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February 25, 2015 - Image 2

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2A — Wednesday, February 25, 2015
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

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THREE THINGS YOU
SHOULD KNOW TODAY

Michigan
football

coach Jim Harbaugh
compared the first day
of spring practice to

New Years, Thanksgiving,
& Christmas. But for a self-
professed “jackhammer,” that
meant business as usual.
>> FOR MORE, SEE SPORTS, PG. 8A

2

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

Live painting
performance

WHAT: Congolese painter
Sapin Makengele will create
a new painting reflecting
the current state of student
politics in the Congo.
WHO: University of
Michigan Museum of Art
WHEN: Today from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.
WHERE: Museum of Art

Environment
lecture

WHAT: Vanderbilt Law
Prof. Michael Vandenbergh
will speak about private
climate governance.
WHO: Michigan Law
Environmental Law
and Policy Program
WHEN: Today at 11:50 a.m.
WHERE: South
Hall, Room 1020
Guest recital

WHAT: Listen to a
performance by Anthony
Taylor, a professor of
clarinet at the University of
North Carolina, Greensboro.
WHO: School of Music,
Theatre & Dance
WHEN: Tonight at 8 p.m.
WHERE: Walgreen Drama
Center, Stamps Auditorium

l Please report any
error in the Daily
to corrections@
michigandaily.com.

The Justice Department
will
not
be
filing

charges against George

Zimmerman,
ABC
News

reported.
Zimmerman

shot and killed 17-year-old
Trayvon
Martin
after
a

confrontation in 2012.
1

420 Maynard St.

Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327

www.michigandaily.com

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Editor in Chief

734-418-4115 ext. 1251

jcalfas@michigandaily.com

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Finance

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The Islamic State in
eastern Syria kidnapped
at least 70 Assyrian
Christians,
The

Washington Post reported.
The group of victims is said
to include many women and
children.
3

EDITORIAL STAFF
Lev Facher Managing Editor lfacher@michigandaily.com

Sam Gringlas Managing News Editor gringlas@michigandaily.com

SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Shoham Geva, Will Greenberg, Amabel Karoub, Emma Kerr,
Emilie Plesset, Michael Sugerman

ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS: Anastassios Adamopoulos, Tanaz Ahmed, Neala
Berkowski, Alyssa Brandon, Nabeel Chollampat, Gen Hummer, Emma Kinery, Lara
Moehlman, Carly Noah, Irene Park

Aarica Marsh and


Derek Wolfe Editorial Page Editors opinioneditors@michigandaily.com

SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Claire Bryan and Matt Seligman

ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Regan Detwiler, Michael Paul, Melissa Scholke,
Michael Schramm, Mary Kate Winn
BLOG EDITOR: Tori Noble

Max Cohen and
Jake Lourim Managing Sports Editors
sportseditors@michigandaily.com

SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Max Bultman, Daniel Feldman, Rajat Khare, Erin Lennon,
Jason Rubinstein, Jeremy Summitt
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Chloe Aubuchon, Minh Doan, Jacob Gase, Kelly Hall,
Zach Shaw, Brad Whipple

Adam Depollo and

adepollo@michigandaily.com

Chloe Gilke Managing Arts Editors chloeliz@michigandaily.com
SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Jamie Bircoll, Kathleen
Davis, Catherine Sulpizio, Adam Theisen
ARTS BEAT EDITORS: Alex Bernard, Karen Hua, Jacob Rich, Amelia Zak

Allison Farrand and

photo@michigandaily.com

Ruby Wallau Managing Photo Editors

SENIOR PHOTO EDITORS: Luna Anna Archey and James Coller
ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS: Amanda Allen, Virginia Lozano, Paul Sherman

Emily Schumer and

design@michigandaily.com

Shane Achenbach Managing Design Editors

Ian Dillingham Magazine Editor statement@michigandaily.com

DEPUTY MAGAZINE EDITORS: Natalie Gadbois
STATEMENT PHOTO EDITOR: Luna Anna Archey
STATEMENT LEAD DESIGNER: Jake Wellins

Hannah Bates and

copydesk@michigandaily.com

Laura Schinagle Managing Copy Editors

SENIOR COPY EDITORS: Emily Campbell and Emma Sutherland
Amrutha Sivakumar Online Editor amrutha@michigandaily.com

