0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, April 14, 2011 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, April 14, 2011 - 5A DINING From Page 1A meals in the dining halls. This time was different, Grieb said, because the resolution included a budget plan formulated by Uni- versity Housing administrators. University Housing spokes- man Peter Logan said the deci- sion to revive Saturday night dining came after months of budgetary considerations and discussions with the RHA. The combination of the Michigan Student Assembly's campaign to restore Saturday night dining and support from the RHA and the residential student popu- lation encouraged University Housing to restore dining to all seven nights of the week, Logan said. The issue of Saturday night dining became a prominent topic on campus during the winter 2010 semester, when former MSA President Chris Armstrong and other members of the MFor- ward party advocated for the return of the Saturday evening meals. "A lot of students have been talking about wanting this kind of option and having the dining halls more accessible to them and (Saturday night dining) will do just that," Grieb said. Due to structural constraints, only two of three dining halls will provide Saturday eve- ning dining options - Bursley Residence Hall, South Quad Residence Hall and/or the Hill Dining Center. All other dining halls will remain closed Satur- day night. "Ideally, we would like to offer meals seven nights a week at South Quad, Hill Dining Center and Bursley, but we haven't yet worked out all of those logistics," Logan said, adding that Bursley is a primary candidate because of its location on North Campus. While the exact cost of the Saturday night dining option remains unclear, Logan said cuts and reallocations of funds in University Housing's budget would pay for the new option, rather than increasing room and board rates. LSA freshman Omar Hash- wi, an LSA representative on MSA and chair of MSA's Cam- pus Improvement Commission that has been working to resotre Saturday night meals in campus dining halls, said he is extremely pleased with the RHA resolu- tion. "We're just really happy to make this happen for our con- stituents," Hashwi said. "They asked something from us and I believe we were successful in taking their concerns and mak- ing them a reality." LSA senior Nathan Hamilton, an LSA representative on MSA who was also involved in the assembly's Saturday night dining campaign, said the Saturday din- ners will provide students who can't afford to eat off campus with more nutritional selections compared to the food offered at residence hall cafes like Ciao Down Pizzeria in South Quad. "A lot of students have left over meal credits, and it's very beneficial to be able to actually use those on Saturday nights," Hamilton said. PROTEST From Page 1A funding cuts. If Snyder's budget passes, Stocks said he antici- pates his class sizes will increase even more, which he says will be a disadvantage for students. Stocks added that the down- sizing of his school's staff size after to previous budget cuts has already inhibited students' edu- cation. "If this budget passes, we will lose another 15 percent of our staff," Stocks said. Serge Farinas, a representa- tive for the Graduate Employees' Organization at the University, spoke at the rally and questioned the legitimacy of democracy in Michigan if Snyder's proposal passes. He added that he hopes everyone at the rally will come together again at the Univer- sity's Spring Commencement ceremony on April 30, when Sny- der will be delivering the Com- mencement speech. When the University announced Snyder would be the keynote speaker at this year's Spring Commencement, many students and members of the University community expressed their disapproval over the governor's planned cuts to higher education funding. Stu- dents held a rally on the Diag in protest last month and voiced their concern at the University's Board of Regents meeting in March, where they presented a petition with nearly 4,000 sig- natures from members of the community who opposed Snyder speaking at Commencement. If Snyder's 15-percent decrease to higher education funding is approved by the leg- islature, the University would receive $47.5 million less than its current state appropriation of $316 million. Snyder also proposed a higher reduction percentage, 20 percent, to col- leges and universities that raise tuition more than 7.1-percent. However, University officials have said any tuition increase for the next academic year will be under this mark. Lansing Mayor Virg Ber- nero, who was also the 2010 Democratic candidate for gov- ernor, addressed the crowd with his two daughters at his side, emphasizing the importance of the working class. "It's not the money chang- ers over on Wall Street, it's not the big bankers, it's the working people in this state that make the country go," he said. Pat Devlin, secretary-trea- surer of Michigan Building and Construction Trades Council, said members of his union have had their "sense of economic security ripped apart," and the Michigan Legislature has done little to return the state's eco- nomic environment to normalcy. "They've lost cars, they've lost homes, they've lost the opportunity to send their kids to college," Devlin said. "Entire families have lost any sense of normal. The new normal is eco- nomic uncertainty. So you would think our lawmakers would be focusing on things that take away that uncertainty, things that provide jobs." Devlin continued by express- ing his concerns about the current state of politics in Mich- igan, adding that the state got means an exhaustive list." However, Brawn said because of the changes to the MCAT, he thinks some students may take more time to prepare for their medical school applications. "The typical three-year sched- ule may continue to work for some students, but it won't work for all of them, and it does not have to," Brawn said. According to Koetje, the changes aren't intended to make things more difficult for pre-med students, but are instead intend- ed to reflect the science-focused reality of today's medical field. "The state of medicine is a far more sophisticated science now than it ever has been," Koetje said. "There's increasing expec- tations on the part of medical schools that their students are going to be able to perform with a certain level of skill or competen- cy in these sciences even as they come into medical school." Because students who plan to attend medical school typi- cally take the exam their junior year, several students, including LSA freshman Jiajia Huang and LSA sophomore Phil Berkaw, into "this mess" because people failed to vote in the gubernato- rial election in November. "... As the old saying goes, bad lawmakers get put into the office by good people who don't vote," Devlin added. "Too many of us stayed home from the polls last November, too many of us weren't paying attention when the tea party pushed by some big money