2019-02-01

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ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

Friday, February 1, 2019

Ann Arbor, Michigan

michigandaily.com

CAMPUS LIFE

MDining to start new emergency allergy plan Addition of epinephrine auto injectors serve as aid for sensitive food allergies CALLIE TEITELBAUM Daily Staff Reporter

DESIGN BY SEJAL LAL

Coalition of faculty, students launch One University campaign Initiative is an effort to spread resources fairly among three ‘U’ campuses ALEX HARRING & ELIZABETH LAWRENCE Daily Staff Reporter & Managing News Editor

The One University Campaign, a coalition of faculty and students, launched last semester across the University of

Michigan’s three campuses as an effort to equip the University’s Flint and Dearborn campuses with more resources. A key player in the campaign is sociology lecturer Ian Robinson, president of the Lecturers’ Employee Organization. Robinson said the campaign has ideas in the works

ACADEMICS

LSA creates institute to expand the digital minor New institution will focus on intersections of technology and human identity, provide research DANIELLE PASEKOFF Daily Staff Reporter

The University of Michigan’s College of Literature, Science and the Arts announced the formation of the Digital Studies Institute Monday. The Institute will expand the current minor degree program and provide students and faculty with greater resources, in addition to a new location on campus. “LSA created the Digital Studies Institute to bring a humanitiescentered approach to the power and problems of the digital worlds billions of people visit and inhabit each day,” the press release reads. “The compelling, integrated coursework allows students to attain a degree with a more holistic and tech-savvy viewpoint on social and cultural issues.” The Department of American Culture created the Digital Studies minor program in 2014. With only 20 students in its first year, the curriculum focused on the digital world and its history, as well as human interaction with technology. The program grew to more than 100 students by its second year and expanded to include a graduate program in 2016.

for where these resources should go and has the numbers to back them up. “We are in many ways one university, and in many ways not,” Robinson said. “The 1U campaign is really, fundamentally an effort to get more resources for those

campuses, and we have a number of different areas in which we think they’re lacking right now and which we have ideas on what might address those inadequacies and some numbers that prove where things are now.” See 1U, Page 3

DOE investigates Flint professor’s Ann Arbor claim regarding male discrimination apartment MICHIGAN

Mark Perry accuses U-M of unfair allotment of STEM programs, funds for women GRACE KAY

Managing News Editor

Katie Wolberg returned to campus after winter break filled with anticipation. As a secondsemester LSA freshman, she resolved to explore her developing interest in consulting, excited by the prospect of what joining a firm offered her: a network, a group of friends and a community at the University of Michigan. Despite Katie’s interest in data analytics and consulting, her anticipation quickly turned into disappointment when she was met with rejection at some of the

top consulting clubs on campus, cutting short her opportunity to engage in this new atmosphere. “I’m planning on transferring to the School of Information,” Wolberg said. “I’m interested in maybe consulting in the future, or doing something in the tech industry, and I thought [joining a club] would be a really good opportunity to meet new people and expand my network … and then it fell through and now I’m like, ‘Do I need to rethink what I’m doing?’” Campus clubs and organizations are an integral part of the college experience.

With more than 1,600 clubs at the University, students are afforded the opportunity to engage in a myriad of activities. But many pre-professional organizations require intensive application processes that make membership extremely exclusive. Competitive admissions are especially prevalent in businessoriented, pre-professional organizations, including consulting groups, investment firms and business fraternities. Applications often require written supplements, interviews and multiple rounds of “cuts,” yielding an extensive process of

Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know.

new member selection. A growing sentiment of frustration has developed among portions of the student body due to the highly selective nature of these clubs, which reject a majority of initial applicants before welcoming new members. LSA junior Andrew Levey discussed how his own experience with rejection from a campus consulting firm led him to create Alliance Consulting Group, an organization dedicated to providing all students with an opportunity to learn about consulting. See GENDER, Page 3

loses heat amid cold

Emergency alert sent to consumers to conserve energy due to weather and power concerns BEN ROSENFELD Daily Staff Reporter

Following temperature lows of -17 degrees Fahrenheit Wednesday and Thursday, numerous Ann Arbor tenants faced difficulties resulting from the inclement weather. Several apartment buildings around campus contended with burst pipes and heating malfunctions Thursday due to the low temperatures. Varsity Ann Arbor, an apartment building on E. Washington Street largely housing University of Michigan students, dealt with these problems yesterday afternoon. On Thursday at about 1 p.m., Varsity Management sent out an email to its tenants, stating that a water pipe had frozen and burst, leading to a fire alarm going off on the 3rd f loor of the apartments. Consequently, heating and hot water throughout the building was limited for much of the day.

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See MINOR, Page 3

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MDining decided to implement an emergency-use epinepherine program for fall of 2019 after a change in Michigan Legislation in 2015 allowing pharmacists to dispense auto-injectable epinephrine to an authorized entity. The epinephrine auto-injectors will be available as an emergency resource in all residential dining halls, according to a press release from the University of Michigan. MDining will partner with Housing security, a subunit of U-M Division of Public Safety & Security, which will have security officers patrolling residential areas, equipped with epinephrine auto-injectors. According to the press release, a 2017 FDA report said there has been a 25 percent increase in allergy sensitive adults from 20072017. The Journal of the American Medical Association found nearly 26 million adults have food allergies, and that number is

growing. MDining Dietitian Anne Smiarowski explained the implications of this research in the University press release. “All research points to this number increasing for many reasons, including new additives and food processing that our bodies are not used to, as well as the possibility that we’ve become too clean,” Smiarowski said “The focus has been on making sure we use hand sanitizers, disinfectants, etc., everywhere in our life. Some studies suggest this has altered our immune system’s response to potential allergens.” Kathryn Whiteside, Director of Systems Management for MDining, said the epinephrine program is not necessarily a response to a rise in allergy sensitive adults but to the recent legislation passed under the Public Act 221 of 2015 that allows for authorized personnel on campus, including See DINING, Page 3

DESIGN BY SHERRY CHEN

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INDEX

Vol. CXXVIII, No. 65 ©2019 The Michigan Daily

NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 CLASSIFIEDS................6

SUDOKU.....................2 ARTS...................5 SPORTS....................7


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2019-02-01 by The Michigan Daily - Issuu