SANFORD FLOODS AFTER FRISBEE ACCIDENT PG 8 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2018
LATE WEEK
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MNDAILY.COM
CAMPUS
ADMINISTRATION
Despite last month’s decision, concerns linger about UMN child care options.
UMN drops presidential search firm AGB Search has been selected to replace Storbeck/Pimentel and Associates starting immediately. BY KATRINA PROSS kpross@mndaily.com
ELLEN SCHMIDT, DAILY
Daycare kids Henley Gorka and Max Finney pretend to be horses next to the sign-in table at the University of Minnesota Child Development Center on Wednesday, Oct. 3 in Minneapolis. Both have parents who work at the University.
Child care concerns persist
BY THERESA MUELLER AND AUSTEN MACALUS tmueller@mndaily.com, amacalus@mndaily.com
After months of waiting, parents with children at a popular child care center at the University of Minnesota were relieved to hear the center would remain open. Last month’s decision to keep the Child Development Center open was a reversal from University President Eric Kaler’s plan last school year to close the center. However, ongoing concerns about
A&E
child care, which includes long wait-lists at the CDC and a lack of options near campus, are fresh in parents’ minds. University administrators announced the decision — and future plans for child care at the Twin Cities — in a campus-wide statement Sept. 18, following recommendations from a campus-wide advisory committee. Under the new plan, the CDC will merge with the Shirley G. Moore Lab School into one, academically-rooted program. “We want parents to feel like their children are in good hands while they study or work at the University,” said Executive Vice
President and Provost Karen Hanson of the new plans. Kaler announced plans to close the CDC last January, but delayed the closure after widespread backlash from parents and a strong response from the greater community. Political science professor Kathryn Pearson was one of several parents involved in organizing opposition to the closure. “Parents are extremely appreciative u See CHILD CARE Page 3
The University of Minnesota’s Board of Regents decided to discontinue its partnership with the search firm Storbeck/Pimentel and Associates for its role in the search to find the next University president, according to a statement released Wednesday. The University has chosen AGB Search to replace Storbeck/Pimentel. Michigan State University chose Storbeck/Pimentel to select its next president, which has created confusion for potential candidates, according to the statement. Representatives from AGB Search will meet with Presidential Search Advisory Committee this week. The change in search firms is said to not interfere with the timeline to find the next University president. All current candidate files will be transferred to AGB Search. AGB Search will be paid $150,000, in addition to other expenses. Storbeck/Pimentel will refund the initial payment of almost $75,000 and no additional payments will be made. “We did not make this decision lightly,” said Board of Regents Chair David McMillan in the statement. “We needed a firm dedicated to finding the next great leader of the University of Minnesota. Accordingly, we have discontinued our engagement with Storbeck/Pimentel and retained AGB Search to complete our presidential search. Our search timeline will not be impacted by this change.” Regents were unaware of Storbeck/ Pimentel’s search history, which included an unsuccessful search at the University. Storbeck/Pimentel selected Scott Studham to be the University’s Chief Information Officer in 2011, who was later asked to resign by University president Eric Kaler due to allegations of misconduct at his previous place of employment.
CAMPUS LIFE
Prince inspires UMN design students make clothes for girls in Uganda apparel design UMN students University students create clothes based young and old on the girls’ shared sketches. COURTESY OF LUCY DUNNE
A University event honoring Prince last Wednesday gave students the royal treatment. BY LIV MARTIN omartin@mndaily.com
First and foremost, Cameron Kinghorn was a trumpet player. He came to the University of Minnesota to pursue an instrumental music education degree, studying at the School of Music with trumpet professor David Baldwin and participating in Jazz Ensemble I under the direction of professor and director of jazz studies Dean Sorenson. During his time at the University, Kinghorn experienced a musical awakening. Living in Minneapolis transformed Kinghorn, who was once just a kid growing up in tiny Circle Pines, MN. He started a band with other students from the University jazz band, The Tasty Tones, during his sophomore year. They started playing around the University and — for the first time — Kinghorn was a lead singer and a trumpet player. “That’s when I really started fronting – like my first time getting to front a group and realizing that I really love doing this and being in charge of the party,” he said. Kinghorn graduated from the University in 2013, and has since been living his dream as a full-time musician. He currently fronts the band Nooky Jones, a group that NPR called “equal parts Stevie Wonder, D’Angelo and Prince.” u See PRINCE Page 5
Blue House, a girls’ orphanage in rural Uganda, partnered with an apparel design course at the University to create clothing items for the girls in need.
BY LEW BLANK lblank@mndaily.com
In a University of Minnesota apparel design class, curriculum is combined with charity as students create hundreds of clothing items from scratch for Ugandan girls in need. Technical Design Studio, an apparel design course offered at the University, requires students to take clothing designs through every step in the textile production process. When the semester is over, students will gain experience in apparel design and more than 200 impoverished girls at the Blue House – a girls’ orphanage in rural Uganda – will receive new clothes. The course, which is offered every fall, kicks off when students receive rough clothing sketches drawn by the girls in the Ugandan orphanage. Although the sketches
are typically too vague to be followed exactly, the students use them as inspiration in designing the garments, which are drafted both on paper and on a computer. This year is the first time that students
are working off of sketches from the girls. Previously, the students would create the clothes without the aid of sketches. u See CLOTHES Page 3
NEIGHBORHOODS
New campus ministry chapel in Dinkytown to open next year The University Lutheran Chapel will soon have a new worship space in Dinkytown. BY IMANI CRUZEN icruzen@mndaily.com
A campus ministry’s work on a new chapel for its congregation is nearing completion after its original church was destroyed to make room for other developments. University Lutheran Chapel has been
headquartered in a former sorority house since 2012, since its church was purchased and demolished to allow for the development of The Knoll apartments. Community members said the new location will provide a more accessible worship space near campus for students. Since 2012, the group has been working to raise funds to move its worship out of the Luther House, where members have spent the last six years attending services, studying, and for some, even living. With the development of a new chapel at 1010 4th St. SE.,
this ambition is close to realization. “We never really saw Luther House as a standalone entity or a standalone ministry location,” said David Kind, a pastor with University Lutheran Chapel. “It was always going to be the place that spawned a church building next to it.” The chapel will sit next to Luther House, located at 316 10th Ave. SE., and will help separate where church members work and worship, Kind said. u See CHAPEL Page 3
u See JUMP Page XX
VOLUME 119 ISSUE 10