The Daily Northwestern Wednesday, May 17, 2017
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Esposito transitions Wildcats into new era
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City announces youth bus plan Evanston to offer transit for summer Six Flags program By RYAN WANGMAN
the daily northwestern @ryanwangman
Colin Boyle/Daily Senior Staffer
Students gather outside Harris Hall to protest the visit of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement representative Tuesday. The ICE representative had been invited to speak at a sociology class.
Students protest ICE representative
Demonstrators stop public relations officer from speaking at lecture By MARIANA ALFARO
daily senior staffer @marianaa_alfaro
Students protested the visit of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement public relations
officer to campus Tuesday, saying the representative’s presence on campus could be dangerous and hurtful for undocumented people at Northwestern. Members of MEChA de Northwestern, Black Lives Matter NU, the Immigrant Justice
Viet Nom Nom prepares storefront Founders launch Kickstarter to fund new restaurant By SOPHIE MANN
daily senior staffer @sophiemmann
Two years after Noah Bleicher (Kellogg ’15) decided to open a Vietnamese restaurant in Evanston, he and a business partner began a Kickstarter campaign weeks before the restaurant’s forecasted opening. Bleicher developed the idea for Viet Nom Nom after noting a lack of quality, healthy food on and near Northwestern’s campus. He teamed up with Alan Moy, and the pair constructed a catering and pop-up restaurant model for their fast casual cuisine.
The two plan to open their first storefront location at 618 1/2 Church St. by Memorial Day, according to the Kickstarter page. The money raised through the Kickstarter campaign — which will run through mid-July — will fund new employees, better equipment, catering vehicles and development expenses. Moy said the idea to use Kickstarter centered on getting more people involved in the project. “It takes a village,” Moy said. “We’ve had folks reach out to Noah and I and ask how they can contribute. Some people cannot help physically because they’re not there. That’s really where (the campaign) started.” In addition to funding the new restaurant, Moy said the funds will also further the grab-and-go » See NOM NOM, page 6
Project, the Asian Pacific American Coalition, NU Queer Trans Intersex People of Color and Rainbow Alliance gathered outside Harris Hall as the unidentified ICE representative began a guest presentation for Sociology 201. The class, taught by Prof.
Beth Redbird, focuses on examining “inequality in American society with an emphasis on race, class and gender,” according to its syllabus. The class began at 3:30 p.m., » See PROTEST, page 6
More flags, more jobs. While Six Flags has no plans to revive its popular marketing campaign any time soon, Evanston officials on May 5 announced a program to provide daily transportation for youth who work at the amusement park this summer. Porschia Davis, the city’s youth and young adult program coordinator, said the program expands on the Mayor’s Summer Youth Employment Program, which will employ at least 600 local teenagers this summer. She estimated about 50 kids will work for Six Flags Great America in the second year of a partnership with the city. “There are barriers to employment and transportation is one of them,” Davis said. “Evanston’s City Council is dedicated to providing whatever service is needed so that there are no barriers if there are people
— specifically youth who are dedicated to bettering their lives — getting jobs and giving back to the community.” The theme park, located in Gurnee, Illinois, is a roughly 40-minute commute from Evanston, which is the “average” time it takes to commute to work, Davis said. She said the city also helps facilitate Six Flags employment opportunities for Evanston youth, hosting an annual job fair and busing youth to in-person interviews. The city outlined steps for transportation to these interviews in a news release earlier this month. Students must apply for jobs at least one day before their desired hiring event, and notify the city of their intent either through a link on the city’s website or by calling 311. Former mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl said when she began her tenure she made expanding the Mayor’s Summer Youth Employment program a priority because the number of applicants far exceeded the number of available jobs. Tisdahl said the partnership with Six Flags will continue to grow the employment program and » See BUSES, page 6
Student robbed in attempted sexual assault Evanston police said a female Northwestern graduate student was robbed and injured in an attempted sexual assault Tuesday night in a residential building in west Evanston. At about 9:30 p.m., units were dispatched to a building in the 1900 block of Ridge Avenue for an attempted sexual assault, Evanston police Cmdr. Joseph Dugan said. The 24-year-old student was riding in an elevator when a man attempted to reach under her clothing and fondle her. The student screamed, at which point the man began to punch the woman and threw her to the floor, Dugan said. The man then fled on foot with the student’s wallet and cellphone. Dugan said the student
Colin Boyle/Daily Senior Staffer
Police gather outside a building in the 1900 block of Ridge Avenue. Police said a Northwestern graduate student was robbed and injured in an attempted sexual assault Tuesday night.
had scrapes on her knees, but declined medical treatment. In a University-wide email, Northwestern chief of police Bruce Lewis said the student
described the man as a 25 to 30-year-old black male who is roughly 6 feet 2 inches tall. The man was wearing a long-sleeved black shirt and
a black backpack. No additional identifying information was made available. — David Fishman
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