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by expanding Counseling and
Psychological
Services
and

Sexual Assault and Prevention
Awareness Center services to
North
Campus.
Additionally,

they hope to place a student on
the Board of Regents during
their tenure in office, though it’s
unclear whether the addition of a
student is legal under Michigan’s
constitution.

In remarks after the votes

were released, Schafer said the
first initiative the party aims to
achieve would be Intergroup
Relations training for all CSG
representatives and Assembly

members. He also noted the
margin of victory for the party,
calling it a powerful statement
of
the
importance
of
both

newMICH and Your Michigan.

“We are just humbled, humbled

that thousands of students have
put their trust in us, and they
believed in us, and I think that it
can not go unnoticed that there are
so many students who voted for
the first time in a Central Student
Government election during their
tenure here at the University
because they hoped and believed
in what we had to say and what we
stood for,” Schafer said. “We are
excited to work with every single
individual, of all parties.”

Overall, he said working closely

with the University administration

will be important going forward to
achieve his administration’s goals.
One piece of the party’s platform
in particular — creating a student
presence on the Board of Regents

promptedquestions
about

feasibility and legality in the lead-
up to the elections.

“I think it’s a matter of sitting

down
with
the
University

administration and having these
conversations about our ambitious
ideas.” Schafer said. “I think
it’s going to be about engaging
students,
and
engaging
the

administration, and to work on
achieving these goals, or at least
paving the way for us to achieve
these goals.”

Griggs also noted that it was

important to work not only with

the University administration,
but also with the newly elected
CSG representatives to push their
upcoming agenda.

According to the unofficial

results,
Your
Michigan

representatives will outnumber
newMICH
representatives

22 to 31 on the new assembly.
However, Schafer said he does
not foresee any difficulty with
that balance.

“I think it’s just a matter

of sitting down with Your
Michigan, and everyone who
supported
Your
Michigan

and getting to know them and
their communities better, and
working with them and their
communities,”
Schafer
said.

“Understanding that we come
from the same community, cut
from the same cloth, and that
as Michigan students we are
all here for the same reasons,
to better this campus and same
community.”

LSA
sophomore
Anushka

Sarkar,
chief
programming

officer in CSG and newMICH
campaign manager, said moving
forward they plan to combine
the efforts of both parties as
they contain similar goals.

“I
think
that
it’s
also

important to ensure that the
issues that students supported
that students who supported
Your Michigan wanted to make
progress on are not forgotten
over the course of David and
Micah’s administration,” Sarkar
said.

Jim Harbaugh won fourth place in the University of Michigan’s 2016

executive Central Student Government election, the same standing he
achieved in last year’s election, according to unofficial results released
Saturday morning.

The name Jim Harbaugh, which could refer either to Michigan

Football coach Jim Harbaugh or the coach’s son James Harbaugh, an
LSA freshman, garnered 215 votes, exactly 100 votes over last year’s
total. The Defend Affirmative Action Party garnered third place with
390 votes.

After his fourth-place finish last year, Harbaugh the coach tweeted

that he was “disappointed” with the results.

“Competitive juices flowing!,” the tweet read. “Hat in the ring for

2016 & will campaign w/ #EUTM”

Harbaugh also won one of ten representative positions for the

Rackham School of Graduate Studies on the assembly, but was
disqualified due to not being enrolled in the school.

Many
variations
of
the
name
Harbaugh
were

also
reported,
including
“JJJJJJIIIMMMMMM

HHHAAARRRRBBBBAAAUUUGGGHHHH”
and
“Coach

Harbaugh,” as well as a slate of executive tickets including Harbaugh

and the ‘Diag Squirrel’.

Other off-campus individuals written in included U.S. Sen. Bernie

Sanders (D-Vt.) and Ohio Governor John Kasich (R), candidates for the
Democratic and Republican presidential nominations, respectively, as
well as Thomas Jefferson and Darth Vader.

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BRACKET BREAKDOWN.
puzzle by sudokusyndication.com

2A — Monday, March 28, 2016
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

LUNA ANNA ARCHEY/Daily

Members of George Washington University’s receSs perform
a skit about Jersey Jesus at the 1st Annual University of
Michigan Improv Festival at Rackham Auditorium Saturday
evening.

IMPROV FESTIVAL
CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

3
THINGS
YOU
SHOULD
KNOW

3
2
1

9

2

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3

9
4

2

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9

3

2
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1
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WHEN YOUR BRACKET IS DONEZO. puzzle by sudokusyndication.com

AMANDA ALLEN/Daily

Afternoon Delight serves homemade brunch foods at its location on East Liberty Street and South Fifth Avenue.

CSG
From Page 1A

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Laura Schinagle
MANAGING EDITOR

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ON THE DAILY
ON THE DAILY

Owner credits

restaurant’s success

to traditionally
prepared dishes

By ANNA HARITOS

Daily Staff Reporter

For the past 38 years, Afternoon

Delight has sat on the corner of
East Liberty Street and South Fifth
Avenue serving homemade specials
to the Ann Arbor community. At
peak hours, customers wait in
a line that trails to the sidewalk
outside, regardless of rain or shine.

Its secret? In an interview with

The Michigan Daily, owner and
manager Tom Hackett said he
thought consistency was key to the
restaurant’s success.

