The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, December 4, 2014 - 3A CONTRACEPTION From Page 1A erally comes in three different forms. One form, ParaGard, is hor- mone-free and made of copper. The second, Mirena, releases a small amount of a progestin hormone. The final method, Skyla, which was introduced in 2013 and is marketed primarily to young women who have not had a child, releases small amounts of the same hormone. Eighty-seven percent of under- graduates used some form of con- traception during their most recent instance of vaginal intercourse, according to the National College Health Assessment administered by UHS. Among those students, a majority said they used male con- doms or oral contraceptives. The survey found condoms and pills most popular among students, both of which are generally effec- tive in preventing pregnancy. Nine percent of women taking the pill will have an unintended pregnancy, compared to 18 percent of couples using male condoms, according to UHS. Laura McAndrews, UHS sexual health educator, said research and experience have demonstrated that students get a significant portion of their information about birth control and sex from their friends, causingthe perpetuation of stereo- types of what are perceived as pop- ular or safer birth control methods. "It has alot to do with the kind of education they have had access to, as well as the information theyhave gotten from their friends," McAn- drews said. "If your friends are using condoms and pills, those are goingtobethemethodsyoualready feel most familiar with. I think that as we start to see more people using IUDs and implants, more people that will be talking about them and becoming more familiar with them." While statistics show a high majority of women who properly use contraceptive methods such as condoms and pills will not become pregnant, IUDs and implants prac- tically ensure that an unintended pregnancy will not occur. Failure rates of IUDs and implants are less than 1 percent, but they are being isediby 6 percent of'ndergradu- ates and 0.5 percent of graduates. "We are finding that many stu- dents feel they do not know enough about IUDs and implants to feel comfortable using them,". McAn- STRESS From Page 1A seling and Psychological Services, believes one of the greatest barri- ers to treatment for students is the belief that stress is always a normal part of the college experience. "There's some truth to that," he said. "I think that the biggest myth is that I have to experience that stress and anxiety almost everyday, or all 15 weeks of the semester, and thatissimplynottrue." Sevig said stress and anxiety are the most frequently documented reasons that students come in to CAPS, a trend that started about five or six years ago. Beyond the perceived stigma, Eisenberg added that a lack of urgency might also be contribut- ing to the small number of students who seek help. "It's got us thinking about the parallels between seeking help for mental health and things like diet and exercise, or other health behav- iors where peopleseemtohave fairly good knowledge and fairly positive attitudes about the behavior, and yet a large percentage of cases don't actually adopt the healthy behavior ... I think that there are some really subtle interventions that can really changebehaviorsintermsofmental health." Dalack, the professor of psychia- try, said mental illness should be looked at like any other physical ail- ment, such as the flu or a high fever. "There's a part in the middle of the flu where you can't remember what it felt like to feelgood,"he said. "And you feel like, I'm never going to feel well again.' When you think about that and depression, that can be pretty terrifying, especially if it's affecting your psychological state." Looking for help Dalack recognizes that "the sup- port network is key, whether that's friends, family, professors, teach- ers, or counselors, because we all tend to not recognize issues when it's us versus in somebody else. Our own insight can be undermined by our own wish to not identify with being sick. Partly it's education, and drewssaid."Another issue has been that students do not want a foreign object in their bodies or are con- cerned about the cost and issues related to insurance coverage." In September, the American Academy of Pediatrics announced a change in its recommendations, stating it now advises that doctors recommend intrauterine devices over other methods of contracep- tion for teenagers who are or plan to become sexually active. "For the first time, the organi- zation recommends that pediatri- cians discuss long-acting reversible contraceptives before other birth control methods for teens, citing the 'efficacy, safety and ease of use' of long-acting reversible contracep- tion, such as IUDs and progestin implants," the report says. Though the cost is substantial, generally about $600 for a student without insurance, the device is effective at preventing pregnancy for as long as 10 years and requires only one application. McAndrews said she has found price to be a con- cern for some students, but not nec- essarily justforthose students who do not have insurance. "Most insurance plans will cover IUD or implant costs, but if a stu- dent is on their parents'health plan, they may be nervous about using their insurance for contraceptives," she said. "We encourage studentsto speak with a medical professional abouthowtohavethatconversation with their parents, because most parents would much rather their child have thebest methods ofbirth control, even if it means having an uncomfortable conversation.' In a survey conducted by The Michigan Daily, 13 percent of stu- dents received information about birth control from friends, com- pared to 3 percent who received it from campus resources and 54 per- cent from a medical professional. LSA senior Sophia Kotov, former president of Students for Choice, said she has heard concerns from many students who are