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OPINION/Gashaw

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Gashaw: MSA has a vendetta against me, terminated me

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MARI GASHAW

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

In 2015, Northwestern threatened to take the Black House away from students. So in 2019, I became part of a group of students who passed an Associated Student Government resolution on student autonomy over the Black House. Our resolution was an attempt to make sure Black students had sufficient temporary space and regained autonomy.

As outlined in the ASG resolution, Black students wanted more Black representation in the house. When I brought this up, I was told it was inappropriate to ask that Black people work at the Black House. I suggested I could lead a training on anti-Blackness and positionality to support my non-Black coworkers in navigating the space better. Instead, after working for Multicultural Student Affairs for three years, MSA used this incident as justification to start the process of terminating me for advocating on behalf of my peers.

A few weeks later, MSA made a post celebrating Veterans Day for Native American Heritage Month because of the high percentage of Native people serving in the military. However, Black students and other community members were confused as to why MSA would honor the very veterans that were complicit in wars that impacted many of our communities here and abroad. Because I had access to MSA’s Instagram, I archived the post so that we could find better language to explain why MSA was honoring veterans. I provided other examples of language that could be used that captured the nuance of Native people serving in the military and the violence of the US military. Instead, MSA’s Associate Director Alejandro Magaña and Assistant Director Derek Nettingham terminated me for allegedly violating MSA policies.

The day of my termination, I reached out to both parties asking for the specific policies and procedures I violated that justified my termination. It has been over three months and I haven’t been given that documentation. Many other student concerns I raised also have not been resolved to this day. MSA even failed to pay me for the hours I worked. I moved forward with an investigation with the Office of Equity.

On Jan. 28, I received notification from the Office of Community Standards that I was prohibited from using the Black House and participating in Black online spaces such as our Association for Black Leaders group chat. MSA made a report stating that the former President Barack Obama portrait was missing and provided evidence that pointed at me as the culprit. I never stole an Obama portrait. Why would I? Although Obama is our first Black and mixed president, he is also a war criminal. Obama ordered hundreds of drone strikes that killed thousands of people around the world. He deported more than three million migrants. He let the National Guard suppress and harm protesters during the Baltimore Uprising and Standing Rock actions.

Obama is not meant to be hung up among Black leaders like Malcolm X and Muhammad Ali. He is a war criminal and an expansionist of the violent U.S. empire. Students requested that the portrait not be hung up, yet MSA went ahead and did that. In early October, I told Nettingham several times that the portrait needed to be removed. As I gave tours in the Black House, alumni would often comment on how strange it was that Obama was the centerpiece of Black leaders. The portrait made several community members feel uncomfortable, including me. Why would I want to steal it?

I did not steal the portrait. In fact, MSA’s allegations that I stole the portrait were extremely anti-Black. It is not unusual for Black people to have such false claims be made against them. MSA claims it wants to “analyze cultural differences to create a more socially just campus community through empathy and understanding.” Yet when I raised Black student concerns, MSA dismissed them as being irrational or inappropriate. Instead of engaging in any form of social justice, they’ve decided to uphold punitive measures like prohibition and termination. In the end, OCS found me not responsible for stealing it. Even though I am innocent and have been let back into the Black House, OCS and MSA have placed other restrictions on my access and made me go through educational programming. MSA staff have not been held accountable for dismissing concerns and being anti-Black to students.

MSA would not exist if it weren’t for the organizers of the Bursar’s 100. It would not exist if 100 students did not occupy and defy university rules and structures to demand better for Black students. Those students understood that if the institution was not going to work for us, then we are going to find ways to create the spaces we need. Instead of upholding this legacy of student activism and agency, MSA has decided to shut it all down. MSA has been nothing but violent to me and has yet to apologize for the harm. Black students need a seperate student affairs department that actually supports and listens to them, not one that uses punitive measures to stop student organizing and silence our voices. MSA has proven to me that it’s not interested in how our identities contribute to our success. If MSA and OCS have the power to do this to me, imagine what they could do to you.

When I raised Black student ” concerns, MSA dismissed them as being irrational or inappropriate. Instead of engaging in any form of social justice, they’ve decided to uphold punitive measures like prohibition and termination. - MARI GASHAW, Op-Ed Contributor

Mari Gashaw is a SESP fifth-year. If you would like to respond publicly to this op-ed, send a Letter to the Editor to opinion@dailynorthwestern.com. The views expressed in this piece do not necessarily reflect the views of all staff members of The Daily Northwestern.

