The Michigan Daily = michigandaily.com Friday February 25, 2011-- 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, February 25, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Pure Michigan ad campaign in line for $10M boost The state's popular Pure Michi- gan tourism campaign will be able to do more spring, summer and fall advertising because of an additional$10 millionapproved by state lawmakers yesterday. The bill, passed 35-1 by the Sen- ate, is headed to Republican Gov. Rick Snyder for his signature. The House already had approved the bill. The legislation allows an addi- tional $10 million to be trans- ferred into the campaign from the state's 21st Century Jobs Fund. That's double the previously allot- ted amount and raises overall Pure Michigan funding for this budget year to $25 million, as requested by Snyder. The tourism funding bill could become one of the first signed by Snyder, who has been governor for less than two months. NEW YORK Cost of the WTC transit hub grows Planners of the new World Trade Center say they need anoth- er $180 million to finish a major transit hub at the site. An official at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey told the agency's commissioners yes- terday that the price of the train and subway station has climbed to $3.44 billion. Construction director Steven Plate says soaring steel arches designed for the building by archi- tect Santiago Calatrava will cost $221million, about twice as much as estimated. Plate says designers had to add extra steel to protect against ter- rorist attacks. Shipping costs also rose after planners decided to use aforeigncontractorthathadexpe- rience with Calatrava's designs. TOKYO Japan hosts first robot marathon The world's first robot mara- thon is under way in western Japan, with five two-legged par- ticipants racing on an indoor track. The race kicked off yesterday with the 1-foot (30-centimeter) -tall, battery-charged robots competing around a 110-yard (100-meter) racetrack. They will have to cover 26 miles (42 kilo- meters). Japanese robot maker and event organizer Vstone Co. says the "Robo Mara Full" race in Osaka will demonstrate the machines' durability and maneu- verability. Vstone robots took an early lead, while two entrants by Osaka University of Engineering teams got off to a shaky start. The race is expected to last through Sunday. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Ivies reinstate early admissions Harvard and Princeton say they are restoring their under- graduate early admissions pro- grams. Harvard dropped its early admissions program four years ago, saying it wasn't easy for dis- advantaged students to access and contributed to high school student anxiety. Princeton fol- lowed suit, hoping other schools would join in, but the idea didn't catch on. The two schools announced yesterday that they will restore their respective programs. Both also say students accepted early will have until the regular spring deadline to decide whether to attend. Harvard also says it is boost- ing financial aid to coincide with a nearly 4 percent increase in tuition. The total cost of attend- ing Harvard next year is estimat- ed at nearly $53,000. It also pledged to improve recruiting of students from more modest academic backgrounds. -Compiled from Daily wire reports SPRING BREAK From Page 1 same number of employees will be working at the restaurant during the week. Carmen Fernando, general manager of Ashley's Pub on South State Street, said the week of spring break is typi- cally slower, but she said the pub will hold special events throughout the week to attract customers. "Hopefully, focusing on doing beer events and all that will definitely offset any impact that we're having from the kids that are not in town," Fernando said. Stacy Amwake, manager of The Brown Jug on South Uni- versity Avenue, said even if stu- dents' week off has a negative impact on business, she expects more customers on Monday and Tuesday because students who are still in town won't have GUATEMALA From Page 1 them, and while they might not be able to fully diagnose them, they can probably screen them and say if there's a problem or not." Skinner said that each year, about 1,500 Guatemalan babies are born with cardiac defects. He said these deficiencies could lead to major health complica- tions later in life. According to Skinner, about two-thirds of Guatemala's population lives in rural areas without access to the developed health care sys- tems of urban hospitals. Because it is such a "labori- ous trip" to go to the city, Skin- ner said rural residents don't get screened on a regular basis and are unable to detect car- diac defects. He said he hopes the remote stethoscope will encourage rural residents to go to city hospitals for medical help more often. "Now, they might be able to get some feedback from people that listened to their electronic vitals and say, 'Oh, I hear some- CONFERENCE From Page 1 ety-at-large are, as we know too well, at risk of harassment, discrimination and assault to property and person," he said. The event will bring national attention to Ann Arbor's role as a national leader in LGBTQ rights, Toy said. The first-ever Gay Pride Week was held in Ann Arbor in 1972, and the city amended its non-discrimina- tion policy to protect gender identity and expression in 1999. "(The) conference's presence and