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Series victory produces third straight 30-win season

By: Drew Claussen

The Gophers softball team has won 30 games for the third straight season after taking two of three from Ohio State during the weekend.

It’s the first time since 2002-04 that the Gophers have won 30 games in three straight seasons. Minnesota has five games left in the regular season.

The turnaround is in sync with the hiring of Jessica Allister, who is in her third season as the Gophers’ head coach.

“It’s a reflection of the work that they’re putting in every day,” Allister said. “They’re feisty, and they’re competitive.”

Minnesota beat Ohio State 3-0 on Friday and 7-2 on Saturday before falling 14-6 on Sunday.

“Any time you can go on the road in the Big Ten and win the series, it’s a good weekend,” Allister said.

The Buckeyes held a 3-0 lead entering a rain delay Sunday. They scored four more times after the delay in the bottom of the third inning to take a 7-0 lead.

The Gophers, led by sophomore Erika Smyth’s three-run home run, responded with six runs in the fourth inning to cut the lead to one.

But Minnesota got no closer. Ohio State added runs in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings to lock up the win.

“We didn’t pitch very well, we didn’t play very good defense and we didn’t swing the bat so well,” Allister said. “It was a tough day; we’ve got to get two of those three things well to win.”

Minnesota broke out the bats Saturday en route to its 30th victory.

Sophomore Madie Eckstrom extended an early lead to 5-1 with a two-run home run in the top of the third inning.

Sara Moulton’s one-hitter highlighted Friday’s victory. The junior ace pitched all seven innings, walked two and struck out 11. Sophomore leadoff hitter Tyler Walker went 3-for-4 with two RBIs in the game.

“I think we played very well on Friday and Saturday,” Allister said. “We did a tremendous job of pitching, playing defense and getting timely hits.”

Allister said she thought Friday’s game was one of the team’s best showings of the season.

Moulton (26-9) earned the win in both of the Gophers’ victories this weekend.

 

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Men fall in Big Ten semifinals, eye NCAAs

By: Dane Mizutani

The Gophers men’s tennis team lost in the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament, but head coach Geoff Young said he’s satisfied with the way his team performed during the weekend.

Minnesota defeated Michigan State 4-0 on Friday and then lost 4-3 to Michigan on Saturday in Columbus, Ohio.

“That couldn’t have gone much better against Michigan State, and with Michigan … we knew it was going to come down to the wire,” Young said. “It just didn’t go our way that time.”

The Gophers took the doubles point against the Spartans before sophomores Jack Hamburg and Leandro Toledo and junior Juan Pablo Ramirez won in singles to clinch the match for the team.

Minnesota also won the doubles point against the Wolverines — a team it beat 4-3 earlier this season — but couldn’t hold on. The Wolverines took four of the six singles matches.

“There was obviously some disappointment, but at the same time the guys were satisfied with the way we competed,” Young said.

The Gophers had already clinched a berth in the NCAA tournament because their record is above .500.

Young said he was impressed with his doubles squads during the weekend and said that aspect of the team could be a strength in the NCAA tournament.

Minnesota will have almost two weeks off from competition before the start of the NCAA tournament. The Gophers have played two matches every weekend since late March.

Young said last week that his team is fatigued and that this stretch will serve as a good break.

He said it will be “a balance between staying in shape and getting some rest,” but he said there’s no doubt his squad will remain focused in that time.

“We need to recognize that this next phase of the season is another opportunity for us to knock off some great teams,” he said. “I’d say we’re playing as well now as we have all year.”

Women end season with quarterfinal loss

The women’s tennis team’s season ended with a 4-0 loss to Nebraska on Friday in the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals in Bloomington, Ind.

The Gophers upset Penn State 4-1 in Thursday’s first round. Head coach Chuck Merzbacher said there’s reason for optimism with this group.

“We were relentless on every court … and that was what we were really shooting for with this team,” he said.

Merzbacher has emphasized the youth of his squad all season. He said the weekend served as a great opportunity for younger players to see the ins and outs of a major tournament.

“That’s something you can’t really replace,” he said. “It was good for them to see that kind of environment, and it will help down the road.”

Minnesota won the doubles point against the Nittany Lions. Singles victories from freshman Paula Rincon Otero, sophomore Aria Lambert and senior Alexa Palen clinched the match for the team.

But the Gophers didn’t score a team point against Nebraska. They had struggled similarly in a 6-1 loss to the Huskers on April 19.

“We’ve got something to build on,” Merzbacher said. “I’m really proud of the young kids. They’ve stepped up all year for us.”

Minnesota will miss the NCAA tournament in a couple of weeks. But Merzbacher said this is just the tip of the iceberg for his team.

“I don’t even feel like the season is really over because everyone is focused and excited to keep getting better,” he said. “We’re going to continue to grow and build the program.”

