E-U hid jigan 0aiIj ON (itIl NItl)I( lj I) ~y' ,[ 1 J'aLNTY-TI I lE EXIS ( 1_~IAI ' El lO~l :\L IIEIO Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, September 24, 2013 michigandaily.com FAIR THEE WELL ADMINISTRATION University to demolish North Hall ALLISON FARRAND/Daily Students pack into the Beyster Building to speak with recruiters for the Engineering Career Fair Monday. FACULTY GOVERNANCE Assemblyupsetby search Home of ROTC will be razed to make way for new building By ARIANA ASSAF Daily StaffReporter South Quad Residence Hall might look a bit rough right now, but another building on campus will have it worse. North Hall, the building that currently is home to the Univer- sity's ROTC programming, is set for demolition, pending approval by the Board of Regents. Operations Officer Wayne Doyle said the building is being torn down because repairs to the cur- rent building would be too costly. University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said the building, locat- ed on North University Avenue near the C.C. Little Building and the Museum of Natural History, is "more than a little old," University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said. North Hall was built between 1899 and 1900 as the Homeopathic Hospital Building, according to records from the Bentley Histori- cal Library. It has housed ROTC programs since 1940. Fitzgerald said plans for demo- lition and reconstruction of North Senate Assembly 0 upset about lack of own members on search committee By YARDAIN AMRON For theDaily At their meeting at Palmer Commons Monday, members of the Senate Assembly expressed concern that the University's Board of Regents didn't appoint any assembly members to the Presidential Search Advisory Committee. The Senate Advisory Com- mittee on University Affairs - a nine-member faculty executive committee elected by the Sen- ate Assembly - passed a reso- lution in February 2012 urging the regentsto include represen- tatives from the assembly on the committee. When members were announced in July 2013, no assembly members were among the names Over the summer, SACUA responded with another reso- lution expressing their "disap- pointment" with the regents' decision. Assembly members expressed a similar sentiment Monday. "It doesn't start off in very good light, given the fact that there's no representation of central governance on the Search Advisory Committee," said Prof. John Lehman, the SACUA secretary. "It sends a sort of message as to what the conversations are going to be about in the interviews." SACUA member Prof. Scott Masten said the regents gave no explanation as to why the assembly was not included in the committee. Monday, University spokes- man Rick Fitzgerald declined to comment about why no Sen- ate Assembly members were included. In lieu of representation on the committee, members proposed that the assembly establish a strong channel of communication with the new University president from the onset. But the window of influence is apparently small. Lehman, See ASSEMBLY, Page 3 COMMUNITY Entreprenuer " co-op formed off-campus C LOSE -K N IT 1 0 Ik Hall will be up for approval by the University's Board of Regents next month. Therefore, he could pro- vide only limited information at the time. "It's been in development for a long time," Fitzgerald said. "It's a project that will try to solve mul- tiple problems on campus." Lt. Col. Allana Bryant, a profes- sor of military science, said ROTC programs will be relocated in May, and the building will be torn down in June. It's not clear where the ROTC programwillbe held during construction. Fitzgerald declined to comment on the timeline of construction, but said more information will become available once the project is approved. Nursing junior Meghan Con- ger, an Army ROTC cadet, said she spends several hours a week at North Hall because it's the meeting place for almost all of her ROTC activities. She added that she's disappointed the building will be taken down, as she thinks of it as acampus landmark. "It's a very unique building with a lot of purpose, and it's a build- ing that's special to cadets and midshipmen because it's solely for ROTC operations," Conger said. "Not a lot of other students know about it or can use it." CAMPUS LIFE New group combines networking with fitness Run This Campus spins off events in Detroit, Chicago By CHRISTY SONG Daily StaffReporter Is your workout routine get- ting stale? Give networking out a chance. Run This Campus is a new organization focused on promot- ing fitness through networking, or "networking out." Unlike many athletic and wellness groups, RTC is focused on collaboration rather than competition. It also provides the opportunity for par- ticipants to engage with commu- nity leaders, peers and potential employers. RTC is based off of an organiza- tion with operations Detroit and Chicago called Run This Town, which was founded in 2012. Usual- ly 400 to 1,000 people participate in two sessions a week in those cit- ies, according to the group's orga- nizers. LSA senior Omar Hashwi, for- mer vice president of the Cen- tral Student Government, helped start RTC. The group held its first meeting on Sept. 17 