2A - Wednesday, February 27, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com (Thic iihigan Dailm 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ANDREW WEINER RACHEL GREINETZ Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 eat. 1252 734-418-4115 eat. 1241 anweiner@michigandaily.com rmgrein@michigandaily.com UPenn sees breakthrough r-HAIL TO THE VICTORS After approximately 20 years of work, Carl June and his research team have made a breakthrough in T-cell immunotherapy, a type of emerging cancer treatment, The Daily Penn- sylvanian reported Monday. Nine out of 12 patients who received the treatment since 2011 have respond- ed favorably to it. June described the treatment as a blood transfusion, except with the patent's own blood, which has been altered in a lab. June told the Penn- sylvanian that there has not been a single precedent where a treatment method like this has gone from a laboratory setting to treat- ing actual patients, unless it was done by a pharmaceuti- cal company. UCLA teaching assis- tant makes learning musi- cal A UCLA teaching assis- tant has blended science with music to engage and educate students in his classes, The Daily Bruin reported Monday. Julio Rodriguez, a teach- ing assistant studying phys- ics at UCLA, came up with the idea of using instru- ments to demonstrate concepts in his physics, astronomy and engineering classes during his first year as a graduate student. While tuning his violin one eve- ning, Rodriguez found he could show sound interfer- ence by pluckingthe strings. "With physics and all sci- ences, we're basically trying to discover the language of the universe. It's already written. It's already there," Rodriguez said. "But with music, that's something that comes from the creativity of the human mind." - STEVEN ZENG Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com SpartsnSectian nports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@michigandaily.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letterstothe Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaiy.com Photography Sectin photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classiefid@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com Law student Michael Pitt was caught in the hail storm outside the Law'Quad on Tuesday. CRIME NOTES Crash course Breathless CAMPUS EVENTS &NOTES Depression Law school conference presentation WHERE: 1506 Medical Center WHEN: Monday at about 7:05 a.m. WHAT: Two vehicles col- lided in a parking lot, Uni- versity Police reported. The accident occured outside the loading dock. No inju- ries were reported, but one car suffered minor damage. (Lap)topless WHERE: Michigan Union WHEN: Monday at about 1:35 p.m. WHAT: Two laptops were reported stolen, University Police reported. The lap- tops were reportedly taken sometime between 1 p.m. on Feb 22 and 7 a.m. on Feb 25. Police currently have no suspects in the case. WHERE: Enviornmental Engineering and Water Resources Building WHEN: Monday at about 2:00 p.m. WHAT: An automated external defibrillator was reported stolen sometime between Jan 31 and Feb 25, University Police reported. There are currently no suspects WHAT: The 11th annual, day long conference will address major issues affect- ing college students, includ- ing depression, anxiety and other mental disorder. WHO: Depression Center WHEN: Today at 9:00 a.m. WHERE: Rackham Gradu- ate School Wheelie bad | Transfer luck WHERE: 200 Block South Observatory WHEN: Monday at about 9:50 p.m. WHAT: A bicycle was reportedlystolen from a rack outside of Mosher Jor- dan on Feb. 24 or 25, Uni- versity Police reported. open house WHAT: Community col- lege transfer students are invited to a mixer where they can meet and discuss their experiences with other transfer students. Jac- queline Bowman, from the Center for the Education of Women, will present. WHO: CEW WHEN: Today at 4:00 p.m. WHERE: 330 E Liberty Streit WHAT: The assistant dean of admissions from Loyola Chicagao Law School, Pamela Bloomquist, will discuss tips and advice for law school applications. WHO: The Career Center WHEN: Today at noon WHERE: Student Activities Building CORRECTIONS . An article in the Feb. 26 edition of The Michigan Daily ('Site aims to connect students to Detroit intern- ships") incorrectly identified Morgan Princing as a co- creator of Detroit Wolverine. Princing is interested in using Detroit Wolverine to find an internship. * Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. Pena Nieto, former Mexi- can president, ended his six year term on Dec 1, CNN reported. During his time in office, 26,121 disap- pearances occured, accord- ing to the Interior Ministry, many of which are the result of organized crime. Storys of students studying abroad and the University efforts to get students across the globe. " FOR MORE, SEE INSIDE Yahoo is ending its work-from-home pol- icy, effectively forcing employees to work in-office or leave the company CNN reported Tuesday. A 2011 study found working remote- ly increased 73 percent between 2005 and 2011. 