POLICE INCREASE PATROL FOR SPRING JAM PAGE 2 THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 2019
LATE WEEK
OFFICIALS ARE WORKING TO PREVENT LARGE GATHERINGS
MNDAILY.COM
STATE GOVT.
RENAMING UNIVERSITY REGENT MICHAEL HSU “I’ve looked at thousands of pages. I’ve probably looked at more pages and documents than the people on the task force have.”
UNIVERSITY REGENT ABDUL OMARI “What I have read and what I have seen certainly suggests there was overt racism and anti-Semitism taking place on campus from several members and likely more who are on buildings.”
UNIVERSITY REGENT DARRIN ROSHA “I have not seen a single document or anything of that variety, nor have I seen a single document that can be attributed to Dean Nicholson with any antiSemitic indication at all.”
Lawmakers ask for more transparency Officials seek improved dialogue between the Legislature and the University of Minnesota. BY ISABELLA MURRAY imurray@mndaily.com
ABBY ADAMSKI, DAILY
On renaming, regents pursue their own historical research Historians are skeptical of some of the University regents’ research approach. BY AUSTEN MACALUS AND JAKE STEINBERG amacalus@mndaily.com, jsteinberg@mndaily.com
The debate over building names at the University of Minnesota hinges on different approaches to interpreting the same historical archive. After a University task force recommended renaming four buildings on campus, some members of the Board of Regents went to local archives to do their own research. However, several historians familiar with contextualizing higher education archives and assessing the actions of historic figures see the regents’ approach to this historical debate as insufficient. On one hand, some historical experts say they take a broad view of archival documents and give more weight to contextual evidence. On the other, some members of the Board of Regents say they don’t see enough evidence in a University task force’s report to back up allegations of racism and anti-Semitism
against four former administrators. Several regents — including Michael Hsu and Darrin Rosha — have come to a different conclusion on the same historical record used to assess the thoughts and actions of former University administrators Lotus Coffman, Edward Nicholson, William Middlebrook and Walter Coffey. Hsu has said the University can’t move forward with renaming without the board understanding all of the evidence. He’s accused the task force of “academic dishonesty” and intentionally omitting evidence from its 125-page report. Both Hsu and Rosha said their criticisms of the report are rooted in analysis of evidence included by the task force, as well as documents left out of the report. “I have yet to take my focus off of the factual analysis,” Rosha said. “I haven’t gotten past getting clarification on the actual factual underpinnings. And once we have that, then I think we move to the next stage.” But Robert Cohen, a professor of higher education history at New York University, said the evidence has been there for years. Cohen studied Coffman and Nicholson’s attempts to surveil students while writing his first book in the 1980s. “As a scholar of this era, this stuff is not even controversial to me. Nothing in this
report surprises me at all,” he said. Cohen said a report this thorough is highly unusual. It’s impressive, he said, but its recommendations are daring. “Really the issue is what do you do about the building naming. That, to me, is really what the controversy is,” he said. “What do you do with this history? Not, ‘Is this history accurate?’ because it certainly is.” Stephen Kantrowitz, a history professor, was on a task force charged with considering the history of the Ku Klux Klan at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He said delving into an archive can be complex. “Anybody is free to go into an archive and explore, and many people are good at it,” he said, but historians are trained to assess what they find in relationship to other archives and to what other scholars have found. They can sometimes see things others wouldn’t, he said. “It’s rarely the case that a single document tells you something so dramatically new that it upends everything else that you already knew,” he said. Rosha said he’s gone to the Minnesota Historical Society multiple times,
BY NORAH KLEVEN nkleven@mndaily.com
Keith Killian was walking down University Avenue when a member of the Students’ Alliance for Cooperative Living caught his eye in 2014. The University of Minnesota student said he’s always been — and dressed as — an expressive person, and knew he found his place when he met members of the cooperative. Students’ Alliance for Cooperative Living, a group on the University of
STUDENT GOVT.
