ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-NINE YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
Monday, April 6, 2020
Ann Arbor, Michigan
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‘I helped somebody take their exam’: University faculty, students discuss academic integrity After transition to online classes, unclear whether honor codes are being adhered to FRANCESCA DUONG Daily Staff Reporter
On March 16, the day the University of Michigan officially began online classes in response to the novel coronavirus outbreak, a student, who will be referred to in this article as Jane, had two exams. One of her exams was canceled while the other was open for three days to accommodate students’ schedules. According to Jane, one of her friends asked for her assistance in taking the exam. Jane has requested anonymity for fear of retaliation from the University. To protect Jane from retaliation, The Daily has decided not to publish the name of the course. Jane said she agreed to help her friend cheat by taking her friend’s exam, but she said she took her own exam separately. “I helped somebody take their exam, and then I took mine because there’s no browser lock or anything (and) they’re not using the camera,”
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Jane said. “I did that, so then I knew what was on it.” Jane said she did not think the exam was that difficult but did believe helping her friend made
her more prepared. After taking the exam, Jane said she was really nervous about getting caught. However, once she talked to more people, she said she realized many
others had also used some form of assistance on their exam. “I was talking to my friends after … and they were like, ‘If (the instructional team) checks if people
A businesses worry about futures 2
Stay Home, Stay Order impacts local economy, results in closures for an extended period of time BARBARA COLLINS & LIAT WEINSTEIN Daily News Editors
On Friday, March 13, two days after the University of Michigan canceled in-person classes and moved to online instruction for the rest of the semester, Kathy Roos, the owner of RoosRoast Coffee on East Liberty Street, removed half of the chairs from the cafe’s seating area. The change was meant to promote social distancing — a phrase that has, in the past few weeks, come to epitomize the selfisolation needed to slow the spread of the rapidly growing COVID-19 pandemic. “We were ahead of the game,” Roos said. “We did that because we were very aware of what was happening.” Now, with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s Stay Home, Stay Safe Executive Order mandating the closure of all “non-essential businesses,” RoosRoast remains reliant on a curbside to-go business operating out of their Rosewood
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DOMINICK SOKOTOFF/Daily Ian Shackelford, assistant distiller at the Ann Arbor Distilling Company, mized ingredients together to make hand sanitizer in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Street location. Even with these kinds of services, Roos said she is not sure Ann Arbor’s small businesses will survive prolonged shutdowns. “This could destroy the local economy,” Roos said. “That’s a really strong word. But when is this going to end? How long can businesses remain closed?
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And all the amazing, deep local, idiosyncratic Ann Arbor local businesses — they can’t survive. They’re not going to be able to survive being closed for too long.” The coronavirus pandemic hit when rising rent prices and an increase in development across the city were already putting a strain on local businesses. In 2018,
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18 businesses closed, with most closures affecting businesses that had been open for more than 25 years. Rent prices also soared in the past year, leaving business owners struggling to pay their employees at rates that would allow them to reside within city limits. But the pandemic and subsequent executive orders have placed local businesses in a unique situation, leaving many to rely on community support in order to meet their rent and pay employees. Literati Bookstore, a staple bookshop on East Washington Street, raised more than $115,000 through a GoFundMe campaign last month. Literati’s owners, Mike and Hilary Gustafson, met their goal of $100,000 just days after the fundraiser opened on March 23. Many stores and restaurants have followed suit, hoping community donations will be able to sustain their businesses until the pandemic subsides and the city reopens.
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See ECONOMY, Page 2
open the textbook, if they enforce that, then the average score would be zero because everyone is going to do it,’” Jane said. See CHEATING, Page 2
CAMPUS LIFE
Hash Bash goes virtual in 49th event
Annual gathering occurs online, draws speakers CHRIS SULLIVAN Daily Staff Reporter
The 49th annual Hash Bash, Ann Arbor’s annual cannabis rights event, took place online Saturday afternoon via livestream due to the state of Michigan’s stay-at-home order amid the coronavirus outbreak. Michigan’s statewide COVID19 cases surpassed 14,000 by Saturday. Nick Zettell, co-founder of MI Legalize and leader of the Hash Bash Committee, said the group quickly searched for alternative platforms to host the event as the spread of the virus increased in the past few weeks.
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