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2A — Monday, April 11, 2016
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
DELANEY RYAN/Daily
Matoma, a tropical house DJ from Norway, performed at
Necto Wednesday.
TROPIC AL HOUSE
CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES
3
THINGS
YOU
SHOULD
KNOW
Sunday morning, a magnitude
6.6 earthquake in Afghanistan
shook major cities across
southwest Asia, BBC reports.
The quake struck the sparsely-
populated Hindu Kush mountains.
At least 27 people were sent to the
hospital in Peshawar for treatment.
The metro system in Delhi was
temporarily halted.
3
Michigan freshman standout
Kyle Connor lost the race
for the Hobey Baker Award,
given to hockey’s best player,
on Saturday. Connor finished the
season with 71 points but fell short
against Harvard’s Jimmy Vesey in
the voting.
>> SEE SPORTSMONDAY on 1B
2
BBC
News
reports
that
UK Prime Minister David
Cameron’s mother gave him a
£200,000 gift after his father’s
death. This might have let him
avoid inheritance tax, according
to an account summary of his tax
returns. Opposition leaders demand
that Cameron publish his full tax
returns from before 2010.
1
‘U’ clinical trial could increase
number of heart donors in U.S.
Law and ethics
lecture
WHAT: Seana Shiffrin,
visiting professor from
UCLA, will host a lecture
and moderated discussion
on democracy and the law.
WHO: University of
Michigan Law School
WHEN: 11:45 a.m. to 1:30
p.m.
WHERE: Hutchins Hall-
250
Interview on
Arab stereotypes
WHAT: Jack Shaheen
will participate in a Q&A
regarding his research on
the representations of Arabs
and Muslims in the United
States.
WHO: Arab and Muslim
American Studies
WHEN: 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
WHERE: Hatcher
Graduate Library- Gallery
Room 100
Panel on
nontraditional
students
WHAT: A panel of
current UM students will
host a presentation about
the classroom experience
of nontraditional students.
WHO: Center for the
Education of Women
WHEN: 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
WHERE: Michigan
League
Opera
Workshop
WHAT: Students in
Robert Swedberg’s
Opera Studio program
will perform two one-act
operas via Green Opera,
an environmentally
friendly method of opera.
WHO: School of Music,
Theatre & Dance
WHEN: 8 p.m.
WHERE: Earl V. Moore
Building- McIntosh
Podcast Party
WHAT: The Wolverine
Podcast project will
feature students
sharing about their first
experiences at UM.
WHO: University Library
WHEN: 5:30 p.m. to 6:30
p.m.
WHERE: Shapiro Harold
& Vivian Library - Design
Lab, First Floor
Concert Band
WHAT: Courtney Snyder
and John Pasquale will
conduct the concert
band repertoire titled
Soundscapes, featuring
Bach, Holst, Read-
Thomas and others.
WHO: School of Music,
Theatre & Dance
WHEN: 8 p.m.
WHERE: Hill
Auditorium
ON THE DAILY
ON THE DAILY
Researchers aim
to keep organs
beating longer during
transport
By SOPHIE SHERRY
Daily Staff Reporter
University of Michigan doctors
will soon participate in a clinical
trial that could transform heart
transplants in the United States.
Since the first heart transplant
surgery nearly 40 years ago, the
methods of transporting a donor
heart from hospital to hospital
have remained the same. The
donor heart is retrieved, placed in
a bag of saline inside of a bag of ice
then inside another bag of ice and
stored in a cooler. This current
technique allows the heart to be
in transit for four to six hours,
with transplantation becoming
increasingly riskier after four.
The new clinical trial test the
effectiveness of the Transmedics
Organ
Care
System
which
continues to circulate blood to
the donor heart while in transit,
theoretically allowing the heart
to be in transit for a greater period
of time. It also enables doctors to
use hearts from extended criteria
donors — older donors who may
have experienced health issues in
the past.
The University of Michigan
Health System is one of 12
programs
participating
in
the clinical trial, testing the
effectiveness
of
the
system
in
comparison
to
traditional
methods. Frank Pagani, surgical
director of the Adult Heart
Transplant
Program,
and
cardiologist Keith Aaronson are
two of the University doctors
working on the clinical trial.
