The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Aft Monday, January 24, 2011 - 5A a The Michigan Daily - michigandailycomMonday, January 24,2011 - 5A w SMOKING From Page 1A smokers, who continue to cho to smoke, move to the edges campus space," Winfield sa "Sidewalks across the Diag, si walks across the Engineer campus, the Music campus, so on are all off limits." Smoking will only be allow in a University parking lot structure if the smoker lig up in a privately owned vehi according to the report. Thereportstatesthat there "substantial discussion, and ferences of opinion" about allo ing smoking within vehicles. committee agreed to review measure in two to three years. To discourage smoking campus, the report recommen no new smoking shelters, or ph es to smoke outside, be instal on campus. Additionally, requested that all cigarette bi containers be moved from outs buildings to near public roads. Implementation of the smo free policy will cost appro mately $240,805, according to report. Included in the budge the addition of a program coo nator to help oversee and imp ment the Initiative. This individual, who has not} beenhired, will report tothe m TENURE From Page 1A want to," Hanlon said. He added that the cha wouldn't extend the time it ta: a faculty member to gain tent but rather the amount of ti they have to build his or her ca And while the governing bo ies at schools and colleges n decidetochangethe probation; period if Hanlon moves forwa with the proposal and the rege approve the revision, Hanlon sa he doesn't expect many chang to occur. "I don't expect there to be big rush for people to cha because right now there are v few schools who are up agai the current limit," Hanlon sai "They rouldalready be chang if they really wanted to push limit." Currently, most schools at 1t University actually have less tin the maximum eight-year ten clock in place. The Law Scht, for example, uses a five-year p bationary period, and most otb schools have a six-year probati ary period. However, a few schools campus use a seven-year p bationary period - includ: the Medical School, the Der School and the Ross School Business - which places their the limit once the one-year tern nal period is included. Hanlon said he expects 1 Medical School would be 1 most likely to take advantage the longer probationary peri if implemented. An informal pi COMMON APP From Page 1A application process gets hardc it's more committed people w apply" Hanlon said that last year 1 University overshot its targ number of students by about 4( students, and this year the targ number of students is 5,970. In l year's admissions cycle, the Ur versityreceived 30,947 applicar Of those applicants, 15,436 we offered spots at the University. The current freshman ci. size - the largest to date at 6,41 students - is higher than w University officials estimated la year. University President Mary Si Coleman told the Daily in Si tember that the freshman cla size increase was not intend and should be avoided this yeai. The University will be esi cially cautious this year, Hani said, and more deferrals are beii issued this cycle. Though t admissions office uses a calculi ed system to gauge the number students to accept, Hanlon said, is essentially a guessing game. "You've got this decision-mi ing process made by 18-year-ol and that's pretty random alread he said. "We do our best." Hanlon said University of cials weren't caught off guard this year's jump in applicati numbers. "Everything is kind of ager of the University of Michigan Health System's Tobacco Con- sultation Service and will be in charge of education, training, ose evaluation, data collection and of enforcement of the smoking ban. aid. In an interview last week with de- The Michigan Daily, Coleman ing said she is pleased with the com- and mittee's report. "I'm actually very happy with ved it, and we'll move full speed or ahead," Coleman said. "We really hts needed time for preparation, and cle, I like the fact that we're starting now because I think campuses was that tried to (ban smoking) from dif- one day to the next with no prep- aw- aration just didn't work. So this The gives us some time, and we'll try the to resolve the issues. I think it's the right way to go." on Though smoking will be pro- nds hibited in unauthorized areas ac- starting July 1, individuals caught led smoking on campus after the ban it is implemented won't be ticketed utt or arrested. Instead, Winfield ide said the rule will be policed by peer pressure - comparing the ke- ban to when seat belts were first )xi- put in automobiles. the "It's much like what I experi- t is enced when seat belts came in," di- Winfield said. "They were put in ple- every car by law, but you weren't required to use them. There was yet more and more mediaattention to an- the safety that they gave you and more and more people were using them." Changes to the University Standard Practice Guide will be made to reflect the new policy, and signs will be posted through- out campus to inform visitors and guests of the smoke-free policy. "We don't plan to make this something where people get tick- ets," Winfield said. "On the other hand, there are ways to address these issues. Let's say there is a person who continues to smoke right outside a residence hall. Somebody could take that indi- vidual through the OSCR'process with the Office of Student Con- flict Resolution as acomplainant." Winfield