The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, September 18, 2013 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, September18, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. Asian carp found in water near Lake Michigan The recent discovery of a large Asian carp near Chicago under- scores the need to protect the Great Lakes from the voracious fish and other invasive species that could slip into Lake Michi- gan, two members of Congress said Tuesday. "If Asian carp are not stopped before they enter the Great Lakes, they could destroy the ecosystem, as well as the boating and fishing industries, and hundreds of thou- sands of jobs," said Sen. Debbie Stabenow, a Michigan Democrat. The director of the White House Council on Environmen- tal Quality's Asian carp program reported the find last week dur- ing a Great Lakes conference in Milwaukee that drew hundreds of environmental advocates, sci- entists and government officials from across the eight-state region and Canada. DETROIT $30 million fund issued to redevelop Woodward Avenue A $30 million fund has been launched to promote physical redevelopment along Detroit's Woodward Corridor. The Kresge Foundation and NCB Capital Impact say the money will be used for real estate projects that promote density and diversity in the city's core. The project is being announced 2 months after state- appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr made Detroit the largest city in the U.S. to file for bankruptcy. The fund will provide long- term fixed rate loans to let devel- opers start construction more quickly. Kresge President Rip Rapson says the Woodward Corridor InvWstment Fund is an example of one of the tools needed to sup- port revitalization in Detroit. DENVER Colorado flooding could keep tourists away A little more than a year after Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper insisted his wildfire-ravaged state was still "open for business," he mayhave to throw another lifeline to the state's billion-dollar tourism industry as the world takes in the startling images of dramatic flood rescues and washed-out roads. The flooding has struck at the very mountains that give the state its identity and attract mil- lions of hikers, campers and ski- ers. Months and possibly years of painstaking, expensive repairs lie ahead, but Colorado officials must also deal with a second problem- the risk that catastrophic damage could keep tourists away, even from places that are unharmed. CAIRO Spokesman for Muslim Brotherhood arrested by police Egyptian police arrested the main English-language spokes- man of the Muslim Brotherhood on Tuesday along with other senior members of the group, all charged with inciting violence, state media and a security offi- cial said. Gehad el-Haddad had emerged has one of the group's most well-known faces, appear- ing regularly in foreign media to defend the Brotherhood's poli- cies during Mohammed Morsi's year as president and following Morsi's July 3 ouster by the mili- tary. His father, Essam el-Had- dad, was a senior foreign policy aide to Morsi and has been in detention with Morsi since the coup. State Department spokes- woman Jen Psaki criticized the arrest as politically motivated. -Compiled from Daily wire reports ATHLETIC From Page 1A any more tickets. Even if he sells the ticket to someone who then chooses not to attend, the stu- dent will be penalized. "We don't want to play a guessing game of who's coming," Lochmann said. Lochmann added that the system has worked well in other schools, including at Kansas. Entry to Crisler Center on gamedays will commence as in previous years; those who arrive earliest will earn bleacher seats. For the Wolverines' marquee contest against rival Michigan State, the Athletic Department will distribute its allotment of 3,000 tickets to the students who attended the most games. "(The Michigan State game) is where we're going to reward our most loyal students," Lochmann said. Students who do not like the new policy can request a full refund, and the Athletic Department plans on email- ing season ticket holders with an outline of the new process before the end of the week. Ifa student does not request a full refund, she will not receive a refund for games not attended during the season. Lochmann said demand for student tickets is at its highest point since the Fab Five era in the early 1990s. The new system allows for the Athletic Depart- ment to grant full season tickets to every student who request- ed them while avoiding a split package in which students only BUDGET From Page1A that any representation issues could be addressed through the newly created Graduate Student Engagement commission. Assembly representatives further debated the distribution of money between the executive and legislative discretionary funds. The budget proposed that the executive fund be allocated $2,000 more than the legislative fund; representatives, however, debated over this margin. Despite the reduced total budget, the legislative fund was allocated $2,500 more than what was the previous semester and the executive fund would be given $4,500 more than last semester. LSA senior Pratik Ghosh said he believed the assembly's work warranted additional legislative funds. "While the (greater legisla- tive discretionary funding) is unprecedented, I think this assembly is unprecedented," Ghosh said during the meeting. "We're going to get a lot done." In addition, the committee unanimously approved a reso- lution that would suspend the assembly from its traditional responsibility of allocating a portion of the fall budget to the upcoming 2014 summer assem- bly. BEYONCE From Page 1A Michigan University - wrote the music. While some of the con- tent for halftime shows, such as scripting, is student-generated. Just like University athletes, marching band members return to campus early to prepare for the fall sports season. Information graduate student Kayla MacLennan, currently a staff assistant for the march- ing band, performed with the band during her four years as an undergraduate student at the University. She said the band begins intense practices about two-and-a-half weeks before classes begin, often drilling from about 9a.m. until 10 p.m. "Our style is different than anywhere else, so everyone kind of has to start from scratch, and then we get time to start (practicing for) our first show," MacLennan said. There's also a weekly "chal- lenge process" during