2019-02-21

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ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Ann Arbor, Michigan

michigandaily.com

CAMPUS LIFE

CAM, faculty address ‘U’ obstacles in sustainability LSA Student Government meets to discuss the LSA foreign language requirement in Mason Hall Wednesday evening.

KEEMYA ESMAEL/Daily

LSA Student Government votes to amend language requirement

Resolution passes in favor of allowing final semester to be taken pass/fail LIAT WEINSTEIN Daily Staff Reporter

LSA Student Government convened for their weekly meeting Wednesday evening in Mason Hall to discuss the LSA language requirement policy and fixing faulty MCard readers in residence halls.

LSA SG passed a resolution 26 to 0 in favor of allowing the last semester of the language requirement to be taken pass/fail. LSA juniors Gabbie Ammond, Wyatt Puscas, Jon Reid and Jordan Schuler and LSA senior Hanna Simmons sponsored the resolution and discussed concerns many stu-

dents taking language courses may have about their GPAs in language courses. Currently, students are required to take four semesters of one language in order to complete LSA’s language requirement. Prior to LSA SG’s vote on Wednesday, the first three courses in the sequence

could be taken pass/fail, but the last course had to be taken for a grade. Since the language requirement went into effect, students have voiced concerns over the large time commitment required to finish all four courses of the sequence. See LSA, Page 3A

Student group highlights climate challenges facing campus community ANGELINA LITTLE For the Daily

This Wednesday, the Climate Action Movement at the University of Michigan hosted an event focused on building the climate change movement on campus. Held in the Annenberg Auditorium at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, the event attracted about 100 students, faculty and community members. The event began with four panelists discussing the most pressing issues concerning climate change and how to address them, followed by a small group breakout session in which students brainstormed their own ideas about the

issues and finished with a large group discussion. Engineering junior Logan Vear, president of the Climate Action Movement at the University of Michigan, started off the event by explaining the goal of bringing community members together to figure out how best to address climate issues and make a change in the University and larger Ann Arbor community. “Although we do not have the power to change things at the global level, taking action and influencing change at the local level i s ju s t a s i mp or t a nt , i f no t e ven mor e s o,” Ve a r s a id . See CLIMATE, Page 3A

Panel discusses human rights violations, Lieutenant YSA hosts Governer impact of US foreign policy in North Korea the founder GOVERNMENT

tours U-M MCity site

Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrest II talks future of autonomous vehicles in state of Michigan ALICE TRACEY

Daily Staff Reporter

Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II toured the University of Michigan’s driverless car test and research site, Mcity, Wednesday afternoon. The visit was part of Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s “Home for Opportunity” tour, a series of 50 events intended to highlight avenues for technological innovation, infrastructural development and economic opportunity in the state of Michigan. Mcity Deputy Director Carrie Morton started the event with a presentation on Mcity’s research and partnerships as well as the future ofBY autonomous vehicles. She DESIGN SHERRY CHEN noted Mcity is currently focusing on small-scale, local deployments of autonomous vehicles, such as the driverless shuttles in Detroit. “We’re going to see this increasing level for deployment, where they can drive themselves in a very small area, similar to the May Mobility shuttles in Detroit,” Morton said. “We’ll see these in small deployments, but make no mistake, at this stage, all of those are pretty highly curated science projects and they’re not ready to scale and they won’t be for some time.” See MCITY , Page 3A

CAMPUS LIFE

Conversations occur amidst recent negotiations of denuclearization between both countries NIKKI KIM

Daily Staff Reporter

On Wednesday night, about 100 students and faculty gathered in the Annenberg Auditorium for a panel to discuss the human rights violations in North Korea and the role of American foreign policy in such conversations. The panel was hosted by the Donia Human Rights Center, in partnership with the Ford School of Public Policy, International Policy Center, Law School and the Nam Center for Korean Studies. The panel took place amidst recent negotiations of denuclearization between the United States and North Korea while humanitarian crimes contin-

ue to occur under the Kim Jong-un regime. Business sophomore Richa Shah explained why she came to the panel and expressed her desire to partake in the broader conversation. “Dialogue can often be ineffective but if communities go about it in a strategic way with tangible plans, I think it will help,” Sacha said. The panel opened with Jared Genser, a legal expert with probono experience in the North Korean humanitarian crisis. He explained the progress the international community has made with resolutions adopted by both the United Nations Human Rights Council and the General Assembly

of the United Nations to focus on the rights of North Korean citizens under Kim’s dictatorship. “While we have done a lot of report writing, public speaking issuing, and combinations of the two, really nothing has been put in major effect regarding the situation in North Korea,” Genser said. According to Genser, the humanitarian rights of the North Korean people are often pushed to the back burner by many policymakers who focus solely on denuclearization. Citing the Responsibility to Protect doctrine adopted by the UN World Summit in 2005 that obligates states to protect populations from crimes against humanity, Genser emphasized the necessity of bringing to light the human rights issue

in North Korea. He noted the famine, lack of basic food policies in North Korea and the Gulag concentration camps as some of the many problems that North Korean citizens face on a daily basis. “The international community has a responsibility to help and engage in these human rights violations in North Korea,” Genser said. “But the reality is that the world focuses almost exclusively on North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs. And the security establishment in the United States, such as the defense department or intelligence agencies, really make the ability to engage in North Korean human rights much more limited than you would expect.” See NORTH KOREA , Page 3A

of Qahwah coffee shop

Local entrepreneur talks current situation in Yemen, reflects on own experiences EMMA RUBERG For the Daily

On Wednesday night, about 100 students attended the Yemeni Students’ Association’s event “Crisis, Commitment, and Coffee: A Yemeni American Stor y.” The event featured Ibrahim Alhasbani, a Yemeni Immig rant and the founder of Qahwah House, a coffee shop in Dearborn, Michigan. Qahwah House aims to teach their customers about the struggles of those living in Yemen, where the shop sources their coffee. Alhasbani began his presentation by describing Yemen’s historical connection to coffee. He also explained the orig ins of the coffee shop’s name. Qahwah translates to “coffee” in English. “ Yemen is the birthplace for coffee,” Alhasbani said. “That’s why Yemen’s coffee is the most important coffee in the world … I remind ever yone, coffee comes from where? It comes from Yemen.”

KARTIKEYA SUNDARAM/Daily Panelists open up for audience questions at the North Korea and Human Rights event at Weill Hall Wednesday evening.

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INDEX

Vol. CXXVIII, No. 78 ©2019 The Michigan Daily

NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 SPORTS......................6

See YSA , Page 3A

SUDOKU.....................2 CLASSIFIEDS...............5 ARTS...................1B


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2019-02-21 by The Michigan Daily - Issuu