A return to relevance Blue beats VCU to advance in NIT Sports, Page 9 From the Daily: Don't cross the GEO picket lines Opinion,Page4 3Iie ffidiigan Bai& ONE-H ED>:1IFT] "F E D Ann Arbor, Michigan_ Tuesday, March 25,2008 michigandailycom Negotiations fail, GEO set for walkout With no deal in place after almost five months of talks with administration, many GSIs and students will skip class for the day By JACOB SMILOVITZ Daily StaffReporter After the Graduate Employees' Organization and the University's bargaining team failed yester- day to agree on several terms of a new contract for graduate student instructors, GEO members plan to begin a two-day walkout today by picketing outside major University buildings. The University's bargaining team walked away from negotia- tions three hours before they were scheduled to end last night, citing GEO's refusal to renegotiate its pro- posal for a 9-percent salary increase for the first year of the contract. GEO represents about 1,700 GSIs who teach at the University. Colleen Woods, the lead nego- tiator for GEO and a History GSI, said GEO representatives were prepared to negotiate through at least midnight, but heard from the administration at 8:55 that they were done for the night. "I have to say that I am shocked and disappointed that the Univer- sity wasn't willing to continue to bargain with us tonight," she said. Woods also said the sides "were making significant prog- ress towards each other today and it seemed like the University was interested in preventing (the walk- out) from happening and we were ready to put the brakes on." Jeff Frumkin, the University's senior director ofAcademic Human Resources, said that GEO's refusal to budge on the initial 9-percent salary increase is "the major stum- bling block" in the negotiations. "The difficulty the University had in responding to their last set of proposals is that it still included the 9-percent, and therefore we didn't feel that we had any other place to move at this point this evening," Frumkin said. GEO representatives said that despite the differences on the topic of salary, they were willing to bar- gain until midnight and avoid a walkout. "I have to say that I am disap- pointed that the administration is not more invested in preventing this work stoppage," Woods said. "We were gettingclose, and I think we were almost there, and really, they walked away from the table from us." GEO has now decided to go for- ward with the much-discussed two-day walkout that will last through tomorrow night. Participating GSIs won't com- plete any of the labor that they usually do for the University, which includes leading discussion sections, grading student work, responding to students' e-mails and holding office hours. They will instead be on picket lines outside of the major buildings on Central Campus and at least one building on North Campus, Woods said. Although all picket lines will be fully assembled on campus by 9 a.m., picket lines at some campus construction sites will be under- way as early as 5 a.m. Woods said 660 GSIs have already signed up for picket shifts. GEO officials are asking under- graduates and faculty to support the union by not crossing the picket line to enter campus buildings or attend class today or tomorrow. "We are simply asking them to See WALKOUT, Page 7 HARDLY WORKING What picketing GSIs won't be doing today and tomorrow: As part of the GEO walk-out taking place today, many GSls participating in the strike will be cancelingany classes, discussion and reviewses- sions or anylab sections they teach. Many GSIs arealsorefusingtoanswer students's e-mails, holdoffice hours or correspond with students onthe course website CTools. PRAISE ON INGALLS MALL STATE GOVERNMENT Kevorkian announces run for Congress 'U' Medical School Kevorkian became a household . name in 1998 when he appeared alum served 8 years on CBS's "60 Minutes" and showed a video of himself assist- for assisted suicide ing in Thomas Youk's suicide. A Pontiac, Mich., native, Kevorkian By GABE RIVIN was sentenced to 10 to 25 years in Daily StaffReporter 1999 after a Michigan jury found him guilty of Jack Kevorkian, the Univer- second-degree sity Medical School alum and murder for physician best known for help- helping Youk ing his patients commit suicide, commit . sui- announced yesterday that he will cide. run for Congress this fall. Kevorkian, Kevorkian,.79, has steep com- who claims to petition for Michigan's 9th Con- have assisted KEVORKIAN gressional district in the House of more than 130 Representatives. patient sui- He'll run as an independent cides, was released on parole in against incumbent Republican June of last year for good behav- Joe Knollenberg, who has served ior. as a representative since 1993 and His candidacy put euthanasia is seeking his ninth term. See KEVORKIAN, Page 3 Ann Arbor residents Dennis Quinn (LEFT) and Jir Scott worship God in mixture of song and prayer on Ingalls Mall yesterday. "We