The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 13, 2013 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, February 13, 2013 - 5A PRESIDENT From Page 1A in order to build the economy. "The American people don't expect government to solve every problem. They don't expect those of us in this chamber to agree on every issue," Obama said. "But they do expect us to put the nation's interests before party." In an interview after the address, Congressman John Dingell (D-Mich.) agreed that in order for the country to develop, there needs to be more biparti- sanship in congress. "It's time for us to put aside this absolutely asinine and vicious partisanship that we've got and to buckle down and to start working together in the better interest of our country," Dingell said. "And I think that's something that Americans desperately want." Obama also emphasized that the United States needs to lessen its dependence on foreign energy. He proposed items such as the Energy Security Trust to invest in research into alternative forms of energy. "Now is not the time to gut these job-creating investments in science and innovation. Now is the time to reach a level of research and development not seen since the height of the Space Race," Obama said. "Today, no area holds more promise than our investments in American energy." Obama added that investment in education will be an important factor in the economic stability of the country and proposed univer- sal preschool. "Every dollar we invest in high-quality early education can save more than seven dollars later on - by boosting graduation rates, reducing teen pregnancy, even reducing violent crime," Obama said. Obama also said he wants to redesign high schools to better prepare graduates for the high- tech job market, in addition to continually working to make col- lege more affordable. Craig Ruff, a lecturer in the Public Policy school, said he was surprised that the president dis- cussed investment in higher edu- cation considering there haven't been significant federal strides in that area in the past. "The president staked out a new purpose for the federal gov- ernment, one we've never seen before - that was to provide an affordable and valuable higher education experience," Ruff said. However, Ruff said he feels that any attempts to make col- lege more affordable won't have a purpose if the job market doesn't improve first. "We are producing, every year, extraordinary talent among high- school graduates, community college graduates, college gradu- ates, bachelor's graduates, MBAs - and that's all well and good, but what jobs will they fill?" Ruff said. While it remains to be seen how much of Obama's agenda will result in policy, Dingell said he is proud of the president's speech. "He is judged by his suc- cess, but he's also judged by his leadership." Dingell said. "The people heard, and I'm satisfied they approved what he said. And I intend to do anything I can to assist him to accomplish his pur- poses." WANT TO SHARE US WITH YOUR FRIENDS? LIKE US ON FACEBOOK! FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @MICHIGAN- DAILY BRESLIN From Page 1A junior guard Tim Hardaway Jr. when asked why the game turned out so lopsided. "We've got to play for the guys next to us." Like previous starts in Columbus and Bloomington, Michigan (8-4, 21-4) struggled to find its footing in a hostile environment, but unlike its three previous road losses, the Wolverines never put together a run to get back within strik- ing range. They trailed Michi- gan State for the entirety of the game, and the Spartans led by as many as 31 points. The Spartans used a 17-4 run to take a 16-point first-half lead and entered the locker room with a 38-24 advantage. Not even halftime could slow down the home team, which didn't skip a beat. Sophomore point guard Trey Burke's and-1 pulled Michigan to within 12 points just minutes into the second half, but Michigan State responded with a 21-7 run to take a 62-36 lead just moments after the second official timeout of the half. Michigan had no answer for the bigger Spartan frontcourt. Michigan State grabbed nearly as many first-half offensive rebounds (seven) as Michi- gan had total boards (11). The Spartans' frontcourt combined to shoot 11-for-14 in the open- ing stanza, good for 24 points. Guard Gary Harris led Michi- gan State with 17 points thanks to five 3-pointers. Forward Derrick Nix scored 14 points on 6-for-9 shooting, as the Spartans shot 48.4 percent from the field, even after sev- eral walk-ons missed late-game shots. Even freshman forward Matt Costello, who averaged just 1.3 points and 1.1 rebounds, got in the mix, scoring eight points without missing a shot while grabbing six boards. "They just beat us up on the offensive glass," Burke said. "They went on a lot of runs, scored off our turnovers. It was just tough for us to get back in front." Burke had an efficient first half on the offensive end, scoring 10 points on 4-of-5 shooting, but two fouls caused him to sit, and with freshman pointguard Spike Albrecht quarterbacking, the Michiganoffense had no rotation or rhythm. Burke finished with a game-high 18 points. Freshman forward Glenn Robinson III again looked trans- parenton the offensive end. Rob- inson made just one of his four shots. Burke had no answers when he was asked how Michi- gan can get