2018-01-29

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ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

Monday, January 29, 2018

Ann Arbor, Michigan

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Hockey swept Michigan hockey team has season-long weaknesses exposed, gets swept against Ohio State

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RESEARCH

App aims to supplement University bus system CHUN SO/Daily

Students walk out of classes and gather in the Diag to protest the University’s consideration of hosting Richard Spencer as part of the #StopSpencer events in November.

University agrees to push Richard Spencer event to after semester

Administration will offer Spencer spring, summer dates once semester is over MAYA GOLDMAN & AMARA SHAIKH Daily News Editor & Daily Staff Reporter

White supremacist Richard Spencer will not be speaking at the University of Michigan this semester, according to

a statement released Friday afternoon. The University will offer Spencer dates after the end of the winter semester. University President Mark Schlissel announced in November his administration will move forward with Spencer’s request, provided

they can ensure a safe environment for the speech. “Consistent with earlier U-M communications, the university will continue its ongoing safety and security assessments and will offer possible dates based on these assessments,” the November statement reads. After a lawsuit regarding

Spencer’s request to speak on Michigan State University’s campus, MSU has agreed to allow Spencer to speak on their East Lansing campus on March 5.

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Partnering with Ford School, RITMO provides on-demand shuttles for users KATE JENKINS

Daily Staff Reporter

Reinventing Urban Transportation and Mobility aims to revolutionize public transit through an online app that turns transportation into an on-demand service. The app, which serves travelers on the University of Michigan’s North Campus, first launched this month on January 16. While no timeline is set in place yet, the developers hope to eventually expand the service to the University as a whole. RITMO, partnering with the Ford School of Public Policy, will allow

students, faculty and staff to use on-demand shuttle transportation linked with the University bus system. Riders only need to book one ticket to their destination and wait up to five minutes for their shuttle to arrive. Pascal Van Hentenryck, the Seth Bonder Collegiate professor at the College of Engineering, is leading the RITMO project. He explained how the new system hopes to resolve inefficiencies within our current transportation system by solving the so-called first and last mile problem, when individuals have to walk more than a “comfortable distance,” typically 1/4 miles. See RITMO, Page 3A

After 116 years, Michigan Law Review Following University president, names first Black Editor-in-Chief alums open

GOVERNMENT

BUSINESS

MSU AD steps down

Classmates describe 2L Megan Brown as “intelligent” and “thoughtful”

Students set up talk to help marginalized students professionally

Second-year Law student Megan Brown has spent the past seven years at the University, first for her undergraduate education and now for Law School. Now, she has been selected as the editor in chief of the Michigan Law Review – a University of Michigan publication written by legal scholars, practitioners and students. She also discovered she would be the first Black person to hold this position at the Law Review, which issued its first publication in 1902. She initially held the position of an associate editor of the Law Review, which she achieved after a rigorous process involving writing a paper, various publication-related exercises and interviews. Brown said she felt honored to be chosen as editor in chief and attributed her success to those around her. “Any success that I’ve achieved in Law School is really a credit to my classmates and my professors,” Brown said. “And then once some of these people gave me a little more confidence, it just felt good to work hard and make them happy and proud and make myself proud.” Regarding her role as the first Black editor in chief, Brown said she had no knowledge of it when she applied. The Law Review board told her after she had

ANDREW HIYAMA Daily News Editor

Two days after Michigan State University president Lou Anna Simon resigned from her post, the university’s Athletic Director Mark Hollis followed suit, according to a statement released on the University website Friday afternoon. The resignations come in the wake of the sentencing of Larry Nassar, the once-worldrenowned physician for the USA Gymnastics team and the MSU athletic department who, over the course of at least three decades, molested hundreds of women and girls whose treatment he was responsible for. A Detroit News investigation published January 18 revealed multiple employees in MSU’s athletic department were told of Nassar’s abuse in the decades leading up to his firing in 2016. Simon herself was informed of a police report and Title IX complaint against Nassar in 2014, but said they were reported to her as being against an “unnamed physician.” In his statement Friday, Hollis See MSU, Page 3A

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SAYALI AMIN

Daily Staff Reporter

been selected. Brown said her selection reflects the progress the Law School community has made. “I will admit that it did take a while,” Brown said. “It should have happened sooner. But I like to think of this as mostly good news. There’s a lot of crazy stuff happening on campus and in the world racism-wise, and it feels good to know that at least my community has faith (in me).”

Brown said her classmate Johannah Walker, a third-year Law student, is someone who has encouraged her to be her best. Brown met Walker through the Black Law Students Association, of which they are both members. Walker said seeing Brown go through the early stages of the process and then achieving her goals was amazing. “Megan is what everyone says she is,” Walker said.

“She’s intelligent, she’s driven, she’s kind and thoughtful and generous, but even more than that she just works so incredibly hard. I think that’s just been reflected through everything I’ve always seen her do.” Walker said having Brown specifically be the first Black editor in chief is significant.

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JULIA FORD

Daily Staff Reporter

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JOSHUA HAN/Daily

INDEX

After success at New York locations, rowing “available for everyone”

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Second-year Law student Megan Brown has spent the past seven years at the University, first for her undergraduate education and now for Law School.

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Ann Arbor rowing gym

Vol. CXXVII, No. 64 ©2018 The Michigan Daily

After discovering she had three herniated disks at age 27, University of Michigan 2008 alum Helaine Knapp was determined to find an effective, low-impact workout. Her doctor suggested rowing, but she said she initially associated rowing with the untouched machine at the gym or in her grandfather’s basement. Knapp decided to challenge this stigma. Now, following the success of its first two studios in Manhattan, CITYROW – a rowing fitness boutique founded by Knapp – will open its third location in Ann Arbor at 401 E. Liberty this spring. “I was really frustrated and kind of kept going back to the rowing thing like, ‘Is there any way to make this sexy and cool and chic and available for everyone?’” Knapp said. “And so that was sort of the impetus behind CITYROW, because I knew there had to be a better and smarter way to work out.” Knapp and John Rotche, another University alum, partnered together to franchise See FITNESS, Page 2A

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

SUDOKU.....................2 CLASSIFIEDS...............6 SPORTS....................7


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2018-01-29 by The Michigan Daily - Issuu