The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 13, 2011 - SA The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October13, 2011 - 5A NURSES From Page 1A willing to refuse to appreci- ate and bargain in good faith with the very people who work so tirelessly - so compassion- ately - and who help make the University health system such a highly recognized and premier health care institution in our nation," Oppenheim said. MNA President Jeffrey Bre- slin also spoke at the event and compared the union's nego- tiations with the Occupy Wall Street movement, in which pro- testers across the nation are voicing their discontent with politicians and corporations. "Wall Street caused this cri- sis, and we demand Wall Street pay us back. It wasn't Wall Street that bailed out the banks. It wasn't us that crashed the economy. Yet we are the ones that are suffering," Breslin said. "Because nurses are America's most trusted profession, and because of our deep commit- ment to patient advocacy, we're demanding that our legislators support (the) nurses' version of the Occupy Wall Street cam- paign." Susan Ahlstrom, who has worked at the University Hos- pital as a nurse on the surgical floor for three years, echoed Breslin's sentiments regarding the Occupy Wall Street move- ment. "The public has to realize that nurses have jobs that are demanding physically, emotion- ally and intellectually," Ahl- strom said. "... I think that the money needs to be spread more evenly when 1 percent of the people are taking care of 90 per- cent of the wealth." Ahlstrom added that the pro- posed benefit cuts hit close to home considering the sacrifices nurses make to care for their patients like staying overnight despite having families of their own.l "Health care workers want to be able to receive the same kind of care I give my patients," she said. Union leaders and local politi- cians like State Rep. Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor) and Yousef Rabhi, a commissioner on the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners and recent Uni- versity graduates also addressed the crowd yesterday and empha- sized the importance of nurses and the necessity of contract negotiations. Tom Mallon, a UMHS nurse since 2004, said he's supporting MNA because he is displeased with how nurses are being treat- ed. "I've historically never been a pro-union guy, but whenIsee the University giving their adminis- trators and giving their execu- tives substantial pay increases and then asking me - as a staff nurse - to work more hours but reduce my access to overtime and increase my healthcare cost, it's a slap in the face," Mallon said. TERESA MATHEW/Daily The dining hail in tast Quad will go trayless after the residence halt is renovated nest year. TRAYLESS From Page 1A taking more food - and some of that food goes directly into the garbage," Coleman said in her speech last month. "Knowing we serve 2.5 million meals a year, wasting less food and washing far. fewer trays will deliver real benefits." Mike Lee, director of Residen- tial Dining Services, added that the University isn't able to collect data on whether going trayless will conserve water in the dining halls. The new plans for East Quad dining hall include a dining area designed specifically for trayless dining after the residence hall undergoes a $116 million renova- tion next year. The dorm will be closed for the 2012-2013 school year and is scheduled to reopen in fall 2013. Lee said Coleman's announce- ment will help shed light on sus- tainable practices already in use in dining services and other areas of the University. Trayless dining was imple- mented as a pilot program in East Quad in 2010 after students in an Environment 590 class presented the option. The students, along with the help of University Hous- ing officials, organized and moni- tored East Quad going entirely trayless for a few days. East Quad was picked for the pilot, Lee said, because it was thought that many of the residents would be accept- ing of the change. "You always have some stu- dents that may not be so positive, but in East Quad the majority real- ly support (sustainable options)" Lee said. In 2009, students attempted to create a similar trayless pilot pro- gram, over the course of 15 meals, in Mary Markley Residence din- ing Hall, but their project was unsuccessful. Upon completion of the 2010 pilot, East Quad became "tray- light" by giving students the option of using trays or not. LSA sophomore Hannah Pearlman and Art & Design sophomore Hannah Nathans, both current East Quad residents who also lived there last year, said they rarely use trays. "It makes more sense," Pearl- man said. "You've got two hands - you can just carry it (without trays)." However, trayless dining poses some challenges in larger dining halls. University Housing spokes- man Peter Logan said it is difficult to implement the trayless model in large dining halls where the serv- ing areas are far from the dining areas, or in dining halls with mul- tiple levels like Hill Dining Center. "There are some situations in which trayless doesn't work so well and where we have to be first and foremost attentive to our mission to provide a good din- ing experience for the students," Logan said. "Where we can, we do, and where it may not be prac- tical, then we won't comprise the primary mission of Residential Dining Services." Nathans said she notices a dif- ference when she eats at Hill Din- ing Center, which is not designed to be trayless. She said she thinks it would be an inconvenience to not use a tray there because once she finished eating, it would be hard to know what to do with only a plate. To educate residents on the trayless dining initiative in East Quad, Dining Services provides information to residents to make them aware of trayless dining procedures. "I think it's a good idea," Pearl- man said. "It comes to a point where I think people need to learn to be more aware of the environment and deal with the fact that you have to adapt to cer- tain things to make the world a better place, because that's what it's about." In addition to trayless dining, the dining halls also incorporate other sustainability efforts such as using napkins made from recy- cled materials and implementing a pre-consumer waste compost, in which excess food from cook- ing meals is composted. "Sustainability is certainly something that we're trying to fold into what we do, as long as it's also consistent with or achieves our responsibilities to provide a quality residential experience for students," Logan said. { PUBLISHERS From Page 1A dence in book retail. "I sell books for a living, so I'm charged with being eternally optimistic," he said. Jim Edwards, publisher and CEO at Ann Arbor Editions, said his company had a "fantastic" relationship with Borders, but it wasn't always sure about the chain's long-term security. Before Borders went out of business, Ann Arbor Editions published books produced by Borders. Edwards explained that while Ann Arbor Editions has always made a small share of its revenue from independent book- stores, it relied on Borders as a large source of business. Foreseeing Borders's financial decline starting about two years ago, the company began to diver- sify its sales and marketing strat- egies through increasing online sales and the use of social media. Edwards added that though sales are not as substantial as they pre- viously were, Ann Arbor Editions is a "healthier" company after Borders's collapse. "The uncertainty of (the) eco- nomic realities of Borders is no longer part of our day-to-day decisions," Edwards explained. He noted that the publishing industry can learn a lesson from Borders's mistakes and its subse- quent closure. "We really believe that with the closing of Borders, it's a wake-up call to everybody in this business (that) we need to be understanding our customers and reaching them better direct- ly, and in many ways reaching around traditional booksellers," Edwards said. THERE'S ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT OF THE TWITTER THROWDOWN Follow @michigandaily so we can #BeatStateNews OCTOBER 15-16, 2011 COMPETITION, SEMINARS, EXPO, PARTIES, MUSIC, ACTIVISM PLUS A SATURDAY NIGHT PARTY WITH ROYCE DA 5'9" & 420 FUNK MOB BERT'S WAREHOUSE THEATER 2739 Russell Street.- Detroit, MI For Tickets visit MEDCANCURCOM