Kaylla Cantilina Managing Video Editor
Carolyn Gearig Special Projects Manager

BUSINESS STAFF
Madeline Lacey University Accounts Manager
Ailie Steir Classified Manager
Simonne Kapadia Local Accounts Manager
Olivia Jones Production Managers
Jason Anterasian Finance Manager

Architecture
lecture


WHAT: Prof. Mark
Jarzombek speaks about
the hisory and theory of
architecture.
WHO: A. Alfred Taubman
College of Architecture
and Urban Planning
WHEN: Tonight at 6 p.m.
WHERE: Art and
Architecture Building

Film screening

WHAT: View a screening of
“Contagion,” which follows
the progress of an epidemic
of an unknown airborne
virus. After the film, the
audience will hear from a
real-life contagion fighter.
WHO: U-M Health System
WHEN: Tonight at 7 p.m.
WHERE: Michigan
Theater

TUESDAY:

Campus Voices

THURSDAY:
Twitter Talk

FRIDAY:

Photos of the Week

MONDAY:

This Week in History

WEDNESDAY:

In Other Ivory Towers

SELFIES IN JEOPARDY
BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING

MSU is one of the last Big

Ten schools to establish a Bio-
medical Engineering program,
The State News reported. The
program was approved by the
MSU Board of Trustees in
October 2014 and officially
became part of the program on
Jan. 1, 2015.

While
biomedical
engi-

neering has been available for
engineering students as a con-
centration for several years
— in the chemical, materials
science, biosystems, mechani-
cal, electrical and computer
engineering departments — it
didn’t become a department of
its own until now.

The dean of MSU’s College

of Engineering said the col-

lege is currently in the pro-
cess of hiring a chairperson
and assigning faculty. Their
goal is to offer a graduate pro-
gram beginning January 2016,
though it will likely be sev-
eral years before they have the
resources to offer an under-
graduate program.

University of Pennsylvania
professors protest school’s

new sexual misconduct

policy

Last week, 16 professors at

the University of Pennsylvania
Law School released an open
letter criticizing the school’s
newly revised sexual assault
policy, The Washington Post

reported. The professors’ pri-
mary concern was insufficient
procedures to ensure due pro-
cess and a fair trial for students
accused of sexual assault.

“We do not believe that pro-

viding justice for victims of
sexual assault requires sub-
ordinating so many protec-
tions long deemed necessary
to protect from injustice those
accused of serious offenses,”
the letter stated.

The brief argues that the

new policies have “sacrificed
the traditional safeguards that
accompany
traditional
law-

making procedures.”

— MARLEE BREAKSTONE

MSU adds new program

THE FILTER

ON THE WEB...
michigandaily.com

American Idol

BY DANIELLE RAYKHINSHTEYN

Raykhinshteyn writes that

“Harry Connick Jr. is the best
judge Idol has ever seen.”
This is the jazz singer’s sec-
ond year on the 14-year-old
program. “He so meticulously
concentrates on each aspect
of
every
contestant,”
she

writes. “And that’s what this
show needs.

BRIAN BECKWITH/Daily

LSA freshman Martin Rivera and School of Social
Work first year Cassie DeFelice take a selfie during
Black History Month Jeopardy at Trotter Mutlicultural
Center on Tuesday

WILLIAM LYNCH/Daily

LSA senior Mike Weinberg discusses the Hail and Unite campign during the Feb. 17 CSG meeting in the CSG chambers.

The art of
cityscapes

WHAT: History Prof.
Jean Boutier will discuss
cityscapes painted during
the French Enlightenment.
WHO: University Library
WHEN: Today at 4 p.m.
WHERE: Harlan Hatcher
Graduate Library, Clark
Library Instruction Space

Pills taken before and after
sex could help prevent HIV

CSG Assembly endorses new
spirit song ‘Hail and Unite’

Resolution to fund

Dining Dollar

donation program

also discussed

By ALYSSA BRANDON

Daily Staff Reporter

In its final meeting before

Spring Break, the Central Student
Government Assembly cemented
its support of the “Hail and Unite”
spirit song, in addition to listening
to a proposal for the body to fund
promotional materials for a new
food donation program.