the school year to decide which members will actually perform for which games. Out of 405 members, only 235 perform in the pregame and 280 perform at half time. The chosen members are noti- PRESIDENTIAL From Page 1A this monumental task," which includes developing a pool of candidates, conducting inter- views and recommending candi- dates to the board The firm and the seven fac- ulty members serve as the Presidential Search Advisory Committee to the Board of Regents, who alone serve as the Presidential Search Committee. Ultimately, the final choice for the next president will be left up to the board. Unlike past years, the advi- sory committee doesn't include a student representative. Under the State of Michigan Constitu- tion, the regents "shall, as often as necessary, elect a president of the institution under its super- vision," meaning the board has "the sole authority and respon- sibility" to elect the president, according to White. Out of the top 25 U.S. public universities, the University of Michigan and Clemson Univer- sity are the only institutions that didn't include students on their most recent presidential search committees. The College of Wil- liam and Mary did not have a for- mal committee beyond its Board of Visitors in its most recent search. Instead of allowing students on the actual search committee, the regents and their advisers announced the dates of public forums that will allow students, faculty, alumni, staff and the general public to weigh in on the presidential search. The forums will be question-and-answer based, and will survey attendees on the qualities they desire in the next University president. White wrote that the forums will allow the committee to gather "different perspectives" on important qualities necessary in the next president. The com- mittee will take the information into account when making rec- ommendations to the board to select the new president. To develop a diverse selection ofcandidates, theboardwill con- sider contenders nominated by fled on a Friday, and rehearse the following Monday through Fri- day for an hour and a half each day. The band never repeats the same show at home, giving them a lot of shows to learn and little time to learn them. For Engineering junior Ruiqi Chen, rehearsals during the school year that led up to the Beyonce show weren't always enough. He described the cycle of practicing and performing for the shows like studying for a test. "If you don't do your home- work, you're not going to do well on the exam, and the exam is the halftime show," Chen said. For Chen, who said he tends to have problems when it comes to dance moves, the dance break in the middle of the Beyonc6 performance was particularly challenging. The increased par- ticipation of the dance team this year has led to the creation of more complicated dances per- formed at halftime. Yet another elaborate - and in some ways perplexing - aspect of the Beyonc6 show was the use of lasers. Spectators may have noticed a larger-than-life figure swaying to the music along with the band. That image was actually cre- the search firm as well as names received at the search commit- tee's e-mail address, umich. president@russellreynolds.com, to which the public can submit recommendations. White could not give many details on the search process itself, since the process is still underway and its details are pri- vate. However, University alum Matt Nolan - former Michi- gan Student Assembly president and member of the 2001 search committee that chose Coleman - said the committee he par- ticipated on spoke with former University presidents as well as the current president at the time, Lee Bollinger, who now serves as the president of Columbia Uni- versity. The 2001 group - which also included University alum Lisa Jackson, current regents White, Laurence Deitch (D-Bloomfield Hills) and Andrew Fischer New- man (R-Ann Arbor) and Athletic Director Dave Brandon, a former regent - fielded through many resumes and CVs, eventually narrowing down candidates and conducting interviews. Nolan said he felt fortunate to participate on the board, espe- cially since he heard from Cole- man before she was hired on why she deserved to be the University president. "Hearing in her words sort of why she would want to leave the position she was in to become president of the University of Michigan, to me, underscored my appreciation for how special of a place Michigan is and just how really unique it is not just in the state, not just in the coun- try, but in the world it can bring together," Nolan said. Nolan and Jackson served as student representatives for the group - a role missing in the current committee. Nolan said he felt his presence allowed the group to remind the committee of the importance of students and to take that point into con- sideration during the search pro- cess. However, times have changed. With the advent of social media, Nolan said, a student representa- ated by pre-recording a member of the dance team, making her movements into a silhouette and then outlining her figure in laser beams to be projected during the show. MacLennan said while the band directors always want members in perfect formation, the added element of laser beams shooting from the press box made staying in formation an even greater necessity. "We had to be really careful," she said. Chen said performing in the dark was a peculiar experience compared to previous shows. "It was a little bit scary when I couldn't see where I was going. We never fully rehearsed with the lights off," he said. Last Saturday's performance marked the first time the stadi- um lights were ever turned off at a football game halftime show at Michigan Stadium MacLennan cited the support of the Athletic Department and talent of marching band mem- bers for the success of the show. "Dave Brandon is extremely supportive of the band," she said. "We wouldn't be able to do the cool things that we do without that (support) ... or even get those really cool blinky bracelets. It's tive on the committee runs the risk of breaching privacy and possibly leaking secretive infor- mation. However, students plan to take the input that they do have with great stride. The University Council established a student committee that will gather stu- dent opinions on the qualities desired in the next president through a five-question survey to be e-mailed to the student body. The compiled feedback from that committee will be presented at the