The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 14, 2011 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, November14, 2011 - 5A NEWS BRIEFS BENTON TOWNSHIP, Mich. Michigan home explodes, killing 2, injuring 4 An explosion at a southwest- ern Michigan house where a resi- dent was using oxygen tanks for a medical condition killed two people and injured four others, police said yesterday. The blast happened about 11:40 p.m. Saturday, according to police in Berrien County's Ben- ton Township. The community is east of Benton Harbor. When emergency crews arrived, they found four injured people outside the burning house and were told two other people were trapped inside, said Lt. Del- mar Lange. HONOLULU Clinton: Iran must respond to U.N. weapons report Iran must respond soon to a report by the U.N. atomic agen- cy alleging that it is working secretly on developing a nuclear weapon, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Friday while attending a Pacific Rim summit. Clinton said she discussed the issue with her counterparts gathered in Hawaii who also expressed serious concern over the issue. "Iran has a long history of deception and denial regard- ing its nuclear program and in the coming days we expect Iran to answer the serious questions raised by this report," Clinton told reporters. "The U.S. will continue to con- sult closely with our allies on the next steps we can take to increase pressure on Iran," Clinton said. The International Atomic Energy Agency showed satel- lite images, letters and diagrams to 35 nations earlier Friday in Vienna as it sought to underpin its case that Iran apparently is working secretly on developing a nuclear weapon. BANGKOK Bangkok residents advised to flee floodwaters Bangkok authorities are telling more residents to leave as flood- waters threaten southwestern neighborhoods in the Thai capi- tal. Governor Sukhumbhand Parib- atra said people should evacuate three neighborhoods due to surg- ingwaterlevels. He saidyesterday pumps were operating around the clock and more pumps were being added to help drain the water. Still, floodwaters are reced- ing elsewhere. Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said previ- ously the city center would have light flooding if the water pen- etrated that far but western areas of Bangkok were threatened with inundation. The national death toll from floods since late July has reached 536. More than 13.1 million people - one in five Thais - are affected. -Compiled from Daily wire reports NESBITT From Page 1A Floyd was up late on Friday night. Inside the team hotel, he kept the reel rolling, watching Jenkins torch cornerback after cornerback. To a man, he'll admit he's no match for Jenkins. But he caught something in the film - a split, atendency. There were certain situations, depending on the score, down and spot of the ball, that Jenkins and quarterback Nathan Scheel- haase got predictable. Third down on Michigan's 40-yard line was one of those situations. When the pass went up, so did Floyd. "The coachesawere talking to me telling me, 'Just trust your instincts,"' Floyd said. "I just read it. I seen the receiver raise up in his break, and Itjust went for it" He returned the interception 43 yards to set up the Wolver- ines' final score. Jenkins finished with eight catches for 103 yards, but Floyd was resilient. He kept Jenkins out of the endzone. A year removed from Michi- gan's 67-65 triple-overtime thrill- er against Illinois, the Fighting Illini didn't cross midfield until the end of the third quarter. It was the Wolverines' defense that VETS From Page 1A place mainly in the Union and on the Diag, included a World War II veterans panel, film screen- ings of "Lioness" and "Taking Chance," a care package collec- tion drive for those currently serving and a discussion on post- traumatic stress disorder. The symposium started off with a panel led by student vet- erans in the Union's Kuenzel Room. LSA senior Ryan Pavel, president of the University's chapter of Student Veterans of America, said during the panel - which he facilitated - that he believes it is importanteto discuss the challenges student veterans face. There are approximately 400 student veterans on campus, according to Pavel. The Univer- sity's SVA chapter was founded in the spring of 2007, and sup- port for veterans on campus has grown over the past few years, he said. "Since then, there has been a few people who have been con- BASKETBALL From Page 1A team. In an interview before the game, Glen Ashlock, a vet- eran and the Navy basketball team captain, explained that the rules of wheelchair basket- ball are the same as NBA rules with the exception of dribbling - the ball must be dribbled in between every two pushes of the wheelchair. Despite the label as a wheelchair basketball game, only four of the players use wheelchairs in their daily life. Checking is OK according to Ashlock, "but there's a line," he said. Ashlock also explained that basketball wheelchairs are engi- neered differently than regular wheelchairs. Basketball wheel- chairs have wider angled wheels and metal bars onthe bottom that help protectplayers' legs and feet. While the Navy team had commanded the flow of the game from start to finish. The 2010 Michigan team got punched and fell flat. These Wol- verines get punched and they punch back. Last season, with 110th- ranked defense in the nation, Michigan couldn't stopa nose- bleed. That defense just wasn't good enough to win. "That's all you heard about when I took the job here," said