and will soon announce inaugural events. Hash- wi hopes the University's numbers will reach or surpass the atten- dance rate of Run This Town. "My goal is to create a healthier campus by creating one of the larg- est collaborative fitness sessions in the U.S. here at our University," Hashwi said. Run This Town founder Shawn See FITNESS, Page 3 Former Michigan linebacker finances Oxford Rd. house By ROBERT ARANELLA Daily StaffReporter The Creators is a new co-op in town - and it has a celebritybenefactor. The co-op was founded after Business and LSA senior Nancy Xiao, a mem- ber of MPowered, spoke at an alumni event in Cincin- nati to generate support for entrepreneurial projects on campus. Former Michigan linebacker Dhani Jones, who currentlyplays forthe Cincin- nati Bengals, was intrigued by her speech and approached her afterward to talk about creating a student group to foster such endeavors. "On this panel, I remem- ber talking about this prob- lem we had on campus, that we're trying to solve, there was just no one place to go to meet like-minded people who were building great things," Xiao, the co-op's general manager, said. Since the event, Jones and Xiao have worked together to form a group that encourages young entrepreneurs to fol- low through with their dream projects. Xiao has attracted six other students to the cause and they continue to have weekly discussions with Jones to continue growing the outfit. The co-op is named for its mission to create a collabora- tive environment for students. The co-op is not a part of the Inter-Cooperative Coun- cil and is not registered as a student group. Xiao said they decided not to affiliate to avoid narrowing the project's scope. "It's not a student organi- zation. We thought it would be better if we weren't so Ann Arbor focused ... we wanted people to be focused on our people, not the place," Xiao said. This fall, Jones bought the group a house located at 631 Oxford Road, a property that used to be owned by the Uni- versity's Board of Regents. The four-story house has two floors of workstations and communal areas to foster the exchange of ideas, and a resi- dential floor for leadership. Due to zoning laws, only four members are able to live in- house currently as they finish convertingthe building. The organization will be accepting their first group of new members this fall. While other clubs accept students with varying levels of experience, The Creators will require more business- focused qualifications when considering applicants. "We're looking for ... peo- ple that have kind of already hit that epiphany and have already started building an app or selling their first prod- uct," Xiao said. LSA sophomore Heather Williams and LSA freshman lii Anuar knit for the homeless at a meeting for Scarves With a Purpose Monday, ANN ARBOR South to get burger oint Bi Un An Burge Bu ficati Univ Fores Th a 'gr food- garne they the" isn't good, attem entir urgerFi to open "The food service industry in general is a very wasteful n space under industry," Heather Stein, the store's manager, said. "It leaves tiversity Towers a pretty big carbon footprint. It's important that we keep By MAX RADWIN that in mind because ... we can For theDaily change that. If more people were more conscientious of sus- in Arbor, prepare to be tainability, the results would be erfied. immeasurable." rgerFi - short for "Burger- Stein said that everything on on" - will open on South BurgerFi's menu will be made ersity Avenue near South from scratch. All of the store's t Avenue on Oct. 1. beef is a proprietary blend of .e restaurant's belief in Montana, free-range Black een' business model and Angus cattle, and the resulting preparation habits has patties will be formed in-house ered rapid success. But and never frozen, she said. say their participation in Hand-cut fries and onion rings better burger movement" will also be made fresh through- just an attempt to serve out the day. ,healthy food: It's also an "We even tilt our grills so a apt to set an example for an lot of that grease runs down, so e industry. you're not just getting a burger that's sitting in its own fat," Stein said. Even the restaurant's inte- rior - which evokes the fast- casual concept of hamburger stands from the 1950s and 60s - will be made from recycled materials: the Coke-themed chairs are made out of 111 Coke bottles and the restaurant's pic- nic tables are made out of 960 milk cartons. LSA junior Elaine Han, who admitted she isn't a huge fan of burgers, said she plans to try the new restaurant for its green- consciousness, fresh food and its proximity to campus. Stein believes that the res- taurant will be a strong fit with Ann Arbor not only because the city is very "green-conscious," but also because BurgerFi's menu provides a lot of food See BURGER, Page 3 WEATHER H1I:70 TOMORROW LO: 47 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. * 4k NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM The Wire:'U' creates off-campus housing website MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS INDEX NEWS ............................2 SPORTS......................7 . 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