2017-12-04

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ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

Monday, December 4, 2017

Ann Arbor, Michigan

michigandaily.com

Breaking out Freshman guard Jordan Poole scored a career-high 19 points to lead Michigan to a 69-55 win, and he stated his case for a permanent spot in the rotation in the process.

» Page 1B CAMPUS LIFE

Monologues aims to raise awareness about HIV

Monologues dispelled myths about illness through performances, poetry, dance NIKHIL BRUEGGEMANN/Daily

Members of the Lecturers’ Employee Organization lead a demonstration for higher pay and more bargaining rights outside Palmer Commons Friday.

LEO members rally for workers’ rights, in opposition to Spencer

50 members of the Lecturers’ Employee Organization protested against white supremacist LEAH GRAHAM Daily Staff Reporter

On Friday about 50 University of Michigan community members, many of whom were members of the Lecturers’ Employee Organization, gathered at Palmer Commons to rally against the

administration’s considerationof white supremacist Richard Spencer’s request to speak on campus. The event brought together members of LEO who were fighting for their rights as workers and in opposition to the Spencer event. LEO includes lecturers from all three University campuses: Ann Arbor, Dearborn and Flint.

Founded in 2003, the union bargains for 1,500 lecturers. Also in attendance were members of other local unions and representatives from student organizations such as Radfun and Young Democratic Socialists of America. Washtenaw County Commissioner Michelle Deatrick and state Rep. Yousef Rabhi, D-Ann Arbor, attended as well.

The rally took place after LEO’s fourth bargaining session with the administration in recent weeks to obtain enhanced job security, higher wages and improved benefits. At the rally, members called for such demands. LSA senior Justin Villanueva is a husband and a father, as well as an undergraduate at the See RALLY, Page 3A

CATHERINE NOUHAN For the Daily

On an illuminated stage in the auditorium of the University of Michigan Museum of Art, the stories of people affected by HIV were presented in forms ranging from dances and slam poetry to statistics and HIV testing site information at the annual HIV Monologues presented by the University of Michigan’s chapters of National Council of Negro Women and the Black Student Union this weekend. LSA senior Margarett McBride, president of the council, said the event aimed to increase awareness about HIV. “There was a lot of talk about

Speakers provide firsthand perspective Rep. Levin to retire, on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

GOVERNMENT

join the ‘U’ faculty

Students arranged a dialogue between Palestinian and Israeli residents

U.S. Rep. Sander Levin will not seek reelection, will join Ford faculty instead

In light of the ongoing conflicts of racial profiling and police brutality, a five-person panel titled “Minorities, Social Justice and Police Enforcement: An Open Discussion” was held Friday, encouraging civil discourse on campus. Topics of racial injustice, student activism and minority underrepresentation were present during the conversation, moderated by Freyja Harris, chief diversity and inclusion officer of the School of Music, Theatre & Dance. The panel highlighted the school’s production of “Blood at the Root,” which tells the story of the Jena Six — six Black high school students in Louisiana charged with attempted murder of a white classmate. The play’s timeliness with regard to recent incidents of racism occurring on campus led to a discussion during the panel. Theatre & Drama assistant professor Jose Casas, the multicultural and diversity director for the American Alliance for Theatre and Education, emphasized the importance of using art to incite activism in its audience. “It’s the hope that these type of plays, and more of these types of plays, can actually have people going home and thinking, and possibility stimulating, some sort of action on a personal and even community level,” Casas said.

CARLY RYAN

Daily Staff Reporter

After 35 years in Congress, U.S. Rep. Sander Levin, D-Royal Oak, will find a new home at the University of Michigan’s Ford School of Public Policy. Levin announced in an op-ed he will not be seeking re-election to a 19th term, and instead told the Detroit Free Press he will start writing and teaching at the Public Policy School. “They want me to talk to the students at the school about leadership, because they say they teach and teach all these courses and want to really have students talk further about how they implement what they’ve learned,” Levin said. Levin said he loved his career in public service, but felt it was time to give someone else a chance. He said he counts defeating the privatization of Social Security, helping pass Affordable Care Act and protecting the auto industry during the recession as some of his greatest victories. See LEVIN, Page 3A

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MAEVE O’BRIEN For the Daily

Panelist Bryant Purvis, a member of the Jena Six, praised the Theatre & Drama Department for its portrayal of the experiences he and the other Black students faced. On the other hand, Purvis stressed the importance of being proactive in facing injustice and not sitting back when a problem isn’t personal. “We can’t wait until this happens to our brothers, sons and fathers to respond,” Purvis

said. “We must have those conversations, we must educate ourselves … I saw firsthand what we can do once we unite.” LSA senior Anushka Sarkar, Central Student Government president, acknowledged the current tensions on campus regarding race, and later answered questions from the audience on next steps to ensure safety and inclusion within the student population. Sarkar noted

the impact of social media on police brutality and the harmful intersection between sharing the facts of an issue and spreading false information. “It’s very, very difficult to share objective and accurate information on social media, and to prevent wildfires of false information from spreading,” Sarkar said. These issues stem from a See DIALOGUE, Page 3A

CEREN DAG/Daily

Husam Jubran and Yuval Ben-Ami talk about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict in Rackham Friday.

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michigandaily.com

INDEX

Vol. CXXVII, No. 41 ©2017 The Michigan Daily

HIV in the past when Magic Johnson came out having it, but since then, it is not as big of a topic,” McBride said. “We want to start conversations about what to do when your partner has HIV, and how to talk about being safe.” LSA junior Taylor Moore said she came to the event in part because she is currently taking a class on HIV and AIDS through the American Culture Department. “I knew most of the information presented here, but I came because I still believe in the message,” she said. “A lot of people don’t view HIV as a problem in the United States, and I believe that is due to the lack of education, especially in the Black See MONOLOGUES, Page 3A

GOVERNMENT

Weekly MI state house legislative wrap-up Bills addressing oversight and accountability in charter schools introduced COLIN BERESFORD Daily Staff Reporter

Each week, The Michigan Daily will be publishing a wrap-up of the most important bills proposed in Michigan Legislature over the past seven days: HB 5286-5294 and SB 674682: These bills, proposed by House and Senate Democrats, would provide more oversight and accountability for charter schools and the organizations that run them. The bills aim to give parents the information necessary to make informed decisions on education options and where their children can go to school. In a press release on the Michigan House Democrats website, House Democratic Floor Leader Rep. Christine Greig, D-Farmington Hills, said the bills are necessary to hold schools accountable and inform parents. “When we send our kids off to school in the morning, we want to know that they’re getting the best education possible — no matter which school they go to,” she said. “While we have rules in place to hold traditional and charter schools accountable, we have no systems See WRAP-UP, Page 3A

NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 ARTS......................6

SUDOKU.....................2 CLASSIFIEDS...............6 SPORTS...................1B


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