1I E X 1''llt I DRE"E . At-,.S 0 F ED 1 1T fIAL.,F Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, March 2,2009 michigandaily.com A FOND FAREWELL IWF' a k I W MMW ' AV A IL TfAT, All 4*0 Y ;. ' r'' . ', "9 .' ° ,. c 3. n ,;, .. :. Pik 'u ¢... . ; F ,.&. ySi MEDICAL SCHOOL TRAINING University ends use of live dogs in courses For a slideshow of the Wolverines' weekend series against Ferris State, go to michigandaily.com.. SAID ALSAL AH/Daly Senior goaltender Billy Sauer, who was benched in favor of sophomore Bryan Hogan this season, was given the nod in net Saturday against Ferris State. He posted a 4-0 shutout win on Senior Night in what could be his final appearance in Yost Ice Arena. For more on the game, see SportsMonday, Page1B. BOOSTING ANN ARBOR'S ECONOMY A2 officials ready stimulus wishlist Decision comes amid complaints from medical ethics committee By KYLE SWANSON Daily StaffReporter In a statement released Thurs- day, the University of Michigan Health System announced that it would no longer use live dogs in its Advanced Trauma Life Sup- port course at the University's Medical School. The decision comes after the Physician's Committee for Responsible Medicine - a non- profit organization that promotes ethical research and experiment methods - heavily criticized -UMHS for the practice and filed a complaint with the U.S. Depart- ment of Agriculture arguing that Dr. Richard Burney, a Medical School professor, misled a Uni- versity committee in order to use live animals in his course. UMHS has now decided to use only simulated models for its training, like the TraumaMan System - an artificial human sys- tem that allows users to practice surgical procedures. The UMHS statement released cited a recommendation from an internal committee as the reason for the change. "The decision comes from a recommendation by the Health System's Graduate Medical Edu- cation Committee after a review of simulators that can be used to train medical professionals in trauma procedures," the state- ment said. The statement also said UMHS carefully considers the educa- tional benefit against the resourc- es required when evaluating a project or course. "In all of its educational endeavors, careful attention is given to matching the opti- mal learning tools and settings to trainees' needs - including simulation methods through the Medical School's advanced simulation center, where stu- dents, physicians-in-training and nurses learn using mannequins, computer-based simulations and virtual trainers," the statement said. UMHS officials declined further comment Friday when details about the policy change were sought. Dr. John Pippin, a senior medi- cal and research adviser for the PCRM, congratulated UMHS on its announcement. "We are very pleased that U-M has conducted a careful review of teaching methods for their Advanced Trauma Life Support Program, and that simulators are replacing shelter dogs acquired through pound seizure," he wrote in an e-mail Friday. "This is yet more confirmation that it is unnecessary to use and kill ani- mals to teach trauma skills." Plan re Hou Slight After billion s Ann Ar quickly some of to help t Whil lates tha money the oth is include bridge for "shovel-ready" social programs issued at the state level and often pairs near Big administered at the local level. Ann Arbor City Councilmember ise, making city Leigh Greden (D-Ward 3), who is coordinating the stimulus requests ts more efficient for Ann Arbor's City Council, said that the city compiled a wish list of By LARA ZADE shovel-ready public works projects Daily StaffReporter it is hoping the stimulus package will fund. Congress passed its $787 Though the city has dozens of timulus package last month, projects that it would like to be bor City Council members funded by the stimulus package, began talking about how Greden said the city has prioritized that money might be used five projects. :he city. "The first on the list is anything e the federal plan stipu- related to repairing Stadium Bou- at 36 percent of the stimulus levard," he said. "The two south- must go toward tax rebates, ern lanes of Stadium Boulevard are er 64 percent will be used closed at the bridge because the beam that supports that part of the bridge is deteriorating." Greden said the city would like to rebuild the bridge entirely, but the cost would exceed the amount of stimulus funding that the whole county will receive. Keeping this in mind, the city expects $500,000 for emergency repairs to the beam so that traffic can be opened back up again. Greden said he's fairly confident that the city will receive the fund- ing for the bridge's emergency repairs