The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, January 11, 2012 - 5A In first meeting, Assembly appoints official positions Owners Paul Drennan, Adam Lowenstein, Robbie Schulz, and Justin Herrick stand outside of their new bar, LIVE. BAR From Page 1A them all the luck in the world." Lowenstein said both he and his partners are looking forward to bringing another dance club to the downtown area. LIVE will feature music performed by vari- ous DJs during the weekends and live music throughout the week, he said. "We're really excited about the idea of taking over Live (at PJ's) because this building is unlike any other in Ann Arbor," Lowenstein said. "There's no other dance club that's this close to Main Street." The Last Word, located down- stairs from the club, is named after a prohibition era cocktail that originated in Detroit. Low- enstein said they felt the name is fitting, as the bar is going to sell a mix of prohibitions drinks - beverages modeled after those served during the prohibition NIH From Page 1A School of Nursing, said NIH funding is central to the Universi- ty's scientific efforts, adding that the Nursing School had just risen to the sixth-largest beneficiary of NIH funds in the country, up from eighth last year. "NIH funding is critically important to the University and to the School of Nursing," Villarruel said. "It provides opportunities, it provides resources to advance the sciences and to make an impact on people's lives. It's the basis for funding discoveries and for mak- ing that impact." According to Steven Kunkel, senior associate dean for research at the University's Medical School, the lack of concern byoffi- cials stems from the University's ability to absorb the additional costs. Still, Kunkel said the amount of money the University now must pay in compensation due to the NIH reduction might only amount to "a few hundred CHAPLAIN From Page 1A Arbor community, especially in a way that incorporates his faith. "One of the things that make up communities is religious out- lets," he said. "All of the other faith communities in large part have had organizations and people who are committed to addressing those things and the Muslims just now are being able to slowly address some of those same concerns within their own community." Safi added that his job as chaplain is not to head or direct Muslim organizations on cam- pus, but rather to advocate for the Muslim community and provide support for Muslim stu- dents. MMAA, in collaboration with the Muslim Student Associa- tion, began the hiring process in September, but had been con- templating appointing someone for the position for a number of years. Members of both MMAA and MSA said they wanted to find a chaplain who had previ- ously experienced what it is like to live as a Muslim student on a college campus. MSA president Eman Abdel- hadi said both organizations era - and more modern cocktails found in high-end bars around the country. With The Last Word, Low- enstein said the group wants to expand onthe successfulbartend- ingthey've had at AlleyBar, one of their other local businesses. "We're going to take (what we've done at Alley Bar) even fur- ther," Lowenstein said. "We set out with the goal of being Michi- gan's best cocktail bar ... and there's a lot of details that go into that." The owners said they plan to make their own bitters, foams, juices and aging cocktails, as well as experiment with molecular mixology in creating drinks. Lowensteinsaid renovationson the spaces are not quite finished, and that he and his partners are giving both business spaces a gen- eral facelift, including new paint and decor before the businesses open in February. "LIVE will feel like the same thousand dollars," noting that in the past only about 10 percent of Medical School researchers were receiving the full amount of money allotted by NIH. "It's not the end of the day, it's just a little bit of an irritant more than anything," Kunkel said. "This is just a blip on the radar. This is not going to be anything that's going to make us re-think how we do grants or anything." To bridge the gap in the sala- ries of researchers impacted by the $20,000 NIH reduction, Kunkel said chairs or deans will need to use funding within their department budgets to com- pensate investigators. He added he believes the Medical School will find the funds to maintain researchers' salaries, which the University negotiates yearly. "There'll be some repercus- sions, no doubt about that," Kun- kel said. "As long as they don't reduce it more and more every year ... this one-time reduction probably will be able to be assimi- lated into the budget." Kunkel said the Medical School is not in "crisis mode" yet, strove to find a chaplain who students feel comfortable turn- ing to for guidance about their spiritual needs and who can to serve the interests of the Mus- lim student body. Adelhadi added that student feedback was an important com- ponent of the hiring process. Students in MSA were given the opportunity ask Safi ques- tions about his plans as chaplain while he was still going through the interview process, and Adel- hadi said students have been communicating