B-SIDE ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
Thursday, January 18, 2018
Ann Arbor, Michigan
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b-side
This week’s b-side takes a look at comics as a phenomenon both inside and outside the classrom.
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RESEARCH
th
Annual Climate Survey Initiated in 2010
Who are the participants? 2,500 students 1,000 faculty members 1,000 staff members Who will be given the results? 130 institutions worldwide
After success on Planet Blue metrics last year, experts expect to see more improvement Daily Staff Reporter
The Sustainability Cultural Indicators Program is launching its fifth annual survey this week, collecting data from University of Michigan students, staff and faculty. The
May Mobility has roots at University, will expand driverless fleet from Detroit
ALEXA DI LUCA/Daily
Annual ISR survey aims to track changes in sustainability culture KATE JENKINS
A company puts AV tech on streets in more states 2
longitudinal study is conducted by the University’s Graham Sustainability Institute and the Institute for Social Research, and focuses on awareness, attitudes and behaviors relating to sustainability in participants. The SCIP project has tracked sustainability culture at the University since 2012, though it
took a two-year break to avoid overlapping with an ongoing Diversity, Equity and Inclusion survey. John Callewaert, Integrated Assessment Center director of the Graham Institute and one of the survey’s principal investigators, explains the SCIP project is revolutionary because
it is the first longitudinal study to track sustainability culture, and its innovativeness is being replicated at other institutes. “It’s been used as a model at many other institutions,” Callewaert said. “I think we are up to over 130 different institutions around the world See SURVEY, Page 3A
MOLLY NORRIS Daily Staff Reporter
Ann Arbor startup May Mobility successfully tested their fleet of driverless cars on the streets of Detroit in October, and now plan to expand the testing to Florida and Texas. Edwin Olson, the CEO of May Mobility, started out working with Toyota’s autonomous vehicles program, and then decided he could make more of a difference by creating his own company. In January 2017, Olson created May Mobility. “I think that too much time is going by, and there are a lot
of things that we can actually do, but a lot of companies are taking paths that will take many more years to turn into real world products,” Olson said. “So part of our approach is really about having real world impact as soon as possible.” Olson discussed all of the advantages of driverless cars, from safety to the environmental benefits of switching from gas cars to a greener solution. As an example, he discussed the potential commercial benefits of being able to have autonomous vehicles transport people from hotels to restaurants. He See MOBILITY, Page 2A
Innovate competition launches with University Plume case alumni talk kickoff event featuring entrepreneur to move on
CAMPUS LIFE
ANN ARBOR
diversity in internships
Students can win $10K for project pitch on public service or entrepreneurship
Underrepresented voices headline panel on working while navigating identity
Central Student Government hosted the kickoff and information session for Innovate, a public service pitch competition, in the Michigan League Wednesday evening with approximately 100 students in attendance. Students were able to hear information on how to become involved in the program, and were addressed by several guest speakers. Innovate is a program in which students can sign up to pitch a public service or entrepreneurship project with the chance of winning $10,000 to help fund continuation of their created project. The deadline to sign up is Jan. 26, and students can either sign up with a group or as an individual to be paired with other individuals of similar interests. Each group will then receive mentors, networks, feedback and advice on public speaking and other aspects important to the field of entrepreneurship. Previous winners range from online communities of information available to teachers and students around to the world to agriculturebased programs for older adults. The first round of judging will take place on Feb. 12, and the final round of pitches will
KAELA THEUT Daily News Editor
Approximately 40 students gathered in the Alumni Center Wednesday night to listen as a diverse cast of panelists — many of them recent University of Michigan graduates — shared their personal experiences and answered questions regarding power dynamics and intersectionality of identities in the workplace. The event, titled “Navigating the Workplace: Underrepresented and Invisible Identities,” focused on helping undergraduate students navigate the oftentimes complicated process of applying for jobs and internships — yet emphasized how the process can be even more difficult for students who hold various underrepresented identities based on qualifiers such as race, gender and class. Panelists included Public Policy graduate student Ammara Ansari, who worked as a campaign field organizer for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign in 2015; Danny Park, who works as a success coach in the University’s See ALUMNI, Page 3A
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JORDYN BAKER Daily Staff Writer
be March 7. CSG Chief Programming Officer Isabelle Blanchard, an LSA sophomore, served as the Innovate Coordinator, and explained students do not need a pre-formulated plan or solid project in order to sign up, but simply need a passion and an interest in a public service idea. Blanchard explained she looks forward
to students working to build upon ideas they already have enthusiasm for, and hopes that Innovate will engage a broader population of the student body. “We already have twenty sign-ups and the projects are all really diverse,” Blanchard said. “I’m also excited just to get the student body really involved … We’re hoping
to follow up with teams throughout the competition and really publicize their projects to the student body, and in the end the student body will also be voting.” CSG President Anushka Sarkar, an LSA senior, was the introductory speaker at the kickoff event where she highlighted the importance See INNOVATE, Page 3A
CHUN SO/Daily
Entrepreneur Suneel Gupta presents tips and strategies regarding how to become a successful entrepreneur at the Michigan League Wednesday.
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INDEX
Vol. CXXVII, No. 57 ©2018 The Michigan Daily
after state judge rules
Gelman Sciences fought decision unsuccesfully in state Supreme Court ANDREW HIYAMA Daily News Editor
The city of Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, Scio Township and the Huron River Watershed Council will be allowed to continue their caseagainst Gelman Sciences, Inc., the Michigan Supreme Court ruled in an order on Jan. 12. After Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Tim Connors ruled the jurisdictions and the Watershed Council could join the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality as co-plaintiffs in December, Gelman Sciences fought the decision unsuccessfully in the Michigan Court of Appeals, ultimately landing the suit in the state Supreme Court. “The application for leave to appeal the July 14, 2017 order of the Court of Appeals is considered, and it is DENIED, because we are not persuaded that the questions presented should be reviewed by this Court,” the Supreme Court order read. See COURT, Page 3A
NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 ARTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1B
SUDOKU.....................2 CLASSIFIEDS...............6 SPORTS....................5