Ube l~idiigan ,.IaI&, NI IN1 S ( Yt 1 51r RI N6 IIY I\ISlI Y1) (1 1 OS Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, March 18,2013 michigandaily.com DEVELOPMENT Building networks, building the 'U' Office of Development grows network in U.S. and worldwide By SAM GRINGLAS Daily StaffReporter On a cloudy day in February, Uni- versity President Mary Sue Coleman arrived in Lansing to applaud a small increase in state higher education funds. Preceded by a decade of state fund- ing cuts - the most drastic under Gov. Rick Snyder - for higher education, 2013 marked the second consecutive state budget containing a two-percent increase for institutions of higher learning. While the increase marks an encouraging trend, Coleman said in an interview with The Michigan Daily last month that the upswing is not enough even after years of careful cost cutting. As state legislators struggle to restore the $1 billion lost in funding over the past ten years that hurled the state of Michigan from ranking among the top 10 best-funded institutions to the bot- tom, the University continues to count on private fundraising to help make up the difference, according to Coleman. "I can't imagine that philanthropy won't continue to be really important in the future," Coleman said. "The rea- son is I cannot see a scenario where any state can meet all of the funding needs for the University and keep it accessible and affordable." Philanthropy's impact and scope have increased over recent decades. In the 1990s, the University was the first public university to complete a billion- dollar fundraising campaign. In 2008, the University concluded its last cam- paign, The Michigan Difference, which raised $3.2 billion for the University, compared to $72 million during the first campaign that ran from 1961 to 1967 Though the next campaign isn't set to launch until November, University development officers are on a constant mission to engage alumni and poten- tial donors, an effort that increasingly spans across the nation and the globe. Jerry May, the University's vice pres- ident of development, presides over a 630-person staff to fulfill these goals. May said developing quality relation- ships is crucial to good fundraising; taking the time to discover a donor's interests and passions that can be best connected with aneed ofthe University. For example, a former Business School dean and Program in the Envi- ronment dean wanted to create a program together that would allow students to understand the complexity of businesses wrestling with sustain- ability issues. As the deans developed the program, gift officers connected the project to a donor with a particular interest in sustainability. "When it comes to fundraising for a great non-profit organization, we are so fortunate that the University of Michi- gan provides the kind of education that so many people that live here can turn around later and say, 'I'm going to give to Michigan because of how Michigan treated me,' "Mays said. "We never can take that for granted." See BUILDING, Page 5A -i TRACY KO/Dail Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, the University's 2013 spring commencement speaker, spoke at Rackham Auditorium in November. #CEO. to give addlress UNIONS GEO to vote on new contract offer - University extends proposal after union left bargaining table By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily Staff Reporter After walking away from the bar- gaining table Thursday night, the Uni- versity's bargaining team contacted the Graduate Employee's Organization with a revised . four-year contract that has caused the union to reconsider an agree- ment. With legislation that limits unions' ability to organize within workplaces taking effect in Michigan on March 28, GEO had been meeting with the Univer- sity every day last week until Thursday, when it decided not enough movement was being made by the University on central issues. The union, which repre- sents graduate student instructors and graduate student staff assistants, decid- ed to take its chances negotiating with the University when its contract expires in 2014, said GEO spokeswoman Emily Howard, a Rackham student. See GEO, PageSA Twitter exec Dick Costolo will speak at commencement By PETER SHAHIN Daily News Editor Let's just say it probably won't be done in 140 characters or fewer. On May 4, those attending the university-wide commencement cer- emony will hear from 1985 alum Dick Costolo, the current chief executive officer of Twitter. Costolo will also receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree in recognition of his achieve- ments pending approval bythe Univer- sity's Board of Regents. University President- Mary Sue Coleman told The Michigan Daily that Costello's role in transforming Twit- ter into a powerful and ubiquitous part of everyday communication had pro- foundly impacted the way that people interact with one another. "(His) entrepreneurial drive, being at the leading edge of a revolution in communication, and the impact of