Thursday, June 13, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MEN'S TRACK ANtD FIELD LaPlante retires after 16 yars By ALEXA DETTELBACH Daily Sports Writer Michigan men's head track and field coach Fred LaPlante announced his retirement on Monday, marking the end of a short head-coaching career as the 11th coach in program history After 16 years of service to the University, LaPlante has decided to move on with the next phase of his life. The Wolverines will begin their search for his replacement immediately. During his 36 years of coaching, LaPlante has helped with 18 athletes earning Olympic berths, and has coached 25 national champions and 83 All-Americans. But the three-time NCAA District Head Coach of the Year knew it was time to take off his running shoes and continue his life in Ann Arbo with his wife, Nancy. "I have enjoyed my experience with all of University of Michigan Athletics and especially the men' track and field program," LaPlant said in a statement to the athleti department. "I want to thank th student-athletes and fellow coache that I have been fortunate enougl to work with as well as all thos who work and have worked in th athletic department, includin, administrators and support staff. "I'm sure the program will mov forward with great success in th future, and I wish the very best fo everyone." LaPlante was the head coach o the men's team since 2008. Befor that, he served as an assistant hea coach from 1997-2008. In his las year as an assistant coach, he wa named 2008 NCAA Great Lak a r et onu rf cu ef grs. HURON HILLS0LF COURSE I WW.A2GOLF.ORG 3465 E. HURON RIVER I ANN ARBOR 1 734.794.6246 40'i' This coupon .nltlosyou to a complimentary: HURON HILLS W)&t dsg/cIcoscp~p - WITH THE PURCHASE OF 18 HOLES &ACART Mustshowvadstudentfaculty LO. This coupon is Q not good with otherecoupons. Expires Aug. 1,2013.r Cat tdayforeatee tme. See you this season. scan ra Facebook page Wet liljalCon -te oteoemte frsaols LESLIE PARK GOLF COURSE I www.A200F.0R6 2120 TRAVER ROAD I ANN ARBOR I 734.794.6245 This coupon entllles you to: " r lealie perk WITH THE PURCHASE OF18 HOLESANDACARI Allcouponsfor 18 holeplay. Must showvalid Q student/faculty I.. This coupon is not good with sc t ac othercoupons. ExpiresA a. 1.2013. Call today! Fl e r Region Assistant Coach of the Year after the team won the Big Ten e championship that season under n former coach Ron Warhurst. s The 2013 season concluded Sat- e urday, when the Wolverines fin- c ished tied for 44th at the NCAA e outdoor championships in Eugene, s Ore. LaPlante's best finish dur- h ing his tenure as head coach was e in 2009 when Michigan finished e a program-best second at indoor g championships and third at out- door championships. His best fin- e ish in the ensuing four years was a e 33rd-place finish in 2012. r Before coming to Ann Arbor, LaPlante was the head coach of the f Lehigh men's and women's track e and field program, a position he d held from 1992 to 1997. t LaPlante first began his coaching S career as an assistant men's coach e at Columbia University in 1977. After one season he was hired as the head coach at San Diego State University, where he was the head coach of the women's track and field team and led the Aztecs from 1978 to 1983. LaPlante thentraveled across the state and held the same position at USC from 1983 to 1988 before he moved to the Midwest, where he held took an assistant men's head coaching job for his alma mater, Eastern Michigan. LaPlante remained in the position from 1988 to 1992. Since his time as the Wolverines' head coach, LaPlante has had three runners compete in the Olympic games, including Adam Harris (200-meter dash, Guyana, 2008), Stann Waithe (4x400-meter relay, Trinidad, 2008) and Jeff Porter (110-meter high hurdles, USA, 2012). In addition, he coached the USA's Jerome Singleton, who competed in the World Paralympic Championship 100-meter dash in 2011. LaPlante has already finished recruiting for the 2013-2014 season, after he inked 10 athletes in March. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER! @THEBLOCKM 'M' settles for 44th By ZACH SHAW The All-American honorable Daily Sports Writer mention honors continued on Day two when junior Ethan After spending the last nine Dennis took 20th in the hammer months training, eating, com- throw with a distance of 60.97 peting and living as a team, the meters. Michigan men's track and field Fifth-year senior Kurt team of over 60 sent five individ- Reichenbach concluded his col- uals to compete in five separate legiate career with a score of events in the NCAA Champion- 7,013 in the decathlon to take ship meet. But they all had one 21st and also walk home with the goal in mind: To put Michigan similar honor. Leaving it all on back on the track and field map. the track in an event that already Once a mainstay at the top of makes one do just that, Reichen- the Big Ten and even National bach posted his best scores in leaderboards, Michigan has the pole vault, javelin and 1,500- failed to place as a team in meter run, the final three events. an NCAA Indoor or Outdoor "To get to this meet is a Championship meet in six tries, tall order - he broke the The Program that owns 30 school record and had a great Outdoor Big Ten titles sunk to performance just to get here," 10th place in the Big Ten outdoor LaPlante said. "I was really championships just three weeks proud of his performance from ago, a low hit only once before in beginning to end, and really 101 seasons. proud of his whole career, But after competing against especially coming back his fifth the best in the nation, the Wol- year to accomplish what he did." verines mustered a 44th-place The hero of the weekend finish behind the fourth place proved to be Arastu. After falling finish of junior Ali Aratsu in the mere hundredths of a second 400-meter hurdles. short of first-team All-American Freshman Mason Ferlic kicked last year in a ninth-place effort, off Michigan's weekend, riding Arastu made the trip to Eugene the momentum from May, but determined to improve. didn't have enough juice to carry He didn't disappoint. After into June. After running the runningthe fifth-besttime in the 3,000-meter steeplechase for the semifinals, Arastu ran a career- first time in Toledo, Ohio on May best time of 49.37 to take fourth 2, Ferlic found himself a natural place. In doing so, he became to the event. The same