Cabral: We’re missing queer authors writing queer stories

EMILIO CABRAL

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Every avid reader has a book they fell in love with before it became popular. For me, it was Casey McQuiston’s debut novel “Red, White & Royal Blue.” When I pulled it from the shelf of my local Barnes & Noble in 2019, I was expecting a coming-of-age story made palatable for straight audiences. Instead, the book was a beautiful exploration of a Latinx man’s bisexual identity amidst a few international relations disasters. It was unmistakably and unapologetically queer.

Unfortunately, stories like “Red, White & Royal Blue” — written for queer people and by queer people — are the exception, not the rule.

For example, let’s take Becky Albertalli’s debut novel “Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda.” It tells the story of Simon, a white teenager who is struggling with coming out to his friends and family while at the same time falling for a stranger he has only spoken to through emails.

Its film adaptation was the first mainstream teen romantic comedy to feature a gay lead, but many queer people didn’t see themselves represented in a narrative that tried to pander to both straight and queer people. The problem with “Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda” is that it attempts to make blanket statements about being a gay man when its protagonist — and his liberal family — is only representative of a small, privileged portion of the community.

Stories like this are endemic in an overwhelmingly straight publishing industry, and instead of books written by queer authors, readers are treated to queer stories and characters written by straight authors. Rick Riordan, the author of the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series, is a high-profile example of this.

Riordan is a beloved young adult author largely because of his commitment to writing diverse characters, and he was one of the first to highlight queer protagonists in an industry that was slow to do so. But what is often ignored in the welldeserved praise that Riordan receives is his status as a straight, white man. He was able to take a “risk” and portray queer characters because his place in the industry was secure. As a straight, white man he can take risks and he’s a more palatable option than an upand-coming queer author.

Still, it’s worth noting that Riordan has recently recognized his responsibility to uplift queer writers when telling these stories. His new series based around the queer characters he introduced in earlier books is being co-written with Mark Oshiro, a queer, Latinx author who will be able to help Riordan tell a more authentic story.

However, this is not to say that I believe authors should only be allowed to write characters with whom they share identities. Zadie Smith — an English novelist, essayist, and tenured professor at New York University — puts it best in her 2019 essay for The New York Review entitled “Fascinated to Presume: In Defense of Fiction.”

The essay rebuked the idea that the only way writers can create meaningful and moral fiction is to have an autobiographical connection with a character.

Instead, Smith puts forth the idea that fiction is centered around poet Emily Dickinson’s fascination with presumption. Smith explains presumption is not about an author assuming that their representation of a character is correct, but rather about daring to create a connection between the grief, joy and experiences they as an author have felt and the feelings of their character. Essentially, the heart of fiction is about comparisons. Writer and character. Reader and writer.

But we have to understand that fiction doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Books with queer protagonists and storylines that have been watered down — either by their straight authors or for straight audiences — are not just annoying, they’re harmful. By only portraying the version of queer identity that straight readers and audiences are comfortable with, these books reinforce an existing system. This system refuses to acknowledge the complex lives and identities of trans people, non-binary people, queer people of color, and more.

I have read wonderful queer stories written by straight authors, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t wondered what the story could have been if it were written by someone who was queer. It’s not just about nuance, it’s about the meaning behind the book.

What story are you as a straight woman trying to tell by writing a gay romance novel? What do you have to gain by telling stories that are explicitly about an intersection that you don’t occupy?

In a perfect world, writers would be able to presume as much as they want. But in a world where the canon of literature itself is inherently exclusive and violent, we can’t continue to pretend that there is not a difference between a straight author writing a book with a gay protagonist, and a straight author writing a book centered around their idea of the queer experience. Especially when the industry is still overwhelmingly devoid of queer authors.

If we want queer stories, why not let queer authors write them?

Books with queer protagonists ” and storylines that have been watered down — either by their straight authors or for straight audiences — are not just annoying, they’re harmful. - EMILIO CABRAL, Op-Ed Contributor

Emilio Cabral is a Weinberg sophomore. He can be contacted at EmilioCabral2024@u.northwestern. edu. If you would like to respond publicly to this op-ed, send a Letter to the Editor to opinion@ dailynorthwestern.com. The views expressed in this piece do not necessarily reflect the views of all staff members of The Daily Northwestern.

