0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, April 8, 2011 - 3 * The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, April 8, 2011 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Michigan to close 23 state forest campgrounds Michigan parks officials said yesterday they plan to close 23 state forest campgrounds on May 19 as they continue to grapple with budget reductions. The campgrounds are located in the state's Upper Peninsula and northern Lower Peninsula. The closings were to be for- mally proposed at a meeting of the state's Natural Resources Commission. Department of Natural Resources Director Rod- ney Stokes could sign an order directing the closings early next month. The rustic campgrounds tar- geted for closing are seldom-used compared to other campgrounds. Many of them are near some of the other 110 state forest camp- grounds that would remain open for the upcoming season. ATLANTA Firm in India halts sales of execution drug to U.S. A pharmaceutical company in India says it is no longer going to sell a key lethal injection drug to U.S. prison officials. It's the latest firm to stop sell- ing the drug to states in the U.S. amid a severe shortage of the drug sodium thiopental. Kayem Pharmaceutical posted a statement on its website yester- day, citing its Hindu beliefs in the decision to stop selling the drug. Nebraska announced in Janu- ary it had acquired 500 grams from Kayem, which is based in Mumbai. A company salesman says he also sold the drug to South Dakota, but state prison officials couldn't immediately be reached. CONCORD, N.H. Rep. apologizes for calling bishop a 'pedophile pimp' The Republican leader of the New Hampshire House has apol- ogized to a Roman Catholic bish- op he called a "pedophile pimp." A spokesman for state Rep. D.J. Bettencourt says yesterday's private meeting with Bishop John McCormack went well and he's pleased. Spokesman Jim Riv- ers says Bettencourt isn't com- menting on the discussion. McCormack was an aide to Cardinal Bernard Law in Bos- ton, where the Catholic sex abuse scandal began. He was in charge of investigating sexual miscon- duct allegations. The Salem politician last week called the bishop a "pedophile pimp" who should've been led from the Statehouse in hand- cuffs after criticizing deep cuts to social services in the House budget. KIEV, Ukraine Ukrainian gov't. accused of role in kidnapping case An opposition lawmaker in Ukraine is accusing the gov- ernment of involvement in the disappearance of a Palestinian engineer who later turned up in an Israeli jail. Dirar Abu Sisi vanished from a train in Ukraine Feb. 19, and sur- faced in detention in Israel short- ly after. Israel charged him this week with being a senior member of the militant group Hamas. Abu Sisi denies the charges. Ukrainian authorities said they were not involved in the operation. The Palestinian is married to a Ukrainian and was in the country to apply for citi- zenship. Lawmaker Hennadiy Moskal claimed yesterday that Interior Ministry agents took Abu Sisi off his train, transported him to Kiev airport and put him on a plane to Israel. -Compiled from Daily wire reports HOCKEY From Page 1 In the first half of the sea- son, Michigan coach Red Berenson was candid about his current crop of Wolverines not being some of the most offen- sively-skilled players in recent memory, with them possibly having to grind out their fair share of games. And while Michigan fans aren't accustomed to normally hearing those words, it's a mantra that has carried the team throughout the season - it wasn't more noticeable than tonight. Michigan knew entering the contest against North Dakota, it'd need to play a defensive- minded game. It'd need to slow down Matt Frattin, a frontrun- ner for the Hobey Baker Award, and his line that combined for 69 goals this season. And, it'd need goaltender Shawn Hunwick to have the game of his life. The Wolverines got all of that - and more. Everywhere you looked, a Wolverine was showing signs of commitment all over the ice. The team. Seniors like Louie Caporusso and Carl Hagelin - two of the team's most talented offensive players - showed their com- mitment to the defensive side of the red line. Just look at Hagelin's limp. In the first period, freshman Derek DeBlois got destroyed along the boards in front of the Michigan bench, simply to get the puck out of the zone - a sacrifice. And Hunwick played hands down his best-career game wearing the block 'M,' as he made 40 saves to shut out the nation's second best offense. From the drop of the puck to the Wolverines piling on Hunwick to celebrate the win, Michigan played team hockey. With less than 40 seconds remaining in the contest, Hagelin blocked a shot in the Wolverine zone, dishing the puck to Caporusso. Caporusso skated up the ice and had a clear shot from the red line. He could have easily thrown a shot into the wide-open net - it's a shot he could make blindfolded nine out of 10 times. But he didn't. He fed a pass to senior foward Scooter Vaughan, who made no mistake about it as he sent a wrister into the empty net, sealing Michigan's berth in the NCAA title game on Sat- urday. Pass. Shoot. Score. The team. - Burns can be reached at burnmark@umich.edu BREAK-UPS From Page 1 sired break-up in a romantic relationship engaged in two different tasks while undergo- ing MRI scanning. Participants were presented with a picture of the person who they were no longer in a relationship with and asked to think about the specific break- up experience. The second component involved a device called a thermode, which the researchers attached to the participants' forearms. With this device, they created a pain sensation by heating the device to the temperature of a hot cup of coffee, Kross said. The findings from the study, which was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Insti- tute on Drug Abuse, showed that the experience of social rejection prompted by the pictures activated the same regions in the brain that are known to react to the sensory experience of pain. The