February 14, 2019

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A&E’S GUIDE TO A BADASS VALENTINE’S DAY PAGE 5 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2019

LATE WEEK

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MNDAILY.COM

STUDENT GOVT.

CAMPUS

Gov. Walz talks policy amid protest Protesters asked Gov. Tim Walz to take a stronger stance on a proposed pipeline in MN. BY EMMA DILL edill@mndaily.com

TONY SAUNDERS, DAILY

Simran Mishra, president of the University of Minnesota undergraduate student body, holds a meeting with Minnesota Student Association staff on Monday, Feb. 4 at her office in Coffman Union.

High demands, low wages

Pay for student body presidents differs between schools, and some say wages affect who can serve.

STUDENT BODY COMPENSATION BY THE NUMBERS

$6,000

BY MICHELLE GRIFFITH mgriffith@mndaily.com

As undergraduate student body president at the University of Minnesota, Simran Mishra’s days never look the same. On the first day of spring semester, Mishra woke up around 6 a.m. to get ready for a yoga class at 6:45 a.m. Then she went to three classes, checked in with her colleagues and called University administrators. At the end of the day, she fit in dinner with her friends before working on homework and getting to sleep around midnight. She did all this while getting paid what equates to just over $3 per hour for a 40-hour work week. Despite what many student presidents describe as a demanding workload, compensation for presidents varies from school to school. Pay for student presidents around the country falls anywhere between getting their full tuition waived during their presidential term to receiving no benefits or compensation for their position. Many student presidents need to pay for

COMPENSATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA

$8,415 COMPENSATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA

$0

COMPENSATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

6 credit hours

OF FREE TUITION PAID EACH SEMESTER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN

$10.50

PER HOUR FOR UP TO 20 HOURS PER WEEK AT UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSINMADISON

As the University of Minnesota works to readjust tuition on the Twin Cities campus, there are conflicting priorities about how the University should balance costs for Minnesota students and those from other states.

FACULTY

UMN professor appears in court after Dec. arrest

Student presidency at the University of Minnesota

According to reports, two more women have accused Aaron Doering of physical abuse.

As student body president at the University, Mishra receives a $6,000 stipend for her yearlong term. Student presidents like Mishra have responsibilities including meeting with University administration and engaging with the student body. For Mishra, that means she is regularly “on-call” in case the University needs her input, meets for hours with MSA members and University administrators and attends at least 16 credit hours worth of classes each week. Last year, outgoing student body president Trish Palermo advocated for a raise to the president’s yearly stipend of $5,000, saying the position warranted more pay. “The reality is, the majority of students have

SOURCE: MINNESOTA DAILY REPORTING

The University expects to bump resident tuition by 2 percent next year, according to President Eric Kaler. That comes on the heels of a 10 percent tuition hike for incoming non-resident, non-reciprocity students and 5.5 percent for nonresidents already here, which the Board of Regents approved in December. The latest round of tuition increases are part of the University’s broader strategy: moving tuition for non-residents to the middle of the Big Ten range and keeping resident tuition increases to a minimum. However, not everyone agrees about

BY MOHAMED IBRAHIM mibrahim@mndaily.com

where the University should drawn the line on tuition while still looking out for the school’s bottom line. Some regents are criticizing another resident tuition increase, saying the University isn’t doing enough to prioritize Minnesota students. For non-resident tuition, dramatic hikes in recent years are hurting efforts to attract students from across the country, though school officials say increases are necessary to bring the University in line with its peers. And most

A University of Minnesota professor and arctic explorer appeared in court last Thursday following an accusation of domestic assault. Aaron Doering, 47, was arrested on Dec. 26 for domestic abuse after the victim told police that he had dragged and choked her, according to court documents. Since his arrest, two other women have come forward accusing Doering of physically abusing them, reports say. The woman pressing charges told police he had assaulted her several times before, and that she believed he was going to eventually kill her, the criminal complaint said. Doering was released from custody on $30,000 bail on Dec. 28. Amy Matthews, Doering’s ex-wife, and Nina Orezzoli, his former fiancee, told KSTP they also experienced abuse by the tenured professor. “When I saw the report and the arrest, I thought, ‘This is exactly how it’s going to go down,’” Matthews told KSTP. Matthews, whose divorce from Doering was recently finalized, said the most severe incident took place in 2013 when the two were in Miami together. Orezzoli told KSTP that Doering physically abused her in April 2017 after he came home drunk. A few months later while accompanying Doering on a trip to an educational conference in Europe, he beat her

u See TUITION Page 3

u See DOERING Page 3

u See PRESIDENTS Page 3

Conflicting priorities emerge as the University readjusts tuition

BY AUSTEN MACALUS amacalus@mndaily.com

u See WALZ Page 4

tuition, housing and cost of living without working other jobs during their presidential term. These steep requirements may preclude some from running for president. “There isn’t a day that goes by that I don’t think about the privilege I have. The privilege I have and that one needs to have in order to serve in this role,” Mishra said.

ADMINISTRATION

Recent tuition hikes fit into the U’s broader efforts to move to the middle of the Big Ten.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz discussed his political priorities on campus Wednesday amid interruptions by protesters. Walz talked about his upcoming biennial budget proposal, health care and education at the event hosted by the Humphrey School of Public Affairs. The visit comes a day after Walz announced an appeal renewal of the proposed Line 3 Pipeline in northern Minnesota, promoting around a dozen protesters to show up. Former Gov. Mark Dayton filed an appeal of Enbridge Energy’s Line 3 Pipeline with the state in late 2018. Walz also filed an appeal this week to further review the pipeline’s construction. Despite the appeal’s extension, protesters say Walz needs to take

LOCAL MUSIC

U undergrad Ben David strums fresh folk and roots in his debut album The singer-songwriter junior will release his first album “Far Off Gaze” next month. BY KSENIA GORINSHTEYN kgorinshteyn@mndaily.com

JACK RODGERS, DAILY

Ben Noeldner poses for a portrait in his home on Wednesday, Feb. 13. Noeldner recorded his first album on tape, which requires playing each song straight through with no mistakes.

When Ben Noeldner began writing music, he sampled chord progressions from a Rage Against The Machine song from the “Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2” soundtrack to create something all his own. (This was middle school, mind you.) Next month, he’s releasing a folk album. Noeldner, a junior majoring in philosophy at the University of Minnesota, will release his debut album “Far Off Gaze” under his stage name Ben David on March 8. The album reflects the identity he has created

for himself since he started writing music. “‘Songbird Darling’ on the album is one of the first songs I ever finished,” Noeldner said. “I was like, ‘Okay, this is actually a voice.’” Noeldner pulled inspiration from a spectrum of artists running from Pete Seeger to Elliott Smith to create the album’s warm, folksy sound. “It’s pretty easy to tell when something isn’t from the heart,” Noeldner said. “I have two hands, a guitar and a voice, maybe a harmonica. How can [I] use those things as directly as [I] can [in songwriting]?” Before recording the album, Noeldner worked as a camp counselor in northern Minnesota. While at the camp, he met musician John Munson, who mentored him in the recording process. u See BEN DAVID Page 5

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