beFidligan, MIih2j Friday, March 23, 2012 Ann Arbor, Michigan michigandaily.com HEARINGS DELAY CSG RESULTS As of 4 a.m., student government election winners yet to be announced By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter As of 4 a.m, a group of about 20 peo- ple filled the single-room LSA student government offices where the fate of yesterday's highly contested Central Student Government presidential elec- tion - receiving the highest voter turn- out in recent history with 19 percent - rested in a hearing of the University Elections Committee to determine the eligibility of multiple candidates. No results had been determined as of 4 a.m., following nearly eight hours of deliberation on a case filed by LSA junior Robert Bowen on behalf of OurMichigan and youMICH against Business junior Manish Parikh, an independent candidate for CSG presi- dent, regarding misuse of an e-mail listserv for campaigning purposes, a violation of student government elec- tion policy. New accusations also arose early this morning against the Our- Michigan party for engaging in similar acts of listserv exploitation, spurring further investigations by the UEC. A candidate can be individually dis- qualified from the election with a total of five demerits and an entire party can become ineligible with a total of 10 demerits among party members. Numerous. members of several campus political parties continually filed in an out of the CSG offices on the third floor of the Michigan Union yesterday for hearing-related matters until adjourn- ing to LSA-SG offices when the Union closed at 2 a.m. The hearing was still ongoing early this morning as the UEC continued to determine if Parikh and his running mate, LSA sophomore Omar Hashwi, had warranted enough demerits for disqualification from the election, and For updated election results visit michigandaily.com began further examinations against OurMichigan. CSG President DeAndree Watson said this spectacle was unparalleled. "I have never seen anything like this since I have been involved in student government," Watson said. "I'm con- cerned with the time it's going to take to sort through all the complaints that have been filed and I hope we can get through this as quickly as possible." Watson added that these hear- ings could reflect badly on the people involved, noting that he believes more complaints may be filed before the results are released. The polls officially closed at midnight yesterday, and offi- cial results can't be released until the hearings have been completed. "Depending on what the outcome See HEARING, Page 3 Business junior Manish Parikh and LSA sophomore Omar Hashwi, indpenedent candidates for CSG president and vice president, at a University Elections Commission hearing yesterday. STUDENT GOVERNMENT Canning wins LSA-SG presidency SPEAKERS ON CAMPUS New Republic editor discusses new Obama book 15. u By GI andA Afte posed Caroli junior elected presid govern Afte 15.4 p dents LSA-S and vi kin sa s "very, the tu compe Tunout at helped increase numbers, but that advertising done 4 percent in by LSA-SG also helped. "We did a ton and it real- ncontested ly paid off," Larkin said. In addition to presiden- tial elections, LSA stu- dents elected freshmen ACOMO BOLOGNA Carly Manes, Lauren Roth, LUSTEN HUFFORD Corey Walsh, Natasha aily Staff Reporters Dabrowski, Patrick Larkin and Kevin Malerman, and errunninginanunop- sophomores Joshua Dean, election, LSA junior Andrew Craft and JoHan- ne Canning and LSA na Rothseid to the nine Melissa Burns were representative positions d president and vice contested in this election. ent of LSA student In total, 18 LSA students nment yesterday. ran for the nine representa- er two days of voting, tive positions. ercent of LSA stu- Canning, who has been cast ballots online, an LSA-SG representative G election director since her freshman year, ce president Jeff Lar- said she is prepared to take id. Larkin said he was on the new role as head of very happy," with a student government rep- rnout. He added the resenting more than 17,000 titive CSG elections See CANNING, Page 3 MCKENZIE BEREZIN/Daily Carl Weinman lectures about teaching methods in the Ross School of Buins yesterday. Hands-on learning lauded Noam Scheiber shares how he examined the financial crisis ByALICIAADAMCZYK Daily StaffReporter Though President Barack Obama's efforts to solve the 2008 economic crisis were extensively covered by the media, author and journalist Noam Scheiber searched to find the less widely known individuals who played an influential role in advising the president in his fiscal decisions. The Ford School of Pub- lic Policy held a special public lecture and book signing yesterday after- noon with Scheiber as part of the school's Distin- guished Speakers Series. At the event, Scheiber, a senior editor for The New Republic magazine based in Washington, D.C., dis- cussed his recently pub- lished book, "The Escape Artists: How Obama's Team Fumbled the Recov- ery" to an audience com- prised of Ann Arbor residents, students and faculty. In an interview before the event, Scheiber saidbhe decided to write the book after he realized the enor- mity of the economic crisis of September 2008. "It became clear that it wasn't going to be a gar- den-variety recession," Scheiber said. "It was really sort of a deep, pain- ful thing that had some dramatic possibilities and some room for ... critiqu- ing the way (the financial team) handled it." Though the book does See NEW REPUBLIC, Page 3 Nobel laureate Carl Weiman shares teaching experiences at event at Ross School By AARON GUGGENHEIM DailyStaff Reporter At a lecture crowded with University faculty and students at the Ross School of Business yesterday, Nobel laureate Carl Wieman spoke about improvingsci- ence and engineeringeducation by mov- ing away from traditional lecturing, and implementing more interactive learning techniques at the collegiate level. With an economy becoming increas- ingly based on scientific research, Wieman - who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001 - emphasized the importance of a scientifically literate population, noting that establishing stronger science and engineering pro- grams is crucial to fostering internation- al growth. "Education is so important in the See LEARNING, Page 3 UNIVERSITY RESEARCH REMEMBERING TRAYVON Drug may cause healthier cells Researchers synthesize chemicals to increase calcium flow to cells By JOSH QIAN Daily StaffReporter University researchers may have discovered a modern-day fountain of youth with the recent development of a potential drug that may aid cellular recycling and slow the aging process. The research team - headed by Haoxing Xu, an assistant professor of molecular, cellular and developmen- tal biology, and composed of Andrew Lieberman, an associate professor of pathology, and Hollis Showalter, a medicinal chemistry research profes- sor - synthesized a collection of chem- icals that increase calcium flow to cell lysosomes, which serve as recycling centers for cellular waste. "The importance will be similar to the trash-removal system in our daily lives that includes trash bins and jani- tors," Xu said. "Increased cellular- recycling activities could provide a treatment for diseased cells with excessive accumulation in the lyso- some and/or slow trafficking." The research is currently funded by the National Institutes of Health and the ML4 Foundation - a non-profit corporation founded by families of individual affected by the genetic dis- ease mucolipidosis type IV. Xu said the research results demon- strate that the drug has the potential to treat unique metabolic disorders such as Niemann-Pick disease and mucolip- See DRUG, Page 3 Students protest the death of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin in the Law Quadrangle yesterday afternoon. WEATHER I: 71 GOT A NEWS TIP? STOMORR W LO: 52 Call 734-418-4115 ore-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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