results gave scientific evidence to the idea thatbreak-ups cause physi- cal pain, Kross said. "When someone says, 'My feelings hurt, my body hurts, I'm devastated,' when they experience rejection, maybe we shouldn't trivialize those reac- tions because people may well be experiencing some type of physical pain," he said. Throughout the study, Kross collaborated with Marc Berman, a psychology research assistant atthe University, alongwithWal- ter Mischel and Edward Smith, both professors of psychology at Columbia University, and Tor Wager, a professor of psychology at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Smith said the clarity of the results surprised him. "We didn't know for sure that we would be able to pick up pain areas that are associated with sensory experience, and we did," Smith said. "That had not been shown before." The level of social rejection the participants experienced was an aspect of the study that differed from previous ones on the topic, Smith said. He described the participants as "people who really had a seri- ous rejection, not a minor one created by a laboratory situa- tion, buta real life rejection." While there have been many studies conducted in the past that examined the neural aspects of social rejection, the research is the first to iden- tify the specific sensory pain regions that are activated in response to social or romantic rejection, Kross said. The study has given researchers a desire to better understand the phenomenon, Kross said. He added that the new findings also shed light on how people should approach recovery from negative social experiences like rejection. "Thinking differently about the experience or getting people to work through these events might be useful in help- ing them combat these feel- ings and ultimately feel better," Kross said. Future studies might include the use of behavioral therapy or standard psychotherapy in treating patients suffering from social rejection, Smith said. "We can use these activa- tions in the brain area as bio- logical markers of the rejection and the pain of rejection, and once you have a marker, you can see if it's decreasing with treat- ment," Smith said. Geoff MacDonald, an associ- ate professor of psychology at the University of Toronto, said he thinks using these findings as an excuse to simply medi- cate patients - rather than approaching recovery in a more holistic manner - is not the take-home point of the study. "If all you do is numb people to the pain with medication, then when the medication lifts, people haven't necessarily formed those social bonds that they would normally be moti- vated to form because they're feeling upset," he said. MacDonald added that the study emphasized the impor- tance of social connections in battling feelings of rejection and isolation, rather than the use of medication. "What this research is sug- gesting is that it's that sense of connection to other people that is probably the best defense against experiences of social pain," he said. "I would rather have a friend than a Tylenol." DUDERSTADT From Page 1 at a lower cost, he wrote. In his report, Duderstadt referenced a European system - the "Bologna Process," which standardized education programs across states - as a successful model. Duderstadt's plan asserts that administrators need to remain dedicated to all levels of educa- tion from kindergarten through continued education and rec- ognize the success and short- comings at each stage to make improvements. According to Duderstadt's report, taking these steps can help make the Midwest an active player on a global level. Duderstadt acknowledged that while manufacturing and agricultural industries will still exist, they will not be the prima- ry force for Midwestern econo- mies in the future. The new force lies in knowledge and the ability to produce change, Duderstadt said in an interview with The Michigan Daily this week. "(The Midwest) was success- ful in the 20th century because it was big," he said. "Big compa- nies, big unions, big universities, biggovernment, but that's notthe way the world works anymore ... now it's about agility." By expanding an educated workforce in the Midwest, Dud- erstadt and other researchers believe the region can emulate successful cities like Chicago and Minneapolis, where knowledge- based industries, including trade and financial services, thrive. Lou Glazer, the president of Michigan Future Inc. - a non- profit organization centered on promoting a knowledge-based workforce in the state - gener- ated some of the research in Dud- erstadt's report. "To be successful, you have to make this transition to the knowledge economy," Glazer said. "In making that transition, you have to support your higher education system, particularly your research universities." According to Duderstadt, the University is making the right moves by focusing on research and innovation. However, the=, University neglects areas outside Ann Arbor, Duderstadt said. "I don't think we're deeply enough engaged across the Mid- west," he said. "I think some- times we think of our peers to be more like Harvard and Stan- ford, and I think there are a great many reasons to rethink that, and see that our collaborations with other (Midwestern univer- sities) are terribly important to those regions." However, state colleges and universities in the Midwest also face the challenge of diminishing state funding, Duderstadt said. a "When I first arrived at (the University of Michigan), we would drive a truck up to Lan- sing once a week and fill it up with money, and then we would drive it back down and run a Uni- versity," he joked. "Now there's no point in driving it up there because there's no money there." The Michigan state govern- ment faces a $1.8 billion deficit. In recent years, state funding to Michigan's public colleges and universities has continued to dwindle, with a 2.8-percent reduction for the fiscal year 2011. The trend of higher education cuts will most likely continue the next fiscal year, since Republican Gov. Rick