A faithful retelling of 'Horton' Don't label our generation Finally, a kid's book done right on the big screen Arts, Page SA Why a name won't stick Opinion Page 4A ()INE-HIU)NDRED-I1HlTEEN YlE-ARS ( 1' D17RIAI ,R EED)M Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, March 24,2008 MICHIGAN 2, MIAMI (OHIO)1 michigandaily.com CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS One day left for GE ,'U' to forge deal If no agreement is reached today, GSIs will start walkout By JACOB SMILOVITZ Daily StaffReporter From 11:30 a.m. until midnight today, bargaining teams from the University and the Gradu- ate Employees' Organization will make one final effort to reach an agreement on a new contract for graduate student instructors before their contract exprires and a planned two-day walkout starts tomorrow. Negotiations between the Uni- versity and GEO, the union that represents about 1,700 Univer- sity GSIs, have been rocky since November. The most contentious issuesstill on the table are salary increases and improved health care cover- age for GSIs in the three-year con- tract. History GSI Colleen Woods, the lead negotiator for GEO, said the only way to avoid a walkout would be for both sides to agree on the GEO's core contract demands, which include a first-year salary increase, expanded health care coverage, wage parity for low-fraction GSIs and a more flex- ible child care subsidy. "There needs to be signifi- cant movement to our positions," See GEO, Page 3A STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS MAP dominates campus elections Michigan junior goalie Billy Sauer holds the Mason Cup over his head following Michigan's 2-1 win over Miami (Ohio) in the CCHA Conference Tournament Champion- ship game. The Wolverines will continue their postseason push when they travel to Albany, N.Y. for a first-round game against Niagara on Friday. SSTRAIGHT TO, TH1E TOP Par rep In a Michit LSA S tion re Party in last electio tial an both o LSA and Ru ty wins executive Arvind Sohoni, the MAP presi- dential and vice presidential can- )sts, majority of didates for the assembly, secured their victory by winning 1,730 resentative seats votes, or about 71 percent of all votes, in the election. By ANDY KROLL LSA junior Leslie Zaikis and Daily News Editor LSA sophomore John Monaghan, the MAP presidential and vice near repeat of last year's presidential candidates for LSA- gan Student Assembly and SG, ran unopposed. Student Government elec- All 13 of MAP's MSA represen- sults, the Michigan Action tative candidates - nine in LSA, swept aside the competition two in the College of Engineer- week's MSA and LSA-SG ing, one in the School of Art and ns, winning the presiden- Design and one in the Division of d vice presidential spots in Kinesiology - won in their bids rganizations. for a seat on the assembly. The junior Sabrina Shingwani party also won all nine available ms School of Business junior See ELECTIONS, Page 3A Sauer carries Wolverines to CCHA title By MICHAEL EISENSTEIN Daily Sports Writer DETROIT - At the end of last season, "Billy Sauer" chants were nearly unimaginable. Despite a stellar performance between the pipes for the major- ity of the CCHA championship game last year, Sauer committed a critical mistake, the kind that prevents a team from achieving its highest goals. Sauer made an easy save but couldn't clear the puck, allowing Jason Paige to stick it between the goalie's legs to seal Notre Dame's 2-1 win and conference champi- onship. His inconsistent play plagued the team all year. But this weekend - and sea- son - was a completely different story. Once the horn sounded to seal the Michigan hockey team's 2-1 victory and CCHA playoff cham- pionship over Miami (Ohio), the Wolverines bull rushed the junior as congratulations for his near- shutout, 27-save performance. "I just tried to tackle Bill as hard as I (could)," defenseman Chris Summers said. "He gave us a chance to win and that's all you can do. He played out of his mind today." During the on-ice celebration, Michigan coach Red Berenson's first words over the loudspeaker singled out the netminder's play in front of the Joe Louis Arena crowd. And as the Mason Cup trophy presentation began, the Wolver- ine faithful chanted his name from the arena's upper bowl. It was Sauer's weekend perfor- mance that anchored Michigan (31-5-4 overall), a team picked to finish fourth in the CCHA during the preseason, in its playoff cham- pionship run. With Michigan on the pen- For more on Michigan's CCHA Tournament win and the Wolver- ines' hopes in the NCAA Tourna- ment, see SportsMonday alty kill late in the second period, Sauer came up with not one, but two eye-popping saves against Miami (32-7-1). Sauer saved RedHawk forward Pat Cannone's point-blank shot from the right crease before the rebound was fired back at the goalie. The puck flew between Sauer's legs and hit the post before the junior sprawled onto the ice to trap the rubber disc under his maize sweater. See HOCKEY, Page 7A TIE MICHIGAN INDIFFERENCE The rise and fall of participation in Michigan Student Assembly presidential elections 10,000 - 8,000 - Lon LLJ 0 6,000 4,000 1 CAMPUS LIFE Policy aims to restrict alcohol at frat parties Largest council require guests to bring their own alcohol. wants partygoers to IFC officials hope the policy will decrease irresponsible drink- check their alcohol ing, said LSA junior Ryan Spotts, vice president of public relations at the door for the IFC and a member of Pi Kappa Phi. By JILLIAN BERMAN He said this year's executive Daily StaffReporter board hopes to enforce the policy more effectively than past groups Partygoers looking to drink at have. He said previous executive certain fraternities may have to board members tried to imple- bring their own booze in the near ment the policy too late in their future. terms. In Feb. 2005, when the The Interfraternity Council, IFC last tried to enforce the plan, the largest Greek councils on executive board members had campus, wants to enforce a policy about one month left in their in its bylaws forbidding fraterni- terms. ties from providing alcohol at its Ross School of Business junior parties. The move would instead See ALCOHOL, Page 3A BUSTING A MOVE 2,000 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 YEAR SOURCE:DAILY,MSA RULESANDELECTIONSCOMMITTEE UNIVERSITY RESEARCH 'U' helping to develop bat-like spy plane $10M grant lets 'U' play role in six-inch plane's creation By ELAINE LAFAY Daily StaffReporter The United States Army has given the University a $10 million grant to help develop a tiny robot- ic spy plane that would be used to collect intelligence for soldiers in combat zones. University researchers have nicknamed the plane "The Bat" for both its size and the technol- ogy it will use. Measuring just six inches in length, the tiny winged robot will sense possible dangers like bombs by detecting objects, chemicals and vibrations in the air using technology modeled after live bats. The Bat's "head" will contain cameras, microphone and radar technology to steer the robot and to instantaneously send informa- tion back to soldiers. The entire robot is only expect- ed to weigh about four ounces. Kamal Sarabandi, an electrical engineering and computer sci- ence professor who will oversee the research, said the Bat will help soldiers gather information about places that may be unsafe to enter. See BAT PLANE, Page 3A JEREMY CHO/Daily BBoy Born, a professional dancer from Korea, performs an exhibition breakdance Saturday in front of a crowd at Master the Art 2008, the University's breakdanc- ing event. The competition was held in Michigan Union Ballroom. WEATHER HI: 40 TOMORROW LO:31 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.comand letus know. ON THE DAILY ell03S Former sweatshop workers speak at the 'U' MICHIGANDAILY.COM/THEWIRE INDEX NEWS................2A CROSSWORD...............6A Vol. CXVIII,No.119 OPINION ...........................4A CLASSIFIEDS ...................6A cQ 008TheMichiganDaily ARTS.................................5A SPORTSMONDAY.................1B michiadaly.con I I