influence will necessarily point up Ann Arbor's leader- ship in supporting all of us in our human worth and dignity," Toy said. The Spectrum Center's 40th anniversary feels "fabulous and at the same time unreal," Toy said. "When we founded the office through the generous risk- taking of the (University), we as much school work and will be able to go out. "It will hurt us a little, but it kind of evens it out. It gives us more businesses on our slow days," Amwake said., With the economic recession still affecting the region, busi- nesses might not see as large a decrease in customer traffic as they would if people had more money to spend on vacations or other spring break escapades. "I noticed actually starting last year, that the impact (of spring break) wasn't as severe as it's been in the near past," Fernando said. "I can't exactly say why that was. Maybe not as many people were leaving for spring break due to the econo- my. She added, "I'm not going to under-staff too much this year just considering that last year was a pretty good spring break for us." Dave Jones, owner of White Market on East William Street, thing that's a little irregular. You should probably come in,'" Skinner said. "And they might take the risks involved in tak- ing that trip into the city." After the excursion this break, M-HEAL will create a more developed version of the device. All versions of the tool will undergo such "rapid and extensive" changes, Skinner said, that the initial device will probably not be recognizable in a year. "It's just kind of proof-of- concept. We're not going to be using it on people down there," he said. "It's sort of a working prop so that we can see how the people will interact with it." According to Skinner, M-HEAL aims to leverage the engineering skills students learn at the University to tackle health problems. The Appropri- ate Technology Collaborative, an Ann Arbor-based non-prof- it organization, approached M-HEAL in November with the request for a device to meet this specific need in Guatemala. ATC is associated with the Aldo Castaneda Foundation in Guatemala - named for Har- couldn't have predicted this event, which brings together so many TBLGQ students and allies from schools across the Midwest," he said. The Spectrum Center not only serves as a resource to LGBTQ students, Toy said, but it is also vital to the University community as a whole. "The human sexual- ity threads of our total identity tapestry are bound together with all the other elements of our identity," Toy said. "There- fore Spectrum responds to and highlights the interconnection of oppressions. As we know - it can't be said too often - no one is free until we all are free." University alum Howard Bragman, founder of public relations firm Fifteen Minutes in Los Angeles, expressed his support for the Spectrum Cen- ter's work on campus. Bragman worked with the University when Andrew Shirvell, a for- mer Michigan assistant attor- ney general, targeted Michigan said he expects a significant drop in activity next week. "We figure it's about 30 to 35 percent less for the week," Jones said. The specialty gift store Middle Earth on South Uni- versity Avenue also anticipates a lull in business, according to the store's owner Cynthia Shevel, who expects business to decrease about one-third in sales. "Much of our business is stu- dents and other people associ- ated with the University, so if they are not here, it definitely impacts." Shevel said. According to a Noodles & Company spokesman Michael Endres, spring break isn't a major concern for the chain restaurant located on South State Street. "It's a little down, but it's something ... that basically we plan for each year," he said. "It's nothing that causes a major impact." vard Medical School Prof. Aldo Castaneda, a native of Guate- mala. With its donations, the foundation provides pro bono surgery for needy patients in Guatemala City. Skinner said the main goal of the trip - which the students will embark on tomorrow - is for them to get a feel for the situation and familiarize them- selves with the people they're trying to serve. "It's very important for every- one in the group to have a much deeper, more visceral experience of the conditions, what's avail- able and the needs of the people that we're going to be trying to address with this technology (in order) to give them the tech- nology in a way that's perfectly accessible to them," he said. Skinner said his goal for the trip is to solve all the "engineer- ing and cultural determinants that have to be flushed out" so the most appropriate device can be produced. "I think there is a lot there, even before we start churning out engineering work, just get- ting in touch with the people," he said. Student Assembly President Chris Armstrong last year because of his sexual orienta- tion. Armstrong is the only assembly president who has been open about being gay. Armstrong is attending the conference and is also set to introduce Jim Toy before his speech on Saturday. He added that he thinks the conference will demonstrate the Univer- sity's commitment to LGBTQ issues. "It's a really exciting thing for Michigan," Armstrong said in an interview last night. "It's an opportunity for Michigan to host the LGTB community." Bragman said it was "amaz- ing" how the University sup- ported Armstrong and fought against hate speech. "(The