The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, February 14, 2012 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, February 14, 2012 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Mich. unions sue over state worker pension changes A coalition of state employee labor unions sued the state of Michigan yesterday, saying recent changes to the funding of the employees' retirement systems are unconstitutional, The suit filed in Ingham Coun- ty Circuit Court challenges a law approved by the Legislature and signed late last year by Gov. Rick Snyder. The law requires employees who choose to remain in the state's defined benefit or pension plan to contribute 4 percent of their com- pensation toward the system. HOOPA VALLEY INDIAN RESERVATION, Calif. Magnitude-5.6 quake strikes rural Northern Calif. A moderate earthquake struck Northern California's coast yes- terday afternoon, rattling nerves around the Oregon border but yielding no immediate reports of major injuries or damage, officials said. The magnitude-5.6 quake struck at 1:07 p.m. about 18 miles inland in an unincorporated part of Humboldt County, the .U.S. Geological Survey said. The epi- center was a rural area near the small community of Weitchpec * on the Hoopa Valley Indian Res- ervation, about 240 miles north of San Francisco and about 60 miles south of the Oregon border. The temblor was widely felt within a 100-mile radius, accord- ingto the USGS website. CARACAS, Venezuela Opposition party selects Chavez's political rival Youthful state governor Hen- rique Capriles won Venezuela's first-ever opposition presidential primary Sunday by a wide mar- gin, emerging as the single candi- date who will try to end President Hugo Chavez's 13 years in power. Capriles, the 39-year-old gov- ernor of Miranda state who describes himself as a center-left progressive, faces a tough task in ousting Chavez, a charismatic campaigner with a loyal following and the full powers of the state to back his candidacy in Oct. 7 elec- tions. Opposition election chief Tere- sa Albanes announced the prelim- inary results, saying that Capriles won about 62 percent of the vote, beating Zulia state Gov. Pablo Perez by a margin of more than 30 percentage points. Chavez's opponents lined up to vote in many areas, surpassing most expectations with a turnout of about 2.9 million ballots, cast out of Venezuela's 18 million reg- istered voters. ZAGREB, Croatia On Valentine's day, a museum about broken hearts What becomes of a garden gnome hurled in fury at a wind- screen during a stormy breakup? Or a teddy bear that was once a Valentine's Day present? A wedding dress from a marriage gone awry? An ax that smashed through household furniture? All are on display at the Muse- um of Broken Relationships in the Croatian capital, each with writ- ten testimonies telling tales of passion, romance and heartbreak. On Valentine's Day, the muse- um sees its visits almost double. "The objects that are here rep- resent all the stages of a breakup. and how people go through love," said Drazen Grubisic, a designer and artist who co-founded the museum in 2010 in the Croatian capital. "We might say it's a love muse- um, just upside down," he said. -Compiled from Daily wire reports RENOVATION From Page1 - NORTH CAMPUS COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING BUILDING TOBE RENAMED In a communication to the regents, Slottow and David Munson, dean of the College of Engineering, recommended that the regents formally change the name of the Computer Science and Engineering Building on North Campus to the Bob and Betty Beyster Building. Slottow and Munson wrote that the achievements of Uni- versity alum J. Robert Beyster merit the honor, citing his work in both the private sector and his philanthropic contributions. Beyster founded the engineering research company Science Appli- cations International Corpora- tion, which aims to apply science and technology in innovative ways, and employed 43,000 at the time of Beyster's retirement in 2004, according to the SAIC website. According to the communi- cation, -Beyster recently made a contribution of $15 million to the College of Engineering to sup- port research and academics, as well as establish a graduate-level fellowship. "Funds will be used in part to create the J. Robert Beyster Computational Innovation Grad- uate Fellows Program to support research in a variety of fields linking high-performance com- puting, networking, and storage to applications of societal impor- tance," Slottow and Munson wrote. UNIVERSITY INVESTS IN NEW FUNDS As a part of an effort to diver- sify and expand the University's investments, Slottow informed the regents of the University's additional commitment of $80 million to funds previously approved by the regents. These investments do not require addi- tional voting, since the regents had already approved each fund's initial investment in the past. The additional funds cover a variety of sectors includingsecu- rities, natural gas exploration, renewable energy and develop- ing market companies, according to the communication. In a separate communication, Slottow wrote that the Univer- sity is seeking approval from the regents to invest $10 million in a real estate fund in Asia. The fund's principal investment is a joint partnership project with the Chinese government to build office buildings, shopping