TOP HEADLINES INSIDE:
MUSLIM STUDENTS ASSOCIATION REPAINTS BRIDGE PANEL PG 3
■■ U researchers devise new, soluble polymer
STUDENTS SHOWED SOLIDARITY WITH HANDPRINTS.
■■ Study finds link between obesity, depression
The polymer increases the body’s absorption of drugs. PG 8
Metabolism hormones may play a role in depression. PG 4
PARTLY SUNNY HIGH 53° LOW 40°
U OF M
MINNEAPOLIS
ST PAUL
EARLY WEEK
ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM
NOV. 14-16, 2016
BY DAILY STAFF
W
Protesters start marching on 94W during a protest against Donald Trump in Minneapolis on Nov. 10.
CHELSEA GORTMAKER, DAILY
A call for unity amid division After Nov. 8, some University of Minnesota students, staff are gathering in protest, song.
CHRIS DANG, DAILY
CHELSEA GORTMAKER, DAILY
Police watch on as protesters march on I-94 to protest President-elect Donald Neighborhoods Organizing for Change, Economic Justice Organizer Rod Trump. The protest began outside Humphrey School for Public Affairs. Adams speaks to protesters outside Humphrey School for Public Affairs.
CAMPUS
Cops: No record of confrontation detailed in viral Facebook post
Report shows dip in hospital-treated sexual violence The report, released last week, highlights significant trends in data compiled from 2010-2014. BY OLIVIA JOHNSON ojohnson@mndaily.com
While sexual assault is already underrepor ted in Minnesota, a new repor t found that only about a quarter of sexual violence victims seek medical care.
Last week, the Minnesota Department of Health released a Sexual Violence Data Brief of information it collected from 2010 to 2014. The report, compiled by University graduate student Melanie LaPlant, will be used by sexual assault or violence prevention ser vices to help meet victims’ needs. LaPlant, a second-year epidemiology master’s student, helped gather and sift through the data this summer while working as an intern at MDH before the report was released Nov. 3.
“We worked on it with [the Minnesota Coalition Against Sexual Assault],” she said. “They were really helpful in developing the reports.” LaPlant said she found significant trends in the data that’s categorized by age, gender and roughly by geography. “They use this data as … [an] indicator as to what’s happening in the state in terms of sexual violence,” she said of the organizations who will use the u See REPORT Page 8
Coyle Center renovation stalled over lease dispute
Local police depar tments say they were not involved in the alleged handcuf fing of a University student who said she was verbally and physically attacked while crossing the Washington Avenue Bridge in a Facebook post on Wednesday. On Facebook and Twitter, the University of Minnesota Police Department and the Minneapolis Police Depar tment said there were no records of the incident Kathy Mirah Tu described in her Facebook Post. In the widely-shared post, Tu said she was harassed by a white male on the bridge. “I was stop[ped] in my [tracks] by a white male, who yelled at me to ‘Go back to Asia.’ ... I pretended to not hear anything and continue[d] on walking since I didn’t want to create conflict,” Tu, who noted she is Asian-American, wrote in the post on her personal Facebook page. “Shor tly after that moment, I was u See FACEBOOK Page 3
u See PROTEST Page 10
HEALTH
The U student’s post said she was handcuffed by police after an alleged campus assault. CEDAR-RIVERSIDE BY JESSIE BEKKER jbekker@mndaily.com
hat began as an antiDonald Trump rally outside Humphrey School of Public Affairs swelled to a thousand-person march on Interstate 94 Thursday — where protesters vocalized post-election grievances and called for unity across ethnic, racial and religious lines. The expression of dissent — spur red by President-elect Trump’s upset victor y on November 8 — was echoed in protests across the nation, in cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Seattle. “I’ve been feeling very pessimistic since the result of the election,” said Anna Vitale, one of the protesters in Cedar-Riverside. “And I think this is a good reason to come together and unite against a common cause. This was a lot bigger than I expected it to be.” On the University campus, smaller gatherings offered support for students in the days following the election. The University’s Office of the Executive Vice President and Provost as well as the Office for Equity sent emails to students detailing safe spaces on campus, while many smaller, less-formal meetings were also organized. About 40 students gathered at the West Bank outdoor amphitheater near Ferguson Hall Friday afternoon singing songs like “Lean on Me” at an event dubbed “Stronger Together” — aimed to bring people together after the particularly divisive election. Music senior Irene Kelly said at the event that she woke up Wednesday and didn’t know how to respond to Donald Trump’s victory. In many of her classes, students were crying, Kelly said. Fr ustrations weren’t limited to students as faculty joined in to voice their opinions as well. Holding signs that read, “I see you” and “I hear you,” over 200 students joined faculty on the east end of the Washington Avenue Bridge Thursday afternoon. The event, organized by Assistant Dean of International Student and Scholar Services, Dr. Barbara Kappler, was a chance for attendees to share their thoughts. “The goal of this event was to bring people together,” Kappler said. “We wanted to show that everyone matters.”
State money intended for the Cedar-Riverside center’s $330,000 expansion has yet to be used. BY ELIANA SCHREIBER eschreiber@mndaily.com
Because of a dispute over a 1992 lease, the Brian Coyle Center — a Cedar-Riverside community staple — won’t be able to undergo renovation. The Minnesota State Legislature allocated $330,000 to expand the center nearly two years ago, but the money now sits unused. A conflict between the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board, which owns the land, and Pillsbury United Communities — a nonprofit that operates and maintains the center — has stalled the fixes as the two sides mediate lease disagreements. MPRB spokesperson Dawn Sommers said the money allocated under the lease doesn’t SAM HARPER, DAILY FILE PHOTO
Ayub Abdi explains why he decided to be part of a local podcast at the Brian Coyle Center earlier this year.
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