The 
University 
of 

Michigan 
was 
ranked 

among the nation’s top three 
schools for undergraduate 
entrepreneurship 
opportunities and sixth for 
graduate 
entrepreneurship 

by 
The 
Princeton 
Review 

in 
a 
November 
release. 

Only Babson University in 
Massachusetts and Brigham 
Young 
University 
in 
Utah 

surpassed the University on the 
undergraduate list.

The annual rankings take 

into consideration business and 
entrepreneurship 
academic 

programs available to students, 

student-to-faculty 
ratio, 

alumni 
entrepreneurship 

ventures, student-led programs 
and community support for 
entrepreneurial ventures.

Formal 
entrepreneurship 

education 
opportunities 
at 

the University date back to 
1999 with the creation of 
the Zell Lurie Institute, an 
entrepreneurship and venture 
capital-focused 
institute 

housed at the Ross School of 
Business.

In 2015, the Zell Family 

Foundation 
donated 
$60 

million 
to 
the 
Zell 
Lurie 

Institute. 

Oscar Ybarra, the director 

of 
Innovate 
Blue 
— 
the 

University-run center for 15 

Sunday, 
the 
Michigan 

Foreign Policy Council held 
its inaugural conference in 
the Rackham Amphitheatre, 
presenting the research club 
members conducted over the 
course of the semester to 30 
audience members. Students 
discussed 
the 
effects 
of 

government 
stability 
on 

humanitarian 
intervention, 

the 
success 
of 
antibiotic 

stewardship programs and 
the impacts of public opinion 
on the 2015 Paris climate 
agreement.

All of the research was 

published in a new academic 
journal 
titled 
Michigan 

Foreign Policy Review.

LSA 
senior 
Evan 
Viau, 

club president and founder, 
said he was impressed with 
the club members’ research 
throughout 
the 
semester 

and how they were able to 
put it together for this final 
presentation.

“I couldn’t be more proud 

of everyone,” Viau said. “This 
being our first semester, there 
were a lot of roadblocks. The 
level of work that we were able 
to put in our first semester 
and the level of work that our 
first and second year students 
were able to achieve — I’m 
impressed, I’m floored.”

LSA 
sophomore 
Nicole 

Dean, 
who 
studied 
the 

effectiveness 
of 
antibiotic 

stewardship 
programs, 

echoed Viau’s statement.

“It felt really good to show 

everyone how much work we 
put into this research,” she 
said. “I was excited to share it 
with everyone else.”

Dean’s research revolved 

around 
finding 
the 
best 

approach to the health issues 
caused 
by 
antimicrobial 

resistance 
when 
microbes 

resist medications previously 
used to treat them. She and 
her fellow group members 
explored 
how 
the 
rates 

of 
AMR 
changed 
when 

stewardship programs were 
implemented.

Despite the positive end 

product of the research, LSA 
freshman Daniel Evans, who 
looked at public opinion’s 
impact on the Paris climate 

agreement, said there were 
some challenges.

“It 
was 
very 
time 

intensive,” he said. “Given 
that it’s my first semester 
here, it’s my first exposure 
to more rigorous research, 
which I think is fun and 
rewarding, but it definitely 
took some time.”

Viau also noted he was 

The Michigan football team 

is headed to a New Year’s Six 
bowl — just not one it was 
hoping for a couple of weeks 
ago.

The 
Wolverines 
(7-2 
Big 

Ten, 10-2 overall), ranked sixth 
in the final College Football 
Playoff 
rankings 
released 

Sunday, announced today that 
they have accepted a bid to play 
in the Orange Bowl on Dec. 30 
in Miami Gardens, Fla. They 
will play their 45th all-time 
bowl game against Florida State 
(5-3 Atlantic Coast Conference, 
9-3 overall).

