I 6A - Wednesday, December 10, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com The equality movement, It seems over the few remain- ing months of this year our world has encountered much more than a climate change. We are in the midst of a global equality movement. Daily, there are new stories from around the globe being discovered - expos- ing law enforcement that has served less in favor of justice for the people, and is more connect- ed to maintaining power and control. Foreign affairs and poli- cies regarding women's rights, the dismantling of governmen- tal structures, policies regard- ing sexual assault, the inclusion of United States laws and sexual orientation, and the current- ly magnified police brutality against minorities all serve as equally important happenings in this awakening. As these situ- ations occur, our readied fingers take to social media to voice various emotions: hurt, pain, anger, confusion - all of which are natural without filters and at times may be misconstrued through our own actions and not benefit the urgent needs of these situations. Within those tangled emotions, my observance of the superior emotion - love, is what intertwines these expansive and contrasting responses and makes hope tangible. Love is the source to pull from hate and cre- ate peace. Love has the ability to look beyond rage and grasp influence. Love has the ability to not only empathize but strat- egize and positively control and structure the myriad of nega- tive feelings that are all human. 'The piece created stems from this space of unconditional love and hope for the better amongst the seemingly disastrous battle- ground we face on this earth. I seek to challenge the mind, will and emotions of my global community at large to find the answers for the "Why me? Why us?" question that we all inter- nally battle everyday. I wish to impart a complex but simple answer that I believe would do us all well. I challenge all people to accept with earnest power, and heroic boldness the very source that rapper Kendrick Lamar has found in his most recent song, and embrace the equality movement in decidingI love myself Be Black Bold We Black People ° Make Black Legal Elevate Black Soul Use Black Control Tell Black Souls Be Black Bold We Black Power Take Black Rage Create Black Change Choose Black Reign Yell Black Pain Be Black Bold We Black Love Make Black Peace Navigate Black Streets Refuse Black Seats Repel Black Hate Be Black Bold We Black Souls Remember Black Goals Write Black Roles Unite Black Strolls Release Black Holds Be Black Bold We Black Gold Have Black Pride Create Black Compassion Capture Black Passion Take Black Action Be Black Bold We Black Music Take Black Influence Create Black Congruence Help Black Endurance Tell Black Assurance Be Black Bold We Black Souls We Black Gold We Black Grow We Black People We Black Power We Black Love BE BLACK BOLD Be Black Bold CSG From Page 1A in making the University more inclusive. "Including onsite admissions at Detroit schools can help lessen the inequality between racial representations by opening doors of opportunity for every- one," Alvarenga said. Prior to the voting process, assembly members introduced an amendment to the resolu- tion, resulting in the addition of a stanza stating CSG does not support violent or intimidat- ing actions that would be taken to promote the resolution. The assembly referred specifically to the actions that took place at the recent Regents meeting. Last month, BAMN members relocated a University Board of Regents meeting. They lodged criticisms of the University, most notably that no action has been taken to increase minority enrollment. Protestors eventu- ally prompted the board to end the meeting and move to another location. Some members of the assem- bly were concerned the amend- ment would deter from the goal of the resolution. The assembly agreed by vote to change the lan- guage of the amendment to say CSG will not support any action that threatens public safety. Education senior Michael ran, I ran with the goal of being a Chrzan is one of the authors of voice to an entirely new view for the resolution. He said now that CSG to consider." CSG supports onsite admis- Shannon said she also wantsto sions in Detroit high schools, the bring concerns regarding Public assembly will create a task force Health to CSG's consideration. to work with the University's "We're really trying to bring Office of Admissions. Public Health into the entire "The Task Force will have scope of not only CSG but on until March to report back with Central campus," she said. either strategies created with Admissions to implement onsite Body elects vice chairs of admissions or reasons why the Finance Committee and Reso- University is unable to do so," lutions Committee Chrzan said. CSG will create the task force CSG also elected new vice during the first meeting of win- chairs for both the Finance Com- ter semester Jan.13. mittee and the Resolution Com- 4 CSG swears in newly elected representatives LSA junior Rachel Webb and Public Health senior Rebecca Shannon were among the group of new representatives inducted into the assembly. They dis- cussed new ideas and strategies they hope to bringto the table. Webb said she wants to help create transparency between CSG and the student body, espe- cially regarding the allocation of funds to student organizations. She also said she hopes to diver- sify racial diversity within CSG. "There weren't a lot of stu- dents of color on CSG, and hav- ing diverse representations within the CSG is important if CSG hopes to represent a diverse population," she said. "So when I mittee. Engineering senior Robert Greenfield was elected vice chair for the Finance Committee after a blind ballot vote. Greenfield said he hopes his experience as treasurer of the Black Student Union will help him to improve the CSG funding process. "I've raised the budget at the BSU by $25,000, and improved the budgeting process so that it is sensitive both to BSU and other organizations that receive allo- cated funding from us," Green- field said. LSA senior Andrew Loeb was elected vice chair of the Resolu- tions Committee. "I want to continue to work to make resolutions that will pro- duce important positive chang- es on campus for students," he said. OPEN From Page 1A public safety concerns necessitat- ed the meeting's relocation. Though the Open Meetings