said that if a Universi- ty staff member is found violating the policy, the person's supervisor would go through "the standard disciplinary process" outlined in the Standard Practice Guide. While Winfield said this process "could include discharge," which is the worst case scenario. The committee's recommen- dations were made with smokers and non-smokers in mind, Win- field said.According to the report, focus groups were held and sur- veys were conducted over the past year and a half in order to gauge how the University community felt about the initiative. Subcommittees made up of stu- dents, faculty and staff were also established to advise the com- mittee in writing their report. The subcommittees consisted of smokers, nonsmokers and former smokers. While the Tobacco Consulta- tion Service will be responsible for overseeing the implementa- tion of the initiative, a new advi- sory committee - established by the University's executive officers, chaired by Winfield and composed of students, faculty and staff - will be in charge of reviewing and potentially alter- ing the policy after implementa- tion. Winfield said one of the issues the committee may undertake is to examinethe scope of the smok- ing ban. For instance, properties off campus that are owned by the University, like Wolverine Tower located on South State Street will also be subject to the smoking ban. "Wolverine Tower is owned by the University, but there's a Com- erica Bank there," Winfield said. "We haven't addressed (whether Comerica employees are subject to the ban), and I honestly don't know how that's going to be set- tled." Winfield said the Chancellors of the campuses in Dearborn and Flint will enforce the smoking ban in ways that are most prudent for their individual campuses. SHIRVELL From Page 1A anti-gay remarks in the e-mail. The report describes the reac- tion of Shirvell's two supervi- sors, Assistant Attorney General Joel McGormley and Michigan Solicitor General Eric Restuccia, who instructed him to "never engage in this conduct again." According to the report, Shirvell agreed. However, Shirvell's payroll records, as well as the dates and times of his Facebook posts, show that Shirvell continued using state resources to perpe- trate such behavior - despite his claim that he had stopped - the report states. According to the document, Shirveli "verbally assaulted his supervisor by screaming profani- ties for which he was disciplined ... contacted a college student's out-of-state employer in an attempt to get him fired ... (and) improperlyused state resources." Shirvell called the office of former U.S. House of Represen- tatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D- Calif.) this past summer, when Armstrong was an intern there, to get Armstrong fired, according to former articles in The Michi- gan Daily. When Shirvell was advised by his superiors to change his behavior - specifically to stop producing his blog, Chris Arm- strong Watch, which alleged that Armstrong was pursuing a "radical homosexual agenda" among other things - Shirvell responded by saying "he did not care" if he was sued, according to the report. The report also states that Shirvell "provided evasive and untrue answers during his Disciplinary Conference." The Attorney General's office began an examination of Shirvell's harassment of Arm- strong on Oct. 4, 2010, the report states. Shirvellwas fired for inap- propriate conduct including anti- gay harassment of Armstrong on Nov. 8, 2010, according to an article in the Michigan Daily on the same day. Gordon said in an interview last night that she hopes the contents of the report will help the Michigan Attorney Griev- ance Commission fully under- stand Armstrong's case against Shirvell. Gordon and Armstrong filed a complaint before the com- mission in October alleging that Shirvell violated several eth- ics and standards attorneys are required to uphold. Gordon added that she hopes the report gives the commission cause to take disciplinary action against Shirvell or necessitate that he receive counseling. "Obviously even the Attorney General's office's employer real- ized some of the stuff he was doing was inappropriate and had asked him not to do it," Gordon said. "I think this material that I've received just really portrays him as somebody completely lacking in judgment, which does support our argument to the State Bar of Michigan, that until he gets some counseling or some assistance, he should not have a 'license to practice law." The report also described an incident in which Shirvell waited outside Armstrong's house in Ann Arbor at 1:36 a.m. to take photographs of a party Armstrong and his roommates were throwing. According to the report, Shirvell walked by the house twice in order to "deter- mine whether Mr. Armstrong was following the rules govern- ing underage drinking that as the MSA president he espoused." Shirvell later called the Ann Arbor Police Department to report the party. He took photos and videos of the police at Arm- strong's home in order to post it later on his blog, according to the report. The report also states that Shirvell was convicted for driv- ing under the influence of alcohol on June 8, 2009. He received six months probation. of about half of the faculty at the Medical School showed 80-per- cent support for extending the probationary period to a 10-year maximum, Hanlon added. "Nationally, medical schools have been leaders in moving to longer tenure clocks," Hanlon said. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine has no maximum pro- bationary period for tenure track faculty, and Mt. Sinai Medical Center in New York City uses a 17-year probationary period. Sev- eral other leading medical schools use longer probationary periods, often 10 or 11years in length. The reason for the elongated tenure probationary periods, Hanlon said, is because several factors have changed in recent years, especially for medical fac- ulty. These include increased regulatory requirements for research that involves humans or animals. Additionally, Hanlon said an increase in interdisciplin- ary research has led many tenure track faculty members to require more time to adequately complete their probationary periods. The research constraints have led to increases in tenure track changes at the Medical School, Hanlon said. A greater proportion of tenure track faculty has been opting for clinical appointments because they don't have enough time to complete work for their probationary periods. Outside of research con- straints, Hanlon said he is wor- ried about the amount of pressure on tenure track faculty members. Citing the increase in single- parent families and the number of households in which both par- ents are working, Hanlon said he believes faculty are feeling more stress regarding how to strike an adequate balance between work and family. Furthermore, Hanlon said, increases in life expectancy also mean many faculty members now face more extensive obliga- tions to care for their parents. Hanlon told the Daily he has consulted with numerous constit- uencies - including deans, assis- tant deans, executive committees and faculty groups - and that his talk with the Senate Assembly is the last group he needs to receive feedback from. He said the feed- back he has received has been mostly positive. Once Hanlon consults with the Senate Assembly today, the faculty group is expected to pass a resolution to support or oppose the change. It is unclear which, side the Senate Assembly will take, but the body's executive committee, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, is largely opposed to the change, Hanlon said. "It's likely to be a vigorous debate," Hanlon said. Hanlon said he expects to make his final decision about how to pro- ceed before the end of the week. "If my decision is to propose a change, it could be happening as early as (this) week," he said. If that happens, the proposed revision, which changes "eight" to "10" in the existing bylaw, would be opened for public com- ment before going to the regents for consideration. The Univer- sity's Board of Regents would then make the final decision to implement or ignore the proposed change. In an interview following last week's Board of Regents meet- ing, University President Mary Sue Coleman told the Daily she is happy with the proposal Hanlon may submit to the regents. "This has been studied pretty extensively in the University by a number of committees for a num- ber of years, and I am very satis- fied with the proposal because it ultimately leaves it up to each school or college to decide wheth- er or not they want to go this way," Coleman said. Coleman also stressed she is supportive of the change because it leaves ultimate control over the probationary timeline with the faculty, which she said is where the authority should lie. If the change is passed, Hanlon said he would continue to monitor tenure rates to make sure tenure track faculty are not adversely affected by the change. Asked whether the change would have any other effects on the University, Hanlon said he couldn't foresee any financial ramifications, but each school and college would have to evaluate whether a change might affect its recruiting and retention abilities. And while Hanlon appears to be advocating for the change prior to his meeting with the Sen- ate Assembly, he said he won't make a final decision until after his meeting with the group today. "I think there's alot of this that makes sense, but I want to with- hold final judgment until I hear from the Senate Assembly," Han- lon said. Andrew Shirvell speaks at a Michigan Student Assembly meeting Sept. 7, 2010. Thousands march at Belgaian unity rally track," Hanlon said. "We're not surprisedby anything right now." Erica Sanders, director of recruitment and operations at the University's Office of Under- graduate Admissions, wrote in an e-mail interview that it's too early to tell whether the switch to the Common Application is the rea- son for the rise in applications. The University made the switch to the Common Applica- tion, Sanders wrote, because the University's contract with the previous web application vendor was set to expire this year. "The Common Application was a great fit for our needs," she wrote. "Many of our common cross-application schools also use the Common Application." The Common Application is a standardized admissions process that began in 1975 and allows a college applicant to fill out a sin- gle application that can be sent to 414 participating schools. Many of the schools, including the Uni- versity, also have supplemental essay questions. In addition to the University, 28 other schools joined the Com- mon Application this year, includ- ing Columbia University and two international universities. As a result, the number of students applying to schools using