Michigan, ranked in the top 

four for most of the season, fell 
in the CFP rankings last week 
after losing at Ohio State on 
Nov. 26. Without a game this 
weekend, the Wolverines stayed 
on the outside of the playoff 
as other teams secured their 
spots. No. 1 and Southeastern 
Conference champion Alabama 
will play No. 4 and Pac-12 
champion Washington, and No. 
2 and ACC champion Clemson 
will play No. 3 Ohio State.

michigandaily.com
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Monday, December 5, 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. 40
©2016 The Michigan Daily

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

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

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

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

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

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

See ENTREPRENEURS, Page 3A

MAX KUANG/Daily

Michigan Supreme Court Justice Richard Bernstein, the first blind justice to ever serve on the court, presents on the value of inclusion at Michigan Hillel Sunday.

Richard Bernstein, Michigan 

Supreme Court justice, spoke 
on the importance of inclusion 
Sunday at the University of 
Michigan Hillel as part of the 
University’s 
Diversity, 
Equity 

and Inclusion initiative, a long-
term plan for increasing equity 
and inclusivity at the University.

Bernstein 
graduated 
from 

the University in 1996 and 
earned his law degree from 
Northwestern 
University’s 

School of Law. He practiced 
law alongside his brother Mark 
Bernstein — a University regent 

— and the rest of his family at 
The Sam Bernstein Law Firm 
until his election to the Michigan 
Supreme Court in 2014.

LSA 
junior 
Sarah 
Parkes, 

Hillel’s 
social 
action 
cohort 

chair, said she invited Bernstein, 
who has been blind since birth, to 
speak because she felt his voice 
was one the community needed 

to hear.

“We 
are 
an 
inclusive 

environment (where) everyone 
should feel comfortable and we 
feel like he has a lot to say about 
that,” Parkes said. “We’re having 
a tumultuous time on campus 
right now, and we’re looking for a 
way to promote inclusivity and a 

See BOWL, Page 3A

AMELIA CACCHIONE/Daily

LSA sophomore Alexandrea Somers gives a presentation at the Michigan Foreign Policy Council Fall Conference at 
Rackham Amphitheater Sunday. 

How Sweet It Is

The Michigan volleyball 

team erased an early deficit 
and topped Oregon, 3-1, on 
Friday night to advance to 
the Sweet 16 of the NCAA 

Tournament

» Page 1B

michigandaily.com

For more stories and coverage, visit

See POLICY, Page 3A

See BERNSTEIN, Page 3A

Fortune 
200 
automotive 

supply 
company 
Adient 

announced Wednesday that it 
would be moving its corporate 
headquarters to the Marquette 
Building in downtown Detroit’s 
historic financial district. Adient 
was recently created as an 
independent offshoot of Johnson 
Controls, 
a 
multinational 

technology corporation based in 
Milwaukee, Wis.

The company will bring 500 

jobs to the city, 100 of which 
will be newly created after 
the completion of the move, 
according to a press release. 
Adient plans to invest $98 million 
in Detroit in total, $75 million of 
which will be directed toward 
the acquisition and renovation of 
the Marquette Building.

The 
Marquette 
building 

renovation process is expected 
to last 24 months.

In a press release, Steve 

Arwood, Michigan Economic 
Development Corporation CEO, 
said Adient will be moving to a 
city that has both a long history 
with the automotive industry 

See DETROIT, Page 3A

‘U’ business 
programs get 
top rankings 
in 2016 list

Mich. Supreme Court Justice talks 
overcoming disability at Hillel

ACADEMICS

Princeton Review lauds campus 
entrepreneurship opportunities 

TIM COHN

Daily Staff Reporter

Richard Bernstein discusses battling adversity as a blind man

MAYA GOLDMAN

Daily Staff Reporter

‘M’ headed 
to Orange 
Bowl for 
postseason

FOOTBALL

Sixth-ranked Michigan 
to play Florida State in 
Miami on Dec. 30

JAKE LOURIM

Managing Sports Editor

At first annual conference, students 
present foreign policy research projects

Initiatives investigate Paris Climate Accords, government stability, antibiotics

DAVID DORSKY

For the Daily

Car supply 
company 
set to move 
to Detroit

DETROIT

Fortune 200 auto 
business Adient will 
bring 500 jobs to the city

KEVIN LINDER
Daily Staff Reporter