Editor in Chief Isabelle Saraf

Opinion Editor Lily Nevo

The Daily Northwestern

Volume 144, Issue 10

Assistant Opinion Editor

Divya Bhardwaj Sterling Ortiz

Managing Editors

Jordan Mangi Laya Neelakandan Delaney Nelson Alex Perry

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2022 SPRINGPREVIEW

BASEBALL Uncertainty awaits a er major o season changes

By LAWRENCE PRICE daily senior staffer @lpiii_tres

Since Northwestern’s last tilt of the 2021 season nearly 11 months ago against Ohio State, a lot has changed inside the program.

Although head coach Spencer Allen’s decision to step down after six seasons with the program headlined the glut of offseason news, the group lost multiple players as well. This 12-person band of Wildcats included star junior shortstop Shawn Goosenberg, redshirt junior pitcher Tyler Uberstine and junior catcher Michael Trautwein, all selected in the MLB Draft this past July.

Alongside the draftees, the team lost both starting outfielders in redshirt junior David Dunn and journeyman Leo Kaplan, and important arms including senior Quinn Lavelle and Hank Christie, to name a few.

With so many moving pieces, and the loss of essential bats, arms and the team’s head honcho, it’s easy to wonder what the 2022 campaign holds. Questions surrounding what new names will become the ‘regular’ faces to cross the white lines and how the various voids will be filled is the tip of the iceberg. However, the one issue that has been solved is the name replacing Allen at the helm — former associate head coach Josh Reynolds.

Reynolds joined the Wildcats in 2016, starting his tenure at NU the same season as Allen. Becoming the interim new head coach, Reynolds brings a familiar face back to a team looking for direction, overseeing the pitching staff and playing an essential role in NU’s recruitment efforts, providing a boost of confidence.

Since the promotion, Reynolds has added two new coaches to the staff: assistant coaches Brad Hill, previously a 14-year head coach at Kansas State and Jimmy Frankos, a hitting coach for Iowa during the past three seasons.

On the players’ side, the program welcomes in nine first-years: infielder Patrick Herrera, catcher/first baseman Bennett Markinson, outfielder Andrew Pinkston, infielder/outfielder Alex Roessner, pitcher Jacob Scharm, catcher/ infielder Alex Calarco, pitchers Sean Sullivan, Chad Readey and Grant Comstock. The class was rounded out by three graduate transfers: outfielder Ruben Fontes, pitcher Michael Farinelli and catcher JC Santini.

With last year’s one and three hitters, senior infielder Anthony Calarco and junior utility Stephen Hrustich, returning to the lineup, respectively, along with the rookie and veteran additions, softened the offseason-losseswound. However, NU’s downhill 2021 season that ended in a 10th place Big Ten finish, on top of the huge voids to fill, leaves little optimism in a consistently competitive conference.

Of course, young players will have a chance to prove themselves, solidify their roles and continually develop. Nevertheless, Reynolds’ group must be ready for a bumpy season in hopes of returning to the Big Ten Tournament for the first time since 2017.

lawrenceprice2024@u.northwestern.edu

SOFTBALL

‘Work hard every day’: Cats hope for strong 2022

By AAYUSHYA AGARWAL the daily northwestern @rockstaz7

Coming off of an impressive 30-17 record in 2021, Northwestern hopes to go even further in 2022.

The Wildcats, who competed in a heavy Big Ten schedule last season due to the pandemic, have already had the opportunity to compete against top programs across the country, including No. 3 UCLA and No. 7 Oklahoma State, this season.

Coach Kate Drohan said she looks forward to a more diverse schedule.

“There’s real energy and excitement for going out and playing schools from other conferences,” Drohan said. “This is how we typically schedule, with a challenging slate, so I think it will serve our team very well.”

The Cats will spend the next few weekends participating in tournaments across the country, and they remain focused on implementing Drohan’s expectations of them.

Drohan set out a simple message to her team: work hard every day.