The Organ Care System has
already been tested in the United
States on normal criteria patients,
but this trial will focus primarily
on those extended criteria donors.
“We are trying to use this new
machine to use the organs that we
may not necessarily want to use,
so we call those extended criteria
donors,” Pagani said. “Generally
we do not like to exceed four hours
where the new heart is out of the
body until it goes back into the
recipient, or we do not typically
take hearts from patients that are
older.”
Aaronson said ORS is used
extensively
in
England
and
Australia, where it is an approved
system and doctors are able to
use either standard donors or
extended criteria donors.
“We are more cautious in the
U.S. than other countries, so this
study is more of a baby step, but
it’s a first step to get us there,”
Aaronson said.
The
Food
and
Drug
Administration recently approved
modifications to the ORS, meaning
the 12 programs participating in
the study must undergo another
round of training within the
month for those modifications.
After that training is complete, the
University will be ready to utilize
the new system once it finds a
donor that meet the criteria.
Pagani and Aaronson said
they do not anticipate any real
challenges in implementing this
system, aside from finding the
right donor.
“The biggest issue is of course
transplantation is so limited, there
are only about 2,000 donors in
the United States each year, so it
becomes difficult waiting for an
organ,” Pagani said. “We have to
wait for the right type of donor
organ and that can take some time.
So we have to be sort of patient
and the progress of the trial may
be slow just based on the number
of heart transplants that are done
in the US.”
Both Pagani and Aaronson
said
they
expect
that
the
implementation of this system will
increase the size of the donor pool
in the United States.
“The hope is that we will be
able to take hearts that are more
marginal or good, not particularly
high risk but would be transported
a further distance, and be able to
use them with success,” Aaronson
said. “We would certainly open
up the number of donors that are
available and increase the donor
pool.”
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Laura Schinagle
MANAGING EDITOR
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EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS
opinioneditors@michigandaily.com
Senior Opinion Editors: Jeremy Kaplan, Ben Keller, Anna Polumbo-Levy, Jason Rowland,
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MANAGING SPORTS EDITORS
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Senior Sports Editors: Minh Doan, Jacob Gase, Kelly Hall, Simon Kaufman, Jason
Rubinstein, Zach Shaw, Brad Whipple
Assistant Sports Editors: Betelhem Ashame, Chris Crowder, Sylvanna Gross, Leland
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MANAGING ARTS EDITORS
arts@michigandaily.com
Senior Arts Editors: Caroline Filips, Melina Glusac, Jacob Rich, Ben Rosenstock
Arts Beat Editors: Matthew Barnauskas, Christian Kennedy, Rebecca Lerner, Natalie Zak
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MANAGING PHOTO EDITORS
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Senior Photo Editors: Zoey Holmstrom, Zach Moore, James Coller
Assistant Photo Editors: Claire Abdo, Robert Dunne, Sam Mousigian, San Pham, David Song
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MANAGING DESIGN EDITORS
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STATEMENT EDITOR
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MICHIGAN IN COLOR EDITORS
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Michael Schramm SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER
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The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the
University OF Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily’s
office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $110. Winter term (January through April) is
$115, yearlong (September through April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus
subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press
and The Associated Collegiate Press.
BUSINESS STAFF
Hussein Hakim
FINANCE & OPERATIONS MANAGER
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Twitter chat discusses mental
health and sexual misconduct
University leaders
answer student
questions about
campus efforts
By LARA MOEHLMAN
Daily Staff Reporter
Friday,
the
University
of
Michigan used Twitter to open up
dialogue within the University of
Michigan community surrounding
sexual misconduct and mental
health.
The online conversation was
held in an effort to erase the stigma
attached to both major issues, as
well to promote awareness of them.
Multiple members of campus
were
panelists
for
the
talk,
including Cooper Charlton, former
Central
Student
Government
president and Wolverine Support
Network
co-founder;
Holly
Rider-Milkovich, Sexual Assault
Prevention and Awareness Center
director; Dr. Bob Winfield, chief
health officer and director of
University
Health
Services;
John Greden, executive director
of the U-M Depression Center;
and Todd Sevig, Counseling and
Psychological Services director.
