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The Minnesota Daily



Serving the UMN community since 1900

The Minnesota Daily

Serving the UMN community since 1900

The Minnesota Daily

City

Tim Horton’s Dinkytown location rumored to close

by Isabella Murray
Published May 2, 2019
Potential closure of the coffee and doughnut shop's locations around the Twin Cities has garnered chatter.
A black SUV caught fire in the Oak Street Parking Ramp on Thursday, May 2.

None injured in individual vehicle fire at Oak Street Ramp

by Jack Warrick
Published May 2, 2019
A valet said the car started smoking when he parked it and then burst into flames.
Professor John Wright faces the Board of Regents after receiving support from the crowd during the special session on Friday, April 26, 2019. The board voted against the renaming of four buildings on campus after more than a year of community discussion on the issue. 

John Wright’s speech on renaming at the regents meeting

by MN Daily Staff
Published May 2, 2019
Protestors overtook a special regents meeting Friday, allowing John Wright to step forward and give a speech on renaming.
Ph.D student Ryan Machtmes, president of the Organization for Graduate and Professional Students with Disabilties, poses for a portrait inside Coffman Union on Tuesday, May 30. Machtmes, who has low vision, is an advoate for other graduate students with disabilities.

For students with disabilities, in-class accessibility goes beyond paperwork

by Audrey Kennedy
Published May 2, 2019
Faculty have to take extra steps to educate themselves on disability, but some say change is coming.
Professor John Wright faces the Board of Regents after receiving support from the crowd during the special session on Friday, April 26. The board voted against the renaming of four buildings on campus after more than a year of community discussion on the issue.

‘Frustrating, disappointing and enraging’: Reaction to regents’ decision on renaming

by Austen Macalus
Published May 2, 2019
The Board of Regents voted against renaming buildings last week, drawing strong criticism from students, faculty and other proponents for renaming.
Jacob Erdman, a junior studying German and political science, poses for a portrait in Folwell Hall on Tuesday, April 30. In March, Erdman saved a man's life on campus. He was on his way home from class and stopped in Nicholson Hall to turn his music on when he noticed a group of people surrounding a man, Mike Vaughan, who was going into cardiac arrest. Erdman checked for a pulse, then located the nearest AED and administered CPR to Vaughan until paramedics arrived. Vaughan lived for two more weeks.

‘I did what anyone could’ve done’: UMN student performs CPR elderly man

by Dylan Miettinen
Published May 2, 2019
In mid-March, Jacob Erdman and other students performed CPR on a collapsed University of Minnesota student.
Filmmaker Sisco Omar poses for portrait before filming an interview on Wednesday, May 1 at the Bryan Coyle Center. Omar says that, "Everyone has a story to tell," and believes that the stories from the Cedar-Riverside community are best told from the perspective of the people who live there.

Film to bridge generational gaps in Cedar-Riverside

by Emma Dill
Published May 2, 2019
The film will feature profiles and conversations between youth and elders on the West Bank.
Vice Provost and Dean Bob McMaster posed for a portrait on Monday, April 29 in Morrill Hall.

Vice Provost McMaster’s reach extends across University map

by Dylan Anderson
Published May 2, 2019
Robert McMaster, former professor and veteran administrator, has one of the broadest career portfolios in the country.
Hundreds of people attended Ahlan Amazon, an event held April 30 at Cedar-Riverside's Brian Coyle Center. Many meeting attendees were there to network with Amazon representatives and expand their partnership with the tech giant.

Cedar-Riverside workers aim to expand Amazon partnership

by Emma Dill
Published May 2, 2019
The event focused helping local workers establish direct contracts with Amazon, which officials say will give employees more independence.
The Cedar-Riverside neighborhood as seen on Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2018.

Recent crime and building security spark concern in Cedar-Riverside

by Mohamed Ibrahim
Published May 2, 2019
Residents hope security upgrades to apartment buildings will deter recent criminal activity from outsiders.

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