“That is as simple as we are being,” Drohan said. ”We are so focused on the process, the results will take care of themselves. We are really committed to working hard and seeing how much better we could get each weekend we play,”

As for making any changes from last season, Drohan said she remains fairly fixed in terms of strategy. Nevertheless, she intends to switch certain players’ defensive positions to maximize the team’s results. 2021 unanimous first-team All-Big Ten Rachel Lewis will move from the infield to the outfield this season to fill a gap there. This shift will allow Drohan to pick from the many talented infield choices available to replace Lewis.

“The outfield is a new position for (Lewis),” Drohan said. “She has played second-base for four years so that will impact some of the defensive shifts that we have.”

NU students can cheer on the team for the first time in more than two years when the ‘Cats host Loyola on March 22, followed by a three-game set versus Michigan State starting on March 25.

As much excitement as there is surrounding the team, internally the team is fired up for the fast-approaching season. Drohan said she cannot wait for the players to have the chance to compete alongside one another.

“Our training started all the way back on Sept. 15. We are ready to put this team together,”’ Drohan said. “We’ve got a lot of really competitive women on our team that we are really excited about taking the field with.”

aayushyaagarwal2024@u.northwestern.edu

WOMEN’S TENNIS A er solid start, Wildcats look to build upon early successes

By ALEX CERVANTES the daily northwestern @cervantespalex

Northwestern’s 2021 dual season ended quicker than desired, following a Round of 32 exit to Texas A&M. The Wildcats returned six players from that squad for the 2022 dual season but retooled with five new faces in Evanston.

NU (4-3, 0-0 Big Ten) has weathered some of the early bumps in the season and is starting to hit its groove.

The Cats are led by senior Clarissa Hand, who is the squad’s No. 1 singles player and ranks 85th nationally according to the latest Intercollegiate Tennis Association rankings. Hand is 3-3 in singles play so far this season, including a win over then-No. 35 Carolyn Campana in the match against Wake Forest.

Hand’s doubles partner, sophomore Maria Shusharina, has been impressive as well. She has bounced from the No. 3 spot to No. 2 on the singles card since the start of the season and also notched a notable victory over thenNo. 69 Ava Hrastar of Georgia Tech.

As a doubles pairing, Hand and Shusharina have secured two consecutive victories and will look to carry that momentum into the spring.

“I really enjoy playing with (Maria),” Hand said of the partnership. “I think our games complement each other quite well because we both know going into a match that we are very confident from the baseline. Both of us can set each other up at the net … having that as our game plan sets the tone for the match right from the beginning. I think we’re doing really well.”

The newcomers have not taken long to settle in and have made quite the impression, too. First-year Sydney Pratt is 4-2 on the season in singles, including a dominant 6-0, 6-1 victory over Harvard on Feb. 20.

Graduate student Ema Lazic, who played four years at Duke, has also been an immediate plug-and-play piece for coach Claire Pollard. Lazic is undefeated on the season at 5-0 and has seemingly secured the No. 5 spot in singles for the Cats. Junior Justine Leong has also been a mainstay in the singles card.

Key returners in juniors Christina Hand and Briana Crowley, as well as senior Hannah McColgan, have all featured in singles matches, altogether boasting a 4-3 record.]

NU is beginning to find their footing at the right time with Big Ten play fast approaching in mid-March.

“I think we have great energy,” Crowley said of the team. “We’re all really excited to play for something that’s much bigger than ourselves. We’re all just really good friends and we want to win for each other, so that’s what makes this team really special this year.”

alexcervantes2024@u.northwestern.edu

MEN’S TENNIS

Northwestern o to its best season start since 2017

By NATHAN ANSELL the daily northwestern @nathanjansell

After losing three of last year’s top four singles players, some critics dismissed Northwestern’s chances as a Big Ten contender this season. In 2021, the Wildcats’ second-round postseason finish was already a slight overachievement for a squad with six conference losses and zero regular season wins against top 25-finishing teams.

Fast-forward to late February, and NU (102, 0-0 Big Ten) is flying higher than ever. Signature wins over Duke (5-3, 0-0 ACC) and Oregon (5-3, 0-0 Pac-12) in tow, the Cats are knocking on the door of the ITA team rankings.

No. 1 Ohio State (11-0, 0-0 Big Ten) remains the team to beat in the Big Ten. But with defending conference champion Illinois (3-6, 0-0 Big Ten) faltering and others far behind, NU is challenging No. 20 Michigan (4-2, 0-0 Big Ten) for second-best.

