6A - Monday, March 17, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6A - Monday, March 17, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom BASKETBALL From Page 1A really focused on this first game." Michigan ties don't exactly run deep into Spartanburg, S.C., but Wofford assistant coach Darris Nichols happens to be a former player under Beilein at West Vir- ginia. "(He) is one of the smartest, brightest point guards I have ever had," Beilein said. "I wish he real- ly didn't understand our offense at all. But he knows everything about it, so we have a challenge with a guy on the other bench knowing everything we are going to do." To hear Michigan talk about it, the team could hardly be both- ered by its NCAA Tournament seed. "People talk about one, two, three, four seed," Beilein said. "None of us coaches really care about that. Or at least this coach doesn't." Added Stauskas: "That wasn't really mentioned at all. We want- ed to win this tournament. We understood if we won, we could HEALTH From Page 1A presented their ideas to the pub- lit at Friday's event.. Out of the five finalist teams, three winning teams were cho- sen as the standouts, with one winning team from each of the three competition categories. Each winning team received a $2500 prize, and the grand prize winner had the opportunity to pitch their idea at the TEDx- UofM conference Saturday. Enliven, winner of b6th the grand prize and the Detecting Disease and Risk Control cat- egory, is a cell phone applica- tion aimed to decrease anxiety and depression in young adult women by promoting self- wvorth. "The point of the app is to work on individual character strengths-kindness, selfless- ness, vulnerability, self-accep- tance," said Nursing graduate student Meaghan Cotter, a proj- ect member. "You work on them by doing what we call 'Daily- Do's,' which can be anything from a self-reflection to a pay it forward in the community." possibly get a one seed. But we weren't too concerned about that. We're happy with a two seed." The only other time the Wol- verines were tabbed as a two- seed, they were upset in the second round by No. 7-seed towa State in 1986. That game was also played in the middle of Big Ten country, in Minneapolis. "The NCAA has been so good this past couple years of finding teams and getting them close to home without putting them in their home arena," Beilein said. "So it's really good. We have great fans all through the footprint of the Big Ten. Particularly in that area, the Chicago area, we will really draw well." It'sthe25thtournamentappear- ance in school history, and it's the fourth time the school has been a two-seed or better. The Wolver- ines are 7-4 overall in the Midwest region and 15-3 overall in their opening March Madness matchup. The top seed in the region is Wich- ita State, the only undefeated team in college basketball. Maybe it was that Michigan had just lost to its rival Michi- gan State, or maybe the team has recalibrated to a new normal, but LiquidGoldConcept, a more efficient breast pump to serve working mothers, won the Empowering the Underserved category. Public Health student Ileisha Sanders said her expe- rience working on the project taught her important lessons in entrepreneurship. "It really makes you think about sustainability, and you can use entrepreneurship to do that," Sanders said. "That's not, so typical of what public health does." The winner in the Technol- ogy-Enabled Health and Well- ness Category was My Waiting Room, a cell phone application meant to personalize a patient's waiting room experience. Vic Strecher, director of inno- vation and social entrepreneur- ship in the School of Public Health, and Ann Verhey-Henke, associate director of innovation and social entrepreneurship in the School of Public Health, led the competition. Strecher said ,the creative outlet provided through the competition was overdue for Public Health stu- dents. "We realized that a lot of stu- dents come here to the School of Public Health now with a very it didn't think much of its NCAA draw. "I don't know if it's that much excitement," said fifth-year senior center Jordan Morgan. "It's not like we didn't expect to be in the tournament." That speaks to the direction of the program, because Beilein cer- tainly remembers different in his coaching career. "I've been in that room when you lost the (conference) cham- pionship and you weren't going anywhere," he said. "Or maybe the NIT. This is huge to walk from that room and go see us in the NCAA Tournament. It's terrific." Morgan is the only one on the team to have experienced a sea- son that Michigan failed to reach the NCAA Tournament, but for the rest of the team, that concept seems foreign. "With the tradition in this program, you start to expect that you're going to be in the tourna- ment," Stauskas said. "It doesn't mean we're gonna take this for granted. But all year the tourna- ment was kind of an expectation for all of us. So the fact that we're here now, we're just happy, and we're excited, ready to go." strong interest in social entre- preneurship, and creating a new public health," Strecher said. "I found that they have wonderful ideas, but there is no avenue to take those early ideas and create deeper concepts from them and, even beyond that, create prod- ucts or services." The presentation featured nationally renowned poetic voice Sekou Andrews. Through his pieces on the growing