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| teaching and learning | research and innovation | investment and business creation | ||||||
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URC2010 GoalsURC sets goals for 2010
Michigan’s University Research Corridor has a clear vision: Help create the 21st century Michigan. What should the new Michigan look like and how can the URC become a major force in creating our state’s new, dynamic economy? Read our latest annual report. (526 KB, 20 pages, PDF) Video courtesy Matt Roush, WWJ and the Great Lakes Innovation and Technology Report By Joe Serwach LANSING – Michigan’s University Research Corridor has five major goals, starting with boosting collaboration at all levels — faculty, staff and students — among University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State University. Other top priorities, mapped out by Executive Director Jeff Mason and the three URC presidents as they marked the opening of the new URC headquarters in Lansing on Friday, include:
Releasing a report detailing accomplishments over the past year, Mason detailed the growth of the life sciences industry and its connection to university research, and listed major employers who have come to the state attracted by the talent of the URC’s faculty, students and graduates. They include General Electric, IBM, Google and Toyota. Asked by reporters what type of help they expected from state government — which has cut support for higher education throughout the past decade — they stressed that the URC was designed to leverage the value of what the state has invested over the past 150 years to help the state when it needs help the most.
“I firmly believe that we will all rise, we will all challenge each other to be better as we are collaborating to help the state,” said U-M President Mary Sue Coleman. “We clearly understand that our future is deeply connected with the state’s future. We believe that we can be a positive force for change and we want to do that.” Coleman and her URC counterparts described a vision of researchers from all three universities working together at U-M’s new North Campus Research Complex, Wayne State’s TechTown and MSU facilities, each supporting the other as partners rather than rivals. “Their success is our success,’’ said MSU President Lou Anna Simon. “It’s not, ‘If they succeed, then we don’t.’’’ The URC headquarters is in Lansing rather than on one of the university’s campuses, Mason said, because each of the universities serves the entire state, and the city offers a central location close to other statewide organizations easily accessible to many parts of the state.
Wayne State President Jay Noren, who had spent much of his career outside Michigan before assuming the WSU presidency in 2008, said the level of cooperation and the complementary abilities of the three universities, each research universities but with different missions and strengths, were especially unique, allowing each to take the lead in different areas with support from the other two partners. Noren described how WSU and U-M backed and aided MSU’s successful efforts to beat Illinois in a national competition to house a $550 million Facility for Rare Isotope Beams. Simon noted a third of MSU students are from southeastern Michigan and she firmly expected many would set up business at WSU’s TechTown, which tripled the number of tenants last year. “We have one of the nation’s very top cover-all-the-bases institutions in Michigan, and Michigan State is the top land grant university or one of the top,’’ Noren said. “Wayne State is clearly one of the leading urban research universities. When you combine those things together, we really cover all the bases like none of those other consortia.” Photos by Greg Kohuth, MSU University Relations Media coverage
WITH VIDEO: Mary Sue Coleman 'very optimistic' about Michigan's economic future
The State News: Universities aim to reshape state economy The Detroit News: Life sciences boost cited Michigan’s 3 largest universities spend $800M as research group opens office in Lansing WILS interview with URC Executive Director Jeff Mason Great Lakes Innovation and Technology Report: MSU, UM, Wayne State Presidents Open URC Office In Lansing University Research Corridor opens Lansing headquarters University presidents debut research corridor building 3 university presidents to meet today |
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