cen- ters and transportation hubs. "This commitment offers the University an attractive oppor- tunity to invest in a project in China that has been significant- ly de-risked due to its almost completed status," Slottow wrote. SITE From Page 1 of the Ann Arbor community," Reed said. "Beyond education, however, we want a2energy to be a call to action and a means to do so." Rebecca Filbey, project man- ager at Clean Energy Coalition, said information provided on the website will promote active participation in sustainable practices. "The whole point of the (sus- tainability) program is to be able to address promoters, rent- ers, landlords, business owners or property owners across the city to make them more aware of the impact of energy use in the home or in properties, and the importance of taking action to reduce energy, to start to consider renewable energy opportunities," Filbey said. Filbey added that homeown- ers should work to improve insulation in their homes to prevent air leakage and decrease energy usage. "We're not just talking about a small piece of the pie," she said. "This is a really big impact as far as energy use all togeth- er." City Councilmember Sandi Smith (D-Ward 1) said resi- dents contribute to the majority of the city's energy waste. "Sixty percent of our energy use in consumption is residen- tial and we need to help our residents understand that there are ways to save money, invest in improving their house, and here are some tools to that effect," Smith said. Smith added that commer- cial owners are presented with financing options, such as the Property Assess Clean Energy program, to alleviate the costs associated with making their properties more sustainable. PACE programs seek to pass legislation to help individual communities maintain energy efficiency, according to the PACE website. Andrew Brix, energy pro- grams manager for Ann Arbor, said City Council's goal is to make Ann Arbor carbon neutral and use 100-percent renewal energy. He added that the new website is a component of the city's long-term sustainability goals, and is primarily intended to function as an informational tool. "Part of it is for folks to know what they can do," he said. "The website by itself is not going to get us to climate neutral, but it's a piece of the puzzle. It's also a mechanism for having a conversation." Due to the city's diverse population of residents, com- muters, students and busi- ness owners, Brix said the site provides many different approaches to sustainable liv- ing that apply to a wide range of circumstances. "Everyone's going to have slightly different needs and different opportunities in terms of what they can do, and were trying to get people to the solutions that work for them." SOUTH AMERICA From Page 1 agreements similar to those that will be discussed in Brazil. "When we started looking at Latin America, it became very apparent that some of our best relationships were with Brazil," Coleman said. "We have quite a few interactions with the health sciences and with scientific research, (and) in some of the social science areas." Coleman said she usually travels to areas where the Uni- versity has already.established a presence in an effort to strength- ening existing relationships. "One of the things that we do before Iever take an internation- al trip is to look at where faculty have programs, where students are going - (I ask) 'where can I strengthen the ties?"' Coleman said. "Where can we think of some new programs that would provide new opportunities for our students?" Mark Tessler, the Univer- sity's vice provost for interna- tional affairs, said eight senior faculty members from a variety of departments will accompany Coleman on her trip in an effort to represent the University's academic diversity. He said the faculty members who will travel with Coleman have not yet been determined and added that the number may fluctuate. "It's possible that if there's someplace that she can't go, that her schedule will be too full, that one or two members of the del- egation will go off and represent Michigan in conversations with these other (institutions)," Tes-, sler said. A primary part of the trip to South America will be to work with national foundations and institutions in Brazil that will help proposed programs mature and receive the funding they need. Tessler said one of the main goals of the trip would be to assess the needs and priorities of partner universities in Brazil. "We view this partnership as very reciprocal," Tessler said. "It's not just what we want to do - it's what makes sense for the people we're working with there. This is a process of evolu- tion as we hear more about what makes sense for them." Tessler said faculty members would serve as guides on the trip and also meet privately with their counterparts in Brazil, Chile and Peru to work on pro- grams in greater detail. He cited health sciences, natural resourc- es and the environment, sustain- ability, diversity and political science as likely areas of focus for Coleman and the delegation. "There's a possibility that this will lead to more students from Brazil applying to come to Michigan - we expect that to happen," Tessler said. Tessler added that students would begin to see the benefits of the president's trip in the form of new programs that will be introduced in 2013 or later, as well as through a potential