The Daily Northwestern – October 18, 2017

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The Daily Northwestern Wednesday, October 18, 2017

DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM 8 SPORTS/Women’s Tennis

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3 CAMPUS/Administration

Cats doubles teams roll through regionals

NÜ Men to expand programming, add 2nd cohort to six-week dialogue on masculinity

4 OPINION/The Spectrum

Before I come out, I have to accept myself

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Director of Bluhm Legal Clinic retires Thomas Geraghty steps down after 41 years at clinic By ERICA SNOW

daily senior staffer @ericasnoww

Colin Boyle/Daily Senior Staffer

Amy Kaufman, Associate Director of Community Partners for Affordable Housing, speaks to an audience at Evanston Public Library. CPAH, an organization that builds and refurbishes affordable housing units taught Evanston residents how to apply for one of their homes.

Residents talk affordable housing Local nonprofit hosts seminar at EPL on how to apply for units By EDMUND BANNISTER

daily senior staffer @ed_bannister

Local residents learned about the city’s affordable housing opportunities during

a meeting Tuesday at Evanston Public Library. Community Partners for Affordable Housing, a nonprofit that builds and rents units for low- and moderate-income people, taught residents how to apply

for affordable homes in Evanston. CPAH hosted the seminar at EPL in order to highlight current and upcoming openings on some of its properties, said Amy Kaufman, the organization’s associate director.

CPAH currently has two units available in Evanston with more opening in the coming year. While there is a waitlist, Kaufman said spots often » See AFFORDABLE, page 6

When School of Law Prof. Steven Lubet received an 18-month grant that brought him to Northwestern, he never thought he would stay for more than 40 years –– but then he worked with School of Law Prof. Thomas Geraghty. “Tom is a legendary law professor,” Lubet said. “There are generations upon generations of law students who’ve benefitted from his kind, wise and generous teaching. I certainly would not be the professor I am without Tom’s leadership. … If you have the chance to keep working with Tom Geraghty, you take it.” After serving as the Bluhm Legal Clinic’s first director for more than 40 years, Geraghty (School of Law ’69) retired on Aug. 31. The clinic, which opened in 1969, allows law students to gain experience trying cases while providing legal help to those in need, Geraghty said. Geraghty said he is especially proud of his cases involving juvenile rights and the abolition of the death penalty in Illinois. School of Law Prof. Juliet Sorensen succeeded Geraghty as the clinic’s director on Sept. 1. She said about 140 law students are enrolled in clinical classes during the year, and 91 percent of Pritzker School of

Officials push for diversity on boards Aldermen seek to add perspectives to city commissions By KRISTINA KARISCH

daily senior staffer @kristinakarisch

In an effort to increase diversity on Evanston boards and commissions, aldermen requested at a Monday meeting that city staff send them reports about vacancies. Evanston currently has more than 40 established boards and commissions, Mayor Steve Hagerty told The Daily on Tuesday. They range from boards that deal with environmental and ethics issues to ad-hoc committees that address a specific issue. Ald. Robin Rue Simmons (5th) told The Daily on Tuesday representing everyone’s voice in city discussions

is important. Rue Simmons said she wants to help diversify boards throughout the city because minority, moderate-income and millennial residents in Evanston are underrepresented. Rue Simmons said there are certain groups — like the Preservation Commission — which could directly benefit from a more diverse membership. She said though Evanston has major landmarks and historically significant neighborhoods throughout the city, more attention has been paid toward preservation efforts in the east. “If we have a structure and a goal on how we diversify these committees, it’s something we have a responsibility to do for these communities,” Rue Simmons said. At Monday’s Rules Committee meeting, where the » See DIVERSITY, page 6

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881

Law students graduate having participated in some clinical program. Sorensen said even though Geraghty’s shoes are “impossible” to fill, it’s exciting to serve as the new director and continue to grow its programs. “He is a legend in the greater Chicago legal community, and frankly, beyond that,” Sorensen said. “I have attended international human rights conferences and been approached by people conveying their warm regards to Tom Geraghty.” Under Geraghty’s directorship, Sorensen said the clinic has been on the “cutting edge of social justice.” Geraghty said he’s proud of how much the clinic has grown since its inception. Original grant funding paid for the clinic to have two lawyers, he said. Now, the clinic has expanded to about 35. “I hope that the clinic will continue its work to provide access to justice to underserved communities in Chicago,” Geraghty said, “and that we continue to focus on the implementation of human rights standards locally, nationally and internationally.” School of Law Prof. Bob Burns has tried cases with Geraghty and said working with him has been a “complete pleasure” because of his technical proficiency as a trial lawyer, his diplomacy and his dedication to social justice. “He just has enormous energy and real enthusiasm for the work » See DIRECTOR, page 6

NU scientists detect collision of neutron stars

Source: Robin Dienel/Carnegie Institution for Science

An artist’s rendition of the collision and explosion of two neutron stars. Four Northwestern astronomers are members of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, which discovered the collision on Aug. 17.

Four Northwestern astronomers were among the first to detect a collision of two neutron stars 130 million lightyears from Earth, resulting in the type of explosion that produces heavy metals like gold and silver, according to a Monday news release. The astronomers — physics and astronomy Profs. Vicky Kalogera, Shane Larson and Raffaella Margutti, and postdoctoral fellow Wen-Fai Fong — are members of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, a group of international scientists dedicated to detecting gravitational waves. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and another group, Virgo Collaboration, identified the collision on Aug. 17. The LIGO Observatories discovered the first indication of the gravitational waves two years earlier, the release said. Neutron stars are formed » See STARS, page 6

INSIDE: Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Classifieds & Puzzles 6 | Sports 8


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