SPORTS Women's basketball loses a nail-biter against rival No. 5 Ohio State at Crisler. PAGE 8 a fo k si g erlivi g inth e sh ad wW N hisf1me1ppi AnPAE, Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, January 22, 2010 STRIKE A POSE michigandailycom lETURERS' CONTRACT NGOI IO ',' LEOto start new contract talks today A passerby views the School of Art & Design all student exhibition award winners at the Work Gallery on South State Street yesterday. The exhibit, which fea- tures pieces by the winning student artists, opened yesterday. R EGENTS NOTEB sK Regents officiall approve Brandon as athletic director Union will ask for pay raises, increased health benefits and job security By DARRYN FITZGERALD Daily Staff Reporter University administrators and the union that represents lecturers at the University will begin negoti- ating a new three-year contract for lecturers today. This year's negotiations mark the third collective bargaining agreement between the Univer- sity and the Lecturer's Employee Organization - which represents about 1,500 full and part-time fac- ulty members - and the University. LEO hopes to draft a new contract that will include pay increases, bet- ter health benefits and more job security for lecturers. The semester-long negotiations will start today with opening state- ments from both LEO officials and University administrators. Inrecentinterviews, representa- tives from both sides said the talks will address contractual issues sim- ilar to those discussed in the past. "The expectations of the Univer- sity are not any different than past negotiations," said Jeffery Frum- kin, associate vice provost and senior director of academic human resources. Joseph Walls - a lecturer of Business Information Technology and media liaison for LEO - said despite the recession, members of LEO's bargaining committee hope to get higher salaries written into this year's contract. "We are going to ask for salary increases," Walls said. "We feel it is feasible for us to do that despite the circumstances." Lecturers represent roughly 30 percent of the faculty at the Univer- sity's Ann Arbor campus, but their salaries account for1 percent of the total Ann Arbor campus budget, according to an LEO press release given to The Michigan Daily earlier this week. LEO President Bonnie Halloran wrote in the press release that pay raises for lecturers are sorely over- due. "We know that these are tough economic times, but our members have been underpaid and underval- ued for years," Halloran wrote. Though Frumkin didn't say the University's position on pay raises for lecturers, he said the contract needs to reflect a respect for the University's financial resources. "The University hopes to achieve a successful contract that is seen as See CONTRACT, Page 7 Board also approves Crisler renovations, receives report on 'U' research By JOSEPH LICHTERMAN DailyStaffReport During its monthly meeting yes- terday, the University's Board of Regents approved Domino's Pizza CEO and Regent Emeritus, David Brandon, as the University's next athletic director, in a unanimous vote. "I believe David's widely recog- nized leadership skills, his busi- ness acumen, his tenure as First reported on a regent, his experience as a student- athlete, and his dedication as a fundraiser combine to make him a perfect leader for this athletic pro- gram and I look forward to working with him again," University Presi- dent Mary Sue Coleman said of the appointment. The regents also unanimously renewed the contracts of a handful of deans from schools across the University. Deborah Loewenberg Ball, dean of the School of Educa- tion, Christopher Ball, dean of the School of Music, Theatre, & Dance and James S. Jackson, director of the Institute for Social Research each received five-year appoint- ments. Bryan L. Rogers, dean of the School of Art & Design, had his appointment extended another two years. Rosina Bierbaum, dean of the School of Natural Resources and Environment, was reappointed for, a one-year term. CRISLER ARENA RENOVATIONS APPROVED The regents also approved reno- vations to Crisler Arena yesterday. The sporting arena - which hosts the Michigan's men's and women's basketball teams' home games - was built in 1967. The projected $20 million reno- vations will include the removal and reconfiguration of the blue, See REGENTS, Page 7 EDUCATING TOMORROW'S TEACHERS School of Ed. revamps curriculum Mirroring medical schools, new program will increase focus on field work By ANNIE GORDON THOMAS Daily StaffReporter In a new approach to educat- ing tomorrow's teachers, officials in the School of Education plan to overhaul the school's current teach- ing methodology to place a greater emphasis on training in the field. Spearheaded by Deborah Ball, dean of the School of Education, the School of Education has launched a concept called the Teacher Educa- tion Initiative. According to Ball, this initiative will change the way the School of Education will famil- iarize teachers with the material they will be teaching. The program aims to model teacher training after medical schools or nursing programs by increasing direct supervision and the hours logged in field training. Ball said she believes that, current- ly, there isn't enough careful super- vision applied to teacher training. School of Education officials are hoping to unveil a completely new teacher training program next*fall for their students. But first, they're encouraging faculty members and researchers at the school to pilot the programs they've developed. One such program, which has garnered recent national attention, involves a new way of preparing for student teaching-the period of time when an education student works alongside a teacher in a classroom. School ofEducation Prof.Elizabeth Moje and Robert Bain, an associate professor of history and social sci- ence education, collaborated to cre- ate a system where students would observe specific teachers who excel See EDUCATION, Page 7 CO L LEGIA TE CO NSUL TAN T S Student consulting group helps'U,' local businesses market to students Pilots James Beasley and Jason Donaldson, members of the Survival Flight crew, during a press conference following their return from Haiti yesterday. The crew brought back two Haitians who are now receiving care at the University Hospital. Emergency flight brings two quake victims to 'U'hospital Nexecon Consulting Group was founded in 2008 by Business School students By ALEX KIRSHENBAUM Daily StaffReporter In their junior year at the Uni- versity, a few friends began consid- ering the importance of applying what they learned in the classroom to business practices in the real world. At first, the students joked about being paid for giving advice to Ann Arbor businesses on how to improve their companies. But then, they realized the idea could become a reality. "The joke actually started becoming a conversation of not 'do you think people would pay us' but 'how do we do it,"' said Business School senior Dean Fefopoulos. Fefopoulos is co-founder of the Nexecon Consulting Group - a stu- dent group established in 2008 that provides consulting services for local businesses and the University. Today, roughly 50 University stu- dents are members. Nexecon has clients ranging from Sava's Cafe and No Thai! to the University's Office of Development, See NEXECON, Page 7 PC ba atients selected now being treated at the Univer- sity Medical Center. The patients ised on need for were transported from Haiti by a UniversitySurvivalFlightaircraft, advanced care and are now receiving advanced care. By LILLIAN XIAO Hospital officials wrote in a Daily StaffReporter press release that they are unable to disclose the condition of either o victims of the earthquake patient, but release that the truck Haiti last week are patients have injuries requiring complex care that's only avail- able at few medical centers in the country, including the University of Michigan Health System. The jet aircraft is part of an ini- tiative started in the wake of the earthquake, which sends medi- cal and flight crews to "transport personnel, patients and supplies to and from Haiti,"hospital officials See HAITI, Page 7 Tw that s WEATHER ' HI: 37 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail TOMORROW LO:36 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Will Michigan mimic Yale's admissions video? MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE WIRE INDEX NEW S ...................................2' ARTS. . .................S..............5 Vol.CXX, No. 78 AP NEW S ..........................3 CLASSIFIEDS.......... 6 © S he ichianDaily OPINION ........... . 4 SPORTS................................8 I $