Search committee on schedule The President Search Advisory Committee said Friday that it is pro- ceeding on schedule. Committee Chairperson and Law chool Dean Jeffrey Lehman said the committee has gathered a "robust, diverse list of prospects" to fill the position vacated by President James Duderstadt. Lehman said the committee has set up policies of legal compliance and the mechanics of its search process. He said the committee has begun to advertise the position and promised the regents that they would have a busy fall. Lehman said the committee is in its outreach" phase. He said committee members have met with student lead- ers, faculty, alumni and academic lead- ership from the Ann Arbor, Dearborn and Flint campuses. "We're looking forward to a busy summer of work," Lehman said. Provost highlights VCM 4hanges coming in July University Provost J. Bernard Machen presented an overview of Value Centered Management (VCM) to the Board of Regents last Thursday. The University is scheduled to adopt VCM as its decentralized budgeting system July 1. Under the system, each school will keep the dollars it generates, in addi- tion to an allocation made to each *hool hy the provost. "Implicit in this model is the under- standing that the University will have the ability to reallocate funds to the highest priorities of the University," Machen said. President James Duderstadt said the amount of money individual schools see will not change this year. "However, the incentives for next year's budget will change dramatically," he said. * Duderstadt said he hopes VCM will generate broad behavioral changes, such as schools taking more active measures to recruit students for spring and summer term classes, and better performances by centrally-provided University services. UHS fees to rise again The Board of Regents approved a 3.96% increase in students' fees, to *nd the University Health Service. In the fall each student will be assessed $105 for the service, an increase of $4 per student. The year's increase is lower than recent UHS fee increases. In the past three years, the fees rose by 5.31%, 4.89% and 4.66%, respectively. UHS Director Caesar Briefer said the increase is needed to fund salary creases for UHS employees, and qsts associated with the current reno- vations project. Briefer said the extra money will also go toward the purchase of a new X-ray unit. - Compiled by Managing Ners Editor Jennifer Harvey. NEWS ' Report on women at the 'U' reveals progress, trends Wednesday, May 22.1996- The Michigan Daily - 3 By Katie Wang Daily News Editor The third edition of the report on the "Women at the University of Michigan," released Monday, revealed mixed results about the University's attempts to improve the status of women at the University. The report concluded that in spite of progress made within the last five years, "the higher, the fewer," remains an accurate description of women's par- ticipation in academia. "('Th e report) tracks m o d e s t progress in some areas and identifies other areas such as gen- der composi- tion of faculty where more effort is need- Tenure Troubi A comparison of the number of tenured and tenure-track men and women at the 463 University.265Ij 17 instructor sst. A Prof. Royster Harper, dean of students. "If we look at the results, it would suggest we have lots of work to do." Carol Hollenshead, the chairperson of the committee that prepared the report, described the results of the report as "mixed." Hollenshead said that although she was encouraged by the increase in the number of females filling positions as assistant and associate professors, she said she still has concerns. She said the University still has "a ways to go to S 1,148 reaching gender m a equity on the acade- Women mic side" U niversity 512 President James Duderstadt said he 77 151 was optimistic about the report's findings. Assoc. Prof. "We're moving in rf_. - . the right direction, MATTHEW SMART/Daily whereas several years ago, the University was moving in the wrong direction,' he said. Duderstadt's Michigan Agenda for Women was designed to increase the num- ber of female faculty at the University. The report also concluded: women of color were less likely to achieve tenure than either men of color or white women; Sin 1994-95 women represented 38 percent of new faculty hired into tenured positions; MARGARET MYERS/Daily English Prof. Sandra Gunnings works with a student. According to the report on "Women at the University of Michigan," the English department hired women 90 percent of the time the department had an opportunity to hire a female appilcant. ed," said Susan Rasmussen, associate director for the University's affirmative action programs. According to the report, even though women comprise nearly half of the undergraduate degree recipients, they represent only one-fifth of the faculty. Twenty-two percent of the tenured and tenure-track faculty are women, and 4 percent of the tenured faculty are women of color. "It's sad, it's disappointing," said E. as of Nov. 1, there were 684 tenured or tenure-track male professors, compared to 197 females in the school of Literature, Science, and the Arts; between 1991-95, women filled positions in the medical school 21 per- cent of the time a hiring opportunity presented itself. Rasmussen said the report is important because it establishes beyond any doubt that the pool for women faculty exists. "Women are in the pool and have been swimming in the pool for some time;' she said. Lester Monts, vice provost for acade- mic and multicultural affairs, said there must be a concerted effort on the part of all academic units to create an environ- ment conducive to bringing in scholars who are women of color. "We have to create an environment here at the University and women of color, in part because of these statis- tics," Monts said. Regents vote to initiate planning for new aquatic research center By Jennifer Harvey Managing News Editor The University Board of Regents voted Friday to initiate planning for a new Aquatic Research and Education Center in Grand Haven, on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. "It fits a need. It's an extension of the University's research facilities," said Regent Daniel Horning (R-Grand Haven). The proposal calls for a partnership between the University, Grand Valley State University and the city of Grand Haven. The Grand Haven site would serve as a center for interdisciplinary study opportunities for LSA, Engineering, Public Health, and Natural Resources and Environment students. "(The center) will serve as an educa- tional benefit not only to the University, but to the school kids who live in the area too," Horning said. The center will be housed in a facil- ity that was once a water filtration plant, but has been unused since 1986. University Vice President for Research Homer Neal said preliminary cost estimates for renovating the build- ing total approximately $3,000,000. Annual operating costs, including staffing, faculty fellowships, supplies, utilities and general services, are esti- mated at $500,000. The proposal states the new facility will have three main functions: to serve as a se forstudies utiliz- ing aquariums, including studies of fisheries, lake plankton and meso-scale ecosystem communities; to serve as an instruction site for all levels of Great Lakes environment education instruction; and to serve as a site for public education on Great Lakes aquatic life and environmental issues. The center will be only the third facility in the United States with the ability to run experiments under con- trolled and altered conditions, involving as many as four trophic levels in large environmental tanks. r at Ulrich's Bookstore - Second Floor (313) 741-9669 KELEY'S <7KOPIES E W Nl:: .4. Arom We've joined forces to c~3rsrTP at Ulrich'sBookstore - Second Floor ' c ' k,- (313) 996-0907 you better. X3 _ 2 1 .. Stop and see us at Ulrich's Bookstore 2nd Floor 549 E. University % y '..... . , ? :x .iN te r.