesterday to encourage President Barack Obama to turn his attention to climate legislation. WEATHER HI: 48 TOMORROW Lo 38 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILYCOM . Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail Pres. Obama gives away educational video games. news@michigandaily.com and letus know. 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