SK Y HIGH IN COLOR ADO

ON THE DAILY: LIST SAYS ANN ARBOR THE PLACE TO GO FOR A CUP OF JOE

THIS WEEK IN HISTORY: STUDENTS SIT IN TO 
PROTEST RESEARCH

For those who require a 
daily fix of coffee, Ann Arbor 
is one of the best places to 
be, according to a ranking 
from ApartmentGuide.com. 
Ann Arbor made it as one of 
the top cities on Apartment 
Guide’s Top 10 Best Cities 

for Coffee Lovers list.
Apartment 
Guide 
credited 
Ann 
Arbor’s 
plethora of coffee shops in 
part to the University of 
Michigan, due to its high 
student 
enrollment 
and 
professor 
count. 
Coffee 
shops are a popular study 
destination for some, and 
give 
students 
a 
much-

needed coffee buzz to stay 
up late studying, according 
to Apartment Guide.
Ann Arbor is home to 37 
coffee shops. According to 
the graphic on Apartment 
Guide’s list, that’s one coffee 
shop 
per 
2,825 
people. 
These 37 coffee shops offer 
a variety of vibes, from 
more mainstream chains 

like 
Starbucks 
to 
local 
favorites like Roos Roast or 
Comet Coffee.
Though Ann Arbor is 
ranked as No.10 on the list, 
it beat out 40 other cities 
considered by Apartment 
Guide. Coffee connoisseurs: 
Ann Arbor coffee shops may 
be the place for you. 

January 23, 1991
Thirty-five 
students 
began occupying an office 
in the Institute for Social 
Research (ISR) yesterday 
to “expose the University’s 
efforts to deceive us about 
its 
role 
in 
developing 
genocidal 
weapons,” 
according to a statement 
released by the group.
The 
occupation, 
scheduled to last 24 hours 
and organized by U of M 
Students Against U. S> 
Intervention in the Middle 
East (SAUSI), began at 
noon when the protesters 

entered the Division of 
Research Development and 
Administration 
(DRDA) 
office on the second floor 
of the ISR.
SAUSI 
informed 
University 
President 
James Duderstadt and Ann 
Arbor Police late Monday 
night of their plans, to 
assure th em of their non-
violent intentions.
The group did not release 
the time and location of 
the 
sit-in 
until 
Daniel 
Kohns, publicity chair and 
SAUSI committee member, 
revealed the information 

at the press conference 
at 
the 
Cube 
moments 
after students entered the 
building.
The aims of the sit-in 
include the following:
To 
encourage 
the 
University not to aid in 
the prosecution of student 
resisters in the event of a 
draft.
To 
persuade 
the 
University 
to 
redirect 
its resources away from 
research and development 
of 
“weapons 
of 
mass 
destruction” 
and 
to 
increase the accessibility 

of 
higher 
education 
to 
people 
of 
color 
and 
the 
economically 
disenfranchised. 
To 
gain 
access 
to 
information regarding the 
extent of the University’s 
involvement 
in 
military 
research and development.
The student occupying 
the 
building 
did 
not 
encounter any resistance 
upon 
entering 
as 
they 
settled in the spacious 
office 
of 
Alan 
Steiss, 
director 
of 
DRDA. 
Protesters said Steiss was 
very accomodating.

2A — Wednesday, January 23, 2019
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
News

EVAN AARON/Daily
I spent the long weekend skiing with my friends in Beaver Creek, Colorado - and I brought along my drone with me. The Rocky Mountains always impress me with their size and beauty, even this 360 degree panorama doesn’t do it justice.

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CSG discusses potential new ‘U’ student 
housing, new educational values 

Represenatives talk Board of Regents’ purchase of 24.6 acres on 5th Ave, E. Madison St.

ELIZABETH LAWRENCE
Managing News Editor

The University of Michigan 
Central Student Government 
discussed adopting a set of 
undergraduate 
education 
values 
established 
by 
a 
University task force and 
a possible location for new 
student housing at a meeting 
Tuesday evening.
Kevin 
Jiang, 
a 
former 
assembly member and 2018 
alum, spoke to the Student 
Assembly regarding a new 
value set to describe the 
mission of the University’s 
entire 
undergraduate 
education 
program. 
According to Jiang, the task 

force wants more student 
input in the list of values to 
ensure the values reflect the 
beliefs of the University.
“We want to first put out 
a set of values that we want 
our university to live by when 
it comes to undergraduate 
education,” 
Jiang 
said. 
“Second, we want to put out 
a set of challenges that our 
undergraduate population is 
faced with now, and third, we 
are trying to figure out what 
the various pilot programs 
on campus that are already 
living by those values are.”
Values on the initiative 
currently 
being 
proposed 
include “brave exploration, 

greater 
good, 
purposeful 
inclusion, 
collaborative 
spirit, well-being and self-
determination.” 
Jiang 
emphasized 
the 
task 
force’s efforts to work with 
Counseling and Psychological 
Services 
to 
include 
more 
clinical counselors on North 
Campus.
Members of the Assembly 
were given the opportunity 
to respond to the suggested 
value set. Rackham student 
Austin 
Glass 
suggested 
including 
“community 
expansion” as an additional 
value.
“I 
think 
it’s 
worth 
evaluating whether or not 
you 
include 
something 
about 
expanding 
our 
community,” 
Glass 
said. 
“One of the problems the 
University faces now is not 
being representative of the 
state of Michigan … I think 
it’s worth expanding it.”
The 
assembly 
later 
discussed the University’s 
Board of Regents’ recent 
purchase of the former 
location 
of 
Fingerle 
Lumber. The 6.54 acres 
of 
land 
was 
purchased 
on Dec. 6 for $24 million 
after 
Fingerle 
Lumber 
announced 
its 
closing 
earlier that month. The 
land 
is 
located 
along 
Fifth Ave. and south of E. 
Madison St. Although the 
Board of Regents has not 
announced what they plan 
to do with the land, the 
location was discussed as 
a possible location for new 
student housing.
CSG 
Vice 
President 
Izzy 
Baer 
mentioned 
the lack of demand for 
student 
housing 
among 
upperclassmen. She said 

because many sophomores 
are more interested in off-
campus housing, building a 
new dorm may not appeal to 
upperclassmen.

“I’m 
skeptical 
if 
there 
is a need for sophomores 
to 
continue 
living 
with 
on-campus housing versus 
making this a more apartment 
style, 
non-dorm 
concept,” 
Baer said.
Law student Kevin Deutsch 
also 
explained 
his 
own 
experience with the location.

“I 
live 
right 
behind 
Fingerle Lumber, and not 
only are there train tracks 
there but trains come in at 
three in the morning, and 
they are very loud,” Deutsch 
said. “The actual streets are 
not designed very well to 
handle the traffic that a dorm 
would bring.”
For the location to be a 
possible 
place 
of 
student 
housing, 
the 
Assembly 
discussed implementing new 
bus routes, creating safety 
standards regarding the train 
tracks and the possibility of 
marketing the dorm toward 
athletes, as it is close to South 
Campus.

BARBARA COLLINS
Daily Staff Reporter

It’s worth 
evaluating whether 
or not you include 
something about 
expanding our 
community.

