The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, April 6, 2012 - 5 HEALTH From Page 1 or policy-based. "I'd expect the research proj- ects to be as varied as the individ- ual applications," she said. "The research projects can vary from J. COLE From Page 1 for J. Cole. On Sunday night, it was announced that the fea- tured groups would be dance groups EnCore, funKtion and Dance2XS, as well as rap groups Fairytale Productions and D.S.B. J. Cole described his support for local musical acts and lauded the benefits of including them in bigger concerts. MAMMOTH From Page 1 "completely commandeered" the carcass. "It's quite clear that humans were very experienced at dealing with carcasses like this (Yuka)," Fisher said. In order to thoroughly inspect Yuka, the team had to defrost the specimen over a few days to pre- vent from harming it. Fisher said the scientists did not have access to advanced equipment and were limited to a room, a table and basic measuring devices. Locals found Yuka in 2010 in the northern part of the Russian state Yakutia, which is known for preserving quality remains in its BUSINESS From Page 1 focused on uniting community members who create products as part of a personal philosophy of developing "authentic goods for the 21st century." Quinones echoed Wacker's sentiments, and lauded the poten- tial for a market of handcrafted goods in the community. " pride ourselves in this idea that things we do should be handcrafted," Quinones said. "Things should be unique, and there should always be a con- nection between the person who receives something we've sold them and the people who have made the thing they're buying." The duo said their hope is to create a more exclusive atmo- sphere reminiscent of Etsy - a website where people sell their own creations - to help artisans produce products on a larger focusing on chronic to (commu- nicable) to (non-communicable) diseases." The first cohort of Global Health Fellows may begin as early as this summer, Restrick said. Roger Glass, director of the Fogarty International Center, "It's a great opportunity for local artists to come through and shine, and make some new fans by performing in front of a bunch of people who may not have heard of them before," Cole said in an interview with The Michigan Daily. Cole also said that his current tour would be his first with a full band. He will perform material from his debut album Cole World: The Sideline Story and his previ- ous mixtapes. In speaking about his perfor- permafrost. Yuka was approxi- mately 3 years old when it died and would have been around five feet tall at its shoulder. Fisher said it most likely lived between 10,000 and 30,000 years ago. Fisher said he has plans for future research on the specimen and wants to arrange a CT scan of the specimen so he can better understand the animal without causing it further damage, not- ing that radioactive carbon dat- ing tests were performed on the specimen to find its exact age, and the results will be avail- able in two weeks. Fisher said a future study of the animal's teeth and tusks will provide information about the mam- moth's lifestyle. Fisher said while finding teeth scale than they could on their own. Wacker noted that having a physical shop is the ultimate goal. "We want to keep our minds opento whatever fits our philoso- phy as opposed to a certain prod- uct," Wacker said. "One or two years from now we might have a roster of 50 artisan designers that we work with regularly but they also start collaborating with each other." Wacker said Quinones caught himself traditional bookbinding methods in order to create hand- crafted iPad and Kindle cases called FlightPads. "It's literally a labor of love for every single case," Wacker said. "He spent months figuring out tiny details." Wacker said they may work toward developing a University- themed FlightPad and that they also hope to utilize the Univer- sity's talent to cultivate future crafters featured with dapp. said in the release that he is excit- ed about the program's potential. "This program will leverage the considerable experience, relationships and infrastructure the 20 U.S partners have built in developing countries around the globe," he said. "(We want to) ensure our alumni are well- mance philosophy, it's evident where his reputation for larg- er-than-life stage presence is generated. He talked about the importance of showing passion onstage. "I try to put a lot of passion into my performance," Cole said. "I feel that if I do that, people will naturally gravitate toward it. It sounds a little generic, but it's really important. You've got to connect with the audience, whether it's through eye contact or putting in a lot of energy." or bones from wooly mammoths is common, finding a well-pre- served, mostly complete speci- men like Yuka only occurs once every several years. "You just have to be at the right place and the right time when things are melting out," Fisher said. Fisher said Yuka was one of the more interesting projects he has worked on, but couldn't name a favorite over the course of his career. "You wouldn't say, 'well I