The Daily Northwestern - Oct. 24, 2014

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Friday, October 24, 2014

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Students create Big Ten green initiative By Emily Chin

the daily northwestern

Christine Farolan/Daily Senior Staffer

BEHIND THE FOOD Carlos Romero, an organizer with the Restaurant Opportunities Center of Chicago, speaks at a panel discussion Thursday. NU Real Food, a group that advocates for fair, sustainable food sourcing, hosted the event.

Panelists talk workers’ rights By Christine Farolan

daily senior staffer @crfarolan

Food service workers and community organizers spoke Thursday about fighting for workers’ rights to create a fairer, more sustainable food industry. The panel, “Who’s Behind Your Food: A Food Chain Worker’s Panel,” allowed workers to share their stories from the workplace and answer questions from students. Hosted by NU Real Food, Northwestern

University Community for Human Rights and NU Political Union, the panel featured six speakers. Carlos Romero, an organizer with the Restaurant Opportunities Center of Chicago, explained that environmentally friendly food requires addressing unfair labor practices first. “Food sustainability is not possible without labor sustainability,” Romero said. Educating people about this dynamic is what NU Real Food aims to do. Cofounded last spring by Weinberg senior Colleen Fitzgerrell, the group is NU’s chapter of the national Real Food Challenge,

which uses four components — humane, fair, local or community-based and ecologically sound — to define “real food.” People are often unconscious about the background behind their food, viewing food as simply materializing on their plate, Fitzgerrell said. “This alienation of people from their food leads to this ultimately unsustainable system,” Fitzgerrell said. “It’s controlled by this market that seeks to maximize profit at the cost of things like labor, humane care for animals, community-based » See food, page 9

Representatives from seven of the 14 Big Ten schools are collaborating to create the Big Ten Students Sustainability Association, a group to promote sustainability initiatives across the Big Ten campuses. “There’s so much communication between the Big Ten schools,” said Christina Cilento, Associated Student Government vice president of sustainability. “It really makes sense to have a source of communication that’s solely based around sustainability so we can really support each other in our projects and find out what other schools are doing that we might want to implement.” Cilento, a Medill sophomore, was contacted in September by University of Maryland student Ori Gutin, who emailed 160 student groups from all 14 Big Ten campuses with the idea. “I was really impressed. I couldn’t believe we hadn’t thought of doing this before,” Cilento said. Gutin, who serves as the director of sustainability at Maryland’s Student Government Association, got the idea by talking to staff at Maryland’s Office of Sustainability, who told him they were collaborating with other staff at Big Ten schools to promote green initiatives. He decided to create something similar among students. “On your campus you have your student organization, and when you’re brainstorming to do something on campus, you have

those minds thinking of an idea,” he said. “But beyond that, there are students all across the Big Ten working in different sustainability organizations that are all thinking ideas like this. And whether they’re looking through a different lens, they’re looking at entirely different issues and solutions to those issues.” Because the Big Ten is an athletic association, it mostly deals with sustainability issues related to athletics, such as air travel emissions from sports travel. Gutin said he also wants the Big Ten to try to become a carbon neutral athletic program. The association is still in its beginning stages. Organizers are looking at what initiatives other schools have in place, which they call a “sustainability snapshot.” The snapshots ask questions such as what the schools are doing about greenhouse gases, water, food and transportation, said University of Michigan student Angela Yang. “It’s another chance for schools to collaborate so we can see what other schools are doing, particularly with the Climate Action Plan that Illinois is doing,” she said. Cilento found many schools had similar programs in place, but there were also initiatives that were unique to certain schools, and initiatives that are unique to Northwestern, such as the ongoing push to ban plastic water bottles on campus. “I think there are some unique and creative solutions that » See sustainability, page 9

Central Street residents learn about master plan By Hal Jin

the daily northwestern @apricityhal

The Central Street Neighbors Association hosted a presentation Thursday that aimed to educate Central Street residents on the master plan that regulates the layout of the street. CSNA, a nonprofit organization that represents the interests of residents of Central Street, laid out the specifics of the Central Street Master Plan. Jim Hughes, one of CSNA’s directors, and Jeff Smith, attorney and CSNA vice president, presented the history, objective and specifics of the plan to an audience of around 30 at the Evanston Ecology Center, 2024 McCormick Blvd. The American Planning Association named Central Street as a “Top 10 Great Neighborhood” in 2013. Central Street was chosen for its history of planning

Humanities festival to come through Evanston

A humanities festival featuring several different speakers and events will be coming to Evanston on Saturday

and design, active and engaged citizens and prime location, according to the APA’s website. Members of the organization began meeting in 2006, when development in the Central Street area was booming and the city had no clear laws on building requirements, Hughes said. The city hired a consultant and, throughout 2007, residents collaborated with city officials to create a plan that would be adopted as city zoning on Jan. 28, 2008. The plan regulates various aspects of Central Street, including the dimensions of buildings and the streetscape. In an opinion article published on Evanston RoundTable on Sept. 10 that was printed out for audience members, CSNA president John Walsh stressed the importance of bringing attention to the master plan now. “Unfortunately, the guidance that the Plan was intended to give future developers has not had much chance to blossom. The collapse of the real estate

mastering the plan Jim Hughes, vice president of Central Street Neighbors Association, describes the proposal for a project on Central Street. The CSNA held a meeting Thursday night to educate residents on regulations of the street’s infrastructure.

before continuing in Chicago until Nov. 9. The annual Chicago Humanities Festival presents events that focus on the humanities and brings novelists, scholars, musicians, archaeologists and other professions together, according to the festival’s website. The goals of the festival include bringing together a

variety of audiences, presenting different cultures of the world and emphasizing the importance of the study of the humanities, the site says. The first CHF was held in 1990 for 3,500 people at the Art Institute of Chicago and Orchestra Hall, according to the website. On Saturday, the festival will have

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881

Source: David K. Staub

its Morris and Dolores Kohl Kaplan Northwestern Day in Evanston. The day is named after a couple who wanted to bring the CHF to the North Shore. Events on Saturday include “Roger Ebert: Life Itself,” “Eula Biss: Where We Are From” and a conversation with writer and actor Wallace Shawn. The festival’s events are discounted for both

bubble … blunted most development of any kind,” the essay reads. “Now … we can expect to see renewed interest in developing underused properties. Unfortunately, nearly all of the City staff … have departed those positions, and are unfamiliar with the details of the plan and zoning, let alone their history and purpose.” Walsh’s letter mentions a proposal for the development of a 47-foot building at 1620 Central Street, which contains “over a dozen deviations from what the law allows.” Hughes said that he has been trying to work with the developers of the project on coming to an agreement. The proposal violates the master plan in being too tall, taking up too much sidewalk space and filling up a large portion of a nearby parking lot, he said. Such acts would block sunlight and cause privacy issues for nearby » See Central, page 9 members and students, and some of the events are free for students, according to the site. The festival will move to Hyde Park and other areas of Chicago after coming to Evanston, according to the site. — Stephanie Kelly

INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 6 | Classifieds & Puzzles 8 | Sports 12


2 NEWS | the daily northwestern

Around Town

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They’re adding to the good environment and synergy that exists for small food businesses in the west side of Evanston.

