Ic i an4,.3at IV Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, February 22,2011 michigandaily.com UNIVERSITY FACULTY SACUA says alternative needed for tenure prop. Ann Arbor resident Marty Smith helps Rackham student Ned Weilman get his car out of the snow yesterday. Smith said Wellman's car was the 12th vehicle he had dug out of the snow that day. Ann Arbor received about nine inches of snow on Sunday. UNIVERSITY ACADEMICS Male U Nursings Isay gender sets them apart Faculty leaders expected to meet with Coleman to discuss plan today By KAITLIN WILLIAMS Daily StaffReporter Members of the lead faculty governing body planto present a faculty counterproposal to Uni- versity Provost Philip Hanlon's recommendation to lengthen the tenure probationary period for faculty members this week. Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs members discussed yesterday Hanlon's proposal, which would change Regent Bylaw 5.09 by length- ening the maximum tenure probationary period University schools and colleges can choose for faculty from eightyears to 10 years. SACUA Chair Ed Rothman, a professor of statistics, said at yesterday's discussion that he agrees with Hanlon's sug- gestion to give faculty more decision-making power, but dis- agrees with Hanlon's proposal to change the bylaw. - Rothman and Gina Poe, SACUA vice chair and associate professor of anesthesiology and molecular and integrative phys- iology in the Medical School, are working on counterproposals that offer short-term and long- term solutions to what they feel are problems with tenure proba- tionary periods. Rothman and Poe plan to meet with University President Mary Sue Coleman today to talk about their counterproposal. They said yesterday that a draft should be available for faculty distribution this week. Rothman said he doesn't think the tenure probationary period should be extended for all faculty members but sug- gested they be able to opt for an extension on an individual basis without questioi or penalty from the administration. However, Rothman said this is only a short-term solution to a larger, long-term problem - ill- defined standards for obtaining tenure. Rothman said externally generated standards, like pub- lishing requirements for faculty members, diminish quality of work. He said tenure should be determined by internally gener- See SACUA, Page 7 Few male students seek to enter career in field By CLAIRE GOSCICKI Daily StaffReporter Nursing School junior David Kalvelage has only one com- plaint about his area of study, and it isn't that he's typically only one of several males in his Nursing School classes. "Often nurses can be very chatty and gossipy," he said. As a male in the School of Nursing, Kalvelage is often in the minority in his classes and at the Oakwood Annapolis Hos- pital in Wayne, Mich. where he works while pursuing his undergraduate degree. But Kalvelage said being in this position is often an advan- tage. Being one of the few males in the undergraduate nursing program has set him apart from his classmates, he said. "Professors might remember me a little easier," Kalvelage said. "I've noticed a couple of times, though, I'll only have met a professor once, (and) the pro- fessor will know me right off the bat." Kalvelage isn't the only male in the School of Nursing who feels his situation is a positive one. Several males studying and working in the school said being in the minority is often benefi- cial, offering them aunique edu- cation and segue into the field. According to data provided to The Michigan Daily by the School of Nursing, out of 146 traditional freshmen and soph- omore cross-campus transfer students, 15 men were enrolled See NURSING, Page 2 A i r AROUND ANN ARBOR Tent city looks for sponsor to fund move to private land 10 residents stay in Camp Take Notice during winter By AUSTIN WORDELL Daily StaffReporter In the woods near I-94 off Wagner Road, a path opens up to a clearing where 10 current residents of Camp Take Notice, a group of homeless individuals who live in tents, continue their self-governing community dur- ing the winter months. Living in separate tents with one large tent designated for group meetings, residents of CTN have been keeping warm this season with small propane heaters and two wood-burning stoves in the large tent. Diminished by about one- third of its population during warmer weather, CTN currently faces the challenges of finding a private sponsor and looming budget cuts of local non-profit organizations. Located on public land that isn't easily visible from nearby roads, members of the camp are seeking a private land sponsor so they can move to a more per- manent location. Trespassing laws have forced the tent com- See TENT CITY, Page 7 FEDERAL FUNDING Great Lakes restoration grants threatened by U.S. House bill With budget cut, that would reduce the current ly lower figure compared to the ' federal budget by more than $475 million President Barack EPA would receive $61 billion for the remainder of Obama proposed for the GLRI this fiscal year, threatening pro- in 2010 and the $300 million he $225M for initiative grams like the Great Lakes Res- proposed for it in 2011. How- toration Initiative. ever, if passed, the cut wouldn't By SUZANNE JACOBS One of the federal agencies affect specific University-spon- DailyStaffReporter facingmajor cuts is the Environ- sored research projects on the mental Protection Agency. The Great Lakes. The U.S. House of Represen- bill would allocate $225 million Additional cuts to the EPA tatives passed a controversial to the EPA's Great Lakes Resto- budget would prevent the agen- spending bill over the weekend ration Initiative - a significant- See GREAT LAKES, Page 7 ALLISON KRUSKE/Daily LSA juniors Brittany Holmes (left) and Lindsey Smith practice with student dance group Images of Praise yesterday. The group is part of the Michigan Gospel Chorale and is preparing for its tour, which starts on Friday. UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES In'U' partnership, Google Books Library Project makes texts available on e-readers Digitization of campus books 60 percent finished By RACHEL BRUSSTAR Daily StaffReporter With Google's help, it is becoming increasingly easi- er for students to ditch their paperbacks and hardcover textbooks for e-readers and iPads. The option partly stems from the University's involve- ment with the Google Books Library Project, in which tens of thousands of volumes from campus library collections have been digitized each week since 2004. According to Paul Courant, the University's dean of libraries, the project is cur- rently 60 percent complete in its digitization process - with more than 1 million volumes currently readable and more than 5 million volumes text- searchable online. "This is the kind of project that never quite ends, but it will be substantially true that we at least have search access See GOOGLE BOOKS, Page 7 WEATHER HL: 31 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-41B-4115 or e-mail Hagelin earns CCHA weekly honors TOMORROW LO 28 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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