are not trying to preach to anyone," Scott said. "We're just out here today to show God's love." LGBT AFFAIRS After years of surveys, LGBT group announces new name Some SACUA members skeptical of independent study courses New title, 'The Spectrum Center,' unveiled yesterday By JESSICA BAER For the Daily After collecting feedback from students, staff and alumni in a pro- cess that began almost three years ago, the Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Affairs has changed its name to The Spec- trum Center. The center, which officially announced its new name yesterday morning, launched the campaign to find a title that would allow for a broader range of gender identities. "The community is more com- plex than the letters L-G-B-T," said Jackie Simpson, the direc- tor of the center. "We believe the name change will allow more peo- ple to see themselves connected to the office." The announcement marks the end of an extensive exploratory period during which the office sought opinions from different constituencies from all corners of the University. After sponsoring open forums, brown bag lunches, surveys and blogs, it became clear that people wanted the center's name to have "variety, fluid- ity, multiplicity, and complexity," Simpson said. A recent online survey asked open-ended questions like, "What is the first thing that comes to mind when you think about the See NAME CHANGE, Page 3 ACADEMICS Engineering prof. to become provost overseas Vice Provost Hanlon agreed to discuss findings further at group's next meeting By LINDY STEVENS Daily StaffReporter In their first meeting since the publication of a local newspaper report that questioned the integ- rity of Psychology Prof. John Hagen's courses, members of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs expressed interest in investigating the class- es more closely. The series of articles in The Ann Arbor News claimed that University advisers have pushed student-athletes toward Hagen's independent study courses. According to the articles, these courses were graded loosely and required small amounts of course- work. Many members of SACUA, the executive arm of the University's primary faculty body, supported Hagen's teaching methods. Not all SACUA members, though, were convinced by Vice Provost Philip Hanlon, who con- tended that there was no basis for the concern surrounding Hagen's courses. "There is no higher priority than the academic success of our Ulaby will serve at new, billion-dollar Saudi Arabian school By ELIZABETH LAI Daily StaffReporter About two years fromnow, Engi- neeringProf. Fawwaz Ulaby will be living off the coast of the Red Sea in Saudi Arabia, serving as the found- ing provost of what's expected to become a high-powered new sci- ence and technology research uni- versity. King Abdullah University of Sci- ence and Technology, named in honor of the Saudi Arabia's reign- ing monarch, will open its doors to a small group of intellectual elites in September 2009. KAUST will host no more than 2,000 students - every one of them exempt from tuition fees thanks to fellowships funded by the university's multi- billion dollar endowment, much of which comes from oil industry profits. In Saudi Arabia, Ulaby will be responsible for hiring faculty and overseeing student and academic affairs. Ulaby said all classes at KAUST will be taught in English to accommodate international stu- dents and professors. A Lebanon native, Ulaby said he would continue teaching electrical engineering and computer science courses at the University of Michi- gan until he begins his appointed post at KAUST, and will complete research collaborations with col- See ULABY, Page 3 Vice Provost Philip Hanlon spoke at yesterday's SACUA meeting in the Fleming Building. He talked at length about Prof. John Hagen's classes. students," Hanlon said. He added that the University had investigat- ed the professor twice before the newspaper published the series. After discussing the findings, some SACUA members were still looking for answers. When SACUA members Phys- ics Prof. Keith Riles and Law Prof. Richard Friedman asked Hanlon to address specific inaccuracies from the articles, Hanlon didn't raise any. "I would prefer to present the facts I know," Hanlon said. He eventually agreed to discuss the details of Hagen's case in a fol- low-up meeting. The series said Hagen taught 294 independent study courses between Fall 2004 and Fall 2007 - 251 of them were with student- athletes. At yesterday's meeting, See SACUA, Page 3 WEAT HER H 1:45 TOMORROW LO 30 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and letus know. ON THEA1L V LO GS Athletic Dept. rescinds new student ticket policy MICHIGANDAILY.COM/THEWIRE INDEX NEW S . .......................D.........O2 SUIDO KU ...............................5 Vol, CXViiNo.120 OPINION.. . . .4.C...A......F..E..4 CLASSII.S............. 6 92008TheMichiganDaily ARTS.. . . ..5 SPORTS.................... 8 michiaandaily.com