Snyder is proposing a 15-percent cut to higher educa- tion institutions. John Austin, director of the New Economy Initiative for Southeast Michigan, said Dud- erstadt's report illustrates the economic importance of higher learning institutions. But for a majority of taxpayers, state col- leges and universities aren't a priority, Austin said. One of the University's strengths that the institution should capitalize on is attracting world-class talent, Duderstadt said. "There are (a) lot of places that are good at educating people from Michigan, but not a lot that can educate people from all over the world," he said. "This one can." According to Juliana Kerr Viohl, director of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, Dud- erstadt's report has been the most downloaded paper in the series of Heartland Papers. She said the council is non-partisan and doesn't advocate for policy change directly, but instead tries to make sure information on poli- cy assessments are spread widely. "We just make surgthe papers are in the right hands and that they are available;" Viohl said. "And we hope that people use the information and the resources as a springboard for action." MENTOR From Page 1 involved in the community in a positive way. The program will create youth athletic teams that will train at local community cen- ters and schools, LSA junior Ginny Liu, also a member of the i&I program, said. She added that the teams - which will be soccer and basketball to start - will be coached by the college student mentors. Liu said she conceived the idea for the project along with Art & Design sophomore Alex- andra Gardner during her introductory social entrepre- neurship class. While work- ing on a project to see what changes were needed to make a low-income community in Bry- ant, Mich. safer, Liu said it was apparent that the lack of space in the community center caused children and young adults to venture outside to unsafe streets and parks after school. "A lot of times these parks become places where teenage gangs hang out," Liu said. "So it's not a very pleasant or safe place for kids to hang out." Liu said by talking to the children, she found that they want to be around college stu- dents and play sports. "Sports is a universal lan- guage," she said. The idea was further devel- oped after Zhu, Liu, Gardner and Social Work graduate stu- dent Eleonora Katsambouris took an interdisciplinary social venture creation course in the College of Engineering's Cen- ter for Entrepreneurship. The group then named the program i&I Mentor for America. Zhu said he hopes the model, which he compared to Teach for America, can be used at prestigious universities across the nation. "Think about UPenn, NYU, Columbia (University), John Hopkins (University) - all these prestigious universi- ties surrounded by very low- income neighborhoods and areas," he said. "There are tons of very bright gifted col- lege students and then a huge disparity in their immediate vicinity." There is a large gap nation- wide between the number of kids who require mentoring versus the number who cur- rently receive mentorship, Zhu said. "There are a lot of youth who aren't being reached out to by the existing organiza- tions," Zhu said. "We are trying to meet the need, not trying to create competition." The i&I mentoring team will launch its pilot program in the Ann Arbor area this July to test if it will be sustainable as a nationwide program. The group will also work with at least five community centers in Ann Arbor, including the Peace Neighborhood Center and Ava- lon Housing - a non-profit that offers support and low-cost rental housing to people with lower-incomes. "We want to be able to cre- ate a program that has the abil- ity to assess the impact and to empower both the kids and the college students who go through this program to be the leaders of the future," Zhu said. The group would like to include University athletes as mentors in addition to non-ath- letes, Liu said. Zhu added that he hopes the University will be open to collaborating with the group in the future so that stu- dent participants will be able to receive course credit. Zhu also said he .thinks the project will be successful because coaches often have a large impact on students' lives. "A lot of people think back to their high school and mid- dle school experience, and they remember their coaches and their mentor figures who invested a lot of their time into them," he said. Moses Lee, an academic pro- gram manager and lecturer in the Center for Entrepreneur- ship, along with Nick Tobier, an Art & Design associate pro- fessor, teach the social venture creation course in which i&I mentoring was developed. Lee said he believes the pro- gram could expand to other universities because many of these higher education institu- tions are located close to under- privileged areas. He added that with cuts to K-12 educa- tion across the country, college mentors through programs like i&I will be beneficial. "I think it could be tremen- dous for a lot of these under- resourced sports programs," he said. During an i&I information session in the Michigan League last night, LSA sophomore Leah Hargarten said she was inter- ested in the program because of her previous experience as a camp counselor. "I hope to form some really good relationships and really involve myself in the commu- nity," Hargarten said. Education junior Michael Tengel said he heard about the program through the school and is interested in participat- ing since he enjoys sports and working with children. "It's important to me to affect the Ann Arbor area as much as I can because it has kind of become my home since I've spent so much time here," Tengel said. WILLYOU BE IN ANN ARBOR THIS SUMMER? Write for the summer Daily. E-MAIL BETHL@MICHIGANDAILY.COM All Day Fish Fry Platter for $6.99 64q,*e - &91te ro 6 10-C $3 Pints & Well Drinks - All 27 Draft Beers $1.75 Heineken & Amstel Light Bottles No Cover Charge 310 Mavnard St.-Food To Go 734.995.0100-Next to the Maynard Parkin Structure em50e 1