0 2A - Monday, February 13, 2012 TUESDAY: This Week in History WEDNESDAY: Campus Clubs THURSDAY: Professor Profiles FRIDAY: Photos of the Week PTT.T.F.T 1MTT T The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com JOSEPH LICHTERMAN ZACHARY YANCER Editorin Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 lichterman@michigandaily.com zyancer@michigandaily.com Fart joke misinterpreted Harold Wayne Hadley Jr., a stu- dent at Jones County Junior College in Mississippi, was arrested on Tuesday after allegedly writing a note on toilet paper that included the word "bomb," according to The Huffington Post Col- lege. After the note was found, 11 emer- gency agencies were dispatched to the campus. The Huffington Post reported that the Hadley family said the note only referred to their son's "joy of flatulat- ing in the library" and was not meant to be a threat to the school. The full extent of what Hadley actu- ally wrote has yet to be revealed, but he was arrested and held on $20,000 bail. The Huffington Post also reported that Hadley could face up to 10 years in CRIME NOTES prison and a $10,000 fine if convicted. interests. NYU students petition against SOPA Before Wikipedia and several other websites blacked out on Jan. 18, New York University students collected 136,229 signatures in protest of the government's Stop Online Piracy Act, according to a Jan. 25 article in Wash- ington Square News. The petition was started by NYU freshman Shashank Kasturirangan, the Square News reported. Kasturi- rangan specifically addressed the game development company Electron- ic Arts's endorsement of SOPA. Kasturirangan told the Square News that EA should act in compliance with its main consumers and their best Man convicted of abduction I attempt on OSU campus. David Phillip Morris, age 45, was sentenced on Thursday to 24 years in prison for the abduction attempt of two women at knifepoint outside the Ohio State Medical Center in August, according to a Feb. 9 article in The Lantern. Morris submitted a guilty plea in December to charges of kidnapping and aggravated robbery and said the attacks were sexually motivated, the Lantern stated. The charges held two 10-year charges in addition to a four- year charge for his status as a repeat SIDNEY KRANDALL/Daily offender. Employees clean up spilled milk at - CHANNING ROBINSON the Twigs at Oxford yesterday. Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com DisplaySes Sales display@michigandaily.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters to the Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photoomichigandaily.com Classified Sales cl assifred@m ich igandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Mail fail WHERE: South Quad Resi- dence Hall WHEN: Thursday at about 12:15 p.m. WHAT: A student said she was mailed a gift card but the card was missing from the envelope when she received it on Feb. 6, University Police reported. There are no suspects. Shattering cold WHERE: Brehm Tower WHEN: Thursday at about 3:20 p.m. WHAT: A mercury ther- mometer shattered within a fume hood after falling off its mount, University Police reported. No one was injured. The University's Occupational Safety and Environmental Health spe- cialists cleaned it up. Cold case WHERE: C.S. Mott Chil- dren's and Von Voigtlander Women's Hospital WHEN: Thursday at about 2:55 p.m. WHAT: A hospital employ- ee reported her coat stolen from an eighth floor room, University Police reported. There are no suspects. Purse punk WHERE: C.S. Mott Chil- dren's and Von Voigtlander Women's Hospital WHEN: Thursday at about 8:40 a.m. WHAT: An employee's purse was reported sto- len from a nurse's station between 7:50 a.m. and 8:10 a.m. University Police reported. Eating issues discussion WHAT: Susan Page, the United States ambassador to the Republic of South Sudan and the ormer deputy assis- tant secretary for African Affairs, will participate in a roundtable discussion about the newly independent Afri- can nation. WHO: Center for Interna- tional and Comparative Law WHEN: Today from 4 p.m. to 5;15 p.m. WHERE: Hutchins Hall, room 116 * Two articles in the Feb.10 edition of The Michigan Daily ("Wings, Leafs to face offin AZ" and "Howthe 2013 Winter Classic came to Ann Arbor") mis- spelled the last name of the Detroit Red Wings owner. It is Ilitch. . An article in the Feb. 2 edition of The Michigan Daily ("Classes, programs inspired by environmentally friendly efforts")incorrectly stated that the the Campus Sustainability Integrated Assesment identified climate, water and livable communities as the University's three most important things. The Graham Institute identified the importance. The article also incorrectly identified Prof. Steven Wright's course as an engineering class. It is a University Course. " Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. Singer Kid Rock released a letter in response to a recent Detroit Free Press column which said some of his "Made in Detroit" apparel was made overseas, the Asso- ciated Press reported. Rock said the clothing line never claimed to be made in-state. The Michigan hockey team improved to 19-4 at Joe Louis Arena over the past five seasons by beat- ing Michigan State, 3-2, in overtime on Saturday. >> FOR MORE, SEE SPORTSMONDAY, INSIDE Actor Nicolas Cage appeared on the "Late Show with David Let- terman" where he adressed internet speculation he is a vampire, the Huffington Post reported. A photo of a Civil War soldier said to resemble Cage has gone viral. EDITORIAL STAFF Josh Healy Managing Editor jahealy@michigandaily.com BethaytiHon ManaingNHsyEditor biron@michiandaily.com SENIOR mN SnEORSnHaly atth~or, HaleyGoldbnerg,aaGodsmith, PaiePearcy Adam Ruben fire SSISeANT NEWS EDITORS:GiacomoBologna,AnnaRozenberg,Andrew