the freshman back into the offensive mix. "I don't know," Burke said. "I just try to continue to give him con- fidence and encourage him to have a presence out there on the court. He's young and he'll get better." Hardaway Jr. missed all six of his shots in the first half and finished 1-for-11, scoring just two points. Michigan turned the ball over 16 times, more than six above its season average. "Don't think that's the real Michigan team, because it's not," Izzo said. CSG From Page1A seniority was not a decision- making factor. "(Swider's) ambition, drive and enthusiasm really spoke a lot to me," Clancy said. "We just sat down and talked about how we really are invested in CSG and with that, here we are today." CSG program director Anika Awai-Williams said since she took her job in 2005, there have been no freshman or sophomore student body presidents. In fact, she said she was unsure if a freshman has ever run for presi- dent. Swider, however, doesn't see his class standing as an impedi- ment to his campaign and even thinks it could be advanta- geous. "Seeing how the first year on campus affects the next three years,it'scritical thatIwork with my fellow freshman and other underclassman," Swider said. "A lack of experience within other political experience can be to my true advantage because I do not have anyone else to answer to but students." "I believe that 'freshman' is just a label," Swider added. They will not run as indepen- dent candidates, like CSG Presi- dent Manish Parikh and CSG Vice President Omar Hashwi did last year. Instead, they are in the process of forming a politi- cal party to back their initiatives. The structure and executive board of the party are yet to be confirmed. On Sunday night, newly- formed party forUM revealed their election candidates and platform for the election. Clancy said forUM's announcement would not rush their current campaign timeline. She said she and Swider want to ensure that their campaign is "perfected." "We really want to focus and we really want to strategize and come up with the best team pos- sible," Clancysaid. "If this means coming out a little after forUM, then that is okay." Though the duo's platform is yet to be finalized, Swider said campaign promises would include increasing CSG aware- ness on campus through social media initiatives and undertak- ing efforts to ensure students are able to interact with CSG execu- tives on a personal level. Competition is not a matter of concern for the duo. Clancy said seeing so many students com- ing forward to run for office is "refreshing" and shows a passion for change on campus. "We really want to focus on the fact that other administra- tions that have come into this have made some unfortunate tall and empty promises," Swider said. "We are not looking to do this." Though CSG Vice President Omar Hashwi is currently unde- cided about whether or not he will run for presidency nextyear, he outlined the specific qualities that he believed every CSG can- didate should possess. "(The candidate needs to) have ambition, put the students' needs first and be a good leader," Hashwi said. "Someone who has the experience with implement- ing things, delivering on their platform ideas and whose plat- form is actually the platform of the students and not some gener- ic platform." -Daily Staff Reporters Giacomo Bologna and Stephen Yaros contributed to this report. CAFE From Page 1A didn't officially announce the change until Tuesday, when Parikh sent an e-mail to the student body. "(Students) needed a place where they could grab a late night coffee or late night snack ... especially dur- ing finals," Parikh said "We believe that when students are well-hydrated and well- nourished - especially late at night - it provides for the better well-being and better health." University Unions facilitat- ed the change by temporarily increasing funding to cover the added labor costs. "Our absolute goal is to make sure this is a self-sustaining operation, but the University Unions have been very kind to front the initial (funding)," Parikh said. After the announcement Tuesday, some students have asked whether or not a similar 24-hour cafe would be opened at the Duderstadt Center to serve students living on North Campus. However, Parikh said there are no plans to imple- ment a cafe at the Dude at this time. "It's definitely something that we'll be looking to in the future, especially if this pro- gram is successful," Parikh said. Safety was another con- cern regarding the 24-hour schedule at Bert's. Because of the later hours of operation at least two employees will be present during all late-night shifts. "This was our number-one priority," Parikh said. "We had to check out the safety ... before we could move ahead with any- thing. There have been no inci- dents whatsoever so far and we don't expect any incidents in the future." In addition to these chang- es, Tuesday's e-mail notified students that office hours led by CSG leaders will now be "Coffee Chats" at Bert's, an effort to make the student government more transpar- ent. "Our focus this year is restoring Central Student Government back to the stu- dents and, in order to do that, we must be 100-percent approachable by any member of our student body," Parikh said. CSG Vice President Omar Hashwi said the traditional office hours' location in the group's