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News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
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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 $250 and year long subscriptions are $275.
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for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid.
DAYTON HARE
Managing Editor haredayt@michigandaily.com
RIYAH BASHA and SOPHIE SHERRY
Managing News Editor news@michigandaily.com
Senior News Editors: Andrew Hiyama, Carly Ryan, Kaela Theut, Matt Harmon,
Maya Goldman
Assistant News Editors: Jordyn Baker, Remy Farkas, Riley Langefeld, Elizabeth
Lawrence, Rachel Leung, Molly Norris, Maeve O’Brien, Shannon Ors, Amara
Shaikh, Katherina Sourine
ANU ROY-CHAUDHURY and ASHLEY ZHANG
Editorial Page Editors
tothedaily@michigandaily.com
Senior Opinion Editors: Elena Hubbell, Emily Huhman, Jeremy Kaplan, Tara
Jayaram, Ellery Rosenzweig
MIKE PERSAK and ORION SANG
Managing Sports Editors sportseditors@michigandaily.com
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Managing Arts Editors
arts@michigandaily.com
Senior Arts Editors: Becky Portman, Sam Rosenberg, Arya Naidu, Dominic
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Arts Beat Editors: Danielle Yacobson, Danny Hensel, Erika Shevchek, Matt
Gallatin, Naresh Iyengar
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design@michigandaily.com
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Statement Editor statement@michigandaily.com
Deputy Editors: Colin Beresford, Jennifer Meer, Rebecca Tarnopol
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Managing Video Editor video@michigandaily.com
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JUEUI HONG
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CAROLINE GOLD
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Senior Photo Editors: Amelia Cacchione, Emma Richter, Evan Aaron
Assistant Photo Editors: Claire Meingast, Sam Mousigian, Aaron Baker, Ryan
McLoughlin, Alec Cohen
Senior Sports Editors: Laney Byler, Mark Calcagno, Robert Hefter, Max
Marcovitch, Paige Voeffray, Ethan Wolfe
Assistant Sports Editors: Aria Gerson, Ben Katz, Tien Le, Anna Marcus, Ethan
Sears, Jacob Shames
THURSDAY:
Twitter Talk
FRIDAY:
Behind the Story
MONDAY:
Looking at the Numbers
TUESDAY:
On The Daily
WEDNESDAY:
This Week in History
THIS WEEK IN HISTORY: OLD MAIN HOSPITAL WALLS COME DOWN
Jan 11, 1989
By Dan Godson
Daily Staff Reporter
When an eight-ton demolition
ball
tore
into
the
former
Neuropsychiatric
Institute
of the University’s Old Main
Hospital complex yesterday, it
symbolically started the end of
an era.
The 63-year old building has
been doomed for years, since the
University began planning for its
eventual replacement.
The estimated cost for the
demolition project— which is
expected to be completed in
July— is in excess of $8 million,
said Paul Spradlin, University
Direction of Plant Extension
and director of the demolition
project. This includes removal
of asbestos and the basement,
restoration of the site, and
replacement of the grass.
The University’s Board of
Regents decided in January
of 1987 that it would be more
cost-efficient to demolish the
old building than to spend
the estimated $3.2 million to
maintain it.
Since then, “Old Main” has
slowly been readied for its
demolition days. Although it was
originally slated for demolition
by
explosives,
O’Rourke
Construction
Company
of
Cinncinnati is demolishing it
with a series of wrecking ball
strikes in an attempt to save
money.
Most time consuming was the
removal of asbestos from the
building’s structure. “You can’t
demolish (the building) until the
asbestos is removed,” Spralin
said.
The asbestos removal took
several months because it was
in the “insulation pipes, floor
tiles, doors, and just about
everything,” Spradlin said.
After
the
new
University
Hospital was opened in 1986, the
7500,000 square-foot Old Main
building was vacated.
Nothing is scheduled to fill
the site after it is cleared, but
the “land will be available for
construction in the future,” said
Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann
Arbor).
Deer cull opponents fired
back at City Council members
Monday night armed with
LED-clad
posters
spelling
“#SAVE THE DEER.” The
protest was staged on Huron
Street outside Ann Arbor City
Hall coinciding with the first
City Council meeting of 2018.
Approximately
16
people
attended the protest organized
by Friends of Ann Arbor
Wildlife and Nature.
Despite
the
flashiness,
FAAWN members viewed the
protest as a somber occasion,
marking the start of the three-
week deer cull season. They
described the event as a “vigil.”
The
deer
cull
was
established by the city of Ann
Arbor in 2016 to manage local
deer populations. This year
the city will devote $35,940 of
budget to hire sharpshooters
from
White
Buffalo
Inc.
who are permitted to kill a
maximum of 250 deer. The
cull permit is issued by the
Michigan
Department
of
Natural Resources.
FAAWN member Lorraine
Shapiro shared her perspective
regarding the deer cull with
council members.
“This is the day that I and
others
have
been
outside,
hoping to see our deer — and
we know our deer by how they
look — one last time before
they are killed,” Shapiro said
to MLive. “This is the day that
I wish I did not live in Ann
Arbor. And this is the day you
should not be very proud of
yourself for your rush to kill
and your disregard of public
safety”
One of the chief concerns
expressed
by
FAAWN
members is the safety of those
whose property is close to one
of the designated shooting
zones.
