The Daily Northwestern Friday, March 9, 2018
DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM 16 SPORTS/Women’s Basketball
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3 CAMPUS/Admissions
NU players develop off-court friendships
Medill reports 24 percent spike in applications for next academic school year
4 OPINION/Editorial
Vote Biss, but more importantly, just vote
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With more demands for accessibility, NU aims to close gaps By JAKE HOLLAND
daily senior staffer @jakeholland97
Accessibility does not rank highly on Northwestern students’ list of priorities. In one section of Associated Student Government’s most recent
annual analytics survey, Northwestern students were asked to allocate points among 16 prompts, said Austin Gardner, ASG’s vice president for accessibility and inclusion. Of the options, increasing funding for AccessibleNU ranked 14th on average, Gardner said. According to a January report by the Northwestern Accessibility Council, 2 percent of students registered
with AccessibleNU during Fiscal Year 2016 were blind or visually impaired. The study — which details different ways Northwestern’s campuses can be made more accessible for students with these and other disabilities — is one of a few steps the University has taken to better address accommodations for students and staff. Students with vision disabilities
usually require additional accommodations in the classroom, such as enlarged course materials and extended time on assessments. Outside the classroom, these students may face obstacles like poor signage and obstructed walking routes. » See ACCESSIBILITY, page 8
Illustration by Colin Lynch Daily file photo by Katie Pach
Three leading Dems vie for governor Judge axes Kipnis’ Pritzker, Biss, Kennedy trade barbs as March 20 primary nears By RYAN WANGMAN
daily senior staffer @ryanwangman
Four years ago, Bruce Rauner became the first Republican to net the governor’s seat in Illinois in over a decade. Now, after over three year’s of Rauner’s unpopular tenure, which saw Illinois without a budget from 2015 into 2017 and featured a tense rivalry with House Speaker Mike Madigan (D-Chicago), Democratic Party hopefuls are aiming to take the seat back. Three major contenders have pulled away from the rest of the pack: J.B. Pritzker, a billionaire businessman who is the heir to the Hyatt Hotel fortune, State Sen. Daniel Biss (D-Evanston), a local legislator pushing progressive policy, and Chris Kennedy, an anti-establishment businessman who is the son of former U.S. Senator Robert Kennedy. Each of the three has struggled to take a firm hold on the race, but feverish campaigning will reach its conclusion for all but one candidate on March 20, when the winner of the Democratic primary will be determined and advance to the general election in November.
lawsuit dismissal Court to hear claims made by graduate student
By MADDIE BURAKOFF
daily senior staffer @madsburk
Daily file photo by Colin Boyle
Daily file photo by Noah Frick-Alofs
Jose M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune/TNS
(From left) Billionaire J.B. Pritzker. State Sen. Daniel Biss (D-Evanston). Businessman Chris Kennedy.
The Billionaire
Pritzker is a Chicago native and a graduate of Northwestern’s Pritzker School of Law. He is by far the wealthiest of the candidates, with an estimated net worth of $3.5 billion, according to Forbes. Pritzker has centered his campaign on restoring a balanced budget to the state to address its poor fiscal condition, and has said he will prioritize increased investment in education spending across the state. Pritzker also has said he wants to focus on “restoring and rebuilding” Illinois’ social services.
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
The billionaire has received endorsements from both of the state’s U.S. senators and many state lawmakers, as well as the Cook County Democratic Party and a few major labor unions. However, Pritzker has faced criticism after a leaked wiretap conversation between him and former Gov. Rod Blagojevich discussing filling Barack Obama’s vacant senate seat. In the conversations, Pritzker said appointing Jesse White would “cover you on the African-American thing” and that White was the “least offensive”
of the candidates for the job. A Feb. 18 poll of Democratic voters from Cook County found that Pritzker held a slim 3 percentage point lead over Kennedy. However, a more recent poll from the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale — which sampled 472 Democratic voters from across the state — showed Pritzker with 31 percent of the vote, 10 percentage points ahead of the next closest challenger, Biss, » See GOVERNOR, page 13
A judge decided Tuesday to proceed with a lawsuit filed by a graduate student against Communication Prof. Laura Kipnis and HarperCollins Publishers, declining to grant a motion filed by the defendants in July to dismiss the suit. The July motion by Kipnis and HarperCollins to dismiss the case on all counts with prejudice stated the student could not state “any plausible claim for relief.” A memorandum in opposition was filed by the student in August, and Northern District of Illinois Judge John Blakey decided Tuesday to deny the defendants’ motion to dismiss. “The Court finds that Plaintiff ’s allegations suffice to state claims of publication of private facts, false light invasion of privacy, defamation and intentional
infliction of (emotional) distress,” Blakey wrote. The student, using the pseudonym Jane Doe, filed the suit in May in response to Kipnis’ book, “Unwanted Advances: Sexual Paranoia Comes to Campus.” In the book, Kipnis criticizes Northwestern’s Title IX procedures, detailing Kipnis’ experience with the process and discussing two Title IX complaints filed by Doe and another student against former philosophy Prof. Peter Ludlow accusing him of sexual assault. Doe’s suit alleges that the book, which has received national attention, intentionally misrepresents facts and publishes private and unnecessary details about her. As quoted in the Tuesday order, the lawsuit calls “Unwanted Advances” a book “that — page after page — exposes extremely private and painful parts of Plaintiff ’s life, makes false statements about her conduct, brands her a vengeful liar and turns this promising young graduate student’s life upside down for the entire world to see.” » See KIPNIS, page 13
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