1 0 The Michigan Daily - Orientation Edition 2007 Pfizer to close Ann Arbor facility Regents approve North Quad By WALTER NOWINSKI Daily News Editor Jan. 23, 2007 - In a devastating blow to the city and region, Pfizer Inc. announced yesterday that it would close its massive Ann Arbor research and development facility - eliminating 2,100 jobs. At a hastily convened press con- ference in the Michigan Union, Mayor John Hieftje joined Uni- versity President Mary Sue Cole- man, Gov. Jennifer Granholm and other elected officials to address the job cuts. University officials said the announcement will not have a dramatic effect on University research. Over the last three years, Pfizer contributed about $12 million of the University's roughly $800 million research budget. Pfizer paid $13 million to the city's treasury in 2006, more than 4 percent of Ann Arbor's property tax receipts, and was one of the largest charitable givers in the city, supporting the United Way, youth programming and the Uni- versity Musical Society. Pfizer was the largest non- University employer in the city and had recently invested heavily in upgrading and expanding its Ann Arbor research labs, which abuts the eastern edge of North Campus. At the press conference, Hieftje spoke candidly about what the loss of Pfizer, the world's largest phar- maceutical company, would mean for Ann Arbor. He said that the disappearance of the city's largest taxpayer would have an impact on property tax levels in the city and would hurt the city's schools. Still, he cautioned against despair. "This is certainly a blow to the city, but it is not one from which we cannot recover," he said. With a low unemployment rate and the promise of new indus- tries like Google moving into the area, Ann Arbor had been one of the few economic bright spots in the struggling state. But the loss of thousands of high-tech jobs yesterday cast doubt on the city's economic future. New dorm to cost extra $38 million By BRIAN TENGEL Daily StaffReporter Dec.13, 2006-TheUniversityBoard of Regents on Friday approved a new design for North Quad, campus's first new residence hall since Burs- ley Hall was built in 1968. The schematic design and bud- get for North Quad were originally scheduled to be approved at the regents meeting in March. At the last minute, though, administrators decided to delay the approval, citing concerns over the aesthetics of the building's exterior. University President Mary Sue Coleman said yesterday that the original design wasn't welcoming enough. A nine-month delay means that the dorm Coleman has called the northwestern gateway to Central Campus will open at least a year later than scheduled. It will also cost an extra $38 million. Coleman said the new structure will echo many of the other build- ings on campus, reflecting the aes- thetics of structures like Weill Hall, also designed by architects at Rob- 6 Schematic drawings of North Quad approved by the University Boarc December. The new dorm is expected to be completed by 2010. ert A.M. Stern. "It's more urban, it's more Michi- gan, it's more who we are," Coleman said of the new design. The hall is now slated for com- pletion in 2010. The building will stand on the current site of the Frieze Building, the demolition of which the regents approved at their September meeting. The new complex, designed to merge academic facilities and resi- dential space, will house 460 stu- dents, the School of Information, the departments of Communica- tion Studies and Screen Arts and Culture, the Language Resource Center and the Sweetland Writing Center. The residential part of the building will include a top-floor community lounge overlooking campus, air conditioning in every room, personal bathrooms and updated dining facilities. The construction of North Quad is part of the University's Resi- dential Life Initiative, an effort to improve the living and learning environment in the University's residence halls. New program enables 'U' to gauge geographic diversity 0 Sc ch Mar. 2 underp and hi in thea the Un graphi lege Bo The Plus, sc hood cluster sity wi about tionalK applica school ty offic diverse tware creates consideringrace. The University's undergradu- usters' based on ate admissions office began using the service at the beginning of the demographics admissions cycle in September. University officials said they hope the service will help the Uni- By GABE NELSON versity maintain ethnic diversity Daily News Editor after the passage of Proposal 2, which banned the use of affirma- tive action. 9, 2007 - Students from But Proposal 2 wasn't the reason rivileged neighborhoods for the implementation of the sys- gh schools will get a boost tem, said Chris Lucier, director of admissions process now that recruitment and operations for the iversity is using a new demo- -University's undergraduate admis- cs service offered by the Col- sions office. ard. ."It's not a device that's oriented servic'e, called Descriptor solely at social or ethnic diversity," arts students into "neighbor- Lucier said. "It's another tool for us clusters" and "high school to identify populations that might s." It provides the Univer- not have the same access to higher th demographic-information education as other populations." the socioeconomic, educa- Lucier said Descriptor Plus is and racial breakdown of the legal under Proposal 2 because it's nt's neighborhood or high based on geographic and education- - information that Universi- al information - the consideration ials say will help them select of which Proposal 2 didn't outlaw. e freshman classes without He said Descriptor Plus is one of many factors taken into account when considering applications. Using demographic character- istics like annual income, ethnic breakdown and college attendance, Descriptor Plus groups neighbor- hoods into one of 30 "Educational Neighborhood Clusters." It also forms "High School Clusters" by measuring factors that show a school's academic quality and its students' racial and socioeconomic backgrounds. Alan Foutz, an attorney for The Pacific Legal Foundation, a Cali- fornia-based law firm that opposes affirmative action, said it would be hard to challenge the University's use of Descriptor Plus in court. "They would have to establish that the criteria they are using are subterfuge for actual racial profil- ing, which would be a difficult case to establish," he said. "If they are in fact taking into consideration the whole panoply of demograph- ics that are attached to a particular geographic area, that is most likely not a violation of Michigan's Pro- posal 2." Ted Spencer, executive director of the University's undergraduate admissions office, said the Uni- versity hopes Descriptor Plus will prevent the sharp drop in minor- ity attendance that was seen at the University of Texas and the Univer- sity of California system after their states banned the use of affirmative action. "We make no bones about the fact that diversity's important to us," he said. But Lucier said it's unclear whether the new system will work. "We don't know if it will help us," he said. Tlie service 'costs $15,000 per year, University spokeswoman Deborah Green said. Forty-one other colleges - pri- marily private schools - currently use Descriptor Plus, according to a list provided by Steve Graff, director of admission and enrollmentservic- es for the College Board. Michigan State University and Northwestern University are the only other Big Ten schools using it. Although some colleges use Descriptor Plus to analyze how stu- dents from certain neighborhoods perform academically or how like- ly they are to attend the school if accepted, most don't use the service as a key factor when making admis- sions decisions, Graff said. When the University bought the right to use Descriptor Plus three years ago, it originally intended to use the service to recruit students from underrepresented groups, Lucier said. He said admissions officials eventually decided it would be more useful in admissions. Lucier said Descriptor Plus is. a more accurate snapshot of a stu- dent's background thanthe applica- tion previously provided. Admissions officers are currently ableto see anapplicant's genderand race - but they can't use that infor- mation when making an admis- sions decision. Admissions officials haven't decided whether that will change next year, Lucier said. 0