The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 4, 2009 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigantlailycom Wednesday, Fehruary 4, 2009 - JA SPECTRUM CENTER From Page 1A or who are uncomfortable with their sexual orientation or gen- der identity may find the prospect of entering the Spectrum Center or attending an LGBT student group meeting to be too risky or intimidating," Correa said. "Some may fear being seen by others and being identified as LGBT, some may not be ready to be around a group of LGBT people." Correa said the new program is being launched as a response to previous insufficient support pro- grams for students. "We've found that existing coming out support resources were insufficient," he said. "We needed a new way to support stu- dents going through a difficult time." After filling out a confidential online request form, students will be matched with a GPS student mentor by a GPS coordinator. The student and the GPS mentor will be pairedbased on shared identi- ties and backgrounds. Correa said the program is designed to benefit students who are coming out, and also the stu- dents who are providingsupport. "It's also a great way for stu- dents who already have experi- ence with coming out to give back to their community by helping others going through a situation they might have been through," he said. Correa said the main goal of GPS is to provide a program for students who are coming out to feel more at ease with their sexual identities. "We hope to give students a new tool to use as they are navi- gating their way out of their closet," Correa said. "I-opefully, the program will help students struggling with their identity to feel more comfortable with themselves." Professors enter the blogosphere TUITION FREEZE From Page 1A education from the University of Michigan." Cunningham did not respond to whether the University would agree to freeze tuition or whether it would raise tuition next year, but said the University is currently working on its budget for next year. "We're in the early stages of developing next year's budget, which typically is presented to the Board of Regents in June," she wrote. Mike Boulus, leader of the Pres- idents Council, State Universities of Michigan - the body that rep- resents the presidents of Michi- gan's public universities - told the Associated Press that a tuition freeze without increased state funding would be "a tough pill to swallow." "We're being cautious right now," he said. "We would have to TECHNOLOGY From Page 1A communicate on the spot and didn't have a professional inter- preter with them at the time." Gilbert and Yu began working on MSigns in January 2006. They entered their idea in a program at the Digital Media Commons in the Duderstadt Center, which awards cash grants to students who sub- mit project ideas that incorporate digital media. Gilbert, who is fluent in sign language and Yu, who has comput- er-programming experience, col- laborated to develop the project. As an undergraduate student at Brigham Young University, Gil- bert worked as a sign language translator to help pay his tuition bills. He said many deaf and hear- ing-impaired people told him they preferred sign language to writ- ten speech because it was easier to understand. Gilbert realized it was pos- sible to create an application for a smart phone, which would trans- late speech into a video image of sign language. "We'd like it to be something you can use on your phone like more along the lines of a Google app, or an iPhone app or an add-on program to an install phone plan - or even a service you could use on the Internet," he said. While a few products exist that can translate speech to sign language, they are expensive - including the iCommunicator, which costs $6,500. "It's out of the range of the everyday person, and that's who we want to bring this to," he said. Though the MSign's technol- ogy isn't currently compatible with cell phones, it's designed to work with PC computers. Gilbert and Yu said they plan to develop a model the public can use within the next month and distribute the BLOOD CHALLENGE From Page 1A to exceed their goal of 1700 pints of blood. Talpos said he thinks donating blood is one of the most charitable things a person can do. "It seems to me so simple," he said. "There is no reason people should be dying for lack of blood. It's a way we can help someone out without having to receive any- thing in return." hear more about the details." Last year, Granhom asked state universities to limit tuition increases to the rate of inflation - then 2.3 percent. In exchange, Granholm had planned to increase state funding to the uni- versities by 3 percent, but the leg- islature reduced the increase to 1 percent. The University has raised tuition every year for the past nine years. Increases have ranged from a 2.8- percent increase in 2000 and 2004 to a 12.3-percent increase in 2005. The University raised tuition by 5.6 percent last year, when the