“The conference is when it starts to reset,” coach Arvid Swan said. “It’s almost like a new season.”

Doubles consistency is helping the Cats’ run. NU dropped the doubles point in four of its first five matches after the opening weekend but has since won four out of the last five.

The Cats currently boast two ranked singles players, No. 55 Trice Pickens and No. 79 Simen Bratholm. Along with Steven Forman, who has played atop the singles order for every match this season, the seniors are a combined 23-5 in duals.

One match recap on NU’s athletics website even likened Forman, Bratholm and Pickens to the 2017 trio of Strong Kirchheimer, Konrad Zieba and Sam Shropshire, a group that also led NU to a 10-2 start.

“It’s a great compliment to our current players,” Swan said. “(I’m) really pleased with how much they’ve improved over the course of their careers at Northwestern. I felt the same way about those guys in ’16 and ’17.” way about those guys in ’16 and ’17.”

NU will need their top singles players to contribute. The Cats’ next opponent, No. 10 Kentucky (9-3, 0-0 SEC) has the No. 5 singles player in the nation, Gabriel Diallo, among its ranks. Not only that, Kentucky also has the 2020-21 ITA Player of the Year Liam Draxl, No. 1 in last year’s collast year’s college singles lege singles rankings.

The The schedule doesn’t let up after that. After Kenschedule doesn’t let up after that. After Kentucky, NU will take on No. 16 Harvard (7-2, tucky, NU will take on No. 16 Harvard (7-2, 0-0 Ivy League), an efficient team with four 0-0 Ivy League), an efficient team with four nationally ranked singles players. Swan’s squad will be tested against more ranked foes throughout the schedule, such as Michigan and No. 22 NC State (7-2, 0-0 ACC), but a road match against Ohio State remains the most brutally difficult task of all.

“I expect all of those teams to be in the NCAA tournament,” Swan said. “That’s why players come to Northwestern, they want to play the best teams possible.”

nathanansell2022@u. nathanansell2022@u. northwestern.edu northwestern.edu

LACROSSE No. 5 NU aims to win eighth National Championship

By SKYE SWANN daily senior staffer @sswann301

Following a successful 2020-21 season, Northwestern is expected to pick up where it left off and contend for the program’s eighth NCAA Division I National Championship.

After suffering a disappointing loss to Syracuse in the NCAA’s Final Four last May, the Wildcats’ groundbreaking season came to a screeching halt. Despite playing a conference-only regular season schedule due to COVID19, NU proved its dominance to the nation and that it deserved its spot as one of the best teams in Division I lacrosse.

Coming into the 2022 campaign — and ranked No. 5 after a week of games — the Cats will have a high slated schedule ahead of themselves, including 2021 NCAA Final Four competitor and ACC powerhouse Syracuse. The squad will also square off against North Carolina, Stony Brook and Maryland later in the season.

Junior attacker Izzy Scane led the team, and the nation, last year by setting new program records for single goals scored in a season. But with Scane nursing a season-ending ACL injury, the Cats will have to find their offensive success from other players. Fortunately, NU is returning graduate attacker Lauren Gilbert, plus graduate midfielders Brennan Dwyer and Jill Girardi. All three players played central roles on the offensive end of the field in 2021, so these women will garner a lot of attention this spring.

On the defensive end of the field, NU returns a majority of the 2021 lineup, including senior goalkeeper Madison Doucette and graduate defender Ally Palermo. The Cats were a solid defensive team last season, but with Scane’s absence, the defensive stance must increase tenfold to combat high-attacking competition.

In her 20th season, coach Kelly Amonte Hiller has made a name for the program and continues to strive to make the Midwest a well-known region for lacrosse. Earning more than 300 games as NU’s coach, Amonte Hiller was named the 2021 Big Ten Coach of the Year following the Cats’ success last season. But with the team falling short of earning a National Championship, Amonte Hiller and her squad are aiming to bring an eighth to Evanston.

NU’s season will be a must watch this entire spring. With vital returners hitting the field this season, the Cats’ chances of repeating the same success as the 2020-21 campaign are high. The team will be back in action Wednesday against Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind.

skyeswann2024@u.northwestern.edu

Kelsey Carroll/Daily Senior Sta er

MEN’S GOLF Northwestern looks to utilize experienced veterans

By KYLE LEVERONE the daily northwestern @kleverone15

The world could use some golf. While Northwestern students remain

Daily file photo by Alison Albelda

indoors due to sporadic February snow flurries and uncompromising humdrum work, the Wildcats have played solid golf in tropical locales.

