Sudoku Syndication
http://sudokusyndication.com/sudoku/generator/print/

1 of 1
9/8/08 
2:06 
PM

1
7

1
2

8
7
9

5
1
2

4

9
8

7

2

2

6
5

1

6
8

3

6
2

4

3
8

2
1

FIVE MINUTE PLANK.
puzzle by sudokusyndication.com

2A — Wednesday, March 16, 2016
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

ON THE DAILY 

Michigan’s primary may be 

over, but at least one political 
group isn’t willing to let its 
influence in the election fade just 
yet.

A new anti-Trump Snapchat 

geofilter spread across Ohio 
State University’s campus this 
week drawing on the football 
rivalry between the University 
of Michigan and OSU, reading 
“Trump Loves Michigan, Say 
No to Trump.” An animation of 
Trump’s hair sits on the letter 
“C” in “Michigan,” and the letter 
”O” in “No” resembles Ohio 
State’s block O. The geofilter was 
paid for by American Future 
Fund, according to a disclaimer 
on the image.

Ohio, along with several 

other states, heads to the polls 
Tuesday. Trump, who won the 
Michigan primary on March 8 
with about 36.5 percent of the 
vote, is tied for first in current 

polls with Ohio Governor John 
Kasich with both at about 38 
percent according to Real Clear 
Politics.

American Future Fund is a 

tax-exempt organization that 
advocates a “conservative and 
free market viewpoint.” The 
group has previously spoken 
out against candidates beside 
Trump, including Kasich, with a 
$1 million ad campaign in New 
Hampshire that labelled Kasich 
as an “Obama Republican,” 
according to the New York 
Times.

Michigan was also featured 

in an Ohio T.V. ad from Trump’s 
campaign, 
which argued 
that Kasich had 
spent “most 
of his time 
everywhere 
but Ohio — 
especially 

Michigan”.

The 

Democratic 
candidates 
are also 
running 
a close 
campaign 
in Ohio, 
with polls 
estimating 
that Hillary 
Clinton was 
5 points 
ahead of 
Bernie Sanders, 51 
percent to 46 percent.

420 Maynard St.

Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327

www.michigandaily.com

ROSE FILIPP
Business Manager

734-418-4115 ext. 1241

rfilipp@michigandaily.com

Newsroom

734-418-4115 opt. 3 

Corrections

corrections@michigandaily.com

Arts Section

arts@michigandaily.com

Sports Section

sports@michigandaily.com

Display Sales

dailydisplay@gmail.com

News Tips

news@michigandaily.com

Letters to the Editor

tothedaily@michigandaily.com

Editorial Page

opinion@michigandaily.com 

Photography Section

photo@michigandaily.com

Classified Sales

classified@michigandaily.com

SHOHAM GEVA

Editor in Chief

734-418-4115 ext. 1251

sageva@michigandaily.com

EDITORIAL STAFF
Laura Schinagle Managing Editor schlaura@michigandaily.com

Emma Kerr Managing News Editor emkerr@michigandaily.com

SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Allana Akhtar, Alyssa Brandon, Jacqeline Charniga, Katie Penrod, 
Emma Kinery

ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS: Riyah Basha, Marlee Breakstone, Desiree Chew, Anna Haritos, 
Tanya Madhani, Camy Metwally, Lydia Murray, Caitlin Reedy, Alexa St. John. Brandon 
Summers-Miller

Claire Bryan and 
Regan Detwiler Editorial Page Editors opinioneditors@michigandaily.com 

SENIOR OPINION EDITORS: Jeremy Kaplan, Ben Keller, Anna Polumbo-Levy, Jason Rowland, 
Stephanie Trierweiler

Max Bultman and
Jake Lourim Managing Sports Editors 
 sportseditors@michigandaily.com

SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Minh Doan, Jacob Gase, Kelly Hall, Simon Kaufman, Jason 
Rubinstein, Zach Shaw, Brad Whipple
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Betelhem Ashame, Chris Crowder, Sylvanna Gross, Leland 
Mitchinson, Ted Janes, Kevin Santo, 

Kathleen Davis and 
 
 arts@michigandaily.com

Adam Theisen Managing Arts Editors 
SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Caroline Filips, Melina Glusac, Jacob Rich, Ben Rosenstock 
ARTS BEAT EDITORS: Matthew Barnauskas, Christian 
Kennedy, Rebecca Lerner, Natalie Zak