with Safi since1 he took the position last week. "We can already see the dif- ference it is making on stu- dents lives," she said. "People are already reaching out to him and trying to make connections with him. They are seeing the value that this person can bring to campus."1 Annie Sajid, vice president of external relations for MSA, said she has observed Safi at vari-; ous MSA events and noticed his commitment to interacting with1 students and facilitating dia-i logue. Sajid added that because Safi is the first person to take on the position, there is some uncer- tainty about how exactly he can best serve Muslim students on campus. However, she said Safi'si ability to be flexible in how he place, just fresher when you walk in," Lowenstein said. "The Last Word will definitely feel different than Gracie's" Apart from the change in decor, Lowenstein and his partners are also changing how customers can access each business. Customers visiting Live at PJ's and Goodnite Gracie could previously move freely between the two business- es, but the new establishments will have separate entrances with no customer access between them. Lowenstein said he and his partners want to ensure each business has its own identity. "We'll have some crossover in terms of demographic and people that are going back and forth and drinking," Lowenstein said. "But in terms of the identities, they're not just going to be one ... and in the end they might be separate people that come here and come there, kind of like (BTB) Cantina and (Good Time) Charley's." but added he is concerned that this year's reductions might be the start of a long-term effort by the federal government to shirk responsibility for funding scien- tific research. "This first round - it's raised some eyebrows, but it's nothing that's going to be something that we can't handle," Kunkel said. "I think just what people start thinking about is that if they low- ered it this year ... will they be coming next year to do it again and the next year to do it again." Often, a University researcher will apply for three or more grants - which can be worth upward of a few million dollars each over several years - and write off20 to 30 percent of his or her salary on each grant, Kunkel said. The University's Medical School is the country's fifth- largest beneficiary of NIH funds, according to Kunkel. The Uni- versity's latest available research report for the 2010 fiscal year reported that the University received more than $507 million - or 44.5 percentoftotal research expenditures - from NIH. approaches his new role is eas- ing the transition. "I appreciate that he is so open minded and willing to learn and be engaged with com- munity members," Sajid said. In addition to offeringspiritu- al guidance to Muslim students, Safi will also communicate with the University about the needs of the Muslim population. "We have always had to rely on individual students' relation- ships with the administration and often times those bonds can break when people graduate," Abheladi said. "With the chap- lain here we have someone who can come to know the University very well and become that face for the Muslim community." Safi said the implementation of the chaplain position is a nat- ural and necessary development for the Muslim community on campus, adding he is eager to continue to work with students and other individuals - both within the Muslim faith and beyond - who are committed to improving society. "We want to work with peo- ple," he said. "We don't want to tell people what to do or impose anything on people. We want to work with them to address con- cerns they already have. That is the goal of what a chaplain is supposed to do." Incoming officials discuss upcoming plans By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter Under a new name and a new semester, the Student Assem- bly of the Central Student Gov- ernment - formerly known as Michigan Student Assembly - made appointments for positions at their first meeting of 2012 last night. Business senior Matthew Eral and LSA junior Aditya Sathi were both re-elected as chair and vice-chair of the Assem- bly for semester-long terms. The Assembly also elected the chairs and vice-chairs of CSG's standing committees - Finance, Rules, Resolutions, and Com- munications - which are also semester-long positions. All eight of the chair and vice-chair positions were uncontested. Eral said he and Sathi are looking forward to bridging the gap between students and CSG and better cater to the needs of the campus community, adding that the organization's recent ROMNEY From Page 1A For Koziara, asewell as for many political experts, the margin of victory reaffirmed the appeal of Romney's economic credentials in an election cycle that will like- ly center on improving the econ- omy. Though his rivals took aim at the former Massachusetts gov- ernor this week for his corporate history, Koziara said he remained the most viable economic candi- date. "At the end of the day, Mitt Romney understands job cre- ation much better than President Obama," he said. The race for the Republican nomination now turns to South Carolina, a battleground for the