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Gophers overcome Friday meltdown

By: Samuel Gordon

Blowing a five-run lead in the eighth inning is a demoralizing way to lose a baseball game for most teams.

Not the Gophers.

Minnesota shrugged off Friday’s 10-inning 10-9 loss and cruised past Iowa on Saturday and Sunday in Iowa City, Iowa.

The Gophers (9-3 in the conference) sit atop the Big Ten with three more conference series to play.

“A lot of teams would have never recovered from what happened on Friday,” head coach John Anderson said. “It was only one game. We didn’t let it turn into two, three or four. I was proud of the way they responded.”

The Gophers took a 9-4 lead into the bottom of the eighth inning Friday with junior ace Tom Windle on the mound.

Windle issued a pair of one-out walks, and Anderson summoned reliable senior closer Billy Soule to end the jam.

But Soule walked the bases loaded, and Hawkeyes right fielder Kris Goodman sent Soule’s 2-2 offering over the left-center field fence.

Iowa tied the game in the ninth and won it in the bottom of the 10th when Gophers sophomore Ty McDevitt hit a Hawkeyes batter with the bases loaded.

“It became a matter of ‘Let’s get this game over with, and let’s get on to the next one,’” senior right fielder Kurt Schlangen said. “We didn’t put them away.”

Anderson and his team regrouped after Friday’s game, and the Gophers buried the Hawkeyes early Saturday.

Minnesota scored seven runs in the third inning and rode junior right-hander Alec Crawford to victory.

Junior catcher Matt Halloran went 2-for-5 with four RBIs. Senior third baseman Ryan Abrahamson went 4-for-5 with an RBI. Schlangen was 3-for-4 and scored a pair of runs.

Crawford allowed two runs in seven innings, and Minnesota coasted to an easy 10-2 victory.

“We do a good job of turning the page quickly,” Halloran said. “We have all year.”

Sunday’s game followed a similar script. Minnesota held a 6-1 lead after five innings and scored three more runs in the seventh en route to a 9-5 victory.

Schlangen went 3-for-5 with two RBIs. Redshirt sophomore shortstop Michael Handel was 3-for-4 with an RBI. Halloran was 2-for-5 with an RBI.

The Gophers had 14 hits Friday and 15 hits in both Saturday and Sunday’s games.

The weekend was easily the Gophers’ best offensive performance of the season. Schlangen said it was the best offensive output in a series since his freshman year.

Minnesota’s scheduled series against Michigan State last weekend was canceled, and the Gophers spent the weekend at practice focusing on hitting.

Anderson said those practices had something to do with the improvements.

“We had good at-bats up and down the lineup,” he said.

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Gophers settle for eighth at Big Ten championships

By: Nickalas Tabbert

The Gophers women’s golf team shot 57-over par to finish eighth out of 12 teams at the Big Ten championships during the weekend.

Minnesota played its best golf in the final round Sunday despite rain and wind at the Donald Ross Course in French Lick, Ind.

Purdue and Northwestern tied for first place at 20-over par.

Coach Michele Redman said she was pleased with her team’s finish given the limited amount of time the team has played outdoors this spring and where it was ranked entering the tournament.

Redman said the team finished rounds better than it did in previous tournaments.

Three Minnesota players had their best rounds Sunday, including sophomore Carmen Laguna. She shot 8-over par for the tournament to tie for ninth place.

“She managed herself around this golf course really well,” said Redman, who walked with Laguna on Sunday. “She made a lot of good key putts at the right time.”

Sophomore Anna Laorr finished tied for 26th, six shots behind Laguna. Laorr shaved 21 strokes off her score at last year’s tournament to improve from the team’s worst finisher to its second-best.

“She’s become such a better player than she was a year ago,” Redman said. “She can just really grind it out on the golf course.”

“The Gophers struggled in Friday’s opening round, shooting 24-over par.

“I think we hadn’t been outside,” she said. “I think it took us a couple rounds, and that’s OK.”

Redman said the team and Laguna have a chance to advance to the NCAA regional May 9. The Gophers will learn their fate Monday night when the NCAA tournament field is announced.

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Van Rooyen, team finish second at Big Ten meet

By: Nickalas Tabbert

Gophers senior Erik Van Rooyen shot 1-over par to finish tied for second at the Big Ten men’s golf championships during the weekend.

Van Rooyen used a 2-under-par opening round and an even-par closing round to lead Minnesota while recording his personal-best finish at the tournament.

The Gophers shot 20-over par to finish second out of 12 teams, their best finish at the event since 2009. But they needed to win the event to potentially keep their season alive.

Illinois edged Minnesota by nine strokes, pulling away late in the final round to win its fourth consecutive title.

Minnesota coach John Carlson said he knew his team’s narrow deficit as the Gophers and Illini played their final holes.