hesitant to obtain birth control from UHS. "The (UHS) doctor was super useful and helped me figure out what type of birth control worked best for me," Kotov said. "I think UHS has a reputation for being unhelpful and ineffective, and I think that deters a lot of students from getting their birth control questions answered there. UHS needs to change their image as well as the quality of their care. Honest- ly, the pamphlets in UHS look like they are from the '90s, I don't know how relevant they are to women's lives now" Kotov said many of her friends, who are also involved in the Department of Women's Studies or Students for Choice, are fairly well informed, but she believes the majority of students still don't fully understand how birth control works, where to get it and what methods are best suited to their needs. "I think trying to remember information from sex education or going through the process of sched- uling an appointment with UHS and remembering what your doc- tor says combined with the avail- ability of so much information on the Internet makes it difficult, and people definitely go to their friends with issues or questions alot of the time," Kotovsaid. She said her friends were sur- prised to hear she used an IUD because of the stigma they associ- ated with the device - namely that it is onlyused by older women who have already had children. "I have had so many friends who react stronglyto findingoutIhave an IUD, so I definitely see that stigma playing out in mylife,"Kotovsaid. The Daily survey found that when studentsare choosing a meth- od of birth control, effectiveness is by far the most important factor, followed onlybysafetyand the pos- sibility of harmful side effects. For the 5 percent of students who said cost is the most important factor when choosing birth con- trol, condoms seem to be the most obvious choice, as they are free for students. For students who pre- fer another brand over LifeStyles, the most common brand available at UHS, UHS has started to offer Magnum Trojan condoms begin- ning this year. Trojan condoms purchased through downtown mer- chants such as drug stores generally cost about $7 for a pack of three. Oral contraceptives, however, can become costly over time. For a student with insurance, this cost may be minimal or nonexistent depending on providers and plans, but for students who do not have insurance, and, for example, pick up their birth control at CVS down- town, the cost per month could be around $20, according to UHS. There are options - though seem- ingly more inconvenient ones - for minimizing these costsby picking{ up prescriptions at locations far- ther from downtown, where the cost for an uninsured studentcould be as little as $8 per month. INNOVATION From Page 1A The new curricular offering comes as a result of recommenda- tions from a campus-wide entre- preneurship taskforce established in May 2012 to survey campus offerings in the field for under- graduates. Thomas Zurbuchen, senior counselor for entrepreneurship innovation and Innovate Blue's head, said in a release that the new minor is meant to address the challenges ofthe modern world. "We believe all students have the capacity to be innovators," he said. "This campus-wide minor provides them with the knowl- edge,skillsand motivation to build the skills attributed to entrepre- neurial behavior and innovative thinking necessary to succeed." Jeni Olney, student services program coordinator for entrepre- neurial programs, said Entrepre- neurial Business Basics outlines the fundamentals of business for aspiring entrepreneurs, whereas Entrepreneurial Creativity is "more of an intrinsic look at what makes entrepreneurs and creative thinkersdifferent." "The two courses combined make up the foundation, the core for the new minor," Olney said. "I refer to it as the hard and soft skills of being an entrepreneur." The minor's "practicum"is also made up of two courses, titled Entrepreneurship Practicum and Advanced Entrepreneurship Practicum. Olney said these will be taken in tandem to provide a hands-on, yearlong immersion into entrepreneurship, moving from conceptualizing and pitch- ing a business venture to imple- menting and launching it. Additionally, a minimum of three elective credits is required to finish the minor. A complete list of qualifying courses is available on the Innovate Blue website. The website also states that entrepreneurial extracurricu- lar activities are required for a minimum of two semesters. This "activity" may include, for example, working on an outside business venture or participating in an entrepreneurship-focused student organization. Olney added some of these course options were already available through the Center for Entrepreneurship's Program in Entrepreneurship, which pro- vides a certificate in entrepre- neurship as opposed to a full minor. The certificate program requires nine credits rather than 15, comprising the two "core" classes and one elective. The Innovate Blue website notes, however, that the PIE will be phased out and "is only available to those students who declared the PIE prior to Fall term 2015." Kristen Kerecman, marketing and communications manager for Innovate Blue, said the goal of implementing the minor was to make entrepreneurship educa- tion more accessible to non-Engi- neering students. Many electives previously offered through the PIE were focused on engineering. "What came from this campus program in entrepreneurship ... there was really a need for some- thing, and a demand from 'stu- dents to really have something that was truly campus-wide and accessible to people from allback- grounds,"Kerecman said. "LSA is the natural home for something like that." Olney said the end goal is to create multidisciplinary teams in each of the University's colleges, so each college can "have own- ership over the curriculum that goes into the minor." ARCADE From Page 1A things like Donkey Kong and Ms. Pac-Man, things I grew up with, are