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Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptionsfor fal term, startinginseptember, via U.S.nmailare $110.OWinter term (January through April) is $i1, yearong(September through Aprilis $195.Universityaffiliates are subject to areduced subscriptionrate.on-campussubscriptionsfor faltermare$35.Subscriptionsmustbeprepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 0 0 Voters to choose replacement for' Jesse Jackson Jr. in dem. primary Costs to maintain Los Angeles nuclear power plant skyrocket after repairs Campaign dominated by debate on gun issues CHICAGO (AP) - After a fierce primary campaign domi- nated by gun control, ethics and economic woes, voters were choosing the likely replacement for Jesse Jackson Jr. on Tuesday, three months after his legal trou- bles and battle with depression forced the son of the civil rights leader to resign from Congress. The Democratic front-run- ners - former state Rep. Robin Kelly, former U.S. Rep. Debbie Halvorson and Chicago Alder- man Anthony. Beale - made Election Day stops through the blistery winter weather at train stations and restaurants in the district, which spans Chicago's South Side, south suburbs and some rural areas. They were among 14 Demo- crats and four Republicans in the special primary, but the Demo- cratic winner was expected to sail through the April 9 gen- eral election because the area is heavily Democratic. Halvorson, who lost a pri- mary challenge to Jackson last year, has been targeted for her position on gun control, which became a key issue in the dis- trict, parts of which have been deeply affected by Chicago's gun violence. Independence USA, the super PAC of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, poured more than $2 million into the race for anti-gun ads in support of Kelly and against Halvorson, a former state lawmaker and one- term congresswoman. Kelly sup- ports an assault-weapons ban, but Halvorson does not. After casting her ballot, Halvorson warned that if the ads are successful Bloomberg will try to "buy seats" across the country. "We can'tletthathappen," she said. Beale also took issue with the ads, saying people are "extreme- lyupset" that someone from New York is trying to tell people in Illinois how to vote and predict- ing that there will be a "back- lash." The guns issue dominated candidate forums and television ads and also appeared to have resonated with voters. Ei ac LOS cost of replace tered S plant j million the coi tends repairs closed' "Thn repair erator units' more rentlyE Intern. pany c Southe nvironmental The plant hasn't produced electricity since January 2012, tivlsts call for after a tiny radiation leak led to the discovery of unusual dam- shutdown age to hundreds of steam gener- ator tubes that carry radioactive ANGELES (AP) - The water. repairs, inspections and The filing touches on a series ment power at the shut- of broad questions about the an Onofre nuclear power plant as SCE pushes to restart amped to more than $400 one of two reactors. i through December as "The cost of such repairs or mpany that runs it con- the substitute market power vith extensive equipment that must be purchased dur- , regulatory filings dis- ing the outage could exceed Tuesday. estimates and insurance cover- e scope of necessary age, or may not be recoverable s for the steam gen- through regulatory processes s ... or the length of the or otherwise," it said. outages could prove SCE is facing pressure from extensive than is cur- several sides, as ittriesto getthe estimated," wrote Edison planting running again. State ational, the parent com- regulators are determining if of San Onofre operator ratepayers should pay for costs rn California Edison. tied to the long-running shut- down, and the Nuclear Regula- tory Commission investigative arm quietly opened a probe in September tied to information Edison provided to the agency on its steam generators. Meanwhile, environmental activists have been pushing to have the plant shut down per- manently. The regulatory filing also said SCE's insurance coverage for wildfires that could arise from its operations might notbe sufficient, and the parent com- pany might not be able to obtain sufficient coverage on SCE's behalf. The NRC said it wanted the company to demonstrate that Unit 2 could meet that thresh- old, or explain how generator tubes would interact with each other if the plant is operating at maximum capacity. 0 A