S THE SHINS: Arts, 5A 471 jo SportsMonday, 1B (t446F eit c i n at 1 Ann Arbor, Michigan www.michigandaily.com Monday, January 29, 2007 LEO NEGOTIATIONS Lecturers begin contract talks Union calls for more pay, uniform job titles ByKATHERINE MITCHELL Daily StaffReporter Wearing T-shirts that said "What do all Michigan teach- ers deserve?" members of the Lecturers' Employee Orga- nization began negotiations on a new contract with the University administration on Friday. The current contract of the 1,300-member union of non-tenure track expires in July. LEO members worked last semester to identify spe- cific problems with the last contract, which was the first collective bargaining agree- ment between the union and the University. "First contracts always have problems," LEO Presi- dent Bonnie Halloran said. The organization has five primary platform issues: increased base salaries, the same title for all LEO mem- bers, greater transparency in employment reviews, better health care and more flex- ibility in working off-campus while employed by the Uni- versity. A University spokesper- son declined to comment on the negotiations. Cedric de Leon, a sociol- ogy lecturer and the griev- ance chair of the Ann Arbor LEO chapter, said the orga- nization seeks equal pay for lecturers at each of the University's three campuses. Base paydiffers fromcampus to campus, he said. While a lecturer at the University's Ann Arbor cam- pus makes at least $31,000 a year, lecturers at Dearborn have a base pay of $25,000 and those at Flint make no less than $23,000. "We think no teacher at the University of Michi- gan should make less than $35,000 as a starting sal- ary," Halloran said in a press release. "Even in hard eco- nomic times, the University should be paying all itseteach- ers a decent wage." De Leon said the Universi- ty has created asystemwhere some lecturers are treated as second-class citizens. The University ranks lec- turers on a 1 to 4 scale. Lec- turers 1 and 2 only teach, while lecturers 3 and 4 may also serve on committees and usually teach a more advanced class schedule. To move from class 1 to class 2, a lecturer must teach at the University for three years and pass a faculty review. To move from class 3 to class 4, a lecturer must teach for four years and pass a review. There is no official bridge from class 2 to class 3. De Leon said the system of ranking lecturers divides lecturers unfairly. "It creates a sort of inequality,"' de Leon said. At negotiations for LEO's first collective bargaining agreement in 2004, the orga- nization asked for a uniform title for all lecturers but was denied. "We'd rather have it flat withrecognitionoftheduties we do have," de Leon said. De Leon also said there is currently little or no trans- parency in the faculty review process. "In some departments See LEO, page 7A Young Americans for Freedom members LSA junior Sarah Ledford, LSA junior Clark Ruper, LSA sophomore Justin Zatkoff and LSA sophomore Andrew Boyd wear tin foil hats to protest a speech by Sept.11 conspiracy theorists in the Michigan Union Ballroom last night. Conspiracy theorists stir controversy at Union Right-wing student group lampoons event By PAUL BLUMER Daily StaffReporter Three men came to the Michigan Union last night and argued that the govern- ment's investigation of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks was flawed and that the admin- istration may have been involved in them. Among those who spoke was Robert Bowman, a member of Scholars for 9/11 Truth, a group that travels the country arguing that the government either allowed the attacks to happen or even perpetrated them itself. Bowman described what he called inconsistencies in initial investigations into the Sept. 11 attacks. He said the construction engineer of the World Trade Center buildings considered the impactofplane crashes while designing the building. The building's engineer said the "building structure would remain intact" in the event of a direct plane crash, Bow- man said. "There are no experts in tall building fire collapse, because it doesn't happen," Bowman said. He described reports by several observers that before the collapse of the buildings, they heard a series of pops, or what sounded like secondary explosions. Many eyewitness reports included descriptions of puffs of smoke reminiscent of professional building demoli- tion, Bowman said. But Popular Mechanics magazine, in a March 2005 cover story that refuted much of the evidence cited by conspiracy theorists, quoted a structural engineer who said the puffs of smoke came from the collapse of each floor as pressure built up from above. Claims like Bowman's are "absurd," said Ryan Fan- tuzzi, vice president of the University's chapter of the Young Americans for Free- dom, a far-right group that