~Iie £k1~igan 0aiIjj ()NL Ill "1)111 1) 1\\ I NIX 1111111 YI XI -01 11)11011 Xliii LI)OM Ann Arbor, MiChigan Thursday, March 21, 2013 THANKS, BRO miChigandaily.Com CR1M 'U' didn't report sex assault to A2police At the 'Student Day of Thanks' on the Diag, students write messages to alumni who have donated $50 or less to the Unloersity Wednesday Eletin en tBCrep reneursh i~ Lack of initial report may have hindered connection of three incidents in Zaragon By AUSTEN HUFFORD Daily News Editor A 31-year-old male graduate atudent la being investigated for sexually assaulting three females in three separate incidents, two of which occurred in September 2012 and the third this February. The cases - which caused unease in the University commu- nity because of repeated assaults at Zaragon Place - raises con- cerns about the ability of police agencies to investigate sexual assault amid the confidentiality of internal University investiga- tions. At the same time, Universi- ty investigators are charged with the difficult responsibility of maintaining a balance between survivor rights and community safety The second reported incident, which occurred in September 20i2, was discovered during an internal University investigation into another sexual assault alle- gation. University Police were informed of the first incident but were not made of aware of the second until February - there- fore, they were unable to consider the second allegation as evidence for apotential pattern ofincidents in September. The University community was not notified of the allega- tions until after a third student was allegedly sexually assaulted in the same location in February and University Police determined there was apossible threatto stu- dent safety. Acrime alert detailingallthree incidents was sent out the night of Feb. 27 once University Police established a pattern from the information they received. 'As soon as we had the infer- mation that led usto believe it was a pattern of behavior that posed a public safety threat and we could identify where these incidents allegedly occurred, we issued a See ASSAULT, Page 3A 0Business-minded initiatives a focus of CSG platforms By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter Last year, only one Central Student Government presi- dential candidate made entre- preneurship a major platform point. Manish Parikh, current- ly a business senior, became the first independent candidate to win the CSG presidency in years. In this year's election, candidates are taking notice and building on the current administration's entrepreneur- ial efforts. - Parikh said the perception of CSG in 20i1 was that of a "bureaucratic, slow-moving machine with a lot of cogs in the system," so his message of reform appealed to voters. "I think entrepreneurship, and more so the entrepreneur- ial mindset, was extremely cru- cial for us in the last election," Parikh said. This year has been marked with several entrepreneurial programs and events, includ- ing the Entrepreneurship Com- mission, the MHacks student hackathon and the Month of Entrepreneurship. "I think (entrepreneurship) got students on campus really fired up, that (we) had fresh thoughts, fresh ideas and that (we) were willing to flip CSG around - make it more innova- tive and focua on (new) projects," Parikh said. Tom Erdmann, an organizer of MHacks, which took the title of the nation's largest college hackathon, said entrepreneur- ship has been growing on cam- pus "in part because of Central Student Government and par- See ENTREPRENEUR, Page 3A ENTREPRENEIJRS1-IP Halfway over, .BE-month still goingstrong Month of the ECommission are leaders of student organizations that focus Entrepreneurship on innovation. coriae promotes innovation the hvarious event strhatj v taken place this month, but By AMRUT HA SIVAKUMAR individual, entrepreneurially Daily StuffReporter minded student groups were responsible for organizing their The University's designation own programs. of March as the Month of Entre- Engineering Prof. Thomas preneurship marks the first time Zurbuchen, the ECommission's a U.S. university has dedicated faculty advisor and associate an entire month to the topic. Engineering dean for entre- In February, Entrepreneur- preneurial programs, said the ship Commission Chair Scott month serves to "support student Christopher hoped that the organizations and governments Month of Entrepreneurship with their idea to highlight would serve to "remove the stig- entrepreneurship." ma that entrepreneurship is only Parikh said although the for business and engineering stu- events are being publicized as dents." a calendar month, it will likely The Entrepreneurship Coin- continue into April as a result of misoio of the Central Student student interest. Government was created last Although events on the web- semester to foster an entrepre- site include those that took place neurial spirit among the student before the official release of the body. Formed as a result of CSG Month of Entrepreneurship plat- President Manish Parikh's cam- form, Parikh said there would be paign promise, the members of See E-MONTH, Page 3A PERFORMANCE PREVIEW 'Vagina' to explore female sexuality Students for Choice to bring emotional, humorous production to 'U' By KAYL AUPADHYAYA ManagingArts Editor LSA freshman Madeline Par- kinson had never seen her vagina before. She was a senior in high school when she first saw "The Vagina Monologues" at an East- ern Michigan University pro- duction of the episodic playby Eve Ensler. The Vagina "Ittcomplete- Monologues ly changed my life," Parkinson Thursday said. at 8p.m. Parkinson Rckm described the Rchm scene that had the moat profound impact on her: A woman discovers her body's beauty when using a mirror to see her vagina for the first time See VAGINA, Page 2A Helene Gayle, President and CEO of CAtRE USA, discusses glohal health initiatives as a part of the Citigroup Lecture Series at the Ford School of Puhlic Policy Wednesday. HumanitrianR non-pr'ofit CEO discusses Public Policy Wednesday about the challenges non-profit orga- the challenges, nizations face today. Gayle spoke as part of the microloans Public Policy School's Citi- group Foundation Lecture By RACHEL PREMACK Series, enacted in 2000 to Duily StoffReporter engage students and faculty in dialogue with leading policy- Helene Gayle, president and makers. She fielded questions CEO of humanitarian organi- from Public Policy Lecturer zation CARE USA, spoke to an Sharon Mactint and Public Pol- audience in the Ford School of icy Prof. Marina Whitman and, in the last half of the talk, the audience submitted questions. Gayle said CARE is connect- ing cereal giant General Mills and other corporations with workers in impoverished areas to improve those area's eco- nomic capabilities. "We're working with (Gen- eral Mills) in Madagascar - which supplies 80 percent of the world's vanilla bean - to See FORD SCHOOL, Page 3A W EAT HE R H I: 38 GOT A NEWS T IP? NEW ON MiCHIGANDAILY.COMl4 l~ O 7 Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail Psi Upsilon suspended TOMORROW o" ews@michigandaily.com and lotus know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THEWIRE IN DE X N E WS.................. 2A S U D OKU.............. 2A Vol. CXXIII, No.087 O PINION ............. 4A C LA SS IFlE DS........6 A ©2t3Th~ih~enlaly SPORTS.. .........SA 8-SIDt E......... .......... 1B