distance the top Wolverine finisher in the runner who suffered through a hurdles since 1997, when Neil broken foot, mononucleosis and Gardner also placed fourth. an iron deficiency a few short "Usually when I run that fast months ago dropped 10 seconds I don't even remember the race, at regionals to earn a trip to which is a good thing," Arastu Eugene. said. "I got out hard, but those But at historic Hayward Feild, guys were still right on my tail. Ferlic posted a career-best time I knew I had a strong finish, and of 8:47.09 totake 13th. He earned I could just compete the last 100 second-team All-American, meters and give everything I falling 0.2 seconds short of a spot had." in the finals in just his fourth While 44th place is nothing time competing in the event. to celebrate about at one of "You can always tell these the nation's most storied track great success stories, but they programs, the weekend was mean a lot more when it's some- still viewed as a success. In one on your team showing that a long season of rebuilding, you can do it," Michigan coach Arastu, Riffle, Ferlic, Dennis and Fred LaPlante told the athletic Reichenbach feel they've laid the department. foundation for years to come. Junior Cody Riffle took ninth "Added LaPlante: "We've place in the shot put with a touched all areas of our team distance of 18.62 meters, falling in terms of guys making it to just one spot short of first-team nationals. So now each guy goes All-American. Already a school back to their event area and record-holder in the event, Riffle that makes the link closer for will return next year with his everybody to really believe they eyes set on the first team. can get to this level." WieffidI 9an Mhal.& WekySummer Edition MichiganDailycom Ann Arbor, MI ONE-HUNDRED-TWENTY THREE YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM i e n sNEWS Betsey Stevenson Economics professor appointed to Obama's Council of Econ Advisors. >> SEE PAGE 3 NEWS Medical Rankings U.S. News & World Report released 2013-14 Best Children's Hospitals list. >> SEE PAGE 3 OPINI ON Textual Tension Hookup culture has gone virtual, says Zak Witus in this week's Viewpoint. >>SEE PAGE 4 ARTS 'Z' Conference Call The Daily sits down with director Mark Forster to discuss his film. >>SEE PAGE 8 SPORTS Coach Retires Men's track and field coach, Fred LaPlante, retired Monday. >> SEE PAGE 12 INDEX mcgn i s.co ms 2013 iue oily NEW S .............................. 2 OPINION ...............................4 CLASSIFIEDS................... 6 CROSSWORD........................6 ARTS......................................8 SPO RTS............. ................10 SPREAD YOUR WINGS MARLENE LACASSE/Daily Patients and their families observe Monarch and Painted Lady butterflies at the opening of the new Healing Butterfly Garden outside the old C.S. Mott Children's Hospital on Tuesday. 'U'considersaiding SECinvestigation Plans for grad housing progress University buys final two properties needed for building By ARIANA ASSAF Daily StaffReporter Graduate students, get ready. The University's plan to provide a housing complex just for graduate students is moving right along. The Michigan Daily report- ed in April that the residence hall would house 600 students in a 370,000-square-foot, eight-story building on South Division Street. The project was made possible by a dona- tion of $110 million from Uni- versity alum Charles Munger. The location was secured by acquiring the current site of Blimpy Burger, four houses previously owned by former Athletic Director Bill Martin and two houses that Copi Properties leases to students. University President Mary Sue Coleman first announced plans for construction at a Uni- versity Board of Regents meet- ing in April. As of Tuesday, the University reached an agree- ment with Copi Properties and closed on the purchase of two houses. The University will pay $1.5 million for both properties. After the April board meet- ing in which the project was approved, a resolution that would have allowed the administration to use eminent domain - the state's power to take private property for pub- lic use - if necessary was also approved. See HOUSING, Page 6 Thursday, June 13, 2013 I U a a 'I a c Keyword search of laptop could help insider trading case By KATIE BURKE Editor in Chief There may be a new break- through in the five-year-old insider trading case against hedge fund SAC Capital. The University is working out a tentative deal with the U.S. Attorney's office to allow access to former Neurol- ogy Prof. Sidney Gilman's laptop computer, which could provide evidence of insider trading. Gilman retired in November after being accused by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Com- mission of assisting traders with inside information. It is alleged that he provided non-public infor- mation regarding a clinical trial of an Alzheimer drug produced by Elan Corporation and Wyeth, Inc., owned by Pfizer, Inc. Gilman's information on the negative effects of the drug reportedly allowed Matthew Martoma, a hedge fund portfolio manager for CR Intrinsic Investors, to short sell the drug company's securities, turning a profit of over $276 million. Martoma's firm is a subsidiary of SAC, whose CEO, Steven A. Cohen, has been under scrutiny for insider trading by the SEC. According to an SEC press release of the Nov. 20 trial, Gil- man, who was moonlighting at an expert network firm, gave Martoma information on the Phase II trial two weeks before it was to go public in July, 2008. Expert firms came into existence after the SEC issued the Regulation Fair Disclosure rule in 2000 - known as "Reg. F.D." - mandating public companies to release to all investors simultaneously "market-moving" information. These firms allow hedge funds to do their own research into the fields in which they invest instead of waiting for the infor- mation to go public. While such independent research is legal, acting on knowledge classified as non-public is not. The release also stated that, after receiving the information, Martoma had a number of funds sell $960 million in Elan and Wyeth securities in about a week. According to the release, Gil- man and Martoma discussed confidential PowerPoint presen- tations regarding the trial, and Gilman received $100,000 from Martoma for the information - he made $1,000 per hour for his consulting work at the firm. See INVESTIGATION, Page 6