“If the customers wait in line a

half hour, the food has to be exactly
the way that they expect it,” he
said. “The normal breakfast is very
important. It has to be perfect;
people are very fussy how they like
their eggs. We’ll reject food off the
line if it’s not right, and we’ll do it

over.”

Hackett
was
working
in

restaurant sales equipment when
the first Afternoon Delight opened
up in Lansing, Michigan. He
designed and sold the business
all its equipment. Eventually, the
restaurant’s
success
prompted

stores in two more locations, in
Ann Arbor and in Grand Rapids, to
open their doors.

In 1978, Hackett joined the

Ann Arbor location and became a
partner. After 38 years of working
at Afternoon Delight, he says he
still loves his job.

“I never get tired of it,” he said.

“I enjoy the people and the staff,
and the job amazes me. I’ve seen
some of the same people come
in for the past 38 years, and seen
their kids grow up. Now they’re
bringing their grandkids.”

Regulars at Afternoon Delight

said they return to the restaurant
for the friendly staff and great
atmosphere.

“I don’t think I’ve seen a whole

lot change at all since I started
coming here in the mid-80s,”
said Ann Arbor resident Debbie
Williams, a University of Michigan

alum. “It has been the same great
food and the same atmosphere
and just the friendly staff. I think
that’s one thing that makes it so
successful.”

Afternoon
Delight
attracts

many of its customers through
word of mouth. Williams said she
heard about the restaurant from a
fellow teammate on the track and
field team during her time at the
University.

More than 30 years later, a

path is seen among the younger
generation.

“I heard about this place from

my friends,” said LSA junior Clare
Kang. “They all say it’s a place you
have to go to if you’re in Ann Arbor.
I’m definitely coming back — I
want to try some other things on
the menu, like the veggie boule.”

LSA senior Iris Fue said she liked

the atmosphere of the restaurant,
as well as the quality of the food.

“I love the cafe style of the

restaurant,” she said. “The prices
are really reasonable for the
amount of food I get, and the food
is really good. I got the smoked
asalmon eggs Benedict, and it’s just

News

Read more at MichiganDaily.com

Afternoon Delight draws brunch
crowd with consistent favorites

See RESTAURANT, Page 3A






Jim Harbaugh for head coach / CSG president

/ athletic director / school president / tenured

lecturer / dining hall employee / mbus driver

-Henry Majoros

@hankinator



During his traditional Easter
speech in Rome, the Pope
condemned those who fail
to help migrants, BBC News

reported. He also said a prayer for
Syria. Referring to recent attacks
in Belgium, Turkey, Nigeria, Chad,
Cameroon, Ivory Coast and Iraq, he
urged people to use the “weapons of
love” to combat terrorism.

The
Michigan
women’s

basketball
team
will
play

in the WNIT quarterfinals
Monday against Temple. The

Wolverines have won three WNIT
games by at least 23 points so far,
and are looking to go to the Final
Four for the second straight year.

>> SEE SPORTSMONDAY on 1B

U.S.
Sen.
Bernie
Sanders

(D-Vt.) has emerged victorious
over
Hillary
Clinton
in

the
Saturday
Democratic

nominating
contests
held
in

Washington, Alaska and Hawaii,
according to BBC News. Sanders
won at least 70 percent of the vote in
all three states. With 101 delegates,
Washington was the biggest prize.

Human Rights
lecture

WHAT: NYU Prof. Sally
Engle Merry will present on
evidence-based goverance
that aims to promote
compliance with human
rights treaties.
WHO: Human Rights
Program
WHEN: 4:00pm-5:30pm
WHERE: School of Social
Work Building- 1636

Lecture on Flint
& environment

WHAT: Martin Kaufman,
professor of Earth and
Resource Science, will
discuss the environmental
hazards arising from aging
infrastructure in Flint.
WHO: University Library
WHEN: 9:30am-11:00am
WHERE: Harlan Hatcher
Graduate Library- Gallery
(Room 100)

Symposium on
secularization

WHAT:The ‘Secular
among the Nations’
symposium features
scholars from the US and
Israel, who will explore
the interplay between the
secular and sacred.
WHO: Judaic Studies
WHEN: 8:30am-5:30pm
WHERE: Rackham
Graduate School (Horace

Speakout
against Nike

WHAT:Noi Supalai,
former union President and
Nike garment worker from
Bangkok, will share the
hardships she underwent
and highlight the need for
factory monitoring.
WHO: Maize Pages
Student Organizations
WHEN: 6:00pm-7:00pm
WHERE: 3330 Mason

Mac & Cheese
week

WHAT:The dining halls
will serve a week of mac
and cheese-themed dishes:
come enjoy the cheesy,
gooey goodies for lunch and
dinner.
WHO: Michigan Dining
WHEN: 11:00am- 9:00pm
WHERE: South
Quadrangle- and All Dining
Halls

Screening of
The Huntsman

WHAT: The Michigan
Union Ticket Office
will give out free passes
to a screening of The
Huntsman: Winter’s War.
Seating is first-come, first-
served.
WHO: Michigan Union
Ticket Office (MUTO)
WHEN: 7:00pm
WHERE: State Theatre,

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