The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, February 1, 2013 - 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, February 1, 2013 - 5 TUITION From Page 1 Because of its autonomy, the regenta could even make the argument that it does not need the authority of the state of Michigan to circumvent some of the barri- ers imposed by the laws. How- ever, such unilateral action would likely face public resistance and draw the University into injunc- tive lawsuits to reverse the policy. In an interview last Friday, University Provost Phil Hanlon said the difficulty in solving the issue is caused more by policy barriers than financial issues. "Certainly the legal issues are really the ones that are most com- plicated and difficult to work out," Hanlon said. California is among 12 states that have enacted state provi- sions that allow institutions of higher education to give benefits to undocumented individuals. Enacted in 2001, the California DREAM act allows public insti- tutions to grant in-state tuition to undocumented students who have graduated from an in-state high school and arrived to the United States as minors. Members of Congress have proposed similar legislation at the federal level to no avail. During the regents' re ent trip GIFT From Page 1 sity, and that his company is using this endowment asa way to fulfill their responsibility of giving back to the community. "I've had a great career - a great life - and Michigan was a big contributor to my success and my life and I thought I'd give back to the Engineering school," Man- ganello said. "I'm a proud Michi- gan graduate." Manganello wants to help sus- tain the high level of innovation and technological output of the College of Engineering. "I want (Michigan Engineer- ing) to continue to be a world leader in technology ... (and) to help mankind ... I'm quite confi- dent that they will continue to be FEMINISM From Page A feminism, which she describes as "the relationship between differ- ent countries and political, eco- nomic and social phenomena and how we understand them." "It's meant to provoke people to think about howwe learn about the world," Fernandes said. "And ways that we can think about viewing the world in ways that don't produce a nationalistic per- spective." Cotera said the event was a great dialogue between like- to California, Robert Birgeneau, chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, discussed with them the circumstances that allow Berkeley to provide in-state tuition and Cal Grants - which provide up to $12,000 in aid - to undocumented students. Coleman said Michigan faces different challenges than Cali- fornia to support undocumented students. "I would love to have the same circumstances here, but we don't," Coleman said. "At the same time, I want the issue of undocumented students to be solved." When California enacted its version of the DREAM Act in 2001, the UC system was spe- cifically granted immunity from civil suits seeking damages by the state legislature. Despite the protection, the UC system was sued for injunctive relief - which would have reversed the policy without awarding compensation - but later won its case before the California Supreme Court. The precedent set by the Cali- fornia court has no standing on the federal level or in other states. While Michigan does not have a similar policy in place, Coleman said she advocates for state provi- sions that would ease the Univer- sity's path towards a resolution of the tuition equality issue. "It would be so helpful if we could change things at the state level and do it as a comprehen- sive plan because I feel it's just an issue this country has stuck its head in the sand about forever," Coleman said. "And it's not right." Hanlon said that while admin- istrators are interested in the issue of tuition equality, it is important to note that the UC system is empowered by the state of California to grant a generous level of financial aid. Still, the University's Coali- tion for Tuition Equality hopes to make the University a leader in implementing tuition equality in the state, according to LSA junior John D'Adamo, a spokesperson for CTE. D'Adamo noted that the Uni- versity's Mission Statement includes a commitment to diver- sity. He believes the University should resolve the issue of tuition equality to adhere to that and other values. "There is a clear block to diver- sity, and it is something that we believe, as an organization, is wrong," he said. "It's a civil rights issue. We believe that these stu- dents who have fought, bled, cried and lived for the majority of their lives in Michigan deserve a fight- ing chance." D'Adamo said that CTE is also working with representatives in the state legislature on the issue, but declined to disclose who the group has worked with or the details of their discussions. A task force that includes Uni- versity attorney Donica Varner, Senior Vice Provost Lester Monts, LSA senior Luz Meza LSA senior Yonah Lieberman and Public Policy senior Kevin Mersol-Barg - who is a Daily columnist - is developing a report on tuition equality to present to the Board, possibly in February, D'Adamo said. D'Adamo said he hopes that although the report will weigh the pros and cons