The Daily Northwestern Thursday, April 6, 2017
DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM
A&E
8 SPORTS/Lacrosse
Sophomore Wildcats prepare for Ohio State
Find us online @thedailynu
arts & entertainment
Quartet performs Bienen student compositions Page 4
High 46 Low 31
Students decry SAE case decision More than 100 students sign letter to Telles-Irvin By MARIANA ALFARO
daily senior staffer @marianaa_alfaro
More than 100 students signed a letter Wednesday addressed to Patricia Telles-Irvin, vice president for student affairs, condemning the University’s decision to not pursue disciplinary action against two fraternities involved in allegations of druggings and sexual assault. The allegations were first reported last month, according to an email notification sent to Northwestern students Feb. 6. The anonymous reports alleged four female students were possibly given a date rape drug at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house on Jan. 21. The alert said two of the students believed they were sexually assaulted. Chief of Police Bruce Lewis said in the email that NU also received an anonymous report Feb. 3 alleging that another female student had been sexually assaulted, possibly with the use of a date rape drug, after attending an event at a » See SAE, page 3
Daniel Tian/Daily Senior Staffer
Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl speaks at the Refugee Freedom Seder at Fiedler Hillel on Wednesday. Tisdahl will be finishing her term as mayor in May, after serving in the position since 2009.
END OF AN ERA
Evanston Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl wraps up, reflects on 8-year term By RISHIKA DUGYALA
daily senior staffer @rdugyala822
Lorraine Morton first met Elizabeth Tisdahl about 30 years ago, before either of them had any mayoral ambitions. Morton was on the way to pick up her youngest granddaughter — then in fifth grade — from softball
practice when she found the team playing with a woman she’d never seen before. “It was Liz Tisdahl,” Morton recalled. “And I was so much impressed with her doing that because she didn’t have a child on that softball team. She was just doing it for other people.” Even after Morton began her tenure as the city’s longest-serving mayor in 1993, she continued to
cross paths with Tisdahl. Ten years later, when Morton had to appoint a new 7th Ward alderman, she turned to Tisdahl. After some armtwisting, Tisdahl agreed to serve. Fast-forward five years to the end of Morton’s fourth mayoral term. “When I knew that I was not going to run for office as mayor again, my thoughts were, ‘Hmm, who should replace me?’” Morton
New aldermen plan for City Council By KRISTINA KARISCH
the daily northwestern @kristinakarisch
Three new additions are set to join City Council following Tuesday’s municipal election. Robin Rue Simmons will replace current Ald. Delores Holmes in the 5th Ward, Thomas Suffredin will take over for Ald. Mark Tendam (6th) and Cicely Fleming will be replacing Ald. Brian Miller (9th). Ald. Judy Fiske (1st), Ald. Melissa Wynne (3rd) and Ald. Ann Rainey (8th) will all serve another term, and Ald. Peter Braithwaite (2nd), Ald. Donald Wilson (4th) and Ald. Eleanor Revelle (7th) ran unopposed for another term. The new aldermen will be sworn in May 8 along with the new mayor, city manager Wally Bobkiewicz said. Fiske, who will start another term in May, said council members always welcome new faces. “New, fresh perspectives are always welcome on the City Council,” she said. “I think it will be an interesting transition,
Daily file photo by Katie Pach
The Lorraine H. Morton Civic Center, 2100 Ridge Ave. There will be three new aldermen on City Council following Tuesday’s municipal election.
but certainly very fun.” Fiske, Suffredin and Fleming all said they realized that being a member of City Council is a collaborative and team-focused experience.
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
Suffredin, who will be representing the 6th Ward, said he hopes to focus on ward-specific issues like traffic and crosswalk safety, but wants to work together with aldermen in other
wards on city-wide matters. He has also spoken to Tendam, from whom he will be taking over the position, to » See COUNCIL, page 6
said. “Honestly, and this is the truth, I didn’t think of any other name except Liz Tisdahl.” When Morton asked her to run for office, Tisdahl said her immediate reaction was, “Absolutely not.” But eight years later, reflecting on her time as Evanston’s mayor, she said the job turned out to be “wonderful” and “absolutely fun.” » See TISDAHL, page 6
Speechwriter Cody Keenan to speak at NU
Cody Keenan ( Weinberg ’02), a speechwriter for former President Barack Obama, is returning to campus next week to speak on the Obama legacy. Keenan will join Medill Prof. Peter Slevin, who authored a biography on former first lady Michelle Obama, next Tuesday in Harris Hall for a panel discussion, which is sponsored by Contemporary Thought Speaker Series. After joining the Obama campaign in 2007 as an intern, Keenan followed the former president to the White House, becoming deputy director of speechwriting. Six years later, Keenan was promoted to director of speechwriting, a position he stayed in through the end of Obama’s second term. Weinberg junior Ben Zimmermann, co-chair of CTSS, said he is excited to hear about Keenan’s behindthe-scenes take on Obama’s
presidency. “Cody was obviously at the center of Obama’s eight years in office and should be able to shed some great light on his administration and his legacy,” Zimmermann said. Keenan, who was raised in the Evanston area, came to Northwestern as a pre-med student but ended up majoring in political science. He began his government career as an intern in the office of then-Sen. Edward Kennedy before being accepted to Har vard University ’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. Zimmermann said he hopes Keenan’s connection to the University as a former Wildcat will inspire students who attend the event. “He’ll be able to really relate to students and students can really see how this very education can help prepare them for something like becoming the chief speech writer for the president,” he said. Tickets are not required for admission; instead, people will be seated on a firstcome, first-serve basis. — Allyson Chiu
INSIDE: Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Arts & Entertainment 4 | Classifieds & Puzzles 6 | Sports 8