November 3, 2016

Page 1

TOP HEADLINES INSIDE: ■■ Kaler announces VP for research resignation Vice President Brian Herman will step down on Dec. 31. PG 2

■■ Some say U parental leave policy exlusionary COGS wants the policy to include same-sex couples. PG 3

PARTLY CLOUDY HIGH 61° LOW 41°

U OF M

MINNEAPOLIS

LATE WEEK

ST PAUL

FOOTBALL

NOV. 3 - 5, 2016

ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM

TECHNOLOGY

Court drops 5 restraining orders against U athletes The five football players will compete in Satuday’s game after a Wednesday court settlement. BY KEVIN BECKMAN kbeckman@mndaily.com

Restraining orders against five University of Minnesota football players were dismissed Wednesday after a settlement was reached during a Hennepin County District Court hearing. The five players must stay at least 20 feet away from the University student and game day employee who filed the restraining orders. The student filed the restraining orders after an alleged sexual assault on Sept. 2. Four of the five players named in the restraining order — KiAnte Hardin, Ray Buford, Tamarion Johnson and Dior Johnson — were suspended from playing and were investigated by the Minneapolis Police Department in connection to the report. A fifth player — Carlton Djam — had a restraining order placed on him by the student on Oct. 19. The Hennepin County Attorney’s office declined to press charges against the players

CHELSEA GORTMAKER, DAILY

History juniors Nick Carrigan, left, and Ian Lambert, right, play Dota 2 on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016 at Bruininks Hall on East Bank with the uDota club during its weekly meeting.

Training on a digital terrain Part of a burgeoning national trend, e-sports teams are gaining members, popularity on the University of Minnesota’s campus. BY DAVID CLAREY dclarey@mndaily.com

u See ORDER Page 8

At the University of Minnesota, Nathan Ernst’s sports regimen bears resemblance to other college athletes. His team practices four times a week, coaches review play-by-play tapes and he scrimmages with other teams around the nation. In the last five years, Ernst estimates he has spent more than 5,000 hours of training,

HEALTH

U researches inequities in senior care

but for a sport deemed unconventional by most. Ernst is part of the growing e-sports community on campus; he’s a solo midlane player for the League of Legends competitive team, the Wombats, and his team faces off against other schools for cash prizes. In the past several years, e-sports have grown explosively in the U.S. Last year, esports championships surpassed the viewership of both golf’s Masters’ Tournament and the National Basketball Association Finals.

u See E-SPORT Page 3

FACULTY

Discontent over lack of Ph.D-taught econ classes

The 5-year, $1.8M study will examine local, national racial A CLA Student Board survey found that many econ undergrads want better access to Ph.D. faculty. disparities in nursing homes. BY KEATON SCHMITT AND RYAN FAIRCLOTH kschmitt@mndaily.com rfaircloth@mndaily.com

Researchers at the University of Minnesota are flipping the script on how they study racism in senior care. A five-year study — funded by a $1.8 million National Institutes of Health grant — will assess racial disparities in nursing homes and how they correlate with resident care and quality of life. The study is part of a growing national awareness of system-wide healthcare disparities based around race. The University analysis was approved by the school’s Institutional Review Board Tuesday and will build on researchers’ preliminary results, which found lower quality of life in nursing homes with more minority residents.

SURVEY DATA SHOWS ECONOMICS MAJORS UNHAPPY WITH FACULTY

WERE YOU INFORMED THAT THE MAJORITY OF ECON CLASSES WERE TAUGHT BY GRAD STUDENTS?

Definitely yes (11.65%) Probably yes (15.53%) Might or might not (9.71%) Probably not (18.45%) Definitely not (44.66%)

HOW IMPORTANT IS IT TO YOU TO HAVE CLASSES TAUGHT BY PH.D. FACULTY?

HOW MANY OF YOUR ECON CLASSES HAVE BEEN TAUGHT BY PH.D. FACULTY?

Extremely important (33.98%) Very important (33.01%) Moderately important (20.39%) Slightly important (7.77%) Not at all important (4.85%)

Zero (45.63%) One (27.18%) Two (13.59%) Three (5.83%) Four (1.94%) Five or more (5.83%)

u See NURSING Page 4

SOURCE: COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS STUDENT BOARD

STUDENT GOV’T

BY OLIVIA JOHNSON ojohnson@mndaily.com

While the University of Minnesota’s economics department publicizes high-ranking and award-winning faulty members, many undergraduates in the program say they aren’t ever taught by those faculty members. A survey conducted earlier this year by the University College of Liberal Arts Student Board found that some economics students went through their entire undergraduate studies without having a class taught by a professor and that the University did not tell them this would be the case upon enrollment. Student responses show that more than 95 percent of the 105 undergraduate economics majors who responded think it’s important that their classes are taught by doctoral faculty members. But only seven of the 26 courses this semester that aren’t independent or directed u See ECON Page 8

Student-leaders navigate tricky landscape of personal beliefs While MSA as an organization must remain nonpartisan, the group’s members speak freely. BY RAJ CHADUVULA AND RILYN EISCHENS rchaduvula@mndaily.com reischens@mndaily.com

MADDY FOX, DAILY

Minnesota Student Association President Abeer Syedah speaks in support of Hillary Clinton at Northrop Auditorium on Oct. 4 ahead of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ speech.

For Minnesota Student Association to maintain its school funding, the group must remain nonpar tisan and strive to represent the entire student body. Still, many of the group’s members, as well as its student body presidents, have endorsed political candidates or

expressed opinions on contentious issues — but only in what they say is a personal capacity. While it can be tricky to decipher the distinction between MSA members’ personal and organizational actions, studentleaders say those involved in student government shouldn’t have to censor their beliefs. MSA Government and Legislative Affairs Committee Director Will Dammann said he keeps his role in student government separate from his outside work for the Minnesota Republican Party. “If I’m representing MSA, I’m being u See LEADERS Page 12

VOLUME 117 ISSUE 18


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