The University of Michigan 

Bicentennial 
Office 
released 

their plans Monday morning 
for the anticipated year-long 
celebration of the University’s 
bicentennial 
in 
2017, 
which 

include festivals, lecture series 
and themed semesters.

Both LSA semesters of the 

year are slated to be themed. 
Next year’s winter semester will 
focus on “Making Michigan,” 
or the history of the University, 
while the 2017 fall semester 
centers 
around 
“Michigan 

Horizons: The Possible Futures 
of U-M” and looking ahead to the 
University’s third century.

According to the Bicentennial 

Office, many of the events will 
feature prominent alumni and 
guest speakers: notable alumni, 
such as actors Darren Criss and 
James Earl Jones, will headline 
a spring festival next April, 
while Supreme Court Justice 
Sonia Sotomayor is scheduled 
to speak in January at the first 
of a yearlong series of symposia 
hosted by University President 
Mark Schlissel. The Bicentennial 
Office and Advisory Committee 
— appointed in 2011 by then 
University president Mary Sue 
Coleman — is also working 
with student groups to ensure 
a number of annual events, 
such as the Martin Luther King 
Symposium in January, tie back 

U.S. 
Sen. 
Tim 
Kaine, 

Democratic 
vice 
presidential 

nominee, spoke at events in 
Taylor and Warren, Mich. on 
Sunday, visiting the state just nine 
days away from the presidential 
election.

According to an average of 

polls from Real Clear Politics, 
Clinton is currently projected to 
win Michigan by seven points.

Michigan Sens. Gary Peters 

(D) and Debbie Stabenow (D), as 
well as U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell 
(D–Dearborn), 
also 
attended 

the event in Taylor, which was 
hosted by the 1A region of the 
Union of Auto Workers.

Kaine’s Taylor rally focused 

in part on FBI director James 
Comey’s 
Friday 
letter 
to 

Congress, which stated the FBI 
is looking into additional emails 
that may be tied to a previous 
investigation into Clinton’s use of 
a private server for email during 
her time as Secretary of State, 
found during a separate inquiry 
into former U.S. Rep. Anthony 
Weiner 
(D-NY). 
Weiner 
is 

married to Clinton campaign aide 
Huma Abedin. In July, Comey 
told Congress he was closing the 
investigation into Clinton’s use of 
the server and it would not result 
in any criminal charges.

Kaine 
said 
Sunday 
that 

despite Friday’s announcement, 
he remains confident that no 
prosecutor would press charges, 
adding that Clinton supporters 

have not been deterred by the 
letter.

“The FBI’s recent letter has 

actually 
revved 
up 
people,” 

Kaine said. “We have record 
voter registration this cycle. The 
Trump campaign wants people 
to be distracted and not vote 
because he knows that’s the only 
way he can win. I can tell you 
folks this: nobody is distracted.”

In an interview prior to 

the event, Peters declined to 

speculate about what motivated 
Comey’s decision to send the 
letter, and said it was important 
for the FBI to clarify their 
position.

“I think it is imperative, given 

the unprecedented nature of 
releasing information pertaining 
to an investigation publicly — in 
particular a few days out of an 
election — that the FBI release 
the remaining emails so the 
public can see what is in them 

and clear up any remaining 
concerns,” Peters said

Speaking before Kaine took 

the stage, Peters emphasized 
Clinton and Kaine’s values to a 
crowd of about 150.

“Both Hillary Clinton and 

Tim Kaine over the course of the 
past few months and during the 
debates have proven themselves 
to be the leaders we deserve,” 
Peters said. “This is in clear 

A documentary about the life 

of Miya Rodolfo-Sioson, a lone 
survivor of a 1991 shooting at the 
University of Iowa, was screened 
Friday afternoon at the Harlan 
Hatcher Graduate Library for 
an audience of five community 
members and one student.

The screening of “Miya of the 

Quiet Strength” was part of the 
annual month-long Investing in 
Ability series, themed “Diversity 
Includes Disability,” through the 
University of Michigan Council 
for Disability Concerns.

Patricia Anderson, one of the 

event organizers, said Rodolfo-
Sioson’s story is emblematic of 
the intersection of disability and 
diversity due to her activism 
for disability rights across a 
spectrum of ethnicities.