Sexual misconduct and mental
health have both been topics of
significant discussion on campus
throughout the past year. This
past week, the University released
the full text of its revised sexual
misconduct
policy
following
a
year-long
revision
process.
The
new
policy
includes
an
expanded definition of what is
prohibited conduct, adjustments
to the definition of consent and the
consolidation of the sanctioning
and appeals process.
At the last Board of Regents
meeting held March 20, Charlton
drew the board’s attention to the
issue of mental health on campus
following the recent death of a
University student earlier that
week.
Throughout
his
term,
Charlton has advocated for an
increased staff of mental health
professionals in the Counseling
and Psychological Services on
campus, citing the “gold standard”
as one counselor for every 1,000
students. CAPS currently falls
short
of
this
standard,
and
students have said they continue to
experience significant wait times
before meeting with mental health
professionals.
In response to a question asking
for specific statistics related to
mental health illness on campus,
See TWITTER, Page 3A
On Friday, the NCAA Division
I council announced it would
prohibit FBS football coaches
from
hosting
or
working
at
camps outside of their respective
universities, effectively ending the
era of the satellite camp. Satellite
camps typically entail coaches
setting up camps in an area outside
of their typical recruiting ground
to observe players they might not
otherwise see. Michigan coach
Jim Harbaugh has become the
face of these camps recently,
and he held a series of them last
summer in Alabama, Florida,
Texas, California, Pennsylvania
and Indiana.
But Harbaugh faced criticism
from coaches — especially from
the Southeastern and Atlantic
Coast Conferences — who were
forbidden from holding these
camps due to conference rules.
The 10 FBS conferences voted by
a 6-4 margin to prohibit coaches
from holding them going forward.
Some Michigan football players
expressed
disappointment
at
the decision, believing it hurts
high
schoolers
who
cannot
afford to travel to camps held at
a distant university. Many of the
Wolverines speaking out against
the NCAA ban felt they benefited
from camps such as Detroit’s
Sound Mind Sound Body camp,
and they took to Twitter to show
their frustrations.
“No
satellite
camps
no
exposure!” said senior offensive
lineman David Dawson. “SMSB
helped me achieve the goals that
I have achieved so far and it also
helped me achieve goals that I have
achieved so far and it also helped
other inner city kids turn their
dreams of going to a (Division 1)
institution into reality.”
Senior fullback Khalid Hill, a
Detroit native, emphasized the
effect the of the ruling on his
native city.
“I was one of the under the
radar kids coming from the city
of Detroit,” Hill wrote. “I was
fortunate enough to have a family
who supported me and sacrificed
(sic) for me to go to these places.”
– AVI SHOLOKOFF
Bennett said.
Extending
the
connector
service was a big part of that
mission,
he
added,
noting
that meetings of the Congress
and meetings with University
Provost Martha Pollack on this
topic have been taking place
since Fall of 2014.
Bennett said at the end of
May, the Office of the Provost
will determine the fate of the
connector based on data they’ve
collected about connector usage
and other surveys.
After
the
resolution
was
passed, CSG President Cooper
Charlton sent out one such
survey to the entire student body
to assess student usage of and
want for the connector in the
future.
In the e-mail, Charlton wrote
that the school’s historic link to
Detroit is one important reason
why the two should remain
connected.
“As many of you are well aware,
Detroit is not only a city with
immense cultural, academic, and
historical significance, but also
the original site of the University
of Michigan,” he wrote. “As we
transition into our third century
of
academic
excellence
and
achievement in 2017, it is vital
that we strengthen and affirm
our deep connection to the City of
Detroit.”
University
alum
Nicole
Stallings, who graduated in 2007,
and is the current senior policy
adviser to the Detroit mayor
and former Muslim Students’
Association
president,
told
CSG during Tuesday’s meeting
that the city has significantly
impacted her professional life.
Stallings
said
when
she
graduated from the University in
2007, not many students aspired
to live and work in Detroit.
Today she works on projects
in economic development, real
estate and mobility, with the hope
of attracting college graduates.
“The
landscape
there
is
completely different,” she said. “I
spend my day working on a ton of
different cool projects that we’re
hoping will attract people like
you guys to want to live and work
and play in the city of Detroit
after you graduate.”
BUS
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