He said Minnesota cut the lead to two strokes with four holes left.

“We gave them our best shot this weekend,” Carlson said, “and they certainly had to respond with their best game also.”

Illinois played the final holes, especially the 18th hole, “in championship fashion,” he said.

Minnesota had three golfers finish in the top 12.

Van Rooyen used his driver and short game to position himself for an individual title, Carlson said. He was among the tournament leaders in birdies made.

“He really controlled his trajectory and his flight today with his golf ball,” Carlson said.

Jon DuToit finished tied for eighth place, six shots behind Van Rooyen. The Big Ten Freshman of the Year candidate had sat out of the lineup the past two weeks to rest his wrist.

“He came out and played great this week,” Carlson said. “He looks like a seasoned [veteran] when he plays. He walks around, he’s very confident in his ability, and he should be.”

DuToit rebounded from a 6-over-par performance Friday by shooting 2-over par in the final two rounds.

Senior Robert Bell finished 12th, one shot behind DuToit. His second- and third-round scores of 1-over par and 2-under par, respectively, propelled the Gophers on Friday and Saturday.

“[Robert] putted better than probably anyone this week, anyone in the field,” Carlson said.

Carlson said entering the weekend that he thought Minnesota could win the tournament.

“We were certainly peaking at the right time of the year to come in here and steal a Big Ten championship,” he said.

Minnesota will not advance to an NCAA regional because its record is below .500. Carlson said the team needed to win the tournament to have a chance.

Van Rooyen will advance individually, and DuToit will wait until regionals are announced May 7 to learn his fate.

Carlson said he was proud to see his team challenge for the title.

“Finishing second is a huge step in the right direction for our program,” he said.

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Acceptable oppression

By: Matthew Hoy

A very vocal minority of the U.S. population endorses and enables widespread, readily apparent Islamaphobia. The Boston Marathon bombings served as a stark reminder of this fact.

Take Abdulrahman Ali Al-Harbi, a 20-year-old Saudi man who was fleeing the explosions, badly injured, when a bystander who thought he looked suspicious tackled him. He was taken to the hospital while his apartment was searched in “a startling show of force” and has since become the subject of one of Glenn Beck’s insane conspiracy theories. Beck claims that this man is somehow connected to the bombings, should be considered a suspect and is being protected by a massive cover-up.

This conspiracy has been taken to even more absurd extremes, with some Beck followers claiming that Alharbi is the son of Osama Bin Laden.

The Internet has been a breeding ground of unwarranted suspicion and hatred in the time following the bombings. A quick Google search will yield pages and pages of tweets reacting to the tragedy, prematurely blaming it on Muslims and insisting, with plentiful racial slurs, that we ought to bomb predominantly Muslim countries.

These sentiments were acted upon after the explosions when angry Islamaphobic people committed hate crimes against a number of Americans for appearing Arabic. This level of racial assumption was not exclusive to emotionally affected citizens. Prominent members of the media found themselves reporting false information because of a need to have someone convenient to blame.

Two days after the bombings, CNN correspondent John King incorrectly reported that authorities had a “dark-skinned male” in custody as the primary suspect.

The New York Post printed two men on its cover, labeling them “Bag Men,” and implicating them as FBI suspects for the bombings just because they happened to have darker skin than the people standing around them.

It is easy to expect this from Beck and the less reliable news personalities, but King is a fairly well-respected journalist. And though his gaffe hasn’t gone unnoticed, I have trouble believing that, had his report been right, anyone outside of civil rights groups would have raised a fuss. A dark-skinned male is what everyone seemed to be expecting, after all.

The irrational hatred for Muslims and people of Middle Eastern descent is often justified with the erroneous argument that their religion is uniquely destructive and that their fundamentalists pose a great threat to the safety of Americans. The idea is that, while the majority of Muslims may be peaceful, good-natured citizens, almost every terrorist attack is committed by one.

It is a widespread assumption that is patently false. In early 2010, researchers at Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill released a study showing that the threat posed by Muslim extremists has been greatly exaggerated. According to the FBI, from 1980-2005 only 6 percent of domestic terrorist attacks were committed by “Islamic Extremists.”

Add in the fact that since 1970 there have been roughly 3,400 U.S. deaths from terrorist attacks, compared to the 116,000 firearm deaths from 2000-11, and our nation’s gruesome focus on terrorism and lack of resolve on gun control become more ridiculous.

When our news media’s determining factor for content is ratings, this bias toward sensationalism becomes necessary if outlets want to survive. It is for this reason that we’ve seen headlines like “Tax-Funded Jihad?” an absurd attempt to blame welfare for the creation of a terrorist.

And it’s not just our citizens or our newsmakers that hype this threat up and blame it on Muslims. Our politicians are well-seasoned veterans of the process.