Michigan coach Brady Hoke. This season, usingthe same cogs and a few well-oiled addi- tions, Hoke and defensive coor- dinator Greg Mattison have a defensive machine on their hands. So what happened? How is Michigan winning on defense? Floyd knows the answer and doesn't mind sharing. Twice, he credited the coachingstaff for putting him in the right position to make a play. Twice more, he admitted his newfound dedica- tion to film. That difference comes from Hoke and his staff - they have the Wolverines prepared to play every Saturday. It's the toughness Hoke preaches. It's demanding every week that nobody's job is certain. It's accountability. And it has Michigan back on the map. sistently lobbying for increased support (of veterans)," Pavel said. "Now I would say that (the University) is getting ... increas- ingly veteran friendly." The panel featured eight stu- dent veterans who spoke about their experiences at the Uni- versity. LSA junior Brendan Lejeune, a student veteran, said that he considers the University a very "veteran-friendly place." He said the support of SVA helped ease his transition into academic life. "I was 25 when I came here, and in some of my classes the kids were 18, and our life experi- ences were just night and day," Lejeune said. "Having other vets near me made it feel like I was more a part of the University." Other panelists pointed out that veterans constitute only a small part of the student body. LSA sophomore Andrew Floyd said he feels there is a relatively small number of student veter- ans on campus and said he only sees fellow veterans at SVA func- tions. "I would definitely like to see more veterans in classes," Floyd momentum in the beginning - scoring three times in the first three minutes - the Army team put up a fight to make it a close game. The Navy ended up win- ning by a mere two points with a final score of 36-34. Engineering freshman Jim Rasche, a U.S. Navy veteran, said he rested up in preparation for the game. He added that learn- ing how to play basketball in a wheelchair is like "learning to walk again." Rasche attributed the Navy's lead in the beginning of the game to good shooting and luck and said he had no expec- tations for the outcome of the game. "The main point is it's all about honoring and bringing attention to veterans," Rasche said. Army basketball team captain Jerry Sarasin, also a veteran, has played wheelchair basketball for the last 20 years and said he's gotten good at the game. "For the first time we've ever "The past is somethingthat's always goingto be in the back of your head," said senior captain Mike Martin. "We don't focus on it because we're so much differ- ent as a team, as a defense. Guys are so much better, our mentality is just so much better, and I'm sure that it showed on the field today." Allowing just over two touch- downs a game - at sixth in the nation in scoring defense - these players finally know the feeling of a job well done. But the transition in the past season hasn't been easy. Ask Floyd. Hoke and Mattison admit they've been hard on Floyd all season. He's notejust No. 8, he's the team's No. 1 cornerback. "Coaches are always tough on me, but that's why I came here," Floyd said. "I came in to win and win big. The coaches did a good job to get me prepared each week, make sure I'm focused, makingsure I'm keying in on what I need to key in on." So when Floyd turned away from Jenkins at the goal line and looked around again. He was the last Michigan player off the field. He'd done his job, he'd made his statement. - Nesbitt can be reached at stnesbit@umich.edu or on Twitter: @stephennesbitt said. "Certainly I think (veter- ans) enrich the learning environ- ment." Business graduate student Lindsay Compton, a student veteran, agreed that veterans enhance the classroom setting. During the panel, Compton said she brings her experience in the armed forces to class by provid- ing examples of leadership, disci- pline and teamwork. "Our classmates have really great experience in the consult- ing world, or as accountants or whatever they may have done, but it's amazing the depth and breadth that we (veterans) can give with our experience," Compton said. Compton added that it's chal- lenging but rewarding for stu- dent veterans to share these experiences with their civilian peers. "I think sometimes it's a little bit harder to open your mouth and share that because our expe- riences are a lot more intimate and a lot more challenging, but I think our classmates really appreciate our perspectives," Compton said. played together, (we're) really good," Sarasin said of the team. While Sarasin was involved in many of the rough wheelchair collisions on the court, he said the event was more about pro- moting awareness and having fun than anything else. "If it wasn't for the veterans, there wouldn't be wheelchair basketball," Sarasin said. Event coordinator Gerald Hoff, a University insurance ver- ification representative, said the event is popular among student veterans. "Student veterans met with me after last year's game and asked that if I could please have another Army-Navy game," Hoff said. Hoff organized the event with the help of volunteers, including members of the University ser- vice group Circle K, who passed out free snacks and drinks dur- ing the event. Hoff said he hopes to move the event to Crisler Arena in the future. HOLOCAUST From Page 1A at roundtables to better facilitate discussion. "It is an entirely different experience hearing their per- sonal stories and to see the way they