The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, January 26, 2010 - 7 Interim GM CEO Whitacre named as permanent CEO Suspect in South University fire will plead not guilty at May trial Whitacre says more needs to be done in sales and marketing DETROIT (AP) - Ed Whitacre Jr. says the main reason he's taking over as permanent CEO of General Motors Co. is to bring stability to the top of the troubled automaker. Whitacre, whose appointment was announced Monday, said although he's satisfied with the leadership team he's put in place, there's still work to do in sales and marketing, product development, purchasing and quality. Manage- ment experts say that means fur- ther changes and possibly more firings. GM's board asked Whitacre to stay on as CEO after seven weeks of searching for a successor from the outside. Whitacre, a former CEO of AT&T Inc., doesn't expect any more big shake-ups, but said ADMISSIONS From Page 1 Hanlon said he believes there will be a record number of appli- cants to the University this year. "The larger number of appli- cations is just a trend we've seen every year," he said. "Every year we've been getting more applica- tions. What we certainly hope is that it's because people are recog- nizing we're an excellent univer- sity." Despitethe increase inthe num- ber of new students who enrolled at the University last fall and the increasing number of underrepre- sented minority students admit- ted to the University, the number of underrepresented minority students enrolling decreased 11.4 percent last year from the previ- ous year. Sullivan said she is well aware of the gap between white and under- represented minority students. She said last year she appointed Lester Monts, senior vice provost for academic affairs, and Debo- rah Lowenberg Ball, dean of the School of Education, to lead a task SENATE ASSEMBLY From Page 1 less said. "We haven't had a statement like that before at the University HAITI From Page 1 not through your own choice but through other people and realize that the right answer is yes." Bonner said though it was a hard decision to make, her fam- ily and friends support her going to Haiti. "I think my friends that know me well have a slight rolling of their eyes thinking 'oh gosh here she goes again' but they're overall really supportive," she said. . Canter and Bonner have been studying developing countries and their relative dependence on foreign aid and what that means for their quest for independence. Canter said that while this aca- demic background will be helpful for Bonner, it is her field experi- ence that will matter the most when she gets to Haiti. "I think her past experience in Sudan will be most helpful work- ing in developing countries," he said. "You can read about it but until you've been there and expe- rience the multiple frustrations you don't know." Bonner agreed, saying what she witnessed in Sudan will help her to aid the victims in Haiti. According to The Associated Press up to 1 million people are in need of shelter as a result of the Jan. 12 quake. In addition the country is in dire need of food and other supplies. "Usually what happens when aid organizations go in it's so cha- otic and things are set up very 0 quickly," she said. "Beingin Sudan so many years after the program was already off and running I had so many complaints and frustra- tions. Because I understand the frustration I can kind of think forward if this program is going to work two to five years from now and how to make it success- ful." Bonner said she feels viewing the devastation in Haiti will be "really -difficult to handle" but that through her past experience he plans to rearrange middle management, which totals about 23,000 people, mainly in the U.S. Whitacre wouldn't name other candidates the board considered for CEO, but said he intends to stay two or three years, or "long enough to get it done." Details of his pay package will be released shortly. He now makes $350,000 a year as board chairman. "The board looked at the poten- tial candidates and decided that this place needs stability," Whi- tacre, 68, said at a Monday news conference. "We don't need any more uncertainty." Had GM hired a new CEO, it would have been the automaker's fourth leader in the past year. The U.S. government, which owns 60.8 percent of the company follow- ing its Chapter 11 reorganization, ousted Rick Wagoner in March, then Whitacre replaced the next CEO, Fritz Henderson, on an interim basis in December. force to investigate the reasons for this discrepancy. "We wanted to know if this is principally a lack of financial resources," Sullivan said. "Is it a result of minority students decid- ing we've got the wrong kind of program and they want to transfer somewhere else? We didn't really have a very good understanding of what the origin of this gap was." Sullivan continued by saying the University can help address this gap by marketing itself more as a viable option to underrepre- sented minority students in high school and middle school. "We also think that some of these students may get steered away from U of M by counselors or others who aren't aware of our policies," she said. "It's not just a matter of doing a better educa- tion job, but a matter of where the education job needs to be headed. Is it at the student applicant? Is it at the parents of the student? Is it at the high school counselor who told them where to apply to start with? We're thinking about all three of those levels in terms of doing a better job of getting the word out." of Michigan," he added. "(The University of) Minnesota had one, but it was very weak, very different than this one." - Sara Boboltz contributed tothis report. she has learned the proper men- tality to tackle the situation. "I will never be able to recon- cile why some of us live with the advantages we have in developed countries while others don't," she said "If you start thinking 'this isn't fair' you get stuck in a bad place. Thankfully I have the cop- ing mechanism that allows me to get on and do what I need to do without breaking down." "It's going to be really sad and upsetting," she added. "But I can't not do anything because of that." Canter said he feels that Bon- ner will most likely end up staying longer than her intended two to three months, adding that she'll probably be there through the summer. "When she gets down there, the need will be tremendous and I feel it'll be longer term than everyone expects because the sheer devastation is just humon- gous," he said. "There's a lot of work to be done." Bonner said she doesn't know whether or not this will be the case but she is open to the pos- sibility if there is still a need for her once it comes time for her to leave. While in Haiti, Bonner said she will most likely be living in a three-person tent while prob- ably focusing on water, sanita- tion, shelter and hygiene issues as well as her personal goal of rais- ing awareness to the rest of the world. "When I went to Sudan most of my friends could barely point out Sudan on a map and by the time I was leaving they were all reading news articles and learning about Sudan," she said. Bonner said she hopes that her experience in Haiti