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2 — Friday, April 7, 2017
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
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Univ. of Michigan
@UMich
.@DrSanjayGupta earned a
U-M BS in 1990, MD in ‘93,
then became a neurosurgeon
and @CNN chief medical
correspondent. #UMich200
Michigan Students
@UMichStudents
Favorite part of Spring: No
one has any idea what to
wear. Shorts? Parka? One of
those hats with an umbrella?
#seenoncampus #truestory
Connor Borrego
@BorregoSauced
why can’t @CoachJim4UM
just give our commencement
speech? #freethekhakis
Land of 10 Michigan
@Landof10MICH
Ken Griffey Jr. says he would
have played at Michigan had
he chosen football #GoBlue
CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES
Decolonizing Diversity
WHAT: Anneeth Kaur
Hundle, assistant professor of
anthropology at the University
of California-Merced, will
lead a discussion on critical
feminist ethnographies of
diversity work.
WHO: The College of LSA
WHEN: 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
WHERE: West Hall, Room 411
Africa-China Conference
WHAT: Multi-disciplinary
scholars will explore the
environmental, social and
economic relationships between
China and Africa.
WHO: Department for
Afroamerican and African Studies
WHEN: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
WHERE: Michigan League,
Henderson Room
Out of the Ordinary
WHAT: The Clements Library
is displaying some of the most
extraordinary objects in its
collection, which it has been
building since 1923.
WHO: William L. Clements
Library
WHEN: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
WHERE: William Clements
Library, Avenir Foundation Room
200 Years and the Law
WHAT: For the bicentennial,
Student Legal Services will
display a comprehensive history
of laws affecting the student
experience, focusing on Title IX.
WHO: Student Legal Services
WHEN: 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.
WHERE: Duderstadt Center,
Room 1019
Bicentennial Tree
Planting
WHAT: The Bicentennial Office
will hold a ceremony to plant
an elm sapling on the northwest
corner of the Diag, continuing
the legacy of planting on the Diag
from the 1850s.
WHO: Bicentennial Office
WHEN: 11:30 a.m. to Noon
WHERE: Central Campus Diag
Community of Cultures
Festival
WHAT: The Bicentennial Office
has put together a combination
of performances and food
samplings to celebrate UM’s
diversity.
WHO: Bicentennial Office
WHEN: 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.
WHERE: Pierpont Commons
and the Duderstadt Center
Tech Talk: Spotting Fake
News
WHAT: ITS will give a
presentation about how to
identify fake news and find
trsutworthy news sources.
WHO: Information and
Technology Services
WHEN: 11 a.m. to Noon
WHERE: Michigan Union, Room
G312
Annual UM-Pakistan
Conference
WHAT: Artists, activists and
academics will participate
in a conference on the roles
of gender and sexuality in
Pakistan’s past and present.
WHO: Center for South Asian
Studies
WHEN: 9:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
WHERE: School of Social
Work, Room 1636
420 Maynard St.
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327
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The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the
University OF Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily’s office
for $2. Subscriptions for September-April are $225 and year long subscriptions are $250. University affiliates are subject to a
reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a
member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press.
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Amid heavy rain and wind on
Thursday, the National Weather
Service warned of possible Huron
River flooding in Ann Arbor,
according to MLive.
Wednesday evening, the
National Weather Service issued a
hydrologic outlook report, noting
potential flooding in the area,
including Swartz Creek in Flint and
the Huron River.
As of Thursday afternoon, the
river reached 14.9 feet. At 15 feet, it
could flood Riverside Park, Island
Park and the Fuller Recreation Area
— frequented city destinations. At 16
feet, the dirt parking lot of Riverside
could face flooding and nearby city
drains could face backups.
The river’s “action stage,” which
requires the National Weather
Service or a partner to mitigate
effects, occurs at 13.5 feet. Its “flood
stage” occurs at 16 feet, according to
the National Weather Service.
A special weather statement
released around 8:30 p.m. Thursday
night indicates light snowfall across
the region for the remainder of the
evening. The statement also warns
of slippery conditions on roadways,
wind gusts up to 45 mph and
decreased visibility due to snow.
A wind advisory was in effect
until 6:00 a.m. Friday morning.
ON THE DAILY: STORM MAY CAUSE FLOODING IN HURON RIVER
JEREMY MITNICK/Daily
Students eat lunch with University alum Dr. Allison Davis, cultural property analyst in the Cultural Heritage Center of the U.S.
Department of State, to discuss her career in Latin America on Thursday.
CONVE R SATIONALIST
of assaults are reported, and
Take Back the Night raises
awareness for such a relevant
issue.
“For
one
night
every
year, the rally provides an
exceptional
opportunity
to raise awareness for this
issue that is so critical, and
unfortunately for many of us,
too close to home,” Warren
said. “So we march tonight, we
rally today in solidarity, with
countless survivors.”
In lieu of a keynote speaker,
event organizers chose to have
Public Health student Traci
Ayub
and
LSA
sophomore
Vivian Trutzl recite personal
poems
regarding
their
experiences
with
sexual
violence.
“It was from a rape poem
that I discovered I was a
survivor too,” Trutzl said.
“Keep writing rape poems,
keep getting pissed.”
Throughout
the
event,
volunteer
psychological
counselors,
identifiable
by white arm bands, were
available for those who needed
to discuss the heavy subject
matter. Furthermore, those
who chose to identify as
survivors wore teal armbands.
March participant Kimmy
Thompson,
a
student
at
Concordia University, said she
believes getting students to
participate in sexual assault
awareness is more impactful
than using adults and other
organizations.
“Get
students
involved,
make it heard through the
students,” she said. “Adults
and organizations can say all
they want, but making the
issue more student driven is
important.”
Following the completion
of
the
speeches,
march
participants picked up colorful
signs
and
blue
balloons,
signifying those killed in acts
of sexual violence, and began
reciting the organization’s list
of demands. These demands
ranged from “no means no”
to ending sexual violence and
other forms of oppression.
Once outside, the group
released the balloons into the
air as a symbol of hope for
survivors, before commencing
the march and chanting to end
sexual assault.
LSA junior Kelly Guerin,
student leader of Michigan
Takes Back the Night, said
she
first
became
involved
with the organization after
taking a self-defense class in
high school and realizing she
wanted to get involved with
sexual assault prevention on
campus.
“I’m a junior now, but when
I was a senior in high school,
they made all the girls take
a self-defense course, and
half the self-defense course
was about awareness about
rape and sexual assault and
how to prevent it on college
campuses, and the second
half was self-defense,” she
said. “I did karate so I knew
all about the self-defense
part of it, but I really
wanted to get more involved
with the activism side of it,
because I was never really
exposed to that in high
school.”
She explained how the
organization
aided
her
in deciding to become a
lawyer, as well as largely
impacted her life in general.
“I feel like it’s really
impacted my life because
I want to be a lawyer, I
want to advocate for people
who are victims of rape
and sexual assault, so this
organization has definitely
had a huge impact on my
life,” she said.
NIGHT
From Page 1
Adults and
organizations
can say all they
want, but making
the issue more
student driven is
important