of tuition equal- ity, he hopes it will provoke a quick discussion among adminis- trators in support of the cause. "We have done what we need to do, and now it's in the hands of the administration and President Coleman to make sure tuition equality happens," D'Adamo said. "They have the power." CTE has also met with some members of the Board of Regents. D'Adamo said he hopes that new Democratic Regents Mark Ber- nstein and Shauna Diggs will support the issue, which was highlighted in Bernstein's cam- paign last year. D'Adamo said CTE may pres- ent the report at the Feb. 21 Board of Regents meeting, and remains optimistic about having a timely response from the Board. ACLU From Page 1 legislative staff in order to pre- vent the public and many mem- bers of the press from entering. "The case, filed on behalf of a journalist, citizens, legislators and unions, charges that gov- ernment officials, in an unprec- edented assault on democracy, deprived the public of their right to participate in the legislative process," the group's statement said. . The suit asserts that barring the public from entering the chamber demonstrated a sus- picious attempt to pass the bill without public commentary. Elmir assailed the lack of legis- lative accountability during the legislature's lame-duck session as well as the law's provisions that make it immune to a'state- wide referendum. An Ingham County circuit judge ruled in December that state police were within their legal rights to lock down the capitol. However, the judge did say the constitution requires that an effort be made to open the Capitol as much as possible. Kurt Weiss, a spokesperson for Gov. Rick Snyder, declined to comment on the filing of the suit. "While we are not comment- ing specifically on this pending litigation, the governor believes Michigan is on the right track and that we will keep moving forward by working together," Weiss said. State Rep. Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor) said the actions taken to prevent people from entering the Capitol are "unprecedented." "It raised some serious alarms with anyone who cares about democracy, openness and gov- ernment," Irwin said. "The strongest claims to the case revolve around those concerns ... The Capitol has never been locked down before in my life- time until just last December." Irwin added that it would be difficult for the lawsuit to pass through the courts because of the current mix of judges. If the case reached the Michigan Supreme Court, it would face a conservative majority. "The courts are very rena- scent, naturally, to get in the leg- islature's way," Irwin said. Irwin said the ,issue is too politically divisive in nature to be impartially considered by judges. "One of the reasons it's going to be a challenge is this whole issue is 100-percent political," Irwin said. "Even if you get in there and find some good claims ... that (the actions) are really anti-democratic and maybe even illegal, it's going to be hard for the judges to make that judg- ment call on whether those issues are important enough to overturn the law because it (the law) serves their interests." as successful in the future as they have been in the past," Mangan- ello said. Munson said the donation is crucial to progressing the engi- neering program, and hopes it encourages further funding. "This gift is a landmark for the College of Engineering," Mun- son said. "Our, hope is that this unprecedented display of corpo- rate, foundation and individual commitment to a specific engi- neering discipline will inspire others in the Michigan engi- neering community to consider similar support for other depart- ments." Department chair Kon-Well Wang, now the Tim Manganello- BorgWarner mechanical engi- neering department chair, said that the generous donation will generate funds to help carry out important department initiatives and achieve some of the depart- ment's strategic goals planned for the next few years. "This gift will allow us to explore new ideas that are high- risk but also high-gain in research and also in education," Wang said. "It will give us an edge as compared to our peers, enabling mechanical engineering at Michi- gan to make an even bigger and broader impact in the near future and generations to come." Unsurprisingly, the Univer- sity's MRacing team was also in attendance-BorgWarner is their main sponsor. This team works to build a formula racecar and com- pete with it ina collegiate motors- port racing series. Engineeringjunior Joe Martin, MRacing's project manager, said he credits much of the team's suc- cess to BorgWarner's support. "I'm happy to hear that Borg- Warqer and Tim Manganello have extended their generosity to the mechanical engineering depart- ment as a whole," Martin said. At the end of the ceremony, attendees learned that -Mangan- ello didn't attend his graduation from the College of Engineering in 1972. In order to tie up these loose ends, a small "graduation ceremony" was re-enacted by Dean Munson and Manganello, both clad in the traditional yel- low-tasseled engineering gradua- tion caps. Upon "re-graduating" the Uni- versity's class of 1972, Munson and Manganello concluded the dual graduation and endowment ceremony with a chest bump - perhaps a true display of Univer- sity-corporate relations. 