ie £iigyan 401aiIj Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, September 20, 2011 michigandaily.com FACULTY GRANTS Three'U' professors awarded fellowship Profs. to receive ulty member at the Universitylast earned a MacArthur Fellowship $500,000 as - nicknamed a Genius Award - in 2005. Twenty-four Univer- MacArthur fellows sity faculty members, including Miles, Sanford and Yamashita, By CAITLIN HUSTON and have been named fellows since JOSEPH L ICHTERMAN the MacArthur Foundationbegan Daily News Editors naming them in 1981. University President Mary Three University professors Sue Coleman wrote in a Univer- were awarded MacArthur Fel- sity press release sent today that lowships worth $500,000 by the the fellowships awarded to the John D. and Catherine T. MacAr- University professors marks "a thur Foundation to further their remarkable day in the life of the research through any means of University of Michigan." their choosing. "The exceptional contributions Tiya Miles, director of the of professors Tiya Miles, Melanie Department of Afroamerican & Sanford and Yukiko Yamashita African Studies, Melanie Sanford, deepen our understanding of life an Arthur F. Thurnau professor of - from a single molecule to the chemistry and YukikoYamashita, sweep of human history," Cole- an assistant professor in the Life man wrote. Science Institute and an assis- Miles, Sanford and Yamashita tant professor of cell and devel- each said they plan to spend their opmental biology in the Medical grants inways that differ as much School, were among 22 research- as their specialties. ers nationwide to be awarded the "It's an awful lot of money," prestigious fellowship. Miles said in a telephone inter- The University of Michigan view last night. tied Harvard University for the The $500,000 is paid out to most recipients this year. A fac- See FELLOWSHIP, Page 2 University President Mary Sue Coleman addresses UMHS surgeons at a question-and-answer session in Rackham Auditorium yesterday- Coleman 'U' management similar oprivate in i tio 'U' endowment worth $7.8 billion for FY 2011 By HALEY GLATTHORN DailyStaffReporter S The University's endowment fund and fundraising efforts were among the primary top- ics University President Mary Sue Coleman discussed during a question-and-answer session with University of Michigan Health System surgeons yester- day. Coleman said the University's endowment is currently worth approximately $7.8 billion - up from its 2010 fiscal year value of $6.6 billion. State-allocated funding continuously dropped throughout Coleman's 10 years at the University, she said. When Coleman took office in 2002, state contributions to the gener- al fund came in at $368 million - a number that has since fallen to $240 million for this year. "We have lost a pretty sub- stantial amount of money each (year)," Coleman said. "I'm not under any illusion that we're going to go back to wonderful funding from the state." Coleman explained that the general fund's "unrestricted money" allows for the pursuit of faculty innovation and entre- preneurship. Most donations to the University can be used only in the method prescribed by the donor, and nearly 96 percent of the"endowment is limited in its use by donors or grant regula- tions, according to Coleman. Though Coleman said man- agement of the University is becoming increasingly similar to a private institution, she said it will always be a public univer- sity. "We made some very, very See COLEMAN, Page 5 UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES ___ 'U' halts Orphan Works Project in light of lawsuit Mistakes made in HathiTrust Digital Library By JOSEPH LICHTERMAN DailyNews Editor After acknowledging ' that its Orphan Works Project is "flawed," the University announced Friday that it decid- ed to suspend the pilot program indefinitely. The Orphan Works Project is an initiative to identify books that may have unsuspectingly become part of the public domain after their original copyrights lapsed. The suspension of the program comes just days after a lawsuit was filed against the Uni- versity claiming that the institu- tion doesn't have permission to use digital scans of more than 7 million copyrighted books. Before halting the program, the University was scheduled to make 27 orphan works avail- able for download through the HathiTrust Digital Library on Oct. 13 and another 140 books were planned for release in November. Any member of the University community with a uniqname would have access to the scanned books. The lawsuit against the Uni- versity was filed by the Author's Guild, the Australian Society of Authors, Quebec Writers Union and eight other individual authors. The suit was also filed See LAWSUIT, Page 5 FACULTY GOVERNANCE VP of research warns faculty of HANNAH CHIN/u Ann Arbor City Council members discuss city funding for public art at a council meeting last night at City Hall. The council is delaying a proposed ordinance until November. With new A20penBook website, city aims to increase financial transparency future cuts to federal Forrest tells faculty to limit spending, number of hires By MARY HANNAHAN Daily StaffReporter In a meeting before the Uni- versity's leading faculty gover- nance body, Stephen Forrest, the University's vice president of research, said the University will have to make significant changes in the coming months to remain a top research institute. Though the University receives federal funding for research - particularly from the National Institute of Health, the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Defense - Forrest said budgets from those institutes are shrinking and told the Uni- versity's Senate Assembly yester- day that he's not yet sure how this will affect the University. funding "2012 is looking at signifi- cant budget cuts across all agen- cies, and we don't know what that's going to mean or how deep they're going to be," Forrest said. Forrest suggested that researchers plan ahead for research funding reductions by being efficient in their work and only hiring people they will really need and can afford. "This is what we have to be aware of so we can position our- See RESEARCH, Page 2 Residents can view city expenses, revenue on site By ADAM RUBENFIRE Daily StaffReporter For students and Ann Arbor residents, city financial data now reads like an online open book. At a press event before yes- terday's city council meeting, Tom Crawford, the city of Ann Arbor's chief financial offi- cer, introduced A20penBook, an-interactive website, www. a2gov.org/a2openbook, that will give users a daily in-depth look at the city's expenses and revenue sources. People who access the web- site can look at expenditures and revenue for any vendor that received city funds. The infor- mation can be viewed for dif- ferent areas including expense type, department or service area, or by a specific budgeted fund such as the city's water and sewer fund. Joshua Baron, senior appli- cations specialist for the city, explained that financial data will be automatically uploaded to A20penBook every 24 hours from the city's internal financial database. "It will give you some insights into our financial status ... in ways that have been harder for citizens to see before," said Crawford, who was formerly the interim city administrator. The site also has a system See WEBSITE, Page 3 * WEATHER HI: 75 TOMORROW - LO: 51 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM New UMHS CFO named MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE WIRE INDEX Vol. CXXII, No.11 @2011 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com AP NEWS ....................3 CLASSIFIEDS...............6 OPINION .....................4 ARTS....................6 N EW S .................... 5 SPORTS............... ......7 I