candidates because of its robust socially conservative Republican base, Political Science Prof. Ken Kollman said. STARBUCKS From Page 1A LSA senior Sarah Beery and Business senior Kristen Stack said they typically meet for cof- fee at the South University Star- bucks once a week. Both said they like the visual appeal of the updated store. "It looks more uniform," Beery said. "Before there was a mismatch of a bunch of dif- ferent chairs and tables, but name change serves as a founda- tion for reinvention and invigo- ration of the group. "(CSG), in the students' eyes, maybe hasn't been the most effective in years past," Eral said. "Starting with a new name and a lot of new great initiatives right off the bat will help give us a lit- tle bit of new momentum that I think student government hasn't had in a couple years." Eral said his and Sathi's pri- mary objective is to increase transparency and make the ini- tiatives of the Assembly more visible to the campus commu- nity. In addition to working toward increasing awareness, Sathi said his and Eral's elections provided them with the opportunity to work with the Representative Outreach Task Force - a group created last year to ensure representative accountabil- ity and improve communication throughout CSG. Though the Assembly achieved quorum at every meet- ing last semester, many repre- sentatives did not attend the meetings. Sathi said the Repre- sentative Outreach Task Force is dedicated to "making the legisla- tive branch live up to its expecta- While Kollman called the New Hampshire primary "an impor- tant opportunity" for Romney to showcase his strength, he said the South Carolina contest could test his broader appeal to the Republican electorate. "You sort of want to know how someone like Romney will do there, because on (social issues) he might not be as appealing in a place like South Carolina as he would be in New Hampshire," Kollman said in an interview before yesterday's primaries. Though the race for the Republican presidential nomina- tion is gaining momentum, some University students said they are not paying much attention to the contest. LSA sophomore Vishruta Kulkarni said she had not fol- lowed the primary closely because she found it difficult to compare the candidates at this point in the election. now everything looks clean. It's a lot more modern, which is nice." "I love (the renovations). It looks beautiful," Stack added. Stack said the updates are practical, particularly in provid- ing additional seating for stu- dents to study. "I think there's more seat- ing, which is one of the things we were most concerned about, especially around finals time there's never seating around here," she said. tions." Sathi added that his re-elec- tion serves as reassurance for his work in CSG thus far, and that is excited for the new semester. "Itshowsuthat I've done my job " he said. "I think I'm doing the right things, and I need to con- tinue in that direction." Eral expressed similar antici- pation for the semester. "I'm definitely honored that I got re-elected by the Assembly," he said. "I'm excited to serve again for another semester." At the meeting, CSG President DeAndree Watson discussed the recent name change, noting that the organization is still in a transition period. He encouraged representatives to use the name CSG more frequently around campus. Watson said he is optimis- tic about students' adoption of the name change, adding that at yesterday's Winterfest, students already expressed awareness of the name change and CSG's newly formed objectives. "I think the fact that (stu- dents) are aware of what we do is a positive sign," Watson said. -Danielle Stoppelmann and Emily A. Kasti contributed to this report. "It's a huge spectrum, and all the candidates are on different parts of it," Kulkarni "It's just really hard to compare because a lot of things they think are simi- lar and then there are things that are completely opposing." Kulkarni said she would follow the election more closely once the Republicans nominate their can- didate and the general election begins this fall. LSA sophomore Meagan Strickland, echoed Kulkarni's sentiments, adding she will begin following once the amount of information stopped becoming "completely overwhelming." "We're just in a really crucial point of almost like rebuilding and getting things done," she said. "It's kind of like the climb- ing out the hole, so it's really important to have somebody in office who's goingto dowhatthey say they're going to do and make strides." University alum Sarah Chang, who graduated in 2007, said she is a regular customer at the Star- bucks location on South Univer- sity, and said she particularly took note of the aesthetic chang- es to the store and the additional seating. "I love the colors and the fact that there's a lot more space," Chang said. "It seems like they've maximized the space very effectively and the ambi- ance is really comfortable and warm." A t iibna , T"EAM 132 stsa'_lic an z .11o1e iewra footballissupposedtlloo-' nfidensei - , , . .~ - = Remember Michigan's victory forever with two glossy posters. Go to www.store.michigandaily.com/sugar-bowl-posters