state's 15 public universi- ties averaged a 7 percent tuition increase. Granholm's entire plan will become public next week when she submits her budget proposal to the state legislature. - The Associated Press contributed to this report. product by next fall. Ina later version of the technol- ogy, Yu said that using a camera phone, the goal is to develop the product to translate sign language into words. Currently, the program can only translate English into sign language, ut Yu said she intends to add more languages. "Sign language, like spoken lan- guage, is different in every coun- try so we'd have to basically redo the whole process with another set of vocabulary," Yu said. "It's certainly something to think of but (English speakers) are by far the largest sign language commu- nity right now." To film their current prototype, Gilbert and Yu used the Motion Capture Studio at the University's 3D laboratory to record the videos. "We really want to doa motion capture version of sign language rather than just video taping a human," he said. "We think there's a lot we can do with the digital data in the long run." So far, deaf and hearing- impaired high school students who attended a College of Engi- neering summer program have been involved in the testing of MSigns. "They were excited to see it," Yu said. "It wasn't the perfect solution because it only does one way right now, but they were glad to see there was something being developed that was targeted for them because that doesn't happen very often." Yu said she hoped MSigns will have a positive impact on the edu- cation and employment prospects for the hearing impaired. "Transcribers, when they take notes for the students, it's still pretty difficult for hearing impaired students to interact inside a classroom or with stu- dents," she said. "We want to fill that gap so they can more fully integrate into society." Talpos also stressed the impor- tance of donating blood despite the snow and cold. "In the cold winter months, we get a lot less peoplebecause people are less likely to leave their hous- es to donate," he said. "We could really use aslot more people show- ing up because there is always a blood shortage." For a full list of places, dates and times to donate blood for the Face Off, go to www.give- life.org and use the sponsor code "goblue." From Page 1A in academic research and publish- ing becomes more complex. Mark Perry, an associate profes- sor of economics and finance at the University's Flint campus, is a self- described "slave" to his economics blog, "Carpe Diem." Perry said he spends up to five hours a day mak- ing various posts to his blog and thinks there is a place for blogging in the duties of a university profes- sor, albeit an evolving one. "It's so new that (universities) haven'tquite incorporatedityetinto the three areas that we're respon- sible for - teaching, research and service," Perry said. "But it really kind of overlaps in all those areas." Perry said he believes that blog- ging could be considered applied research. But in an interview, University Provost Teresa Sullivan said that blogging lacks an important ele- ment, which generally elevates the credibility of a publication: peer review. "Peer review is an important quality marker," said Sullivan. "With electronic media now, any- body can publish anything." While the University doesn't view blogs as a form of official research or publishing, Sullivan said she encourages professors to use them, even if they express con- troversial opinions or ideas. "That's what universities are about," Sullivan said. "The univer- sity is the place where you're free to put ideas out there, and we're tolerant of other people's ideas but it also means you've got to be ready for somebody to go after you and attack your ideas." That open door for comments adds a dynamic element to blogs, which can further strain bloggers- who take the time to edit readers' posts. Harvard University Econom- ics Prof. Greg Mankiw has removed the comment feature altogether from his economics blog. History Prof. Juan Cole writes what is probably the most well- known of University of Michigan professors' blogs as well as the most controversial. His blog "Informed Comment,". focuses on the Middle Communication Studies Prof. Fara Warner works on her laptop during office hours at Starbucks on South University yesterday. East and has received both posi- tive and negative critical attention. Cole said most of his students know about his blog, and he references it in class but doesn't make it part of the curriculum. "I don't do my blog as part of my university duties," Cole said. "I do it on my private time. For that reason, I can sometimes be a little more political." With his blog, Cole has gained recognition as an expert on the Middle East and gets at least 800,000 visits a month. While many professors anchor their posts in facts and data, others employ a less journalistic style and write on topics outside their aca- demic