~16e ffiidlipan .0ai4jj Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, March 22, 2012 michigandaily.com CENTRAL STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS Campaigns could face violations University Election Council to hold nine * hearings today By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter An individual affiliated with the OurMichigan party has made numerous allegations of campaign violations against the other parties running in the Central Student Government presidential and vice presi- dential elections, according to a document obtained by The Michigan Daily last night. The University Elections Commission will hold nine hearings today in response to the alleged campaign viola- tions, and there have been 15 complaints filed so far, which can translate to demerits if they violate UEC policy, elec- tion director Peter Borock said. If a candidate receives five demerits; he or she is disquali- fied from the election, and ifa party receives 10 demerits, the whole party and its candidates are deemed ineligible. Of the 15 complaints, two have been issued as demerits, one was dismissed,onehas been withdrawn and the remaining 10 will be heard today. Borock said the additional complaint had been recently filed, and he was unable to confirm details about the grievance. While he said he expects the number of complaints to increase before voting ends tonight at 11:59 p.m., Borock said many of the complaints could fail to result in demerits. "If you filed a complaint for aliens coming down and coordinating with a party, we actually would have to have a See VIOLATIONS, Page 3A E-mail slams candidate Hashwi defends record in face of allegations of anti-Semitism By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter The highly contentious Cen- tral Student Government elec- tions turned personal yesterday when an e-mail became widely circulated that accused LSA sophomore Omar Hashwi, a current CSG vice presidential candidate, of being an anti- Semite and homophobe. LSA sophomore Lauren Lei- bach sentthe e-mail onTuesday at about 10:30 p.m. to members of the Delta Phi Epsilon soror- ity, and the message was subse- quently sent to other members of the Greek community, ulti- mately reaching the inboxes of Haswi and his running mate, Business junior Manish Parikh. "Omar is not only publicly anti-Israel, he is also openly homophobic," Leibach wrote. "Beyond the fact that someone like him could be involved in making important decisions on campus, itisscary to think what he could do with his power." Leibach - who identified herself as a member of the American Movement for Israel, a part of Hillel - continued, discussing what she sees as the implications of an election victory by Hashwi and Parikh, who are both running as inde- pendents. "Omar and Manish have a lot of followers. It is frighten- ing that they may have a good chance in winning, and it is See CANDIDATE, Page 2A FEDERAL POLICY 'U,'nat'l officials reflect on health care legislation Dr. Tigger, a certified therapy dog, plays with Engineering senior Luree Brown last week. Dog thera hours relieve stress Administration because of the legislation. Uni- versity health officials noted officials celebrate that while they have seen an increase in insured students act's two year and better accessibility to resources for well being, there anniversary is still room for improvement for the University's health care By PETER SHAHIN program and national policy Daily StaffReporter enacted under Obama. "The number of minor- In accordance with the sec- ity young adults with coverage and anniversary of the Presi- has seen the biggest increase, dent Barack Obama's health which is important for the care reform law, Kathleen populations who often have Sebelius, the secretary of the more trouble gaining access to United States Department of coverage," Sebelius said. Health and Human Services, Due to the high costs of addressed the impact of health health insurance, Sebelius said insurance coverage on stu- many young adults work jobs dents in a conference call with instead of attending school or reporters yesterday. simply choose not to purchase Sebelius highlighted the coverage. By now allowing benefits of the legislation, people to remain on their par- noting that 2.5 million young ents' health plans until they adults that would have oth- are 26, students are now free to erwise been excluded from pursue a variety of other goals, coverage under the law have including attending college been enfranchised into the and starting businesses. health care system today "(For) young adults who felt healthy and were looking to save money, going without cov- erage often seemed like a good alternative," Sebelius said "Without coverage, the young adults were both not getting the preventive care needed to keep them healthy and were living every day just one serious accident or illness away from medical debts or worse." Robert Winfield,the Univer- sity's chief health officer and director of University Health Services, said a survey con- ducted by UHS found that the, number of uninsured under- graduate students today is 9.4 percent, a 2-percent increase over the last three years. How- ever, he cautioned that a single accident or medical emergency could be catastrophic for the average student. "It's pretty common for appendicitis to be $10,000 to $15,000, or a bill for an auto accident to be substantially higher than that," Winfield See HEALTH CARE, Page 3A En Uni Whi afterno ing thr from e College of ers visit the office hours of a more unconventional study aid - Dr. gineering holds Tigger, a certified therapy dog. Every other Wednesday, the que office hours male Shih Tzu therapy dog vis- its the College of Engineering's By JOSH QIAN Office of Student Affairs in the Daily StaffReporter basement of the Chrysler Center to greet students in need of a men- le many students spend tal rejuvenation. The program is Dons between classes work- spearheaded by Angela Farrehi, ough challenging concepts student advocacy manager of the lass with a professor, oth- College of Engineering, tto help students ease stress and tension. Farrehi said the College of Engineering has focused on devel- oping innovative programs to cre- ate a supportive environment for all students as part of their well- ness initiative. "I work with many students who have gone through very diffi- cult times while at the University." Farrehi said. "In my work with students, I've heard many of them See DOG THERAPY, Page 3A LOCAL BUSINESSES Company seeks to protect environment by recycling used cell phones ReCellular receives twice before tossing their old phones into the garbage if they about 500,000 want to help save the environ- ment. phones monthly ReCellular, a company found- ed in 1991 and headquartered By CECE ZHOU in Ann Arbor, specializes in the Daily Staff Reporter resale and recycling of electron- ics, such as cell phones, tablets Students who avidly keep and netbooks. The company aims an eye on the latest iPhone or to encourage users both nation- Android phone may want to think ally and internationally to sell or donate their electronic devices to the company so that the devices can be resold or disposed of prop- erly. r According to Joe McKeown, vice president 0 of marketing at6 ReCellular, the company receives about 400,000 to 500,000 cell phones per month. McKeown said the company receives the electronics primar- ily through direct contact with phone carriers such as AT&T or Verizon, partnerships with 20-30 charity organizations and con- sumers who use the ReCellular website. Some of their charity part- ners include Susan B. Komen for the Cure and the American Red Cross, but McKeown said the company's most popular charity partneris Cell Phones for Soldiers - an organization that provides military personnel overseas with free means of communicating with family members. "Our charity partners lever their sponsors and their member- ship to donate phones," McKe- own said. "We then compensate the charity for those phones." Even though it is an Ann Arbor-based company, ReCel- lular also has a branch in Hong Kong. McKeown said the compa- ny is also working with countries in Latin America through a His- panic sales team. He added that the company's sales rate has been at a "consis- tent growth," and sales are back up following a small decline last year. See RECYCLING, Page 3A WEATHER HI: 72 TOMORROW LO:51 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-418-4115ore-mail Off the dribble, episode19 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE GAME INDEX Vol. CXXII, No.t113 02012 The Michigan Daily michigandoily.com NEWS...... SUDOKU.. OPINION. ..........2A SPO RTS.......................5A . 5A CLASSIFIEDS...............6A ......... 4A TH E BSID E....................1B k A 0