University) never asked, 'What's the politically correct thing to do?' They only asked, 'What's the morally right thing to do?"' Bragman said. "It reminded me what a great place the University is." GEO From Page 1 Literatures, held his 17-month- old daughter as he participated in the rally. Marching from the Diag to the Cube, GEO members passed out copies of a letter addressed to University President Mary Sue Coleman for rally attendees to sign, which they later presented to her. The letter asked for Cole- man's support of GEO's efforts to improve parental accommoda- tions at the University, including the union's push for increased child care and parental leave options. The letter states that union members want the University to better accommodate employees' rights when it comes to child care and continue to support initia- tives like making breastfeeding easier in appropriate places on campus. Pous - who, like Kroll, has been involved in the parent cau- cus of GEO - said the Univer- sity's requirement that a spouse must work or study more than 20 hours a week to have access to child care benefits should be eliminated. GEO President Rob Gillezeau, a graduate student instructor in the Department of Econom- ics and a graduate staff research assistant for the Center for Afroamerican and African Stud- ies, said one of the most impor- tant efforts of GEO is obtaining access to child care subsidies for international students. He said a current work restriction keeps international students from get- ting child care subsidies because they have a limit on work hours as foreigners that prevents them from qualifying for some benefits under University rules.. In an interview at the rally, Gillezeau said he and other GEO members feel the contract bargaining process is moving too slowly. He added that the current contract is supposed to expire March 1, but GEO plans to ask to extend the deadline until March 18 at a meeting to be held today. "We will be coming back strong after the break to ensure that we don't let this momentum fall," Gillezeau said to the crowd. GEO has been bargaining with the administration since Decem- ber. Gillezeau said he anticipates the union will be granted an extension, which usually hap- pens during years when the contract is being negotiated. The contract is negotiated every three years. Patrick O'Mahen, former com- munications chair of GEO and a former Michigan Daily colum- nist, told the crowd that several University administrators prom- ised on Wednesday that they would be getting back to GEO today with package proposals. O'Mahen urged those at the rally to go to the meeting today to bar- gain with the administration. "Please come out and support your local bargaining team, sup- port yourselves, support your union," O'Mahen said. Sam Montgomery, chair of GEO's organizing committee, said in addition to GEO's effort for increased parental rights, the union is lobbying for disability accommodations, increased sala- ries and more rights for GSRAs. In recent weeks, members of GEO have been contacting the University administration - including through the delivery of an oversized letter to Coleman's office - hoping to gain approval to allow GSRAs collective bar- gaining rights in the union. Lauren Reed and Alix Gould- Werth, GSRAs in the School of Social Work, said they attended the rally to express support for the campaign to have GSRAs included in GEO's contract. "The University has been slow to return proposals, and I think it's been frustrating for us that they're unwilling to recognize that we, as (GSRAs), are work- ers and that we have the right to organize," Gould-Werth said. Jeff Frumkin, the University's associate vice provost and senior director of the Department of Academic Human Resources, said in an interview last week that the University" is not inter- ested in voluntarily recognizing GSRAs as having the ability to organize." Reed said she thinks GSRAs and GSIs should be included under the same collective bar- gaining contract because many graduate students either hold both positions at the same time or switch between the two from semester to semester. Gould-Werth said she also attended the rally to express her solidarity with GSIs on issues like child care. She and Reed said they think many GSRAs in the School of Social Work are sup- portive of being included under GEO's contract. Members of the Lecturers' Employee Organization attended the rally as well. Ian Robinson, LEO member and a lecturer in the Department of Sociology and the Residential College, said he N~Fiaikll LEO members would agree that GSRAs should have the right to unionize. "There shouldn't be any impediments put in the way of people signing up and joining a union if that's what they want to do," Robinson said. At a meeting on Tuesday, GSRAs from the Department of Aerospace Engineering and other attendees expressed hesitation about joining GEO to Gillezeau and other union officers. Some of the meeting's attendees said they felt there wasn't a need for GSRAs to unionize and wouldn't join in the efforts until they saw statis- tics expressing that need. T 4 All Day Fish Fry Platter for $6.99 14 - cat73e, e 6 10-CL $3 Pints & Well Drinks - All 27 Draft Beers $1.75 Heineken & Amstel Light Bottles No Cover Charge 310 Mavnard St -Food To Go 734.995,0100-Next to the Mavnard Parking Structure H, -,,om 'LIKE' THE DAILY ON FACEBOOK