— Mark Muenzer, city community development director

City plans for more charging stations daily senior staffer @paigeleskin

Evanston plans to add electric car charging stations to a local parking garage, allowing the city to take advantage of state rebates which would cut the costs of the stations’ purchase and installation. The city’s 2015 budget allots money for the incorporation of charging stations at the Sherman Plaza Parking Garage, the city’s sustainable programs coordinator Catherine Hurley said Thursday in an email to The Daily. If the budget is approved, the stations would be installed in the garage in spring 2015, Hurley said. The spring installation would make the city eligible for the fall 2014 cycle of the Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Rebate Program, an initiative from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. Applications for the program recently opened. The effort aims to develop electric vehicle infrastructure by offering rebates that cover up to 50

percent of the equipment and installation costs for charging stations, according to the DCEO’s site. The city can qualify for up to $50,000 of funding for the stations. Government units, businesses, educational institutions and individual residents are eligible to apply for the rebate. To apply, Evanston must purchase and install its new stations before asking for funding. The DCEO is accepting applications until Apr. 16, 2015. The first charging stations in Evanston were installed in February in the Maple Parking Garage and qualified for the 2013 cycle of rebates, Hurley said. In its first month, the dual connection vehicle station, which cost less than $12,000, served about 80 individual uses. Due to the station’s success, the city looked into expanding its program to include other parking garages. In addition to the Maple Parking Garage, other parking lots throughout the city are equipped with charging stations as part of a partnership with Chicago-based car-sharing service I-GO, Hurley said.

Police Blotter Evanston man arrested after alleged drunk-driving crash Police arrested a 29-year-old man early Tuesday morning after he crashed his car into a tree and hit a building. Authorities believe he was under the influence at the time of the crash. Officers responded to a car accident in the 600 block of Custer Avenue at about 4:20 a.m. on Tuesday, Evanston police spokesman Perry Polinski said. There was evidence that the driver was intoxicated, Polinski said. The car had hit a tree and, before it could be put in park, rolled into a nearby house, he said. The building sustained minor damage, including a broken water pipe. The Evanston man was transported to Presence Saint Francis Hospital, 355 Ridge Ave., with minor injuries, police said. He was released around 5:30 a.m. on Tuesday and charged with DUI.

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charge it, please Evanston is bringing electric car-charging stations to another Evanston parking lot in spring 2015. Their installation will make the city eligible to receive state rebates that will cover up to 50 percent of the costs of purchase and installation up to a maximum of $50,000.

Setting the record straight In “Cats hope to stay alive at Lakeside� from Thursday’s print edition, the story misstated the relationship between Northwestern goalkeeper Lauren Clem and Michigan State goalkeeper Courtney Clem. They are cousins. The article also misstated Lauren Clem’s school. She attends Michigan State. The Daily regrets the errors.

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20-year-old man charged with interfering with police at Bar Louie Officers arrested an Evanston man Thursday in connection with interfering in a police investigation, police said. Police were called to Bar Louie, 1520 Sherman Ave., at about 1:15 a.m. for a disturbance, Polinski said. A group was arguing over a bar tab, he said. When an officer tried to interview one of the people involved in the incident, the 20-year-old man started to scream at police and interfere with the investigation, Polinski said. Police gave the Evanston man several warnings to stop and cooperate, but he continued to yell, authorities said. Officers arrested the man around 1:30 a.m. and charged him with misdemeanor interfering with police, Polinski said.

Local caterer opens Evanston kitchen Page 4

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THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 3 Korea Peace Day discusses domestic violence, sexual assault Page 7

Quest Scholars launches new Advocacy Committee By OLIVIA EXSTRUM

daily senior staffer @olivesocean

The Northwestern chapter of Quest Scholars will host Saturday the first meeting of its newly formed Advocacy Committee, a group devoted to discussing socioeconomic issues on campus. Members of the committee do not have to be a part of Quest Scholars and simply have to be “passionate about socioeconomic status at NU,� said Amanda Walsh, Quest Scholars president. “The interesting thing about the committee is that it’s an entirely separate entity from Quest Scholars,� the Communication junior said. “Members do not have to identify within the network, so everyone feels comfortable doing whatever they want.� Although the committee does not have specific projects planned out yet, Walsh said initiatives to ensure inclusivity within student organizations and providing sensitivity training for Greek organizations, faculty and administrators are potential ideas the committee wants to support. This is the first group of its kind created by the NU chapter of Quest Scholars. In Winter Quarter 2014, Quest Scholars hosted “Money Matters,� a week of programming dedicated to socioeconomic issues that included the creation of a Tumblr, “NU Class Confessions,� where students could anonymously post about their experiences.

Services for Students with Disabilities office changes name, location

The Office of Services for Students with Disabilities made several changes over the summer,

Rajan Negassa, Quest Scholars vice president, said the committee was partly created in response to the issues brought up through the Tumblr and other initiatives during the week. “Some people suggested solutions to these issues and we hope to bring them alive on campus,� the Communication junior said. “We want to address any socioeconomic issues students might be facing that’s making it harder for them to be on campus or anything like that.� The committee comprises seven members, with Walsh and Negassa as co-chairs. Walsh said Quest Scholars reached out to members within the network as well as the broader campus through flyering and Facebook and Twitter campaigns. Walsh said she and Negassa looked for committee members who were available and had the ability to discuss socioeconomic issues. She said often at NU, students want to be very involved but do not have the time to do so. Walsh said “every single student� on the committee is comfortable discussing status. The committee is open to students outside of Quest Scholars because it is important to represent different socioeconomic backgrounds, Walsh said. “In Quest, we are all low-income students, but at the same time we don’t have the perspectives of middle- and high-income students,� she said. “We want to make sure we have diversity of experience so we are advocating for all students.� oliviaexstrum2017@u.northwestern.edu including its name, location, website and email address. The office is now known as AccessibleNU, according to a University news release. “The overarching reason for changing our name is to emphasize that making a Northwestern education accessible is the responsibility of the entire University community,� Alison May,

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Nathan Richards/Daily Senior Staffer

QUEST KICKOFF Students discuss issues of income inequality at a talk hosted by Quest Scholars this past April. Quest Scholars’ newly formed Advocacy Committee will meet for the first time Saturday to discuss socioeconomic issues.