the Common Application rose by 27 percentthis year, accordingto the Common Application website. Robert Killion, executive director of The Common Appli- cation, Inc., wrote in an e-mail interview that the Common Application website is designed to diversify the pool of applicants in addition to lowering the cost and easing the admissions process for universities. "We can offer both a more sophisticatedtechnology at aless- er cost than any single institution could build and maintain on their own," Killion wrote. The Common Application charges $65 per school for domes- tic students to submit applica- tions and $75 for international students, according to the Com- mon Application website. Killion, however, wrote that switching to the Common Appli- cation doesn't necessarily guar- antee an increase in applicants for a university. "Veryselective colleges get alot more apps every (year) when they use the Common App, and very selective colleges get a lot more apps every year when they don't use the Common App," he wrote. "Michigan did get a lot more apps this year. But so did MIT, George- town, and USC. None of them use the Common App." Julia Wiener, a high school senior from Plainview, N.Y. who was accepted to the Univer- sity this fall, said she noticed an increase in interest in applying to the University among her friends because of its new presence on the Common Application web- site. She said some students who weren't sure if they were going to apply to the University were much more likelyto do sobecause of the convenience the new appli- cation system provided. "A lot of my friends applied to lots of different schools, and I think the Common App played a huge part in them applying (to the University of Michigan)," Wiener said. Jessica Zank, also a high school senior from Plainview, N.Y., applied to the University but was deferred. She said she was surprised when she received her deferral notice. "It was shocking to me based on students I knew in previous years who were accepted and the gen- eral accepted scores," Zank said. High school senior Madison Chaness of West Bloomfield, Mich. said the switch didn't have much of an effect on her admis- sions process. "I only applied to the Univer- sity of Michigan and Michigan State University, so it didn't have a big effect on me," Chaness said. "But it was a lot easier for my friends applying to lots of differ- ent schools." LSA freshman Rachel Beck- man said using Michigan's old application was definitely more of a hassle. "I know a lot of people who actually didn't apply to Michigan (last year) because they didn't feel like filling out the extra forms," she said. - Daily News Editor Joseph Lichterman contributed tothis report, Rally aims to bring together Flemish and Walloon BRUSSELS (AP) - Tens of thousands of protesters marched through the Belgian capital yes- terday in support of national unity and to demand that the rival polit- ical groupings finally form a coali- tion after seven months without a government. Organizers said the peaceful rally in downtown Brussels - the seat of the European Union - is also meant to promote solidar- ity among the country's Flemish and Walloon communities and to reject nationalism. Police saidbetween 20,000 and 30,000 people took part in the demonstration called by a group of university students who say they're fed up with the political deadlock. "We're sending a clear mes- sage to the political leaders that we want them to form a govern- ment," said Felix De Clerck, one of the organizers. "We are sick and tired of the enduring political impasse," said Thomas Decreus, another orga- nizer. He said the protest showed "the people can act where politi- cians fail: i.e. working together across the language barrier" that slices Belgium in half. The demonstration - the result of a Facebook campaign under the banner "Shame. No government, great country" - was the second of its kind in just over three years. On Nov. 18, 2007, around 35,000 people marched through the capital to vent their anger about a political deadlock that by then was preventing the formation of a government for 161 days. Like in 2007, yesterday's pro- test led demonstrators - Franco- phones and Dutch-speakers - to a vast stone arch in the Cinquen- tenaire park. The arch marks Belgium's independence from the Netherlands in 1830. Political parties representing Belgium's two communities have been unable to form a coalition since parliamentary elections last June - a record period of dead- lock in postwar Europe. Politicians have been try- ing unsuccessfully to broker a new constitution with increased regional autonomy for the 6 mil- lion Dutch-speaking Flemings and 4.5 million French-speaking Walloons. The deadlock has sparked fear that Flanders could secede from the union formed in 1830. Positions in Flanders have hardened over the years, bringing to the fore the center-right N-VA nationalist party headed by Bart De Wever. He is negotiating on forming a government with the socialist PS party, the dominant political party in Wallonia. In a reference to De Wever, several demonstrators carried pictures of cartoon charac- ter Bart Simpson with his face crossed out. Others carried signs saying "Separation? Not In Our Name," and "Less Bla-Bla, More Results." Many carried umbrellas, hats, shawls and other items in the black, gold and red colors of the Belgian flag. "What do we want? We want A government," they chanted.