still here," Vogel said. "So it can take the older people back to the younger days when we were first introduced to those types of games." The 10,000 square-foot estab- lishment began when eight-year- old East Lansing native Ted Arnold and his two brothers set up a pinball machine in a garage in 1973, The Michigan Daily reported in 2012. However, run- ning the business in a residen- tial area was illegal, so once city inspectors discovered the opera- tion, the brothers closed the garage shop and opened in Mon- roe, and then in East Lansing. Opening in a former dough- nut bakery, the arcade had a life-sized fiberglass elephant on the roof- which the brothers- painted pink to attract attention. The business has used the pink- elephant as its mascot since. The Arnolds soon expanded to Ann Arbor during the 1980s, eventu- ally opening seven arcades in total, including the Pinball Pete's just off the Diag. However, during the mid- 1980s, people began buying the first home console gaming sys- tems instead of going to arcades, and arcades began to disappear from U.S. suburbs and cities. Ann Arbor's arcade history is an example of this decline: the six other arcades in the Ann Arbor and East Lansing areahave since closed, leaving Pinball Pete's alone, according to Petterson. "It just got to be too much," he said. "There's only so many hours in a day, and there's not a whole lot of people that can fix these machines and most of them aren't around anymore." However, as the only arcade in the area, Pinball Pete's has attracted regulars from Detroit and even afew from pinball clubs in Ohio, accordingto Petterson. "The older people will always come to the arcade. It's the younger people we're worried about. But that's why we have the mix of stuff." Vogel's daughter, LSA fresh- man Kate Vogel, said she contin- ues to bea Pinball Pete's regular, following in her mother's foot- steps. "When I was in middle school it was a good place for people to come and hang out," Kate Vogel said. "We would go to Bubble (Island) in the summer and then come here and just play for hours. We would play air hockey for a long time and then a rowing game. It was really fun and weird and just kind of a thing to do." Though the recession and gen- eral decline ofthe industryheve-- been hardfor thercade, Petter- son remains optimistic. Evan Williams, a comput- er science student at Eastern Michigan University and a pre- vious employee of Pinball Pete's, agreed. "I think it will make a come- back," he said. "Pinball Pete's just got the new Walking Dead (pinball) machine and aMustang machine last summer. The new tables are honestly my favorite." However, if popularity increases again it will come with a variety of new problems, espe- cially for the old machines like Donkey Kong and Pac-Man. Petterson said production of the parts used in these old machines stopped long ago. This problem is especially apparent with the classiccathode ray tube moni- tors of older machines, which are being replaced with LCD moni- tors by producers. "LCDs in the classic stuff doesn't look right," Petterson said. "Donkey Kong on a flat screen has blurrier lines because it upscales for the resolution, and it doesn't look right. I spend a lot of time dialing in monitors to try and keep them looking nice. It's a huge investment to fix up old games." Petterson also pointed to high real estate costs in Ann Arbor and the electricity bills associ- ated with running an arcade as challenges in maintaining the more than 30-year-old business. As difficult as survival has been for the arcade, Lisa Vogel is happy Pinball Pete's has sur- vived for future generations to enjoy. "I think it's a great place for people to gather. It's not a place for people to come and party and get drunk; it's just something that's nice and wholesome and clean fun," she said. "Pinball Pete's was a popular hangout for people to come and play pool and pinball. Back then it was 25 cents for a game of pinball, and now it's more like a dollar." "It's been here for so long, my parents used to come here. It's been a huge part of every- one's life, so I'd say it's been a huge part of Ann Arbor. I think it's definitely a part of the downtown culture. It's a safe place for people to get together and just have fun." Kate Vogel agreed. Pinball Pete's is home to both classic pinball and arcade games, as well as pool and air hockey for the newer regulars, creating a safe atmosphere where Univer- sity students can escape their studies for an hour or two with friends. When asked if the establish- ment would last, Petterson had this to say: "We're still here, and we're not going anywhere." partly it's overcoming the stigma ... I view it both as an individual thing as well as importance of the friend network." He said efforts have been made to educate RAs in dorms as well as facultyandGSIs,whomaybesable to intervene if they see someone who is at risk. Eisenberg and the Healthy Minds Network have started a student-leader coalition that meets every two weeks and joins leaders of a variety of student organiza- tions. Some of these groups - such as PULSE, Active Minds and Own It - havea specific focus on health and well-being,while others suchas Central Student Government have established branches focusing on such issues. There is hope that the coalition will play a large role in dis- seminating information about men- tal health to large portions of the University. In addition, Eisenberg said he and his teamhope to create new courses in which students will help with the production of the brief videos that the Healthy Minds Network pro- duces. Such courses would focus on a variety of disciplines, from film production to psychology to social marketing and dissemination. If the program receives funding, these courses could be offered at the Uni- versity as early as Winter 2016. Wolverine Wellness, a division of UHS with the goal of promoting overall wellness on campus, piloted wellness coachinglast