416FAid40 '0ailj 4 ', IIN)I1\It N i i \ t a111nIat1\1 IVR M.l\ Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, April 8, 2011 michigandaily.com HIGHER EDUCATION Duderstadt proposes plan to help Midwest JAKE FROMM/Daily The Michigan hockey team advanced to the NCAA Championship last night after defeating No.1 North Dakota, 2-0. Senior goaltender Shawn Hunwick made 40 saves in a shutout effort. Michigan will play for a national title against Minnesota-Duluth on Saturday. M hgan hocke s g about "the team' Former president calls for universities to collaborate for regional success By MICHELE NAROV Daily StaffReporter While the Midwest was a driv- ing force in the 20th century that helped power the rest of the nation, today it's a vast expanse of rusting manufacturing indus- tries and emptied urban centers. For University President Emeritus James Duderstadt, the goal is to put the Midwest back on the map. To do this, Duderstadt wrote a recent report outlining the need for a knowledge-based economy and calling for colleges and universities in the region to help propell the heartland into the 21st century. The report, titled "A Master Plan for Higher Education in the Midwest: A Roadmap for the Future of the Nation's Heart- land," was released on March 31 by the Chicago Council for Glob- al Affairs and published as one of the council's Heartland Papers, which focuses on development in the Midwest. Duderstadt, who is also chair of the Millenium Project - a research center that studies the ways technology impacts soci- ety - explains in the report that highereducation institutions can act together to encourage eco- nomic growth in the Midwest by applying aspects of the region to a global mindset, collaborating instead of competing and having educators from K-12 to higher education work together. Midwestern states should unite and get out of a state- focused mindset so the area can have a greater presence on the world stage, Duderstadt wrote in the report. Collaboration is key to the region's success, Duderstadt wrote. If education institu- tions shared facilities and made degrees easily transferrable, universities and colleges could provide high quality education See DUDERSTADT, Page 3 ST. PAUL, Minn. - The battle wounds were apparent. Carl Hagelin limped to the postgame press confer- ence followingthe Michigan hockeyteam's 2-0 victory over North Dakota last night. And Ben Winnett was a minute late, as he strolled in - shirt, tie and a bag of ice taped on his left forearm - to take a seat in front of local and national reporters. They were signs of the scars, bumps and nicks MARK they'd sus- BURNS tain for the good of the team. Let me repeat that for you. The team. Tonight, Michigan shocked the world against the Fighting Sioux. Okay, maybe they didn't really shock the world like the Fab Five did back in the early 1990s. They weren't that big of an underdog against the nation's No. 1 team. But they did do something many people within the col- lege hockey community didn't think was possible: beat North Dakota - hands down the best team coming into the NCAA Tournament two weeks ago and the hottest squad in the country - in what was practi- cally a road game. The Wolverines arrived at the Xcel Energy Center with their lunch bucket and hard- hat in tow, willing to go to work. See HOCKEY, Page 3 CAMPUS COMMUNITY 0 Students talk diversity at multicultural event Panel says 'U' doesn't do enough to accommodate diverse population By DAVID BUCCILLI Daily StaffReporter The issue of diversity within * the University community took center stage at a panel discussion last night. Organized by the black stu- dent group Here Earning A Des- tiny Through Honesty, Eagerness and Determination of Self, or H.E.A.D.S., the panel sought to "break down racial stereotypes in all communities and to spread awareness and knowledge about these communities," LSA senior James Stinson III, the co-chair of H.E.A.D.S., said. The panel, titled "Around the U: Perspectives of Identities," was comprised of eight Univer- sity students from different eth- nic, cultural, religious and social backgrounds who fielded ques- tions about their cultural expe- riences. Over the course of the discussion, the speakers empha- sized how their backgrounds have impacted their University experiences. Addressing the audience, panel member and former Michi- gan Student Assembly President See DIVERSITY, Page 3 UNIVERSITY RESEARCH . 'U' researchers link pain from break-ups to physical response Members of Michigan's Naval ROTC participate in a series of drills at Nichol's Arboretum yesterday. The drill team took first place at a competition at the University of Colorado last weekend. STUDENT PROJECT New student mentor program aims to help youth through after-school sports Study presents new way of thinking about recovery By JENNIFER LEE Daily StaffReporter It turns out that the physical pain of heartache that follows a break-up isn't a figment of the imagination. A recent study led by Universi- ty professors, published last week in the Proceedings of the Nation- al Academy of Sciences, found that social or romantic rejection activates the same regions of the brain that respond to physical pain in the body. Ethan Kross, an assistant pro- fessor of psychology and faculty associate at the University's Insti- tute of Social Research, was the lead author in the study. "When people think about intense rejection experiences, they may well be experiencing physical pain sensations in their body," Kross said. To determine which parts of the brain are co-activated by the experiences of rejection and physical pain, Kross and his col- leagues conducted a study in which 40 individuals who had recently experienced an unde- See BREAK-UPS, Page 3 i& Mentor for America to start in A2 this summer By SARAH ALSADEN Daily StaffReporter This summer, a group of University students hopes to make an impact on children's lives by playing basketball and football with them. The student-run program called i&I Mentor for America - "i" as a visual representation of a small child and "I" of a col- lege student - will offer sports mentoring to underprivileged youth involved in community centers and will train college students to be coaches and mentors. The program will start in Ann Arbor and will later branch out to other towns with universities across the country. Engineering senior Bo Zhu, a member of the i&I team, said the program will feature a curriculum based on men- toring and sports and will be aimed at teaching students life strategies that will keep them See MENTOR, Page 3 WEATHER HI:59 TOMORROW r: LO: 51 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail Q&A: Phelps returns to Canham for Grand Prix news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE GAME INDEX AP NEWS...................2 OPINION.................4 Vo.1CXXI,No.127 NEWS..... .........3 ARTS ....................5 ©201tTheMichiganoDaily S U D O K U.....................3 SPORTS ...................7 michigondaity.com 0