protested the event. About a dozen YAF mem- bers stood wearing tin foil hats in the hallway around the entrance to the Union Ballroom last night. Audience members enter- ing the ballroom for the speech could not help but notice the outlandish-look- ing protesters. In addition to the hats, one carried a sign saying "Jedi ascertain the Sith did it." Others chanted "Bush Causes Cancer" and "Bush Killed Kenny." The purpose of the sar- castic protest, according to members, was simply to poke fun at claims they thought were absurd. YAF members described all sorts of government con- spiracies through which the government controls the people. Protesters jokingly said the foil hats would protect them from harmful mind control rays sent by cell phone tow- ers. Fantuzzi said the pro- test might remind audience members of what YAF mem- bers felt were more realistic explanations of the 9/11 ter- rorist attacks. "Humor is a useful tool," be said. Audience members filed past the protesters, accepting cards at the door on which to write questions for Bowman. Few seemed deterred by the protest, and most passed by chuckling at the protesters' costumes. Many members of the audi- ence seemed to agree with the speeches. They nodded and whispered after several of Bowman's points. Kevin Barrett, an associ- ate lecturer at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and Kevin Ryan, a former scien- tist for Underwriters Labora- tories, also spoke. Although the members of YAF and the speakers disagreed, the two groups didn't come to a confronta- tion. The event and protestcome just before YAF is scheduled to host a controversial event of its own. The group plans to have what they bill as three former terrorists speak at Rackham Auditorium Tuesday night about the roots of terrorism and what prompted them to stop committing acts of ter- ror. RINGING UP A WIN Sophomore Ralph Rosso performs on the stationary rings as the top-ranked men's gymnastics team took on two-time defending national champions Oklahoma. The Wolverines defeated the third-ranked Sooners. FOR FULL STORY, SEE SPORTSMONDAY SAAN CONFERENCE 2007 . Gandhi's grandson: Bring conscience back INSTANT PLEASURE Washington Post journalist, others talk at conference ByAMANDAMARKOWITZ DailyStaffReporter Amid a thunderous cheer, a slight, graying figure made his way slowly to the podium. He looked out at the anticipating crowd and introduced himself The man was Rajmohan Gandhi. Gandhi, the grandson, of celebrated Indian leader Mohandas Gandhi, spoke in the Michigan Union Ball- room Friday aight as part of SAAN 2007, a conference sponsored by the South Asian Awareness Network, a University student group. Gandhi asked the crowd of about 200 to bring "a con- science back to life in the United States." This conscience should stem from his grandfather's teachings of forgiveness and peace, he said. He told a story about his grandfather from Aug. 15, 1947, the day India gained its independence from Great Britain. After Mohandas Gan- dhi led a prayer gathering that attracted over 500,000 participants, the statesman retreated to his room and wrote a letter to one of his oldest friends in Britain, thanking her for her friend- ship through trying times and asked that she send love to all of Gandhi's friends in Britain. Like his grandfather, South Asian-Americans should try to reach out dur- ing times of unrest, Rajmo- han Gandhi said. With animosity toward Muslims in the United States, and toward Ameri- cans in Islamic nations, this advice is particularly rel- evant today, he said. "People are being con- demned for their birth, their blood, their DNA," he said See SAAN, page 7A LSA WIRELESS 'U'CUTS CORDS College to expand network ByKATHRYN VAN LONKHUYZEN For the Daily In Intel's 2005 survey of wire- less Internet access on college campuses, the University did not make the list of the 10 most wireless campuses. It didn't even make the top 50. Now, though, the University's largest school or collegeLSA, is going completely wireless. LSA announced last week a plan to expand its wireless net- work to cover all 23 of its build- ings. The $1.5-million endeavor is expectedto take about two years. That means if you're sitting See WIRELESS, page 3A Singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright performs Friday af the Ann Arbor Folk Festival at Hill Auditorium. FOR FULL STORY, SEE ARTS, PAGE SA TODAY'S HI 21 WEATHER LO:12 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail newsymichgandaily.com and let us know. COMING TUESDAY Controversy surrounds appearance by "three ex- terrorists" NEWS INDEX NEWS...... Vol.CIINo.85 SUDOKU.. )2007 The Michigan Daily michioundailycom OPINION., . . 2A ARTS...................... - 5A .......... 3 A CLASSIFIED.......... .. h. 6A ..........4A SPORTS .................. 1B