February 6, 2020

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A&E’S GUIDE TO INTERNATIONAL GROCERS IN MINNEAPOLIS PAGE 4

LATE WEEK THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2020

MNDAILY.COM

COMMUNITIES

STATE GOVT.

UMN alums form PAC to aid funds

For youth program, outreach means heading back home

The Maroon and Gold PAC aims to boost University funding from the Legislature. BY MOHAMED IBRAHIM mibrahim@mndaily.com

In an effort to advocate for the University of Minnesota this upcoming legislative session, some alumni are taking their support to the Capitol. Following years of partially fulfilled capital investment requests by the Legislature, an independent group of alumni, former regents and other individuals formed the “Maroon and Gold” political action committee last month. The PAC hopes to use its members’ connections to improve the University’s chances of seeing its full request allocated. “The fact that a bunch of people got together independent of the University and feel that it’s important we hope will show the importance that individuals feel about the University,” said Ross Levin, University of Minnesota Foundation board member and PAC member. Political action committees are organizations that gather money from contributors and donate the funds in support of specific candidates, causes and legislation that represent their interests. The Maroon and Gold PAC began organizing last year after taking inspiration from a similar organization that advocates for the University of Wisconsin-Madison during the state’s budget process. The PAC plans to contribute to lawmakers and caucuses related to the higher education and capital investment committees, which will work most closely with the University this session. Regent Emeritus Thomas Devine, a member of the group, said the share of higher education funding in the state budget has decreased significantly over the years. As the portion of the University’s budget from the Legislature shrinks, the University’s donor base cannot fill the gap, leading to tuition increases, he said. Devine said the organization hopes to prevent these tuition increases and ensure allocation of sufficient funding to renovate the University’s infrastructure. “We’re hoping that through the effort of what we do in delivering PAC checks, we can help tell that story and have a little bigger impact on what’s going on relative to supporting the University’s overall requests,” Devine said. In terms of infrastructure funding, the University received about $79 million of its $238.5 million capital request in 2018, the most recent bonding year. Last session, a bonding bill failed to pass in the Senate, leaving the University with no state funding for infrastructure. This year, the state received more than $5 billion in total bonding requests. While DFL members on the u See PAC Page 3

SERVING THE UMN COMMUNITY SINCE 1900

Youth Coordinating Board staff member Iqbal Maxamed roams the hallways Patrick Henry High School on Wednesday, Feb. 5 in an effort to connect with students and monitor their well-being. (Nur B. Adam / Minnesota Daily)

The Youth Coordinating Board spent last summer in CedarRiverside after receiving funding. BY J.D. DUGGAN jduggan@mndaily.com

Abdul Sero grew up in CedarRiverside. He remembers it as a fun neighborhood, all his friends lived nearby. They played soccer or hide-and-seek well into the afternoon until their parents had to call them home for lunch. That was more than a decade ago. Sero spent last summer working with the Minneapolis Youth Coordinating Board for its first year in the area. The YCB just secured $50,000 for another year in Cedar-Riverside and Seward. The YCB was a chance for Sero to give back to the changing community. He said crime has worsened and the opioid epidemic hit Cedar-Riverside especially hard. “Around my time there wasn’t that. A lot of things were not easily accessible to young kids like us, you know, like drugs, guns

u See YOUTH WORKER Page 4

After success last year, Gophers embrace expectations Minnesota returns a cast of a familiar characters following a historic 2019 season. BY NOLAN O’HARA nohara@mndaily.com

The Gophers softball team is set to return to the field with high expectations, coming off their first-ever appearance in the Women’s College World Series in 2019. Last season, the Gophers proved they could compete with any team in the country, finishing the season with a 46-14 record and closing the year as the No. 8 team in the nation. A loss to Washington put an end to the Gophers’ historic run and with last season in the rear-view mirror, Minnesota is set to embark on its 2020 campaign ready to get after it. “We got back on campus being able to celebrate some of the u See SOFTBALL Page 3

Members of the Gopher softball team celebrate after winning the game against Louisiana State at Jane Sage Cowles Stadium on Saturday, May 25, 2019. (Jasmin Kemp / Minnesota Daily)

RESEARCH

Training on international students ramps up for graduate school staff

New School of Public Health group pushes for more qualitative research Named “Quali-tea,” the group hopes to inspire a more community-based way of taking in data.