AccessibleNU director and assistant dean of students, said in the release. “We understand that not everyone considers their condition to be a disability and do not want to deter anyone from approaching us because of our previous name.� May said although the term “disability� is still politically correct, there has been a recent push

toward using the word “access� instead. In addition to the name change, the office has moved to Suite 130 at 2122 Sheridan Road. May said the office administered more than 1,700 exams during the 2013-14 academic year. — Olivia Exstrum

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Local catering company opens Evanston kitchen By Tori Latham

the daily northwestern @latham_tori

Feast and Imbibe, an event planning and catering company started by two Evanston residents, officially opened its first permanent location Wednesday at 1601 Simpson St. with a ribbon cutting. Executive chef D’Andre Carter and sommelier and event coordinator Heather Bublick worked together at Chicago restaurant Moto before they decided it was time to break out on their own and start a company. “We needed to spread the word, so we did pop-up dinners in Evanston and around Chicago,� said Bublick. “Eventually, people who attended the dinners asked us to cater events in their homes, so

we started to do that as well.� Carter and Bublick operated Feast and Imbibe out of shared kitchen spaces and friends’ restaurants for a year and a half before opening their space in Evanston, according to a news release. Although the transition has been fast-paced, Bublick said she and Carter have just followed the direction the company has taken them. “It seems like its been a long time coming, even though it’s really only been about two years,� she said. “But (Evanston) is our home and it just felt right.� Mark Muenzer, the city’s community development director, said the company is a distinctive fit for the city. “First, they’re reusing the space of a former restaurant, which I think is great,� Muenzer said. “Second, they’re adding to the good environment

Daily file photo by Alex Putterman

OFF TO A ROCKY START Construction work on the Wildcats’ baseball field is underway at the corner of Ashland Avenue and Isabella Street. Wilmette residents have recently raised issues about Evanston and Northwestern not doing an adequate job of informing neighbors about Rocky Miller Park renovations.

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and synergy that exists for small food businesses in the west side of Evanston.� Elaine Kemna-Irish, executive director of the Evanston Chamber of Commerce, echoed Muenzer’s statement, saying new businesses like Feast and Imbibe are choosing to open in the city. “The new restaurants and caterers are sure to attract more foodies to come and experience Evanston,� Kemna-Irish said in an email to The Daily. Bublick said she has received positive responses about the company. “I had a lot of fun at the grand opening,� she said. “It was a mix of friends, family, business acquaintances and everyone is just super excited.� Feast and Imbibe caters events ranging from birthdays to bat or bar mitzvahs. They are also available to help plan full events. Bublick said they will still host the occasional pop-up dinner, but

fewer tickets will be available for those events. “One of our goals for the future is to start catering more weddings,� Bublick said. “We were recently voted one of the top ten wedding caterers in Chicago, so we want to keep that going. Our first bride was even at the ribbon cutting and that was so special.� Although they are expanding, Bublick said they hope to maintain the quality and core of the company. “We want to keep the events personable and the food good,� she said. “We have such a close connection with the people we work with; they’ve become part of our family. We work hard to capture their moments and make them special. We just want to make people happy.�

Residents voice concerns over baseball field construction

future renovations. The University issued an apology to Wilmette residents and promised to better inform the community, Frenzer said. “From the feedback we have received, it appears (our work) was not sufficiently communicated to those in the surrounding area,â€? the statement said. “Moving forward we will proactively communicate the road ahead as we work to improve and beautify the ballpark and the surrounding area.â€? The University first announced the renovations in June 2013, following a $5 million donation from Richard and Roxy Pepper. The planned upgrades include a new clubhouse and seats, as well as artificial turf to replace the grass. Wilmette residents want to be more included moving forward, so they can provide greater input when it comes to potential problems, including frequency of field use and nighttime lighting, Frenzer said. “Both the city and the school have committed to making sure that all the neighbors in the area have a notice of future public meetings and discussions of what will be going on at the park,â€? he said. “Our only interest here is making sure that the neighbors are fully informed and have ‌ an opportunity to have their concerns heard and addressed.â€?

The renovations to the Wildcats’ baseball stadium have not been a welcome change to nearby Wilmette residents, who feel that they haven’t been kept informed on the progress of the construction. Rocky Miller Park, located on the corner of Ashland Avenue and Isabella Street, lies at the border of Evanston and Wilmette. Although the park lies within Evanston’s boundaries, its construction directly impacts the lives of Wilmette neighbors, village manager Tim Frenzer said. “They had not been advised as to what’s going on,� he said. “The first inkling the neighbors had of what was going on was when the bulldozers were working.� Frenzer said he and village president Bob Bielinski only found out about the construction when Ald. Jane Grover (7th) told them. However, the city itself had not extended the same kind of information to Wilmette residents, and the park’s project began before they even knew what the plans were, Frenzer said. In a letter to Northwestern, Bielinski asked the school to&R keep allQ 9D neighbors aware any X SR OL G 7K UR XofJ K

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THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 5

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Evanston releases new Parks and Recreation mobile app

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Source: EvanstonRec app

PARKS ON THE GO Evanston launched a new app for the Parks, Recreation and Community Services Department at City Council on Monday.

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Evanston’s Parks, Recreation and Community Services Department launched a new mobile app at Monday’s City Council meeting. Ray Doerner, program coordinator at the Chandler-Newberger Community Center, presented the app at the meeting. “We’re excited about this app and the ability for our residents and participants to find information quickly about our department from a mobile device,” Doerner said. At the meeting, Doerner highlighted the app’s features. The “Around me” tab uses smartphone GPS to identify nearby events and recreation locations. The “Calendar” tab lists all city events and allows users to sync upcoming events to their phones. The app can also send out push notifications. It connects to the city’s Evanston Life guide, which provides information and news about community events. The app can be downloaded from Apple’s App Store and on Google Play. — Lydia Ramsey

NU CB Dwight White to retire after discovery of rare

Northwestern announced Thursday that sophomore cornerback Dwight White, who has not appeared in a game this season, will retire from the football team due to an non-football-related medical issue. “Being a member of the football program at Northwestern University has been a huge blessing,” White said in the news release. “It hurts knowing I will no longer wear my family name across my back.” The Chicago Tribune later reported that White decided to retire after learning he was born with only one kidney, a rare condition known as renal agenesis that affects 1 in 750 children. “We love Dwight and we’re proud to have him as a part of the Wildcats football family,” coach Pat Fitzgerald said in a news release from the athletic department. “It’s disappointing to lose a great teammate from the field.” — Bobby Pillote

Brian Lee/Daily Senior Staffer

AN EARLY EXIT Dwight White makes a tackle in Northwestern’s game against Minnesota last year. The sophomore cornerback has decided to retire after learning he was born with only one kidney.