influx, of Latin American stu- dents on campus in Ann Arbor. Melinda Matice, a lecturer in the University's English Lan- guage Institute who led a group from the Global Intercultural Experience for Undergraduates program to Brazil in 2010, said she hoped the University will be able to attract students from Brazil to study at the University. Matice specifically cited a new program from the Brazilian government to provide 75,000 science and engineering schol- arships for students to study abroad,,adding that she believes the University should try to attract a great number of such students. "It would be lovely to bring some of those (science, tech- nology engineering and math- ematics) scholars here," Matice said. "I would like to see a much more vested interest in Brazil in both directions, but that seems to be a remarkable program right now." While Matice was unable to comment specifically on Cole- man's trip, the said the Universi- ty was supportive when Matice was organizing her GIEU trip. She added that student groups at the University - particularly the Pantanal Partnership, an organization that developed a school in Mato Grosso, Brazil and works to cultivate educa- tional and health programs in the country - are helpful in pro- viding opportunities for Univer- sity students from a variety of disciplines. "There's so much diversity, (and) not just biodiversity (in Brazil), but also what goes on in the urban areas - it's an excit- ing place to have a connection with," Matice said. "They're poised to make a lot- of chang- es, and it would be nice to see the University take part in all of those areas of growth and change." SACUA From Page 1 and said there was a necessity to emphasize that the commit- tee does not support intimida- tion by students or faculty. "I feel we should be neu- tral," Larsen said. "We should endorse the principle that, of course, we should not have intimidation." A paragraph was initially included in the document that suggests that the community views Dibbern's accusations against her adviser, Engineer- ing prof. Rachel Goldman, as false. "(The committee's) support of free and open debate comes in light of widespread false accusations of intimidation directed at the faculty at large, and one faculty member in par- ticular," the paragraph stated. "We call on such innuendo and defamation to end, in order that a dignified exchange of ideas be restored." Members of the committee said they felt this paragraph was inflammatory and moved to strike it. The committee also unanimously voted to adda sen- tence to the end of the revised statement which reads: "We JOIN NEWS STAFF. SEND AN E-MAIL TO RAYZAG@ MICHIGAN- DAILY.COM also call on all parties to put forward only claims that can be documented with reason- able evidence, in order that a dignified exchange of ideas be encouraged." COMMITTEE MEMBERS DISCUSS UMHS INVESTIGATION FINDINGS SACUA chair Kate Barald also presented a statement responding to the Universi- ty's recently released internal investigation of the alleged child pornography possession by former medical resident Ste- phen Jenson at UMHS. "It is expected by Senate Assembly that the University will use this incident to care- fully consider the recommen- dations of the Senate Assembly Resolution 122311-2 on report- ing criminal activity in the most expeditious and effective manner," the statement read. The statement refers to a previous resolution, passed by electronic vote on Dec. 23,2011, which encouraged the Univer- sity to develop more efficient criminal reporting methods. The committee unanimously voted in favor of affirming the resolution. After reading the statement aloud, Barald said increased communication and effective protocol in reporting incidenc- es are essential in cases regard- ing UMHS. "(The statement is) in the spirit of trying to encourage education, information about reporting lines that every sin- gle person in the University to have in their cognizance as they begin to face such issues." DUDERSTADT PRESENTS ON THE UNIVERSITY'S BICENTENNIAL Former President James Duderstadt opened the meet- ing to present plans for the University bicentennial in 2017. SACUA invited Duderstadt to discuss the funding challenges of state research universities, as well as elaborate on the impor- tance of faculty in celebrating the 200-year anniversary of the University's founding. "We are not a hospital, we are not a hotel, we are not a pro- fessional football franchise," Duderstadt said. "We are one of the great learning institutions of the world, and this reality should dominate any event such as a bicentennial. FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MICH IGAN DAILY @MICHDAILYNEWS @MICH DAI LYSPORTS @MICH DAI LYOPED @MICH DAILYARTS @MICHDAILYPHOTO Student Entrepreneurs - Join Us! Zell Lurie Institute Michigan Business Challenge Semi-finals, Finals and Awards Reception Dare to Dream Grants & Mayleben Family Venture Shaping Grants Announcement Friday, 2/17 - Ross School of Business 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Semi-finals & 1-5 p.m. Finals E Lower Level Rooms 5:30-7 p.m. MBC Awards Reception and Grants Announcement I Blau Auditorium Come watch 8 teams from the original field of 45 present at the semi-finals - 4 teams will advance to the finals. Over $60,000 total in cash prizes will be awarded. Public welcome. U MICHIGAN www.zli.bus.umich.edu A