February 6, 2017

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TOP HEADLINES INSIDE:

WITH NEW SEMESTER, NEW TITLE IX DIRECTOR BEGINS PAGE 5

■■ U website explores U.S. immigration history

TINA MARISAM WILL NOW LEAD THE U’S EOAA OFFICE.

■■ 12 vie for four open Board of Regents spots

The #ImmigrationSyllabus provides public with context. PG 3

State legislators will make recommendations this week. PG 8

MOSTLY CLOUDY HIGH 38° LOW 29°

U OF M

MINNEAPOLIS

ST PAUL

EARLY WEEK

ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM

FEB. 6-8, 2017

FOOTBALL

U panel sanctions six football players Four Gophers football players accused of sexual misconduct were expelled, two others received one-year suspensions. BY CHRISTOPHER AADLAND, MIKE HENDRICKSON AND JESSIE BEKKER caadland@mndaily.com, mhendrickson@mndaily. com, jbekker@mndaily.com

Six of the 10 Gophers football players accused of sexual misconduct have been sanctioned by a University panel. Ray Bufor d, Kiante Har din, Dior Johnson and Tamarion Johnson have been expelled from the University. Mark W illiams and Carlton Djam received one-year suspensions, according to the source close to the situation. Four players — Kobe McCrar y, Antoine Winfield Jr., Seth Green and Antonio Shenault — were cleared of wrongdoing. The University had recommended a one-year suspension for three of the players and academic probation for Shenault. The accused players allegedly sexually assaulted and/or harassed a University game-day employee in September after a

LEGISLATURE

U Med School lobbies for new health building as ranking lags

football game. The three-person panel issued its decisions Friday after two days of hearings last week that included testimony by the accused players, the victim-sur vivor and a University Title IX administrator. Of the original University Of fice for Equal Oppor tunity and Af firmative Action recommendations — which were made after it determined that it was “more likely than not” that the accused players had committed sexual assault and/or harassment — five punishments were upheld, one was reduced and four players were cleared of wrongdoing. In an emailed statement, a University spokesman declined to comment, citing student privacy laws. The panel’s decisions can still be appealed by both the repor ting par ty and players to Provost Karen Hanson. u See SANCTIONS Page 3

COURTNEY DEUTZ, DAILY

Ryan Pacyga, attorney for University of Minnesota football player Antoine Winfield Jr., addresses the press in front of the Gibson-Nagurski Football Practice Facility on Saturday.

FEATURE PHOTO

From atelier to runway The College of Design held its 49th annual fashion show Saturday, showcasing bespoke tailoring, cosplay and everything in between.

STUDENTS

New program gives minority grad students crisis funding

The school is asking for $69.3 million in Minnesota funding.

The new emergency fund gives a onetime award of $1,500.

BY RYAN FAIRCLOTH rfaircloth@mndaily.com

BY DAVID CLAREY dclarey@mndaily.com

The University of Minnesota Medical School could resuscitate its fallen school ranking if granted state funding for a new health facility. University of ficials are asking the Legislatur e for $69.3 million in capital funding this session for a new health sciences education facility — which some say could provide lear ning advantages for medical, dentistr y and pharmacy students. But legislators want a detailed plan for the medical school before approving funding for the $104 million project. Although the University asked lawmakers to fund the health sciences b u i l d i n g l a s t y e a r, n o bonding bill passed before the session ended. Early last month, Gov. Mark Dayton recommended

The trial run of a new grant is offering University of Minnesota graduate students from underrepresented populations a chance to bounce back from tumultuous financial situations. The Diversity of Views and Experiences Emergency Fund of fers a onetime award of up to $1,500 for emergencies that could derail students’ academic careers. Eligible expenses include medical bills insurance doesn’t cover, travel costs in the event of a family death or damages to valuable property such as a laptop or vehicle. “There are students who are facing … some real financial emergency that comes up that means they’re going to have to leave graduate school to address that,” said Scott Lanyon, vice provost and dean of graduate education.

u See MED SCHOOL Page 5

EASTON GREEN, DAILY

Sarah Mirman and models walk onto the runway in Rapson Hall on Saturday. The Ethereal Collection focuses on unique fabrics and high class cosplay. Each dress in the collection is its own original red carpet look for costume enthusiasts and celebrities alike.

MEN’S HOCKEY

u See FUND Page 5

High-scoring Nittany Lions swept by Minnesota No. 7 Gophers beat No. 6 Penn State 5-1 on Friday and 5-2 on Saturday at Mariucci Arena. BY DREW COVE dcove@mndaily.com

CARTER JONES, DAILY FILE PHOTO

Gophers forward Leon Bristedt carries the puck into the Ohio State zone on Dec. 2, 2016 at Mariucci Arena.

The Gophers hockey team stifled the nation’s best offense in a series sweep over the weekend. No. 6 Penn State (16-6-2, 5-4-1 Big Ten) has averaged 4.17 goals a game this season, but No. 7 Minnesota (17-7-2, 8-2-0 Big Ten) scored 10 of its own while allowing just three. “It was an important weekend,” said head coach Don Lucia. “It will be a critical fourgame segment coming up.” After a 5-1 win Friday night, the Gophers completed the sweep — Minnesota’s third of

the year — on Saturday at Mariucci arena with a 5-2 victory. On Saturday, forward Leon Bristedt led the way for Minnesota and scored the first goal for the Gophers shorthanded and tied the score 1-1. He scored again on the power play in the second period and once more even strength in the third period for his first career hat trick. “It’s always good to get one,” Bristedt said. “That’s something you [don’t] necessarily strive after. It feels good. I’m happy I got one.” Goaltender Eric Schierhorn played another solid game Saturday for his 17th victory of the season. He stopped 38 of the 40 shots that he faced. The sophomore was saved twice late in u See HOCKEY Page 4

VOLUME 117 ISSUE 36


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