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Opinion

Join the online conversation at www.dailynorthwestern.com

Friday, October 24, 2014

PAGE 6

Don’t institute live-in requirement for sophomores Meredith goodman

Daily columnist

I currently live in an off-campus apartment. I like the freedom of having guests over whenever I choose, buying and cooking (well, reheating) my own meals and just being responsible for my own living space. If you had asked high school senior Meredith if she would have lived off campus during college, she would have adamantly stated that she wanted to live on campus all four years. In fact, I was almost hesitant to come to Northwestern because I had read several online reviews stating that many upperclassmen preferred to live off campus. I looked at colleges where living on campus for all four years was common and encouraged, such as Rice University. I wanted a strong, oncampus community for all four years of my university experience. But now, as a senior in college, I realize that there are many reasons to choose to

live off-campus. Some students want to save money living off-campus, where the rent is cheaper than the cost of student housing and you don’t have to waste unnecessary money on a meal plan. Others may have a very large, close group of friends and want to live with them. Some friends of different genders may want to live together, which may be harder to arrange on campus. High school Meredith may have applauded NU’s recent decision to require sophomores to live on campus as part of the University’s Master Housing Plan, but college Meredith thinks otherwise. Sophomores should be free to make their own housing choices after attending the University for one year. Paul Riel, executive director of Residential Services, explained the University’s justification at a meeting. “Freshmen and sophomores living on campus is probably a pretty good thing for a host of reasons,” he said. “It gives people more sense of continuity of care and our sense of community that we want to develop.” Of course we all want a thriving oncampus community; it’s a large reason why we chose to attend NU. But forcing people

to live on campus beyond freshman year is not the way to form this community. Sophomores who are forced to live on campus will likely resent the policy and not make as many meaningful contributions to the campus community. Even more conBuilding a vibrant fusing, the campus community University’s doesn’t have to mean messages about the that everyone lives on benefits of campus. the suitestyle or apartmentstyle housing that they intend to build contradicts the campus community that they are advocating. ASG student life vice president Chris Harlow said the new style of housing, as opposed to the traditional single or double rooms of dormitories, will offer “more independence for sophomores and upperclassmen.” If these upperclassmen want to go into their own suite and be independent, they will probably not be active in the campus community. They might as well be allowed to

lease their own apartment off campus. Instead of instituting this requirement, I think the University should acknowledge that students want to live off campus for many rational reasons and accommodate that fact by fostering an all-campus residential community. One solution could include renovating the commuter lounge in Norris University Center to be more spacious and cozy to encourage off-campus students to stay on-campus for longer periods of time. Another solution could involve more campus-wide programming, like NU Nights events. I would also propose expanding the residential college system and keeping their off-campus alumni active. Building a vibrant campus community doesn’t have to mean that everyone lives on campus. There are many ways that the NU administration can promote a cohesive campus community, even with many of us happily living off campus. Meredith Goodman is a Weinberg senior. She can be reached at meredithgoodman2015@u.northwestern.edu. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, send a Letter to the Editor to opinion@dailynorthwestern.com.

Bring national newspaper subscriptions back to NU Heiwon shin

Daily columnist

The New York Times, Chicago Tribune and USA Today were readily available for any Northwestern student before or after a meal in the dining halls. That is, until this year. I’ve been looking around but have failed to find the three neat files of newspapers that used to line the doors of the dining halls across campus. I’ve asked the resident assistants and the dining hall staff but found no answer, as they confessed they didn’t know why they weren’t there either. I went ahead and started a home delivery subscription for The New York Times, so I’ve come to a personal solution, but I still believe the pan-campus newspaper subscription should be brought back. Before going through a list of reasons, I’d like to briefly share my experience. Yes, I did come in as a journalism major but that’s not the reason why I am interested in newspapers. I only decided to be a journalism major two months prior to starting college. Besides, I never read newspapers: I can’t remember when my family ever had subscriptions. It just wasn’t a thing and that

was that. I’ll be frank to admit, I was not the biggest fan of newspapers. Freshman year, I found a fresh batch of newspapers every morning and I started to take some and browse through them. It was different from online news because I was exposed to so many more stories. Online, I could click away in a perpetual circle of my defined interests; with physical news I could open up the spreads and surprise myself with things I never knew about or topics that I didn’t think I College is about liked. shaping our selves, our Sometimes ideas, and our habits, one my eyes of which could be reading would just roll newspapers. around and the next thing I knew, I was reading through the paper, soaking in the details, the quotes, the images and the stories. I don’t think I was the only one though. My roommate and many of my floormates would just casually pick a newspaper up and read it. At dining halls over dinners or breakfasts and even during busy lunches, I would see people read through the papers. There was something more to do in our leisure

Volume 135, Issue 26 Opinion Editor Amy Whyte

Managing Editors Ally Mutnick Lydia Ramsey Rebecca Savransky

Assistant Opinion Editors Bob Hayes Angela Lin

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR may be sent to 1999 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208, via fax at 847-491-9905, via e-mail to opinion@dailynorthwestern.com or by dropping a letter in the box outside The Daily office. Letters have the following requirements: • Should be typed and double-spaced • Should include the author’s name, signature, school, class and phone number. • Should be fewer than 300 words They will be checked for authenticity and may be edited for length, clarity, style and grammar. Letters, columns and cartoons contain the opinion of the authors, not Students Publishing Co. Inc. Submissions signed by more than three people must include at least one and no more than three names designated to represent the group. Editorials reflect the majority opinion of The Daily’s student editorial board and not the opinions of either Northwestern University or Students Publishing Co. Inc.

to have a good selection of a few stories. That’s what newspapers are for me. Instead of getting distracted by new queries on similar topics or fields, I want to just get the wide selection of what is the most pertinent for that day. Just that day’s chunk. Moreover, with newspapers, I just love having a physical copy. I can look back to some of the articles or op-eds that really inspire me and, on a more academic note, this can be very useful as a journalist. I can scrapbook the infographics or striking pictures that inspire me. Taking notes on mindhalting issues or details, I feel more engaged with the stories than I would online. Simply to improve my writing skills, I also analyze the sentences, story structures and expressions by underlining, circling and drawing arrows to connect different parts of the story. All of a sudden it’s become a study for me. Newspapers can serve a wide array of functions for different individuals. I don’t know what happened with our subscriptions but I do know now that it was a gift to NU students to have these three newspapers handy. Bring back our newspapers. Heiwon Shin is a Medill sophomore. She can be contacted at heiwonshin2017@u.northwestern.edu. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, send a Letter to the Editor to opinion@dailynorthwestern.com.

ONLINE BUZZ

The Daily Northwestern Editor in Chief Ciara McCarthy

time than staring and scrolling through our smartphones. Some people may not like newspapers even still, and that’s totally fine. But for those who have not had the chance to have a newspaper reading experience, like me, the school’s subscription could be a great opportunity to discover an interest. College is about shaping our selves, our ideas, and our habits, one of which could be reading newspapers. It’s important for the University to give students options. I still hear people say that print journalism is a dying field. I understand where that opinion comes from. Newspapers have gone from the dominant, if not the only, source of news to just one of the many media forms that constantly lure potential readers with eye-grabbing videos, interactive news, pictures and a mixture of all. Although it may not be the dominant form of media anymore, that does not mean newspapers are worthless. On the contrary, I find them to be attractive. The options of news we can consume are endless. It’s literally impossible to imagine not having fresh news to read at any given time. But more is not always better. Sometimes I feel myself floundering in a sea of too many choices. Rather than everything, I want

IN RESPONSE TO: “Evanston seeks community input for Fountain Square renovation,” published on 10/16/14.