Schulman, PtrShahin, K.C. Wasmn AshleyGriesshammer and opinioneditors@michigandailycom Andrew Weiner Editorial Page Editors SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Harsha Nahata, Timothy Rabb, Vanessa Rychlinski ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Jesse Klein, Patrick Maillet Stephen Nesbitt Managing Sports Editor nesbitt@michigandaily.com SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Everett Cook, Ben Estes, Zach Helfand, Luke Pasch, NealRothschild,MattSlovin ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Steven Braid, Michael Laurila, Matt Spelich, Colleen Thomas, Liz Vukelich, Daniel Wasserman Leah Burgin Managing Arts Editor burgin@michigandaily.com SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Elliot Alpern, Jacob Axelrad, David Tao, Kayla Upadhyaya ASSISTANTnARTS EDITORS: Laren Caserta.Matt Easton,Kelly Etz,Anna Sadovskaya, Chloe Stachowiak Erin Kirkland and photo@michigandaily.com Alden Iteiss Manang nPhootEditors SENOHOOsDnITORS:Terra Moengraff,ToddNeedle ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS: Adam Glanzman, Austen Hufford, Allison Kruske Marlene Lacasse, Adam Schnitzer Arjun Mahanti ManagingDesign Editor mahanti@michigandaily.com SENIOR DESIGN EDITOR: Anna Lein-Zielinski Dylan Cinti and statement@michigandaily.com Jennifer Xu Magazine Editor DEPU'TY MAGAZINE EDITOR: Kaitlin Williams ChristineChun and copydesk@michigandaily.com Hannah Poindenter Copy Chiefs SNIOn COPEDToRS:Josephine Adams,Beth coplowitz Zach Bergson Online Editor bergson@michigandaily.com Imran Syed Public Editor publiceditor@michigandaily.com BUSINESS STAFF Julianna Crim Associate Business Manager Rachel Greineto sales Manager SophienGreenbaum Production Manager Sean Jackson Special Projects Manager Connor Byrd Finance Manager Ashley Karadsheh clientRelationships Manager Meryl Hulteng National Account Manager The Michigan Daily OSSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is avalable free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mai are $110 Winterterm(anuary through April is $11S, yearlong (September through Apriltis $195.University affiates aresubject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? Share them with your followers on Twitter @CrimeNotes ortfind them on their new blog. Wolverines fall to Detroit in inaugural varsity match By EVAN QUINN Michigan athletic lineup, and the For the Daily first since the addition of men's soccer and women's water polo in PONTIAC, Mich. - The Michi- the 2000-01 academic year. gan lacrosse team's inaugural var- Detroit also fields a young pro- sity match gram, having only competed at the was less a MICHIGAN 9 Division-I level since 2009. The fashionable DETROIT 13 two are also the only Division- entrance, I lacrosse teams in the state of and more a baptism by fire. Michigan. In their first Division-I game in Dead-even scoring in the first school history, the Wolverines fell half exemplified the two teams' 13-9 to Detroit Mercy on Sunday similarities. Sophomore midfield- afternoon in Pontiac. er Douglas Bryant broke through Lacrosse is the most recent the Titan defense early to score varsity sport to be added to the the first goal of the game and the first goal in Michigan varsity his- tory. Minutes later, he would rep- licate the feat, giving Michigan (0-1) an early 2-0 lead. Detroit (1-2) responded quickly, in what would become the theme for the back-and-forth first half. Neither team was able to establish a lead, and the score was tied on three separate occasions. While the Titans maintained a slight advantage in shots on goal and faceoffs won, an impressive five- save performance in the first half by sophomore Dylan Westerhold kept the score tied at 5-5. "Dylan started the season as our third goalie," said Michi- gan coach John Paul. "He came in today because of an injury to (freshman) Emil Weiss and played a really, really good first half." Detroit's aggressive style of play began to wear down the Wolverines by the second half. After a few more back-and-forth exchanges, the Titans scored four straight goals beginning late in the third quarter. Costly turnovers by Michigan and quick counterat- tacks by Detroit turned momen- tum against the Wolverines, who were outscored 8-4 in the second half. "Mentally, I think we kind of fell apart towards the end of the game," said fifth-year senior attackman Trevor Yealy. "I wouldn't say that they were run- ning all over us, but I think (that) mentally, they were a little more focused for the latter part of the game, and we've got to work on staying focused for the entirety of the game." This being its first Division-I year, Michigan cannot afford to make mental mistakes. At a much higher level of play, the Wolverines will not be able to outmatch their opponents with pure talent, so they must play intelligently to remain competi- tive. Sunday's first half against Detroit provided a glimpse of the direction the team will move in. This season, the ultimate goal for the team is to make sure this visionbecomes a reality. "We've got to make sure that we keep going forward and we don't take any steps back," Yealy said. With their introduction to varsity lacrosse now out of the way, the Wolverines will face off against Penn State in State College next Saturday. e JOIN DAILY NEWS. e-mail rayzag@michigandaily.com Casses i a-art 5u.,arnyr .ani"reo r $002Roview ; $0-273-8439 i PrinctoReview.corm S U 2 i U * Free Checking with eStatement enrollment * Free Online Banking, Bill Pay and e-Staternenls * 7 branches, with 3 being on campus * Wire transfer options available * Amess to the largest ATM network in the country with 16 ATM locations throughout campus Visit umCUorg to lam how you E" o 0 0 4