11P , iC4t9an' ailm Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, October 26, 2011 michigandaily.com UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICES UHS to go paperless to help transfer patient data New system was required to repeat tertain tests suth as blood samples or to improve X-rays. The transition to the new digital system - expected to be communication completed in August 2012 will make all UHS test results and with UMHS other clinical information avail- able electronically to authried By MICHELE NAROV University of Michigan Healthy Daily Staff Reporter System staff. Currently, UHTSopraes Sitting in the basement of mostly with paper records, wite University Health Services are the hospital uses electronic about 100,000 paper records records. Robert Winfield, the on patient viit , +-o ness au r,_ +'--71a,+1 44- Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, a Burmese activist, delivered the Wallenberg Lecture at Rackham Auditorium last night while Skyping from Burma Nobel Peace Prize winer SuU Kyi receives Wallenberg e Burmese activist Aung San Suu Kyi accepted award via Skype By BEN SEIDMAN For the Daily Despite being halfway around the world, a Nobel Prize winner personally accepted an award from the University last night. Aung San Suu Kyi - a Bur- mese nonviolence activist and 1991 recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize - accepted the Raoul Wallenberg Medal for humani- tarianism via telecommunica- tion and Skype. More than 500 people watched her accept the award in Rackham Auditorium. Suu Kyi, who currently heads the National League for Democ- racy in Burma, recorded a 30-minute lecture acceptingthe award in which she spoke about her experience as a humanitar- ian. "(Democracy) is not an end in itself but the means to achieve a particular kind of society," Suu Kyi said in her recorded lecture. "... The people of Burma have made democracy their cause because they want the freedom to be able to help themselves." The Wallenberg Medal is awarded to humanitarians whose actions on behalf of per- secuted people represent the efforts of Raoul Wallenberg, a University alum who saved an estimated 100,000 people from Nazi execution during World War II. Other recipients of the medal include the-Dalai Lama, Holocaust survivor and author Elie Wiesel and Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Suu Kyi is the 21st recipient of the medal. Suu Kyi closed her lecture by paying tribute to Wallenberg. "To deny freedom means to deny life," Suu Kyi said. "That is, those who love life cry out: 'Give me freedom or give me death."' See WALLENBERG, Page 3A medical histories. But this num- ber won't be growing anytime soon, as UHS is in the process of going paperless. UHS recently began phasing in an electronic health record keepingsystem, to record patient information. The new system, which went live about a month ago and will be fully implement- ed in one year, is part of an effort to remedy current communica- tion problems with the Univer- sity Hospital. With the former paper sys- tem, if a patient was tested at UHS and then referred to the University Hospital, the patient nas caused commuicaton prob- lems. "For as long as I've been here, we have struggled wit a way Ito share lab reports;.isit e_6riir extra reports without just copy- ing them and putting them into the patient's hand and saying, 'Please take these with you,"' Winfield said. Though the use of faxes to exchange reports has helped, documents sent by faxes are often received by the clinic and never actually make it into the See UHS, Page 3A MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY GSRA group against union asks assembly for support MASK MEETING M GS A r dents ization gradua tants - ISA to vote on a resolution that will come before MSA next week concern- RA resolution ing the support of GSRA union- ization. next week GSRA Stephen Raiman told the assembly that unionization By CLAIRE HALL doesn't make sense for GSRAs. Daily StaffReporter He explained that while gradu- ate student instructors receive a epresentative from Stu- stipend to teach while they com- Against GSRA Union- plete their theses, GSRAs don't - a group of about 400 generally get compensated for ate student research assis- the same research they conduct - presented a case against to earn their degrees because their research and educational roles are indistinct from one another. GSRA unionization, which is supported by the Gradu- ate Employees Organization, is opposed by the Michigan Employment Relations Com- mission, which upheld a 1981 ruling in August that said GSRAs are students before staff Still, GEO wants to sponsor a poll to see how many GSRAs See GSRA, Page 3A STUDENT START-UPS Students develop new discount card for use at local businesses ALDEN REISS/Daily LSA freshman Connie Qi makes a mask at a Halloween event hosted by the Lloyd Hall Scholars in Couzens Hall yesterday. UNIVERSITY TECHNOLOGY ITS prepares to launch new mobile app to access CTools resources, assignments LegendsCard offers savings at 34 restaurants, stores By CLAIRE HALL Daily StaffReporter A student goes to purchase two six-inch Subway subs and while paying flashes a shiny, black, metallic card - signaling his exclusive membership in a club that provides discounts on everything from haircuts, to ice cream, to hookahs. It's not the coveted Ameri- can Express black card, but that's what it's designed to look like. It's Ann Arbor's newest discount card called Legends- Card that was developed by four University students. And while it won't give you access to thousands of dollars, it will make one of those two six-inch Subway subs free. With about 200 cards cur- rently in circulation, Legends- Card is looking to be the next big thing on campus. "It's a discount card, but we like to think of it more of like a student lifestyle card because it has everything a student would need on campus," said LSA junior Jonathan Kaufman, See CARD, Page 3A Michigan app to be launched in next few months By DANA DEL VECCHIO For the Daily Students will no longer be able to blame their missing home- work assignments on a lack of computer access. The University's Information and Technology Services and a student programming team have developed a Mobile CTools appli- cation to give students on the go access to academic resources . The app, designed for Android and iOS devices, will be launched in the next few months after ITS finishes producing the design prototype. After receiving a design pro- totype of Mobile CTools from MSuite Student Collaborative - a team of computer science and University computer engi- neering students - ITS began to incorporate the app into the forthcoming Michigan app, which will include information about bus routes, menus for cam- pus dining facilities and course listings. Rackham student Apoorva Bansal helped develop the app See CTOOLS, Page 3A a. .. ~ _z,., ... "v .. .. a,.. .,. ,,, WEATHER TOMORROW HI: 44 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILYCOM L 32 Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail V hosts competition for student grad speaker news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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