A public monument like Fountain Square should not be falling apart after only 38 years. It is a boondoggle to spend this much money and have a poorly designed or poorly constructed result which requires replacement that soon. Our homes, our schools and churches, railroad overpasses and businesses do not fall apart after 38 years. How about just paving it and adding a simple fountain and memorial plaque? There are other needs in our underfunded city withe its hundred year old water mains, for instance. — Jim Skelton

Tracey is certainly an outstanding teacher and coach but if that was all she was , it wouldn’t be enough to describe her sufficiently. The players and parents who are lucky enough to be recruited and play for Tracey get an education in patience,performance, intensity, decency, respect, fairness and another dozen positive adjectives. Not one in a 1000 coaches has the complete skill set she deliverers. If she made up her mind, she could coach and teach any sport, She surrounds herself with assistant coaches and recruits players that reflect so very well on her and Northwestern. There are a lot of wonderful schools with field hockey programs and Tracey is among the best of the best. What she brings every day is something intangible but ever so valuable - character. — Richard Williams

IN RESPONSE TO: “Balk: Common excuses don’t explain basketball futility,” published on 10/21/14.

IN RESPONSE TO: “The Sideline: Tracey Fuchs, ‘the Michael Jordan of field hockey’​,” published on 10/21/14.

It’s actually not true re: not having had great coaches. They have had some great coaches in the past including one - Bill Foster, who built the Duke that Coach K came to inherit. They had Tex Winter who was inducted in to the Basketball Hall of Fame recently. — Jay Sharman


the daily northwestern | NEWS 7

FRIday, october 24, 2014

Korea Peace Day talks focus on domestic violence

Matthew Zhang/The Daily Northwestern

COMMUNITY CONCERNS A KAN-WIN representative presents “myth or fact” questions about domestic violence at Korea Peace Day. The event brought speakers to discuss issues facing the Korean community.

Matthew Zhang/The Daily Northwestern

BECOMING ADVOCATES Anna Bang, multicultural advocacy coordinator of KANWIN, leads an interactive activity about staying in abusive relationships Thursday night. At the event, Bang also spoke on the cycle of domestic violence.

By Amanda Svachula

the daily northwestern @amandasvachula

The Asian Pacific American Coalition and Korean American Students Association celebrated Korea Peace Day on Thursday night, an annual event during which the two student groups collaborate and listen to a speaker discuss an issue facing the Korean community. Two representatives from KAN-WIN, a Chicago-based organization that helps Asian-American

women deal with domestic violence and sexual assault, spoke to students about immigrants’ experiences with domestic violence and how to recognize the signs on a college campus. “In years past, we talked a lot about the North and South Korea conflict,” said Weinberg sophomore Younglak Hong, philanthropy chair of KASA. “This year we wanted to change it up a bit and try women’s rights. We thought it was a topic worth exploring because it’s relevant to students.” KAN-WIN’s presentation aimed at distinguishing facts from myths about domestic violence. The speakers spoke about four types of abuse: physical, emotional, financial and sexual. They also discussed barriers including religion, language, immigration status and culture that many Asian-American immigrants face in coping with these types of abuse. KAN-WIN presenters discussed their survey involving 359 Chicago area Asian-American respondents, which found that 34 percent grew up witnessing domestic violence in their homes. “Domestic violence is used by one person in

an intimate relationship in order to establish and maintain power and control over the other person,” said Ji Hye Kim, associate director of KAN-WIN. “Abuse can show up in any kind of mannerism.” The speech engaged attendees with activities testing their knowledge of domestic violence. The speakers then identified signs of abuse and ways to react to these warning signs, specifically on a college campus. Anna Bang, KAN-WIN’s multicultural advocacy coordinator, said domestic violence can occur anywhere, and as college students, knowing this could help other students. Kim and Bang described the cycle of domestic abuse, which is a continuous shift between a “tension, explosion and honeymoon period.” “When you boil hot water and put a frog in hot water, it will jump out,” Bang said. “But if you put a frog in really cool and pleasant temperature and start boiling the water, it’s too late for it to jump out. This is a metaphor for how domestic violence occurs in a relationship.” About 30 people attended the event, including

Before, I knew about domestic violence, but it shed a light on immigration’s effect on domestic violence. Abraham Kim, Weinberg freshman

Weinberg freshman Abraham Kim. “Before, I knew about domestic violence, but it shed a light on immigration’s effect on domestic violence,” he said. KAN-WIN provides several services for Asian Americans affected by domestic violence, including a 24-hour hotline, transitional housing, support groups, legal advocacy and a children’s program. KAN-WIN is also recruiting student peer advocates to spread awareness of domestic violence as part of their education and outreach efforts. amandasvachula2018@u.northwestern.edu


8 NEWS | the daily northwestern

FRIday, October 24, 2014

City brings art to lot destroyed by December fire By Jennifer Ball

=daily senior staffer @jennifercball

Local artists will be working throughout the next few weeks to create a mural surrounding empty lots on the corner of Davis Street and Oak Avenue, where a fire in December 2013 destroyed three local businesses. The artists will create the mural on the fence surrounding the lots, which will include colors that represent Evanston’s three zip codes: brown for land and 60201; blue for the lake and 60202; and green for wilderness and 60203. “Orange is used to represent the common thread of community that ties us together, and is used throughout the pattern,� project designer Jason Brown said in an email to the Daily. Brown, known as “The Zip Code Kid,� said he’s been experimenting with this art form for a few years. “The art form is called Geocommunetrics which simply means place-based communityscale imaging,� Brown said in the email. “It’s a form I have been using for the past few years as proxy for exploring community identities.� Brown said he is working with several other local artists on the project, which is called “Geocommunetrics: An Intersection of Evanstons.� It will be completed by the end of the month, the designer said. In his Twitter biography, Brown wrote some of the reasons why he cares about the community. “Place matters, space closes, time compresses,� his bio reads. “Love God, love your neighbor, build just neighborhoods. I’m trying for #Evanston & #RogersPark. Join me.� The fire, which destroyed three businesses

Adnaan Zaffer/The Daily Northwestern

MAKING MURALS A mural is being created on the fence surrounding an empty lot on the corner of Davis Street and Oak Avenue. The lot was once home to Taco Diablo and other businesses, which were destroyed in a fire in December 2013.

in December 2013, began at Pine Yard Restaurant, 1033 Davis St., and spread to TechniColour Nail & Day Spa, 1031 Davis St., and Taco Diablo, 1029 Davis St. Taco Diablo owner Daniel Kelch now owns the building across the street, 1026 Davis St. In June 2015, he plans to reopen Taco Diablo and Lulu’s at the new property, he told The Daily in September.