January. Stu- dents can see a wellness coach who is able to provide tools and strate- gies to those concerned about high stress levels. Similar programs are also in place at Ohio State University and West Virginia University. Within UHS, there is a proac- tive focus that allows students to set individualized goals for themselves. Coaching begins with a 90-minute session, and participants can set up regular appointments in order to fol- lowup withgoals and track progress. Wolverine Wellness Director Mary Jo Desprez explained the importance of the wellness model and all of its different dimensions in relation to wellness coaching. The wellness model encompasses many different aspects of life, including intellectual, physical, financial, emotional, mental, environmental, occupational, social and spiritual health. "We help the student take a long, deep breath and look at how they are doing in each of the different dimensions, and understand how they sort of are interdependent on each other," she said. "Really what they can do, in wellness coaching, is self-assess and focus in on one or multiple areas and they can make goals for them." "The University ... is to really start to understand that students are whole people, they're not just thebraininthe classroom,"Desprez said. "When you ask students what their definition of success is, they say'my GPA' and 'if I get a job.' Our collective job is to say it's much more holistic than that." To expand the University's role in promoting mental health, Eisen- berg said he hopes to integrate the mental health checkup process with academic advising. Such an effort would demonstrate the link between health and academic suc- cess, he said. "We want to normalize it and make it part of a routine,"he said. CAPS provides traditional one- on-one counseling, but also engages students in a variety of other ways. For example, in 2011, CAPS opened the Wellness Zone, which allows students to simply walk in and use the available facilities, which include massage chairs, meditation cushions, yoga mats, a couch for napping,alamp for seasonal depres- sion and even agamingsystem. Additionally, CAPS offers differ- ent workshops, among other types of support, in order to reach out to more students. Regarding CAPS services, Imir- zian said, "I know people that have (used CAPS). I've heard mixed things. I've heard it's hard to get access or get appointments... it's like you have an issue right now, so you want something immediately, but I've alsoheardgreatthingsaboutit." While Shapiro said she does not know much about CAPS, she said she would definitely be interested in learning more about it if it could help her with her stress levels. TESTIMONY From Page 1A Singh told the committee this was a turning point for the state, which would join 19 others in having similar policies to the amendment he proposed. "(This is) a historic day to ... tell the rest of the country who we are, what we stand for and what our values are," he said. He also told the commit- tee that excluding transgender people would be the same as condoning discrimination, a message echoed by several of the other speakers. Gilmour, who was one of a few openly gay executives during his time at Ford, said businesses are concerned that the current lack of protections for LGBTQ indi- viduals disincentivizes people from coming to work in Michi- gan. "Concepts don't develop themselves, cars don't sell them- selves ... and no organization can afford to leave out a segment of the population," Gilmour said. "Now is the time to stop leav- ing out the LGBT community. We need the talent," he added. All of the speakers in favor of modifying the ELCRA except for Foster supported Singh's more inclusive amendment. In speaking for his bill, Foster acknowledged the con- troversy surrounding it. He has faced criticism from both sides of the aisle, and his support for the proposed amendment was a major point of contention dur- ing the Republican primary election for his seat in August, which he lost. "Some people think the bill goes too far," he said. "Others think it doesn't go far enough. I say it's the next positive step." Opponents of the bill - speaking for several several conservative religious groups, including the National Chris- tian Leadership Council, rep- resentatives of the Michigan Christian Coalition and the Michigan Family Forum - questioned the bill's neces- sity and impact. They also expressed concerns about potential consequences for reli- gious freedom in the state. Keith Den Hollander, a representative of the Michi- gan Christian Coalition, told the committee his opposition stemmed from concerns with the efficacy of the bills rather than morality. "I don't accept the premise that by changing the law, we will change people's hearts," he said. Lansing attorney David Kallman, who represented the Michigan branch of Citizens for Traditional Values and the Michigan Family Forum at the meeting, said similar laws in other states have had negative impacts on religious freedom, especially for small businesses. "Bakeries, photographers, on and on - there is case after case where this law is being used as a sword; it's not being used as a shield," he said. "These laws are being used to bully and silence individuals acting on their religious conscience." No additional Commerce Committee meeting regarding the amendments is currently scheduled, but the House Judi- ciary Committee is expected to debate a third bill closely tied to the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act, the proposed Mich- igan Religious Freedom Resto- ration Act, on Thursday. The Michigan RFRA, pro- posed by House Speaker Jase Bolger (R-Marshall) paral- lels existing federal legisla- tion and would grant broad exemptions to state laws if they conflict with an individual's religious beliefs. Bolger has said he would require its pas- sage before allowing an ELCRA amendment to come to the House floor, a position Demo- crats have decried. A t