Monday, July 23, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com UMHS declines in national rankings UMHS Official: Honor Roll. Hospitals make the Honor Roll methodology by ranking highly in at least six of the evaluated specialties. The differences cause for report reviewed 16 specialties com- d mon to American hospitals. drop Factors reviewed inthe compila- tion of the rankings include death By KATIE BURKE rates, number of patients, size of{ Daily Staff Reporter staff and reputation, according to the magazine's website. The high quality of the Universi- This is the 18th consecutive year ty's health care system continuesto UMHS has been featured on the be recognized nationwide, though Honor Roll, and it's the only Michi- not necessarily at the same level as gan hospital on the list. UMHS past years. ranked in the top 20 in seven spe- After spending three consecu- cialties and top 40 in another seven. tive years as 14th on the U.S. News This year, the University's high- and World Report America's Best est specialty rankings were in ear, Hospitals Honor Roll, the Univer- nose and throat, ophthalmology sity of Michigan Health System and urology, ranking 13th on all dropped to the very bottom of the three lists. list at 17th in this year's rankings. Thisyear's reportranked UMHS UMHS ranked immediately as the top hospital in the state and below Indiana University Health, the Detroit metro area. based in Indianapolis. The Massa- Doug Strong, chief executive chusetts General Hospital, in Bos- officer of the University's Hospitals ton, topped the Honor Roll for this and Health Centers, said in astate- year's report. ment that the University appreci- The report, published last Mon- ates the evaluation it has received day, ranks U.S. hospitals based on in the report. evaluations of their specialty pro- "As the only hospital that serves grams, and lists the top-scoring patients from every county in hospitals in the country in the Michigan, and many other parts of Monday, July 23, 2012 The Michigan Daily --michigandaily.com the country and world, we're proud to offer a high level of care and expertise across many specialties," Strong said. "There are many ways to measure a hospital's excellence, and we are grateful to be recog- nized in this ranking and others." Strong commented on the drop in rank, attributing the move from 14th to 17th to the methodology the magazine used to compile the list. "There were an awful lot more changes this year compared to pre- vious years," Strong said. Strong said this year's rankings focused less on hospital reputation among physicians nationwide than previous years. "What differentiated, in the past, one organization from anoth- er, tended to be reputation," Strong said. - "My understanding is that it's less important under the new methodology and other things are more important." Avery Comarow, rankings edi- tor at US News and World Report, wrote in a July 3 article that the attention of the hospital standings has shifted from reputation to sta- tistics. "While reputation continues to play an important role in the Best Hospitals rankings, clinical data such as patient outcomes and pro- cesses of care have become cen- tral," Comarow wrote. Comarow added that some information was not available when the list was first compiled in 1993, but the cooperation of the federal government and healthcare community in releasing hospital data has allowed for more detailed evaluations. Statistics including mortal- ity and nurse staffing, along with other measures, now make up more than 70 percent of hospitals' scores in most of the 16 specialties, according to Comarow Comarow wrote that the new methodology provides more con- crete and quantifiable comparisons among the nation's besthospitals. "(The methodology is) an adjust- ment that continues the shift toward judging hospitals on infor- mation that is measurable, direct and verifiable," Comarow wrote, but noted that a hospital's reputa- tion still makes up 32.5 percent of its ranking score. Comarow's article mentioned that the methodology caused sev- eral hospitals, like UMHS, to move drastically on the list. "The change to reputation, cou- pled with the other methodology improvements made this year, con- tributed to some significant shifts in the upcoming rankings," Coma- row wrote. Strong said UMHS is taking the evaluation as an opportunity to improve upon the care it provides. "Our minds and efforts are focused on improving both qual- ity and efficiency at the same time, and we think that if we can keep at that, we will do well in the complex world of rankings," Strong said. 420 MaynardSt. AnnArbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com JACOB AXE MERYLHULTENG CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom s frehour: 734-763-2459 opt News Tips news@michigandaily.com torrections crorrecios@'ihie"daiy.com Letters theEditor rfthedaily@michigandaiyon orvisitmichiganair.com/letters Potodepartment photo@michg ndaily.com Arts SecnS a rts@mchiandaily.com Editorial page oiinmcignal~o Sports Section spors@ihigondaity.com Adwrtising Pe:734-764-0554 Classifieds Peo-. 7 -055 department cassifed@michigandaily.com Ann Arbor Art Fair 2012 ByTERRA MOLENGRAFF ManagingPhoto Editor DARK KNIGHT From Page 10 Visually, "Rises" is the lightest of Nolan's installments, adorned with cinematographer Wally Pfis- ter's ("Inception") glaring, clean light. Tonally, it surpasses dark and approaches cataclysmic. Never before has a movie of this magni- tude inflicted so much pain upon its hero, and Bale delivers a haunting performance as a decaying man and ticking timebomb. Moments of lightness are brought by Hathaway's knockout performance. She transforms - almost unrecognizably so - into the dual-natured Kyle, and plays off Bale with conviction. "Rises" offers the most detailed and poignant real- life manifestation of the character, and Hathaway manages to be sexy, manipulative, tongue-in-cheek, all while kicking ass in her razor-blade heels that are anything but kitten. Also new to the crew is cop- turned-detective Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt, "50/50"), whose innocence offers a stark contrast to the more morally gray of Gotham. Marion Cotillard ("Public Ene- mies") accomplishes impressive depth with very little screentime as Wayne Enterprises' wealthy and mysterious board member Miranda Tate. Like the wounded Wayne, the film's familiar faces are hurting more than ever. Alfred is disil- lusioned with Batman's madcap self-destruction, and Caine's more emotional scenes are heartbreak- ing. Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman, "Invictus") continues to whip up the Applied Sciences gizmos, but he too is noticeably worn by the agony seeping through Gotham's streets. Gary Oldman ("Titiker Tailor Sol- dier Spy") returns as Commissioner Gordon, who is just as tormented as the man in the mask, but lacks the luxuries of an alternate"iden- tity to protect the ones he loves (not to mention a fortune and a secret lair). He's a tangible hero, one that Gotham truly deserves, and Old- man once again churns out a heavy performance. With this trilogy and "Incep- tion," Nolan has proven himself a maestro of creating vivid worlds. In "Rises," the universe is so visceral - full of characters with very real, political motives - that it's easy to forget that this is still a comic book tale. "Realistic" is different than "believable," and while "Rises" might notnecessarily be the former, it has the latter on lock. Gotham isn't just breathtakingly immersive - it's a character as developed and tumultuous as Batman. Before "Rises," "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight" worked well as standalone pieces, as they were rhythmically and thematical- ly quite different. But now that we have all of the pieces, it's clear that this is one story being told in three movements. "Begins" is steeped in themes of family and fear and gradually crescendos, giving way for the raucous energy of"The Dark Knight," Nolan's exploration of anarchy. "Rises" is the final tragic act, overridden with themes of jus- tice and all-out war. No element weaves the three parts together better than Bale's evolving, endur- ing performance, which brings specificity and vitality to a role that has been rehashed countless times. Response to the film will undoubtedly be divided. Clocking in at nearly three hours and offeringa mostly dire depiction of the human condition, moviegoers looking for * a fun flick are sure to find its emo- tional weight taxing. But death and destruction have long hovered over this trilogy and itsuniverse, and the weight of its monolithic conclusion should come to no surprise. Nolan insists his knight will not rise again, but that's OK: The Bat- man legend has reached its unsur- passable peak. EDITORIAL STAFF Giacomo Bologna gsbtogna@.ni*igoaday.com ManagingEditor Anna Roenherg ManagingNewsdtor annarroze@ichigandaily.com Adrienne Roberst s Edtal Pge gEdior adrirobe@.nicigandoil.comn Colleen Thomnas Mnag~ing SortsnEditr c,0oltor@.ichigondily.o Anna Sadsvskaya sManginnur ior SENIsORATS EDITOtuR:KlyEtz Terra Mnlengraff MangigPhooEditor pfcc.@.nichigandaily.co.. Alica Kssalchec Managin DeignEditor REGENTS From Page 1A we manage that, or it will turn out to be a community billboard as opposed to the investment we're making, (which) is on behalf of our fans and student athletes," he said. The Athletic Department had another request unanimously approved by the Regents to appro- priate $9 million from the Athletic Department for a renovation and addition to the museum portion of Schembechler Hall, to be complet- ed in the winter of 2014. The proj- ect will add 7,000 square feet to the building, renovating the existing 7,000 square feet. The schematics for a $34-mil- lion parking structure on Wall Street, which were initially approved a few months ago, were approved unanimously by the board as well. The structure, which will have 725 parking spots, will be com- pleted in 2014 and will be funded by parking resources. Timothy Slottow, the Univer- sity's executive vice president and chief financial officer, explained that parking resources amount to the capital fund generated from the approximately 27,000 parking spaces on campus, among other forms of revenue. Regent Katherine White (D- Ann Arbor) said the Wall Street parking structure - which has been discussed for several years - drew wide criticism from the com- munity over its aesthetics when first proposed in 2008. "We had a lot of e-mails and phone calls, and people were very upset about us building a parking structure down there," White said: But she added that this time, people have been much more posi- tive. "It sounds to me, from what I've seen and heard, that a lot more was taken into account to make the parking structure a little more amenable to people living there," White said. The Institute of Social Research. also sought to re-approve the bud- get for renovations on budgets from $23 million to $29 million. Slottow said that $15 million of the $29 million is coming from a grant from an agency within the National Institute of Health. "The grant is a real feather in ISR's cap because NIH does not generally make grants for capital renewal - usually (they're) for research," he said. Earlier in the meeting, the board listened to a 10-minute presenta- tion by George Alter, a University professor and director of Inter- university Consortium for Political and Social Research, a subset of the ISR. Alter gave a description of the ISR, which researches a wide vari- ety of topics ranging from politics to druguse to consumer trends and income dynamics, among several others. Lastly, the regents approved the schematics ' for a new 78,000-square-foot School , of Nursing building. "It's been in planning for over a decade," Slottow said. "This .is basically the result of 10 years of planning and saving to do the project. We're ready to actually get it done." The reports section of the meet- ing was relatively brief and focused on the research report. During the research report, the meeting temporarily took on the air of a physics lecture when Ste- phen Forrest, the University's vice president for research, explained the University's - involvement in the discovery of the Higgs boson particle at the European Organi- zation for Nuclear Research, or CERN. "(The University is) one of the largest teams at CERN, and it played a pivotal role in developing the statistics that led to what's now looking like the discovery of the key particle," he said. "Michigan played a very, very significant role in this activity." University President Mary Sue Coleman took time in her remarks to congratulate the University Autonomy team - whose autono- mous boat recently won a national competition - and the University Solar Car team, which currently leads the American Solar Chal- lenge in an endurance race across the nation. KendraFurry copydsk@mhigoand"aily.com Copy Chief BUSINESSSTAFF BrettBergy SalesManager Joe Crim Classified's Account Executive Connor Byrd Finance Manager The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and weit, rerns by students at the Uniuersity of Michigan. One coyy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked upat the Daily's office "nn $2. Suhscriptions for fall tern, starting in Septenher, via O.S. nail are $110. Winter term (anuary through April)is $115, yearlong (September through April)is$195.University affilatesare subiecttoa reduced subscription rafe. Or-canmpus sohscriytions for fall fern are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. Continued on Page 12