The city piloted the public art project as part of an effort to bring public art to areas under construction, Brown said. The project serves the dual purpose of bringing more public art to the community and keeping certain areas from being eyesores, he said. George Radaios, the current owner of the empty lot, said he is not sure what will replace

the three businesses destroyed in 2013. Kelch said the original plan was to rebuild the brick building that stood in the space before. However, the city is still determining which businesses will be licensed to open in that location, he said. jenniferball2015@u.northwestern.edu

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1 Critters who worshiped C-3PO as a god 6 Penicillin precursor 11 Like Beethoven’s Second Symphony 14 Museum piece 15 Central Florida city 16 Wild West 17 Latin for “big idiotâ€?? 19 “Certainement!â€? 20 Blotter letters 21 Good, in Genoa 22 Hides in the closet? 23 Latin for “holding a grudge for a long, long timeâ€?? 26 Classic pops 29 Charles of old mysteries 30 Bustles 31 Steam table fuel 35 “Goodâ€? cholesterol initials 38 Latin for “fighting over parking spots is not allowedâ€?? 41 Adams of “The Muppetsâ€? 42 Owl, at times 43 Turkmenistan neighbor 44 Where change is welcome 46 “Choose tasteâ€? sauce brand 47 Latin for “cheating on one’s timecardâ€?? 53 Son of Aphrodite 54 Cell terminal 55 Cry made with a raised index finger 58 Torah holder 59 Latin for “fish tradingâ€?? 62 Journalist William Shirer’s alma mater 63 Verve 64 Hefty portion 65 Shop door nos. 66 IdĂŠe sources 67 Salon and others

Edited by Rich Norrisby and Joyce Lewis Edited Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

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1 First name in wit 2 Watery, as a drink 3 One of Chekhov’s “Three Sisters� 4 Blood 5 Takes a dive? 6 Agreeable words 7 Sch. originally endowed by the Storrs brothers 8 __ luxury 9 Viral ailment 10 Remote power sources 11 “See ya!� 12 Pacific republic near the equator 13 Voltaire’s worldview 18 Joe with some oomph 22 Holiday buy 23 Sapporo soup 24 __ circle 25 “High __� 26 Family nickname 27 Biblical kingdom near the Dead Sea 28 “Yikes!� 31 Glaswegians, e.g. 32 Furthermore 33 Tolkien creature

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the daily northwestern | NEWS 9

FRIday, october 24, 2014

NU SENIORS: SIGN UP FOR YOUR

YEARBOOK PORTRAIT F CUS

2015 Syllabus Yearbook Northwestern University

Photographers are here starting Monday, October 27 @ NORRIS

Sign up at: www.OurYear.com NU Code: 87150 Walk ins welcome (appointments have priority)

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Food

From page 1 agriculture and sustainability.” The panel, part of Food Day programming, focused on the “fair” aspect of real food. Workers told personal stories of discrimination, unfair conditions and physical and mental abuse and of rallying their coworkers to bring about change. Adam Yalowitz (Weinberg ’11), a panelist and organizer with UNITE HERE, recalled his time as an NU student coordinating the Living Wage Campaign in discussing how to help workers gain rights. “We built a really powerful community of students and workers who felt like they were working towards the same cause,” Yalowitz said. “The most important thing is to know the people who make your food, build those relationships. That’s really transformational.” Food Day, a national event, began at NU last year when students interested in these issues decided to organize discussions, demonstrations and a panel on food access. NU Real Food and other organizations have since taken on the responsibility of putting on the program, Fitzgerrell said. Weinberg junior Alexi Stocker attended because of his interest in the economics side of social justice issues.

“I think it’s really great to hear from workers themselves,” Stocker said. “They can tell us what we can be doing to help them.” Besides supporting workers’ rights, NU Real Food’s main goal is to work with Sodexo to figure out exactly how food gets to our dining halls. Finding the percentage of real food presently served in cafeterias will allow the group to push University President Morton Schapiro to sign onto sourcing at least 20 percent real food by 2020, Fitzgerrell said. Weinberg sophomore Kara Rodby, the group’s spokeswoman, said this task is already underway. “We’ve started doing research on the food that’s served right now and started looking at key administrators who might be involved with this process later down the line,” Rodby said. Rodby, who joined NU Real Food last spring, said she believes it’s important to expose NU students to this issue because we should have control over what we eat and have the ability to affect change. “The way our food services work now leaves little room at all for (us) to decide where our food comes from,” Rodby said. “It’s never good to keep giving big companies more and more power over us, but especially so when it comes to something so basic and important as our food.” ChristineFarolan2017@u.northwestern.edu

Central

Sustainability

residences, Hughes said. “I don’t think the residents there knew what the requirements are,” he said. Ultimately, the master plan doesn’t dictate what to do, but sets out parameters for development, Smith said. “Zoning is never rigid,” he said. “Anyone can go in and ask for a variance … and then the city and residents talk it over. It really is a democratic process.” Bob Danon, owner of art shop The Danon Gallery, 1810 Central St., promoted his current efforts to see the part of Central Street that lies east of the CTA station renamed to Central Street East. “People don’t think about us when they think ‘Central Street’,” Danon said. “I waited for four years for things to happen, and it didn’t … I just want people to know where we are.”

Northwestern has been coming up with, but I think there’s also some other projects that other schools have been doing that make you think outside of the box for what we can do here as well,” Cilento said. They will discuss these snapshots in a conference call next month. Gutin said he hopes that after they meet they can create a more organized structure, with a set mission statement and values. Gutin said he hopes to get one representative from each school in the Big Ten, and that the association will continue from year to year. Cilento also hopes the association grows more in the future. “We’re hoping that starting 2015 and the next couple of months we’ll be able to start tackling large scale sustainability issues for the Big Ten Conference as a whole,” she said.

hjin@u.northwestern.edu

emilychin2018@u.northwestern.edu

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10 NEWS | the daily northwestern

FRIday, October 24, 2014

Across Campuses University of California leaders consider limiting out-of-state enrollment

LOS ANGELEES — The University of California is beginning to have second thoughts about its highly successful effort to bring more out-of-state students onto its campuses. In a bid to boost revenue, the system five years ago began to aggressively recruit students from other parts of the country and from around the world. The significantly higher fees those students paid brought in about $400 million extra last year. But the effort stirred a backlash from California parents, who suspected that their children’s admissions chances were being hurt. UC officials have taken great pains to argue that qualified California students were not losing slots to those from New York or China. But the complaints from parents and state legislators recently prompted UC President Janet Napolitano and other system leaders to consider putting limits on out-of-state enrollment. Any such retrenchment faces its own set of complications. In 2009, a year into the recession that badly hurt higher education funding, a commission on the future of the University of California recommended

Student protesters: ‘Stop the Board of Regents in their tracks’

IOWA CITY — With the Board of Regents on Wednesday about to convene a two-day meeting on the University of Iowa campus, during which they plan to discuss the first tuition increase in two years, a crowd of about 100 students rallied on the Pentacrest in protest of student debt. “We need to stop the Board of Regents in their tracks and say enough is enough,” said Jeannette Gabriel, president of the local Campaign to Organize Graduate Students. “Pay us back,” she led a crowd chant. “Pay us back.” The Board of Regents is proposing a 1.75 percent tuition increase for the 2015-16 school year after freezing tuition for undergraduate resident students at Iowa’s public universities for two straight years. If approved, the increase would bump up the price of tuition for undergraduate Iowans by $116 at all three universities to $6,794 at UI and $6,764 at ISU and UNI, according to regent documents.