Act states that "no one maybe exclud- ed fromameetingotherwise open to the public except for a breach of the peace actually committed at the meeting," there are not specif- ic provisions for excluding mem- bers of the general public at large. Douglas Smith, a former Uni- versity medicl professor and one of the public speakers on the. original agenda for the meeting, told the Daily in an interview Dec. 4 that he was denied entrance to Fleming. "After a while (University spokesman) Rick Fitzgerald began to whisper something to the reporters at the media desk so I wentcup and asked him if they were moving the meeting," he said. "He said they were and that I could followhim." Smith said a public safety offi- cial at the Fleming doors told him only those with approved media credentials would be granted access to the building. "Then the chairman of the regents, Regent (Kathy) White, came tothe door and told me they were not going to have public speakers today and that I was not allowed to come in," he said. In an e-mail Friday, Fitzgerald said the University maintains it fully complies with the Michigan Constitution's requirement that formal sessions of the Board of Regents be open to the public. "Regarding the November 2014 meeting, we believe the state con- stitution also gives the University latitude to take prudent measures to assure those attending board meetings are safe," he wrote. In a Dec.5 e-mail, Diane Brown, spokeswoman for the Division of Public Safety and Security, said public safety officials and law enforcement are charged with assessing any potential threats to the community. "If there is a condition in which the people or property in a par- ticular location are threatened or where parties present have a heightened sense of fear for their personal safety based on an esca- lating situation, there may be a determination of a public safety threat," she wrote. The Open Meetings Act does not include specifications for relocating a meeting due to a pub- lic safety threat. However, in 1980, the Uni- versity faced a similar situation when students and members of the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid protested the University's investments in South African corporations at meetings of the regents. The protests forced the regents to recess their meeting multiple times over two days. The board ultimately obtained a restrain- ing order against WCCAA which allowed the regents "to recess, move its location and exclude from attendance those persons who breach the peace." The coalition sued, arguing the regents violated the Open Meet- ings Act by preventing them from entering the new meeting loca- tion. In Regents of the University of Michigan vs. Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid, the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled the regents' actions accept- able, noting the presence of the restraining order and that both the press and members of the general public were notified of the room change. "We do, however, share the concern obviously felt by defen- dants and the trial court that a meetingwhich is recessed remain open to the public," the ruling read. "In order to remain faithful to the spirit and purpose of the Open Meetings Act the Regents were required to provide notice of the new time and place of the reconvened meeting. Plaintiff complied with the court order to this effect by posting officials at the Regents Room to advise the press and members of the general public of the room change." The University, however, did not notify members of the gen- eral public of the room change in November. According to Frank LoMonte, Student Press Law Center execu- tive director, based on the prec- edent from the 1980s case, the difference in whether the pub- lic was advised might be key in determining whether Novem- ber's meeting violated the Act. "It seemed really important to the judges in the 1980s case that the public had a chance to go to the recessed location," he said. "If the public wasn't give the oppor- tunity to go to the recessed loca- tion than that really might put a legal cloud over the move of loca- tion." Fitzgerald said because mem- bers of media were present, the University upheld the provisions of the Open Meetings Act. "The meeting was reconvened at a different location, but not until all members of the news media were present," Fitzgerald said. "We believe these steps pro- vided for a balance betweenkeep- ing those in attendance safe while still providing public access." Schlissel said members of the general public not involved in the protest were not permitted to enter the relocated meeting because the University did not have proper means to determine what members of the public were or were not part of BAMN. "I don't think we had a way to sort the general public into mem- bers of BAMN and non-members of BAMN," he said. "So I think in real time as the decision was made, not knowing how to do the sorting without being prejudiced against certain people, we didn't think it was appropriate to try." "We ended up striking a com- promise that the general counsel thought was legally consistent with the Open Meetings Act," he added. Herschel Fink, editorial legal counsel for The. Detroit Free Press, said members of the press are often considered surrogates of the public by the courts. "In this case, given exigent cir- cumstances, the situation with the disruption, I think it was a justifiable action to move the meeting and to allow representa- tives of the public in," Fink said, referring to the media. "I think it then constituted a substantial compliance with the law." The Free Press is currently involved in a lawsuit against the University over a separate viola- tion of the Open Meetings Act, filed in July. The suit alleges that most decisions made by the Uni- versity's Board of Regents are made in private. "We are still several months away from depository motion stage, where we will be filing a motion with the court asking them to declare whether or not the University is violating the Open Meetings Act," he said. At the end of November's meeting, several BAMN organiz- ers said they had plans to return to the December regents meet- ing. "We were very disappointed that the meeting was disrupted and we are trying to develop ways to allow groups their free speech rights, to have a civil pro- test, which is very important to us, but not to disrupt a meeting