41F 4w 4JW 04 4 an %6V c Illic 1 9 a IV ' lit N llt I, Tuesday, February 18, 2014 Ann Arbor, Michigan michigandaily.com ADMINISTRATION Regents to approve set of projects, buildings Michigan students Meryl Davis and Charlie White became the first American pair to take home a gold medal in ice dancing with their record-breaking performance in Sochi Monday. Students strike Sochi gold Olympic skaters their years of skating together, two rounds of competition after Just like the 2010 Winter but one had always eluded them they earned a 78.89 in the short Olympics in Vancouver, the race set world record until now: wina gold medal. program and a 116.63 in the free for gold ultimately came down On Monday, Davis and White program - both scores are new between the two pairs. After in first ice dancing crossed that feat off their list world records in the sport. Sunday's short dance perfor- p f S. by finishing first in ice dancing "We wanted to fight for the mance, the Americans had a top prize forU. with a total score of 195.52 to best performance we could give narrow, two-point lead. While become the first Americans to and we did that," White said to both delivered emotional per- By CAROLYN KODIS win gold in the event. reporters after the event. "You formancesand earned personal DailySports Writer The duo defeated reigning dream of this for so long, work bests in the free dance on Mon- gold medalists, Canadians Tessa so hard, and (Virtue and Moir) day, Davis and White bested University of Michigan Virtue and Scott Moir, who worked hard too. They always Virtue and Moir by five points. juniors Meryl Davis and Charlie also train with them in Canton, have been with us, pushing us, Also representing the Wol- White have tallied an impres- Michigan. Davis and White and we couldn't have done it verines in ice dancing were sive list of accomplishments in held first place throughout the without them." See SOCHI, Page 3 New biology facilty, Ross renovations among agenda items for Thursday meeting By CLAIRE BRYAN and YARDAIN AMRON Daily StaffReporters After the University's Board of Regents appointed University President-elect Mark Schlissel in January, the regentswill convene for their second official meet- ing of the year Thursday. The regents will be asked to approve multiple renovation projects, as well as proposals to create new administrative positions. Board to consider new biological sciences building The most expensive item on the agenda is the proposed construction of a new 300,000 square-foot Biological Science Building,which will come at an estimated cost of $261 million. The proposed structure will be built in place of the historic North Hall and the Museums Annex, which, if approved, would require the demolition of both buildings. A connection to the Life Science Institute would also be created to take advantage of the building's dock and vivar- ium-animal research-services. The new building will super- sede the needs served by the nearby Edward Henry Kraus Building - built in 1915 - that houses the departments of Molecular, Cellular, and Devel- opmental Biology (MCDB) and Ecology and Evolutionary Biol- ogy (EEB). The action plan states the Kraus Building has "reached its limit in terms of ability to allow contemporary research and the number of researchers it can sup- port." An estimate given in the plan has both departments relocated into the new BSB by 2019. New research laboratories, offices, classrooms and vivarium servic- es will allow "for much greater collaboration than what can be achieved in the existing build- See REGENTS, Page 3 .. ... . ,._ .,_ ....._., r .. .. __ _ __ r _ _ CAMPUS LIFE Lecture looks into inequality at universities Panel discusses studies examining how income affects student decisions By JACK TURMAN Daily StaffReporter As student organizations rally on campus for diversity and inclusion, a panel discuss- ing the inequality ingrained in organizational structures at universities across the nation took place at Lane Hall Monday evening. The panel was based off the book "Paying for the Party," to- authored by Elizabeth A. Arm- strong, associate professor of sociology and women's studies, and Laura T. Hamilton, associ- ate professor of University of California, Merced. The discussion included Armstrong, Elizabeth Cole, chair and professor of women's studies, Phil Deloria,*LSA asso- ciate dean for undergraduate education and Michael Bast- edo, associate professor and director of the Center for the Study of Higher and Postsec- ondary Education at the School of Education. "Paying for the Party" examined the results from Armstrong and Hamilton's five-year case study where they immersed themselves in the college lifestyle by solicit- ing feedback from an all female freshman dorm at a Midwest- ern University. Armstrong and Hamilton went to this dorm at certain times of the week and day to interview freshmen liv- ing on that floor. After the first year of the study, Armstrong and Hamilton left that floor with the rest of the freshmen and contacted all 53 females to get interviewed once a year. The university in the book is named "Midwest Univer- sity" because Armstrong did not want students and parents to perceive this university as the only one with aspects of inequality. The event began with Arm- strong describing her book, fol- lowed by the remarks from the panel speakers and questions from the audience. Armstrong and Hamilton found that fresh- men students at the university who lived in a particular dorm and floor diverged into three different pathways that were caused by the school's organi- zational framework. Armstrong's findings indi- cated that the most prevalent pathway was the "party" path- way - a university's organi- zational support system that allows students to have the social experience of college. Greek Life, residence halls and See INEQUALITY, Page 3 ADAM OLANZMAN/Daily Michigan State Representative Jeff Irwin spoke to the EnviroDems student club about the Keystone XL Pipeline Mon- day in the Union College Dems rally to stop KXL pipeline construction STUDENT GOVERNMENT NewCSG party hosts event, talks campaign Make Michigan establishes goals for upcoming election By MICHAEL SUGERMAN Daily StaffReporter Last week, the University's newest movement revealed its intentions to eradicate politics from Central Student Govern- ment and in doing so, "Make Michigan" great. As CSG elections approach, Make Michigan executives unveiled their platform Monday night, touting hopes to increase campus diversity and reform student ticketing policies, among other goals. The Make Michigan campaign will center on "five pillars" - student-focused, safe, diverse, healthy and innovative. Within these general themes, there are specific goals that the candidates hope to achieve ifelected tooffice. Public Policy junior Bobby Dishell, CSG vice president, and LSA sophomore Meagan Shokar, CSG speaker, will run for presi- dent and vice president, respec- tively, on the Make Michigan ticket. "We're agroup of students who came together," Dishell said. "It's not about the resume. We're peo- ple who are dedicated to Making Michigan and to making a differ- ence. Elections are just a way for See CSG, Page 3 Kickoff event organizes petition to be sent to the White House By AMABEL KAROUB DailyStaffReporter The fate of the Keystone XL pipeline lies largely in the hands of Secretary of State John Kerry, and many University stu- dents are encouraging him to halt its construction. On Monday night, the Uni- versity's Environment Com- mittee of College Democrats, known EnviroDems, brought students together in the Union to raise awareness about the proposed pipeline. The proposed pipeline has been generating significant con- troversy since the 1,664 mile- long extension-which would transport crude oil from Can- ada to refineries in Texas--was introduced in May of 2012. On Jan. 31, U.S. Depart- ment of State released its Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement regarding KXL. Kerry has 90 days from the release date - until the end' of April - to make a recommen- dation to President Obama on whether the pipeline should be constructed or not. At the event on campus, stu- dents circulated petitions that will eventually be presented to the White House. The petitions will be received sometime dur- ing the 30-day KXL public com- ment period arranged by the Federal Register. This period ends on March 7. State Rep. Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor), who was also present at a KXL protest on Feb. 3, was See PIPELINE, Page 3 WEATHER HI: 36 TOMORROW LO:21 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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