donors, pushed Repub- licans farther to the right than they've been in recent memory." Like Farinas, Bernero said the Republican's fiscal propos- als won't fix Michigan's econ- omy and will only exacerbate the state's financial issues. The Michigan government faces an approximate $1.4 billion deficit for the upcoming fiscal year. "(Democrats) have a differ- ent strategy than trickle down," Bernero said. "We believe in the grass roots ... if you water the roots ... if you take care of the people at the lower level, then good things will grow upward. I'm tired of being trickled on." - The Associated Press contributed to this report. expressed concerns about being able to finish pre-med require- ments on time. Huang, a pre-med student who has not yet declared her major, said she feels the new version of the MCAT will deter students from declaring concentrations in subjects unrelated to the material on the exam. "I can understand why they would do thatbecause you should know more in-depth topics, but at the same time it's hard for you to major in something other than the sciences," Huang said. Berkaw said he plans to apply to medical school and thinks the additions to the test are appropriate since the new topics tend to be neglected in the pre- medical curriculum. However, he expressed a similar concern as Huang about the additional requirements. "It doesn't leave any room for exploration, really," Berkaw said. "For me, I was thinking about majoring in anthropology, and I was able to take anthropol- ogy classes early on, and I don't know if you'd be able to fit that in under the new curriculum." GENE THERAPY From Page 1A that injections of the gene trans- fer vector - commonly referred to as NP2 - were agent was safe and that it improved cur- rent treatments, proving Fink's hypothesis correct. The purpose of using NP2 in the study was to test whether the pain experienced upon injec- tion differed from the pain can- cer patients felt aftef dosages of more common treatments, like morphine, were distributed. The study's subjects were given a herpes-based vector, Fink said. Samples of the herpes virus were injected into the vector, which was then administered the subjects. According to Fink, the herpes virus was explicitly chosen for this particular study. "Cold sores are transmitted through skin contact," Fink said. "In the same way, their injection tested for pain upon skin con- tact." The similarities between the transmission of the herpes virus and the transmission of the gene therapy as a mechanism of pain relief was meant to show the researchers whether the treat- ment is effective or not, Fink explained. Using gene therapy as a mech- anism to combat pain is a revolu- tionary discovery, Fink said. "Initially, we thought gene therapy was only a way to cor- rect abnormal genes," Fink explained. "But now, therapies are very useful to express pep- tides as drugs in very local places in the central nervous system." There are three phases a treatment must go through before becoming available to consumers at a pharmacy, Fink said. In phase one, which was completed for this study, the safety of the drug is evaluated by a group of about 10-20 subjects, Fink said. Next, larger studies are con- ducted to assess the effective- ness of the drug, pending it is proven to be acceptably safe in phase one. Finally, randomized, controlled, multicenter trials on large patient groups of up to 3,000 subjects assess how effec- tive the drug is compared to current treatments. This phase determines whether a drug or therapeutic treatment goes to market, Fink said. Susan Urba, a professor of hematology, oncology and oto- rhinolaryngology in the Medi- cal School and one of the study's researchers, wrote in an e-mail interview that when cancer patients first come to the Univer- sity Hospital, they are primar- ily seeking treatments for their disease, while researchers also work to improve their quality of life. "They don't realize that we can also offer innovative new treatments for control of their symptoms, too, which can poten- tially really benefit their quality of life," she wrote. According to Urba, the recent study has the potential to lead to future developments in the field. "About 80 percent of patients with pain can be fairly easily treated with pain medications, although the other 20 percent are more challenging, and new approaches are needed ..." Urba wrote. She added that the research- ers' recently completed study will be used to assess the safety of further clinical trials. "This study only looked at patients with cancer pain," Urba wrote. "Similar vectors are being studied in neuropathic pain from nerve injuries and in pain result- ing from diabetes." MCAT From Page 1A behavioral and social sciences. Officials have also eliminated the current writing sample section and will add 90 minutes to the length of time to take the exam, which is currently 5.5 hours. The behavioral and social sci- ence section of the new MCAT will reflect the material taught in undergraduate psychology and sociology courses. Koetje said the additional high-level science that will be tested on the exam reflect material students will encounter during medical school. "They're going to be increas- ingly focusing on biochemistry, cellular - and molecular biol- ogy, as well as statistics because these are sciences that medical schools themselves are saying are increasingly important for pre-medical students to have exposure to before they come to medial school," Koetje said. However, Steven Gay, assis- tant dean for admissions at the Medical School and an assistant professor of internal medicine, wrote in an e-mail interview that the University's curriculum isn't undergoing substantial changes because of the proposed MCAT modifications. "We believe that the improved MCAT process should help us continue to evaluate and admit the best applicants in the country to the University of Michigan," Gay wrote. "Our curriculum is always under constant review, but one preliminary component of admission should not dramati- cally affect how we design our curriculum." Similarly, David Brawn, a pre- health adviser at the Newnan Academic Advising Center, wrote in an e-mail interview that the additional advanced science to be included in the MCAT shouldn't make a considerable difference for pre-med undergraduates at the University. "It is already commonplace for students here at U-M to fit in some upper level science course- work prior to the MCAT," Brawn wrote. "Biochemistry, physiol- ogy and genetics are probably the most common, but that's by no m'LIKE' THE DAILY ON FACEBOOK .. . " " " " r ' r - " r ' 77 GOT IDEAS? Enter the 2011 IIN Invent Now Collegiate Inventors Competition! Top Graduate Prize: Invent now- $15,000 (and $5,000for theoproject's advisor) P"etigS Top Undergraduate Prize: __Abbott $10V00 Fund (and $2,500 for the project's advisor) Pius Second and Third Place Cash Prizes in Each Division Deadline:June 24, 2011 www.invent.org/collegiate S 4