GOALTENDERS SHARED A SHUTOUT IN AN EXHIBITION GAME. GOPHERS DEVOUR OOKS IN FIRST GAME PAGE 7 THREE
MOSTLY SUNNY HIGH 60° LOW 42°
CAMPUS
U changes scrutinized ticket plan
U OF M
MINNEAPOLIS
FOOTBALL
ST PAUL
MONDAY
OCTOBER 6, 2014
ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM
The Williams boys
The athletics department will stop its controversial ticket bundling policy next year. BY HALEY HANSEN hhansen@mndaily.com
After an outcry from Gov. Mark Dayton and student leaders, the University of Minnesota’s athletics department will return to previous student ticket bundling practices. This season, the University sold season tickets in bundles before it put individual season tickets on sale. The school reversed that system hours after Dayton sent a letter to University President Eric Kaler criticizing the policy and less than a day after the University’s Student Senate passed a resolution in opposition to the practice, saying bundling season tickets limited student choice and indirectly affected students who can’t afford the more expensive multi-sport bundles. The University previously sold separate season tickets for football, men’s hockey and men’s basketball. Last year, bundled packages and individual season tickets went on sale at the same time. The “gold package” cost students $258 for season tickets for football, hockey and basketball. An alternative package allowed
AMANDA SNYDER, DAILY
Minnesota tight end Maxx Williams, left, watches his old high school team from Waconia, Minn., with his dad, Brian Williams, on Friday evening in Orono, Minn. Before an NFL career, Brian Williams played offensive lineman for the Gophers.
Gophers tight end Maxx Williams’ performance with the University is continuing a legacy his father left behind.
u See BUNDLING Page 12
see his son celebrating on the field.
BY JACK SATZINGER jsatzinger@mndaily.com
HIGHER ED
Strat plan gets faculty criticism
“Just the look in his eyes, you know, it’s
Amid a mob of teammates, Maxx Wil-
really special,” Brian Williams said. “Just to
liams stood on the field after the University
see that look in his eyes … that will be put
of Minnesota football team’s 30-14 victory
in the back of my head forever.”
at the University of Michigan last Saturday.
In 1986, Brian Williams was in the same
The victory gave him more than the Little
position as his son, knocking off Michigan
Brown Jug rivalry trophy — he completed
to win the oldest rivalry trophy in college
a family legacy.
football. Brian Williams was an offensive
Moments after his performance on the
lineman at Minnesota from 1986 to 1988
Some voiced uncertainties with the strategic plan at a Faculty Senate meeting on Thursday.
field ended, Williams couldn’t wait to find
before a decade-long career with the NFL’s
his father.
New York Giants.
As Wolverines fans filed through the
“After the game,” Maxx Williams said,
BY TAYLOR NACHTIGAL tnachtigal@mndaily.com
exits, Brian Williams hustled down the
“when I won it, I gave him a hug. That was
bleachers of the nation’s largest stadium to
kind of the coolest part for me. Knowing
Many faculty members have reser vations about the plan that will set the longterm course for the University of Minnesota. A group of faculty voiced their uncertainties with the University‘s strategic plan at Thursday’s Faculty Senate meeting, with many calling for it to include clearer implementation plans and specific goals for increasing diversity. The plan — which President Eric Kaler called a “road map for reinvigorating the University of Minnesota” at the meeting — aims to make the school a leader in solving global problems through fresh curriculum and research and by increasing collaboration across disciplines. The Board of Regents will vote on the plan this week. While the plan states the University’s desire to address diversity issues, philosophy professor Naomi Scheman said she’s concerned the plan doesn’t adequately address both racial and economic diversity at u See SENATE Page 4
u See LEGACY Page 6
CITY
Unanimous council vote regulates military actions Future Defense Dept. training exercises will need consent from City Council members. BY NICK WICKER nwicker@mndaily.com
Black military helicopters swept Minneapolis’ skies in August, flying close to highrise buildings and surprising residents. Now a new ruling by the Minneapolis City Council means the U.S. Department of Defense must first seek council approval before carrying out any training exercises like the ones in August. Council members voted unanimously
TECHNOLOGY
to approve the measure, aiming to prevent such activity from occurring without proper public notice. Under the new rule, the city can’t authorize any funding of military training without the council’s go-ahead. The motion, proposed by Ward 5 Councilman Blong Yang, included a second provision that calls for the development of a process through which the council would consider requests for disruptive activities in Minneapolis, like August’s training. Most of the exercises late this summer took place at night in the Cedar-Riverside and Seward neighborhoods, along with downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul, said Ward 2 Councilman Cam Gordon, who coauthored the proposal.
In January, the Department of Defense requested to conduct “tactical urban counter-terrorism training exercises” in the city, a spokesperson for Mayor Betsy Hodges’ office said in an email. The mayor’s office consented, but the federal agency asked local jurisdictions to limit the amount of information shared about the training’s timing and nature, citing security and safety reasons, the Hodges spokesperson said. Now, Hodges’ office “will set the expectation that they provide clear notice to our residents,” the mayor’s office said in the email. u See HELICOPTERS Page 4
New tool maps biz clusters University researchers helped make an interactive map that shows U.S. industry clusters. BY KEVIN KARNER kkarner@mndaily.com
LIAM JAMES DOYLE, DAILY
Lee Munnich, Humphrey School senior fellow and director of the State and Local Policy Program, moderates a panel discussing cluster mapping in the Cowles Auditorium on Tuesday.
Academics, business leaders and federal officials gathered at the University of Minnesota last week to celebrate the release of an online tool that lets users visualize where businesses cluster in specific areas. The two-day event, called “Mapping the Midwest’s Future,” was held at the Humphrey School of Public Affairs and featured discussions about the University’s role in economic development and in researching industry clusters, or geographic concentrations of related companies or organizations. Researchers developed the tool over the last four years through research from the
Harvard Business School and partnerships like that with the University of Minnesota, said Lee Munnich, director of the State and Local Policy Program at the Humphrey School. The interactive map’s primary function is to serve researchers in business and academia, said Munnich, who teaches a course on clusters. But he said the tool is also simple enough for individuals to use for their own purposes; for example, people who are job searching can browse areas to see which areas are suitable. Some students think the new tool could help them decide on a career path. “I think it looks ver y useful and creative and could be a huge help,” said freshman Zack Klesch, who is in the process of choosing either biomedical or chemical engineering to study. “I want to pick the u See HUMPHREY Page 3
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