expertise. Engineering Prof. Thomas Zur- buchen writes a blog through the Center for Entrepreneurship web- site, though his content generally addresses subjects other than his academic specialty. "The vast majority of topics are about things other than engineer- ing," Zurbuchen said. " feel it's important to recognize as an engi- neer that we have to learn how to recognize the impact that we can make, and see opportunity and adjust to change. Engineering is not just engineering, it's about much more than that, and it requires skills in many other areas." Regardless of how this niche of the blogging world evolves, the trend shows no sign of slowing. Uni- versity Librarian Paul Courant, who is also a Public Policy professor and author of the blog "Au Courant," said the trend is a positive thing. "I actually think it's very good if professors talk or convey their views less formally to a broader audience than we do in our formal research publications," said Cou- rant. "So I very much like the idea that members of our. faculty use their expertise in the wider world." Blogs considerably raise the pro- file of University professors, which is good for the University. Through their archive of posts, professors advertise their expertise in a given field. Establishing that authority leads calls from the media - and the University's appearing in print. Perry used himselfas an example of what blogs can do to elevate an instructor's status, saying a Google search of his name yields substan- tially more results than University President Mary Sue Coleman. Cole- man's name generates 246,000 results while Perry's name registers more than 2,620,000 results. "Someone like Mary Sue Cole- man, who has a very high profile - you would expect a lot of atten- tion to her on the Internet," Perry said. "Now here I am just as a pro- fessor without any staff, without any research, writing a blog that's gotten pretty popular. I've now got this presence on the Internet that in terms of the number of hits is even higher than the president of the University." DO YOU KNOW HOW TO USE FLASH AND WANT TO GET INVOLVED IN-THE DAILY? E-mail graca@michigandaily.com for more information. the michigan daily THESIS EDITING- LANGUAGE, organization, format. 25 yrs. U-M exp. 996-0566 or writeon@iserv.net help wanted 090 ATTRACTIVE FEMALES FOR nude, semi-nude photography. No expe- rience, Flexiheie hoss, great pay. Must he t5. For interview call 734-675-4151. EARN EXTRA MONEY. Students needed ASAP. Earn up $150 per day being a mystery shopper. No experi- ence required. Call 1-800-722-4791. FUNDRAISE FOR THE U! $9.25- +/Hr. at Michigan Telefund. 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LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You feel very strongly about some- thing related to publishing, higher edu- cation, medicine or the law. Or you might be super determined to travel somewhere. You mean business! VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Conversations with partners and close friends are very intense today. They could be romantically intense or, altema- tively, intense about money and shared possessions. Go easy! LIBRA (Sept. 23to Oct. 22) Today you have a do-or-die attitude about something, and it could be about a close relationship or a partnership. (Partnerships are very important to you. Don't throw the baby out with the bath watet.) SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov.21) You've got big ideas about how to make improvements at work. Let's hope people listen to you. (A romance at work could also begin today!) SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22to Dec. 21) You'reatraveler and you love a sense of adventure. Today you feel passion- ately about romance, vacations, the arts and playful activities with children. You're raring to go! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Home-entertaining or -decorating pro- jects mean a lot to you right now. You wool to improve your family, relation- ships and how you fret ahout where you live. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20to Feb. 18) You can sell snow to the Eskimos today! You're fervently passionate about whatever you're talking about. Look out, world! PISCES (Feb. 19to March 20) You might discover new sources of income today. However, if you're shop- ping, you're practically obsessed about buying something. (Slow down. Best to give things a sober, second thought.) YOU BORN TODAY You're clever with words. You have such style and grace that people listen to you. You know how to appeal to the emotions of others. Many of you have secret, private lives that very few are aware of You need to be captain of your ship, master of your soul! This is a powerful time. You're wrapping up something to get ready to move on to new turf. Birthdate of: Don Cherry, hockey commentator; Barbara Hershey, actress; Jeremy Sumpter, actor. 0 2009 King Features Syndicate, Inc WANT TO WRITE FOR DAILY NEWS? E-mail smilovitz@michigandaily.com