tell theem," Sternberg said. "Some of the people we bring in are teachers, authors - people who really want to share their stories." While Fleish said it is difficult to share stories of the atrocities she endured, she believes it is important to move forward. "The dreams are there, and you can't make them go away," Fleish said. "It lives inside of me. You never get over it. It is a part of you, always in the back of your head." At another table sat 83-year- old Anton Opengeym, who spoke of his troubled life running from the war. Because his family was wealthy, the Nazis targeted his father and brother, who were among the first in the town to be killed. "They like to take everything you have - your weaknesses," Opengeym said. After the war, Opengeym fled communist Latvia with his wife and children - hoping to give them a better life. He came to Michigan and worked as the custodian for The Birmingham Temple in Farmington Hills for 26 years until he retired. "God Bless America," Openg- eym said with a smile on his face. "I started with nothing, and now I have Social Security." Opengeym said even though his life was not as prosperous as when he was a child, survival is the only thing that is important to him. "Sometimes you just need to have a bad life to know what a good life is, and I have a really good life now," Opengeym said. Holocaust survivor Henia Ciesla Lewin lived in the ghettos of Kielce, Poland and then fled to the woods for nine months with her sister and aunt, where she witnessed the murders of fellow hiding refugees. After return- ing to the ghettos, she was sent to five different concentration camps, including Auschwitz, before being freed by the U.S. Army. "I remember when Hitler came into the town, and I felt the hostility all around him," Lewin said. "It still rings in my ears." Lewin said that now her life goal is to share her stories so people can understand and stop the hatred that caused the Holocaust. She wrote a poem in remembrance of her mother for her grandchildren that she likes to share. "My mother begged me, before we separated, that her only wish was for me to survive," Lewin said. "I think her wish kept me alive. Someone had to be there to tell the stories." When asked how she could continue to be optimistic after living through such horrific events, Lewin explained thatshe had to rise above her oppressive past to foster a future that tran- scends the hatred of the Holo- caust. "I hope and I pray that a time like that will never come again," Lewinsaid. "I am full of so much pain, but I don't hate anybody." RESEARCH From Page 1A than normal red blood cells and deliver less oxygen to tissues in the body. Deprivation of oxygen to tissues can often cause organ damage and lead to death. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Preven- tion, 90,000 to 100,000 Ameri- cans have sickle cell anemia. The disease, which is identified by a lower than normal fetal hemoglobin count, is prevalent in Africa and found in about one out of 500 African-Ameri- can babies born. In the study, Campbell suc- cessfully increased fetal hemo- globin levels in mice with sickle cells. Increasing the production of TR2 and TR4 proteins has the potential to prevent and reduce organ damage. Similar results were seen when the study was conducted on mice with trans- planted human genes. Campbell said that increased fetal hemoglobin directly cor- relates with decreased disease mortality rates. "Those who have higher fetal hemoglobin levels associ- ate with significant decrease in death and definitely in morbid- ity and complications," Camp- bell said. Currently there is only one drug, Hydroxyurea - which is also used in cancer treatments - that is FDA approved to increase fetal hemoglobin lev- els in sickle cell patients. How- ever, the side effects of the drug are not well known. Campbell said the study will allow an alternative method to treat the disease that might be more favorable. "There's a lot of intoler- ance in some patients in taking (Hydroxyurea)," Campbell said. "... They need other options, so we're just discovering another protein. This is a protein, and it's in the body." The study was a collabora- tive effort by different Univer- sity departments, Campbell said. Osamu Tanabe, a research assistant professor of cell and developmental biology, and James Engel, a cell and devel- opmental biology professor and department chair, were co- authors and contributors to the study. In 2007, Tanabe first devel- oped the gene that caused the over-expression of TR2 and TR4 proteins and proposed the study on mice to Campbell. Now, the researchers will begin to translate these find- ings into a treatment safe for humans. Tanabe said it could take a long time, but the next step is to find a way to cause the same effects seen in the mice by increasing the activation of TR2 and TR4 receptors, which may lead pharmacological researchers to develop a drug that can do this. "(I think) our findings may lead to a new therapeu- tic approach for the disease," Tanabe said. 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The University actively encourages applications and/or nominations of women, persons of color, veterans and persons with disabilities. 35th ANN ARBOR Aj un raiserfor AT HILL AUDITORIUM SAT / JAN 28 / 6:30 FRI / JAN 27 / 6:30 EMMYLOU DEVOTCHKA HARRIS DAWES CARBON LEAF GLEN CAMPBELL ELEPHANT REVIVAL SUNNY WAR NANCI GRIFFITH JOE HENRY DAVID WAX MUSEUM Additi.na artistst.b.ann.uced. SARAH JAROSZ CARAVAN OF TEIEVES SET1H GLIER tdn Nvme Inpro 0a -wthsuetID