November 25, 2013

Page 1

CAMPUS & METRO

CAMPUS & METRO

CAMPUS & METRO

MEN’S BASKETBALL

The president also discussed the U’s new leadership and honors program.

Minnesota and Madison FIJI members buck rivalry for a cause.

Kaler talks crime, research, new mayor

From Randall to TCF, frat runs for charity

u See PAGE 4

MOSTLY SUNNY HIGH 35° LOW 16°

u See PAGE 5

U OF M

MINNEAPOLIS

ST PAUL

MONDAY

Students fast after Typhoon Haiyan

MN preps for Syracuse in first round of Maui Invitational

Students join a nationwide effort to raise awareness of climate change.

The Gophers beat up on Wofford and will now face their toughest test yet.

u See PAGE 5

u See PAGE 10

NOVEMBER 25, 2013

CRIME

Sexual assault reported A man claiming to be a police officer attacked a student, police say. BY NICK STUDENSKI nstudenski@mndaily.com

A University of Minnesota student was sexually

assaulted by a man impersonating a police officer early Sunday morning, according to an email alert sent to students, faculty and staff by University police Chief Greg Hestness on Sunday night. The student was walking alone at about 2:15 a.m. Sunday near the intersection of 15th Avenue

Southeast and Eighth Street Southeast in MarcyHolmes when she was approached by a black SUV, the alert said. The man driving the SUV slowed to talk to the student, the aler t said, claiming he was a police of ficer and war ning her against walking alone. The man then of fered the stu-

dent a ride. When she got in, he locked the doors and drove her somewhere west of Interstate 35-W and sexually assaulted her, the alert said. The alert describes the suspect as a young black u See ASSAULT Page 4 The man was also wearing a badge and police-style belt.

CAMPUS

New Northrop readies debut

ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM

STUDENT GOVERNMENT

COGS set to leave GAPSA The Council of Graduate Students voted Monday to split in July.

BY KYLE STOWE kstowe@mndaily.com

The University of Minnesota’s Council of Graduate Students is set to sever formal af filiation with the Graduate and Professional Student Assembly, effective July 1. COGS passed a resolution in a landslide vote last Monday to apply for its own student ser vices fees funding beginning with this spring’s cycle. COGS will also stop accepting passthrough funds from GAPSA — funds that GAPSA receives and then distributes to its member councils — and discontinue sending COGS representatives to the assembly next school year, according to the resolution.

GAPSA President Brittany Edwards said the assembly must pass an amendment to remove COGS from its constitution because it’s included as a member council in GAPSA’s constitution. “It’s like Minnesota seceding from the United States,” she said. “They can’t just leave.” Edwards said the majority of GAPSA’s executive board wants to amend GAPSA’s constitution to immediately remove COGS from the assembly. An amendment failed at a meeting last Wednesday. COGS Executive Vice President Sumitra Ramachandran voted against the amendment because, she said, it would have prevented COGS from receiving pass-through funding for spring semester. COGS is currently one of 10 different councils that u See COGS Page 16 COGS members say GAPSA didn’t distribute fees correctly.

ADMINISTRATION

Candidates make cases for CLA spot Four contenders for dean presented their visions for the college. CHELSEA GORTMAKER, DAILY

The University hosted a media tour of Northrop Memorial Auditorium on Thursday afternoon. After three years of construction, Northrop is scheduled to reopen in spring 2014.

Three years in the making, the new Northrop aims to be a cultural hub for students and the state. by a live orchestra.

BY ROY AKER raker@mndaily.com

“In the daily life of our stu-

Most current University of

dents, Northrop too often was a

Minnesota students have yet to

magnificent and beloved campus

set foot in Northrop Memorial

landmark [students] walked by

Auditorium.

on their way to somewhere else,”

But after a three-year, $88.2

Karen Hanson, vice president

million renovation, Nor throp

for academic affairs and provost,

will reopen its doors April 4 with

said at a press conference Thurs-

the American Ballet Theater per-

day.

forming “Giselle,” accompanied

In addition to performances

u See NORTHROP Page 6

NEIGHBORHOODS

BY ALEX BITTER abitter@mndaily.com

W ith some develop ment already planned for the neighbor hood and more on the horizon, Prospect Park is looking to connect developers, investors and residents in order to better coordinate the changes. The Prospect Park East River Road Improvement Association and planning group Prospect Park 2020 are holding a “Neighborhood Open House” next year to introduce residents and developers and to discuss their goals for the community. The organizations hope to hold more

Four higher education leaders from across the country are vying to be the next dean of the University of Minnesota’s College of Liberal Arts. The contenders — Thomas DiPier o, John Coleman, Eugene Borgida and Stephen Esquith — discussed research, budget strategies and the role of a liberal arts education during public interviews at the University from Oct. 29 to Nov. 14. Each candidate has held both academic and administrative roles previously,

u See DEAN Page 5 Candidates discussed how they’d deal with recent funding cuts.

FOOTBALL

Prospect Park to connect residents and developers An upcoming “open house” is part of the neighborhood’s development plan.

BY ROY AKER AND MEGHAN HOLDEN raker@mndaily.com mholden@mndaily.com

which College of Design Dean Tom Fisher, who chairs the search committee, said is required for the open position. After former CLA Dean James Parente announced last spring his plans to step down from the position, a search committee began recruiting candidates and conducted the public interviews. Interim Dean Raymond Duvall will hold the position until the new dean — who the University will announce by January — steps in next fall. The search committee compiled the original candidate list over the summer with the help of Illinoisbased executive search firm Witt/Kieffer. The committee narrowed the list further this fall, leaving five

open houses as developers propose new projects. PPERIA master planning committee chair Tamara Johnson said they hope to let developers and potential developers see the overall plans for the area. “We don’t want to look at each building in isolation,” she said. “We want to look at how it all fits together.” Prospect Park 2020 board member Dick Gilyard said the meetings will allow developers and residents to meet and examine how new building projects fit in with the area. “It’s mainly to talk about what their company does, what they’ve done in the past, why they’ve chosen this area and for u See OPEN HOUSE Page 3 The Prospect Park master plan predates light-rail development.

Badgers keep Axe after 20-7 win Wisconsin tallied a 10th straight win against Minnesota on Saturday. BY NATE GOTLIEB ngotlieb@mndaily.com

University of Minnesota players were undoubtedly disappointed with their 207 loss to the University of Wisconsin on Saturday at TCF Bank Stadium. But the Gophers weren’t about to let their biggest rivals get the last word. Wisconsin players wielded Paul Bunyan’s Axe after the game and tried to “chop down” the Gophers’ goal post, but Minnesota players got in their way. The two rivals exchanged color ful words in the end zone and nearly came to blows. “It’s just a pride thing,” senior safety Brock Vereen said. “This is our stadium,

AMANDA SNYDER, DAILY

University of Wisconsin lineman Beau Allen swings Paul Bunyan’s Axe after the Badgers beat the University of Minnesota 20-7 on Saturday at TCF Bank Stadium.

and even after the clock hit zero, we still felt the need to protect it.”

The Gophers (8-3, 4-3 Big Ten) came the closest they’ve been to beating

u See FOOTBALL Page 9 Minnesota’s offense had three turnovers and didn’t score.

VOLUME 115 ISSUE 48


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