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
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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.
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January 23, 2019 (vol. 127, iss. 58) - Image 2
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