# G N M ds When do you have an obligation to hang with your high school friends and when is it time to let them go? PAGE 4A 0awe3Yf" be £idl~cigan 4,Bailg Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, February 4, 2010 michigandaily.com N AAt INVE TIGATION In informal meeting, regents talk NCAA probe MARISA MCCAIN[Dily More photos from Lansing Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm delivers her last State of the State address last night in the state Capitol Building in Lansing. M at f., Lansing In the speech, Granholm called forthe restoration of the Michigan Promise Scholarship. at SGranhoim says she plans to restore Pro-mise Scholarship Source says private meeting took place in Pres. Coleman's conference room By KYLE SWANSON Daily News Editor The University's Board of Regents held an informal meeting early yesterday morning to receive an update on the NCAA's investi- gation into the Michigan football program, a source familiar with the situation told The Michigan Daily. The meeting convened at 8 a.m. yesterday morning in the confer- ence room in Univer- First reported on sity Presi- Midhigdti)ailyconl dent Maryx Sue Coleman's office and lasted 90 minutes, the source said. The NCAA investigation, which has been officially underway since October, is focused on allegations that Michigan's football team vio- lated NCAA regulations on the number of hours student-athletes are allowed to spend practicing and in off-season workouts. As he left the meeting, Regent Andrew Richner (R-Grosse Pointe Park) told the Detroit Free Press to direct all questions to the Uni- versity's general counsel, Suellyn Scarnecchia. Calls to other regents yesterday went unreturned or were met with no comment. A spokesman for Coleman told the Daily that Cole- man would not comment on the meeting or the investigation. University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald confirmed that the meeting had taken place, saying notice of the regents meeting was posted at the Fleming Administra- tion Building yesterday. However, Fitzgerald said because it was an "informal meeting" and not a "spe- cial meeting" the topic of the meet- ing was not posted. An informal meeting would mean that the regents were sim- ply briefed about something with possible discussion, but that no See REGENTS, Page 7A In State of the State, gov. announces scholarship will be in budget proposal By TORREY ARMSTRONG Daily StaffReporter LANSING - In her eighth and final State of the State address last night, Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm announced her bud- get for the 2011 fiscal year would restore the Promise Scholarship and guard against further cuts to education. However, Granholm did not reveal specific plans for funding the scholarship's restoration. The scholarship was elimi- nated last November, when Gra- nholm signed the final bills of the 2010 state budget. Granholm's 2011 budget plan will be officially released next week when she sub- mits it to the legislature for con- sideration. "The choices we face in thebud- get are tough, but is there a single family in Michigan that would choose to make ends meet in hard times by first sacrificing the needs of the children?" she said. The restoration of the Promise Scholarship is especially signifi- cant in light of rising tuition rates in the state and the possibility of decreasing state appropriations for higher education. In her State of the State last year, Granholm called for a tuition freeze at all public universities in the state. But as the University experi- enced further financial strain, the regents voted 6-2 to raise tuition by 5.6 percent last June. Since then, budget shortages have fueled speculation and even See GRANHOLM, Page 7A MICHIGAN FOOTBA L L With Dorsey signing, Blue gets major talent, concerns SOUNDBOARD SUPREMACY Rodriguez shoots down criticisms over defensive back's criminal history By RYAN KARTJE Managing Sports Editor With the majority of the Mich- igan football team's 27-player recruiting class already in place by yesterday's National Sign- NOTEBOOK ing Day, Rich Rodriguez's third signing day as the Wolverines' coach proved to be less suspenseful than his last two. Rodriguez even admitted that thecoachingstaffwasonlyunsure about the commitment of a few players when the day began. Michigan's final signee, Florida defensive back recruit Demar Dorsey, could be the jewel of Rodriguez's recruiting class. The Fort Lauderdale, Fla. native is ranked as the No. 2 safety and No. 12 overall player in the country by ESPN. As a four-star defensiveback on Rivals.com and Scout.com, Dors- ey's talent isn't being called into question. But past legal troubles put Rodriguez on the defensive at his press conference announcing the signees yesteiday. A Demar Dorsey listed on the website of the Broward County 17th Judicial Circuit Court of Florida, who's birthday matches up with the Michigan recruit, is cited on two felony charges: bur- glary of an unoccupied dwelling in 2007 and robbery with a dead- ly weapon in 2008. Dorsey was never convicted of either crime, and both summaries list the cases as closed. Though Dorsey was never con- victed, the announcement that he was signed highlighted previous concerns about Rodriguez's vet- tingduringthe recruiting process. Last August, backup quarterback Justin Feagin, who had a check- ered'legal past before joining the team, was dismissed from the team on cocaine charges. "There's nobody on this foot- ball team that we're signing that has a felony conviction and there's See SIGNING DAY, Page 7A MICHIGAN STUoENT ASMoLY S4PG works to revamp MSA code iuOREHAN SHARMAN/Daly Dave Greenspan, audio resources coordinator at the Digital Media Commons located in the Duderstadt Center, discusses the API Vision. The soundboard is available to all University students through a series of training programs. Greenspan says that at the moment, DMC owns two of the 14 API Vision soundboards in existence. UPenn prof. talks diversity in higher education at event Perna: Increasing lenges facing higher education in "Increasing post-secondary America. educational attainment is impor- access to college SpeakingintheRackhamassem- tant given the changing economy bly hall, Perna said her research is and global competitiveness," Perna important for state's focused on understanding the way said. .n.woicopun-1.1o.,, ie Ao--1sa ! ~ric 5g A- 47--- +1u - sue rrge- Student group with ties to MSA needs 1,000 signatures to get plan on ballot BY ELYANA TWIGGS Daily Staff Reporter A campus group with ties to the Michigan Student Assembly is looking to make big changes to the MSA Student Compiled Code. The process - which includes redrafting the entire document and seeking support for the final version - began this month. Last fall, MSA representatives wanted to revise the code through a constitutional convention, but Rackham representative Kate Stenvig raised concerns about the revision, calling the action uncon- stitutional. Because the document could not be restructured inter- nally, LSA senior and MSA vice president Michael Rorro started Students for Progressive Gover- nance as a grassroots organiza- tion to develop a draft. The group is currently mak- ing its second attempt to revamp the document - 26 years after the last full-scale revision. Rorro, chair of S4PG, said the group will have the final document ready by Monday. The proposed constitution calls for a restructured assembly con- sisting of a new legislative branch along with the central executive branch already in place. Changes made to the cen- tral executive branch will be designed to increase its See CODE, Page 7A changing economy By VANESSA NUNEZ Daily StaffReporter In front of a group of about 50 students, faculty and staff, Laura Perna, an associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania, gave a talk yesterday on the chal- in which public policies and social norms affect higher education opportunities for women, minor- ity groups and individuals of low socioeconomic status. Highlighting Michigan's need to increase educational perfor- mance in areas like Detroit, Perna said universities play an important role in improvement efforts and promoting higher education. Crting a study fram the George- town University Center on Educa- tion and the Workforce, Perna said an estimated 30 million jobs will require secondary education by 2018. "Unless we increase our current levels of production, the demand for college educated workers will exceed the supply," Perna said. 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