2019-11-26

Page 1

ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-NINE YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Ann Arbor, Michigan

michigandaily.com

ALEC COHEN/Daily E. Royster Harper, Vice President of Student Life, shares her thoughts on the IFC recruitment process in an interview with The Daily in Fleming Administration Building Friday afternoon.

Vice President Harper reflects on legacy at University, considers future of Student Life

Executive officer talks fraternity and sorority life, Title IX interim policy while looking back on career PARNIA MAZHAR & CLAIRE HAO Daily Staff Reporters

For the last time before her retirement in January, The Michigan Daily sat down for an interview with E. Royster Harper, the University’s vice president for Student Life. In the interview on Friday afternoon, Harper discussed IFC-affiliated fraternities recruiting freshmen against University policy, controversy surrounding the senior honor society Order of Angell, protests against the University’s sexual misconduct policy and reflections on her

20-year career at the University. The Michigan Daily: A Michigan Daily investigation found some IFC-affiliated fraternities recruited freshmen students against University policy. In addition, the investigation found that at least one IFC-affiliated fraternity used freshmen pledges as sober monitors for at least one party without these students completing the required University training. What are potential negative consequences of students participating in unofficial rush and pledging processes? What are potential negative consequences of students serving as sober monitors

without proper training? What does University administration plan to do to address these issues? E. Royster Harper: The whole point of having the new policy in place is to really give first-year students a chance to get anchored academically and socially. In part because we know that when students have more of an opportunity to get settled into college, they’re less likely to be susceptible to behavior that puts them in harm’s way. So, I’m deeply disappointed if that is actually going on, and we have reason to believe that it is going on. You can imagine also how ineffective

and concerning it would be to have first-year students acting as sober monitors, not likely to approach an upperclassman and insist on the kind of behavior that causes students to be safe, and they’re certainly not likely to confront an upperclassmen in a fraternity that they want to be a part of. So, what we’re trying to do and are having conversations about now, because we believe in self-governance, because we’ve tried to do this work with IFC, because we believe that they are acting in good faith and with integrity. … We are looking at and working also with the Nationals

Wallace House expands fellowship Program to add 2 positions for journalists from news outlets across the Midwest ALEX HARRING Daily Staff Reporter

The Knight-Wallace Fellowship — a program for accomplished journalists to study at the University of Michigan — has expanded to include two fellowship positions for leadership of beginning news operations in the Midwest. Wallace House Director Lynette Clemetson said the opportunity, housed within the current fellowship framework and its benefits, will allow project leaders to develop outlets focused on bringing news to the Midwest. Fellows in the new program will work with faculty in the University’s Business School and Law School and can continue to work for their operation from Ann Arbor, a responsibility fellows normally must forgo during their eight months in the program.

GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know.

$70,000 stipend

Subsidized classes, seminars, workshops and travel

Two spots for fellows One out of four newspapers in the U.S. have been shut down or merged since 2004

Approximately half of reporting jobs have been terminated since 2004

K n i g h t -Wa l l a c e Fellowship Expansion “When you look at the Midwest, in these areas where things have been closing, there hasn’t been a rush to to address those voids and there hasn’t been a rush in funding or attention,” Clemetson said. “The repercussions of local news disappearing in the Midwest

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Six months of consulting support after the conclusion of the fellowship

are striking and quite serious, and things that I think we’ve all been feeling socially and politically for the past several years.” Clemetson said the new addition to the fellowship program was inspired by a report from the Knight Center and the University of North

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Carolina, which found growing news deserts in the Midwest. The report found around one in four newspapers in the U.S. have shut down or merged since 2004, and approximately half of newspaper jobs have been terminated in the same period. Ann Arbor became the first city of any size to lose its professional daily newspaper in 2009 when the Ann Arbor News shut down and then merged with the media group MLive. The new Ann Arbor News now publishes a paper twice-weekly and online daily. Clemetson said Ann Arbor has felt the effects of losing one of its main sources of news. She said she hopes the fellowship allows participants to build outlets to fill voids left by shuttered publications. See WALLACE, Page 2B

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INDEX

Vol. CXXIX, No. 35 ©2019 The Michigan Daily

and with the police about what the consequences of this kind of behavior will be. There is a process that the Greek community uses when there are violations of policies and procedures. So of course, we will be taking a look at that. What the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life is certainly looking at is following up on reports that come through the hazing hotline. … But I want to be careful that I don’t accuse them of doing something that they’ve not done. So, now the issue is trying to figure out, where is the truth? See FELLOWSHIP, Page 2B

CAMPUS LIFE

Taco Bell joins Union restaurants Fast food chain to be added to new lineup SAYALI AMIN

Daily News Editor

Fast food chain Taco Bell will be added to the University of Michigan’s newly renovated Michigan Union, among other food and service partners. The Union is slated to reopen its doors this coming January. The University announced the other business included in the space about a month ago, some of which include Barnes and Noble, Sweetwaters Coffee and Tea and Panera Bread. See UNION, Page 2B NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 A R T S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 SP ORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7


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