February 25, 2019

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COMMITTEE TO REVIEW LIB ED REQUIREMENTS PAGE 2 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2019

EARLY WEEK

THE REDESIGN IS EXPECTED TO BE IMPLEMENTED IN 2020

MNDAILY.COM

WOMEN’S HOCKEY

UMN clinches conference title

FOOTBALL

First court appearance for lawsuit The nine Gophers players sued UMN for discrimination in a sexual assault investigation. BY MOHAMED IBRAHIM mibrahim@mndaily.com

JACK RODGERS, DAILY

Goaltender Sydney Scobee smiles from the bench at Ridder Arena on Saturday, Feb. 2.

The Gophers swept Bemidji State with a 6-3 victory on Friday and 4-3 win Saturday. BY ERIK NELSON enelson2@mndaily.com

The Western Collegiate Hockey Association regular season championship trophy is heading back to Minneapolis. For the first time since the 2014-15 season, and for the 10th time in program history, the Gophers are WCHA regular season champions. No. 2 Minnesota (294-1, 19-4-1-0) defeated Bemidji State (1319-2, 10-12-2-0) 6-3 on Friday and 4-3 on Saturday at Sanford Center in Bemidji, Minnesota. To win the trophy, the Gophers needed victories in both games against Bemidji State and needed Ohio State to

keep rival Wisconsin from winning. That scenario came to be. The No. 1 Badgers tied with No. 10 Ohio State 2-2 on Saturday to secure Minnesota’s title. Goaltender Sydney Scobee made 25 saves on Saturday and won her 11th game of the season. Right winger Grace Zumwinkle, left winger Emily Oden, center Taylor Heise and right winger Amy Potomak scored for Minnesota. Head coach Brad Frost said the Gophers were up to the challenge against the Beavers. “[The Beavers] are tough to play against,” Frost said. “For us to score 10 on the weekend was beneficial.” After the game, the Gophers’ eyes were on Scobee’s phone, which was streaming the game between the Buckeyes and the Badgers at LaBahn Arena in Madison, Wisconsin. When neither team could score in overtime, the Gophers erupted in cheers and hugged one another.

RESULTS

FRIDAY Bemidji State Minnesota

SATURDAY Bemidji State Minnesota

1 2 3

2 0 2

3 1 1

FINAL 3 6

1 1 1

2 0 2

3 2 1

FINAL 3 4

SOURCE: GOPHERSPORTS.COM Center and team captain Kelly Pannek said this weekend was exciting for her and everyone else on the team. “It’s the first [time] for a lot of people on the team,” Pannek said. “The last time we won the regular season championship was my freshman year. It’s something we take a lot of pride in. It was an u See HOCKEY Page 4

FACULTY

No academic breach found in UMN fellowship Committee found no academic freedom violations in delayed women’s health fellowship. BY JAKE STEINBERG jsteinberg@mndaily.com

The power gap between graduate and professional students and professors puts students in a vulnerable position and makes it difficult to report, according to discussion at the town hall. For graduate students, retaliation could be detrimental to their careers

A University Senate committee has determined the University of Minnesota’s decision to delay a controversial reproductive health fellowship did not violate academic freedom. The committee also criticized the University’s process and several members said administration should have consulted them first. The fellowship, funded by the Reproductive Health Access Project, would have placed a fellow at a community care clinic for a year, where they would have been trained in reproductive health care — including performing abortions. The University removed the fellowship from its website last May following backlash from anti-abortion lawmakers and conservative media. In September, the Academic Freedom and Tenure Committee began questioning whether this constituted a breach of academic freedom. Board of Regents policy describes academic freedom as “the freedom, without institutional discipline or restraint … to explore all avenues of scholarship, research and creative expression.” Following a Nov. 2 meeting that was closed at the request of University President Eric Kaler and Medical School Dean Jakub Tolar, the committee concluded there was no breach of academic freedom. Because the meeting was closed, committee members couldn’t speak to specifics about the University’s decision-making process. “People directly involved were given funding or assignments to continue research or educational directives,” said committee chair Jessica Larson in an email to the Minnesota Daily. Larson said the University still trains physicians in reproductive health care. This includes training for abortions, which is required to maintain an accredited

