The Daily Northwestern Friday, October 27, 2017
DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM
THE WEEKLY
PODCAST
Scan to listen
Find us online @thedailynu
PAGES 5-8
Wildcats ready for home date with Spartans
SAE may return to house in fall 2018 NU decides chapter could come back if suspension complete By CATHERINE KIM
daily senior staffer @ck_525
Northwestern will allow Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity to return to campus if it “successfully completes” its suspension in 2018, University spokesman Al Cubbage said, even though Interfraternity Council decided Tuesday to cease to recognize SAE until 2021. In April, the University suspended SAE until September 2018 because the chapter “knowingly violated” its disciplinary probation last academic year, University spokesman Bob Rowley said at the time. A University-led investigation found that SAE had been “repeatedly hosting parties and providing alcohol to minors,” he said. Despite IFC’s decision, Cubbage said the SAE chapter will be able to resume on-campus living and participation in student life if it successfully completes its suspension. IFC operates separately from the University, and the council’s decisions will not influence the University’s actions, he said. IFC’s decision would not affect SAE’s ability to obtain a housing lease or live on campus, Cubbage said. As a
fully-recognized student organization, SAE could recruit and participate in the Student Organizations Fair as well, he said. “Certainly we recognize and respect (IFC’s) process, but it’s also important to understand the University has its own policies and procedures that ultimately guide what will happen in regard to SAE,” he said. IFC president Rodney Orr did not respond to a request for comment about the University’s decision. SAE’s suspension came after a separate investigation into the SAE chapter last academic year. According to an an email sent by Chief of Police Bruce Lewis in February, the Sexual Harassment Prevention Office received a report that four female students had possibly been given a date rape drug at the SAE house on Jan. 21. The report said two of the students believed they were sexually assaulted. After a University review of the reports, no disciplinary action was taken against the chapter for those allegations, vice president for student affairs Patricia Telles-Irvin announced in an email to students in March. Associated Student Government President Nehaarika Mulukutla told The Daily on Thursday that she is “disappointed” with the University’s decision to allow SAE back on » See SAE, page 10
Allie Goulding/Daily Senior Staffer
Evanston Township High School, 1600 Dodge Ave. ETHS graduates filed two lawsuits Wednesday against former drama teacher Bruce Siewerth, ETHS and the District 202 Board of Education.
Former ETHS teacher faces suits Ex-drama teacher, school sued following sexual assault allegations By RISHIKA DUGYALA
daily senior staffer @rdugyala822
Two lawsuits were filed Wednesday following allegations that a former Evanston Township High School drama teacher sexually abused
students during his roughly 20-year tenure. The two “John Doe” plaintiffs were male students in the 1970s. In the lawsuits, they claimed the teacher — Bruce Siewerth — sexually abused them, and that the incidents were part of an “open secret” at the school. The litigation was
Journalists discuss diversity at panel
Writers talk experiences in newsrooms, changing media landscape By ALEXIS WHITE
the daily northwestern @alexisw_98
Three journalists spoke at Northwestern as part of a Thursday panel, discussing patterns in the changing media landscape and their experiences with diversity in newsrooms. The event, hosted by Contemporary Thought Speaker Series, featured Doreen St. Félix of The New Yorker, Wesley Morris of The New York Times and freelance journalist Rembert Browne. About 80 people attended the “Journalism in the 21st Century: Politics, Pop Culture & Protest” conversation in Harris Hall, moderated by journalist Britt Julious. Medill sophomore Amanda Gordon, a CTSS executive board member, said the journalists were invited to speak because they fuse their » See PANEL, page 10
Noah Frick-Alofs/Daily Senior Staffer
Britt Julious (left) moderates a panel of journalists Rembert Browne, Doreen St. Félix and Wesley Morris in Harris Hall on Thursday. The panel discussed their personal experiences in newsrooms during a changing media landscape.
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
filed in the Circuit Court of Cook County against Siewerth, ETHS and the District 202 Board of Education. One more former student will file a suit, said Evan Smola, one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers. Smola said one plaintiff was an actor for the theater department and the other plaintiff
was a stage crew member who worked regularly on productions. He said a third graduate approached the firm, and the attorneys will file his suit either Friday or Monday. “These types of acts don’t come to an end until people
Charles Murray, Steve Forbes to visit campus in early November
held in Parkes Hall and is open to only NU students and faculty, according to the release. Papastefan told The Daily the group normally doesn’t have two fall speakers, but invited Murray to campus because he was in the area. College Republicans also thought it would be a nice opportunity for students interested in the “nitty gritty” political science side of the election, Papastefan said. In March, students at Middlebury College protested an event where Murray was scheduled to speak about his book “Coming Apart,” which examines the white working class. Papastefan, a former Daily columnist, said College Republicans tries to invite speakers to campus that it believes have views worth hearing, and the group encourages students who may not agree with those views to attend its events. “Unlike other schools who get really bad national press attention, Northwestern seems to have a really good habit of respecting these speakers and allowing them to share their opinions and have a meaningful dialogue,” the Bienen junior said. Tickets for both events will be available through the Norris Box Office next week.
Steve Forbes, editor in chief and chairman of Forbes Media, will be the annual fall speaker for Northwestern College Republicans, the group announced Thursday. The event, titled “Business, Media and Politics in 2017,” will be held in Fisk Hall on Nov. 6 and will be open to the public, the release said. Forbes formerly campaigned for the Republican nomination for president in 1996 and 2000. He currently writes editorials for Forbes, whose magazine has an international circulation of about one million, according to the Forbes website. “He’s a really great fit for students here because of his really strong connections to the business and the media world as the editor in chief of Forbes,” Grant Papastefan, vice president of College Republicans, told The Daily. College Republicans also announced a Nov. 1 lunch event with political scientist and author Charles Murray. The event will be
» See LAWSUITS, page 10
— Elizabeth Byrne
INSIDE: Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Gameday 5 | Classifieds & Puzzles 10 | Sports 12