In the weeks after the Boston Marathon bombings, politicians have scrambled to use the tragedy for political leverage, primarily using Tamerlan Tsarnaev as an example of how the pending immigration bill will leave our country more open to attack. This isn’t just Islamaphobic, it’s borderline xenophobic.

Politicians using horrific events to further political goals is nothing new, and often it’s necessary. But this borderline non sequitur requires the performance of some truly impressive mental gymnastics to even begin to rationalize. And all it does is contribute to the convenient oppression of a minority. When people argue that Islam is defined by the extremists that get an inordinate amount of media coverage, it’s the same as saying that Christianity is defined by the Klu Klux Klan, or that every Hispanic-American is defined by the Latin Kings.

The difference is that equating the vast majority of peaceful Muslims with their radical minority is socially acceptable, while the other examples would see you (rightfully) derided and labeled a bigot. We’re lucky to be at a time when social consciousness about oppression is expanding. It is important that our awareness of anti-Muslim sentiment follows suit.

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Not your baby

By: Bronwyn Miller

his weekend, in honor of the delightfully warm temps, I happily hopped out the front door in a skirt sans tights for the first time this year. I had barely skipped down my three front steps to the sidewalk when a car full of guys rolled by and they yelled, “Show us your boobs!” among a variety of other colorful statements. After honking up a storm, they then proceeded to blast “Candy Shop” and trail me going five miles an hour for two blocks. Needless to say, my thrilled attitude was crushed immediately.

Street harassment is defined as unwelcome and unwanted attention of a sexual nature, objectifying and targeting people of all genders. Nonprofit organization Stop Street Harassment enumerates its many forms: “catcalls, sexually explicit comments, sexist remarks, groping, leering, stalking, public masturbation and assault.”  And like mosquitoes and humidity, street harassment reminds us that warm weather is not all sunshine and rainbows.

When I lived in South America, it was a hissing that sounded more appropriate to shoo away a raccoon than acknowledge a person, a hissing that I literally still hear in nightmares sometimes. Here, it’s the man on the bus who tells me I have pretty eyes and then asks me if I like to be on top. It’s the yelling from car windows, kissing noises and whistles, surprise invasions of personal space and the “compliments” that are in fact just demeaning, threatening and discriminatory.

Street harassment happens everywhere: in First and Third World countries, low and high income communities, rural and urban areas and public and secluded settings. It’s not only intimidating, but according to Hollaback!, a worldwide, crowd-sourced initiative to end street harassment, it is a form of gender violence and a human rights violation. And sadly, the majority of women — more than 80 percent worldwide — and lesbian, gay, bisexual, queer and transgender/transsexual people will encounter gender-based street harassment in their lifetimes.

But when we complain about street harassment — in the moment or after the fact — we are often chastised for being a bitch, stuck up or ungrateful for the attention. We are accused of misinterpreting “flattery” for harassment and told to relax and stop being difficult and overly sensitive. We are sometimes told to stop getting our feminist panties in a bunch. More egregious, we are told that it is just an inevitable consequence of our decision to show some skin.

Encountering street harassment is a lose-lose situation. Women are told our entire lives — from the first day we lament the boy teasing us on the playground — to just ignore the treatment. But not responding to whoever is trying to holler at you opens you up to being disparaged as a snob for not being interested in the advances, an outcome that could potentially be accompanied by violence from someone who thinks you deserve to be taught a lesson. I don’t even want to think about what the response I secretly wish I could entertain — which would be BACK THE F UP — might elicit. On the other hand, being “polite” and giving a short greeting in return is also a slippery slope. Even the most abrupt and uninterested “hi” can be mistaken for showing interest and open the door for continued unwanted engagement.

After years of dealing with belittling, offensive and scary instances of street harassment, some of us might be slightly guarded. Because for every innocuous “good morning,” there have been five more instances in which the next words were along the lines of “it would be better if I could tap that ass!” To reasonable individuals who recognize the ubiquity and detriment of street harassment, I think it is understandable that being on the defense might be common at this point.

Yet, rest assured that even those of us who may be slightly guarded can generally discern an innocent compliment from street harassment quite well. A kind word or greeting delivered in a non-menacing way, even if it is from the stranger, will typically not be viewed as overly aggressive and offensive.

The other day, I held the door open for a man with a cane, and he told me I was “a lovely and dashing young woman.” It kind of made my day. The distinction between someone who is just being nice and someone who is being a stage-five creeper is accomplished pretty quickly. It must be in our genes.

On the mornings of warm days, I sometimes consider the probability of street harassment as I peruse my closet, but I hate that I do. I hate that I have sacrificed comfort and worn pants in the dead heat of summer to avoid street harassment because that implies I am its cause. Our fashion choices should not be dictated by the fear of what a stranger might say or do. An outfit is not an excuse to engage in sexual harassment, and even if we get so fed up that we calculatedly avoid the possibility of showing any leg or cleavage, we’re still leaving the house with a vagina. Our bodies will still be viewed by so many as public property, openly deserving of commentary and expectations. Street harassment is a daily reminder for women to sure-as-hell know our place and not forget that we are still seen as objects, around for the whimsy and entertainment of men, above which they can publicly assert their power.