150 skulls found in Mexico puzzle researchers minded scholars in the field. "This was a wonderful oppor- tunity to read my colleagues' work," Cotera said. "It was really focused on how women's studies as a discipline can re-think the way it represents women from other places." Cotera said transnational feminist theory is mainly about proactivity - training graduate students to become professors who can relate the concept back to the next generation of under- graduates. "It's basically about interven- tions, from organizing knowl- edge, training everyone from professors to undergraduates, in terms of thinking not just from a U.S. centered perspective trying to diversify our perspective as opposed to constantly speaking from this implied center about other women and their own ways of understanding feminism," Cotera said. While the lecture was set with a more scholarly angle in mind, some professors encouraged their undergraduate studentsto attend. LSA freshmen Jessica Eisma and Lauren Trulik said that they decided to attend to learn about the material in tandem with their Filipino culture class. "We didn't really know what transnational feminism was until now," Eisma said. "We're actually here for our Filipino culture class; we thought it would be interest- ing." "Even though it's an Ameri- can culture class, our teacher is also a women's studies professor. She encouraged us to go," Trulik said. Both agreed that their under- standing of transnational feminism had improved after attending the discussion, though they wouldn't have known about it without the recommendation from their professor. health-care analyst for the Uni- Provisions in the Affordable sustainable among employees HEALTH versity's Center for Healthcare Care Act are also encouraging or if they really save employers From Page 1A Research and Transformation, employers to start such pro- money. said wellness programs are grams to promote good health, "If your main (desired) out- becoming increasingly popu- Hemmings said. Unfortunately, come is employee satisfaction - improve overall fitness. Cur- lar. A significant number of Hemmings added that no defin- promoting a culture of health, rently, 55 percent of employees employers are either develop- itive long-term studies have those ... might be reasons for are enrolled in Active U. ing or continuing to use of simi- been done to examine if the employers to continue using Brandon Hemmings, a lar programs. benefits of these programs are these program." Depression conference to' e held Farming village unexpected location of shrine MEXICO CITY (AP) - Archaeologists say they have turned up about 150 skulls of human sacrifice victims in a field in central Mexico, one of the first times that such a large accumu- lation of severed heads has been found outside of a major pyramid or temple complex in Mexico. Experts are puzzled by the unexpected find of such a large number ofskulls at what appears to have been a small, unremark- able shrine. The heads were carefully deposited in rows or in small mounds, mostly facing east toward the risingsun, some- time between 660 and 860 A.D., a period when the nearby city- state of Teotihuacan had already declined but the Aztec empire, founded in 1325, was still centu- ries in the future. Georgia State University archaeologist Christopher Morehart, who found the skulls last year in Xaltocan, a farming village just north of Mexico City, said that between 150 and 200 adultskulls or their equivalent in bone parts have been excavated so far from fields that stand on a former lake bed. Experts weren't expecting to find anything of this kind in the flat, undistinguished pasture land and corn fields. The site is near, but not immediately adja- cent to, Teotihuacan, one of the biggest pre-Hispanic cities. It reached its height between 100 B.C. and A.D. 750 and was aban- doned by the time the Aztecs arrived in the areain the 1300s. Morehart was conducting a study of ancient agricultural patterns and human landscape uses in the northern part of the Mexico Valley in 2007, when during a walking survey of the site he started noticing looters' pits that had turned up human bones. A subsequent season of excavations in 2012 turned up dozens more skulls. The results of the 2007 dig were just pub- lished in the academic journal Latin American Antiquity. While the Teotihuacan cul- ture and the Aztecs were known to practice human sacrifice, and remains of hundreds of victims have been found in their pyra- mids or other large structures, the Xaltocan mound "is like a bump in the landscape that you could really easily walk over and not know you're standing on it," Morehart said. "The interesting question is, why are we seeing this kind of sacrificial act that we often asso- ciate with something like Teoti- huacan or a big center. Why do we see this ... ina place that's not associated with these cities?" Physical anthropologist Abi- gaill Meza Penaloza of the Insti- tute of Anthropology at Mexico's National University said her team was still cleaning and assembling the skulls, but have a confirmed count of about 130 skulls so far, all of which appear to be of adult males. Meza Penaloza