ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Ann Arbor, Michigan
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statement CAMPUS LIFE
‘U’ students address high cost of living on campus Over a year after CSG’s 2018 Affordability Guide controversy, campus reflects
DARBY STIPE/DAILY University President Mark Schlissel answers questions about future emmisions reductions and climate change solutions from the University community at Rackham Auditorium Tuesday.
Schlissel responds to concerns at carbon neutrality public session
After arrests during climate strike, University president holds open dialogue ATTICUS RAASCH Daily Staff Reporter
Approximately 150 students, faculty and community members attended a special public session with the President’s Commission on Carbon Neutrality Tuesday in Rackham Auditorium.
Featuring University President Mark Schlissel as the main speaker, the event was moderated by three commission members: Jonathan Overpeck, dean of the School for Environment and Sustainability; Engineering junior Logan Vear; and Rackham student
Austin Glass. The public session followed the arrest of 10 people during a climate strike in March, during which students requested an open dialogue with Schlissel and other administrative members. All members of the commission were present at the event. The
event started with opening remarks before moving into a question and answer format, where attendees could directly ask Schlissel questions or submit cards with questions to be read by the moderators. See CARBON, Page 3A
MADELINE MCLAUGHLIN & CALLIE TEITELBAUM Daily Staff Reporters
When LSA sophomore Aidan Sova transferred from Michigan State University this school year, he didn’t expect an increase in his cost of living. Sova, who self-identifies as a student of low socioeconomic status, said upon his arrival to campus, the major economic disparities between students at University of Michigan became abundantly clear to him. Sova is an associate director of the Association of Big Ten Students, a forum for student representatives from each Big Ten college to address student needs and concerns. He served on student government at
Michigan State and was on Michigan’s Central Student Government Executive Team as a policy adviser last semester. See AFFORDABILITY, Page 3A
Journalists discuss representation, Shaking it Residence up: Shake inclusion of Latinx voices in reporting Halls Assoc.
BUSINESS
Shack set to open in A2 Burger chain recieves approval from city to move into new location REMY FARKAS Daily News Editor
Shake Shack is set to shake up the fast food scene in Ann Arbor. The company will be opening an Ann Arbor location in fall 2019, according to an email statement from the burger chain. This will be Shake Shack’s third location in Michigan, joining one in downtown Detroit and another in Troy. The New York-based burger and shake restaurant will be located at 3030 Washtenaw Ave. #107 in the Arbor Hills shopping center, replacing Brooks Brothers. The restaurant will occupy more than 3,000 square feet of Arbor Hills including outdoor seating, Shake Shack said. The city of Ann Arbor approved the permits for the space, which will include structural, plumbing, electric and mechanical alterations which is estimated to cost $575,000, according to city records. In an email to The Daily, Shake Shack spokeswoman Meg Castranova said the menu will consist of “Shack classics” like the ShackBurger, crinkle-cut fries, shakes and frozen custard concretes. See SHAKE, Page 3A
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CAMPUS LIFE
Panel focuses on how diversity in newsrooms impacts coverage, storytelling NIKKI KIM
Daily Staff Reporter
Journalists convened in Haven Hall Tuesday afternoon for a panel to discuss the representation of Latinx issues, perspectives and voices in American journalism. More than 50 students and faculty attended the event, which featured two KnightWallace fellows, Luis Trelles and Aaron Nelsen, and two local journalists from Detroit, Serena Maria Daniels and Sarah Alvarez. The University of Michigan Latina/o Studies Program hosted the panel, in
collaboration with Wallace House and the Department of American Culture. Larry La Fountain-Stokes, the interim director of the Latina/o Studies Program in the Department of American Culture, was the main organizer behind the event. “This event came about as a collaboration with the Wallace House to take advantage of the fact that so many of the fellows this year were either Latino or Latina, or covering topics pertaining to Latinos or Latinas in the United States,” La Fountain-Stokes said. With President Donald Trump’s administration’s
focus on immigration laws and the president’s often generalized negative remarks towards the Mexican population, La FountainStokes noted the relevance of this panel in the current political climate. “This is a complex, historical moment to be covering Latino/a people and Latin America,” La Fountain-Stokes said. “You could argue that it is a hostile environment.” The panel opened with a discussion of the term “Latino.” According to Trelles, despite its common usage by media outlets and in news articles, it generalizes the
diversity of Latin America and glosses over the cultural and regional differences. “Latino issues — It can be a very convenient label for politicians and for marketing, but very often the issues that affect a third generation Puerto Rican from the Bronx are very different from the issues that affect Cubanos in South Florida,” Trelles said. Kinesiology sophomore Kim Morales is a member of La Casa and identifies as Latinx. She said she found the panel to be a fresh take on the modern discourse surrounding the Latinx identity. See LATINX, Page 3A
MICHAEL BAGAZINSKI/ DAILY
Panelists discuss the current representation of Latinx identity in journalism at the “Representing Latinx Voices in American Journalism” event in Haven Hall Tuesday.
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INDEX
Vol. CXXVII, No. 100 ©2019 The Michigan Daily
asks for pay for officers
Resolution calls for more than $20,000 allotment for salaries for executives ALEX HARRING Daily Staff Reporter
A Residence Halls Association’s assembly resolution to compensate its executive board has prompted criticism from the executive branch of the LSA Student Government. The resolution was approved by RHA on April 4 with 27 out of 30 members in favor. If approved by the director of housing, $20,700 of RHA funds will be earmarked as compensation for its seven-member executive board. An April 8 executive statement from LSA SG affirmed the organization supports the goal behind compensating executive board members as the proposal removes financial barriers for students interested in joining the board. However, LSA SG executives feel the problem lies with the fact that the compensation would come from the RHA funds, which are largely collected through student fees. LSA SG President Brian Wang, an LSA junior, said students pay $24.75 in student fees that are allocated to the RHA. See RHA, Page 3A
NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 ARTS......................6
SUDOKU.....................2 CLASSIFIEDS...............5 SPORTS....................7