recruiting outside students whose tuition — triple what state residents pay ­— would help offset cuts in tax revenue. UC administrators not only heeded that advice, but they far exceeded expectations. An unprecedented 20 percent of this year’s freshman class across the system’s nine undergraduate campuses are from outside California, up from 6 percent in 2009. At UCLA and UC Berkeley, that enrollment figure is about 30 percent of freshmen. University officials insist that the growth in nonresidents has been accomplished mainly by increasing sizes of the incoming freshman classes. And they note that top public universities in other states enroll much higher percentages of nonresidents than UC does. But families of top-tier California high schoolers turned away from their first-choice campuses have their doubts. As do state lawmakers. At an August confirmation hearing for UC regents, state Sen. Jean Fuller (R-Bakersfield) was among those who pressed the issue. In a recent interview, Fuller said that although she appreciated the diversity that students from other states and nations bring to UC, the same goal might be more easily accomplished by boosting recruitment in the Central Valley. UC must not forget that “the university’s job is to educate Californians first, the California taxpayers The regent proposal, which will be discussed during the board meeting Thursday, also includes increases for non-resident undergraduate students -- 1.75 percent at UI and UNI and 1.2 percent at ISU. And the proposed increases are the same for resident and nonresidents at each school at the graduate and professional level. But some UI students, teachers, and several political leaders argued during the Wednesday protest that tuition shouldn’t go up and lawmakers instead should restore its funding of higher education in Iowa. “Stop tuition increases, stop fee increases and bring education back to an affordable level,” Gabriel said. At the protest, students carried signs that read “education is a right,” “I am not a loan,” and “graduating black and gold should not mean in the red.” Some protesters wrote dollar amounts on sheets of paper indicating the size of debt they’ve incurred for their education -- $95,000, $32,000, and $25,000, to name a few. Seven students sat cross-legged on the

Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times

state of affairs Royce Hall towers over the UCLA campus in Westwood on August 7, 2013. The University of California is rethinking its efforts to bring in out-of-state students.

who pay for it,” Fuller said. Amid mounting pressure, Napolitano recently said that the university would work to determine the optimum percentage for out-of-state enrollment and

that the numbers at Berkeley and UCLA “may be at about as maximum as they can be.”

pavement, working on typewriters, in response to UI President Sally Mason’s recent comments referring to debt incurred beyond federallydefined need as “lifestyle debt.” “They are here to show Sally Mason what life looks like when they don’t go into lifestyle debt,” Gabriel said. The students’ specific demands of the Board of Regents are threefold: commit to a tuition freeze for the next academic year, eliminate all administrative feeds, and request full funding of all regent universities in Iowa from the legislature. Board of Regents officials have said they’ve kept tuition to Iowa’s public universities low compared to peer schools, and the two-year tuition freeze was the first in Iowa since 1975. UI doctoral student Melissa Zimdars, 29, said a two-year freeze is not enough, and the proposed increase is not “modest” to the students shouldering the burden of funding higher education. “My individual loan level should not be as high as it is,” said Zimdars, who dressed up like

President Mason for the protest. “But it’s the result of the Iowa and national trend of defunding higher education.” Tessa Heeren, 23, is a first-year UI graduate student studying social work who came to the rally on Wednesday with about $70,000 in debt to her name. She said that burden is hanging over her as she thinks about life after graduation, and she fears it will limit her job choices and earning power. “It’s pretty stressful,” she said. “Every dollar I spend, I’m thinking about how much interest I’m going to owe.” In reference to the notion of “lifestyle debt,” Heeren said it’s debatable. She said family members recount for her the days they lived in a closet-sized space and ate SpaghettiOs every night. “Well I need to have Internet at home, and I need a computer, and I want to eat fresh food,” she said. “I’m sorry. But you do the best you can.”

— Larry Gordon (Los Angeles Times)

— Vanessa Miller (The Gazette)

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the daily northwestern | NEWS 11

FRIday, october 24, 2014

National News

Turnout will be crucial in tightening NC Senate battle

CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—Jordan DeLoatch, a Duke University senior from Cary, set out on a recent Saturday with a clipboard to knock on doors for Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan, ready to talk about whatever voters had on their minds. Most people, if they’re home, are willing to open up, he’s found. “People do care about the issues. This affects them every day,� said DeLoatch, a public policy major who also knocked on doors for President Barack Obama in 2012. “A lot of people are really supportive, and even people who are undecided—they’re all willing to listen.� There’s no script. “It’s about connecting with each voter,� he said. “It’s about getting them to care about the election.� Volunteers for both Hagan and her Republican opponent, state House Speaker Thom Tillis, hope to connect with enough voters to win. Some have been going door-to-door for months. Now those efforts are ramping up as early voting begins on Oct. 23 and the Nov. 4 election draws closer. With the race tightening, both campaigns say turnout is the key. But what will work? North Carolinians are inundated with ads and mailers. You can mute the TV and toss the mail, but a friendly face on the doorstep is different, especially if it’s a local volunteer, a neighbor even. Tillis, joined by Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus and Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., visited several of his campaign’s field offices last weekend, where volunteers made calls and fanned out to knock on doors.

National Republicans and Democrats are using sophisticated databases to direct their volunteers to the people who already have indicated they’re supporters, or are at least leaning that way. Outside groups allied with them also are using data to target the voters they want to turn out. Democrats claim an advantage, built on the success of Obama’s presidential campaigns. They say their big investment in voter turnout dwarfs what Republicans are doing. But Republicans this year say they also have developed the technology for effective canvassing. What’s more, the hurdle for Democrats is higher. Republicans generally show more enthusiasm in midterm elections. A national Gallup Poll in September found 44 percent of Republican respondents were extremely motivated to vote, compared with 25 percent of Democrats. And an Elon University poll in September found that 38 percent of Republicans said they have given “quite a lot� thought to the election, compared to 29 percent of Democrats. That’s typical for a midterm election for the party that doesn’t control the presidency, said Kenneth Fernandez, director of the Elon University Poll. “Republicans are more angry than Democrats are enthused,� he said. Hagan says turnout will make the difference for her. She has been going to her party’s 35 field offices around the state since August, encouraging her volunteers. A big team of young workers, meanwhile, works behind the scenes on logistics at the campaign’s headquarters in a Greensboro office park. — Renee Schoof (McClatchy Washington Bureau)

Harry Lynch/News & Observer, MCT

MIDTERM ELECTIONS U.S. Senator Kay Hagan, right, works the crowd outside of her campaign field office September 19, 2014 in Chapel Hill, N.C. Hagan was in Chapel Hill to rally her staffers and supporters from Orange and Durham counties to get out the vote against her opponent, NC House Speaker Thom Tillis in this November’s election.

