()NAAbIUNDhEI)Thurl dyli 'tber321nYEihS OF EDITOIALganday11 Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, October 3, 2013 michigandailycom FUN IN THE HARVEST SUN R , _ Alm 4 '4L 1". " aLE °'J SCIENCE Research on treatment for ALS aided by stem cells ALLISON FARRAND/Daily TOP LEFT: LSA junior Rebekah Kreckman gives tours of the campus farm during the Sustainable Food Program's annual harvest festival at the Matthei Botanical Gardens Wednesday. BOTTOM LEFT: Musicians perform for students as part of the fesitval. RIGHT: Graduate student Lauren Materne participated in a doughnut-eating contest. CAMPUS IMPROVEMENT R ovation ead north Testing of new surgical treatment moves to Phase II By IAN DILLINGHAM Daily StaffReporter Though the Food and Drug Administration remains closed due to the federal government shutdown, researchers at the University are pushing for- ward the development of stem- cell therapies, with the hope of improving the quality of life for individuals with life-threatening disabilities. Researchers at University Hospital and the A. Alfred Taub- man Medical Research Institute are exploringthe use of stem cells in the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis - also known as Lou Gerhig's disease, a neurode- generative condition that causes cell death in spinal cord neurons that control movement. Patients with ALS suffer from loss of mus- cle control and often die of respi- ratory failure. Neurology Prof. Eva Feldman presented recent results from her research at an event Wednesday evening at the Taubman Insti- tute's Kahn Auditorium for an audience of about F40 students and faculty. Feldman discussed the completion of Phase I trials of the new stem-cell therapy and her plans for Phase IL While Phase I trials typically test the safety of a treatment in human patients, Phase II tests the treatment's efficacy. Feldman's research team received approval for Phase II of their research in May and has since begun tests. Shortly before the event Wednesday afternoon, a third patient enrollei in the trial had the surgical procedure, in which a surgeon injects stem cells into specific regions of the spinal cord. Although it is too early to record changes in disease pro- gression, Feldman said the three patients have experienced "no adverse consequences" from the procedure. Stem cells have the unique ability to fulfill a wide variety of tasks by developing into spe- cialized cells depending on their environment. When these cells are injected into the spinal cord of ALS patients, they surround diseased cells and slow the pro- gression of cell death, Feldman said. "Depending on how you grow them ... they can become any cell in the body," Feldman said. Feldman's treatment uses a See ALS, Page 5A Pierpont Commons, Mitchell Field to recieve upgrades By YARDAIN AMRON Daily StaffReporter North Campus-ers feeling left out from the dizzying resi- dence-hall renovations on Cen- tral Campus will soon have their own to boast about - albeit on a smaller scale. The Commons Cafe is sched- uled to close for renovations in March as part of a larger, campus-wide project to update student facilities initiated by Building a Better Michigan, a student-run organization creat- ed to advise renovations across campus. Through 2020, the project hopes to bring improvements to aging facilities including Mitch- ell Field, the three recreational sports buildings and two of the three unions. Built in 1965, Pierpont Com- mons has apparently lost much of its student appeal. Through information from student sur- veys distributed by Building a Better Michigan, dissatisfaction with the food options and usable study and organizational spaces became apparent. "(Pierpont Commons) doesn't offer healthy, affordable and attractive dining options," LSA senior Louis Mirante, co-chair of Building a Better Michigan, said. "It doesn't facilitate the academ- ic, social or physical well-being to the degree that itshould." Renovations to the cafe hope to address this by offering an increased variety in food choic- es and better study space. Four new, restaurant-like serving areas will bring in a range of quality cuisine, such as those found in the recently renovated dining hall of East Quad Residence Hall. A 'Fire & Ice' station is in talks to serve freshly-prepared Ramen or stir-fry; a hearth-oven station will serve gourmet flat-bread pizzas and freshly baked bread; an international cuisine station See RENOVATIONS, Page SA MAKE IT WORK Looking for presidential candidates both inside and out Regents will have to weigh the benefits of 'U' experience vs. outside perspective By AMRUTHA SIVAKUMAR Daily StaffReporter University President Mary Sue Coleman broke long-standing prece- dent when she was appointed despite not having any prior affiliation with the institution. By July 2014, that aberration may become the start of a new trend. As the first president to be appointed from outside the Uni- versity since 1979, Cole- man proved to stakehold- ers worldwide I In Fmin that she could manage the ropes of three university campuses, an athletic department with the fifth-largest national revenue and a consistently top-ranked health sys- See CANDIDATES, Page 5A STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS Solar car team heads 'down under' for race ALUISON FARRAND/Daily Art & Design freshman Sophie Schank tests her group's Rube Goldberg device at the Art & Architecture Building Wednesday. GOVERNMENT Equal pay advocate talks gender discrimination, 'Generation' will compete in four-day, 1,800-mile race in Australian desert By STEPHANIE SHENOUDA Daily StaffReporter One hundred team mem- bers. Seven national champion- ship titles. Five top-three world championship finishes. This Sunday, the University Solar Car Team is competing in the World Solar Car Challenge, and they're hoping this will be their year. After spending the last two years building and designing Generation, the team's latest car, several members have traveled to the Australian outback, where they'll compete with teams from around the world in a1,800-mile race to the finish and the title of world solar-car champion. Over the course of four days, competitors from 40 schools and 23 countries will race from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and then charge their cars until 7 a.m. the next morning for the next day of rac- ing. LSA junior Ian Sullivan, the team's business director, spoke to The Michigan Daily from Ari- zona, where he was currently attending a sponsorship confer- ence. He said he learned at the conference how to effectively work with companies to gain resources for the coming year. "We're all definitely really excited about Sunday's race," Sullivan said. "Though we're proud to consistently be in the top, this is our best chance ever to win, and that's always our goal, so we feel like we just need to go in and take it." Sullivan noted a rule change this year that mandates thateach car have four wheels instead ,of three, which will make this year's car more efficient and competitive. He said the team is always working on improving technology and sustainability, but this has probably been the most major change their design has undergone. Engineering and Business junior James Kauney, a third- See SOLAR, Page SA Lilly Ledbetter is namesake of Obama's first law By CAROLYN GEARIG For The Daily Lilly Ledbetter, a gen- der-equality advocate and namesake of the 2009 Equal Pay Act, made remarks to a crowd of more than 200 peo- ple at Rackham Auditorium Wednesdayevening. "If I say one thing tonight that will change an indi- vidual's life, I will have done my job," Ledbetter said at the beginning of her speech. In 1979, Ledbetter said she faced discrimination at Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company in Alabama, where she worked as a supervi- sor. In 1998, after 19 years of alleged sexual harassment and gender discrimination at the company, she received an anonymous note that showed the salaries of three of her male co-workers who held the same position as her. The three males monthly salaries were nearly $6,000, while hers was $3,727. Ledbetter originally won a See EQUAL, Page SA WEATHER TOMORROW HI: 82 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail The Liner Notes: Latin jazz takes center stage LO: 64 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/BLOGS INDEX NEWS ..........................2A SUDOKU..................... 2A Vol. CXXIV, No. 4 OPINION.................... 4A CLASSIFIEDS ...............6A 0203tTheMichigan Daily SPORTS ......................6A B S I D E ..................1 B michigofdulycom , .oin Reckitt Betnckiser-ao..te,., Fre *and Mcinx*At the H Qmc9- gJTIMgAllinm HMTH Hm IIM 0'dw here hewledes ober 5h12p - I