0 0 2B Wednesay, 201 Wednesday, March 21, 2012 // The Statement 7B Young adults needed! This study will characterize brain mechanisms of emotion and motivation. This study involves: To qualifvjfor this studryou must be: . An interview, questionnaires, blood and urine - Age 18 - 22 (inclusive) samples, and a computer task (2 - 2% hr) . Not pregnant or using hormonal . Compensation of $25 - $35 contraception . Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and an " Not using drugs that affect the brain additional $70 - $90 if selected for the 2nd phase -"Able to tolerate an MRI scan This study is sponsored by: University of Michigan Department of Psychiaty MichiganInstitute for Clinical & Health Research; National institutes of Health Study ID: HUMIOM40452 Please call 1-734-615-2698 or email Mchancestudy@umich.edu for more information j UyD m KIUn Letter from the Editor by Kaitlin Williams ore than 40,000 students attend the University and they all stake claim to the epithet "the leaders and the best." How could you whittle the "champions of the west" down to just 11 Stu- dents of the Year featured in 10 articles? With plenty of viable choices, it wasn't easy. Nominees were gathered via e-mail submissions and suggestions from Michigan Daily staff members. The resulting pool of nominees was dif- ficult to cut down to just a handful of finalists. That said, we're confident our selection is a representative sample of the best the University has to offer. The students profiled include star athletes, an actress starring on Broad- way and an engineer building equipment to shoot into the stars. Their achievements are made more impressive when you consider that they take classes, deal with relationship drama and juggle social lives. For those profiled who are not seniors, we can expect more great things in years to come. For those leaving the University this year, we get to throw in our lot with the legacy they leave behind. And for those not tossing their graduation caps in the air this spring, you could land on these pages next year. THE Statement Deputy Editor: Kaitlin Williams Magazine Editors: Dylan Cinti, Jennifer Xu Editor in Chief: Joseph Lichterman Managing Editor: Josh Healy Design Editor: Nolan Loh Photo Editor: Terra Molengraff Copy Editor: Beth Coplowitz q l COURTESY !F CHRIS DZOMB'A Taylor Louderman: To Broadway by Jesse Klein II TIth blonde hair and bright blue eyes, Taylor Louderman looks like your stereotypical high school cheerleader, but she hadn't ever cheered until she landed a starring role in Bring It On: The Musical. Louderman is currently taking a sabbatical from the University to tour the country as Campbell, the lead role in Bring It On. To get the part, Louderman went through a series of intense auditions at the University and then in New York. She even nabbed the part while battling bronchitis. "I was back in time for school the next day," Louderman said. Louderman traded in her backpack for a suitcase and embarked on a 13-city tour. She plays Campbell, an uppity rich girl who transfers to an inner city school and is forced to compete against her old high school in a cheerleading competition. "It's insanely different," Louderman said. "It's not based on any one movie but takes elements from each." Louderman said she thoroughly enjoys her time on stage. "I love work with a creative team on the production of the show," Louderman said. The big cities are a change for this small town girl. Growing up outside of St. Louis had a large impact on Louderman's work ethic, she said. "I had to drive an hour to get to rehearsals," Louderman said. "It taught me how hard you have to work." - It's that same drive that got her into the University's prestigious School of Music, Theatre & Dance, a place she said is defined by its instructors. "The professors really make the school," Louderman said. Louderman will return to the University next year and is excited to come back to campus. while she misses the football games, the buses and just being in school, she said the atmosphere was the hardest thing to leave. "I miss the family environment," Louderman said. - "As students, it is important to be open to opportunities available to you," Shi said. "If you take the time to find the classes that are interesting to you, you never know when the opportunity may come about to make use of it." ALDENREISS/daly Duncan Miller: The Rising Star by Zach Bergson hough he's too modest to admit it, Engineering junior Duncan Miller is a rising star in the field of aerospace engineering. Miller, who said he was "bitten by the space bug at an early age," has a resum6 that any aerospace engineer would appreciate. In his three years at the University, Miller has interned for Lockheed Martin Space Systems, the NASA Langley Autonomous Vehicle Laboratory and earned a flawless 4.0 grade point average with 18 A-pluses. Oh, and did we mention he's one of the lead engineers for the Cubesat Inves- tigating Atmospheric Density Response to Extreme Driving, a state of the art satellite, which will orbit around the Earth? But the Dearborn, Mich. native plays all of this down when you speak to him. He says he's gotten to where he is today through tireless work and a lot of help from his peers and mentors. "I didn't do all of this myself," Miller said. "I get to work with some of the smartest (University students)." Miller added that the CADRE project has been consuming most of his free time lately. He said the satellite project is one of the biggest student-led projects at the University. "CADRE will study the thermosphere in low earth orbit by sampling the ion winds. Ultimately, this will improve orbital tracking of objects to help minimize collisions in orbit," he said. Though he downplays his level of importance to CADRE's success, Miller is the only undergraduate leader of the project - the rest of the team leaders are graduate students. Miller said it's difficult to balance his CADRE work and his rigorous engi- neering curriculum - he spends more than 20 hours a week designing the satel- lite. He added that his peers are integral to his success juggling responsibilities. "The great thing about being on a student project is that there are a bunch of other kids who have the same dream, who are really motivated to make it hap- pen," Miller said. "what usually happens is, if it's my midterm week, it's going to be someone else's midterm week next week, so if they pick up the slack for me this week and I cover for them next week ... we have each others' back." This summer Miller will intern at SpaceX, a private aerospace company that develops space vehicles, and his long-term plans include attending graduate school for aerospace engineering. Miller said he owes all of his successes - from the internships to his pres- tigious position on the CADRE project - to the lessons he's learned from this University. "All of my experiences at Michigan have shown me the merits of hard work and having strong morals and motivation, and that those things are the key to success," Miller said. "You can't pick the lock." Don't just spend your tax refund, invest it in your future. At Coverall, we make awning pne own business as attainable goal. Join a leading commercial cleaning franchise system In a grawing industsy. " Financing Available a Comprehensive Training " Billing & Collection Services " Initial Customer Base With as low as $2ooo down, there has never been an easier way to start a business for yourself. 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