c4c Ifric4toan at j michigandaily.com 0 Ann Arbor Michigan Friday, March 18, 2011 BOARD OF REGENTS Board meets in Detroit to recognize 'U' partnerships Regents approve naming of Lawyers Club in honor of donor By MICHELE NAROV Daily Staff Reporter DETROIT - Collaborations between the University and the Motor City was the main topic of discussion at the University's Board of Regents meeting here yesterday. Three Uni- NOTEBOOK versity-affiliat- ed groups made presentations to the Board regarding the impor- tance of the University's partner- ships with Detroit organizations. The presentations - made by Semester in Detroit partici- pants, researchers working on the Healthy Environments Part- nership and graduate students involved in Revitalization and Business: Focus Detroit - all stressed the University's integral role in improving the city. In her opening remarks, Uni- versity President Mary Sue Cole- man said it was important to meet in Detroit because many of the city's leaders are University alumni. "We are pleased to have so many engaged partners in met- ropolitan Detroit," Coleman said. "Together we are all committed to a strong future for our state." Student participants of Semes- ter in Detroit, a University pro- gram in which students live, take classes and intern in the city for a term, talked about their expe- riences to the regents. The stu- dents explained how their time in Detroit enriched their lives and strengthened their commitment to Michigan. Charles Bright, faculty to- director of Semester in Detroit, said the program is operating on limited resources. He advised the regents to take a more active role in the program to ensure its sus- tainability over time. Later in the meeting, Amy Schulz, an associate professor in the University's School of Public Health, and Angela Reyes, execu- tive director of the Detroit His- panic Development Corporation, discussed the Healthy Environ- ments Partnership's work pro- moting cardiovascular health in Detroit. The partnership is a col- laboration between a number of See DETROIT, Page 3 [SA senior Rick Durance addresses the University's Board of Regents at its meeting at the Westin Hotel in Detroit yesterday. Durance discussed an online petition he created, which has more than 4,000 student signatures, against Republican Gov. Rick Snyder delivering the Spring Commencement address. Regents approve Snyder to speak at 'U' graduation Students urge Board not to vote in favor of governor By JOSEPH LICHTERMAN Daily News Editor DETROIT - The University's Board of Regents unanimously approved Republican Gov. Rick Snyder as the Spring Commence- ment speaker despite opposition from thousands of University students. Several students made the trip to the regents' meeting here to tell the Board why they didn't think Snyder was the right choice to deliver the commencement address on April 30 because of his proposed reductions to state higher education appropriations. However, the Board ultimately voted to approve Snyder and the other honorary degree recipi- ents. The decision to have Sny- der give this year's commence- ment speech has caused outrage among many students in light of his state budget proposal, which calls for a 15-percent funding cut to the state's 15 public colleges- and universities in the 2012 fis- cal year. A cut of that size would translate into a loss of $47.5 mil- lion dollars for the University. LSA senior Zach Goldsmith was among the handful of stu- dents who implored the regents to reconsider their votes in sup- port of Snyder as commence- ment speaker. Goldsmith said at the meeting that Snyder's budget proposal makes him an illogical choice for commencement speaker. The proposal includes cuts to educa- tion funding and grants power to emergency financial manag- ers, who Snyder can appoint to restore budgets in cities and school districts in fiscal distress. "I'm not going to rattle off the facts and figures that explain the idiocy," said Goldsmith, refer- ring to the governor's budget See REGENTS, Page 3 TOP O' THE MORNTN' GREEK LIFE IFC expels Sigma Alpha Epsilon on hazing counts 'U' chapter to be them. The fraternity has been given colony status officially removed from the Interfraternity Council - the by nationals student governing board that manages fraternities at the By SARAH ALSADEN University - due to hazing alle- Daily StaffReporter gations. After a meeting on Wednes- Many fraternities were get- day, SAE was dismissed from ting into the spirit of St. Pat- the council, according to a rick's Day yesterday, but the . March 16 IFC press release. University's chapter of Sigma The chapter had been suspend- Alpha Epsilon wasn't among ed since Feb. 9, when the IFC started pursuing an investiga- tion and a chapter review. The fraternity was sus- pended by SAE nationals and the IFC last month. The IFC had previously voted to defer its review of SAE until after the national organization con- cluded its review and made a decision about the status of the fraternity. The fraternity's suspen- sion came after an e-mail was See IFC, Page 3 St. Patrick's Day die-hards wait outside Ashley's Bar on State Street at about 3:30 a.m. Thursday. The bar opened at 6:30 a.m. and started serving drinks at 7 a.m. The line wrapped around the corner of State Street and East William at the bar's opening. UNIVERSITY OUTREACH With grant, Cardiovascular Center to promote health in middle schools CAMPUS TECHNOLOGY U' to launch new online directory during summer Program helps local students get active, eat better By BRIENNE PRUSAK Daily StaffReporter Hoping to sway kids to reach for carrot sticks instead of cook- ies, the University's Cardiovas- cular Center is expanding its outreach to local middle schools with the help ofamultithousand- dollar boost. The Cardiovascular Center recently received a $232,000 grant that will be used to widen the center's Project Healthy Schools - a program that teaches local sixth-graders about healthy lifestyles through a 12-week pro- gram. The program is currently established in 13 locations in the Ann Arbor, Corunna, Detroit, Owosso and Ypsilanti school dis- tricts, and the grant will be used to fund students in lower income neighborhoods, according to Jean DuRussell-Weston, proj- ect manager for Project Healthy Schools. "Our main goal is to reach See GRANT, Page 3 'M M ha WI instrr locat Community' to stalk a classmate, the Univer- sity's Online Directory has long ve more profile been a tool used by University students. information But beginning this sum- mer, the directory will get a By SABIRA KHAN new name and new features Daily StaffReporter to match. Renamed MCom- munity, the new directory will hether used to find an still display a University mem- uctor's e-mail address, ber's name, unigname, title and e a professor's office or affiliation as listed on Wolverine Access, but it will include more identification options and a new user-friendly interface. Joan Witte, a spokeswoman for Information and Technology Services at the University, wrote in an e-mail interview that the new MCommunity Directory will serve as a way for members of the University community to recognize University affiliates See DIRECTORY, Page 2 WEATHER HI: 47 TOMORROW LO 31 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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