46Ije6 A4diai0 i~ ON I IINIh1 )XIN IHI I\((IIIIO11I\.I II I V. Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, October 30, 2012 michigandaily.com NHLLOCKOUT - Report: NHL will cancel outdoor game Winter Classic scheduled for New Year's Day at Michigan Stadium By MATT SLOVIN and HALEY GOLDBERG Daily Sports Editor and Daily News Editor The National Hockey League plans to cancel its annual Winter Classic on Thursday, ESPN.com reported Monday. The Detroit Red Wings and the Toronto Maple Leafs are sched- uled to play outdoors at Michi- gan Stadium on New Year's Day. The game is expected to be avic- tim of the ongoing labor dispute between the NHL and its player's union, which has resulted in the cancellation of the NHL season up to this point. But as labor negotiations between the league and the Play- ers' Association have come to a standstill, it doesn't appear there will be a resolution soon. "I'm just hoping it's not can- celled," said Michigan hockey coach Red Berenson. "That'll be a world-class event for the sport of hockey." David Ablauf, the University's associate athletic director, said . the Athletic Department is mov- ing forward with its preparations for the game. "Any decision would be announced by the NHL so we, as an athletic department, are currently still continuing our planning," Ablauf said by phone Monday evening. "We're still moving in that direction, and any final decision one way or the other is going to have to come from the NHL." Crain's Detroit Business also reported last week that the Hock- eytown Winter Festival will be cancelled alongside the cancel- lation of the Winter Classic. The festival - a weeklong celebration of hockey in Detroit - includes the Great Lakes Invitational, an annual tournament held each December. This season, the Great Lakes Invitational was to be held at Comerica Park, but it will move back to its typical venue, Joe Louis Arena, if the NHL can- cels the Winter Classic, Crain's reported. See NHL, Page 3 ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily Ann tomney speaks al a tepublican rally in Grand tapids on Monday October 29, 2012 AnnRomney brings- camaig toW. M ich., GOP ticket focuses on conservative- leaning west side of the state By CSANDRA BALFOUR. For the Daily GRAND RAPIDS - In the final sprint to Election Day, Ann Romney took the stage at the Romney campaign's office here Monday afternoon to rally for her husband, Republi- can presidential nominee Mitt Romney, and showcase her Michigan roots. Romney was received by raucous applause at the office, which was filled with GOP supporters eager to hear Rom- ney share her husband's mes- sage that though the clock is ticking, there is still time "to save the country." With recent polls indicating that President Barack Obama has a slight lead in Michigan, Romney implored the crowd to help the campaign bridge the gap in the days lead- ing up to Nov. 6. Romney, a native of Bloom- field Hills, emphasized her ties to Michigan during her address, at one point holding up her hand in the quintessen- tial symbol of the Mitten State. Earlier in the day, she was in Traverse City and spent Sun- day night at Comerica Park in Detroit watching the Detroit Tigers play in the World Series. "You can't believe all the people I run into across the country who show me their hand. All the fingers, thank goodness," Romney joked. She reassured the crowd that Mitt Romney not only embod- ies the qualities necessary for a strong president, which he demonstrated during the See ROMNEY, Page 3 CAMPUS SECURITY Coleman: Security issues not 'unusual' At SACUA, president addresses new Division of Public Safety and Security By AUSTEN HUFFORD Daily StaffReporter University President Mary Sue Coleman publicly addressed the recent reorganization of campus security organizations into the Divi- sion of Public Safety and Security for the first time Monday. Speaking at the weekly meeting of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, the University's lead fac- ulty governing body in the Fleming Administration building Monday. Coleman said she was pleased with the reaction to the reorga- nization but also downplayed the uniqueness of the University's secu- rity problems. "One of the things (the Margolis external audit report) did uncover was some long standing issues, and I understand from colleagues around See COLEMAN, Page 7 STUDYING ABROAD University gets most Fulbrights 4 Zingerman's staff members prepare for this week's opening of the 10,000 ft. expansion. ingerman's expansion to boast additional 10,0 . New building will improve customer experience, Ann Arbor deli says By HALEY GOLDBERG Daily News Editor Like corned beef nestled between two toasted pieces of rye bread, the newest addition to the Zingerman's Deli hopes to add more meat to the eatery in the form of additional seat- ing, a newer, larger kitchen and a more modern facility. After almost two years of construction, which was approved by the Ann Arbor Historic District Commis- sion in 2011, the new additions to the eatery will be open to Zingerman's customers and staff this week. In a tour of the new expan- sion, Lori Saginaw, Zing Look and Feel consultant and wife of Zingerman's co-founder Paul Saginaw, said the new expansion - which is a little more than 10,000 square feet in additional space - will give the Zingerman's eatery the environment it has always needed to operate efficiently. "We've outgrown every- thing. And that was why this was so necessary," Saginaw said. "It isn't just because we didn't have enough places to seat people, but it was because that little, tiny kitchen was the only kitchen. And every- thing that the kitchen needed had to be put outside on the campus in remote areas, so people who are cooking had to go outside the building to get more potatoes." Saginaw said the long- needed expansion could not happen in past years because the company did not own more space to expand. The chance to expand came after a house next to the eatery was severely damaged in a 2006 fire, an incident in which a Zingerman's sand- See ZINGERMAN'S, Page 7 Fo and t the that were studs other 2012- Th stude this schoc came stude rank( The L spot in 20 2011. Th spoo ment catio. was stude U.S. efitin work Ne recei more 0 'U' students and scholars from across the world have received Fulbright awarded grants since the program was created 66 years ago, about prestigious 44,000 of which are students from the United States. scholarships The 12-member J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship By DANIELLE Board oversees the adminis- STOPPELMANN tration and organization of the Daily StaffReporter program in the United States and abroad, and selects the r the third straight year, grant-receiving applicants. he sixth time since 2005, Kelly Peckens, an academic University said Monday program officer and Fulbright more Fulbright grants program adviser for the Uni- awarded to University versity, said Fulbright scholar- aots than those at any ship recipients at the University U.S. institution for the benefit greatly from exposure -2013 academic year. to various cultures and the ere were 40 University enhancement of their careers ants who received grants or professional degrees. fall - a record for the "The goal of the Fulbright ol. Harvard University program for U.S. students is to in second place with 31 promote mutual understanding ants and Brown University between the people of the U.S. ed third with 29 students. and people of other countries," University also held the top Peckens said in an e-mail inter- for most students accepted view. 05, 2007, 2008, 2010 and Peckens said applicants submit individual academic ie Fulbright program, projects and proposals, and stu- sored by the U.S. Depart- dents can seek guidance from of State's Bureau of Edu- University Fulbright advisers nal and Cultural Affairs, or from the University's Inter- established in 1946 as a national Institute. ant exchange program for She added she is happy and foreign students, ben- with how many students were ig more than 155 countries accepted into the program this dwide. year. arly 1,700 students "We are thrilled with the ved grants this year, and University's continued success than 300,000 students See FULBRIGHTS, Page 7 WEATHER HI: 45 TOMORROW LO: 39 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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