Student leaders seek zero waste at Spring Jam After falling short last year, MSA wants to divert 90 percent of event’s waste from landfills. BY NIAMH COOMEY mcoomey@mndaily.com
benefits more than when living in a more traditional setting. According to Liam DelMain, an officer and resident of the co-op, cooperative living holds different meanings for different people. In addition, residents are considered “owners” of the house. Nan Feldis is a member of the cooperative and enjoys living at the co-op because Feldis pays dues rather than rent each month. These dues have a diverse use and cover expenditures to live in the house as well as the cost of food and other organization activities. “We have a responsibility to each other [and this space] to take our collective u See CO-OP Page 3
u See ZERO-WASTE Page 3
u See RENAMING Page 2
Bikes, kombucha and social justice: the co-op on U’s frat row Minnesota campus that’s been around for approximately 80 years, has long been a vocal advocate for social and environmental justice issues. By holding advocacy and social events, the co-op’s 26 members aim to provide a safe and supportive space for the residents of the house and for the University community. On Friday, the co-op will host a benefit to educate people about police brutality. Inside the house, rows of bikes greet visitors, inviting them into one of the house’s living rooms. The walls are adorned with various murals, all painted by residents of the cooperative over its years. Cooperative living is built on the idea that when people come together to share resources, knowledge and labor, everyone
u See TRANSPARENCY Page 3
After months of planning, the Minnesota Student Association and several groups on campus are collaborating to make Spring Jam 2019 a zero-waste event after falling short last year. MSA has been working with University of Minnesota’s Student Unions and Activities and University Recycling staff to get the event closer to “zero-waste.” Their work has involved communicating with Spring Jam vendors and preparing student volunteers to instruct attendees on how to dispose of their waste at the event. “Zero-waste” means 90 percent of all waste generated at the event was diverted from being placed in a landfill, according to University Reuse Program Coordinator Todd Tanner. The total rate of waste diverted from landfills was 74 percent last year, meaning that Spring Jam 2018 failed the zero-waste criteria. SUA and University Recycling signed an agreement with Spring Jam vendors such as El Burrito Mercado, Cookie Dough Bliss and Tot Boss that requires them to serve their food with only compostable or recyclable materials. ”If we have vendors come in and they bring in solo cups, for instance, that aren’t recyclable or compostable, we aren’t going to have a zero-waste event. We do have to be thoughtful about ensuring that the
STUDENT LIFE
The Students’ Alliance for Cooperative Living has been on campus for around 80 years.
The State of Minnesota had long intended to pay two-thirds of students’ public higher education costs; this is now a distant memory that resurfaces at the Legislature when lawmakers discuss college affordability. The gradual disinvestment is partly due to some lawmakers’ belief that the University of Minnesota isn’t operating efficiently or transparently. Many say that pushes for strategy and accountability for the University, along with shifts in leadership at the Capitol and upcoming changes to University administration, might be what it takes to establish trust with the Legislature. While state funding for the University has fallen behind rising tuition costs and inflation since the Great Recession around 2007, affordable college in Minnesota seems even more out of reach. “We’re trying hard, but we’re not [back to state funding levels before the recession],” said Sen. Jason Isaacson, DFL-Shoreview.
HOUSING
Plans to renovate public housing in Minneapolis spark resident criticism The City Council approved tenant protections Friday in hopes of reassuring residents. BY EMMA DILL edill@mndaily.com
JACK RODGERS, DAILY
Ward 6 Minneapolis City Council member Abdi Warsame hears concerns about the memorandum of understanding at City Hall on Friday, April 19. The memorandum sets standards for using city funds to renovate public housing.
Amid criticism, the Minneapolis City Council unanimously approved protections for public housing residents Friday. The measure comes as the Minneapolis Public Housing Authority plans to use Rental Assistance Demonstration, a 2012 federal program meant to attract private or nonprofit investment to buildings in need of repair. MPHA has come under fire by public housing advocates after the Elliot Twins Apartments in the Elliot Park neighborhood became the city’s first public housing renovation approved to use RAD. Opponents say the program threatens to privatize the buildings. A memorandum of understanding passed Friday between the City of Minneapolis and MPHA. The memorandum gives tenants the right to return to their apartment building if
displaced by renovations and bans rent hikes when MPHA projects use City money. Ward 6 City Council member Abdi Warsame co-sponsored the memorandum. Warsame, whose ward is home to the most public housing units in the city, said the measure proactively protects tenant rights under private and nonprofit investments. “Our role as a City is to make sure that we create mechanisms that basically monitor and give confidence to the tenants,” he said. “It won’t solve the issue of fully funding public housing; that’s not within our power.” The need for alternative funding sources stems from the underfunding of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which supports local public housing authorities. MPHA estimates it needs nearly $140 million to repair its more than 6,000 units. In 2018, they received $14 million from HUD, said Jeff Horwich, MPHA’s director of policy and external affairs. Elliott Twins Apartments’ renovations will include improvements in heating and u See HOUSING Page 3
VOLUME 119 ISSUE 56