March 4, 2019

Page 1

IN THIS ISSUE:

GRAPEVINE DEATH AFTER SHOOTING IN CEDAR-RIVERSIDE PAGE 2

MONDAY, MARCH 4, 2019

EARLY WEEK

A SHOOTING IN THE AREA FRIDAY NIGHT LEFT ONE DEAD

MNDAILY.COM

CAMPUS

U limits controversial business

RENAMING

Kaler calls for Coffman renaming Kaler recommended renaming four buildings on campus, but students are split on the issue. BY AUSTEN MACALUS amacalus@mndaily.com

Coffman Union sees thousands of students pass through it every day. The student union is home to an assortment of student organizations — including the University’s nine student cultural centers. Soon, it could have a new name. University of Minnesota President Eric Kaler is supporting plans to rename Coffman and three other buildings named after former administrators who upheld racist and anti-Semitic practices on campus. However, students’ views on renaming the buildings are varied, ranging from mild indifference to staunch support or opposition. Kaler announced his recommendation to strip the names of Coffman Union, Nicholson Hall, Middlebrook Hall and ELLE MOULIN, DAILY

u See COFFMAN Page 3

Southwestern Advantage President Dan Moore gives a presentation on Wednesday, Feb. 20 at the Courtyard Marriott hotel on West Bank. Southwestern Advantage is a direct sales company that helps college students start their own business selling educational books door to door.

NEIGHBORHOODS

Further complaints about Southwestern Advantage may limit its campus access.

Safety concerns rise in MarcyHolmes area

BY AUDREY KENNEDY akennedy@mndaily.com

After giving his personal information to a recruiter at the University of Minnesota, recent graduate John* trained for months to become a salesman for Southwestern Advantage. But after arriving in Ohio to begin selling for the company in 2016, he started questioning the decision. “They admire this discipline of working 90 hours a week. It was such a cutthroat, competitive, run-you-into-theground summer,” said John, who requested anonymity because he fears backlash from the company. Southwestern Advantage teaches college students to build their own business by selling books and advertises earning over $8,000 a summer. The company uses a direct sales method where those involved sell products from a parent company and earn profits depending on their sales. Students are not required to buy books to sell up front but are

An uptick in violent crime has made students uneasy about their neighborhood’s safety. BY EMMA DILL edill@mndaily.com

Bridges apartment complex. “In conversations with other students, we know this congestion is part of a larger issue that culminated in yesterday’s incident,” the statement read. On Feb. 22, PTS released a statement outlining suggestions for students as well as steps the University is taking to improve campus transportation. “PTS apologizes for the overcrowding that many members of our campus

Maria Sanchez, a third-year Ph.D. student at the University of Minnesota, was in her Marcy-Holmes apartment one afternoon in January when she looked outside and saw a group of men running into her building brandishing guns. After calling 911, she learned the men were undercover Minneapolis Police Department officers executing a search warrant, but the incident left Sanchez and her dog Rosie traumatized. The warrant led to one arrest on drug and firearm offenses. In the weeks that followed, crimes in the area including a double homicide, attempted sexual assault and a shooting in her building’s parking lot eventually led Sanchez and her boyfriend to break their lease last week and move into a more secure apartment in Northeast Minneapolis. This uptick in crime prompted the Marcy-Holmes Neighborhood Association to hold a safety meeting with MPD officials and City representatives Thursday. Residents living in buildings where the crimes took place voiced concerns about recent incidents and apartment management. Robert Sayers, a fire inspector from the City’s regulatory services department, acknowledged that current apartment management in the neighborhood does not meet the City’s standards.

u See BUSES Page 3

u See CRIME Page 3

ELLE MOULIN, DAILY

AJ Skalsky gives a presentation to students on Wednesday, Feb. 27 at the Southwestern Advantage office in Minneapolis.

responsible for travel and living expenses. After the company began recruiting this semester on the Twin Cities campus, students have raised concerns over their business model and methods of recruitment,

which include visiting classrooms and renting tables at prominent buildings like Coffman Union. u See SOUTHWESTERN Page 3

TRANSPORTATION

Cramped, crowded, delayed: weather hinders U transportation Students have complained that campus buses have been delayed and overcrowded. BY NIAMH COOMEY ncoomey@mndaily.com

As more snow falls and temperatures continue to drop, University of Minnesota students are piling onto crammed campus buses in order to avoid walking in the cold and slushy snow, creating trouble for buses

accommodating this increased demand. Students have raised concerns about longer wait times and overcrowded buses on the University Campus Connectors and Circulators. The Minnesota Student Association and University’s Parking and Transportation Services are working together to address these issues. MSA released a statement about the Feb.19 incident on the 4th Street Circulator, during which students were pushed to the ground while attempting to board an overcrowded bus at the stop near The

STUDENT LIFE

New campus wash stations struggle to garner approval from students Spaces made to accommodate Muslim students have proven to be ineffective and unpopular. BY JAKE STEINBERG jsteinberg@mndaily.com

MORGAN LA CASSE, DAILY

The recently installed wash station in Coffman Union is just down the hall from the Muslim Students Association. In it, a grimy basin waits in the corner behind an non-locking door, and water drips from a hose into a grate on the floor. It’s Friday night, and it hasn’t been touched in hours. The wash station is one of 12 across campus that can be used for foot washing. The University of Minnesota has been installing the multi-purpose wash stations over the

past year in order to meet the needs of its diverse student body. Student governance and Muslim student groups have welcomed prior actions like offering halal dining options and designating prayer and meditation spaces. However, the wash stations haven’t garnered the same praise. “It’s basically just a supply closet,” said Samia Abdi, Muslim Students Association’s student affairs coordinator. “They literally just attached a hose to it.” The stations were installed after the University recognized Muslim students lacked infrastructure for Wudu, the ritualistic cleansing of the face, hands and feet before prayer. Foot washing rituals are a part of many religions, said Mohsen Goudarzi, an assistant u See WASH STATIONS Page 3

VOLUME 119 ISSUE 43


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March 4, 2019 by The Minnesota Daily - Issuu