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2 — Thursday, February 9, 2017
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

 
 

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

BLI Habit Workshop: 
Build a Team

WHAT: David Korus, founder of 
Owenoke Capital Management, 
will lead a workshop on 
effective team building.

WHO: Barger Leadership 
Institute

WHEN: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. 

WHERE: Ruthven Museums 
Building, Room 2009 

Prison Creative Arts 
Project Art Auction

WHAT: This auction is open to 
the community, all proceeds will 
go to support PCAP’s 22nd Annual 
Exhibition of Art by Michigan 
Prisoners.

WHO: The Prison Creative Arts 
Project

WHEN: 6:30 p.m. 

WHERE: Michigan League, 
Hussey Room

Detroiters Speak: 
Introduction

WHAT: The opening session 
of this semester’s Detroiters 
Speak series. There will be an 
introduction to the collaberative 
teaching team and dicussion on 
the purpose of education. 

WHO: Semester in Detroit

WHEN: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.

WHERE: Cass Corridor 
Commons, Detroit, Mich.

Slavic Studies Graduate 
Colloquium: Ukraine

WHAT: Slavic Studies graduate 
student Grace Mahoney will 
present her research on modern 
Ukrainian poet Iryna Starovoit

WHO: Slavic Languages and 
Literature

WHEN: 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. 

WHERE: Modern Languages 
Building, Room 3308

Mental Health Career 
Options

WHAT: Dr. Ashley Gearhardt 
will field questions on pursuing 
a career in the mental health 
field, specifically discussing the 
benefits of graduates degrees.
WHO: Department of Psychology

WHEN: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. 

WHERE: East Hall, Room 4448

“What You Want Is Not 
What You Need”

WHAT: Jonathan Barnbrook 
will give a talk as part of the 
Penny Stamps Speaker series. 
Barnbook is known for his 
collaberations with David Bowie

WHO: School of Arts & Design

WHEN: 5:10 p.m.

WHERE: The Michigan Theater

The Black Male Athlete

WHAT: The 3rd Annual W.M. 
Trotter Lecture will focus on the 
narratives of Black Male Athletes. 
The keynote speaker will be Ray 
Jackson, a member of the Fab 
Five.

WHO: Trotter Multicultural 
Center
WHEN: 6:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.

WHERE: Ross School of Business

Law & Economics: 
The Effect of Police 
Slowdowns

WHAT: UC Davis Prof. Andrea 
Chandrasekher will present her 
article on the 1997 New York 
City Police Department work 
slowdown.

WHO: Law & Economics

WHEN: 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

WHERE: South Hall, Room 1020

Tweets
Follow @michigandaily

#BBUM

@THEBSU
Situations like these remind 
us what we must fight for. 
The Black Student Union will 
not stand for racism, anti-
Semitism, and violence.

Larn @lauren_pryszcz

Wow why couldnt the chem 
building be on fire at a more 
convenient time (1-2:30)

Shaina Jansen 
@sjmarie14

The Chem building was lit 
today.....literally

Kandi

@Kandis_Terry 

Mojo cookies honestly make 
me re-evaluate my life’s 
purpose

Jalen Rose, one of 

the members of the Fab 

Five who brought the 

University of Michigan 

men’s basketball team to 

the 1992 and 1993 NCAA 

championship games, is 

heading to prime time. 

Written and produced 

by Nahnatchka Khan of 

“Fresh Off the Boat,” 

ABC’s newest show, 

“Jalen vs. Everybody,” 

will star Rose in a semi-

autobiographical comedy.

The show centers 

around Rose after his 

career in the NBA, as well 

as his current life as a 

sports broadcaster and a 

single dad.

Since ABC already 

owns the rights to the 

NBA Finals, “Jalen vs. 

Everybody” will be a 

natural fit in the network’s 

lineup.

After bringing the 

University’s basketball 

team into the national 

spotlight along with 

Jimmy King, Chris 

Webber, Ray Jackson and 

Juwan Howard, Rose 

played for multiple teams 

in the NBA. In 2007, he 

started working as an 

analyst for ESPN, and 

in 2012 he took a job as 

one of the hosts for NBA 

Countdown.

The roles of Rose’s 

mother and grandmother 

have also been cast in the 

show.

ABC did not yet release 

information on when the 

show will premiere, but it 

will definitely be included 

in ABC’s new cycle, along 

with 10 other slated pilots.

- MATT HARMON

ON THE DAILY: FAB FIVE GOES LIVE

MAX KUANG/Daily

Ann Arbor Fire Department firetrucks park outside the Chemistry building on Wednesday morning in 
response to a lab fire.

FIRE IN THE L AB

Tuesday night, Todd Sevig, 

director of University of Michigan 
Counseling 
and 
Psychological 

Services, gave Central Student 
Government an oversight of the 
organization’s current plans to 
expand mental health services 
unique to the differing majors on 
campus.

“It’s crucial that I … as director 

of CAPS — we, as CAPS — are here, 
engaging, listening, answering 
questions,” he said. “In the last 
approximately 15 years, we’ve 
almost doubled in size. We are 
starting a national search for new 
positions. We have been newly 
funded, if you will, for six new 
positions in CAPS.”

Sevig 
emphasized 
the 

importance of faculty and students 
working 
together, 
and 
how 

CAPS is currently expanding and 
adopting new positions this year. 

“When I think of how change 

happens in the University, I’m 99 
percent convinced that sustainable 
change, lasting change, happens 
in student, faculty, staff (and) 
administrators 
all 
working 

together,” Sevig said. “We are 
your counseling center. We do not 
exist for me; we do not exist for 
the staff … We are not a private 
counseling center; we are a student 
counselling center. Whatever we 
do needs to be grounded in what 
you all think is helpful, actually 
works, actually helps you, and not 
really what we think.”

Sevig also described a new 

program being implemented at the 
University, modeled after similar 
programs at other campuses. 
The program involves assigning 
a model to each school of the 
University, in order to understand 
the unique situations in each field 

or major.

“Northwestern 
and 
the 

University 
of 
Iowa 
were 

experimenting, piloting having 
one 
of 
their 
staff 
members 

devoting part of their time to one 
school or college,” Sevig said. “The 
staff member was physically in 
that college, and would provide 
services to only those students 
and would be able to consult with 
faculty and staff. I took that idea, 
transferred it to us, and people 
liked it.”

Sevig said CAPS started 

with this process on North 
Campus 
with 
full-time 

counselors in the College of 
Engineering, the School of 
Music, Theatre & Dance and 
the School of Art & Design. It 
also implemented a step that 
involved four more specialized 
counselors in the School of 
Dentistry, the Ross School of 
Business, the Law School and 

Rackham Graduate School. 
Sevig and his team met with 
the deans of every school and 
highlighted the differences 
in experiences and sources 
of anxiety for students in 
different schools, such as 
the College of Engineering 
and Music, Theatre & Dance 
School.

There are currently plans 

in progress to expand the 
embedded model and add 
more 
counselors 
to 
the 

program, as well as increase 
the number of positions in 
Central Campus CAPS.

School of Art and Design 

Representative Abigail Zrike 
said that though she liked 
the embedded model and 
that she’s definitely seen it’s 
effect on campus, she thinks 
that 
additional 
funding 

could also go towards other 
measures, such as making it 
more convenient to schedule 
an appointment at CAPS. 

Central Student Government hears 
from CAPS director about resources

Todd Sevig explains action being taken to expand services across North Campus

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