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Grad, professional students discuss sexual misconduct Power imbalances between graduates and faculty can lead to sexual misconduct. BY KAIT ECKER kecker@mndaily.com

JACK RODGERS, DAILY

Tina Marisam, director of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action at the University, speaks at a town hall on Tuesday, Feb. 19. Professional Student Government and the Council of Graduate Students held the meeting to discuss concerns about sexual misconduct on campus.

professional students experiencing sexual misconduct from their professors or advisers. “The reality is [sexual misconduct has] always been creepy,” said Katie Eichele, director of the Aurora Center. “It’s never been fine. We just have people who are tired and are willing to actually say ‘stop it.’”

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WOMEN’S HOCKEY

STUDENT LIFE

University of Minnesota graduate and professional students recently discussed the power imbalance between graduate and professional students and faculty members that sometimes leads to sexual misconduct. At Tuesday’s town hall, graduate and professional students addressed a new referendum, concerns of retaliation upon reporting, culture change and details of the University’s system for addressing sexual misconduct. The Council of Graduate Students and the Professional Student Government held the meeting to clarify the sexual misconduct reporting process, answer questions specific to graduate students and raise awareness about resources. In 2017, the University’s Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action investigated complaints of sexual misconduct made against Gianluigi Veglia, a tenured biochemistry professor, and Randy Handel, the associate athletic director. The EOAA concluded that both Veglia and Handel had violated the University’s sexual harassment policy. On the heels of these findings, the University established the President’s Initiative to Prevent Sexual Misconduct in 2017. These cases sparked concern and drew attention to the problem of graduate and

Representatives for nine Gopher football players allegedly involved in a 2016 sexual assault case appeared in court Friday to present a discrimination case against the University of Minnesota. Lawyers for both the players and the University appeared in U.S. District Court Friday morning after the University filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit of nine former and current football players. The players, all of whom are black, are suing the University for discrimination, claiming they were unfairly targeted in the 2016 investigation into the alleged sexual assault of a female student, according to federal court documents. The alleged sexual assault of the unnamed victim took place in fall 2016 and resulted in the suspension of ten Gopher football players. Although no criminal charges were filed, four players were ultimately disciplined after a hearing by the University’s Student Sexual Misconduct Subcommittee and an appeal to the Provost. The lawsuit claims the investigation

STATE GOVT.

Minnesota lawmakers look to tighten restrictions on vaping in public locations The bill would prohibit vaping in some public places, but some say it would be ineffective. BY ERIN WILSON ewilson@mndaily.com

Minnesota may ban vaping in places where smoking cigarettes is illegal if a bill heard at a House committee earlier this month passes through the legislature. Chief author Rep. Laurie Halverson, DFL-Eagan, presented the bill to the House health and human services committee

meeting on Feb. 12. The legislation would broaden the Minnesota Clean Indoor Air Act to include vaping in its definition of smoking, which means using vape products would be prohibited in areas like public transportation, places of employment, public schools and government buildings. Halverson said she brought the bill forward in an effort to limit youth smoking. “We bring these bills forward today to make sure that Minnesota maintains its status as a leader in health and a leader in preventing youth from starting to smoke,” Halverson said. Some University of Minnesota students

who use vape products said while they understand the motivation behind the bill, these efforts would be difficult to enforce. “I can vape in class. You can do it anywhere. … If I hold it in long enough, the vapor will evaporate in my lungs … and then I exhale nothing,” said Cormac, a University sophomore who uses a Juul vape product. “So, like, you can make it illegal, but for more discreet vapes, it’s not going to do anything.” Because of age restrictions on vape products in Minneapolis, Cormac requested to be identified only by his first name. University sophomore Ian, who also

requested to be identified only by first name, also uses a Juul. He said while the University already bans vaping on campus, the prohibition is not effective. “I don’t even know how you would [enforce it], there’s just too many people doing it. Especially like outside on campus. … You could even see people smoking cigarettes too. Nothing happens,” he said. Ian said vaping has led to more young people developing nicotine addictions. “Especially like because I think it’s ... kind of like a chain, like you’re addicted to u See VAPE Page 3

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