The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 25, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS Research exposes Ann Arbor SOUP grants over BIRMINGHAM, Mich. e p ssA b rga t West Point cadet negative effects Of $1,000 to student organiZation from Mich. named Rhodes scholar A 21-year-old West Point cadet from Michigan who says she wants to use her math skills to help attack Detroit's social prob- lems after leaving the Army is one of 32 Americans named Sunday as Rhodes scholars, who will get the opportunity to spend two to three years at Britain's Oxford Univer- sity. Calla Glavin, who grew up in Birmingham, is a math major at the U.S. Military Academy, where she played goaltender for the * Army's women's lacrosse team. She also goaltended for Birming- ham Seaholm High School, help- ing her team win a state lacrosse championship her junior year. Glavin told The Associated Press that she learned of her selection Saturday in Chicago at a meeting of those applying for the prestigious program. Rhodes scholarships are awarded for aca- demics, character and athletic achievement. TULSA, Okla. 4 dead, 1 wounded in north Tulsa shooting Four people were killed and a fifth person was hospitalized after being shot in a Tulsa resi- dence, police said Sunday. The victims were shot by a lone gunman at close range Sat- urday night, police said. The Tulsa World reports that officers are looking for a suspect. Police said a shooting involv- ing multiple victims was report- ed to authorities about 7 p.m. Investigators said the home had been the scene of several drug arrests. Officers arrived to find two people dead, a man and a woman both between 30 and 40 years old,. responders said. A second woman, who appeared to be in her 50s, was pronounced dead at a hospital, said Kelli Bruer, EMSA spokeswoman. McALLEN, Texas. Suspect in Houston triple homicide captured A man wanted in connec- tion with an apartment shoot- ing near Houston that left three people dead was captured Sun- day, according to Harris County authorities. Johnathan Sanchez, 25, also known as "J Boi," was captured early Sunday in east Harris County by the Gulf Coast Violent Offenders and Fugitives Task Force, according to a statement from the Harris County Sheriff's Office. Details about the arrest were not available. Sanchez has been charged with * capital murder in connection with the Nov. 20, 2013, shooting at the Peppermill Place Apart- ments in a suburb 25 miles north- west of downtown Houston. KIEV, Ukraine Tens of thousands rally in Kiev for closer EU ties About 50,000 demonstrators rallied in the center of Kiev on Sunday to demand that Ukraine's government reverse course and sign a landmark agreement with the European Union in defiance of Russia. The protest was the biggest Ukraine has seen since the peace- ful 2004 Orange Revolution, which overturned a fraudulent presidential election result and brought a Western-leaning gov- ernment to power. The rally was led by Ukraine's top opposition figures, who called for the protests to continue until President Viktor Yanukovych agreed to sign the free trade and political association deal with the EU'at a summit on Friday. -Compiled from Daily wire reports anti-gay legislation F Net pi Study: lack of LGB equalityhas detrimental effect on public health By YARDAIN AMRON Daily StaffReporter New research out of the Schoolof Public Health breathes urgency to the polarizing issue of gay marriage, by highlight- ing the depressive and psycho- social impact of such restrictive legislation on young gay men, especially in regard to their fatherhood aspirations. While arecent Gallup pollindi- cated that 52 percent of Ameri- cans support the legalization of gay marriage - up from one in four in 1996 - same-sex marriage remains illegal in 34states. The study was conducted by Assistant Public Health Prof. Jose Bauermeister and was pub- lished in this month's issue of the Journal of Youth and Ado- lescence. The report builds upon a growing body of research on the psychological effects of gov- ernment policy. Bauermeister analyzed the survey results against state- specific LGBTQ policies, includ- ing bans on marriage equality, same-sex joint parenting and second parent adoption. He stressed the importance of including policies not just lim- ited to marriage equality saying less frequently discussed poli- cies are also restrictive. "You stick another layer into it and you start seeing a lot of parenting laws and bans in place that prohibit either a single gay or lesbian man or woman to adopt or to have a child and then have a second same-sex par- ent added as a guardian of that child, or to adoptcjointly," Bauer- meister said. The results confirmed Bau- ermeister's hypothesis that men who plan on raising children had higher levels of depression and lower levels of self-esteem in states with LGBTQ restric- tive policies than men with the same aspirations in states with- out the bans. Furthermore, in policy- restrictive states, the more a participant valued his father- hood aspirations, the more symptoms of psychological dis- tress he reported. Bauermeister said the impli- cations of such findings might help cast light on the often-myo- pic view in the United States in general. "We usually think about how policies affect our current behav- ior, but this is basically telling us that policy can affect future intention of behavior," he said. "You don't have to be a parent right now to start feeling the psy- chological consequences of dis- tress. You can actually already start seeing some of that even if you start thinking about having a UAID From Page 2A when doctors could not explain the symptoms. Only later did they realize that patients were infected with HIV. Riddell explained that while the virus is often successfully suppressed nowadays, the dif- ficulty with curing HIV is that it's not only stored in the immune system, but also has reservoirs in other parts of the body. Thus patients who have been relieved of HIV from their immune system run the risk of the virus being released from the reservoirs. Riddell also recognized "poor medication adherence" kid 20 years down the line." Public Health Prof. Gary Harper said politicians that pro- pose such restrictive policies are often more concerned with get- ting reelected than with the con- sequences the policies produce. "(Politicians) need to real- ize that those restrictions do have real-world influences on individuals, especially adoles- cents who are developing their sense of self and sense of who they are," Harper said. "That's a really critical time and these restrictive and oppressive laws can have an extremely damag- ing impact on the adolescent." Harper's emphasis on ado- lescents comes from 20 years of experience as a clinical child psychologist with a focus on young gay men. He