October 22, 2018

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CLIMATE CHANGE MAY HARM MN FORESTS PG 3 MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2018

EARLY WEEK

A NEW U STUDY LOOKED AT WARMER CLIMATE IMPACTS

MNDAILY.COM

ELECTIONS

I remember a lot of my friends were talking about primaries and going out to vote. I know we’re all planning on going out to vote this election season.”

Nathan Alemu, freshman, economics major

I feel like this season has really seen people wanting to get involved ... even though it’s not a big election, they still know it affects things.”

We’re hoping [Tim Walz] gets in office because if he does, we’re hoping he has some influence over certain changes with PSEO.”

Eva Dywer, sophomore, global studies and Arabic

Midterms approach, students share voting priorities The Minnesota Daily spoke with University of Minnesota students ahead of the Nov. 6 midterm elections. They discussed voting as students and the issues that matter to them.

“I personally feel that people are so sick of the political climate right now, it’s so polarized and people actually want to take action this time.

Maggie Madsen, junior, mass communication and global studies “This is a time where I feel like you want your voice to be heard and you’re learning the impacts your voice can have within society as a whole.

Kaily Robinson, sophomore, kinesiology

“It’s also a little scary because the polls didn’t reflect what actually came to fruition.

BY ISABELLA MURRAY imurray@mndaily.com PHOTOS BY COURTNEY DEUTZ cdeutz@mndaily.com

u See VOTING Page 4

Joshua Mason, PSEO student and PSEO student association member

Peter Akal, second year med student

FOOTBALL

Gophers husked by Nebraska 53-28 over weekend The Gophers remain winless on the road in Big Ten play under head coach P.J. Fleck.

It’s hard to start slower in a football game than the Gophers started Saturday’s matchup against Nebraska. Nebraska had a 28-0 lead with 1:58 left

SCIENCE

GREEK LIFE

UMN women engineers visit STEM event

Fraternity celebrates memory of longtime, in-house chef

BY JACK WARRICK jwarrick@mndaily.com

The international conference aimed to bring attention to a lack of women in the field. BY NIKKI PEDERSON npederson@mndaily.com

University of Minnesota students attended an international conference for women engineers in Minneapolis this weekend, which sought to encourage women in STEM fields and bring attention to a lack of representation. WE18 brought in more than 14,000 people from around the world to the Minneapolis Convention Center. Over 100 University students were given the opportunity to attend the event while being reimbursed for half or all of the registration cost through a sponsorship between local Fortune 500 company 3M and the College of Science and Engineering. The convention is held in a different city every year, and is hosted by the Society of Women Engineers, a non-profit educational and service organization that has almost 35,000 members worldwide. At the University, the SWE chapter is the largest student organization within CSE with approximately 300 members. People join SWE for a range of reasons. The underlying theme, however, is that being a woman in a STEM field isn’t always easy. Marie Wulff, a University sophomore and member of the University’s SWE chapter, attended the convention for the first time this year. But about a year ago, she wasn’t even sure she wanted to join SWE. “I was the one person of color in the whole u See ENGINEERING Page 4

march 75 yards down the field in under two minutes, capped off with a 40-yard rushing touchdown by Cornhuskers running back Devine Ozigbo. The Gophers got the ball and got to the Nebraska 37-yard line. Quarterback Zack Annexstad hit a wide-open Rashod Bateman with a pass, and he ran in for what would be a touchdown. But a flag on the play caused by a holding from center Jared Weyler made for a big headache and a loss of 10 yards. “We had a holding call on the first

touchdown ... that got called back,” Fleck said. “I think its a completely different game if that’s not a holding penalty.” Two plays later, Gophers kicker Emmit Carpenter came out for a 54-yard field goal. He put the ball through the uprights, but a delay of game brought it back, and the Gophers settled for a punt. The 54-yard field goal would have been Carpenter’s longest. The Gophers’ defense allowed six plays

to play in the second quarter. Minnesota allowed high-yardage plays on defense and didn’t capitalize on offense, giving Nebraska its first win of the season, a 53-28 rout at Nebraska’s Memorial Stadium on Saturday. “You get down 28-nothing and ... with seven starters freshmen on offense, we’re not designed to come back from that type of deficit without going outside of our comfort zone,” said head coach P.J. Fleck. In Nebraska’s first offensive drive, the Gophers defense allowed Nebraska to

u See FOOTBALL Page 6

Sigma Phi Epsilon celebrated Aloma “Gib” Gibson, the chef of the fraternity for over 23 years. BY JORDAN WILLAUER jwillauer@mndaily.com

On Saturday afternoon, over 100 people gathered at the Pourhouse in Uptown to celebrate the life of Sigma Phi Epsilon’s beloved and oldest chef. Aloma “Gib” Gibson died earlier this month at 76 years old after battling lung disease. Past and current fraternity members, family and friends gathered to remember Gibson, who was a chef at the fraternity house for 23 years. “He [had] a unique relationship with the kids in the fraternity. ... [The members] invited him to their weddings, they brought him to all the fundraisers,” said Heather Essig-Reinhart, who hired Gibson and introduced him to the fraternity two decades ago. “He was just a part of the fabric of the u See CHEF Page 4

WILL TOOKE, DAILY

Phi Sigma Epsilon fraternity members, alumni, family and friends of Aloma Kewana Gibson meet together at the Pourhouse in Uptown following his on Saturday, Oct. 20. Gibson was the chef at Phi Sigma Epsilon for 23 years. Fraternity members raised $12,000 in six days on GoFundMe to pay for Gibson’s funeral expenses.

CAMPUS LIFE

Gopher Chauffeur expands transit service to run seven days a week The student service now runs nightly, after the success of a pilot program early this year. BY LEW BLANK lblank@mndaily.com

The University of Minnesota’s Gopher Chauffeur program officially expanded from three to seven nights per week last Monday in an effort to get more students home safely on weeknights.

The expanded hours of the transport service were modeled on the positive results of a similar pilot program launched in February, which temporarily expanded the Gopher Chauffeur’s hours to six nights per week. This new, permanent expansion was backed by the Minnesota Student Association and extended the service’s hours to be every night from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Previously, Gopher Chauffeur was only available Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights from 10 p.m. to 2:30 a.m.

The decision to expand the program was made this summer by Boynton Health, which runs the Gopher Chauffeur, and the Office for Student Affairs. The new rideshare hours required Boynton to hire 30 new student employees and conduct four training sessions over the past two weeks, said Julie Sanem, director of health promotion at Boynton and manager of the program. These new employees will operate u See CHAUFFEUR Page 4

VOLUME 119 ISSUE 15


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October 22, 2018 by The Minnesota Daily - Issuu