michigandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, November 14, 2016 ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SIX YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM IOWA CITY — It seemed like it would be Michigan’s special teams that would win the day. Instead, it was Iowa’s. After fifth-year senior kicker Kenny Allen booted a career- long 51-yard field goal midway through the fourth quarter to put the Wolverines up, 13-11, and after senior cornerback Channing Stribling picked up an interception with under two minutes remaining, it looked like the Wolverines had the game in the bag. But the Hawkeyes got one more chance, and they made it count. Hawkeye kicker Keith Duncan hit a 33-yard chip shot as time expired, and Iowa pulled off a stunning 14-13 upset Saturday at Kinnick Stadium. Iowa’s defense was able to hold the Wolverines to just 98 rushing yards, the first time all season they have been held under 100. “There were some wrinkles, they played well, they played hard, they set the edge extremely well,” said Michigan coach Harbaugh of the Hawkeyes’ defense after the game. “They tackled well and played good coverage.” Just before Allen’s made field goal, it seemed as if the Michigan football team was sleepwalking. It had converted on just five of its attempted third downs. But then redshirt sophomore quarterback Wilton Speight had a rare scramble for four yards, and then he completed just his 10th pass of the game to senior tight end Jake Butt, who picked up 17 yards for a first down. The Wolverines would still be forced to punt three downs later, but they caught a break on the play. A roughing-the-center penalty on Iowa gave Michigan the ball back on the Hawkeyes’ 36-yard line just after Speight overthrew an open Darboh streaking toward the end zone, ultimately setting up Allen’s dramatic field goal. But the tide would change Two hundred students, faculty and staff gathered on the Diag at 6 p.m. Saturday night to partake in a protest titled “Opposing Intimidation!” The protest was organized by Music, Theatre & Dance senior James Ross Kilmeade in response to an incident Friday evening in which a student was approached by a man who demanded she remove her hijab or he would use a lighter to set her on fire. This incident is still under investigation by the Ann Arbor Police Department. According to Kilmeade’s post on the Facebook event, the protest aimed to generally respond to the hatred he feels has been validated by the recent election. Before the protest began, Kilmeade said he had created the event only hours before it started and hoped to reach as many people as possible. “Today I woke up and said, ‘I don’t know what I’m going to do but I have to stand and do something,” he said. “People have to feel safe and it’s absurd that they don’t. It’s our responsibility to be out here for them.’ ” LSA senior Adrian Rakochi said he heard about the protest through an email sent to the Arabic Activities club, and expressed his frustration with recent incidents following the election, both locally and nationally. “I wanted to go,” he said. “I feel like we haven’t had enough protests in Ann Arbor about this whole thing anyway. I just showed up and let some friends Following the unexpected victory of President-elect Donald Trump early Wednesday morning, in addition to issues of safety, racism and hateful speech, many students and faculty on the University of Michigan campus are worried about climate change, economic, immigration and women’s health policies under a Trump presidency and a Republican-dominated Congress. Most concerning, LSA senior Hannah Moore said Tuesday night, is the fear of an entirely unchecked Republican controlled government and the policies that will be blocked by the executive and legislative branches. Republicans now have GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. INDEX Vol. CXXVI, No. 28 ©2016 The Michigan Daily NEWS......................... 2A OPINION.....................4A CL A SSIFIEDS .............. 5A SUDOKU..................... 2A A R T S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 A SPORTMONDAY...........1B See IOWA, Page 3A The Michigan Daily administered a women’s health survey, to 1,000 randomly selected respondents at the University of Michigan campus. There were 147 respondents, with 115 self-identifying as female. The following article includes data collected in this survey, particularly with regard to safety on campus. When Jocelyn Aptowitz, a dual- enrolled School of Music, Theatre & Dance and LSA junior, was a freshman, a man in a car asked her for directions while she was walking back from a rehearsal at the Student Theatre Arts Complex around Hoover Street in 2014. She said the man followed close behind in his vehicle and eventually exited the car pantsless, wearing nothing from the waist down. Once Aptowitz saw the man touching himself, she said she quickly walked away and called the University of Michigan Division of Public Safety and Security as well as the Ann Arbor Police Department. She received a quick response from officials, who later found and identified the man. “There’s something so unsettling and degrading about it,” Aptowitz said of the incident. “The lines of body autonomy and, I think, safety, specifically, get blurred sometimes, but you’re definitely more aware of it after you experience it firsthand.” Aptowitz’s sentiments are far from unique on campus. In a survey administered to female students by The Michigan Daily, 73.11 percent of respondents said they were afraid to walk home alone on campus. 17.65 percent said they did not and 9.24 percent said they were unsure. In a campus climate survey administered by the University to both male and female students in 2015, 89 percent of students reported feeling safe from sexual misconduct on campus. Bill Axinn, a national expert on survey research at the University Population Studies Center, said there could be a number of reasons for the discrepancies in the datasets. Axinn said in addition to the differences in wording — the University survey asked if students “felt safe from sexual misconduct on campus” while the Daily survey asked if students “felt afraid to walk home alone on campus” — as well as a small sample size in the Daily’s survey and a tendency for respondents to agree See TRUMP, Page 3A michigandaily.com For more stories and coverage, visit See PROTEST, Page 2A See WOMEN, Page 2A Average GPA’s in the college of LSA were lower for STEM classes than for classes in the humanties and social sciences, and GPA became higher as class level increased. Last week, The Michigan Daily released a new web tool that allows users to view distribution data for all LSA courses over the past three full-length semesters. The data, obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, enables users to view grade distributions from courses and compare multiple classes on a single graphic interface. Students and University community members can view See GRADES, Page 3A Hawkeye Shock On a wild night at Kinnick Stadium, everything went Iowa’s way as the Hawkeyes handed Michigan its first loss of the season » Page 1B EVAN AARON/Daily Students gather to protest intimidation, related to recent incidents following the presidential election, on the Diag Saturday. IASA show highlights Indian culture Event draws 4,000 to Hill Auditorium for annual dance performance » Read at michigandaily.com Iowa shocks undefeated Wolverines on final play In Daily survey, 73 percent of female students fear walking home alone FOOTBALL No. 3 Michigan suffers first loss on Hawkeyes’ last-second field goal KELLY HALL Daily Sports Editor Respondents express concerns about safety at night despite ‘U’ lighting efforts ALEXA ST. JOHN Daily Staff Reporter On campus, questions on Trump policy plans GOVERNMENT Economic, immigration policies criticized by students and faculty LYDIA MURRAY Daily Staff Reporter Two hundred gather to protest reported hate crime in wake of election results Speakers and attendees express frustration with incidents across the country JENNIFER MEER Daily Staff Reporter Average GPAs lower for STEM classes ACADEMICS Distribution data also shows higher grades in upper level classes TIM COHN Daily Staff Reporter