Monday, May 5, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com New dean joins faculty Architecture prof. has won awards for "green" buildings By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily StaffReporter Internationally-renowned architect Monica Ponce de Leon, who has designed buildings in cit- ies like New York, Paris and Tokyo, willnextturnher attentiontoAnn Arbor. The University announced her appointment as the new Dean of the Taubman College of Archi- tecture and Urban Planning on Tuesday, pending approval by the University Board of Regents. Ponce de Leon, a Harvard Graduate School of Design pro- fessor and principal architect at award-winning firm Office dA, will assume her post Sept. L Along with winning awards for design ingenuity, much of Ponce de Leon's work has been praised for its energy efficiency. She was selected after nearly a dozen candidates were inter- viewed by a search committee formed in November. Mary Anne Drew, executive PICKING OUT POTTERY assistantto the TCAUP dean and a member of the search committee, said the committee was looking for someone who would inspire students to attend the college. Drew described the ideal candi- date as "someone who could artic- ulate the vision of the school on a national and international level." Outgoing TCAUP dean Douglas Kelbaugh said Ponce De Leon fits that bill. "She's an accomplished prac- titioner with a firm that's won many, many distinguished design awards," he said. Kelbaugh pointed to Ponce de Leon's experience in other coun- tries, which he said provides her with an "international perspec- tive" and the ability to appeal to a diverse audience. Provost Teresa Sullivan said that she and University Presi- dent Mary Sue Coleman were "extremely pleased" with the appointment because of Ponce de Leon's ability to build upon both the University's technological advances in architecture and its reputation. "We are confident of her abil- ity to articulate a vision for TCAUP that will position it as a leader in architecture and design education and practice on such important issues as sustainabil- ity, digital technologies, diver- sity and social consciousness," she said. COLEMAN From Page 2 Coleman said the University began using Descriptor Plus, a ser- vice provided by the College Board, to improve minority recruiting efforts across the state. Descriptor Plus sorts student by home address and school location, and then breaks down the demographics of these "clusters" by socioeconomic, educa- tional and racial criteria. "From this we're able to go through the state and understand areas where we should be concen- trating our message," Coleman said. She said University efforts to recruit students have been particu- larly strong in the cities of Detroit, Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo. How- ever, The Michigan Daily reported in December that counselors in the majority of Detroit high schools available to comment said they had seen University recruiters less fre- quently since the 2006 ban. Coleman said the University has taken a "one student at a time" approach to minority recruitment since 2006. "We understand that we're in this for the long run," Coleman said. "It's why I come out to meetings like this, and it's why I make individual phone calls to students once they're admitted." Coleman said she convinced one student from Detroit to enroll after she discovered that the student and his parents, who Coleman said didn't go to college, misread the acceptance letter that offered him a full scholarship. Financial aid is an important starting point for improving minor- ity enrollment, Coleman said. She added that the University has col- lected $70 million in the past 18 months to give financial aid to stu- dents like the one she phoned. Business School junior Britney Little, the financial secretary for the University's chapter of the his- torically black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha, said she thought the Univer- sity still needed to do more minor- ity outreach and attributed most successful recruitment efforts to minority organizations on campus, not the University. "I think there is definitely room for improvement, and that includes going to places outside of Detroit," Little said. "We talk about diversity, but having students from the same area doesn't make a diverse campus when they've all had the same expe- rience." CORRECTIONS Please report any error in the Daily to: corrections@michigandoily.com ' r"-- ho I CHANELVONHABSBURG-LOTHRINGEN/D Ann Arbor residents Lucie Roy (left) and Adelle Roy shop at the Ann Arbor Potters Guild's 60th Annual Spring Saleon Hill Street. ,, ___ L'' _ rt e2 I u ' 1 . . . ;s'x . , ., , $, , ' ,. 3 £> 1 jt * ,t' } i 1Y" 4, ! 'd 6 E C d d _? {;, 30th AnnArbor Antiquarian Book Fair Sunday, May 18th 11-5 $5 Admission * First Editions * Americana * Old & Rare * Thousands of Books "- in All Categories and Price Ranges Michigan Union Ballroom (2nd floor) 530 S. State, corner of S. State and S. University Sponsored by the Ann Arbor Antiquarian Book Dealers Assoc. Benefit for the William L Clements Library For more information call Westside Bookshop (734)995-1891 ,. _: . a* $ . . i s E ' e .,, " A.) R