Blues Brothers Dance: Two University alums share the origins of the now-iconic Michigan athletic tradition. PAGE 4A ""1i l~idiigan 0ailjj Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, January 26,2011 michigandaily.com STUDENT UIFE " Survey data paints portrait of class of 2015 CIRP: Most freshmen support LGBT rights By AUSTEN HUFFORD For the Daily Along with entrance exams and campus tours, new stu- dents at freshman orienta- tion are required to complete the Cooperative Institutional Research Program survey, the results of which were released for 2011 yesterday, and showed, among other things, that a majority supported legalizing gay marriage. Administered by the Higher Education Research Institute - the graduate school of edu- cation and information studies at the University of Califor- nia, Los Angeles - the survey tracks behavioral and educa- tional trends among incoming college freshmen across the nation. One of the areas that the sur- vey focused on is student opin- ion on LGTBQ rights. Survey data showed that 71.3 percent of incoming freshmen nation- wide believed that gay mar- riage should be legalized, while 80.7 percent of the University's incoming freshmen did. The executive board of the Central Student Government's LGBT Issues wrote in a state- ment to The Michigan Daily that it was pleased with the results of the survey regarding the support of gay marriage. "We now hope to see this level of support reflected on the state and national levels," the board wrote. However, thesUniversity's freshmen were less supportive of affirmative action than their national peers. In 2011, 42.1 percent of all freshmen were in favor of preferential treat- ment in college admissions to students from disadvantaged backgrounds, while at the Uni- versity, 32.7 percent of fresh- men were. Malinda Matney, a senior research associate at the Divi- sion of Student Affairs, wrote in a statement to the Daily that she was not surprised that Uni- versity students were less sup- portive of affirmative action than their peers. "These debates have been ongoing in the state of Michi- gan media since before these students started kindergar- ten," Matney wrote. "They have never known a time in which this was not an issue of active debate." See SURVEY, Page SA TODD NEtDLE/Daily People began lining up for tickets to see President Barack Obama speak at 7:30 p.m. last night. Tickets will be distributed at 9 a.m. today. Students swarm to Union for tickets to see president As of 2 a.m., about 1,000 line up in Regents Plaza By ADAM RUBENFIRE Daily News Editor The basement of the Michi- gan Union reached capacity last night as nearly 1,000 people lined its walls with the hope of receiv- ing tickets for President Barack Obama's address at Al Glick Field House tomorrow morning. Students, faculty members and Ann Arbor residents began forming a line at about 7:30 p.m. that stemmed from the Michi- gan Union Ticket Office, reached back toward the connector to the West Quad Residence Hall and wrapped around the food court, U-Gos and Computer Showcase, before students were forced to relocate outside at about 1 a.m. Tickets were scheduled to be distributed from the ticket office at 9 a.m., on a first come, first serve basis. There was a limit of one ticket per per- son. The event tomorrow will be Obama's second visit to the University, following his Spring Commencement address at Michigan Stadium in 2010. A Department of Public Safe- ty officer on the scene said he was there to "coordinate with staff," and acknowledged there were no security issues as of 1 a.m. The officer said the Union would be evacuated at its regu- lar closingtime of 2 a.m. But, at about 1 a.m., a Union employee announced to the assembled crowd that they needed to vacate the building and line up outside. "Unfortunately, we've reached capacity, so we have to move people outside early," the official told the hundreds of people lined up. "So you guys - when the other DPS officers get here - please stay ina single file line. I'm sorry we have to get out early, we have no more space in the Union." After being forced from the building, the crowd waited in a line that stretched through See TICKETS, Page 6A Warner, head of newly opened hospital, to retire on April 4 1 dir 1t Co-workers Hospital last month, the leader of the complex announced she aud executive will be retiring on her 67th birthday. 'ector's 35-year Patricia Warner, execu- tive director of the hospitals UTMHS career who led the construction of the newly opened $754 million By ALEXANDRA hospital, will officially retire on MONDALEK April 4. In an interview yester- Daily StaffReporter day, Warner said her co-work- ers and patients have made her ortly after the opening of past 35 years at UMHS excep- ew C.S. Mott Children's tional. Von Voigtlander Women's "Everyone gets to a point in their life where they feel ful- filled and move on," Warner said. "I am looking forward to my retirement career after having been privileged to work with wonderful people and meet our families." Kelly Parent, patient-family coordinator at the Mott Chil- dren's Hospital, said War- ner had a lasting impact on the facility. Parent runs the Patient-Family Centered Care Program, where she took the See WARNER, Page SA MCKENZIE BEREZIN/Daily Students attend various sex education workshops in the Michigan League yesterday. Strict regulations protect human subjects in studies Sh( the n and N New Master's of Health Informatics to merge two academic programs NIH, review boards enforce safety policies By PETER SHAHIN Daily StaffReporter Though people often conjure the image of long hypnotic ses- sions on Sigmund Freud's couch when imagining psychological research, that picture isn't the norm for modern day practice. As research psychology has continued to evolve over the course of the last 40 years, so too have the ethical guidelines over- seeing such research. Psycholo- gists at the university level are bound by institutional review boards, peer reviews and the National Institutes of Health to validate the quality of the stud- ies and the safety of their par- ticipants - methodology that has led to safer standards across CONTIN UIN ERIE S the board. Colleen Seifert, chair of stu- dent academic affairs in the Department of Psychology, said regulations governing experi- ments today allow for little dam- age or ethical concern. At the University and peer institutions, See REGULATIONS, Page SA Degree to award degrees from multiple schools By ALEX O'CONNOR For the Daily In response to the rapidly growing demand for educa- tion in the fields of informa- tion technology and public health, the University plans to launch a new Master's pro- gram in Health Informatics this fall. The program will be direct- ed by Charles Friedman, for- mer chief scientific officer for Health Information and Tech- nology in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Ser- vices, and Meghan Genovese, senior associate director of Health Informatics. The pro- gram will combine material from both the School of Infor- mation and the School of Pub- lic Health, and offer students the opportunity to obtain a degree from both programs - making it the only program in the University for which a degree will be attributed to more than one school. Genovese described Health Informatics as the develop- ment of methods and infor- mation technology that capitalizes on the digital age by collecting, analyzing, storing and communicating health-related information. "Health Informatics is about planning for the 'problem after next,' in today's health- See MASTER'S, Page SA ...w :. , w WEATHER TOMORROW HI: 41 GOT A NEWS TIP? NE W ON HM IatANaA ILY.COM 1 OLO: 32 Call734-418-4115or e-mail RECAP: Olympic synchronized U.S. Marshaling news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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