Hail and Unite

The new spirit song, which

had been discussed at the pre-
vious two assembly meetings,
made a third appearance Tues-
day night as “Hail and Unite”
creator Mike Weinberg, an LSA
senior, reintroduced a resolution
for CSG to endorse the project.

In a vote following Wein-

berg’s
presentation
to
the

assembly, which included the
screening of a promotional video

for the movement, the resolution
passed.

When the “Hail and Unite”

team first introduced the proj-
ect, they asked the assembly for
$2,750 to fund the promotional
video — a resolution that was
referred to the finance commit-
tee.

However, because Weinberg

and his team felt that “Hail and
Unite” accrued negative feed-
back from the University com-
munity following its launch,
they withdrew the resolution
from CSG’s consideration.

“We decided that given what

was happening, we should just
start over, come back in so I
could explain the real story, and
clarify what exactly ‘Hail and
Unite’ is,” Weinberg said in an
interview with The Michigan
Daily.

The new resolution asked

CSG for its endorsement, not
funding, and includes language
to express that the goal of the
project is to unite and ener-
gize the University community.
This addition responds to con-
cerns that the spirit song would
replace “The Victors.”

Weinberg,
and
Business

sophomore Adam Weiss, a CSG
representative who introduced
the original “Hail and Unite”
resolution, wrote the new legis-
lation.

“We really wanted to clarify

that ‘The Victors’ and what we
are doing couldn’t be further
apart,” Weinberg said.

He declined to disclose which

organizations have guaranteed
support for the song, though he
said he is in negotiations with
a variety of departments and
schools at the University.

Now that the resolution has

passed, Weinberg said he wants
to continue to share accurate
information about what “Hail
and Unite” actually is with the
University community.

“If we heard that someone

was trying to do something with
‘The Victors’ or a fight song, or
something that wasn’t com-
pletely organic to the University
of Michigan, we would be furi-
ous too,” he said. “I ask that peo-
ple be willing to listen and hear
what we’re actually doing.”

Read more online at
michigandaily.com

THE FILTER
Live and direct

BY MICHAEL FLYNN

Flynn suggests that live

music performances improve
by varying degrees when
artists know their material,
regularly play in front of
and interact with audiences,
“change up” and diversify the
act and treat their crew with
the utmost respect.

Canadian study
focuses on ‘risky’

intercourse between

homosexual men

SEATTLE (AP) — For the first

time, a study shows that a drug
used to treat HIV infection also
can help prevent it when taken
before and after risky sex by gay
men.

The results offer hope of a

more appealing way to help pre-
vent the disease beyond taking
daily pills and using condoms,
although those methods are still
considered best.

The study, done in France and

Canada, is the first to test “on
demand” use of Truvada, a pill
combining two AIDS drugs, by
people planning to have risky
sex. The uninfected men who
took it were 86 percent less like-
ly to get HIV compared to men

given dummy pills.

“That impressed me,” Dr.

Scott Hammer said of the size of
the benefit. He is an AIDS spe-
cialist at Columbia University
in New York and heads the Ret-
rovirus Conference going on in
Seattle, where the results were
discussed Tuesday.

Daily Truvada pills are used

now to prevent HIV infec-
tion in people at high risk for
it, and studies show the drug
helps even when some doses
are skipped. Health officials
have been leery of billing it as a
“chemical condom” out of fear
that people will not use the
best prevention methods, but
many won’t use condoms all
the time or take daily pills.

The study of Gilead Sci-

ence’s Truvada was led by the
French national HIV research
agency.

Men were given fake or real

Truvada and told to take two
pills from two to 24 hours
before sex, a third pill 24 hours
later, and a fourth pill 48 hours
after the first dose. The men
also were given condoms and
disease prevention counseling.

The study was stopped early,

in November, after 400 men
were enrolled and researchers
saw that the drug was working;
there were two new HIV infec-
tions among those on Truvada
and 14 in those on dummy pills.
The two infections in the Tru-
vada group were in men who
stopped using the pills after
more than a year in the study.

The drug was safe, but nau-

sea and diarrhea were more
frequent among men who used
it. Only one stopped using it
because of side effects.

Dr. Susan Buchbinder, an

AIDS specialist at the San
Francisco Department of Pub-
lic Health, called the results
exciting but warned that it
can’t be assumed they would
apply
to
male-female
sex,

because different types of sex
expose partners to differing
amounts of virus.

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