ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-NINE YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
Tuesday, February 11, 2020
Ann Arbor, Michigan
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NASA asks Union board to rename south lounge
Group proposes ‘U’ honor Native American communities with new title DAILY WRITER
who has this position
Flint, Dearborn campuses push for University health services DESIGN BY MICHELLE FAN
1U members at all three campuses highlight socioeconomic differences, put pressure on administration for equitable distribution of resources CALDER LEWIS
Daily Staff Reporter
When Ali Darwish, sophomore at University of Michigan-Dearborn, found himself in the Henry Ford Medical Center emergency room in November of his freshman year, he was frustrated by the inadequate care he received compared to the University hospitals he went to as an Ann Arbor native. Because U-M Dearborn does
not have its own on-campus health clinic comparable to U-M Ann Arbor’s University Health Service, the HFMC across the street from campus was Darwish’s only immediate option. “They didn’t even figure out what was wrong, and it ended up stretching until 6 a.m. because no one saw me for hours,” Darwish said. “They wheeled me around in wheelchairs and left me in hallways for extended periods
of time, and at the end, I still had the pain and I just left with it. I had to come back to my U-M health doctor in Ann Arbor.” For most students at the University’s Flint and Dearborn campuses, however, finding health care is not as easy as a trip home to Ann Arbor. While the University offers free UHS care to all students at the Ann Arbor campus, U-M Flint and U-M Dearborn do not have on-campus health care clinics.
Instead, they refer students to health centers in respective communities, including the HFMC and the Genesee Health System in Flint. The U-M Flint and U-M Dearborn student bodies differ greatly from U-M Ann Arbor in terms of socioeconomic status. More than 40 percent of undergraduates at U-M Flint and U-M Dearborn are Pell Grant eligible, compared to under 20 percent at U-M Ann Arbor. See UHS, Page 3
Maitland Bowen, the chair of the Native American Student Association presented to the Michigan Union Board of Representatives on Monday evening about how the University of Michigan can help the Native American community feel more included and respected on campus. About 50 students and community members attended the event. Bowen proposed that the Union’s first-f loor south lounge be renamed to honor Native American students and community members. On behalf of NASA and their supporters, Bowen said that if the lounge were to be renamed, it would be one effort made by the University to recognize past offensive practices of the student organization, the Order of Angell, toward the Native American community. In 1902, thenUniversity President James Angell founded the
CAMPUS LIFE
Students in Former National Transportation Safety RC discuss Board chairman speaks on self-driven cars program Christopher Hart explores how technology has helped vehicles become safer requisites SARAH PAYNE
Half of Residential College participants drop after 2 years, cite language requirement FRANCESCA DUONG Daily Staff Reporter
Only one out of every two students who enter the Residential College graduate with a degree from the program, according to RC Director Catherine Badgley. Students The Daily spoke to who left the RC, which provides LSA students with a four-year interdisciplinary liberal arts program in the form of a livinglearning community, cited stringent degree requirements and financial stress as reasons for dropping. Badgley said about half of the students who enter the RC program drop within two years. “Over the last 20 years, there has been a very consistent rate of about half the entering class leaving the Residential College, but for a variety of reasons, and at different stages,” Badgley said. “Most of those departures occur after the first year, or in graduating seniors.” RC requirements include firstand second-year residency within East Quad, a first-year writing seminar, completion of RC SemiImmersion Foreign Language Sequences and an arts practicum in the form of an RC creative arts class. Students who are non-RC majors also have to take four additional RC classes. See RC, Page 3
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Christopher Hart, former chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, spoke to 70 University of Michigan students and community members at the Ford School of Public Policy Monday afternoon about the innovation of autonomous vehicles. Hart is the chairman of the Washington Metrorail Safety Commission and the founder of Hart Solutions LLC. He has also worked for the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Federal Aviation Administration and was nominated by both President Barack Obama and President George W. Bush to the National Transportation Safety Board. Robert Hampshire, associate professor in the Public Policy School, introduced Hart before his lecture and spoke of Hart’s vast experience. “I had the pleasure of serving on a panel with him last year at Princeton reunions ... and I figured that the Ford
School community could really benefit from hearing his sage advice and his years of experience and his career,” Hampshire said. Hart began his presentation by discussing the common misconception of the complexity between aviation automation and automation on the ground. “In aviation, automation has shown amazing safety benefits, productivity, operating efficiency, getting more airplanes through the airspace and reducing pollution all at the same time,”
Hart said. “And I think that the car automation scenario has even more opportunities for improvement, especially in safety.” Hart said many of the problems with autonomous vehicles stem from a lack of graceful exits in case of emergency or unanticipated circumstances. “When automation isn’t perfect, you need to have some graceful exits,” Hart said.
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student organization, which many consider a secret society, under the name “Michigamua,” the Ojibwe word for water. Michigamua met on the seventh f loor in the tower of the Union. Their meeting space resembled a wigwam and displayed Native American statues and artifacts. The organization further appropriated Native American culture by incorporating Native practices into their meeting rituals. In 2000, the Students of Color Coalition led a 37-day demonstration at the Union, protesting Michigamua’s appropriation of Native American culture in their organization’s practices. After the sit-in, the University banned Michigamua from using the tower as a meeting space. Seven years later, Michigamua was reinstated under the name Order of Angell, a tribute to their founder. Currently, the Order of Angell is again affiliated with the University. See NASA, Page 3
ACADEMICS
Leader in EPA talks law, water policies Michael Fisher talks environmental issues, building a successful career in legal world KRISTINA LENN Daily Staff Reporter
Michael Fisher, legal division director of the Environmental Protection Agency Office of Criminal Enforcement, Forensics and Training, spoke to a crowd of about 20 Law students about building a successful law career on Monday morning. The Environmental Law and Policy Program (ELPP), a program affiliated with the University of Michigan’s Law School that prepares students for careers in environmental law, hosted the talk. Fisher’s talk touched on current issues surrounding Michigan water quality, among other environmental concerns. Since 2014, the city of Flint has been striving to remove lead from its drinking water, a public health crisis that has caused 12 deaths from Legionnaires’ disease. In December of last year, the EPA provided $100 million to the ongoing Flint water crisis. Additionally, the EPA is working to implement more stringent regulations of lead in drinking water. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, they have not found a safe level of lead exposure.
ALEC COHEN/Daily Christopher A. Hart, former Chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, discusses the benefits of automation during a lecture in Weill Hall Monday afternoon.
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INDEX
Vol. CXXIX, No. 67 ©2020 The Michigan Daily
NEWS.........................2 OPINION.....................4 CLASSIFIEDS................6
See LAW, Page 2
SUDOKU.....................6 SPORTS...................7 ARTS...............5