said Bauer- meister's research underscores worrisome implications for the younger demographic. "If from very early on you were told that you are not as good as everybody else, then you are notgoingto develop ahealthy sense of self-esteem because at every turn you are told you're not as good as other people," Harper said. "When we have marriage restriction laws, we are basically saying to a young gay person, 'Your love for another person is not recognized by the state, so that means it's not as good as het- erosexual love."' For the study, male par- ticipants completed a 30- to 45-minute online questionnaire that focused on relationship and partner characteristics, sexual behaviors, psychological well- being, and sexing behaviors. The 1,683 eligible 18- to 24-year olds were predomi- nantly recruited through Facebook and peer referral. Targeted advertising and mon- etary incentives were used to produce the large sample size, of which 65 percent was White Caucasian - considered racial- ly and ethnically diverse for research standards. Harper is one of 25 research- ers in the Center for Sexuality & Health Disparities, referred to as the SexLab, which Bau- ermeister founded in 2009 and currently directs. Bauermeister said he hopes to build upon his research by exploring motherhood aspira- tions of lesbians and bisexual women and by lengthening the study timeframe to examine longstanding effects of indi- vidual policy on psychological wellbeing. Hawaii and Illinois recently became the most recent states to pass legislation legalizing gay marriage. Harper is happy with the progress, but said there is a fundamental problem. "If we live ina countrywhere we say that all people are creat- ed equal and we have protection on almost every other identity characteristic under the sun," Harper said. "Why is it this one factor is the only factor that we federally, legally discriminate?" - patients missing their pre- scribed doses - as the biggest contributor to HIV persis- tence. "The best way to get patients to adhere to medication is to have a partner or spouse," Rid- dell said. Engineering graduate stu- dent Aarthi Arab is the co- founder and president of the University's chapter of the United Against Infectious Dis- eases. She noted that the speak- ers were very interesting and differed from each other. "We have to grow or collabo- rate with other organizations to get more people interested," Arab added. The World AIDS Week is from Dec. 1 to Dec. 7. As the B of pe winte alley, friend to the in the Th dents intere nearb the s micro ing c Arbor soup, local to pre nizati Arbor Aft atten zatiou won 1 the ev LS. son, f SOUP Ann to a g zine. Detro rison energ ativit3 rood Recovery "I thought Ann Arbor would be a great city for that," Morrison twork wins event said. "Especially since students have a lot of resources available roceeds to fight to them and to collaborate with the city of Ann Arbor as a whole, food waste I thought, would be great". Food Recovery Network U of By SARA YUFA M, which won $1,074 at the end Daily StaffReporter of the night, works to fight food waste on campus by distributing a man turns the corner by food to Washtenaw County resi- lind Pig and sees the line dents who are in need. Student ople waiting in the cold volunteers recover leftover food r night extending into the daily from Mary Markley Din- he worries aloud to his ing Hall and West Quad Dining I that they might not get in Hall at the University and deliver exciting even taking place it to Food Gatherers, which dis- club. tributes it to food organizations e line of University stu- throughout the county. Ann Arbor locals and The final proposal of the night sted people from cities came from Roundtable, an orga- y waited for entrance to nization that provides crash- econd Ann Arbor SOUP, a course lessons each week in a -granting dinner celebrat- new skill, hobby, subject or trade reative projects in Ann taught by a different member. r. For $5, attendees received Members were seeking funds to and other food donated by hire professional teachers for a restaurants while listening conference. sentations from four orga- 826 Michigan, a nonprofit ions working in the Ann organization in Ann Arbor that r community. serves children ages six to 18 with er the presentations, the free creative writing and tutor- dees voted and the organi- ing programs, presented their s garnering the most votes proposal to keep their Drop-in the money gathered from Writing sessions, and WCBN, a vent. mostly volunteer-staffed, free- A senior Isabella Morri- form radio station located in the founder of the Ann Arbor basement of the University Stu- , first brought the event to dent Activities Building, also pre- Arbor last March thanks sented proposals. trant from Sharable maga- In addition to the funds raised After experiencing her first from ticket sales, the University's it SOUP last summer, Mor- Central Student Government will said she was inspired by the reimburse Ann Arbor SOUP for y, collaboration and cre- the cost of the event. y of the event. At the conclusion of the event, Morrison said she was pleased with the combination of Uni- versity students and Ann Arbor locals since the first event was mostly students. This year, Ann Arbor SOUP received 12 proposals, mostly from nonprofits in Ann Arbor and students groups, but also one from an Eatsern Michigan University student. Together with the core group of 10 people who helped organize Ann Arbor SOUP, they chose four proposals that would benefit the Ann Arbor community most for the night's event. "There were a few that we felt just needed to kind of work on their idea a little bit more, it wasn't that clear, so we encour- aged them to apply to the next one," Morrison said. "So we'll check in on them again in a few months and encourage them to apply again." Morrison said she hopes to have two more SOUP events this school year. ReSource Fun, a student- led organization that provides services in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti for financial literacy, won $900 at the first event last spring, then named UM SOUP. Since then, it has launched a pilot program, and has been working with clients on bud- geting, debt management and credit building. Morrison said she changed the name from UM SOUP to Ann Arbor SOUP because she wanted to include the whole Ann Arbor community and bridge the divide between students and other com- munity members. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @MICHIGANDAILY hair and skin care classes STARTING NOW! CHECK US OUT ON FACEBOOK! We'll only post cool things, unlike that guy who you keep forgetting to unfriend. FACEBOOK.COM/MICHIGANDAILY . AV EDA INSTITUTE Aann arbor ur sico arIya r C all 511 349-4213+T1DY! Financial aid available to those who qualty. 333 Maynard St Ann Arbor, Michigan I