The Daily Northwestern Friday, October 7, 2016
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NU centralizes sex misconduct cases Sexual Harassment Prevention Office will handle all cases By YVONNE KIM and ALLYSON CHIU
daily senior staffers @yvoneekimm, @_allysonchiu
All cases of sexual misconduct at Northwestern will now be handled through the University’s Sexual Harassment Prevention Office, the office announced Thursday in an email. Previously, the Office of Student Conduct handled cases against students. “We believe the centralized model will allow us to increase coordination of prevention and complaint resolution response, expedite response to concerns and allow us to engage in more effective educational and communication efforts,” Joan Slavin, who directs the office, told The Daily in an email before the announcement. The email from Slavin to students outlined that and other changes to the University’s misconduct policy, including an updated definition of consent and a rewritten section about retaliation. The expanded definition of consent states that “to engage
in sexual activity with one person does not constitute consent to engage in sexual activity with another person.” On the same page of the policy, there was also an expanded definition of coercion, explaining that someone could not give consent if there was “severe or persistent pressure causing fear of significant consequences from respondent if one does not engage in sexual activity.” In addition, the policy on retaliation was rewritten to include specific examples, such as removing someone from an organization, lowering someone’s grade, as well as direct or indirect intimidation. “That’s a great line to have because a lot of the time there’s a lot of fear about (reporting assault),” said Weinberg senior Molly Benedict, executive director of Sexual Health and Assault Peer Educators. “It’s important that … survivors making these reports know that people against them will be held accountable.” Benedict also said it is “fantastic” to see the University listing a wider range of confidential resources available to students, such as KAN-WIN, which offers multilingual » See POLICY, page 5
Linnea Narducci/The Daily Northwestern
Nate Silver speaks to an audience of roughly 1,000 about data analysis and predictions at the One Book One Northwestern keynote address. Silver’s book “The Signal and the Noise” was selected as this year’s One Book read.
Silver searches for truth in data By CHRISTIAN SURTZ
the daily northwestern @cjsurtz
Nate Silver said it’s crucial for society to use big data responsibly and discern truths from it during his One Book One Northwestern keynote address on Thursday.
Silver, author of “The Signal and the Noise,” spoke to roughly 1,000 people in Pick Staiger Concert Hall on Thursday night about his work in statistical analysis and predictions. During the talk, Silver explained his methods of working with data and answered questions from the audience. “Ninety percent of the
world’s data has been created in the last two years,” he said. “(But) it’s not like when we have more information we agree with each other more.” Silver, a University of Chicago graduate, is known for his website, FiveThirtyEight.com, and for correctly predicting the results of all 50 states in the 2012 U.S. presidential election.
In 2009, he made the Time Magazine’s list of The World’s 100 Most Influential People, and in 2012 he published “The Signal and the Noise.” Silver made special note of FiveThirtyEight’s baseball predictions in light of the Chicago Cubs’ chances to win their first » See SILVER, page 5
Council to discuss bike safety, lanes Alderman launches mayoral campaign
By ROBIN OPSAHL
daily senior staffer @robinlopsahl
Updates to the Sheridan Road rebuilding project will be discussed at City Council on Oct. 17 in response to a call for bike safety measures following the death of Weinberg freshman Chuyuan Qiu, who was killed on the road after an accident with a cement truck in September. Evanston already has plans in place to build bike lanes on Sheridan Road and Chicago Avenue, with work on the project slated to begin in April 2017, according to a news release. The project was delayed until 2017 by the council in 2014 because of road construction in a nearby area of the city. Additionally, the city will consider other proposals about how to improve bike safety on the road, including requests to lower Sheridan’s speed limit. Ald. Judy Fiske (1st) and Ald. Eleanor Revelle (7th) requested the speed limit be lowered to 25 mph on Sheridan Road from the current 30 mph limit. “Immediately lowering and enforcing the speed limit at 25 miles per hour is one positive way to improve safety on
By NORA SHELLY
daily senior staffer @noracshelly
Noah Frick-Alofs/The Daily Northwestern
The speed limit on Sheridan Road is currently 30 mph. Both aldermen and Northwestern students have called for the limit to be lowered following the accident that killed Northwestern student Chuyuan Qiu on that road.
Sheridan Road, but there are others,” Fiske said in the release. “I encourage NU students to join with us for this important discussion.” Faculty Senate passed a resolution on bike safety at NU on Wednesday that called for a lower speed limit, as well as for the annual distribution of subsidized bike lights and helmets to all students on campus. Associated Student
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Government President Christina Cilento, who authored the resolution, said she plans to attend the City Council meeting to discuss the proposed changes with other students. “I understand why construction can’t start until certain dates, but when a tragedy like this falls so far away from construction, I feel kind of helpless,” Cilento said. “I don’t know if there’s anything we can do to
change the city’s plans, but I think in the interim what we can do is educate students and other cyclists about how to ride safely and make sure they have the tool to do so.” The resolution at Faculty Senate called for the creation of a task force on bike and pedestrian safety, which will be discussed further at later Faculty » See BIKE SAFETY, page 5
A third candidate has entered the race for mayor of Evanston. Ald. Mark Tendam (6th) announced his candidacy Wednesday. The alderman joins the race alongside Ald. Brian Miller (9th) and businessman Steve Hagerty. After serving as alderman for nearly eight years, becoming mayor seemed like a way to move to something bigger, Tendam said. He said he was drawn to the opportunity to focus on the city as a whole rather than just the Sixth Ward, which includes the northwest part of the city. “We tend to spend all the time in our wards,” he said. As alderman, Tendam worked on changing the organization that runs Evanston Animal Shelter to a user that he said was more in-line with the city’s philosophy. He also pointed to his work on amendments to the affordable housing ordinance. Tendam said affordable
housing, reducing violence and increasing employment opportunities are at the top of his platform. He also said the city needs better health services, with a focus on mental health and substance abuse. Evanston is on the right path, Tendam said, but it can always improve. “We’re a great city; we excel in many ways, but we don’t like to rest either,” Tendam said. “I see Evanston as a leader. I think that is important.” Tendam said as Evanston has become more populated and more developed, housing prices and living expenses have increased as well. He pointed to the affordable housing ordinance, which altered city code to incentivize developers to include affordable housing units in their buildings as a way to keep the city accessible to middle and low-income residents. “We need developers who build with the city in mind,” he said. Virginia Mann, who has known Tendam for 20 years and has worked with him on » See TENDAM, page 5
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