chambers resulted in inconsistent involve- ment. "We think if we can have more of a presence on campus - for people to be able to walk by, see our name and ask us questions - it would be better for the student body," Hashwi said. Though the new format involves meeting in a pub- lic place, Hashwi said lead- ers don't expect that their meetings will inconvenience patrons. The process of transi- tioning Bert's to a 24-hour schedule required extensive background work by staff at University Unions. Food Ser- vice Director Keith Soster said the UGLi had to first success- fully transition into a 24-hour library before Bert's could become an around-the-clock cafe. "We're going to pilot it for winter semester to see if it's going to be sustain- able ... and then we're going to take it from there," Sos- ter said. Logistically, Soster said Uni- versity Unions found it chal- lenging to staff the cafe during the early morning hours, par- ticularly between 2 a.m. and 7 a.m. "It's difficult finding stu- dents who would want to work those hours, so that's one of the cost factois," Soster said. Soster cited the uncer- tainty of staff availability as the reason the 24-hour cafe underwent a "quiet" opening in mid-January. Since then, he added, Uni- versity Unions has begun to advertise the new hours, a move he said has increased sales. If CSG and University Unions deem the project sus- tainable, Bert's Cafe will likely adopt the 24-hour schedule on a permanent basis. -Daily Staff Reporter Amrutha Sivakumar contributed to this report. POT From Page 1A seeds or plants. Former Compassionate Apoth- ecary owners Brandon McQueen and Matthew Taylor posted a message on the business's website commenting onthe ways in which the medical marijuana business helps Michigan's economy. "Dispensing legal amounts of medication to legally registered patients registered with the state of Michigan, and ID checked every time, was just a small frac- tion of what California did," the couple wrote. State Representative Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor) said he's upset with limits that have been placed on the law, which he said has turned out to be a failure. "It costs hundreds of millions of dollars just here in Michi- gan to control marijuana laws, and in the process negatively impacts our productive capabil- ity," Irwin said. He noted that the court missed the gravity of the definitions clause - which that defines legal terms used in the act - when first draftingthe MMMA, and predicts that dispensaries will begin to change their business models to avoid being deemed a public nui- sance by local law enforcement. Irwin said he has worked to decriminalize the use and sale of medical marijuana in order to keep the product away from potentially dangerous black-mar- ket traders. "Everything the government does to drive the trade into the shadows empowers violent criminals," Irwin said. "I want to bring the light of legitimacy into these transactions so that we can protect consumers." LSA senior Nicholas Zettell, a leader of Students for a Sensible Drug Policy, said the recent deci- sion will affect safe access for reg- istered patients and caregivers. Zettell also commented on what he said was an increase in dispensaries shut down by law enforcement. In 2011, after the original ruling on the Compas- sionate Apothecary case, two Ann Arbor dispensaries were raided by the Michigan State Police Livingston and Washt- enaw Narcotics Enforcement Team after investigation into their activities. One dispensary, MedMAR, had picked up their official city appli- cation to become a licensed dis- pensary just four days before the raid. "I don't know if I can really explain in words how tragic it was to witness," Zettell said. "Some people were held at gun- point and taken to jail." Public Policy Prof Melvyn Levitsky has different thoughts on the matter. "In my opinion, it would be better if they'd just declared the whole thing illegal," Levitsky said. Levitsky pointed out that fed- eral law and the World Health Organization consider marijuana an intoxicating substance, not a medicine. "The fact is that federal law is supreme over state law ... it's not wise to declare something a medicine without any scientific proof." The Hoard for Student Pubtlcations seeks New Members 'caliy The University of Michigan Board for Student Publications is recruiting new members for three year terms beginning in April. :NLIGHTENME-NT TO F MICHIG AN The Board is responsible for three publications: The Michigan wENESDAY,FEBRARY3, Daily, the Michiganensian yearbook, and the Gargoyle. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER enversityohiganCge Because the Board is committed to realizing diversity's benefits irmes ii sfor itself and for the publications it oversees, the Board is For more imto aon calC4.615,6449 particularly interested in recruiting members of the University community (faculty, staff and students) or the general public who are members of underrepresented groups and who have experience and expertise in journalism, law, finance or fund raising. All interested persons are encouraged to apply. For more information and application forms, please contact Mark Bealafeld, Student Publications General Manager at (734) 418- 4115 extension 1246 or mbealafe@umich.edu. The deadline for applications is Monday, February 13th