Amanda Allen and 
 
 photo@michigandaily.com 

Grant Hardy Managing Photo Editors 

SENIOR PHOTO EDITORS: Zoey Holmstrom, Zach Moore, James Coller
ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS: Claire Abdo, Robery Dunne, 
Sam Mousigian, San Pham, David Song

Anjali Alangaden and 
 
 design@michigandaily.com 

Mariah Gardziola Managing Design Editors 

Karl Williams Statement Editor statement@michigandaily.com 

DEPUTY STATEMENT EDITOR: Nabeel Chollampat
STATEMENT PHOTO EDITOR: Zoey Holmstrom
STATEMENT LEAD DESIGNER: Shane Achenbach
STATEMENT CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Emilie Farrugia

Emily Campbell and 
 
 copydesk@michigandaily.com

Alexis Nowicki Managing Copy Editors 

SENIOR COPY EDITORS: Taylor Grandinetti and Jose Rosales
Nivedita Karki Managing Online Editor nivkarki@michigandaily.com

SENIOR WEB DEVELOPERS: Dylan Lawton and Bob Lesser

Levin Kim Managing Video Editor

SENIOR VIDEO EDITORS: Michael Kessler, Abe Lofy, Emma Winowiecki

Demario Longmire, Gaby Vasquez, Ryan Moody, 
Sarah Khan Michigan in Color Editors 
Michael Schramm Special Projects Manager
Emma Sutherland Social Media Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Hussein Hakim Finance and Operations Manager 
Claire Ulak Production Manager
Jordan Yob Marketing Manager
Matt Pfenning UAccounts Manager
Asja Kepes Local Accounts Manager
Chris Wang Classifieds Manager
Colin Cheesman National Accounts Manager
Anna He Special Guides and Online Manager
Claire Butz Layout Manager

The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by 

students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may 

be picked up at the Daily’s office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $110. 

Winter term (January through April) is $115, yearlong (September through April) is $195. University affiliates 

are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must 

be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press.

THREE THINGS YOU 
SHOULD KNOW TODAY

Technology 
has 

changed 
today’s 

classroom 
— 
the 

Statement explores if that’s 
been for better or worse.

>> SEE STATEMENT on 1B
2

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

Economy 
lecture 

WHAT: Guest lecturer 
Serguei A. Oushakine 
will be presenting on 
“Soviet Productivism: 
Building the Economy 
of Storage in the 
Late USSR.”
WHO: Department 
on Anthropology
WHEN: 12 p.m. 
to 1:30 p.m. 
WHERE: School of 
Social Work, room 1636

On 
Tuesday 
the 

Los 
Angelas 
Police 

Department announced 
that there was no DNA 

found on the knife buried in 
O.J. Simpson’s backyard, the 
Washington Post reported. 
Detectives have hit a dead end 
with the investigation of the 
knife found four years ago.

1

Mental health 
resources

WHAT: This workshop 
will educate all students 
in how to gain access to 
mental health resources 
on- and off-campus.
WHO: Spectrum Center
WHEN: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WHERE: The Michigan 
Union, CSG Conference 
Room G

The 
White 
House 

announced 
on 

Tuesday that they 
plan 
on 
removing 

some restrictions on travel 
and transactions between 
the 
United 
States 
and 

Cuba, NBC News reported. 
The policy changes are 
intended to alter U.S.-
Cuban relations positively.

3

Opiate lecture

WHAT: The School of 
Kinesiology will host 
author Sam Quinones 
to present a talk titled 
“Dreamland: The 
true tale of America’s 
Opiate Epidemic.”
WHO: School of 
Kinesiology
WHEN: 12 p.m. to 2 p.m.
WHERE: UMHS 
Ford Auditorium

Brown bag 
lunch lecture

WHAT: The center for the 
Education of Women will 
host Prof. Debotri Dhar, 
who will be presenting key 
insights from her monograph 
“Violence, Knowledge and 
the Female Body.”
WHO: Center for the 
Education of Women
WHEN: 12 p.m. to 1 p.m.
WHERE: The School of 
Education, room 2327

Hail Yeah! 
2016 event

WHAT: The Office of 
University Development 
will host the fifth annual 
“Hail Yeah!” student day of 
thanks to show gratitude to 
the alumni who have made 
donations in the past year. 
WHO: The Office of 
University Development
WHEN: 11:30 a.m. 
to 3:30 p.m. 
WHERE: Diag and 
Pierpoint Commons

Medical 
School expo

WHAT: The Career 
Center will hold a 
Health and Medical 
School expo for students 
interested in pursuing 
a health care profession 
after graduation. 
WHO: The Career Center
WHEN: 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. 
WHERE: The 
Michigan Union

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

Open mic night

WHAT: A drum kit, a guitar 
rig, a PA and free snacks 
will be provided for those 
interested in participating or 
watching.
WHO: Michigan Dining
WHEN: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
WHERE: Pierpoint 
Commons, Fireside Cafe
l Please report any error in 
the Daily to corrections@
michigandaily.com.

