iC4t0 an 4,3atIV ONE -I 1U ND ED) F R EEDQ Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, December 11, 2012 michigandaily.com REGENTS PREVIEW 'U' to pay $1.075M for Bumpy space Regents also to vote on Fishbowl renovations By SAM GRINGLAS and JENNIFER CALFAS Daily StaffReporters At its monthly meeting on Thursday, the University's Board of Regents will discuss the pur- chase of properties on South Division Street, including the property where Blimpy Burger is located, several renovation proj- ects, and temporary procedures for hiring new faculty. The regents will not formally meet in January, having elected instead to spend time in Cali- fornia at a series of workshops and discussions about future challenges facing higher edu- cation. The meeting on Thurs- day will be the last for Regents Olivia Maynard (D-Goodrich) and S. Martin Taylor (D-Grosse Pointe Farms), whose terms expire on January1, 2013. Incoming regents Mark Ber- nstein and Shauna Ryder Diggs, both Democrats, will go to the meetings Jan. 17-18in Los Ange- les. The regents will resume their regular schedule of meet- ings on February 21, 2013. One of the highest profile items on the agenda will be for the regents to consider whether See BLIMPY, Page 3 SENATE ASSEMBLY At meeting, SACUA als Big House Run TERESA MATHEW (TOP LEFT, BOTTOM) AND JOSEPH LICHTERMAN(TOP RIGHT)/Daily In his speech at the Detroit Diesel Plant in Redford, Mich. President Barack Obama said Michigan's right-to-work fight has "everything to do with politics" bama enters into ri ht-to-work battle Kearfott: There were 'risks' in working with for- profit charity By AUSTEN HUFFORD Daily Staff Reporter University faculty members aired their grievances over the University Athletic Depart- ment's decision to cancel the Big Heart Big House run at Monday's meeting of the Senate Advisory Committee on Uni- versify Affairs. SACUA chair Kimberlee Kearfott, an engineering pro- fessor, said at the meeting that she met with University Ath- letic Director David Brandon on Monday morning to discuss the decision. Kearfott said Bran- don told her the cancellation of the race was based on concerns about the race's sponsor, Chamin pions for Charity, and did not reflect broader policy changes. "The change was not made for financial reasons because they did receive fees for use of the stadium," Kearfott said. "There were risks associated with that specific individual See SACUA, Page 3 In speech at Detroit- Diesel Plant, president chastises Michigan GOP By ALICIA ADAMCZYK- Daily StaffReporter Redford, Mich. - With thou- sands of protesters expected to descend on the State Capitol on Tuesday, President Barack Obama entered into the fray surrounding Michigan's conten- tious battle over right-to-work legislation during remarks at the Detroit Diesel Plant here on Monday. Obama, speaking before sev- eral hundred UAW workers as well as many members of the Michigan Democratic Congres- sional delegation, chastised Republican Gov. Rick Snyder and other Michigan Republi- cans for championingthe recent right-to-work bills. If signed by Snyder - which is expected to occur on Tuesday - the legisla- tion would make union due pay-, ments voluntary for private and, most public-sector unions. "What we shouldn't be doing is trying to take away your rights to bargain for better wages," Obama said to enthusi- astic applause. "These so called right-to-work laws have nothing to do with economics, they have everything to do with politics." Obama pointed to Michigan's automotive unions as repre- sentative of the importance of collective bargaining in the for- mation of the middle class and the success of the larger United States, and he said state and national representatives should be fighting to preserve the pro- cess. "What they're really talking about is giving you the right to work for less money," the presi- dent said. "America's not going to compete based on low-skill, low-wage, no worker's rights - See OBAMA, Page 3 CLASS OF 2013 Daily elects 2013 e ditors Online coverage a focus for paper's new leaders By JENNIFER CALFAS Daily StaffReporter More than 100 staff members of The Michigan Daily filled the second floor of the Stanford Lipsey Student Publications Building to elect the paper's new editor in chief on Nov. 9. After hours of posing questions, the staff chose candidate Andrew Wein- er, a Public Policy junior, to serve as the editor-in-chief for the 2013 calen- dar year. The staff-wide elections are held every fall semester to determine the - editor in chief and editorial page editor for the following year. The remaining sections - news, arts, See EDITORS, Page 3 FINISHING ON A HIGH NOTE STUDENT GOVERNMENT Even after votes, students divided over RSG secession Both sides argue over financial impact of move By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily Staff Reporter As results from the ref- erenda on graduate student secession from the Central Student Government roll in, supporters and detractors of the issue continue to argue their respective cases. Last month, 9.5 percent of Rackham students voted in the Rackham Student Gov- ernment elections with 69 percent of voters supporting secession. The Law School Student Senate held its elec- tions last week with mixed results for secession. LSSS election director Joe Gallagh- er said though turnout in the school of only 1,165 students was 48 percent, the margin of students supporting seces- sion was narrower fitn the RSG election, with64 percent, or 354 voters, in favorand 36 percent, or 203voters, against. Standing on opposing sides of the secession argument, Rackham student Michael Benson, RSG president, and Public Policy graduate student Zeid El-Kilani, the chair of the CSG Graduate Student Affairs Commission disagree on the central reasoning for seces- sion. "It's an issue that's com- pletely about money," El- Kilani said. "And if anyone says 'well no it's about repre- senting these interests more,' no it has to do with Rackham - they do great things, they want to have more money to do greatthings." Benson said he wholeheart- edly rejects that claim. "What we're looking to do is not a financial thing at all - there's a financial com- ponent," Benson said. "We're See SECESSION, Page 3 MCKszNIEneyEZIN/Daily Law student Marta Rajkova plays the piano in the Michigan Union while students study tor exams on Monday. WEATHER HI 39 TOMORROW LO: 29 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 ore-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM #michlinks MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE WIRE INDEX. Vol. CXXIII, No. 60 ©201 The Michigan Daily michigandoily.com N EWS ........ ................ 2 S P OR TS .................. .5 AP NEWS ................... 3 CLASSIFIEDS...... A........6 OPINION .....................4 ARTS .......................... 6 A