1ie 1id.igt~an 40a IVa () F' - I I t IA i I li " "A 14 O R 1# L 1 11 1jA D .I J . ., . i i .. .': .£ i +"r ; 1, :.:4!XsF!r']cs3 ci3 7'te'.±iFsiL 'tiL.'" $ 3ffffi . '.S.r ty ." .., Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, September 20, 2012 michigandaily.com CENTRAL STUDENT GOVERNMENT CSJ: College GOP chair can keep job SAMANiHARGI/Daily Members of the Medical School community hold a vigil in Rackham Auditorium in honor of families whose loved ones made the decision to donate their bodies to science on Wednesday. STATE BUDGET 'U' gets bonus state funding $1.1 million more lion in additional state funding, smaller the increase in tuition Central Michigan University the third highest of the state's from the previous academic received the highest amount allocated for 15 public universities. year, the larger the funding of state funding, accruing $1.8 Each of Michigan's public allocation becomes. million for raising tuition by 2 keeping tuition universities received funding Earlier this month in a percent, the smallest margin of for preventing tuition increases memorandum released by the the 15 schools. Ferris State Uni- costs in check as part of Republican Gov. Rick State House Fiscal Agency - a versity came in second at $1.3 Snyder's restructured higher nonpartisan group that pro- million, a Detroit Free Press By SAM GRINGLAS education budget formula. The vides fiscal advice to the state article reported. For the Daily policy rewards public univer- House - explained how the According to University sities that adhere to perfor- breakdown of the $9.1 million spokesman Rick Fitzgerald, the By limiting the amount it mance standards and tuition set aside by the state for the funding was not unexpected. In increased tuition, the Univer- restraints that keep annual tuition restraint funding would order to keep tuition increases sity is being rewarded $1.1 mil- increases below 4 percent. The be rewarded. See FUNDING, Page 5A Dean of students still must approve judiciary's ruling By GIACOMO BOLOGNA and ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporters More than five months after impeachment charges were filed, the Central Student Judi- ciary decided on the fate of the leadership of the University's chapter of College Republicans early Wednesday morning. How- ever, the decision is still pending review by the University's Dean of Students as the organization's internal struggle.continues. In a document obtained by The Michigan Daily, the CSJ decision explained that the chair and the executive board made some convincing arguments, while others fell short. Eventu- ally, CSJ ruled that the executive board did not have the grounds to impeach its chair, LSA senior Rachel Jankowski. However, it found credence in the executive board's argument that Jankows- ki did not give sufficient notice to the group's membership when she instituted constitutional changes that made it more diffi- cult to impeach her. Maintaining Jankowski as chair and invalidating the con- stitutional changes she made allows her to make alterations again in the future as long as she gives ample notice, and also allows the executive board to file for impeachment again as long as they have sufficient proof that she violated the bounds of her position. "In many ways, the College Republicans' board has received real-life lessons in the machi- nations of politics and the con- sequences of constitutional brinksmanship," the decision read. "We hope they will consid- er that a lesson learned and use it to further the organization and principles they purport to repre- sent." In a written statement to The Michigan Daily, Jankowski cel- ebrated CSJ's decision, reiterat- ing that the executive board's accusations against her were "baseless" and that its attempted impeachment of her was "noth- ing short of a petty attempt to score cheap political points." "Whether the board was attempting to settle some politi- cal or personal vendetta against me, or whether they had ulterior motives for attempting to remove me from power, CSJ made the correct recommendation in rein- stating me as chair and deter- See CSJ, Page SA ELECTION 2012 Economy, jobs focus for young Republicans BLUE BIKES Social issues less important than fiscal matters By CHANNING ROBINSON Daily Staff Reporter While some young conserva- tives disagree with the Republi- can Party's stance on marriage equality and abortion rights, students identifying with the GOP said they are more focused on voting for the'candidate they think is best suited to stabilize the economy. Members of the University's chapter of College Republicans said while- many college-aged Republicans may not share the same social values as Rom- ney, his platform - focused on reducing taxes, government programs, spending and regu- lation, while increasing trade, energy production and labor market flexibility - is critical to fostering a stronger nation. LSA senior Jared Boot, the chair of Students for Romney at the University and a member of * College Republicans, said stu- dents should make the economy a priority in choosing a candi- date to vote for in November. "In this election cycle, the economic crisis should be the thing that students are voting on - it's what I'm voting on," Boot said. Boot recently spoke out in support of gay students sup- porting the GOP during the first appearance of the College Republicans 1 at Gayz Craze on Sept. 2, an 111111 annual event held at the beginning of the year by the LGBT Issues Commission of Central Student Government. "I've had people come up to me on campus and say, 'I'm fis- cally conservative and I lean toward being a hawk on foreign policy issues, but I'm gay,"' Boot said earlier in the month. "For me, that's really discouraging that people would be turned away because of that." LSA senior Rachel Jankowski, the chair of the College Repub- licans, echoed Boot's sentiments See REPUBLICANS, Page SA AUSTEN HUFFORD/Daily Brad Stark, manager of the Blue Bike rental program demonstrates how to use the bike on Wednesday. UNIVERSITY RESEARCH Study shows disparities in counseling ACADEMIC FUNDING Nursing program gets $1.5m grant Program aims to assist underrepresented students By LIANA ROSENBLOOM Daily StaffReporter Prospective University nurs- ingstudentsfromdisadvantaged backgrounds will continue to receive guidance and support through Gaining Excellence in Nursing Education: Strength in the Sciences, a School of Nurs- ing program that was recently granted $L5 million from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services over a three- year period to continue award- ing scholarships and mentoring students. Nursing Prof. Patricia Cole- man-Burns, the director of GENESIS, said the program focuses on preparing high school students for the Univer- sity's nursing curriculums and providing financial support and See NURSING, Page 5A Parents of sickle cell patients get less guidance By RENUKA SANTHANAGOPALAN For theDaily University researchers pub- lished a study this month illus- trating their findings on the disparity between counseling received by parents with new- borns that had the sickle cell trait, agene thatcan cause sickle cell anemia, and newborns who were carriers of cystic fibrosis. The study, published in the Journal of Genetic Counseling, foundthat20 percentofparents with newborns carrying the sickle cell trait did not receive genetic counseling, while only 8 percent of parents with new- borns carrying the cystic fibro- sis gene lacked counseling. Sickle cell anemia and cys- tic fibrosis are two recessive genetic disorders, the former common in African Americans and the latter in Caucasians. Kathryn Moseley, an assis- tant professor of Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases at the Medical School and a researcher who conducted the study, said there are no medical problems associated with car- rying the cystic fibrosis gene, while carriers of the sickle cell trait have risks that must be addressed, such as the possi- bility of heart stroke or muscle breakdown. "In certain environmental See COUNSELING, Page SA WEATHER HI: f62 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM TOMORROW LO: 42 Call 734-418-4115or e-mail B-Side Buzz: Rapping, Med Student Style news@michigandaily.com and letus know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE FILTER INDEX NEWS.............2A CLASSIFIEDS . 6A. 6A Vol.cXXllINo.13 AP NEWS....................3A SPORTS........... hA @20t2TheMichiganDaily OPINION...... .....4A THE B-SIDE.................1B mkchigandaily.com