Artist lecture

WHAT: Korean artist 
and MFA Art & Design 
student Yoosamu will 
present a lecture on his 
recent visit to China to 
infuse contemporary 
aesthetics to a traditional 
Buddhist sculpture.
WHO: The Confucius 
Institue
WHEN: 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. 
WHERE: Michigan 
League, Henderson Room

Attendees express 
frustration with 
current University 

services

By GRACE CANFIELD

For the Daily

A vigil held Tuesday evening 

on the Diag aimed to provide 
students with a forum to talk about 
how mental health is handled on 
campus.

About 15 students gathered in 

front of Hatcher Graduate Library 
for the vigil in response to the 
death of a student Monday night.

Word of the vigil was spread 

mainly through the anonymous 
social media app Yik Yak, which 
students on campus use frequently 
for everything from questions 
about campus life to posts about 
subjects of mental health. 

At Tuesday’s vigil, students 

shared experiences of their own 
experiences with mental health, 

along with concerns over the 
stigma on campus surrounding 
depression and self-harm.

A 
common 
theme 
among 

students at the vigil was frustration 
with University of Michigan’s 
Counseling 
and 
Psychological 

Services, the on-campus resource 
for students seeking counseling 
services 
for 
anxiety 
and 

depression, as well as other mental 
health crises.

Engineering 
sophomore 

Jacqueline Malkin described a 
six-week waiting process from 
the time of her initial move to seek 
assistance to her first counseling 
appointment.

“Between when I signed the 

papers and when I got my initial 
consultation, it was three weeks,” 
Malkin said. “I didn’t get to see my 
psychologist for weekly counseling 
… for six weeks after I signed 
papers.”

LSA sophomore Karly Carson 

also expressed frustration with 
how her CAPS counselor helped 
her through her anxiety.

“She told me I had to stop 

thinking that way,” Carson said. 
“She told me, ‘You’re stressed out, 
we’re all stressed out, you need to 
get over it,’ basically.”

She 
added 
that 
University 

Health Service ultimately provided 
more assistance.

“I also used UHS, and they were 

a lot more helpful to me, as far as 
medication goes,” Carson said. 
“The psychologist I saw was very 
helpful. She helped me learn to … 
basically meditate, and just to calm 
down.”

1,130 individuals had signed an 

online petition as of Wednesday 
morning calling on the University 
to to increase mental health service.

Many students had suggestions 

during the vigil for alternatives 
to address campus mental health 
besides services like CAPS and 
UHS. Liz Zhang, Social Work and 
Public Health graduate student, 
said she believes the answer lies 
with the student body.

“CAPS can’t be the only answer. 

It is like the formal way of thinking 
about mental health,” Zhang said. 
“Overall, change needs to happen 
bottom-up, grassroots, to really 
change the culture.”

Engineering 
sophomore 

Michael Oshatz echoed those 
sentiments.

“We need a culture here of 

caring,” Oshatz said. “We really 
need to stop being cutthroat with 
each other. We need to really 
realize that this is a huge university 
— people get lonely. It’s not an easy 
thing to do to change a culture like 
that, but it’s the only thing we can 
do, I think, is to change the way we 
look at each other.”

Dr. Todd Sevig, director of 

CAPS, wrote in an e-mail the 
Mental Health Service held extra 
hours Tuesday.

“Whenever a student dies, it’s 

such a great loss to our community, 
and we need to support each 
other in extra ways,” Sevig wrote. 
“CAPS had additional walk in crisis 
counselors available today, and we 
are in the process of setting group 
support with Residence Education 
staff. We also have been consulting 
with others who are supporting 

At vigil, students discuss their 
experiences with mental health

Central Student Government 
talks online presence of CAPS

Body also passes 

resolution on tuition 
for undocumented 
graduate students

By ANNA HARITOS

Daily Staff Reporter

At 
Tuesday’s 
meeting, 

representatives of the University 
of Michigan’s Central Student 
Government discussed funding 
and the University Counseling 
and 
Psychological 
Services’ 

website, as well as passing a 
resolution 
on 
undocumented 

and 
non-traditional 
graduate 

students.