To the catcallers: Never in my life have I seen a girl chase after a car whose passenger is honking at or yelling out to her. I would estimate the “success rate” of catcalling at a .00001 percent or less, so I think it’s time to drop the pervy, aggressive comments and try a new, less misogynistic strategy. A “Hello, how are you?” will have much greater effectiveness than a “Yo girl, your ass makes me wish I was that bike seat!” And don’t worry: Our self-esteem will survive without you incessantly expressing your “appreciation.”

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As standards skyrocket, so do barriers

By: Emma Nelson

Two decades ago, only 15 percent of University of Minnesota students graduated in four years. It was a problem the Board of Regents asked administrators to tackle in the years that followed.

In the early 2000s, regents set a goal that 60 percent of undergraduates would graduate in four years, and administrators started chipping away at it.

So the school restructured its admissions office, revamped first-year programming and instituted the 13-credit tuition charge to meet that goal. Later, administrators set a goal to become one of the top-three public research universities in the world by 2015 — a dream that brought with it the closure of the General College and the opening of the University Honors Program.

Today, the four-year graduation rate has quadrupled to nearly 60 percent. In fall 2012, the average admitted freshman scored 28 on the ACT and ranked in the top 15 percent of his or her high school class.

“There’s a whole group of excellent students who never would’ve looked at this University as a possibility in the 1990s who now make the University of Minnesota their first choice,” said Robert McMaster, vice provost and dean of undergraduate education.

But as more highly qualified students and those of higher-income backgrounds march in, those who may have attended the University in the past now see it as an elite institution — one that, with its increasing admissions standards and high price tag, might not be the place for them.

 

Changing direction

The University decided in 2005 that one of its efforts to serve underrepresented students no longer aligned with its overall goals.

A task force reported that the General College should close as part of a larger plan to improve the University’s standing among its peers.

The College, a precursor to modern community colleges, had its roots in the post-WWI era, when 60 percent of University students did not return after their first year. Many of these students — oftentimes veterans — were not prepared for college-level academics.

Arguably the biggest advocate for opening the General College was Lotus D. Coffman, the University’s president from 1920-38.

“[Coffman] believed, first of all, that a state university owed an opportunity to everyone. If a student failed, it wasn’t necessarily the fault of the student but more likely the failure of the university,” Allen B. Johnson, a former General College faculty member, wrote in a 2003 essay.

The College’s closure pointed to new values at the University, based largely on improving graduation rates.

While Coffman blamed a student’s failure on a university, administrators today are looking for students who can’t fail.

“The goal is to provide access to success for University of Minnesota students,” the task force’s 2005 report said. “Access that does not produce a degree in four-to-six years does not meet that goal.”

McMaster is hesitant to discuss the General College closing but said administrators at the time felt there were better ways to provide what the General College was offering.

While there are programs at the University, as well as the Post-Secondary Teaching and Learning department, that serve underrepresented students, they don’t serve as many students as the General College did.

TRiO, which was originally part of the General College, is a set of federally funded programs. One of them, TRiO Student Support Services, admits 150 freshmen at the University annually. To be admitted, students must come from a low-income background, be a first-generation college student, have a disability or show academic need.

“TRiO is … quite unique in that we’re still serving the population that General College was intended to serve,” said Amy Kampsen, the program’s director.

But while the General College admitted more than 800 students each year, TRiO is only able to serve about 300 students at once.

The President’s Emerging Scholars program is another that has stepped in to serve about 500 underrepresented students across the University.

But TRiO is the only existing program that serves the exact same population as the College did, Kampsen said.

TRiO students are typically in the program for two years, or until they declare a major. When they move into the larger University, Kampsen said, they can feel out of place among more typical University students.

“They might be the only person of color in the room — or ‘The only one like them,’ is what we get a lot in our surveys.”

Carlos Reyes, a senior who started in TRiO, said he’s noticed the level of “cultural understanding” is different outside of the program.

A business and marketing education major, Reyes is the son of Mexican immigrants and the first person in his family to attend college.

“I had potential, and I had drive,” he said. “And I’m happy to say that I made it.”

Because TRiO students take many of their classes together during the first two years, they develop a strong sense of community. And many come from similar backgrounds — whether they came from low-income households, are first-generation college students or went to inner-city high schools.

“We’re happy to see each other succeed,” he said, “which can be different from a lot of places on campus.”

 

Defining success differently

Kampsen was a low-income, first-generation college student herself.

