December 9, 2019

Page 1

December 2019

Volume 4

EARLY WEEK MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2019

MNDAILY.COM

STUDENT GOVT.

SERVING THE UMN COMMUNITY SINCE 1900

CAMPUS

MSA pres. announces resignation Mina Kian, the president of the undergraduate student body, plans to resign in the spring.

Left, Students and faculty march towards Morrill Hall as part of the UMN Climate Strike. Those in attendance criticized the University’s policies on fossil fuel usage. Below, Savannah Wery, left, and Katherine Schmid, right, speak to protesters outside of Coffman Union on Friday, Dec. 6. (Emily Urfer / Minnesota Daily)

BY SAMANTHA HENDRICKSON shendrickson@mndaily.com

University of Minnesota undergraduate student body president Mina Kian plans to resign in the spring. Kian, who has been involved in MINA KIAN various positions in MSA for the last four-and-a-half years, said she plans to resign purely for academic reasons and will leave her presidency sometime in the spring semester. “I am choosing to leave exclusively because of the fact this academic professional development conflict could not be adjusted,” Kian said. MSA Vice President Jael Kerandi will assume the presidency and appoint a new vice president subject to the MSA forum’s approval. “I have full confidence in Jael’s ability to continue leading this organization in my absence and to ensure the advocacy initiatives that we started together will come to fruition,” Kian said. Voting members met Thursday and held discussions on the next steps for MSA in light of a presidential resignation. The preparations follow an Oct. 22 forum, which was motioned into closed session. A bill drafted in October, and discussed at the forum, called for Kian to discuss MSA’s priorities. “[T]he President of the Minnesota Student Association has denied repeated and sustained requests to have a meaningful and respectful conversation around organizational culture and organizational portfolio,” the bill states. It also states that “the President’s behavior is largely responsible for the creation of a difficult work environment.” The closed session, which some members say was called in order to have “transparent conversations” about internal culture, excluded leadership. Prior to the closed session, six members resigned from the undergraduate student government. Two more members have resigned since, bringing the total to eight since July 2019. Kian denied a connection between her resignation and the concerns about the internal culture discussed in the closed session. Kian stated that while she has loved her position within MSA, she is choosing to put her academics first. “I hope to lead by that example for all students across campus that they have to always have [academics] as a top priority,” Kian said. In spring 2019, during the MSA presidential elections, the Minnesota Daily Editorial Board endorsed Kian and Kerandi for their current positions.

Students call for action on climate During a march Friday, UMPD barred protesters from entering Morrill Hall. BY ABBEY MACHTIG AND NATALIE RADEMACHER amachtig@mndaily.com, nrademacher@mndaily.com new University of Minnesota student group held a march Friday to demand the University divest from fossil fuels and do more to address the climate crisis.

A

A group of more than 50 students and community members marched across campus to Morrill Hall, the location of University President Joan Gabel’s office, to bring attention to their demands. The University’s Minnesota Climate Strike student group, a branch of the statewide initiative, insisted the University declare a

climate emergency, create a new climate and environmental justice major and cut ties with the fossil fuel industry, among others. The group intended to hold a sit-in at Gabel’s office, but on arrival found Morrill Hall placed on lockdown as the sit-in “would be disruptive” to campus activity, according to University of

STUDENT LIFE

Minnesota Police Department officers present at the time. UMPD officers blocked students from entering the building. The group then eventually dissolved, with leaders encouraging students to attend other climate protests taking place in St. Paul u See CLIMATE Page 4

FOOTBALL

Gophers to take on Auburn Tigers in Outback Bowl The Gophers will play in a game on New Year’s Day for the second time since the 1962 season. BY JOHN MILLER jmiller@mndaily.com

ILLUSTRATION BY SARAH MAI, DAILY

Amid fears of recession, University students split on economy’s outlook UMN students and experts weigh in on rising concerns over economic stability. BY JASMINE SNOW jsnow@mndaily.com