will help to make her an advocate for the country. "In six months people aren't really going to care," she said. "Me being there and then coming back will hopefully raise aware- ness to people and help them real- ize that there will still be a lot of work to do." Ian Mackenzie, 18, is charged with setting fire to former Pinball Pete's location By DEVON THORSBY Daily StaffReporter Ian Mackenzie, one of the defen- dants charged with setting fire to the formerlocation of Pinball Pete's in October, will plead not guilty in a trial set for May 10 before Judge Melinda Morris. The date was set in a brief pre- trial conference yesterday, after Mackenzie's attorney and the pros- ecuting attorney approached the bench to speak off the record with Morris. Mackenzie, 18, turned himself in to Ann Arbor Police shortly after the Oct. 24 fire occurred, which charred the South University building and caused minor dam- ages to the neighboring University Towers apartment complex and HANLON From Page 1 think it's going to be important to have someone who has either bud- getary experience or the ability to pick that up pretty quickly," Sulli- van said at the time. "But, I think it's important that you have some- body in this job who has a strong academic background and under- stands the aspirations of faculty." A veteran of the University com- munity with extensive experience in the provost's office, Hanlon fits the ticket. In addition to these characteristics, Sullivan told the Daily her successor would need to be forward thinking and open- minded. "They need to be broad minded enough and interested enough so that they can have conversations with people from many fields, because in one day the provost interacts with people from all over the campus and it's important to be able to have important conversa- tions with them no matter where they come from," Sullivan said at the time. "That does take a kind of breadth of intellectual vision that not everyone finds congenial:" "I think there's also something that we think of as the administra- tive personality," she said. "It's the Momo Tea. Mackenzie andhis co-defendant, Justin Arens, were both homeless at the time of the incident, and had previously stayed overnight in the vacant building. They had acquired other sleeping arrangements prior to the time of the fire. The reason behind setting the fire remains unknown. Mackenzie is charged with three counts of arson of real property at the cost of over $20,000, a reduced charge from the original count of arson of personal property. The charge was changed at Mackenzie's preliminary exami- nation at Prosecutor Karen Field's request. Field argued that the charge of arson of real property was more fitting because the build- ing was abandoned at the time of the fire. Mackenzie faces up to 10 years in prison if he is found guilty at his trial in May. Mackenzie's pretrial was initial- ly scheduled for Jan. 4, but Morris allowed an adjournment until this afternoon. Mackenzie remains in ability to listen carefully and com- mute your own self interests in a conversation." University officials were not commenting on the anticipated announcement last night, but several executives and regents outlined qualifications they said would be essential for the next pro- vost when Sullivan was announced as the University of Virginia's next president two weeks ago. Dean of Libraries Paul Courant, who served as the University's Pro- vost from 2002 to 2005 told the Daily at the time that the ability to balance academic and budgetary pressures would be paramount. "The provost is the chief aca- demic officer and the chief budget officer at the institution," Cou- rant said at the time. "The budget times are going to be tough over the next while and the provost has to be able to ensure that the academic missions of the Univer- sity - learning, teaching, research - are always in the foreground as choices are made, especially in tough times." Prof. James Duderstadt, who rose through the University's internal ranks to become provost and from 1988 to 1996 University president, highlighted several sim- ilar characteristics for Sullivan's replacement. However, he said Ian MacKenzie at his preliminary examination on Dec.16, 2009. custody, despite the announcement that he planned to submit a written request to post bond on Jan. 4. Arens, 21, plead no contest to the three charges of arson at his pretri- the deciding factor of whether a replacement would be successful would come down to his or her relationship with Coleman. "In the end, I think it's very much a relationship between the provost and president which makes. universities work well," he said at the time. Duderstadt and Courant both said at the time that it was too early to tell whether the next provost would be selected from within the University or not. However, they said national searches are typically conducted for such a prominent position. "Wehavesomeverycapabledeans right now and that's the first pool you look at," Duderstadt said at the time. "There's a lot of talent inside, but there's a lot of talent as you look across the country right now." "It's often the case that provosts come from inside because it's use- ful to know how the University works. I think that's why it's been done that way in the past," Courant said at the time. "Yet, Terry was an extremely effective and successful provost here, so it's clear that one can come from outside and do very, very well in the job." Though Hanlon won't assume his new role for five months, his new position will place him into a job known for developing univer- al on Jan. 11. He awaits sentencing on Feb. 22. - Eugene Chung contributed to this report. sity presidents. In addition to Sullivan, who will leave for the University of Vir- ginia's presidency this summer, University of Michigan provosts often go on to serve as presidents of major institutions. Charles M. Vest, who served as provost at the University in the late 1980s is the National Academy of Engineering's president and is president emeritus for the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology. J. Bernard Machen, who served as the University's provost from 1995 to 1997 currently serves as the University of Florida's president and is president emeritus at the University of Utah. Nancy Cantor, who became the University's provost in 1997, cur- rently serves as president of Syra- cuse University. Though now University presi- dent emeritus, James Duderstadt followed a similar pattern. "The provost position at Mich- igan has produces some of the great presidents in this country. That's what people look to it for," Duderstadt told the Daily when Sullivan was named UVA's next president. "That's what Michigan presidents look for. We look for provosts who have the capability to provide that kind of leadership at the national level." hthe wire FOLLOW OUR NEWS BLOG michigandaily.com/blogs/the wire FIND YOUR NEXT HOUSE OR THESIS EDITING- LANGUAGE, APARTMENT organization, format. 25 yrs. U-M exp. 996-0566 or writeon@iserv.net at michigandaily.com/classifieds SUMMER EMPLOYMENT WORK ON MACKINAC Island, this summer - Make lifelong friends. 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