r 0 iJbe fMidiipan wilyj michigandailycom New Student EditionC ,7:,-. n.. z .. s ,. t. . i ". fir. .. ., xr .z i-i .. ,a, :.. rR:> re lwwY> _ ._ h ; t.:J!$+ :: .Y ' ?, : ?i.'.; University cancels to 20 miles per hour. Campus buildings -including classes for first time dining halls and libraries - will remain open. University trans- in36 years, due to portation services will continue operating as normal, though severe cold delays should be expected. This announcement marks By STEPHANIE SHENOUDA the first time that the Univer- and MAX RADWIN sity has cancelled classes due to Daily News Editor and weather-related circumstances Daily StaffReporter since Ann Arbor was hit with 19 inches of snowin 1978. JAN. 27, 2014 - For the first University Police spokeswom- time since 1978, the University an Diane Brown said Univer- has canceled classes Tuesday sity Police will be taking extra due to extreme weather, Univer- efforts to keep response times sity spokesman Rick Fitzgerald low to limit the amount of time confirmed Monday evening. that people spend outside in the According to the National cold. Weather Service, temperatures After Fitzgerald confirmed will be at a high of 2 degrees, the decision, University Provost with a wind chill reaching -30 Martha Pollack, Chief Health degrees and winds reaching up Officer Robert Winfield and Laurita Thomas, associate vice president for human resources, sent a memo to faculty and staff encouraging flexibility and tele- commuting if possible for Tues- day. "Campus operations will con- tinue,"the memosaid."However, while staff should plan to report as usual, we ask that supervisors be flexible and make reason- able accommodations for these extreme circumstances. Travel may be hazardous, especially on foot or by bus, and we ask that all of our colleagues remain sensi- tive to safety concerns. Parking and Transportation Services is increasing bus frequency to help minimize wait times." The memo added that staff who are "unable or choose not to" travel to campus Tuesday should contact their supervisors to use vacation time or unpaid time off. Medical School Prof. Charles Koopmann, a member of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, said he feels it's "unfortunate" that staff on main campus have to come in or be forced to take a day of vacation. However, he said he believes that the medical cam- pus should remain open, which, according to the memo, will operate normally. "The University needs to get a well organized plan for something like this and should remarkably improve communi- cations," Koopmann said. After the controversy over not closing campus during the Polar Vortex earlier this month, Pol- lack sat in on the Senate Advi- See COLD, Page 7C Campaign sets $4 billion goal By SAM GRINGLAS and JENNIFER CALFAS Daily StaffReporters NOV. 7, 2013 - The University announced Thursday that the Victors for Michigan campaign will be the largest fundraising drive for a public institution in history - with an ambitious $4 billion goal. Victors for Michigan, the Uni- versity's sixth major fundraising campaign, will launch Nov. 8. The University's last campaign, The Michigan Difference, raised- $3.2 billion between 2000 and 2008 - surpassing its original goal of $2.5 billion. University President Mary Sue Coleman said last winter that the primary priority for the campaign will be student sup- port through financial aid. At Coleman's leadership breakfast last month, Coleman reiterated that $1billion in campaign funds will be focused on student sup- port. Just like the last campaign, Coleman said in an interview after the event that passing the $4-billion mark is possible. "It is always possible that if the campaign is phenomenally successful, then maybe midway we could raise it," Coleman said. "There's a lot of analysis that goes into doing it, but I feel really good about this number. It's a very audacious campaign." Campaign organizers have made students central to cam- paign strategy, not only creat- ing goals for student support, -RYAN REISS/Daily President Mary Sue Coleman addresses the audience at the Victors for Michigan fundraising event on November 8, 2014. but als campa " go( ve ing. T create comm at the' 19 met gradu so in involving students in to assist in the fundraising and sign planning and market- planning process. The campaign will also focus on raising funds for developing laa more engaged learnog envi- I eel really ronment in the classroom and producing ideas to aid world- od about this wide problems. After the event, m r t University Provost Martha Pol- umber. It's a lack said the three priorities for 1 the campaign intersect, meaning ry audacious that students could participate " in research projects addressing za paign global issues, and gain valuable learning experiences outside the classroom. "As the chief academic offi- he Office of Development cer, I couldn't be happier about d a student campaign the priorities," Pollack said. "I ittee - the first of its kind think those three priorities are University - consisting of just perfectly aligned with what mbers from various under- we want to beas an educational ate and graduate schools institution." The University's newest campaign launches against a backdrop of depressed state appropriations and rising tuition rates. In June, the University's Board of Regents approved a 1.1 and 3.2 percent increase in tuition for in-state and out-of- state students respectively - the lowest 29 years. "We believe that by judi- ciously controlling our costs and tuition increases, while also committing university funds for financial aid, we can join with donors to make it possible for the best students, from any socio- economic background, to afford to get a Michigan education," Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R) said in a statement. Many institutions across the See CAMPAIGN, Page 7C CSG votes against divestment from Israel Hundreds gather in Union for historic' assembly decision By WILL GREENBERG and KRISTEN FEDOR Daily News Editor and Daily Staff Reporter MARCH 26, 2014 - After hours of discussion and debate, the Central Student Govern- ment reversed the indefinite postponement of the controver- sial divestment resolution and subsequently voted to not pass it in a 25-9 vote with five absten- tions early Wednesday morning. Hundreds of students lined the second floor of the Michigan Union and entered the Rogel Ballroom on a first-come, first- served basis Tuesday evening, and more than 2,000 viewers watched CSG's live-stream of the six-hour-long event. Uni- versity Police regulated the large crowd that formed both inside and outside the Union and organized the crowds to line up on State Street. Students allowed into the meeting were given tickets and encouraged not to leave the room once they entered. When the meeting began, the number of people in the room exceeded its 375-per- son capacity. An additional 200 students were seated in the nearby Pendleton Room as an overflow space. On March 18, many members of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality and its support- ers attended the CSG Student Assembly meeting to advocate for a proposal to encourage the University to divest from certain companies allegedly involved in human rights violations against Palestinians. After the CSG assembly chose to postpone the vote indefinitely, SAFE and its partners staged an indefinite sit-in in the CSG chambers and formed "calls for accountabili- ty," asking CSG to make amends for what SAFE viewed as its poor handling of the situation and to bring the proposal to a full vote. The sit-in garnered attention across campus leading up to Tuesday night's meeting. This week, individuals both support- ing and opposing the divestment resolution attended in signifi- cant numbers. SAFE represen- tatives and members of the 36 student organizations that have pledged support for the resolu- tion spoke to the assembly about the proposal. Students who spoke against the resolution did not identify with specific orga- nizations, but were encouraged by several members of Hillel to attend. CSG President Michael Proppe, a Business senior, motioned to allow a reconsid- eration of the indefinite post- ponement of the divestment bill once the assembly reached the Motions and Other Business portion of the meeting. This motion passed with five dissent- ing votes, followed by a revote on the motion to indefinitely postpone the bill again, which failed with only seven in sup- See CSG, Page 14C LSA sophomore Fatima Chowdhury holds a #UMDivest sign during the CSG meeting that moved to the Rogel Ballroom after chambers reached capacity on March18, 2014. A