have 6 kids, and I really like this one the best," Fisher said. "(My discoveries) are all part of the whole picture that we are able to put together, and from each one, we are able to learn something new and different." However, he said this may be challenging due to the demand- ing schedules of students. "Design students and art stu- dents often have amazing proj- ects, but they're so focused on graduating," he said. Quinones said he's excited about the prospect of potentially working with students in the future. "One of my dreams is to go to the design school, go to thearchi- tecture school, talk to people in the art program and find people who have really cool stuff so that we could work together with them," he said. Quinones said he is consider- ing searching for crafters within the community, notinghe already has his eyes on a hat-designer. "There's a lot of richness in the community in terms of people's ideas and experience, and I think we would do really well by con- tinuing to have the connection to Ann Arbor," he said. Michigan's Slam Poetry Team performed at UMMA yesterday to support ONE Night stand. ONE Campaign event raises awareness for w er safety Students gather in support of human rights advocacy at UMMA By ALICIA ADAMCYZK Daily StaffReporter At last night's "Thirsty Thurs- day" event at the University of Michigan Museum of Art, about 50 students attended a free con- cert hosted by the University's chapter of the ONE Campaign, an international nonpartisan advocacy organization working to fight poverty and disease in Africa. Each year, the ONE Cam- paign selects a different global issue to focus its advocacy efforts on. In previous years, the organization has focused on HIV/AIDS, maternal health and education. This year's event, which was organized around World Water Day, was held to raise awareness about water accessibility and sanita- tion conditios in devel ping nations. Public Policy senior Mer- edith Horowski, the former president of the University's ONE chapter, said the event was held to inform attendees on the various ways they can solicit change. "The ONE Campaign is all about advocacy," Horowski said. "We're not a charity; we don't ask people to donate money, so it's all about the real- ly simple actions that you can take to hold our government leaders accountable to good development policy." Horowski said her passion for the ONE Campaign was solidified when she traveled to Rwanda in 2010 and saw the impact of the campaign first- hand. "I saw on the ground in Rwanda that the policies that the U.S. is implementing in terms of international develop- ment really are effective," she said. "These programs that we fund are crucial in saving lives across the world." The event included perfor- mances by Match by Match and Chaser - two bands composed of University students - as well as brief sets from the Universi- ty a cappella groups Dicks and Janes and Gimble. Vertika Sriv- astava, a member of Michigan Sahana, also performed a solo dance number, and the Michi- gan Slam Poetry Team made an appearance at the end of the event. During the performances, pictures of impoverished con- ditions:and =global water sani- tation facts an&statistics were- projected on a screen. LSA junior Lesley Kucharski and other members of the Universi- ty's chapter took time between sets to further educate attend- ees on the issue. "We're here to tell you guys there's opportunity out there. Progress is being made," Kucharski said. "We're here to try and make (government offi- cials) do what they say they're going to do." After the performances, members of the ONE Cam- paign passed out stationary and helped audience members com- pose letters to President Barack Obama asking him to take action at the next G8 Summit, a conference for world leaders to discuss international affairs. LSA senior Mary Kate Cart- mill, the campus leader of ONE, said she was pleased with the event's turnout. "As long as we're reaching people and we're having them write their letters and getting them engaged, it's really excit- ing," Cartmill said. "We had really great performers this year ... I think we had a good mix of Ann Arbor bands and then student performers." LSA sophomore Ryan Kras- noo, a member of the Universi- ty's Slam Poetry Team, said he agreed to perform at the event because he is a strong believer in the mission of the ONE Cam- paign. "It's a great cause. I actually performed last year at ONE's event," Krasnoo said. "Any time I can help out, :I'malways happy 'tWcontribute.