It's time to pay attention to the hockey team SportsMonday IiE-HUd gau A ij ON .N)1) tII ixi11F)nx Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, December 10, 2007 michigandaily.com TENURE Profs to students: Get involved Faculty members say process often murky, hard to understand By ANDY KROLL and ELIZABETH LAI Daily StaffReporters At a forum on Friday at Palm- er Commons, a panel of experts encouraged students to learn more about the University's tenure pro- cess and dispelled certain beliefs expressed by students about its complicated nature. The event was titled "No Prof Left Behind" and was co-spon- sored by multiple minority student groups. The forum's speakers encour- aged students to get involved with what some students felt was a secretive process by becoming more informed about how tenure works at the University. "The tenure process affects stu- dents' education in profound ways, and it is important students have an active role in learning aboutcthat process," said panel member Scott Kurashige, an associate professor in the American culture and his- tory departments. Ifilgo de la Cerda, an RC lecturer and panel member, said students could have a lot of leverage in mak- ing the tenure process by organiz- ing and writing letters of support to the administration on behalf of professors. "If students decided that they want to get involved, there's a pos- sibility that they could make the tenure process more transparent and more democratic," de la Cerda said. The process begins at the departmental level, where a profes- sor must undergo review by other tenured professors who work in the same field. If a professor applying for tenure holds a joint appoint- ment in two departments, he or she is reviewed by both departments. If the candidate earns positive reviews at the departmental level, he or she is then reviewed by a See TENURE, Page 7A ACCOMMODATION ON CAMPUS In scandal's wake, a chance for progress Students question University's role in aiding students with learning disabilities By SCOTT MILLS Daily Staff Reporter Students met yesterdayinthe Michigan Union Tap Room to discuss ways to make the University more accessible for students with learning disabilities. Central to the discussion was this question: What is the University's responsibility to students with learning disabilities? The meeting comes just days after Zack Yost stepped down from his post as Michigan Student Assembly president after an MSA representative made public a secret Facebook.com group Yost cre- ated a year and a half ago mocking an MSA represen- tative and referencing his Asperger's syndrome. Yesterday's meeting was led by LSA senior Aghog- ho Edevbie, who also organized a meeting a week earlier intended to force Yost from the presidency. Among the 20 or so in attendance were Yost and at least eight MSA members. Edevbie had tried to launch a campaign last Sunday to force Yost's resig- nation. Division of Kinesiology senior Thatiana Tavarez said she attended the meeting because she thinks faculty members need more education on the prob- lems students with learning disabilities face in the classroom. "A lot of teachers just aren't educated on the issue of disabilities," Tavarez said. MSA Rep. Tim Hull, the LSA senior who was the subject of Yost's Facebook group, said the level of understanding varies from professor to professor. Hull said some professorsagive him the extra time he needs occasionally for projects and tests while oth- ers do not. "It is somewhat hard to look for various accom- modations," he said. "There are some areas where there aren't very many resources, and you just have to advocate for yourself." Students at yesterday's meeting agreed that increasing awareness among faculty and staff should be the group's primary goal. Edevbie said the group plans to incorporate itself into MSA's newly revived Students with Disabilities Select Committee at tomorrow's MSA meeting. He said he might volunteer to co-chair that committee. Yost, quiet for most of the meeting, suggested that someone contact the chair of SACUA, which repre- sents the University's faculty. Other students suggested that the group focus first on smaller, more approachable issues. MSA Rep. See FORUM; Page 7A The Dalai Lama, who was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal of Honor in October, will speak at the University in April. DalaiLamato visit' ' Nobel winner to speak at Crisler By LISA HAIDOSTIAN Daily StaffReporter The Dalai Lama will visit the University in April. During a two-day event, he will deliver a lecture called "Engag- ing Wisdom and Compassion" at Crisler Arena and will present the School of Natural Resources and Environment's Peter M. Wege Lecture on Sustainability to mark Earth Day, University spokeswom- an Kelly Cunningham said. Tenzin Gyatso - the 14th Dalai Lama's birth name - is the spiritu- al leader of Tibetan Buddhism and serves as one of the world's most prominent teachers of peace and compassion. Jewel Heart, an Ann Arbor- based Buddhist cultural center, The Tibet Fund and the Garrison Insti- tute are co-sponsoring the visit. "The University is excited to welcome the Dalai Lama to campus in April," Cunningham said. Gelek Rimpoche, a Tibetan teacher and the founder of Jewel Heart, said Gyatso's visit will make a great impact on the Ann Arbor community. "His visit will uplift us during difficult times and be like the great fortune of a blue moon for spiritual practitioners of all disciplines," Rimpoche said. The Dalai Lama won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989. He was award- ed the Congressional Gold Medal in October. The Chinese government, which is at odds with Tibet and claims that the Dalai Lama supports an independent Tibetan state, criti- See DALAI LAMA, Page 7A DOWN FOR THE COUNT Alum gives inside look at Google Matossian describes company's vertical integration By DANIEL STRAUSS Daily StaffReporter A Google official gave a behind -the-scenes look Friday into the workings of the company at a con- ference held in the Michigan Union. The conference, titled the Global Operations Conference, was put on by the University's Tauber Insti- tute for Global Operations, and was meant to open a dialogue between companies at the forefront of their field, students and faculty. Representatives from Gen- eral Motors, UPS and Cisco made speeches alongside Mark Matos- sian, a University alum who over- sees the company's data center, which ensures the company's appli- cations - including Gmail and You- Tube - are functioning properly. The rapidly growing company, which was co-founded by Universi- ty alum Larry Page, has undertaken alot oflarge projects in recent years, including the GoogleBooks project that began digitizing the Universi- ty's entire library in 2002 - the first of several library partnerships. Matossian said projects like this fit into the company's goals. "We have a very simple mission statement, which is organizing all the world's information," Matossian said. "The tricky part about it is that there's a whole lot of it, and it's in a lot of different forms." Matossian said that to accommo- date the fast growth and change, the company is built as a self-sustaining, vertically integrated operation. For instance, Google constructs its own servers instead of buying them from another company. Matossian continually pointed out during his speech that Google is a rapidly growing company that has to facilitate its ownneeds,such as build- ing its own servers and server sites. "If you're going to build the world's largest supercomputer you need some really, really good tools to manage it and they don't exist on the market," he said. Business Prof. William Lovejoy, another speaker at the conference, said he was not surprised by Matos- sian's description of Google's hard- ware needs. Mark Matossian, who oversees Google's data center, described some of the compa- ny's internal processes at the Michigan Union on Friday. "Google wouldn't even exist it proprietary," he said. unless you found it convenient to Later in his speech, Matossian use them as your search engine, said rapid growth of the company's which means they have to protect earnings has shaped its internal that ability, so it. makes sense to workings. Google's revenue rose by make their own hardware but make See GOOGLE, Page 7A CLIF R EEDER/Daily Chris Csont tries to revive fellow University alum Trevor Stone after he was tack- led dring Giant Animal Badminon, part of a fandraisine campaign for he Ann Arbor Film Festival, in front of Alpha Delta Phi on Slate Slreet. TODAY'S HI: 33 WEATHER LO: 27 GOT A NEWS TIP? Calf 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS What's wrong with the Speed Racer trailer MICHIGANDAILY.COM/THEFILTER INDEX NEWS................................2A ARTS.. . . . ......... 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