Take graduate student Varun Chopra. He had a 70.27 scoring average in the fall through four tournaments and went 2-0 in the team’s most recent tournament, the Big Ten Match Play.

David Nyfjäll, who also went 2-0 in tearing up Big Ten competition two weeks ago, averaged 70.92 in the fall. This included a thirdplace finish en route to the Wildcats’ first-place finish in the Hamptons Intercollegiate tournament in October.

This team has some players. And this team can win some tournaments.

Ranked No. 29 in the country, NU comes into the spring season as the third-highest ranked team in the conference behind Illiranked team in the conference behind Illinois and Purdue. And the next tournament nois and Purdue. And the next tournament for the Cats starts Sunday — The Prestige in La Quinta, Calif. It includes six other top-30 programs and eight former NCAA top-30 programs and eight former NCAA D1 Champions. If you want to see how NU stacks up against elite competition, this is the tournament.

Last year, the Cats finished in the middle of the pack 12th out of 24 teams with Chopra, Nyfjäll, and now-junior James Imai all tied for 44th at six-over. This year, with more experience and with some momentum coming from the fall season, the Cats look to move themselves up a couple of spots.

After The Prestige, NU rides After The Prestige, NU rides into Las Vegas the following weekend. And on Sunday, weekend. And on Sunday, the Cats will be up against the house for their second stroke play event of the spring.

WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY

Wildcats look toward outdoor track season with aniticipation

By KATE WALTER the daily northwestern @katewalter03

Northwestern is riding the high of a historic fall into the indoor and outdoor track seasons. During an electric cross country season, the team finished in fourth place at Midwest Regionals, marking its highest finish in 20 years, and senior Rachel McCardell earned All-Big Ten honors, qualifying for the NCAA Championships.

NU has built a solid base during the indoor track season, competing at the Gene Edmonds Classic, the Michigan Invitational, the Terrier Classic and Wisconsin’s St. Valentine’s Invitational. The Cats posted some historic times during this winter.

At the Terrier Classic, freshman Ava Earl achieved the fifth fastest time in program history in the 3000m with a 9:38 and graduate student Amanda Mosborg ran a 16:51 in the 5000m for the seventh-fastest time in program history. At the St. Valentine’s Invitational this weekend, junior Emily Casaclang ran a 4:55.59 mile, good for seventh-best in program history.

McCardell, the star of NU’s cross country season, returned to compete at the St. Valentine’s Invitational. She made her indoor season debut in the 3k, posting an impressive personal best of 9:39.2 and finishing first overall.

As primarily a cross country program, NU views the winter and spring track seasons as opportunities to build confidence and strength. After a solid indoors season, the Cats are poised to be a formidable contender on the outdoor track this spring. This will be Coach Jill Miller’s third outdoors season as head coach and the team’s first normal outdoors season since the pandemic.

During last year’s modified racing schedule, the Cats still managed to rewrite history. McCardell clinched the number one all-time record for NU in 3000m with a time of 9:33. Kalea Bartolotto’s time of 9:41 was good for the third fastest in program history.

The Cats seek to pick up right where they left off. They return to competition at the end of March with the North Carolina State Raleigh Relays.

From March to May, NU is slated to compete in six meets, with three of them being relay meets. Most of these competitions are held in the Midwest, while some will take them all the way to sunny California.

For a team on the national rise and filled with a mix of young talent in Earl and established veterans in McCardell and Bartolotto, it’s sure to be a speedy season on the outdoor track.

Other looming trips include Palo Alto, Calif. for The Goodwin tournament a month later, and Augusta, Ga. for the Augusta Haskins Invitational a week after that. This NU team is sitting pretty with a schedule like that, but each tournament is one step closer to getting back to where they finished last year in the Big Ten Championship, third out of the 14 teams. This year, they look to aim even higher.

Although they’re not the ones in La Quinta and and Las Vegas, Cats fans can find solace in one thing for now. Golf is back, and NU is ready to go.

kyleleverone2023@u. kyleleverone2023@u. northwestern.edu northwestern.edu

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