The Daily Northwestern — Feb. 18, 2015

Page 1

Evanston introduces changes to housing rehab program » PAGE 2

Spring sports guide

Catch up on all the spring sports as the Wildcats start their seasons » PAGE 5

High 7 Low -5

The Daily Northwestern Wednesday, February 18, 2015

DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM

Find us online @thedailynu

Freed inmate sues NU, Protess By CAT ZAKRZEWSKI

daily senior staffer @Cat_Zakrzewski

Sean Su/Daily Senior Staffer

WOMEN IN POWER Christine Brennan (Medill ’80, ’81), Cassidy Hubbarth (Medill ’07), Pam Oliver and Rachel Nichols (Medill ’95) discuss women in sports media at a panel Tuesday.

Sports reporters talk gender By TONY CHEN

the daily northwestern

Christine Brennan (Medill ’80, ’81) joined three of her fellow trailblazers from different generations and fields of sports journalism to discuss the female voice in sports media Tuesday. There was standing room only in the McCormick Foundation Center Forum for the four-person panel that tackled subjects including the role of social media and personal brands in journalism as well as the trope of the female sideline reporter. The panel is the fifth installment of the “Beyond the Box Score” lecture series hosted by the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications and Northwestern Athletics.

Brennan, a USA Today sports columnist and author and commentator for ABC News, CNN and NPR, moderated the event. Brennan began the event by asking the panel their thoughts on the status of women in sports journalism. Rachel Nichols (Medill ’95), CNN’s sole sports anchor, said the strides women in sports media have made can’t be ignored, but there is much improvement to be made. “Being able to have women in the position that Christine is in or being able to say what you think is a big deal,” Nichols said. “There weren’t women in those positions 10 years ago.” Cassidy Hubbarth (Medill ’07), an ESPN anchor and host of NBA Tonight on ESPN2, said women can now explore more opportunities than before. “A woman can now tell a sports story,” Hubbarth said. “There isn’t a specific role

anymore. That’s positive.” Fox Sports reporter Pam Oliver said staying true to the craft of journalism is the most important. She wants to see “passion and heart” in young journalists, not just a desire to be on television. The panel also discussed their starts in journalism, and during the half-hour Q&A session that ended the event, the panelists answered audience questions about how to deal with career rejection and the biggest misconceptions about female sports journalists. “The greatest misconception for me is that I can cook because now and then I will still get an email or tweet that says, ‘go back to the kitchen where you belong,’” Brennan said. “And I would be like ‘oh no … you do not want me to be in the kitchen.’” » See BEYOND, page 10

ASG Senate to vote on divestment By SHANE MCKEON

the daily northwestern @Shane_McKeon

Associated Student Government Senate will vote Wednesday on a Northwestern Divest-sponsored resolution asking the University to divest from six corporations the sponsors say violate Palestinians’ human rights. The meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m. at Norris University Center’s Louis Room, a larger-than-usual venue to accommodate the larger crowd expected to attend. Weinberg junior and Senate speaker Noah Star said students should bring their WildCARDs because ASG will require guests to check in at the meeting. The resolution, introduced at Senate’s Feb. 11 meeting, calls for greater

transparency in investing the University’s endowment and for NU to divest from six corporations that NUDivest believes the University is invested in. The Investment Office does not release information on its investments. Weinberg senior Ariel Roitman, the ASG senator for NU Hillel, said he will vote against the resolution. He said he supports the call for greater transparency, but that passing the resolution would align ASG with the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement, a movement he finds “problematic for many reasons.” “I don’t think we should invest in companies that violate human rights anywhere in the world,” he said. “Where I disagree with them is I do think this is a political resolution. It has a lot of political implications, and I am very concerned about those implications.”

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881

NUDivest held a workshop Feb. 5 to educate students on the BDS movement and to clarify misconceptions about it. Weinberg junior and NUDivest member Noah Whinston, a senator for off-campus students, helped author the resolution. He said NUDivest has no organizational stance on the political issues Roitman referenced. Whinston answered questions about the resolution at the Feb. 11 meeting. “Within our organization, there are people who believe in different political solutions to the conflict, which is why we don’t have an organizational stance,” he said. “The only affiliation we have with the BDS call is that we are pursuing part of the divestment part of the call.” Whinston also said NUDivest avoids » See DIVEST, page 10

A man is suing Northwestern and other parties for $40 million after he says he was coerced to plead guilty to a double homicide and spent 15 years in prison following revelations by an NU journalism class. Alstory Simon filed a lawsuit Tuesday in the U.S. District Court of Northern Illinois seeking redress for the time he spent in prison after he says he was wrongfully incarcerated for the killings. Cook County prosecutors threw out his conviction in October. The suit alleges the University, former Medill Prof. David Protess as well as private investigator Paul Ciolino and Simon’s then-attorney Jack Rimland “conspired to frame Simon for the murders.” In a landmark case that garnered international attention and contributed to the end of the Illinois death penalty, a 1998 class led by Protess found evidence that overturned a death sentence against Anthony Porter in the 1982 murders of Jerry Hillard and Marilyn

Green. Porter was originally found guilty of the double homicide. Ciolino, a private investigator working with the Medill class, obtained a video of Simon confessing to the killings. Simon pled guilty to charges of murder and manslaughter and was sentenced to 37 years in prison. However, in October, Cook County prosecutors threw out the conviction of Simon when questions were raised about the integrity of the investigation by Protess’ class, which was part of a program later named The Innocence Project. In his suit, Simon claimed Protess instructed students to “develop evidence of Porter’s innocence, rather than search for the truth.” He claims he was coerced to falsely plead guilty to the murders when presented with fabricated evidence and “terrifying” threats. In a statement today, University spokesman Al Cubbage said the University is reviewing the lawsuit. “Northwestern denies all wrongdoing in this matter and looks forward to being vindicated in a court of law,” he said. » See SIMON, page 10

NU hosts forum on new provost position By JEE YOUNG LEE

the daily northwestern @jennajeeyoung

Students and administrators voiced concerns about Northwestern’s diversity efforts Tuesday at a forum held by the search committee for the University’s new associate provost for diversity and inclusion. The search committee, comprising representatives from the administration, faculty, staff and the student body, was formed in December 2014 to begin looking for the successor to former Assistant Provost for Diversity and Inclusion Dona Cordero, who left the University in October for a position at the Georgia Institute of Technology. The committee will interview candidates in May and hopes to have chosen a new provost by the end of the academic year, Lindsay Chase-Lansdale, associate provost for faculty, told The Daily. The search committee decided to upgrade the position from an

assistant spot to associate provost to make the position more powerful, Chase-Lansdale told The Daily after the forum. She said other Big Ten universities are creating similar positions to consolidate the power and responsibilities of administrator positions dedicated to diversity and inclusion. About 25 staff, faculty and students attended the forum. “During the search of candidates, we are educating ourselves with what the concerns of the community are, so that when we are talking to the candidates we can be candid about them,” said Dwight McBride, cochair of the search committee and the Associate Provost for Graduate Education. McBride said the search committee held two open fora Tuesday on the Chicago and Evanston campuses, as well as two committee meetings during the quarter. His update on the committee’s progress was followed » See PROVOST, page 10

INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Classifieds & Puzzles 10 | Sports 12


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.