NEWS New Medical School dean appointed After spending 10 months as the interim dean of the Univer- sity School of Medicine, James Woolliscroft will take up the position permanently on July 1. See page 2. OPINION From the Daily: Gitmo must go Since President Bush exploit- ed the tragedy of Sept. 11 for political gain, the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, with its lax standards and indefinite detention policies, has come to represent America's worst. In . another string of challenges to its legality, two separate courts recently handed down deci- sions that reaffirm that the Bush administration is out of line. It's time for Congress to get on board too. See page 4. SPORTS A wrap-up of the baseball season The Michigan baseball team lost in its super regional to Ore- gon State June 11. What caused the Wolverines' season to end in Corvallis? Baseball beat writers Courtney Ratkowiak and Andy Reid weigh in. See page 11. SHAY SrAsiOLA/oaiiy The Ann Arbor Green Fair exhibited a hybrid bus on Friday to give Ann Arbor residents a preview of the envirosmentally friendly future of the city's public transportation system. A2embrac-es hybrid buses TEXTBOOKS Custom solution to textbook dilemma Customization option will lower cost to students, panel says By AMINA FARHA Daily Staff Reporter High textbook prices might be the result of a "broken" market system that state or federal leg- islation can't fix, said a congres- sional advisory committee in its report to Congress in May. The Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance, an independent research panel orga- nized by Congress, said high text- book prices could be blamed on a "producer-centric" market that doesn't allow consumers to influ- ence how products are formatted and sold. Instead of regulating the text- book market, which the report says would be ineffective, the committee recommends an online marketplace where professors nationwide can order custom- made electronic or print copies of texts for students to purchase. According to the report, these texts consisting of material from several publications would elimi- nate the cost of chapters that pro- fessors don't plan on covering, while protecting copyrights. The University's Textbook Task Force, which has been investigat- ing how to reduce the cost of text- books since 2006, proposed a plan to digitalize much of the campus textbook market in its report to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs in May. In the long run, the task force said it would also like to establish a website for instructors to com- See TEXTBOOKS, Page 7 While city makes eco- friendly move, 'U' keeps old buses By JAKE HOLMES Daily StafflReporter Public transportation in Ann Arbor is about to become even more environmentally friendly. Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje recently unveiled plans to curb the amount of fossil fuels used by the city's buses. As part of "The Mayor's Green Energy Plan," the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority plans to replace all its buses with a "green fleet" of hybrid buses within three years. But while Ann Arbor plans to use city funds and outside grants to buy 15 hybrid buses by Novem- ber, the University has no plan to introduce hybrid technology to. its own buses. Although the hybrid buses use about 30 percentless fuel than the ones used now, they cost about 83 percentmore,AATA maintenance manager Terry Black said. Keith Johnson, the general manager of the University's Fleet and Garage Operations, said that because the hybrid buses cost so much more than regular ones - $550,000 versus $300,000 - the University will hold off on buying hybrid buses for now. But Johnson said the Univer- sity plans to reinvestigate hybrids in 10 to 12 years when higher fuel costs and lower prices of hybrid technology make the transition a more cost-effective option. Replacing every bus in the AATA's 75-bus fleet with hybrids, which Hieftje has pledged to do over the next three years, will require a hefty initial investment, but Black said he expects the city to see more than just a return in environmental well being. Over the next 12 years, Black said the AATA expects to save $2,500,000 in fuel and maintenance costs as a result of introducing the hybrids. Johnson said the financial ben- efit would not be as great for the University because its buses typi- cally only rack up half the mile- BY THE NUMBERS $550,000 The cost of a hybrid bus. $300r000 The cost of the model of bus the University uses. age of city buses. "It's just more attractive to them," he said, Hybrid technology is espe- cially beneficial for vehicles that encounter frequent stop-and-go trafficlikebuses. Hybridbuses are mostly powered by fuel combus- tion, but are assisted by electrical energy. When the bus's brakes are applied, a generator converts the energy released from deceleration into electrical energy, which is stored in a battery and used when the bus accelerates. See BUSES, Page 7 INDEX Vol. cXvIiENo. 145 02007The Michigan Daily michigandoiiy.com N EW S ....................................... SU D O K U .................................. O PIN IO N ........... .............. .. CLASSIFIED. ........... ...... .AR T S . ... ...... ............. .. ........... . S P O R T S .................................... ...2 ...3 ...4 ....6 ...9 ..11