The meeting opened with LSA 

senior Jacob Ruby, chair of the 
Student Organization Funding 
Commission at the University, 
updating the council on SOFC’s 
progress 
in 
regard 
to 
the 

distribution of money among 
student clubs and organizations.

“Thanks 
to 
the 
online 

application 
the 
quality 
of 

requests for funding has gone 
up,” he said. “We had $500,000 
in requests last semester, and 
so far this semester we already 
have $750,000 in requests. If we 
stick within our range we won’t 
be giving out very much money 
to student orgs, but we will not 
go over our budget.”

The topic of funding did not 

stop with Ruby’s executive 
report. Business junior Ben 
Meisel, chair of CSG’s Finance 
Committee, 
introduced 
a 

new resolution to alter the 
distribution of the CSG budget. 
If the suggested budget is 
passed, just under $7,000 will 
be moved from CSG’s General 
Account 
to 
the 
Legislative 

Discretionary 
Account. 
The 

money in the latter account 

would be used toward student 
resources like St. Patrick’s Day 
dining hours and hand dryers in 
the C.C. Little Science Building.

Meisel 
said 
he 
thought 

the shift would impact how 
accessible CSG funds were to 
the student body.

“I believe we’ve done amazing 

work so far this semester as a 
funding body,” he said. “We 
have more things coming up 
and 
representatives 
excited 

about improving the student 
body. Finances shouldn’t stop 
them if it is within the means 
of our organization. It’s a no 
brainer to me that we should 
create accessibility to use money 
that was given by students for 
students.”

Additionally, a resolution to 

allocate funds for the MUSIC 
Matters 
2016 
concert 
went 

through first review by the 
assembly. 
Business 
senior 

Jibran Ahmed, MUSIC Matters 
president, 
said 
increasing 

funding to his organization 
could help improve the quality 
of events and activities held for 
SpringFest on April 13. 

“The costs for this year’s 

festival will be higher than 
they were in the past,” he said. 
“We give money to student 
organizations that want to 
do more, but we are running 
into issues. So the money 
would be allocated to those 
specific organizations as a way 
to create more engaging and 
entertaining events.”

Among 
new 
business 

discussed was a resolution 
to 
have 
CSG 
encourage 

CAPS to improve its website. 
The 
resolution 
states 
that 

the 
current 
website 
does 

not present a clear way for 
students to go about making 
an appointment or accessing 

additional 
resources. 
The 

resolution will be reviewed 
further at CSG’s next meeting.

Ford senior Sloane Forbush, 

who authored the resolution, 
said the current website is not 
user-friendly. The resolution 
proposes that CAPS to adopt 
a format similar to that of 
the Ohio State University’s 
Psychological Services website, 
which Forbush said has better 
organization and structure.

LSA junior Cam Dotson, 

co-author of the resolution, 
echoed her remarks.

“Students who are going 

through 
these 
traumatic 

experiences don’t want click 
through all these links,” he said 
“We want to ease the service, 
make it easier to use and make 
finding help through CAPS 
more accessible.”

During 
the 
community 

concerns section of the meeting, 
six individuals came to address 
the chamber on a resolution 
to encourage the University 
to extend in-state tuition to 
undocumented graduate and 
non-traditional 
students 
in 

Michigan. The assembly passed 
the resolution.

One 
of 
the 
speakers, 

Ph.D. candidate Persephone 
Hernandez-Vogt, 
said 
it’s 

important for non-traditional 
students in Michigan to have 
affordable tuition.

“It’s wonderful that this is 

available to undergraduates, but 
it’s so important that everyone 
has access to it,” she said. “It 
would offer more affordable 
opportunities to undocumented 
and non-traditional graduate 
students who would qualify 
for the in-state tuition if in 
undergrad.”

FOLLOW US ON TWITTER 
@MICHIGANDAILY

See VIGIL, Page 3A

 
 
 

Very clever way to reach young voters. 
Snapchat geofilter paid for by Super 
PAC backing #Kasich
 —@TConnner
 
 
 
 

Students react to Ohio State geofilter 
targeting Donald Trump. 

Sara Kowatch describes new 
geofilter.

“@AmFutureFund nailed it with 

their anti trump @snapchat 

geofilter they even put Trump 

hair on the C in Michigan!!

- @diornotwar

“
Ohio State geofilter recieves 
positive responses on Twitter.

The “say no to trump” geofilter is 
probably the best one I’ve seen.
 — @Isabelle_Ryan11