In high school, she participated in track and field and ended up being recruited by college coaches who, she said, talked to her about sports not school.

“My first year was horrible,” she said. Her GPA was 1.9, and she ended up transferring and thinking about dropping out. Her second year was better, but she struggled to balance two jobs with athletics and academics.

Finally, the athletics director upped Kampsen’s scholarship so she could work less. She found a major she loved and later went on to graduate school.

Her undergraduate degree took five years, she said, “because I was first-generation — didn’t know what I was doing or how to do it.”

Learning skills like how to study and work independently took time, she said.

McMaster acknowledged that not all students can meet the four-year graduation goal — they might change their major, for example, or take time off because of financial difficulties.

“At any major university, you can’t have a 100 percent rate,” he said, but pointed to other Big Ten schools with rates higher than the University’s.

“I’m a competitive guy,” he said, “and so I see that Penn State’s at 65 percent … I think our four-year graduation rate ought to be better than that.”

 

‘College material’

To become a top institution, the University has made a habit of targeting top students.

“Our goal is to admit students who we know are going to graduate in a timely way,” McMaster said.

As standards have increased and University academics have become more rigorous, “the academic profile of our students has changed,” said David Arendale, an associate professor in PsTL.

Many of the department’s faculty members, including Arendale, worked in the General College.

Kampsen, who also worked there, said the University is targeting “students that are already college material.”

As initiatives to improve undergraduate education take effect, McMaster said, word spreads to students who may not have considered the University in the past. At the same time, the admissions office has “refined” its strategies.

Admissions decisions consider both “primary” and “secondary” factors. Secondary factors are qualitative — community service, for example. Primary factors are more hard-and-fast and include test scores, high school GPA and class rank.

At a January meeting of the Faculty Senate Committee on Educational Policy, McMaster said that there’s a correlation between “student success and graduation” and their high school rank and ACT score.

According to the meeting minutes, McMaster told committee members that the University has increased the graduation rate because it has increased the average ACT scores and high school rank of incoming freshmen.

Nationwide, many institutions are choosing not to accept students who are less prepared or who cannot meet tuition costs.

In a 2011 survey of college admissions counselors, those at public doctoral institutions identified students who can pay full tuition as the top group for which their institution increased recruitment efforts in the past year.

These institutions are also pursuing out-of-state and international students, who typically pay higher tuition and fees. At the University, out-of-state students without reciprocity and international students pay about $5,000 more than in-state students. International students are charged a $290 fee.

Kampsen said the emphasis on ACT score, in particular, is a major barrier for students. TRiO students’ average high school GPA is 3.5, but their average ACT score is 19, she said.

Alysha Lister, an elementary education junior and co-chair of the TRiO Student Board, was waitlisted when she applied to the University. She was eventually accepted through TRiO but said she thinks she was waitlisted because of her 19 ACT score.

Though she said test scores are important “to an extent,” it’s difficult to judge a student’s ability based on those alone. They may, like her, have done well in high school but have test anxiety.

What’s more, low-income students tend to score lower on the ACT than their wealthier counterparts.

A Washington State University study using 2004 College Board and ACT Assessment test score data found an almost perfect correlation between poverty and low ACT and SAT scores.

The correlation for SAT scores was so strong, a co-author of the study thought at first he’d made a mistake.

But Don Orlich, professor emeritus at Washington State University and co-author of the study, said when he asked a statistician friend to do the same calculation, the result was identical.

“No matter how you look at it,” Orlich said, “income plays a role in achievement.”

 

The income divide

Omer Khan, a junior who transferred from Normandale Community College, works at least 30 hours per week and takes out loans to pay for school. Because he’s also taking 15 credits, he’s had to make sacrifices.

“You don’t hang out with friends anymore,” he said.

In-state tuition has quadrupled since 1992. Despite significant additions to financial aid, tuition costs are still intimidating for many students.

Sen. Terri Bonoff, DFL-Minnetonka, said while the Legislature “applauds” the University’s goal to become a top school — and sees the increase in admissions standards as consistent with that — lawmakers are also committed to increasing access for low-income students.

“We want [the University] to be competitive,” she said. “But what we would also say is that we think it is of paramount importance that the low-income best and brightest be able to attend the University.”

Many TRiO students work to pay their own tuition because their families are often unable to help, Kampsen said. In some cases, family members may not have credit scores and so cannot take out parental loans.

Though students may receive a lot of financial aid when they’re first admitted to the University, she said, the original package doesn’t always keep up with tuition increases.

For first-generation college students, figuring out how to even apply for financial aid is a struggle, said Arendale, the PsTL professor.

Although administrators encourage students to see college as a long-term investment, some may still be hesitant to take on debt, he said.

Sam Goldberg, a first-year student at Normandale, decided to start at a community college to save money and decide on a major. He has family help with tuition now but plans to pay his own way with work, scholarships and loans when he transfers to the University in about a year.

