The Daily Northwestern – November 13, 2017

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The Daily Northwestern Monday, November 13, 2017

DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM 8 SPORTS/Football

3 CAMPUS/Student Groups

Wildcats beat Purdue in 5th straight victory

Northwestern dance team will combine dance, social media at first-ever fall show

Find us online @thedailynu 4 OPINION/Alfaro

Consider other side of border on immigration

High 43 Low 34

Investor looks to build apartments Evanston to receive additional space for multifamily living By ADRIAN WAN

the daily northwestern @piuadrianw

Joining the push for multifamily developments, a Wilmette real estate investor purchased an assisted-living facility in downtown Evanston for $20 million earlier this fall and plans to convert it into apartment units. The property includes the former assisted-living facility — The Highlands at King Home, 1555 Oak Ave. — and a surface parking lot that the facility’s previous owner shared with the McGaw YMCA. Wilmette Real Estate & Management owner Cameel Halim, who bought the parcel, said he will create 70 to 80 units in the six-story building. Halim also plans to keep parking available for the community, he said. “The land is rare and the location of the building is really good,” Halim said. “The block will bring a lot of benefits.” The parcel is across the street from Halim Time and Glass Museum, which is filled with the Halim family’s private collection

of ornate clocks and stained glass windows. Halim’s company purchased the Oak Avenue property from Presbyterian Homes, a nonprofit and faith-based retirement organization. Before it officially closed in June due to high capital improvement costs — between $3,000 to $7,000 per month — the assisted-living facility consisted of more than 50 apartments and housed 34 residents, said Bob Werdan, Presbyterian Homes’s vice president of marketing and public relations. Werdan said the residents were offered the option to transition to Westminster Place, Presbyterian Homes’s northwest Evanston campus. “King Home no longer meets the demands of the market, nor does it operate as a continuum of care, which strays from our core mission and strategic plan,” Presbyterian Homes president and CEO Todd Swortzel said in a January news release. Due to the comfortable suburban living environment and quick transit to downtown Chicago, there is a high demand for housing in Evanston, the city’s economic development manager, Paul Zalmezak, said. » See APARTMENT, page 5

Rachel Kupfer/The Daily Northwestern

Comedian Jessica Williams speaks at A&O Productions’ fall speaker event in Cahn Auditorium. Williams spoke about the importance of incorporating her identity into her comedy.

Comedian talks identity in work About 600 people come to hear A&O fall speaker Jessica Williams By ALISON ALBELDA

the daily northwestern

Comedian Jessica Williams, former correspondent on “The Daily Show” and cohost of the podcast “2 Dope Queens,” discussed how her identity impacts her material

at A&O Productions’ fall speaker event Sunday. About 600 people gathered in Cahn Auditorium to attend the talk, sponsored by A&O, College Feminists, Multicultural Filmmakers Collective and One Book One Northwestern. Williams, who was the first

black woman and youngest correspondent at “The Daily Show” when she joined in 2012, said she has developed her comedy around her struggles with her identity and her successes as a black woman. She also said she tries to incorporate the experiences of the black and LGBTQ

communities, as well as women into her material. Her time at “The Daily Show” was formative for her career, Williams said. “I sort of found my rhythm on the show,” Williams said. “(It was) the sheer force of » See WILLIAMS, page 5

Advisory group to Cats defeat Butler in penalty kicks get new undergrad WOMEN’S SOCCER

NU advances to 2nd round of NCAA Tournament, to play UCLA By CHARLIE GOLDSMITH

the daily northwestern @2021_charlie

Lauren Clem was all by herself, standing on the back line with the fate of her senior season coming right at her. Northwestern was in penalty kicks after 110 scoreless minutes in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, playing in its first match since the heartbreaker against Penn State that cost the Wildcats a Big Ten Tournament championship. Clem wasn’t ready for her career to end, which she told her teammates in a huddle before penalty kicks began. But with a 3-2 advantage before the Bulldogs’ final attempt, her teammates were 50 yards away, unable to help. It was up to Clem to keep her career going. Butler forward Caitlyn DiSarcina aimed for the top corner and missed. NU survived. “I knew that I needed to take a deep breath and just take it one shot at a time,” Clem said. “You don’t have a lot of time to kick so you just step and fly.” Butler failed to score on its final three attempts against the

ASG to choose 2nd student to advise trustee investments By JONAH DYLAN

daily senior staffer @thejonahdylan

Butler

0(2) Northwestern

0(3)

David Lee/The Daily Northwestern

Kayla Sharples kicks the ball. The junior defender and the Wildcats beat Butler in penalty kicks to advance to the Round of 32 in the NCAA Tournament.

2016 All-American, and goalkeeper coach Paul Jennison said Clem made DiSarcina shrink in the match’s biggest moment, sending the Cats to the Round of 32. NU had not gone to penalty

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881

kicks all season, but Clem stepped into the situation unphased. On each attempt, she added what Jennison calls a pre-stretch — a quick jump to the side — to keep the Bulldogs uncertain. Because of Clem’s creativity, athleticism

and experience, Jennison said she barely needed to prepare for the moment that could have ended her college career. » See WOMEN’S SOCCER, page 5

After an expedited recruitment campaign to replace Yusuf Kudaimi on the Advisory Committee on Investment Responsibility, Associated Student Government President Nehaarika Mulukutla said a replacement would be announced this week. Kudaimi decided to take a leave of absence from Northwestern and will therefore no longer serve on the committee, Mulukutla said. After extending the application deadline to find more qualified applicants, ASG will choose between four, the Weinberg senior said. “Not that many people know about the ACIR, which is why it’s been difficult to find an undergraduate representative,” said Maryam Salem, a Weinberg junior who sits on the committee. “If more people knew about it and what the purpose of it was, if it was better advertised, then more people would apply to the position.”

Salem was appointed to the committee in the spring after it was approved by the Board of Trustees in November 2016. She will serve until next spring, as will the student appointed later this week, Mulukutla said. Ten people comprise the committee, which includes both undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, staff and alumni. The ACIR will consider proposals and make recommendations to the Board of Trustees’ investment committee. However, the ACIR has not received any student proposals and has not met yet with the Board’s committee, Salem said. Former ASG President Christina Cilento (SESP ’17), who helped oversee the creation of the ACIR, said she hopes students will engage with the committee. “On paper, it’s set up to be a good advocacy mechanism, but in practice I’m worried about if it has enough traction, if students will be interested in being engaged in the process, if the divestment movements are active enough to contribute to it,” she said. Cilento said three divestment movements — Fossil Free NU, NU Divest and » See ACIR, page 5

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


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