NEWS On Campus SES sees increase in student contact » PAGE 3
SPORTS Gameday Kelly: Midseason slump is no cause for alarm » PAGE 7
OPINION Spectrum Black students shouldn’t have to represent entire race » PAGE 4
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The Daily Northwestern Friday, October 23, 2015
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Law school gets $100 million gift By PETER KOTECKI
daily senior staffer @peterkotecki
Daily file photo by Cat Zakrzewski
CASH FOR GUNS Evanston resident James Davis fills out paperwork at the city’s second gun buyback event in June 2013. The city has since changed the gun buyback format to allow residents to trade guns for money on a daily basis.
City gun buyback questioned By ELENA SUCHARETZA
the daily northwestern @elenasucharetza
Less than three years after Evanston resident Carolyn Murray’s son was gunned down on the city’s West Side, Murray stood before City Council speaking again to aldermen about how the gun buyback program could reduce violent crime in Evanston.
In response to recent shootings, Murray urged city officials to reinstate public gun buyback programs based at community centers. “If we have organizations come together and reach out to the individuals owning and operating guns, we can end the senseless gun violence,” Murray said at the meeting last month. At the Sept. 21 council meeting, several members of the community in addition to Murray expressed concern
about recent gun-related homicides in the city. Just three days earlier, 45-year-old resident Cesario Cox Sr. had died from injuries sustained in a gunshot wound to his head while sitting on the back porch of a house one block from Evanston Township High School. Two of this year’s three homicides — all of which were gun-related — occurred about two weeks apart. Investigators » See BUYBACK, page 8
With one of the largest gifts to a law school in the nation, J.B. Pritzker (Law ’93) and his wife, M.K. Pritzker, made a $100 million donation to the School of Law, the University announced on Thursday. Bill Osborn, chair of the Northwestern Board of Trustees, said the school will be renamed the Pritzker School of Law. Thursday was a major turning point, both in the history of the School of Law and the history of legal education, Osborn said. Reaching such a point requires fundamental pieces to be in place, including a visionary but viable strategy as well as resources and talent needed to implement that strategy, he said. “The strategic plans for our university and the law school guide us to excel in critically important academic areas where we can, and should, be national and global leaders,” Osborn said. University President Morton Schapiro said the Pritzkers’ gift will have a significant financial impact on students pursuing law degrees at NU. “With this transformative gift, we leap ahead in our ability to provide a Northwestern legal education to all our best students, regardless of financial circumstances,” Schapiro said. The School of Law is the seventh
of NU’s 12 schools to be named after a benefactor or leader, he said. The gift will support multiple social justice centers at the School of Law, including the Center on Wrongful Convictions, the Children and Family Justice Center and the Center for International Human Rights. “This remarkable gift will allow us to expand our work in these unbelievably critical areas,” Schapiro said. In addition, the gift will permanently endow the school’s Entrepreneurship Law Center, renaming it the Donald Pritzker Entrepreneurial Law Center in honor of J.B. Pritzker’s father, Donald Pritzker, co-founder and former chief executive of Hyatt Hotels Corporation. “The Donald Pritzker Entrepreneurial Law Center … will not only instill an entrepreneurial mindset in all of our future lawyers, but it will allow us to build on our pioneering Master of Science in Law program for professionals in the scientific, engineering and medical fields,” Schapiro said. Schapiro said the intersection of law, business and technology is a key to the nation’s economic prospects. NU is already known for its willingness to break down disciplinary barriers, and the School of Law will lead future efforts in interdisciplinary studies due to the donation, he said. School of Law Dean Daniel Rodriguez said the law school’s » See PRITZKER, page 9
Student parents upset Reported crime down 4 percent with representation By MARISSA PAGE
By OLIVIA EXSTRUM
daily senior staffer @oliviaexstrum
A coalition of graduate student parents say they are not represented by a task force formed this quarter to examine the experience of graduate student parents. Announced this month, the task force does not include a representative from the group, the NU Student Parent Alliance. The task force comprises faculty, staff and graduate students, three of whom are student parents. But Matilda Stubbs, an eighth-year anthropology student and active member of the Student Parent Alliance, said it’s not enough. “Individuals being on a task force is not the same as them representing a collective group,” Stubbs said. “We’re the only student parent group on campus. It’s very problematic.” Representatives from the alliance met with administrators in April to discuss improving the resources available to student parents. Some of the group’s concerns, detailed in a 75-page report the alliance presented at April’s meeting, include access to affordable childcare, parental leave policies
and availability of lactation rooms. Members of the alliance, which formed last year, voiced their frustration about these issues to The Daily in March. Provost Daniel Linzer, who assembled the task force with Executive Vice President Nim Chinniah, said he thought his conversation with the alliance in the spring was productive. Although Linzer highlighted the work the alliance had done, he said he and Chinniah wanted the task force to include “multiple perspectives.” “This is a terrific process, where these initial students helped identify a problem and are moving ahead and addressing it,” he said. “But those who bring forward a position of advocacy cannot be the ones who then set the recommendations for what the University should do.” Robin Hoecker, a sixth-year Communication graduate student and a student parent, said although she was aware of plans to form a task force, the alliance received little information about it after the meeting. The group sent administrators a list of who should be on the task force, which included graduate student parents, representatives from » See TASK FORCE, page 9
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
daily senior staffer @marissahpage
In the first nine months of the year, robberies in Evanston are down 22 percent compared to the same period in 2014 — the sharpest decline in the statistics released by the Evanston Police Department this month. Except for instances of motor vehicle theft and homicide, crime in Evanston has declined so far in 2015 compared with the same point last year. The statistics show a decline in all aggravated assault and battery, robberies, burglaries and arson. In total, reported crime is down 4 percent. There have been three homicides this year, compared with two at the same point last year. The first of those homicides — all of which were gunrelated — occurred at the beginning of June when a Chicago resident was shot multiple times in central Evanston. The next two homicides, which police believe are both gang-related, occurred about two weeks apart in late summer. Evanston police responded with a program aimed at reducing violence in Evanston by getting guns off the street, deploying two officers each day dedicated to the task. “What I’d like is to get more assistance from local prosecutors,” Ald. Jane Grover (7th) said. “Anyone
Graphic by Jacob Swan and Rachel Dubner/The Daily Northwestern
COMPARING CRIME The Evanston Police Department’s third-quarter crime statistics show a 19 percent decrease in robberies compared with the same period of time from last year. Of the 81 motor vehicle burglaries this year, 96 percent involved unlocked vehicles.
willing to use a gun in a conflict should not be on the streets anymore. Perhaps we need more focus from the criminal prosecution side to get guns off our streets.” Evanston police Cmdr. Joseph Dugan said the department meets weekly to discuss crime trends and map out deployments based on areas with higher rates of criminal activity. “We have a crime analyst whose
job is to map out crimes and look for trends and similarities so that we can deploy resources for the upcoming week,” Dugan said. “That always helps, putting resources in the right area, even if not to arrest, but deter (crime) by just being in the area.” Motor vehicle theft has also increased, up 14 percent to 49 cases » See CRIME, page 8
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