or the rights of others," Schlissel said. Schlissel declined to discuss the University's plans to address similar BAMN protests in the future. "Rest assured, there are spe- cific plans," he said. AN ODE TO 420 MAYNARD: THANK YOU FOR THE TIME WE SPENT WITHIN YOUR WALLS WE'VE LEARNED HOW TO WALK HERE WHEN WE CAME WE COULD ONLY CRAWL WE MEAN THAT METAPHORICALLY, OF COURSE BUT DAILY, YOU'VE MADE US GROW AND WHAT WE HAVE LEARNED WITHIN YOU HAVE MADE US READY (THOUGH UNWILLING) TO GO THE PEOPLE WE HAVE LOVED MEAN MORE THAN A BUILDING COULD EVER KNOW YOU ARE MICHIGAN TO US AND YOU ARE HOME. THANK YOU FOR EVERYTHING EDITORS From Page 1A "I think as long as we continue to be one of the prominent news sources and most accurate news sources for the Ann Arbor com- munity and even for the nation ... I think as long as we seek the truth and report on the truth, that's what's going to measure our success," Calfas said. "We've already been doinga great job of doing that and we'll continue to keep that tradition alive in the next year." The increased focus on the Daily's online presence is also a priority of LSA junior Lev Facher, who will serve as the publication's managing editor. Collaboration between the different sections, such as news, arts and sports, are other highlights. "Our voice is critical to both the University and the region - as Washtenaw County's only daily print publication, we bear a huge responsibility," Facher said. "I'm surethe 2015 class of editors is up for the challenge of provid- ing fair and thorough coverage of all things Michigan and all things Ann Arbor." Calfas said she is also excited' about the addition of a new posi- tion under her supervision - that of special projects manager, a job which LSA sophomore Carolyn Gearig will fill. The position will require Gearig to spearhead and facilitate initiatives beyond day- to-day coverage. "We tend to focus too much on our short term coverage and on things that we do to make a paper every day, which is great, but we've never had someone whose exclusive job is to think long- term," Gearig said. "I think this newspaper really needs that." Calfas stressed that one of the most immediate innovations will be rolling out the Daily's new website over the course of the Winter 2015 semester. Engineer- ing junior Amrutha Sivakumar, the newly appointed online edi- tor, will help facilitate this tran- sition. "At The Michigan Daily, we believe that the future of journal- ism is digital journalism," Siva- kumar said. "If allgoes according to plan, the new website will have more photo slideshows, more video capabilities, things like audio journalism ... just very interesting ways for us to tell the news that connect more deeply with the University readership community." For Public Policy junior Sam Gringlas, the new managing news editor, fair and thorough coverage will also mean expand- ing the breadth and depth of news content to include series on hard-hitting issues relevant to the University community. He said this will require cross- section collaboration to enhance modes of storytelling. Continuing coverage of diver- sity and sexual misconduct are other priorities for Gringlas. "We've started some initia- tives to begin looking into that over this first semester," Gring- las said. "I think now that we've laid a lot of ground work for that, we'll have the time and the talent to really follow through." LSA senior Aarica Marsh and LSA junior Derek Wolfe will serve as editorial page editors. The duo said they will widen their coverage both online and in print. "We're pretty excited about incorporating news ethics and reportingskills into our editorial process," Marsh said. "We're also relaunching our blog content." LSA junior Max Cohen and LSA sophomore Jake Lourim, co-managing sports editors, said their priorities will lie in con- tinuing to produce top-notch coverage of all the University's athletic teams. "I think we have some great sports coverage in store - huge transitions in Michigan football right now, as everyone knows, and I look forward to keeping up to date with those and creating some good stories as a section," Cohen said. LSA junior Chloe Gilke and' LSA junior Adam DePollo will serve as co-managing arts edi- tors. Gilke said they have begun to plan workshops to familiarize their writers with a variety of reporting experiences. The duo also aims to up their coverage of local music. In 2015, 'the Daily will also work to expand its content across media beyond written articles. LSA junior Kaylla Cantilina, the Daily's new managing video edi- tor, said she plans to continue to develop the Daily's video section, partially by more smoothly inte- grating with other sections for collaboration. LSA junior Allison Farrand and LSA junior Ruby Wallau, the co-managing photo editors, voiced a similar sentiment. "We're really excited to bring more developed photo content online within the framework of better online photo features, better quality (and) better gal- leries," Farrand said. "We're also still excited to have more photo stories in print as well as online." LSA junior Ian Dillingham, Statement magazine editor, said he will work to facilitate long- form writing that captures the student experience. "We're always looking to increase the quality of our con- tent and give all students on cam- pus the voice that they deserve and really highlight the most pressing issues that face stu- dents," Dillingham said. Art & Design sophomore Shane Achenbach and LSA soph- omore Emily Schumer will serve as co-managing design editors. Schumer said she is looking for- ward to further innovating the Daily's page design by working more regularly with individual sections. "We are alsolookingto remod- el some aspects of the paper and create a more regular variety in the way of illustrations and lay- out," Schumer said. LSA junior Hannah Bates and LSA sophomore Laura Schina- gle, co-copy chiefs, said they are working to streamline the appli- cation process of their section. This year, they said, 80 people competed for six spots on the copy desk, and the six weren't chosen'until after Fall Break because of the application vol- ume. The Michigan Daily involves around 200 student editorial staff members each semester and is financially and editorially independent of the University's administration. .4 CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE www.michigandaily.com 4 1 I I A hi