said it was the first find of its kind, both because of the location - a small, artifi- cial mound built in the middle of an agricultural field - and the kind of decapitations carried out there. She said mass sacri- fices had been documented at temple inaugurations of temple closings, but not in the middle of fields. She said it was also unusual in thatthe skulls appear tocome fromavaried population, includ- ing people who practiced cranial deformation and others who did not, as opposed to more homog- enous groups of sacrifice victims found in the past. The skulls were also found with a shorter length of verte- brae attached to the skulls than is the case of other such finds, suggesting the decapitation cut was made closer to the base of the skull. Still other strange details emerged: Morehart said some of the skulls were found with finger bones inserted into the eye sock- ets. "It was common enough that it was intentionally placed there in the eye socket," Morehart said, though the ritual signifi- cance of that remains unclear. Arizona State University Dr. Michael E. Smith, who was-not involved in the project, said "this is certainly an impressive and very puzzling find," adding, "I am not aware of any other finds ofmass burialsor mass sacrifices outside of major settlements." The key to the placement might be the natural springs that provided fresh, clean water in an area dominated by shal- low, brackish lakes. The springs existed for centuries until they were covered and tapped by pipes around the 1950s. The ancient inhabitants of Xaltocan apparently used those springs to water lakebed farm plots. Carv- ings associated with the water- god Tlaloc and corn and chile plants were found at the excava- tion site, suggesting it may have been an agricultural shrine. 11th-annual event to focus on 'healthy self-care' By LIANA ROSENBLOOM Daily StaffReporter Students and staff from col- leges and universities throughout the nation will come together in Ann Arbor at the end of Febru- ary to gain and share knowledge about managing depression on college campuses. The 11th Annual Depression on College Campuses conference will be held on Feb. 26 and 27, with a special focus on "healthy self-care." Trish Meyer, program direc- tor for outreach education for the University Depression Center, is one of the primary organizers of the conference. She said the goal of this year's conference is to help students manage symptoms of depression on a daily basis in a healthy way. There will be a series of speakers, panel discussions and workshops over the course of the two-day conference. "We're not talking about that students should be able to take care of this by themselves but in conjunction with professional treatment ... there are lots of strategies they can use, includ- ing exercise, better sleep, journ- aling ... that are healthy self-care strategies, as opposed to the more unhealthy self-care strategies such as drinking or drug use," Meyer said. Meyer said the stress of a col- lege environment can bring symptoms of depression to the forefront. "Given all of the otherstressors that are unique to a college set- ting, including lack of sleep and perhaps alcohol and substance abuse, it sort of creates the per- fect storm for people who have a vulnerability to developing these illnesses when they might first experience it," Meyer said. Increasing early diagnosis is a positive development and is help- ing many people with mental health disorders reachtheir goals, one of which may be going to col- lege.As aresult, college campuses need to be more aware of how to provide resources to these stu- dents, Meyer said. The conference is set apart by its multi-disciplinary structure, bringing experts from multiple fields and all community mem- bers are welcome. Meyer said organizing such a large conference has been a rewarding experience. "So often, on big campus like U of M, everybody's in their little area and they do their thing," Meyer said. "But the opportunity to kind of collaborate and con- nect across campus with people all working toward the same goal is also really valuable, and often leads to new collaborations." John Greden, the executive director of the University's Com- prehensive Depression Center, is one of three co-chairs of the conference planning committee. He too stressed the importance of conversation about depression on campuses. "We're dealing with illnesses that affect one in every six peo- ple in the country," Greden said. "What we're emphasizing this year is the identification of strat- egies for students and counselors and parents and everybody else to pick up on that really help the situation rather than send it back- wards. I think that's what the terms self-care and self-manage- ment mean." Greden said the conference began when the Board of Regents approved the formation of a cam- pus Depression Center. Shortly thereafter, there was a student suicide on campus. He said this event sparked the desire to hold a conference to learn and teach how to best handle depression in a college setting. Greden said the first confer- ence attracted attendees from nearly 50 campuses nationwide. Eleven years later, he said he hopes the conference is still mak- ing a difference. ' 4 44