public forum on Sept. 26. Since the group is recognized by the regents, White said the com- mittee is "crucial" in aiding the process. One year ago, the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill - another large, public research university - underwent and completed a chancellor search with a 21-member committee that held four public forums that were similar to the University's upcoming meetings. The com- mittee included members of the school's Board of Trustees, stu- dents, faculty, staff, alumni and community members. The UNC committee selected R. William Funk & Associates to help the search process for a price of $120,000, excluding addition- al travel and general expenses. It also set up an e-mail address to which the public could send their opinions and nominations. Although the committee met privately, they published their meeting location, dates and some of the minutes for the public to see. The committee held a total of 19 meetings, including the public forums, between Nov. 2012 and March 2013. The chosen chan- cellor, Carol Folt, who served as interim president at Dartmouth College before former University Provost Phil Hanlon took office, was appointed in April. However, as the committee- sponsored public forums began Tuesday, the decision on who the next president of the University will be inches closer and closer with each opinion offered. -Daily News Editor Alicia Adamczyk contributed to this report. Search committee holds public forum on med. campus Speakers seek pres. with experience in health care By SAM GRINGLAS Daily Sports Editor The first set of six public= forums on the search for the next University president con- vened Tuesday on the Medical Center Campus and at the Uni- versity's Flint Campus. Regent Katherine White (D) led the discussion Tuesday eve- ning, along with Alison Ranney, a consultant with the firm hired to conduct the seaarch, Russell- Reynolds Associates. Three faculty members of the Presidential Search Committee and four additional regents- Julia Darlow (D), Mark Ber- nstein (D) and Shauna Ryder Diggs (D) - jotted notes and asked follow-up questions to about 25 students, faculty and community members gathered in the Taubman Biomedical Sci- ence Research Building's audito- rium. After briefly explaining the search process, White and Ran- ney asked the crowd of mostly faculty and medical students to consider the challenges the Uni- versity will face over the next one, five or twenty years as well as qualities they would want the committee to keep in mind when choosing a candidate. While a few periods of silence occurred in the mostly unfilled auditorium, a steady flow of comments generally characterized the forum. Com- ments centered on a wide array of issues and challenges. Some were focused on the Univer- sity of Michigan Health Sys- tem, with multiple speakers expressing the importance of a candidate with a background at an institution with a hos- pital. Two other contributors also expressed the importance of facing the challenges of the changing landscape of health- care, following passage of the Affordable Care Act. More generally, multiple med- ical school students addressed college affordability, touching on topics such as scholarships and tuition costs, as well as the need to attract students from diverse backgrounds in terms of race and socio-economic sta- tus. Other comments addressed alumni engagement and build- ing cohesion and partnership between University of Michigan units and campuses, in Flint and Dearborn. Peter Farrehi, an assistant professor in the department of internal medicine, pointed out that the next University presi- dent effect not just the campus in Ann Arbor, but the entire state of Michigan, including cities like Flint and Dearborn. "The state is in dire need of the University's leadership," he said. Farrehi mentioned that many people are interested in becoming more global, but the University and its next presi- dent must place greater empha- sis on supporting the local community. Multiple commenters men- tioned community-oriented needs as challenges that are just as important as the University's global expansion, both in the scope of the hospital and the University at large. In an interview with The Michigan Daily after the event, White said many of these con- cerns were also echoed earlier in the day at a forum on the Flint campus. The next public forums will occur on Thursday, Sept. 26 and Friday, Sept. 28. Brazil to depart from U.S. -centric Internet Nation increases net independence, cites concerns with NSA RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - Brazil plans to divorce itself from the U.S.-centric Internet over Washington's widespread online spying, a move that many experts fear will be a potential- ly dangerous first step toward fracturing aglobal network built with minimal interference by governments. President Dilma Rousseff ordered a series of measures aimed at greater Brazilian online independence and secu- rity following revelations that the U.S. National Security Agency intercepted her commu- nications, hacked into the state- owned Petrobras oil company's network and spied on Brazilians who entrusted their personal data to U.S. tech companies such as Facebook and Google. The leader is so angered by the espionage that on Tuesday she postponed next month's scheduled trip to Washington, where she was to be honored with a state dinner. Internet security and policy experts say the Brazilian gov- ernment's reaction to infor- mation leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden is understandable, but warn it could set the Internet on a course of Balkanization. "The global backlash is only beginning and will get far more severe in coming months," said Sascha Meinrath, director of the Open Technology Institute at the Washington-based New America Foundation think tank. "This notion of national privacy sovereignty is going to be an increasinglysalientissue around the globe." While Brazil isn't proposing to bar its citizens from U.S.- based Web services, it wants their data to be stored locally as the nation assumes greater control over Brazilians' Internet use to protect them from NSA snooping. The danger of mandating that kind of geographic isola- tion, Meinrath said, is that it could render inoperable popu- lar software applications and services and endanger the Internet's open, interconnected structure. LIKE US ON FACEBOOK FACEBOOK.COM/MICHIGANDAILY I I 4 t. Aq