The Daily Northwestern – April 27, 2017

Page 1

The Daily Northwestern Thursday, April 27, 2017

DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM

A&E

12 SPORTS/Football

Walker leads NU into NFL Draft this week

arts & entertainment

Find us online @thedailynu

Lyric Opera recreates Parisian ‘My Fair Lady’ Page 6

High 54 Low 44

Senators confirm 9 vice presidents By JONAH DYLAN

daily senior staffer @thejonahdylan

Associated Student Government Senate confirmed the nominations of nine vice presidents Wednesday without a single vote against a nominee. McCormick junior Vikas Kethineedi was confirmed as vice president for campus life, a position that was created after a code change passed last week. “I feel like I definitely have the skills to hit the ground running for this committee,” he said before the vote. “Especially with the two-year live-on requirement coming, the administration is going to get a lot of things correct, but at the same time they’re going to get a lot of things wrong, so my goal is to minimize all those things they get wrong.” McCormick sophomore Daniel Knight was confirmed as vice president for services, and Weinberg sophomore Emily Ash was confirmed as vice president for public relations. SESP freshman Austin Gardner was confirmed as vice president for accessibility and inclusion. Gardner is the only freshman on ASG’s executive board. Weinberg sophomore Eshawn Sharma was confirmed as vice president for analytics, while SESP sophomore Michael Deneroff was confirmed as vice president for community relations.

Weinberg junior Katie Mansur was confirmed as vice president for sustainability. Mansur previously served on the ASG sustainability committee as well as the executive board for the Northwestern Energy and Sustainability Consortium. Although Weinberg junior Olivia Paulhac did not attend Senate, she was still confirmed as vice president for health and wellness. Speaking on her behalf, ASG President Nehaarika Mulukutla said Paulhac would be an excellent choice for the position. “I want us to not just be in a culture that builds people up in ASG, but a campus that builds everybody up and creates and fosters this culture of wellness,” Mulukutla said before the vote. “I’ve never seen anybody more (than Paulhac) excited about that message, except for maybe (executive vice president Rosalie Gambrah).” SESP sophomore Sky Patterson, a former Daily columnist, was confirmed as vice president for academics. Patterson, who had been the For Members Only senator this year, said her goal would be to put students first. “I’m someone who cares deeply about improving the Northwestern experience for all students,” she said before the vote. “This is why I joined ASG. Even as I watched many of my friends stop showing up every Wednesday or just quit all together, I stuck with student » See SENATE, page 9

Colin Boyle/Daily Senior Staffer

The Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity house on Northwestern’s campus. This year’s Dog Days, AEPi’s annual philanthropy, will donate profits to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention in honor of NU student Scott Boorstein, a member of AEPi who took his own life in September.

Honoring Scott Boorstein

AEPi will donate Dog Days profits to suicide prevention fund By CATHERINE KIM

the daily northwestern @ck_525

During past years of Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity’s annual philanthropy event Dog Days, Scott Boorstein always smiled and greeted people as he grilled hot dogs late into the night, his friend Daniel Polotsky said.

“He was so amped,” the Weinberg senior said. “He was really wacky, shouting during Dog Days, and everyone just loved having him around.” This year’s Dog Days will honor Boorstein, who took his own life on Sept. 2. AEPi plans to donate profits to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, an organization that raises awareness, funds

research and provides resources to those affected by suicide. Members of the fraternity will grill and sell hot dogs around campus from May 1 to 5. AEPi President Aaron Kaplan said although the words “suicide” and “prevention” have a negative connotation, he hopes Dog Days will be “overwhelmingly positive.” As members of the fraternity interact with

the Northwestern community throughout the week, the McCormick sophomore said he wants AEPi to be “an uplifting spirit on campus.” Kaplan said this event shows how AEPi has grown as an organization since Boorstein’s death. Members of the fraternity have been able to think » See DOG DAYS, page 9

Programming team advances Three NU students advance to world competition By MADELEINE FERNANDO

the daily northwestern @madeleinemelody

Colin Boyle/Daily Senior Staffer

Divvy bikes parked at the Northwestern Library station. As of March 2017, 13,166 bike trips have been started from Evanston since the installation of the original 10 locations in July, Evanston’s transportation and mobility coordinator Katie Knapp said.

City’s Divvy service grows By SYDNEY STONE

the daily northwestern @SydStone16

Since the initial instillation of Divvy bike stations in Evanston almost a year ago, the city has continued efforts to make the bikes more accessible for all residents. Divvy, a Chicago-based

bike-sharing service, aims to give residents an alternative option to travel between Evanston and Chicago, Evanston’s transportation and mobility coordinator Katie Knapp said. The bikes first came to Evanston last summer in coordination with Chicago and was funded in part by a state grant. Aldermen voted at a City Council meeting Monday

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881

to approve the purchase and installation of a new Divvy station, which will include 10 new bicycles and be located near the intersection of Dempster Street and Chicago Avenue. Knapp said she hopes the new location, part of an effort to generally increase mobility for Evanston residents, achieves » See DIVVY, page 9

A team of three Northwestern students — who call themselves the WildWildCats — will advance to the World Finals of the Association for Computing Machinery International Collegiate Programming Contest in May. The team won first place out of more than 100 teams at the

Hagerty wins by 115 votes in official count

The Cook County Clerk’s Office released the official results of Evanston’s municipal elections Wednesday. Steve Hagerty, owner of an Evanston-based emergency consulting business, won the mayoral race against Ald. Mark Tendam (6th), garnering about 50.3 percent of the vote. His lead over Tendam was only 115 votes. Tendam

regional competition held at Contest is a worldwide comthe University of Chicago in petition that brings together November. teams of three students from NU’s team includes second- universities across the country year computer science Ph.D. to compete and solve about student Abhratanu Dutta, 10 problems in less than five first-year computer science hours. The problems typically Ph.D. student Yiding Feng deal with real-life scenarios and Weinberg senior Ruohong involving complex algorithms, Zhang. The team is advancing said McCormick Prof. Goce to the finals in Rapid City, Trajcevski, the team’s coach. South Dakota. Together, the group must The Association for Com- develop and then successfully puting Machinery International Collegiate Programming » See PROGRAMMING, page 10 conceded the race to Hagerty on April 9, pledging to support Hagerty in fulfilling his campaign promises. The election, held on April 4, had a voter turnout of nearly 37 percent, with 18,422 ballots cast and counted. Prior to the general election, a primary was held Feb. 28 for the mayoral and 5th Ward races. The turnout rate was significantly higher than that of the last contested election in 2009, when only 10,375 people voted. Hagerty told The Daily on April 9 that his opponent

“owes it to himself and his supporters to make sure he is comfortable with the data to date before making a decision whether to concede or not.” In the 8th Ward race, longtime incumbent Ald. Ann Rainey (8th) defeated her challenger, Rob Bady, by a margin of one percent. Rainey finished the race with 764 votes, only 13 votes ahead of Bady. Additionally, races were held for city clerk and other aldermanic seats. — Kristina Karisch

INSIDE: Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Arts and Entertainment 6 | 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.