gan4,3at IV Ann ArboNm a Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, November 24, 2008 michigandaily.com AN INTERNATIONAL HONOR 'U' student wins Rhodes for first time since 2004 JEREMY CHO/Daily Ohio State defensive lineman Nathan Williams celebrates after tackling Michigan running back Michael Shaw (20) during Saturday's game in Columbus. Ohio State upend- ed Michigan 42-7, capping the Wolverines' worst season in 129 years at 3-9. Shaw narrowly avoided a safety on the play. No O pri e e in G/tC Bce BS Recent graduate, to study public health at Oxford By LISA HAIDOSTIAN Daily News Editor At the University's springcom- mencement in April 2007, then- LSA senior Abdul El-Sayed stood at a podium in Michigan Stadium and said that, besides the fact that BTB Burrito is open until 4 a.m., what truly sets the University of Michigan apart is its students. "St's thewrare we've shown, the people we've helped and the passion that we have that define us," said El-Sayed, who was the student speaker at the ceremony. "Moreover, it's the fact that we're about to go out into a world that absolutely needs us." If El-Sayed's definition of the Michigan Difference is right, then he could be its poster boy. El-Sayed, who is now pursu- ing a joint doctorate in medicine and public health at the Univer- sity, was named Sunday one of 32 American recipients of the Rhodes Scholarship, one ofthe world's old- est and most prestigious academic scholarships. It covers tuition and expenses for two to three years of study at the University of Oxford in England and is valued at about $50,000 per year. The last time a University stu- dent won the scholarship was in 2004. A Bloomfield Hills native, El-Sayed was vice president of the Muslim Students' Associa- tion, a member of the Phi Beta Kappa honor society and a start- ing defenseman on the Michigan men's lacrosse team. He married his girlfriend, LSA senior Sarah- Jukaku, after his junior year of college. Now in medical school and the School of Public Health at the Uni- versity, El-Sayed's research focus is within epidemiology. He said his ideal career would involve con- ducting academic research 80 per- cent of the time and working with patients 20 percent of the time. When he enters Oxford in Octo- ber, he will work toward a Master of Science in global health sciences. Though his focus on epidemi- ology wasn't piqued until after finishing his undergraduate stud- See SCHOLAR, Page 3A COLUMBUS - Entering Satur- day's game, the only thing left to lose was the last bit of pride. And somehow, the Michigan football team managed to fumble that away, too. Before going to Ohio Stadium, it hadn't been completely clear P when the 3-9 Wolverines would hit rock bottom. It felt like it after the Illinois blowout. Maybe it was after the Toledo embarrassment, or when Michigan lost to Notre Dame, Michigan State or Purdue. But it ( became obvi- ous at the end of Saturday's .misery. As the Buckeyes stomped on the Wolverines' COURTNEY pride one last RATKOWIAK time and the _ Ohio State students rushed the field, junior running back Brandon Minor slowly walked off the field with his helmet in his hand. In the lowest point of the worst season in Michigan history, was he really trying to soak it all in? "Yeah, basically," Minor said, slowly and sadly, right before he was grabbed by the shoulder and pulled away by a member of the Michigan staff. But now that the season is over, there are a few positives looking forward - well, the main one is probably just that this year is over. See RATKOWIAK, Page 3A FOR MORE, SEE SPORTSMONDAY, PAGE 1B Like nearly all the other games this season, big plays doomed Blue. Page1B Two young quarterbacks struggled early, but had completely differentfinishes. Page4B Cheap eats: students set $1 food budget for charity LSA seniors live off FROM ALISSA'S BLOG: rice, Ramen to draw attention to poverty By STEPHANIE BERLIANT Daily StaffReporter With Thanksgiving approach- ing, most students are counting r down the days to turkey, stuff- ing and their holiday favorites. For LSA seniors Alissa Renz and Clare Porter, though, Thanks- giving will be a scaled-down affair. The students committed to spending just $1 a day on food each for the month of November to draw attention and raise funds for the fight against global poverty. Renz said she thought of the idea in October when trying to imagine what Thanksgiving would be like without money to buy food. She said she began researching ways she could bring attention to the issue and found others around the country who'd completed similar experiments. After telling Porter, a fellow member of the sorority Theta Nu Xi, the students got to work plan- ning the details. Porter and Renz are document- ing their progress through a blog - one-dollar-a-dayblogspot.com. They are also raising money to donate to Millennium Promise, a non-profit organization that works to eradicate global poverty in the next few decades through a PayPal account on their blog. Thursdays are always Hell for me, for several reasons. One, I have to get up at 8:00 am in order to be at work by 8:45. 1 work a rela- tively long shift (5.5 hours), working through all of the rushes that typically come through the UGLi, which isn't always fun. I have a weak will, too. I spent .75 of my dollar today on milk and half of a plain, not even appetizing donut. At the time, it made sense: I was hungry, and I wasn't going to be off work for hours and hours. However, with that same amount of money, I could have bought 3 days worth of Ramen. Too impulsive. SOU RCE: ONE-DOLLAR-A-DAY.BLOGSPOT.COM The students decided not to buy in bulk at the beginning of the month in order to better sim- ulate actual conditions, Porter said. Their food staples have been oatmeal, rice, lentils and "a lot of ramen" plus bananas as a 16-cent "treat," she said. They both said it has been especially challenging because See FOOD, Page 7A DECADES LATER, A DEGREE Student was accused of communism in Cold War By DARRYN FITZGERALD Milo Radulovich was persecuted in the Red Daily Staff Reporter Scare. Now, almost 60 years later, he'll be In the 1950s, Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wis- consin led a campaign to rid the country of what awarded the degree he didn't receive. he considered the threat of communism. During the Red Scare, he and others blacklisted everyday Americans, forcing them to quit their jobs or drop out of school. , The search for communist sympathizers took its toll on one University student who ended up leav- ing the school. Fifty-eight years later, the University Board of Regents has awarded a posthumous degree to Milo Radulovich, who likely would have graduated had it not been for the Red Scare. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said the College of Literature, Science and the Arts was the first to recommend the honor, a Bachelor of Science degree with a physics concentration. The decision then went to University Provost Teresa Sullivan and was unanimously approved by the Board of Regents at its monthly meeting Thursday. "To the best of my knowledge, theUniversity has not done this before," Cunningham said. "He was a student in good standing. If it wasn't the McCarthy era, he would have finished his degree." Radulovich was a student at the University from 1952 to 1954 and stood up against McCarthyismr after being removed from his position as lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force. In 1953, Radulovich received a letter from the Air Force Reserve informing him he had been dis- missed. Radulovich had served in the Air Force for eight years prior to attendingthe University. Although the letter didn't cite what prompted" the decision, Radulovich later learned he was considered a national security threat because of his relationship to family members who were being investigated for communist ties. His sister PHOTO COURTESY OF NEWsWEEK was a civil rights activist and his father was a Ser- Milo Radulovich, pictured here with his family, was accused of being a communist in 1953. The See DEGREE, Page 7A accusation forced him to leave the University just months before he would have graduated. WEATHER + HI: 35 TOMORROW LO: 29 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS Thanksgiving Potluck THETABLE.BLOGS.MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS.......... Vol. CXIX,No. 58 SUDOKU..... 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