In 2012, nearly 31 percent of University students said they were “very concerned” about their accumulated educational debt, according to the Student Experience in the Research University survey.

The same year, nearly 12 percent of students took a community college course to save money.

Meanwhile, students with more money are more common on campus.

Since 2001, the number of students at the University whose families earn at least $110,000 per year has doubled. At the same time, the number of students from families at lower income levels has decreased, with the biggest drop in the middle-income range.

Despite its interest in increasing diversity, the University is shutting out low-income students in its pursuit of students who were academically successful in high school and can almost certainly graduate in four years.

“It isn’t that the University has to deny admission,” Arendale said. “It’s just that those other students — particularly, I think, first-generation and low-income — may not even think of the University as an option.”

 

Going elsewhere

In recent years, students have flocked to community colleges, where admission is less competitive and tuition costs are lower.

At Normandale, the biggest “feeder school” to the University of any college in the nation, enrollment has increased 46 percent since 2000.

More than 70 percent of students indicate on their application that they want to attend Normandale to complete general education requirements, and a quarter of students who transfer out enroll at the University.

“Students are coming in here as if it’s a general college,” said Matt Crawford, Normandale’s dean of enrollment and marketing.

The University’s Minnesota Cooperative Admissions Program guarantees admission for students who transfer from certain two-year colleges and meet specific criteria.

In a way, Minnesota’s community colleges are serving the goal Coffman assigned to the General College decades ago.

The MnSCU system, which includes community colleges, makes higher education in Minnesota more accessible, Bonoff said, because students can start there and then transfer to the University.

Mohammed Hassan chose Normandale to help him transition to the University. He was born in Somalia and emigrated to the U.S. from Yemen at age 7. Because English is his second language, he said, he decided to focus on academics in high school instead of extracurricular activities.

Normandale helps immigrant students like him make the transition to larger universities, he said. Once he’s completed his associate’s degree in kinesiology, he plans to transfer to the University.

Though Normandale offers a few technical programs, its primary focus is on fulfilling general education requirements, Crawford said.

 

The college dream

The University, founded in 1851, was made a land-grant institution by the 1862 Morrill Act.

Signed into law by Abraham Lincoln, the act intended to make higher education available to more than just the most privileged Americans.

“The fundamental idea was to offer an opportunity in every state for a liberal and larger education to large numbers …” U.S. Sen. Justin Morrill said in 1888.

Hassan said he hopes to enroll in the University’s physical therapy program after completing his bachelor’s degree. His dream is to become a doctor — the first in his family.

“My parents keep telling us, ‘We came to this country to give you guys a better life, a better education,’” ******he said. “… We work our hardest so that we can go to university and get a degree and have a job that we love and that we can support our family with.”

Reyes, who will graduate in May, said he has inspired his younger siblings and family friends to pursue higher education. He does outreach work at area high schools and plans to advocate for the University as an alumnus.

“Students like me … are some of the best advocates for the University, bar none,” he said. “Not only because I got a chance to graduate from here but because they gave me a shot.”

And though he appreciates that the University is trying to become a top institution, he still wants to see an emphasis on the kind of access that gave him a chance four years ago.

“Access to education is just about giving somebody a shot and making it a possibility of even going there before shutting the door,” he said. “Because at the end of the day, this isn’t Stanford. This isn’t Harvard.”

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CSL Plasma could get more relocation options

By: Kelsey Shirriff

A plasma collection center that has stalled construction of apartments near the University of Minnesota campus may soon find moving a little easier.

The Minneapolis planning commission approved a zoning amendment that would allow plasma centers to set up shop in more areas around the city. The CSL Plasma center, currently off University and Washington avenues, would have more options for relocation.

Last fall, developers purchased the property for the 333-unit WaHu apartment building. But plans hit a roadblock because CSL can’t move to any nearby site because of current zoning regulations.

“[CSL was] only allowed in the most highly intensive commercial zoning district, called C4,” said Cam Gordon, city councilman for the 2nd Ward. “I thought, well, maybe it’s inappropriate that they’re limited so much.”

Scott Newkirk, marketing director for CSL Plasma, said the business was supportive of the amendment.

The facility employs about 70 people, and representatives are looking at potential locations this week. Newkirk said he wants the center to stay near campus and transit lines.

“Our donors live within a five-mile radius of our

current facility,” Newkirk said. “So we’re looking for opportunities within that five miles.”

While finding a new space for the center may be easier for CSL, moving even five miles might pose a challenge for some donors.

Steven Christen, who donates plasma twice per week, said he might not come as often if the center moved farther north or east.

“It could [affect whether I donate],” he said. “I live over in south Minneapolis, and I bike usually.”