rela- tionship between public health and technology, he elicited laughs and a standing ovation from the audience. As a former fifth grade teacher, Andrews said he maintains a commitment to education. "When a school calls, I tend to come," Andrews said. "It was an opportunity to inspire on a topic that I care about - innova- tions in health." Andrews said one message of his poems was for people to embrace change. "Technology is causing the world to move faster and faster," Andrews said. "Those who can keep up are going to be success- ful whether it's in entrepreneur- ial endeavors, whether it's in healthcare endeavors, whether it's in capital endeavors." Life is good brand comes to Ann Arbor in new shop Clothing brand opens store on Main Street By CHRISTY SONG Daily StaffReporter Optimists rejoice. Life is good has opened its lat- est retail location in Ann Arbor. The store opened its doors March 9 and hosted its grand opening Saturday and Sunday, which featured Michigan-relat- ed Life is good gear, free give- aways and a 20 percent discount off of a purchase of $50 or more. The retail store took the place of Seyfried Jewelers, located at 304 S. Main Street, after six and a half weeks of renovation. The store occupies 1,000 square feet and features Life is good products from T-shirts to shorts to water bottles. The Black Pearl, the next door sea- food and martini bar, will use the back roomofthe store for private events. Store owner Mark Messmore, a School of Education alum, said that he decided to open the shop because the brand is well suited for Ann Arbor shoppers. Life is good is noted for its grinning mascot, Jake. Mess- more said the brand was tradi- tionally a resort-town mainstay. The company is based in Mas- sachusetts and has 4,500 retail stores nationwide, all privately owned. "They are sort of turning the brand in a new direction and it's more toward college campuses, toward the younger professional look," Messmore said. "It still caters to the outdoor activist type person. It's the right kind of mix and it goes really well with the Ann Arbor crowd." Messmore said Main Street is an ideal location for the store due to the foot traffic in the area. When guests are waiting for their reservations at nearby restaurants, Messmore said he anticipates they will peruse local shops like his own in the mean- time. Messmore does not anticipate competition from nearby stores like Moosejaw. He said Life is good products are unique and complimentarytotheir products. Messmore said his ultimate goal isto provide a personal, gen- eral neighborhood shop where customers can get the full Life is good experience. "I think as this brand grows and repositions itself to maintain its loyalty to tried and true but also turn to a younger crowd," Messmore said. "This store is a pivot point for the brand and I think that it will lend itself really well to the people here." Regular store hours are10 a.m. to 8 p.m. from Sunday through Thursday and 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. from on Fridays and Saturdays. Rescue workers continue clean-up work from blast Cause of deadly NYC explosion still undetermined NEW YORK (AP) - Emer- gency workers sifted through debris Saturday from the site of a deadly explosion at two New York City apartment buildings as they worked to clear the way for investigators to search for clues that might reveal what caused the blast. Fire Commissioner Salva- tore Cassano said rescue work- ers reached the rear of the basement Saturday but said that investigation of the pip- ing and meters in the front of the basement that will help explain what caused the blast that killed eight people will likely start on Sunday. He said that the National Transportation Safety Board should be able to start pres- sure-testing the pipes Sunday. . Arson detectives and fire marshals have been waiting to enter the basements to exam- ine meters, check pipes and inspect any possible ignition sources, such as light switches, that might have caused the blast. The theory that the explo- sion was due to a gas leak gained momentum Friday after the NTSB, which investigates pipeline accidents, said under- ground tests conducted in the hours after the explosion reg- istered high concentrations of natural gas. The NTSB will conduct its own inquiry after police and fire officials deter- mine what might have caused the blast. Cassano said about 15 per- cent of the debris was left on the site late Saturday after- noon. An uplifting moment from the painstaking recovery effort came as crews pulled a large water-damaged Bible from the rubble of the Spanish Christian Church, which was located in one of the two destroyed build- ings. About two dozen people, including clergy members, car- ried the Bible in a solemn pro- cession near the East Harlem site. "This was in the depths of the rubble. Somehow God pro- tected it," said Rick del Rio, a bishop at the Church of God. The church's pastor, Thom- as Perez, suffered heart palpi- tations when he saw the Bible, said Letitia James, the city's public advocate. He was taken by ambulance to a hospital as a precaution, supporters said. Cassano said Perez was overwhelmed with emotion. "It was singed but it meant an awful lot to the pastor," he said. "It showed the pastor that they'll be rebuilding." ENJOY Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com READING THE DAILY? 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