Twitter on the world ... he deeply understands the ways that this affects people's interactions with each other," Coleman said. "It's that broad view that caught my attention." In an interview Sunday with the Daily, Costolo said he was deeply honored - and surprised - by Coleman's invitation for him to address his alma mater. "I asked them if they had the wrong number," Costolo said jokingly. During his time at the University of Michigan, Costolo was a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity - commonly called FIJI - and practiced amateur improvisational comedy. In an unusual move for a graduate with a bachelor's degree in computer science, he then spent time in Chicago trying his luck as a standup comedian before beginning to work on web-based projects in 1996. Cos- tolo founded three companies, the lastof which, Feedburner, was sold in 2007 for $100 million to Google, where he worked in various capacities until 2009. The same year, Twitter hired Costo- io as its chief operating officer. A year later, he became its chief executive officer, replacing Evan Williams. In November, Costolo addressed a full house at Rackham. Auditorium, where he shared his experiences in the technology sector and some anecdotes about his personal life. Coleman said during that visit, he talked with her See ADDRESS, Page SA RESEARCH University partners with Israeli school LEAN iN $1M partnership with university in southern Israel to focus on alternative fuels By WILL GREENBERG For the Daily The University recently announced it will partner with the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beersheba, Israel to research renewable energy technologies. Faculty from both uni- versities will be accepting and work- ing on proposals for research projects in renewable energy.. The two universities will contrib- ute a combined total of $1 million to the intoxicated collaboration. Univer- sity Vice President for Research Ste- phen Forrest said the relationship is intriguing for both institutions. "This is a really exciting opportu- nity," Forrest said, "It's opening a lot of doors." Ben-Gurion has already had suc- cess in renewable energy technolo- gies, Forrest noted. "The one energy source that they have unquestionably in abundance is solar," Forrest said. "They have a very practical attitude toward developing alternative energy sources." In addition to solar energy, algae- generated energy and thermoelectric- ity are major focuses of Ben-Gurion's prior research, Forrest said. "We're pretty open-ended at this point," Forrest said. "We pay our fac- ulty part, they pay their faculty part, but they have to be joint projects. We're inviting them to come forward with their ideas and then we will eval- uate the best ideas and come (up with) the best proposals." Chemical Engineering Prof. Mark Barteau, the director of the Universi- ty of Michigan Energy Institute, said the initial focus of the joint research projects will be on energy areas such as solar energy, transportation fuels and thermoelectric materials. "The idea is that each project will involve a faculty collaborator from each institution," Barteau said. "It's a way for us to broaden our network and look for opportunities to both apply and expand the kind of energy research that's going on atthe Univer- sity of Michigan." Both Barteau and Forrest said the partnership should provide opportu- nities for student exchanges between the universities. The hope is that stu- dents will gain new perspectives from working with researchers from other parts of the world and see how people living in different climates approach See ISRAELI, Page SA The dance group Ta'amullat performs folklore dances at Eshghe Bahar, the Persian Students Association's 15th annual culture show at the Power Center on Saturday. PUBUC ART DIA brings art toAi Arbor.. Following rejection of public art program, works to be displayed mA2 By PAULA FRIEDRICH For the Daily Residents may soon notice some unex- pected additions to the city landscape as the Detroit Institute of Arts brings seven high-quality reproductions of artwork from its own collection to Ann Arbor to be displayed outdoors. These temporary installations, which include works by John Singer Sargent and Henri Matisse, are part of the DIA's "InsidelOut" program, which is now in its fourth year. Paintings will be placed mostly in the Kerrytown and Main Street areas. Aaron Seagraves, the city's public art See DIA, Page SA .~ {i.* Playoff in the Palace baCK Michigan ean "afu seed J ake' s latest NA oraet N C AA Tornamnt.ent. NDw PAGE 6A WEATHER HI: 31 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM TOMORROW LO: 21 Call 734-418-4115or e-mail Fraternity brothers raise money for orphanage news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THEWIRE INDEX NEWS ...................2.....2A SUDOKU.....................3A Vol.CXXIIll,No.84 OPINION.....................4A CLASSIFIEDS...............6A ©201 TheMichiganDaily ARTS................. ......6A SPORTSMONDAY..........1B michigonduiilycom