The training will teach basics about visas and strategies for work with international students.

International Student and Scholar Services will offer its first training solely for University of Minnesota graduate school program coordinators and other staff later this month. The training on Feb. 25 is aimed at University employees who often work with graduate international students. It is intended to help them gain understanding about the international student population, learning basics about visas and communication strategies. This is the first year that graduate and undergraduate training will take place

basketball with the teenagers and soccer with the younger kids. They’d break up fights and act as “big brothers,” Sero said. Stepping into the neighborhood was “a little weird” at first, Sero said. The young people in the community did not trust the workers. Some thought they were cops or fishing for information. But the outreach team built trust over time by reassuring community members that they were just there to help — and often shared water or Gatorade on hot summer days. “Youth are here” was emblazoned on the group’s bright yellow shirts to draw attention. “Once they started understanding why we’re there and they saw how sincere we were to

SOFTBALL

GRADUATE STUDENTS

BY NIAMH COOMEY ncoomey@mndaily.com

and all the stuff,” Sero said. “But now it’s just [on] your front step. So, it’s scary.” In its first year in the neighborhood, the YCB mainly connected youth to resources, but they also helped homeless adults who needed a hand. LaToya Balogun, director of youth operations with the YCB, said the first year was about getting a “lay of the land.” The workers initially connected with local institutions to reach the youth. The nine-person Cedar-Riverside outreach team built relationships with security at Riverside Plaza to try to get youth off trespassing lists for minor infractions. The team handed out vouchers to young men who may have been intoxicated, which could be redeemed at local businesses for food to sober up. The workers played

A pedestrian walks by the International Student and Scholar Services center on West Bank on Tuesday, Feb. 4. (Parker Johnson / Minnesota Daily)

in separate sessions. Training for undergraduate and graduate staff used to be combined, but due to the unique needs of students at different academic levels, they will now be held in two separate sessions, said Beth Isensee, the assistant director for student engagement and intercultural initiatives. The amount of time that graduate students spend at the University, as well as how that experience is structured, is very different from the undergraduate level, Isensee said. ISSS has been hosting similar

training for staff and faculty for more than 20 years, Isensee said. The upcoming training will be at capacity with 36 attendees, and ISSS will likely host another session due to the demand. Through this training, ISSS tries to highlight how staff and faculty can support students through the many restrictions and regulations for students with visas, Isensee said. These rules can impact required credit numbers and work authorization for students, among other things. u See GRAD TRAINING Page 3

BY HANA IKRAMUDDIN hikramuddin@mndaily.com A group of University of Minnesota researchers are creating a group to promote the use of qualitative data in scientific papers. The group, to be called “Qualitea,” is being formed by a handful of lecturers and researchers in the School of Public Health. Members say qualitative data-based research is more accessible and can be more more easily implemented by community leaders. Qualitative data, usually focused on traits and characteristics, has often been used to help scientists generate hypotheses. Quantitative data, on the other hand, is often used to measure exact quantities, specific numbers and data. “Qualitative serves a really unique function,” said Jude Mikal, a member of the group’s leadership committee. “If you come blindly at a particular phenomenon and just start asking

questions, you by virtue of even asking a question are making a qualitative assessment.” This research style can give researchers a better look inside particular instances or patterns, especially within specific communities, Mikal said. A study Mikal recently released looked at how breast cancer patients change their interactions with social media after being diagnosed. Another study covered how refugees engage with the internet and social media. These topics are more likely to require researchers to communicate with their subjects personally as opposed to in a lab or purely from a computer. These interactive questions are best answered through the use of qualitative data, which has historically been missing from health colleges, said Mikal. “The importance of being able to communicate meaningful scientific evidence that is more than just a simple statistic is really important,” said Stuart Grande, a public health lecturer and member of the group. “The purpose of u See QUALITATIVE Page 3 VOLUME 120 ISSUE 36


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