According to MLive, council
members
did
not
respond
to the protesters, but some
supporters
driving
by
the
demonstration participated by
honking their horns.
With
Michigan’s
gubernatorial
election
looming
ahead,
Progress
Michigan,
a
Lansing-based
progressive organization that
works to hold government
officials accountable, is calling
on Michigan Attorney General
Bill Schuette to investigate Lt.
Gov. Brian Calley’s absences
from the state Senate in 2013
and 2014.
In his state constitutional
role as president of the state
Senate, Calley missed 61 of
177 session days to travel to
Harvard University one day
a week to pursue a master’s
degree in public administration
from
Harvard’s
Kennedy
School of Government.
Calley said he was paying
for the transportation and
education himself, although
Progress Michigan says it is
now questioning whether he
used public funds to pay for
these expenses.
Progress Michigan is also
asking Schuette to investigate
if Calley ever paid the state
back for missing a third of
Senate session days. In a recent
press release, Lonnie Scott,
executive director of Progress
Michigan, says it is essential
to know if Calley put in the
proper amount of work for
taxpayers.
“Bill Schuette has the power
to get to the truth of the matter
and let us know if Calley was
serving himself instead of
working for the people of
Michigan and if he ever paid
back the state for hours he was
off when he should have been
working for taxpayers,” she
said.
Though the story of Calley’s
absences
broke
in
2014,
Schuette
never
questioned
Calley for his absences, and
they ran on the same ticket in
the 2014 gubernatorial race.
Now Calley is running for
the Republican gubernatorial
nomination against Schuette
and is joining Democrats in
publicly criticizing Schuette
for having political staffers on
the state payroll.
Calley is calling on Schuette
to
take
four
“constituent
relations” staffers off of the
state payroll, and Progress
Michigan is separately arguing
that Schuette is violating U.S.
law.
“Forcing
taxpayers
to
subsidize any officeholder’s
political ambition is a clear
and
disturbing
breach
of
the
public’s
trust,”
Calley
said in a public statement.
“Attorney General Schuette
should immediately move the
gubernatorial campaign field
staff exposed in the story off
the government payroll and
refund the state for all taxpayer
funds that were misspent on
political purposes.”
The University has opened
its second Clinical Simulation
Center,
a
7,500-square-foot
space
located
in
Medical
Science
Building
II.
The
new center goes beyond the
original,
smaller
facility,
allowing more than double
the amount of professionals
and students to train in a
simulation environment.
The
second
Clinical
Simulation Center is equipped
with
state-of-the-art
technology, such as various
adult and child mannequins
which have the ability to talk,
cry, breathe and have full
heart and lung sounds. These
mannequins respond to the
different medical interventions
that may be practiced by those
training there. The technology
allows professionals to train
for real-life scenarios in a low-
risk environment.
At
the
new
facility,
computer-based
simulation
lessons
guide
students,
physicians
and
nurses
through practice exams
and material. There are
five
inpatient
rooms
that imitate those in the
University Hospital, C.S.
Mott Children’s Hospital
and
Von
Voigtlander
Women’s Hospital. Such
rooms create a realistic
environment, in efforts to
mimic real life scenarios
as closely as possible.
Dr. James Cooke is an
associate
professor
of
learning health sciences
and
family
medicine
and
the
executive
director of the Clinical
Simulation
Center.
He
is a firm believer in the
effectiveness of simulation
learning.
In
a
press
release,
he
highlighted
how simulation learning
allows
interdisciplinary
teams to work together,
as well as provide and
receive valuable feedback.
“Debriefing
allows
learners to reflect on and
discuss
their
medical
decisions
and
allows
expert
facilitators
to
guide
teams
to
improve
communication,
efficiency
and
overall
performance,”
Cooke said. “Intentional and
well-designed practice leads to
better outcomes.”
Nursing junior Rachel Sabin
also believes in the power of
simulation learning.
“The opportunity to learn
from your mistakes is priceless
in the nursing field,” Sabin said.
“Working
through
realistic
clinical scenarios side-by-side
with my instructor has taught
me to think critically and
practice the skills that I learn
in lecture.”
The
School
of
Nursing
as a whole has shown its
commitment
to
simulation
learning,
opening
a
new
building in the fall of 2015
that includes six simulation
rooms. This allows students
to practice real-life situations
they may encounter while
working with patients.
Sabin is currently in her
obstetrics
rotation,
during
which she spends six hours
each week in the Nursing
School’s simulation center.
“I
feel
so
much
more
confident
when
I
am
interacting with ‘real’ patients
at the hospital,” Sabin said.
“The new simulation center
will allow even more students
to
refine
their
skills
and
ultimately
improve
patient
safety.”
SHANNON ORS
Daily Staff Reporter
MAEVE O’BRIEN
Daily Staff Reporter
MAEVE O’BRIEN
Daily Staff Reporter
JESSICA GREENE/ Former Daily Photographer
ON THE DAILY: FAAWN FIRES BACK
Progress Michigan to investigate Lt. Gov Calley
‘U’ opens second Clinical Simulation Center