- Jessica Branski, an LSA sophomore, said she's been involved with ONE since high school and believes the cause is something college students can easily stand behind. "You can do so much with your voice, and you don't have to put any money in it," Bran- ski said. "College students can do a lot to affect change in the world ... What's important to us is what's going to be important to the world later." Obama plans to rail against Supreme Court in fall campaig Deomcrats to paint conservative justices as extreme WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Barack Obama is laying groundwork to make the major- ity-conservative Supreme Court a campaign issue this fall; taking a political page from Republicans who have long railed against lib- eral judges who don't vote their way. The emerging Democratic strategy to paint the court as extreme was little noted in this week's hubbub over Obama's assertion that overturning his health care law would be "unprecedented." His statement Monday wasn't completely accurate, and the White House backtracked. But Obama was making a politi- cal case, not a legal one, and he appears ready to keep making it if the high court's five-member majority strikes down or cuts the heart out of his signature policy initiative. The court also is likely to con- sider several other issues before the November election that could stir Obama's core Demo- cratic supporters and draw cru- cial independent voters as well. Among those are immigration, voting rights and a revisit of a campaign finance ruling that Obama has already criticized as an outrage. "We haven't seen the end of this," said longtime Supreme Court practitioner Tom Gold- stein, who teaches at Stanford and Harvard universities. "The administration seems to be posi- tioning itself to be able to run against the Supreme Court if it needs to or wants to." While Obama has predicted victory in the health care case now before the court, his admin- istration could blame overreach by Republican-appointed jus- tices if the law is rejected, said Goldstein, who wrote a brief sup- porting the law's constitutional- ity. This can be dangerous ground, as Obama discovered. Since Franklin Delano Roosevelt, few presidents have directly assailed the Supreme Court. In Obama's case, he issued an indirect chal- lenge, but the former constitu- tional law professor tripped over the details. Obama told a news conference on Monday that he was "con- fident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Con- gress." The Supreme Court does sometimes overturn laws passed by Congress. Obama later clari- fied that he was referring to a narrow class of constitutional law, but even then Republicans and some court scholars took issue. What's not in question is that the law wasn't approved by a strong, majority - the vote was a slim 219 to 212 in the House. A Republican-appointed fed- eral judge took umbrage at the suggestion that federal courts might be powerless to overturn such laws, and ordered the Jus- tice Department to provide writ- ten assurance. He insisted the response be at least three pages, single-spaced. Attorney General Eric Holder took on that task himself, tell- ing the judge Thursday that "the longstanding, historical position of the United States regarding judicial review of the constitu- tionality of federal legislation has not changed." He also took the opportunity to cite Supreme Court case law supporting the premise that laws passed by Congress are "pre- sumptively constitutional." The Supreme Court heard a rare three days of argument on the 2010 health care overhaul last week, and the court's conserva- tive majority appeared deeply skeptical of the key provision, a requirement for individual health insurance. Justice Antonin Sca- lia, for one, appeared strongly in favor of striking down the entire law. A decision is expected by July. Also Thursday, Senate Repub- lican Leader Mitch McConnell had his say on presidents and the Supreme Court. AWARENESS From Page 1 the designated Sexual Assault Awareness Month. "Rape and sexual assault hap- pen under the guise of silence," Johnson said. "The more people that know about your victimiza- tion, the more opportunities it is to help other people continue to be safe and stay safe, and so you can't expect to solve a problem in silence." FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MICHIGANDAILY @MICHDAILYNEWS Many people in the crowd wore teal armbands to iden- tify themselves as survivors of sexual assault. Among them was Ann Arbor resident Grif- fin Green, who said the event evoked feelings of support and empowerment. "I'm here because I know plenty of survivors that get a chance to be able to speak out. I'm a survivor, and it's just a really good experience being able to see people get together and fight for the same thing," Green said. LSA sophomore Gia Tam- mone said her membership in F-Word, a feminist activist group, influenced her choice to attend Take Back The Night. "I am participating because I think that sexual violence is a really important issue that soci- ety still struggles with, and it's something that women are still very much afraid of, and it holds women back from really living the lives that they would want to live," Tammone said. A wild ride through the sexual politics of one family over two centuries... BTW, did we mention SEX? a comedy by Caryl Churchill University of Michigan ScIool of E Music, Theatre & Dance Directed by Tim Ocel - Dept. of Theatre & Drama Recommended for mature audiences due to explicit sexual content. April 5 at 7:30 PM 'April 6 & 7 at 8:00 PM April 8 at 2:00 PM -Arthur Miller Theatre General Admission $26 - Students $10 with ID League Ticket Office - 734-764-2538 tickets.music.umich.edu It I