2 — Thursday, February 22, 2018 The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com FRIDAY: Behind the Story MONDAY: Looking at the Numbers News TUESDAY: By Design WOLVE RINE OF THE WE E K AARON BAKER/Daily WEDNESDAY: This Week in History 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ARTS SECTION arts@michigandaily.com SPORTS SECTION sports@michigandaily.com ADVERTISING dailydisplay@gmail.com NEWS TIPS news@michigandaily.com LETTERS TO THE EDITOR tothedaily@michigandaily.com EDITORIAL PAGE opinion@michigandaily.com NATHAN GUPTA Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 nathankg@michigandaily.com ALEXA ST. JOHN Editor in Chief 734-418-4115 ext. 1251 alexastj@michigandaily.com PHOTOGRAPHY SECTION photo@michigandaily.com NEWSROOM 734-418-4115 opt. 3 CORRECTIONS corrections@michigandaily.com 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. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. DAYTON HARE Managing Editor haredayt@michigandaily.com RIYAH BASHA and SOPHIE SHERRY Managing News Editors 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 DANIELLE YACOBSON and MADELEINE GAUDIN Managing Arts Editors arts@michigandaily.com Senior Arts Editors: Becky Portman, Sam Rosenberg, Arya Naidu, Dominic Polsinelli Arts Beat Editors: Danny Hensel, Erika Shevchek, Matt Gallatin, Naresh Iyengar ALEXIS RANKIN and KATELYN MULCAHY Managing Photo Editors photo@michigandaily.com ROSEANNE CHAO and CASEY TIN Managing Design Editors design@michigandaily.com BRIAN KUANG Statement Editor statement@michigandaily.com Deputy Editors: Colin Beresford, Jennifer Meer, Rebecca Tarnopol FINN STORER and ELISE LAARMAN Managing Copy Editors copydesk@michigandaily.com Senior Copy Editors: Emily Stillman and Allie Bopp BOB LESSER and JORDAN WOLFF Managing Online Editors lesserrc@michigandaily.com Senior Web Developers: Patricia Huang, Abna Panda, Hassaan Ali Wattoo, Rebecca Tung IAN HARRIS Managing Video Editor video@michigandaily.com Senior Video Editors: Abe Lofy, Robby Weinbaum, Jillian Drzinski, Danielle Kim JASON ROWLAND and ASHLEY TJHUNG Michigan in Color Editors michiganincolor@michigandaily.com Senior Michigan in Color Editors: Lorna Brown, Zainab Bhindarwala, Christian Paneda, Nisa Khan, Na’kia Channey Assistant Michigan in Color Editors: Angelo McKoy, Kareem Shunnar, Maya Mokh, Priya Judge, Efe Osagie ANNA HARITOS and KAYLA WATERMAN Managing Social Media Editors Editorial Staff Business Staff EMILY RICHNER Sales Manager DEANA ZHU and JEFFREY ZHANG Marketing Managers CAROLINE GOLD Media Consulting Manager CLAIRE BUTZ Business Development Manager JULIA SELSKY Local Accounts Manager SANJANA PANDIT Production Manager 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 Sudoku Syndication http://sudokusyndication.com/sudoku/generator/print/ 1 of 1 9/15/08 9:40 AM SUDOKU MEDIUM 4 8 9 6 1 5 4 3 2 7 8 6 2 4 3 8 2 3 2 4 5 8 1 8 1 3 6 4 2 GUCCI puzzle by sudokusyndication.com THURSDAY: Twitter Talk JoseJuan @josejuan_vega This lady visiting Umich w/ her daughter tried to give her finished plate to the lady cleaning the table in the dining hall and she goes: “what you think you at Red Lobster?” Then walked away Austin McCoy @AustinMcCoy3 Welp, some of those questions were racist #UMDistrupting snassidy @cassidoe oOOOOH BABY when you get that class is cancelled email <3 <3 <3 <3 UMich Catholics @UmichCatholics I was supposed to go work out and instead I’m at Bdubbs. Life comes at you fast. Univ. of Michigan @UMich Is your @UMichStudents texting about U-M? Here’s how to tell: LOL=Lots Of Lectures SML=So Much Learning LAB=Leaders And Best OMG= Oh Michigan’s Great MSU= Must Study at Ugli OSU= Gross Sciuridae Michigania @ArborSquirrel Midterms got you stressed out? Doubting yourself? You can do this! You were meant to be here! I believe in you! CSG party profiles: Meet True Blue, Arathi Sabada and Marriane Drysdale In run-up to March elections, party platform calls for more safe and accessible campus What are your plans for spring break? “Go back home and then fill out FAFSA and worry about exams that are going to happen after the break.” LSA sophomore David Geering As students gear up for the University of Michigan’s Central Student Government elections on March 21 and 22, The Daily sat down with executive candidates to talk platforms, vision, and plans. In this installment, we profile the True Blue party, headlined by presidential candidate Arathi Sabada and vice presidential candidate Marianne Drysdale. Business junior Arathi Sabada, True Blue’s presidential candidate, got involved with Central Student Government almost as soon as she stepped onto campus her freshman year. She decided it was time to run for president after seeing the importance of engaging with the student body. “I got involved with CSG my first semester freshman year so it was a very new experience, and I had so many incredible mentors, and it gave me an amazing platform to work on issues I saw on campus,” Sabada said. “When I was going through tough times, CSG really helped me in terms of programs that it had, so seeing what the platform did for me and seeing what it could do for other students in terms of the work (was important). I did a lot of work in terms of supporting student organizations with food insecurity on campus and seeing how powerful the platform was, and feeling like I had the experience to lead that organization is what inspired me to run. I also just really love engaging with different student organizations and talking to students on the Diag in my role as a former executive member, and working on a couple campaigns, that was something I was really looking forward to doing and inspired me to run.” LSA sophomore Marianne Drysdale, True Blue’s vice presidential candidate, said she felt like CSG was her first real community on campus, and felt compelled to run this semester after thinking about the impact the body has had on her own experience. “When I came to campus as a freshman, I knew that I wanted to get involved but I had no idea what I wanted to get involved in so I was definitely the kid at Festifall talking to every single booth,” Drysdale said. “I spent first semester feeling like really involved, but spending a lot of hours doing a lot of nothing, I felt like I wasn’t involved in anything that was really a tight-knit community. So when I ran on the campaign for CSG it was like the first moment where I was like, ‘Woah,’ I feel like I’m touching this really important work … Right now I’m a (CSG) chair position for communications, which is a lot of making sure students are engaging in student government and student government is engaging with students, which is a lot of what an executive position is. I also knew Arathi through working on the campaign last year, and when I found out she was running I was really excited to work on her campaign in whatever capacity possible and then the opportunity presented itself to be VP, and I took a minute to think about it and I thought, ‘You know, this is really something I could see myself doing and liking’ so it was totally unexpected.” Sabada said one of her party’s main policy points has to do with food insecurity. She is also committed to improving overall student experience. “There’s not a lot of grocery stores in the area. It’s really hard to have access to healthy and affordable food and I think there’s so many great orgs who are doing so much amazing work on campus, from Maize and Blue Cupboard to the Food Insecurity Taskforce, (and) I think CSG would be a really great way to scale up that work,” she said. “One thing that I’m really excited about is potentially hosting a pop-up grocery store in partnership with a local grocery store where they could come to campus and students could purchase that fresh and affordable produce as a shorter term initiative, and definitely working towards a longer-term initiative — eventually opening up a grocery store on campus where students can buy that healthy and affordable food, is something we’re really excited KAELA THEUT Daily News Editor Read more at MichiganDaily.com