HOLMES’ MOST USED BRIDGE FACES ACCESS ISSUES 5TH STREET BRIDGE TO GET OVERHAUL PAGE 3 MARCY
MOSTLY SUNNY HIGH 87° LOW 70°
U OF M
MINNEAPOLIS
ST PAUL
SUMMER EDITION
WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 2017
CAMPUS
ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM
SOFTBALL
Softball coach leaves U after historic year Jessica Allister is leaving the Gophers to coach at Stanford after a record 56-5 season. BY JACK WARRICK jwarrick@mndaily.com
EASTON GREEN, DAILY
Hair stylist Jeanne McCoy cuts and styles Nicole Shuster’s hair at the Masonic Children’s hospital’s new hair salon. Nicole was happy to use the service as her three-month-old son is treated at the hospital.
For patients and their families, comfort with style A new center at the U children’s hospital offers massages, hair cuts and other stress relievers.
Head softball coach Jessica Allister is leaving the Gophers’ program, athletics director Mark Coyle announced Tuesday. She will go to Stanford, her alma mater, to head its softball program. The Gophers softball team reached a new level of success this year under Allister. The team won its most games in program history with 56, finished first in the Big Ten and was ranked No. 1 in the country toward the end of the season. Allister is leaving after seven seasons with the team. “We didn’t see this coming,” former Gophers player Sam Macken said. “We are pretty shocked about it to be honest.” The job at Stanford opened up earlier in the month, July 11, when now former Stanford head coach Rachel Hanson stepped down after a 19-32 record, leaving the position available for Allister, the 2017 Big 10 Coach of the Year. “Minnesota will always hold a special place in my heart,” Allister said in a statement. “It is hard to walk away but the opportunity to coach at my alma mater is something I have always dreamed of.” A Gophers spokesperson said the program will move “as fast as we are able to” name a new head coach. Coyle has not yet named an interim coach. When reached for comment, former Gophers pitcher Sara Groenewegen declined to speak on Allister’s departure. “I’m sad to see her go, but I am happy for her,” Coyle said in a statement. “She earned the opportunity to coach at her alma mater. I know that’s always been a dream of hers.”
HOUSING
BY MAX CHAO mchao@mndaily.com
J
The Knoll, The Bridges sold for over $90 million
eanne McCoy is par t of a group of volunteers at a University of Minnesota children’s hospital that is giving patients a little style. Since late May, McCoy has worked at the University Masonic Children Hospital’s new Blythe Brenden-Mann Foundation Wellness Center. McCoy and others regularly give young patients and their families haircuts, work on their nails and of fer other styling ser vices. For McCoy, who was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s L ymphoma in 2005, it has become a way to provide a ser vice for patients and an emotional boon
With this sale, Doran no longer owns any U-area apartments. BY TAYLOR VRANEY tvraney@mndaily.com
u See HOSPITAL Page 2
ADMINISTRATION
Kaler talks sexual misconduct plan, largest freshman class in 40 years The president also addressed facilities updates and data on students’ academic progress. BY LAUREN OTTO lotto@mndaily.com
The Minnesota Daily sat down with University of Minnesota President Eric Kaler Monday to discuss the upcoming academic year and look back on the summer’s
events so far, including the newest tuition hike. What have been some of the highlights of your summer? The highlight will be on Saturday … my son Sam is getting married … Then looking for ward to vacation at the end of the month and just getting rested and recharged. Where are you going on vacation?
My father’s family is from southern Maine, and I’ve never been there. And so we’re going to go to southern Maine and southeast Canada. There’s a place called Kalers Corner Road, and there’s a restaurant called Kaler’s Restaurant, and apparently there’s a graveyard where a whole lot of dead Kalers are buried, and so we’re going to go see that… u See KALER Page 8
A local development company sold a pair of student apar tment complexes in Dinkytown Friday. Doran Companies sold The Bridges and The Knoll to TH Real Estate, a global real estate investment company, for $93 million, which some say shows the student housing market remains in high demand. Doran Cos. received multiple offers, but sold to TH Real Estate for its strong reputation, said Anne Behrendt, chief operating officer for Doran Cos. Behrendt said Doran Cos. initially identified a need for student housing that was still absent from the University campus areas. Doran Cos. built Syndey Hall, Dinkydome Buildings, The Bridges, 412 Lofts, The Knoll and Edge on Oak — all located within the University of Minnesota area and heavily concentrated with University students. u See DORAN Page 3
ARTS
Q&A: Scott Seekins on Minneapolis art A&E sat down with painter and icon Scott Seekins to talk art, Britney and PC culture. BY GUNTHAR REISING greising@mndaily.com
You’ve probably seen him around town, wearing a white suit in the summer and a black one in the winter. His name is Scott Seekins. Over the years, Seekins has become an icon in the Twin Cities. His unchanging style and paintings (which often feature him in romantic dialogue with Britney Spears) have generated a cult following. There is even a website and a Twitter page dedicated to tracking his whereabouts, aptly named “Seeking Seekins.” The painter has much to say about art
and culture, so A&E chatted with him to make sure Minneapolis is keeping up with Scott Seekins. In the past, you’ve spoken out about the art scene changing in Minneapolis. What are your thoughts on it? Times have changed; the scene now is weak. On the patron side of it, that is — the support system. It wasn’t great before, but it was better. The art scene here is like a festering pond in the hot sun. The creatures are slithering in the muck, trying for the morsels, and there aren’t enough. So why have you stayed around? I stay here for the fishing. u See SEEKINS Page 4
ELLEN SCHMIDT, DAILY
Minneapolis artist Scott Seekins poses for a portrait at CC Club in the early hours of the morning on Saturday, July 14 in Uptown. The painter, known for his black or white attire, frequents bars in the area to socialize and sell his work.
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