C . P tc4l an at l Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, January 26, 2009 michigandaily.conm NORTH CAMPUS RENOVATIONS 'Uasks for G.G. Brown fix-up funds If capital outlay economic growth for the region and the state. request is accepted, "The Mechanical Engmeerig Department is consistently ranked state will shoulder in the top five undergraduate and graduate programs nationally in some of the costs a field strategically important for revitalizing the state's economy," By NICOLE ABER Slottow wrote in the statement. Daily StaffReporter College of Engineering Dean David Munson said the college Demonstrating its appetite to has been discussing a renovation build and re-build despite the to the G.G. Brown building, which state's and country's current eco- is one of the oldest buildings on nomic hardships, the University campus, since he became dean has proposed a $110 million reno- two and half years ago. vation project for the G.G. Brown Munson said the renovation is Laboratory Building to the state something that has been needed legislature. for many years to increase oppor- The capital outlay request for tunities in the mechanical engi- the 2010 fiscal year calls for a proj- neering field. ect involving a renovation and ad- "In the case of mechanical en- dition to the building, located on gineering, it's now our largest en- North Campus at 2350 Hayward gineering program so they need St. If approved, the state and Uni- more faculty and space," he said. versity would both provide fund- "In addition, mechanical engi- ing for the project. neering as a field has been moving In an informational item pre- rapidly in the fields of nano- and sented to the Board of Regents bio-technologies, and the G.G. at Thursday's meeting, Timothy Brown is not set up to handle that Slottow, the University's execu- research.' tive vice president and chief fi- From 2002 to 2004, the G.G. nancial officer, wrote that the pro- Brown building underwent reno- posed renovation would increase vations to its chemical engineer- research opportunities in the ing laboratories and department bio- and nano-technologies. He offices. The total cost of that proj- wrote that it would also provide See G.G. BROWN, Page 3A BILL AYERS EVENT Controversial election figure, to speak at 'U' ZACHARY MEISNER/Daily Michigan junior defenseman Steve Kampfer lays motionless on the ice following an incident with two Michigan State players dufing Saturday night's men's ice hockey game. On, off-ice clashes mar win After brutal hit during the game, incident follows in visitor's locker room By NICOLE AUERBACH, MICHAEL EISENSTEIN and COURTNEY RATKOWIAK Daily Sports Editors About 30 minutes after the end of the Wolverines' 5-3 win over Michigan State Saturday night, a somber hush fell upon the small crowd gathered outside the Michi- gan hockey locker room. The lighthearted mood from the players' postgame press conference had dissipated. The enjoyment of six straight victories over the Spar- tans - the Wolverines' longest win streak against them in 47 seasons - momentarily ended. Junior defenseman Steve Kamp- fer, still in his maize game sweater and with his neck in a brace, was being carted out of Yost Ice Arena on a gurney by paramedics. As team officials cleared the hallway, a visit- ing junior hockey team waiting to greet the Wolverines looked on in disbelief. Kampfer, a Jackson, Mich. na- tive, was punched from behind by Spartan forward Andrew Conboy and slashed in the head and neck areas while laying motionless by Michigan State forward Corey Tropp in the final minute of Michi- gan's victory. Michigan State coach Rick Comley called the hit "cheap" and "uncalled for" after the game. And, according to a Department of Public Safety report, once Tropp was kicked out of the game, "a visi- tor assaulted a hockey player after being upset about an incident that happened during the game." DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said that the incident followed the ejection from the game. She said the player ejected from yesterday's game - which, according to the box score, was Tropp - was in the visi- tor's locker room and a 48-year-old man from Jackson confronted him. "We had a parent come crashing into the locker room and fight my player," Comley said to the State News. According to multiple sources close to the situation, the man was taken to the Yost offices behind the skate rental booth for DPS ques- tioning. "I heard him tell the officer that he did grab Tropp by the jersey, and they were also holding each other and yelling at each other," said a person who was in the room during the questioning. The person asked