Thursday, June 21, 2018
ONE-HUNDRED-TWENTY SEVEN YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
inside
Crime
NEWS
Retired prof found dead
Schlissel interview Schlissel clarifies the role of the Bias Response Team. >> SEE PAGE 3
AAPD investigate potential homicide of Robert Sharp
OPINION
Ignorance in idols
By ALICE TRACEY
Audrey Gilmour examines the precarious relationship society has with politicians.
Summer Daily News Editor
>> SEE PAGE 5
ARTS
DESIGN BY JACK SILBERMAN
Beyoncé returns EVERYTHING IS LOVE finds the Carters at their most extravagant >> SEE PAGE 6
MICHIGAN IN COLOR
When Justice isn’t served
“I’m afraid, our communities are afraid, it’s time to step our laws up.” >> SEE PAGE 9
U-M prof seeks to eliminate STEM programs for women Mark J. Perry says programs like GEECS violate Title IX and state constitution By GRACE KAY
SPORTS
Summer Managing News Editor
Michael Woods The former Michigan runner ended his track career after multiple injuries and found a new outlet in professional cycling >> SEE PAGE 11
INDEX Vol. CXXVII, No. 121 | © 2018 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com
NEWS .................................... 2 OPINION ............................... 4 ARTS....................................... 6 MiC......................................... 9 SPORTS................................ 10
michigandaily.com
In an article currently circulating Facebook, Mark J. Perry, an economics professor at the University of MichiganFlint, calls readers to act against female-oriented programs in order to encourage “diversity, equity and inclusion and end gender discrimination in Michigan.” According to Perry, the University needs to eliminate women-only programs on the grounds that they are “illegally discriminating against men and gender non-conforming students, faculty and patients.” Perry challenges 11 different
University programs, initiatives, organizations, scholarships and fellowships at U-M Ann Arbor, including groups such as Girls in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, the OCH Initiative for Women in Finance and the Barbour Scholarship. In Perry’s article, published on the American Enterprise Institute website, he claims the programs violate the University’s Nondiscrimination Policy, Title IX and the state of Michigan Constitution. “It’s important to note that university programs, scholarships, initiatives, fellowships and medical programs that are for gender exclusionary (‘women-only’) are potentially illegal for excluding and violating not just the civil rights of men, but are also potentially illegal for violating the civil rights of students, patients and faculty who have non-binary gender identities that are not exclusively male or female, and would include those who are transgender, transsexual,
genderqueer, gender-expansive, bigender, dual gender, pangender, trigender, genderfluid, or agender,” Perry writes. Student organizations such as GEECS and the Ensemble of CSE Ladies were originally designed to create a support group for women within the STEM fields. However, Perry argues, these programs not only exclude men but violate their civil rights. He cites the Michigan state Constitution’s portion about affirmative action programs in his argument: “The University of Michigan, Michigan State University, Wayne State University, and any other public college or university, community college, or school district shall not discriminate against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting.”
Read more at MichiganDaily.com
The Ann Arbor Police Department is investigating the suspected homicide of Robert Sharp, a 76-yearold retired University of Michigan professor. The victim was found dead Monday night in the basement of his house on Alpine Drive. Sharp’s death, which police believe involved foul play, happened at some point between Sunday and Monday. Police arrived after Sharp failed to appear at a community meeting, concerning other residents of his housing complex. Sharp retired from U-M faculty after teaching in the chemistry department for 39 years. He earned his doctorate from Case Western Reserve, studying Multidimensional and Multiquantum NMR of Paramagnetic Systems, and completed his postdoc at Oxford University before starting at the University of Michigan in 1969. Over the course of his career, Sharp researched and published numerous papers on the paramagnetic behavior of electrons in NMR spectroscopy. Most recently, his team focused on using oriented polyacrylic gels to map electron spin. The victim’s son, David Sharp, told MLive his father was passionate about learning. “He knew so much about so many things that you could talk to him for hours and continually learn something new,” Sharp said. Police have not made any arrests yet, but they are actively looking into the crime. The Ann Arbor Police Department tip line can be reached at 734-794-6939 or tips@a2gov.org.
Read more at MichiganDaily.com