CPM Property Management, which has been assisting CSL Plasma in its search for a new home, plans to break ground on WaHu apartments as soon as the center moves. Daniel Oberpriller, owner of CPM, said the apartments would likely open in fall 2015.

“We’ve been struggling to find a location for the plasma center,” he said. “It’s been a painful process.”

Gun shops, tattoo parlors and pawnshops are the other businesses allowed in the district, and Gordon said he felt that the center should be classified more as a clinic.

CSL is the only plasma center in Minneapolis and collects about 300-400 donations each day. Donors can visit the center twice per week and are compensated for their plasma.

The amendment would allow the blood and plasma centers to be placed in an additional zoning district, OR3 (Institutional Office Residence district), opening up more potential locations.

“OR3 zoning is zoning that’s found on a lot of our larger campus areas — hospital campuses, clinic campuses,” said Kimberly Holien, a senior city planner. The zoning also allows for dense housing.

Riley Nornes, a history sophomore, said donating depends on whether the center is within biking or walking distance.

“It would definitely be very much about convenience,” he said.

Whether CSL Plasma can find an optimal new location or not, it has to move because its lease is up next April, Newkirk said.

“It has nothing to do with the current zoning,” he said. “We do need to find a new home for our current facility in Minneapolis.”

If approved by the zoning and planning committee next Thursday, the Minneapolis City Council will review the amendment May 10.

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Dean heads Humphrey with humility

By: Alma Pronove

On a shelf in a large office overlooking the University of Minnesota West Bank sits a framed photograph of two men.

In it, Eric Schwartz attempts to detail a migration issue while former President Bill Clinton looks down, smiling.

“And as I’m briefing him, he reaches down to my shirt and starts adjusting my tie,” said Schwartz, who heads the University’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs.

Growing up in New York, Schwartz never imagined he’d meet the president — let alone joke with him.

“I’ve been very lucky in many respects,” said Schwartz, whom President Barack Obama nominated to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom earlier this month.

Although he’s been at the University for only 18 months, Schwartz has traveled throughout the developing world for more than 30 years, negotiating with countless world

leaders and establishing himself as a national authority on international relations.

Still, Schwartz is reserved, speaking only of his accolades when pressed and constantly attributing his success to good fortune.

As a kid, Schwartz and his identical twin brother, now a federal public defender, always knew they’d work in public service.

“My parents were very interested in the world outside of our home,” Schwartz said, “and very committed to the idea that we all have an obligation to serve others.”

After graduating from Binghamton University, New York University’s law school, and Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Schwartz landed his first job at Human Rights Watch, an international advocacy organization, which he called his “big career break.”

Since then, Schwartz has worked in public service with the United Nations, under President Clinton’s administration at the National Security Council and at many humanitarian foundations.

During his time in the White House, Schwartz was very influential in Clinton’s decision to join the International Criminal Court, which prosecutes against crimes such as genocide.

Most recently before joining the Humphrey School, Schwartz served at the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration in the U.S. Department of State under then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, whom he described as a “wonderful boss.”

There, he said his greatest accomplishment was doubling the funding for the State Department to support newly arrived refugees.

Despite his impressive résumé, Schwartz said he’s faced some disappointment in his career.

“You don’t always hit a home run or even get a base hit every time you step up to the plate,” he said. “Though overall, my career has been extremely gratifying.”

Schwartz took over as Humphrey dean in October 2011 and said he’s enjoyed his time on the job.

“It’s fun to be around young people who are so inspired and so committed to not only doing well, but doing good,” he said.

Laura Bloomberg, executive director of Humphrey’s Center for Integrative Leadership, said Schwartz is a very inclusive decision-maker, which makes him a pleasure to work with.

“He has a terrific sense of humor,” she said. “He’s a very jovial guy.”

Schwartz came to the Humphrey School with the intention of internationalizing the curriculum and establishing ties between the school and Washington.

“Our students and our faculty should be influencing and informing the policy discussion on the biggest issues that the world confronts,” he said.

As far as Larry Jacobs is concerned, Schwartz has exceeded expectations.

“He’s a pretty rare talent. The Humphrey School is lucky to have him,” said Jacobs, the director of Humphrey’s Center for the Study of Politics and Governance.

Jacobs said Schwartz was the “the right guy at the right moment” as student interest in international affairs has increased in recent years.

Outside of work, Schwartz enjoys vacationing at the beach with his wife and two teenage daughters.

He can also be found at the campus recreational center, where he has run into students in the past.

“I’m always a little embarrassed,” he joked.

Schwartz said he advises students interested in public affairs to get involved and network while they’re young.

“Get out there,” he said. “Get a sense of what matters to you.”

He’s always found his work to be gratifying, but Schwartz said he hopes the peak of his career is yet to come.

“The focus of a career in public life is on something that is broader than your own well-being. You’re concerned with the well-being of society at large.”

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