As economists speculate on the probability of an impending recession, students feel uncertain about

future financial prospects. Recent survey data of 330 completed responses collected by the Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication found that 8 percent of students surveyed rated the current state of the U.S. economy “very good.” Forty-six percent rated it as “good” and 17 percent rated it as either “bad” or “very bad.” u See ECONOMY Page 3

Coming off of one of their best regular seasons in over 100 years, the Gophers finally know their bowl destination. No. 18 Minnesota will head to Tampa Bay, Florida to take on the No. 12 Auburn Tigers in the Outback Bowl on Jan. 1. The game will be played at Raymond James Stadium, where the NFL’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers call home. This will be yet another opportunity for the program to play in the spotlight. It will be the second time the program plays in a New Year’s Day bowl game since the 1960s. The Gophers lost to Missouri in the Citrus Bowl to conclude the 2014 season. Since that loss to Missouri, the Gophers have not lost a bowl game; they are currently on a threegame win streak. Most recently, Minnesota beat Georgia Tech 3410 in the Quick Lane Bowl. This is the second-consecutive season the

Gophers have qualified for a bowl game. The Gophers will have their hands full facing a very good Auburn Tigers team. They finished the season with a 9-3 overall record and went 5-3 in the SEC West conference. Their three losses were against AP Top 15 teams: Florida, Georgia and LSU. The Tigers finished their season defeating Alabama on Nov. 30 to win the Iron Bowl and effectively eliminating the Crimson Tide from the College Football Playoff. Offensively, the Tigers are led by freshman Bo Nix, who has thrown for 15 touchdowns and six interceptions and has run for seven scores. On the ground, Nix is joined by running back JaTarvious Whitlow. Whitlow leads the team in attempts (147), yards (739) and rushing touchdowns (nine). Defensively, Auburn is ranked No. 21 in the country in rush defense, allowing 115.5 yards per game and is No. 13 in points allowed (18.6). The Iowa Hawkeyes, a fellow Big Ten team, won last year’s Outback Bowl. The Hawkeyes represented the Big Ten well, beating the Mississippi State Bulldogs 27-22.

ACADEMICS

After University Senate vote, no changes to liberal education requirements — for now The Senate voted against two proposed plans on Thursday, and discussed how to best proceed. BY NIAMH COOMEY ncoomey@mndaily.com

At a lively meeting Thursday, the University of Minnesota Senate decided to prolong discussions around changing the University’s liberal education requirements. The Liberal Education Redesign Committee took several years to rethink the University’s liberal education requirements, bringing plans A and D to the senate to be voted on. Faculty and students expressed concerns about the level of student involvement in the redesign process, the cost associated with changing requirements and how they would

be implemented. After discussion of these concerns, the senate ultimately voted against both plans over the current curriculum. Plan A would eliminate courses that fulfill at least two liberal education requirements, commonly known as “double-dipping” courses, while plan D aims to maintain them. Both plans introduce ethics and quantitative reasoning as required fundamentals, among other changes. Thursday’s meeting ended with a discussion about how to move forward, including a suggestion of the potential formation of a new committee under new Provost Rachel Croson sometime this spring. Professor Sally Gregory Kohlstedt, chair of the now-disbanded LERC, said it is time to pass the baton. However, whoever works on the redesign next will likely build off of

the committee’s work, she said. University Senator Tabitha Grier-Reed suggested that the next step of the redesign should include more analysis of feedback from faculty and students, a process that could span over the next couple of years. “I don’t think that whoever comes next should throw the baby out with the bathwater, but I do think that the redesign won’t be fast, and that it would involve getting and integrating feedback at multiple steps along the way,” Grier-Reed said. Members of the Student Senate and the Minnesota Student Association expressed concern that their voices had not been involved enough in the consultation process from the beginning. Kohlstedt met with several MSA u See LIB ED Page 3

The University Senate convenes in Mondale hall on Thursday, Dec. 5. Those involved in the vote decided to continue discussions around changing the University’s liberal education requirements. (Parker Johnson / Minnesota Daily) VOLUME 120 ISSUE 29


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