“Miya’s 
story 
was 
chosen 

because of its current relevance as 
well as the intersectionality of her 
story as a Philippine immigrant 
of 
political 
activist 
parents, 

her work among Hispanic and 
Latino/Chicano communities and 
her work as a disabilities advocate 
and activist,” Anderson said.

michigandaily.com
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Monday, October 31, 2016

ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SIX YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

GOT A NEWS TIP?
Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail 
news@michigandaily.com and let us know.

INDEX
Vol. CXXVI, No. 19
©2016 The Michigan Daily

NEWS......................... 2A

OPINION.....................4A

CL ASSIFIEDS............... 5A

SUDOKU..................... 2A

A R T S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 A

SPORTSMONDAY. . . . . . . . .1B

See BICENTENNIAL, Page 3A

GRANT HARDY/Daily

Fifth-year senior defensive tackle Ryan Glasgow and redshirt junior defensive tackle Maurice Hurst celebrate Michigan’s win and yell for the Paul Bunyan trophy at 
Spartan Stadium Saturday.

EAST LANSING — They came 

for Paul Bunyan, and they left with 
him, even if it wasn’t exactly the 
way they wanted.

This was true during the game 

for the Michigan football team, 

and it was true afterward, when a 
handful of Wolverines arrived on 
the Michigan State sideline looking 
for their hard-earned trophy, only 
to be told it was already in their 
locker room.

“Me and Delano (Hill) went 

to go on the field so we could run 
around and get little victory laps,” 
said senior cornerback Jourdan 

Lewis. “But, hey, we got it back. I’m 
excited to get it back home.”

There may not have been a 

more fitting way to cap the day for 
Michigan.

Heavily 
favored 
coming 

into 
Saturday’s 
game 
against 

Michigan 
State, 
the 
second-

ranked Wolverines (5-0 Big Ten, 
8-0 overall) came in with a feeling 

they might finally reclaim the Paul 
Bunyan Trophy for the first time 
since 2012. They did just that with 
a 32-23 win, but they still weren’t 
completely satisfied in how they 
did so.

“I was excited we got the win — 

hell of a win against Sparty,” Lewis 
said. “At the same time, there’s a lot 

See IOWA, Page 3A

DAVID SONG/Daily

U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA), Democratic vice presidential nominee, raises his hands to welcome the crowd in the 
Taylor Fire Station Sunday.

Sweet revenge

With a 32-23 win over 

Michigan State, the 

Michigan football team took 
another step toward ridding 

itself of painful memories. » 

Page 2B

michigandaily.com

For more stories and coverage, visit

See KAINE, Page 3A

See FOOTBALL, Page 3A

In a recent study led by the 

University of Michigan, just 92 
randomized control trials were 
found to have been conducted 
on immediate treatments for 
cardiac arrest over the past 20 
years — a disproportionately low 
number given the 535,000 cases 
of cardiac arrest per year.

A University press release said 

although cardiac arrest kills 10 
times more people in the United 
States than breast cancer, there 
is an immense lack of research 
aimed at treatment and survival 
of 
patients 
who 
experience 

cardiac arrest.

Shashank Sinha, a third-year 

general cardiology fellow at 
the University Health System 
who was the lead researcher 
of the study, said the amount 
of 
research 
is 
unacceptably 

low, noting fewer than five 
randomized control trials were 
published annually over the past 
20 years.

“What 
we 
found 
in 
a 

nutshell was a striking paucity 
of randomized clinical trials 
relative to the burden of cardiac 

See CARDIAC, Page 3A

University 
announces
bicentennial 
celebrations

Wolverines reclaim Paul Bunyan, 
hold off Michigan State, 32-23

ADMINISTRATION

Year of events to include themed 
semesters, festivals and lecture series

RIYAH BASHA
Daily Staff Reporter

No. 2 Michigan wins back famed rivalry trophy for the first time since 2012

MAX BULTMAN

Managing Sports Editor

Film aims 
to highlight 
disability 
awareness

CAMPUS LIFE

Documentary chronicles 
the story of a survivor of 
1991 Iowa shooting

NEIL SCHWARTZ
Daily Staff Reporter

Tim Kaine says FBI announcement will 
inspire, not hinder support for Clinton

In Michigan rallies, vice presidential nominee also talks economic policies

TIM COHN

Daily Staff Reporter

Study calls 
for increase 
 
 
 
 
 
 

in cardiac 
arrest trials

SCIENCE

University researchers 
find only 92 clinical 
studies in past 20 years

YOSHIKO IWAI
Daily Staff Reporter

