TOP HEADLINES INSIDE:
INDEPENDENT BUSINESS OWNERS REFLECT ON STADIUM VILLAGE PG 8
■■ Man falls five stories from FloCo balcony
A NEW APARTMENT FORCED SOME STORES TO CLOSE.
■■ In 1938, the U tried to ‘smash’ apart atom
The 19-year-old was hospitalized on Saturday night. PAGE 2
U scientists hoped to better grasp nuclear physics. PAGE 6
MOSTLY CLOUDY HIGH 77° LOW 59°
U OF M
MINNEAPOLIS
ST PAUL
EARLY WEEK
SEPT. 12-14, 2016
ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT MNDAILY.COM
DINKYTOWN
Protest calls for boycott of Dinkytown businesses Sex abuse claims against Varsity Theater owner Jason McLean prompted a Saturday protest. BY JACKIE RENZETTI AND TIFFANY LUKK jrenzetti@mndaily.com, tlukk@mndaily.com
About 40 demonstrators lined the sidewalk between the Varsity Theater and the Loring Pasta Bar Saturday, quietly holding signs and talking with passers-by. The protest was meant to educate the campus community of sexual abuse allegations against the Dinkytown businesses’ owner, Jason McLean, said the
organizer, Sarah Super. Between December and Febr uar y, four lawsuits were filed against Loring Pasta Bar and Varsity Theater owner Jason McLean, alleging child sex abuse during the ’70s and ’80s at the Children’s Theatre Company, where he worked as an actor and teaching artist. The lawsuits were filed under the Child Victims Act, which extended the statute of limitations for three years and expired in May 2016. “[The sur vivors] have called for a boycott of Jason McLean’s businesses,” Super said. “People have the right to choose where they spend their money, u See PROTEST Page 9
CHELSEA GORTMAKER, DAILY
Demonstrator Bella Looney holds a sign in support of sexual assault survivors in front of the Loring Pasta Bar in Dinkytown on Saturday.
CEDAR-RIVERSIDE
HBO show spurs demonstration
HOUSING
FloCo Fusion slashes game day tailgating An online petition is requesting FloCo’s management to rethink its game day party restrictions. BY TIFFANY LUKK tlukk@mndaily.com
Ahead of the Gophers football game Saturday morning, FloCo Fusion residents and guests played beer pong and mingled in the building’s courtyard, some sipping wine out of plastic bags. But in a shift from previous years, security capped attendance at 100 around 9:30 a.m. “It’s definitely minimized,” said marketing sophomore Whitney Wheelock. The apartment complex, known by students for its partying, is discontinuing its sponsored game day events that previously attracted hundreds of people. In an email sent u See FLOCO Page 8
EASTON GREEN, DAILY
Officers prepare to spray the crowd with chemical irritant after individuals started throwing plastic bottles and liquid on Saturday in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood. Demonstrators filled the streets, protesting the use of the neighborhood as the setting for an upcoming HBO show.
In Cedar-Riverside, some residents think an upcoming HBO show may represent their community poorly.
u See HBO Page 10
Pio Hall to get $104M facelift The Superblock dorm will have a new heating and cooling system, and a 850-seat dining facility.
BY ELIANA SCHREIBER eschreiber@mndaily.com
A block party concert in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood Saturday was disrupted by protesters concerned about how an upcoming TV show will depict their community. The headliner of Saturday’s concer t, K’naan — a Somali-Canadian rapper — co-wrote a for thcoming HBO drama called “Mogadishu, Minnesota.” Some residents of the neighborhood are concerned the show will slight Minneapolis’ Somali-American community. Others, however, think the show — co-produced by Kathr yn
SUPERBLOCK
BY KEVIN BECKMAN kbeckman@mndaily.com
EASTON GREEN, DAILY
Members of the crowd and protestors flee the event area after officers spray chemical irritant on Saturday, Sept. 10, 2016 in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood.
Pioneer Hall, the University of Minnesota’s oldest residence hall in the Superblock, is getting a costly facelift. The University’s Board of Regents approved plans for the $104.5 million renovation by a 9-3 vote Friday after more than a year of debate over the proposed project. The expansion of the outdated building — a dorm students often criticize — will bring it up to code while connecting Pioneer’s two wings with a central spine and increasing capacity. A new 850-seat u See RES HALL Page 4
VOLUME 116 ISSUE 3