because the Washtenaw Area Transportation Study, the city's local transportation coordi- nator, has included the Stadium Boulevard project as one of its top priorities. See WISHLIST, Page 7A ANN ARBOR'S WISHLIST The ftie projects officials hope will get stimulus tunding and estimated costs. $500,000 Emergencyrepairsfor deteriorating parts of the bridgeon Statium Boulevard $1 MILLION Weatherization of city's low-income housing $12 MILLION Phase twoof the projectlto upgrade the Ann Arbor Municipal Center $3 MILLION Phasetwo of a greening project at Fifth and Division Street $3.8 MILLION Convertingall of the city's lights to environmentally-friendlyLED lights UNIVERSITY LICENSING After complaints, 'U' to cut contract with Russell Corp. Your bus's ETA? Just a text away Athletic apparel company alledgedly fired employees for trying to unionize By KYLE SWANSON Daily StaffReporter University officials announced last week that. a licensing con- tract between the University and Russell Corporation, an athletic apparel manufacturer that has recently come under fire for alleg- edly infringing on its workers' rights, will not be renewed. Russell Corp. has been accused of firing employees from two of the company's manufacturing plants in Honduras because the workers attempted to unionize. The University's Advisory Com- mittee on Labor Standards and Human Rights sent a letter to Uni- versity officials last month asking them not to renew the contract with Russell Corp. when it expires at the end of March. "Because of the company's pre- vious failure to adhere to its own standards of conduct, we do not feel that continuing the license, even under strict monitoring of any new code of conduct, is appropri- ate," the letter said. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said the committee's recommendation was the main See CONTRACT, Page 7A Ph.D. student's new system could cut waiting times at campus bus stops By MATT AARONSON Daily StaffReporter Everyone hates waiting for the bus. Computer Science and Engi- neering Ph.D. student Scott Wol- chok is no exception. So when Wolchok, who regu- larly rode the University buses as an undergraduate, saw a way that he could cut back on time spent waiting at the bus stop, he jumped on it. Wolchok recently created UmBus, a program that allows students to check Magic Bus - an online bus tracking service from their cell phones. By texting "umbus" to 41411, and using a few simple commands, students can find out when a bus will be arriv- ing at a specific stop. Magic Bus, a project funded by Parking&TransportationServices and carried outby the Atmospher- ic, Oceanic and Space Science Department in the College of Engineering in 2004, adapts GPS bus tracking to an online interface. The site gives a route view that CAMPUS LGBT CONFERENCE University picked for 2011 LGBT event Annual conference draws more than 1,500 people a year By JENNA SKOLLER Daily StaffReporter The University won a bid last month to host the annual Midwest Bisexual Lesbian Gay Transgender Ally College Conference in Febru- ary 2011L For the past 16 years, students from colleges across the Midwest have attended these conferences, which draw about 1,500 partici- pants each year. The aim of the conference is to raise awareness of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans- gender issues through a weekend of workshops, speakers and state caucuses. The University of Michigan bid team presented at this year's con- ference at Indiana University last month in hopes of winning host- ing rights to the conference in 2011. The bid team was composed of multiple LGBT students and was advised by Spectrum Center Assis- tant Directors Lauren Sherry and Gabe Javier. Javiersaid the University'sLGBT See CONFERENCE, Page 7A Ph.D. student Scott Wolchok has created a way to track campus buses by phone. displays the number of minutes Wolchok had been using Magic until a bus arrives at a given stop, Bus since its launch in 2006, even as well as a map view that shows developing his own desktop and color-coded buses' positions on a Web applications for it in his free Google map. See BUSES, Page 7A WEATHER HI: 2 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail TOMORROW LU:15 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM The Daily's Big Ten hoops power rankings. THEGAME.BLOGS.MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEW S .................................2A ARTS.................... ..........,. 5A Vol. CXIX,No.100 SUDOKU.................. 3A CLASSIFIEDS. . . A.........6A v2009TheMichiganDaily OPINION....................4A SPORTSMONDAY................AB michinandoilycuw 4 4 l 1