to remain anonymous because he was not authorized to speak to the press on the matter. The hit on Kampfer was espe- cially poignant, considering his recent history of head injuries. He suffered a fractured skull in an off- ice incident on Oct.12, was ina neck brace until Nov.19 and didn't return to game action until Dec. 27. See KAMPFER, Page 7A STUDY[NG FN T HE STA TES Demand rises for ' English skills tests DEMONSTRATING BY EXAMPLE Aye an to L University's MELAB expands testing sites in growing market By CAITLIN SCHNEIDER Daily StaffReporter Asthenumberofforeignstudents applying to U.S. colleges continues to grow, the University's English Language Institute is expanding its testing sites for the Michigan Eng- lish Language Assessment Battery. The MELAB, which originated at the University of Michigan, is a test of English writing, speaking and reading proficiency. When the number of interna- tional applicants is expected to hit at an all time high in a year, the University is concurrently bolster- ing the availability of the MELAB by adding new testing sites around * the world. The University has offered the MELAB exam foryears,but it never sought the scope of giants like the Test of English as a Foreign Lan- guage (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Until now, the most well-known test of English language ability has been TOEFL. But, as the market for such a test has grown, competitors like the IELTS have emerged. In an e-mail interview, Erica Sanders, the director of recruit- ment and operations in the Office of Undergraduate Admissions said, "The MELAB is accepted as a test of English as a second language ex- amination; not in place of TOEFL, but as an alternative." According to the English Lan- guage Institute, that alternative is one that droves of international students are electing. The MELAB is accepted at many U.S. universities and while the test has only been administered in the United States and Canada in the past, institutions in the United Kingdom, Sweden and Norway now recognize it. In the industry of well-estab- lished names, the MELAB dis- tinguishes itself by remaining a strictly paper-and-pencil test. See TOEFL, Page 7A Des bothm in last won't contro school Uni war ac dressit nity to Hatch, Aye: educat linois ing fro Memo and wi nadine the bo White Aye Under: claime ings oi Pentag ernme 1970s. connec rs, an alum and were dropped after prosecutorial misconduct. tti-war radical, The event is being co-spon- sored by Shaman Drum Bookshop talk at Hatcher and the Graduate Library. Earl Fobrt, owner of Shaman ibrary tonight Drum, said Beacon Press, the pub- lisher for Ayers's book, approached By NICOLE ABER him about holding the event. Daily StaffReporter Pohrt said he then approached the Graduate pite a lack of attention from Library to host iajorpresidential candidates the event, in fall's election, Ann Arbor part because go completely unnoticed by of its esteemed versial political figures this Labadie Col- year. lection of an- versity alum and1960s anti- archist and tivist Bill Ayers will be ad- social protest AYERS ng the Ann Arbor commu- literature. night at 7 p.m. at the Harlan "Hatcher er Graduate Library. has the finest collections of radi- rs, who is a professor of cal literature, the Labadie Collec- ion at the University of Il- tion. That's a good sight for the at Chicago, will be present- event," Pohrt said. "Also, the mis- im his book, "Fugitive Days: sion of the University is to discuss irs of an Anti-War Activist," controversial issues, as is (that of) ll be joined by his wife, Ber- bookshops." Dohrn, who co-authored Pohrt said he expects Ayers to tok "Race Course Against draw a large crowd, like the last Supremacy" with Ayers. time Ayers spoke at the University rs co-founded the Weather in 2003. ground organization, which "That was before the contro- d responsibility for bomb- versy during the last election, and n the Capitol Building, the everybody is very curious about on, and several other gov- who he was and what his ideas nt buildings in the early are," Pohrt said. Charges against Ayers in During last year's presidential ction with the bombings See AYERS, Page 3A Memhers t fStudents Organizingor Lahor and tconomic tquality demonstrate varios CIA torture procedures and techniques on Friday. They held the dem- onstration outside ofva CIA recruiting event in the School of Information. The demonstration was eventually ended when the SOLE members were removed by Department of Public Safety officials. WEATHER HI 21 TOMORROW LO14 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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