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DALLAS—While expensive medical equipment used on Ebola victim Thomas Eric Duncan at Texas Presbyterian Hospital Dallas was decontaminated with disinfectants, the 60-inch TV hanging in the apartment of his fiancee was sawed in half, stuffed in a hazmat drum and incinerated. “That Samsung was one of the hardest cuts of our lives, but we were told to get rid of everything that could be replaced and we did,� said Brad Smith, vice president of Fort Worth-based CG Environmental _ the Cleaning Guys, which decontaminated Louise Troh’s home at the apartment complex where Duncan became symptomatic with vomiting and diarrhea. This was the first time that a residence in the United States had ever been decontaminated for the Ebola virus. There were no manuals, no specific guidelines by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on what to do. In Texas, the county and city had to come up with a plan quickly to rid the place of any remaining Ebola virus, to prevent its spread while providing peace of mind to a fearful community. The response now appears to be decontamination overkill, compared with what the CDC and other health agencies recommend for hospital disinfection. “We’ve done lots of life-threatening jobs, but this was the unknown, and we didn’t take any risks,� Smith said. Workers in yellow hazmat suits spent four days

destroying almost everything in Troh’s apartment, which she shared with three family members. Curtains, couches, carpet and everyone’s clothing and other worldly possessions were dumped into about 155 barrels. Only passports, a family Bible and a few other sentimental items were spared. “She’s lost everything that she owns in the apartment,� Senior Pastor George Mason of Wilshire Baptist Church told ABC News. Troh and her family weren’t allowed outside the apartment during the first phase of the response, when Duncan’s soiled clothing, perspiration-filled sheets and other items that were in contact with his bodily fluids were removed. “I think they were a little upset that we came inside with yellow suits and they were staying there in street clothes,� Smith said. Neighbors weren’t briefed on what was going on. Smith declared the job at Troh’s apartment a success, and less than a week later the Cleaning Guys were back in Dallas to decontaminate the apartment of nurse Nina Pham, who contracted Ebola while caring for Duncan. It’s not clear who made the decision, but only hours into scrubbing the brick exterior, the Cleaning Guys were called off the job by the Texas Division of Emergency Management, which had assumed control from Dallas County and then put the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in charge.

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In cleansing Ebola, hospital is disinfected but homes are purged

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Paul Moseley/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, MCT

TEXAS TROUBLES A resident of the Ivy Apartments at 7225 Fair Oaks in Dallas, Texas, talks to the news media gathered at the fence of the complex Oct. 1, 2014. Timothy Duncan, who was diagnosed and later died of Ebola, was staying there.

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SPORTS

ON DECK Women’s Soccer 24 Michigan at NU, 7 p.m. Friday OCT.

ON THE RECORD

We’re trying to get back to some basics and relax a little bit. — Keylor Chan, volleyball coach

Friday, October 24, 2014

@DailyNU_Sports

Cats ready to engage conference foe Spartans No. 25 Northwestern vs. No. 10 Michigan State

By Julian Gerez

daily senior staffer @JulianEGerez

East Lansing, Michigan 12 p.m. Sunday

An immovable object meets an immovable object in a conference battle of two defensive titans Sunday. With four games left in the regular season, No. 25 Northwestern (7-2-4, 2-1-2 Big Ten) travels to No. 10 Michigan State (9-3-2, 3-1-1) for a conference matchup with the Big Ten Tournament looming. The name of the game for the two teams has been defense, with each team only conceding 7 goals in all of their matches this season for an average of less than 0.55 goals per game. “They’re a very good team, a very veteran team,” coach Tim Lenahan said. “(The two programs are) very similar programs in how they approach things, we just want to be better at what we do.” For NU, much of its offensive capability has come out of juniors midfielder Cole Missimo and forward Joey Calistri, with the two combining to score 9 goals and with Missimo at 4th place in the Big Ten in goals per game. But Lenahan said the rest of the team has also been making some good contributions and may yet still have an important impact. Sophomore forward Mike Roberge,

Men’s Soccer Daily file photo by Sean Su

MAKING THEM MISS Cole Missimo works his way around a defender. The junior midfielder has used his fancy footwork to score a team-high 5 goals this season.

for example, picked up the gamesealing goal in the Wildcats’ most recent match against Rutgers. “Now you’re trying to find down the stretch some guys stepping up and contributing,” Lenahan said. “When you have a good team, everyone has a moment to step up. … I still think there’s a couple of guys that still

have a moment in them.” From the Spartans, the formidable midfield pairing, described by Lenahan as “very athletic,” of juniors Jason Stacy and Jay Chapman has combined to tally 7 goals and 8 assists, with Stacy picking up 4 goals, 3 of them game-winning, and 6 assists. NU will look to shut them

down and halt Michigan State’s good offensive capabilities in the first half. The Spartans have scored 8 of their 18 total goals in the first period of matches, while the Cats have scored just 3 of their 16 total goals in this same time frame. But Lenahan was quick to not play up this particular match.

“It’s hard to win games no matter who you’re playing against,” he said. “Every single win you get is earned, no matter who you play in Division I.” For instance, Michigan State is coming off of a 2-0 loss against unranked Oakland University on Wednesday, where the Spartans were outshot 14-9. NU’s last match also had the same scoreline, but in favor of the Cats as they defeated conference rival Rutgers. The Cats will hope to capitalize on the momentum of that victory going into this match, to put themselves into a good position and seeding for the Big Ten Tournament. Last season in October, the Spartans defeated the Cats at Lakeside Field in a thrilling 3-2 match that went into overtime, and in 2012, NU picked up the win against Michigan State in East Lansing in another match that went into overtime, this time ending 2-1. If the last two games are any indication, fans are in for a good match of this growing conference rivalry despite the two teams’ defensive prowesses. juliangerez2017@u.northwestern.edu

Cats look to put road woes behind in homestand By Max Gelman

the daily northwestern

After a brutal four-match losing streak on the road, including two defeats against ranked teams, the Wildcats return home hopeful to salvage the season. They face No. 13 Purdue on Friday night in Evanston. Coach Keylor Chan, when asked about how NU can improve following the four-game skid, addressed the Cats’ problems away from WelshRyan Arena. “We got a little jittery on the road,” Chan said, “and we couldn’t get back in a rhythm and that’s what we have to try to find, is a good rhythm and a tempo At home, you and build on know, we’re that.” comfortable Sophomore outhere, we side hitter practice in the Kayla Morin gym every day. also talked about how Monica McGreal, traveling can senior outside affect the hitter way players prepare for the game. “We really try to work to keep the same mentality, the same focus and energy no matter where we’re playing,” Morin said, “but (traveling) does really affect you. You have to take into account all

No. 13 Purdue vs. Northwestern

Indiana vs. Northwestern

Evanston 7 p.m. Friday

Evanston 7 p.m. Saturday

the traveling and the time away. It’s just a different atmosphere. … You almost have to create more energy when you’re away.” Senior outside hitter Monica McGreal echoed her teammate. “I definitely think there’s a difference between playing at home and playing away,” she said. “At home, you know, we’re comfortable here, we practice in the gym every day, it’s more part of our routine. When you’re away (from Welsh-Ryan) you’re traveling, you’re staying in a hotel. It’s a little uncomfortable.” Although NU will be back within the friendly confines of its home court, snapping its longest losing streak since the end of last season will prove no easy feat against the Boilermakers. Purdue is 7-1 against Big Ten opponents, good for second in the conference, and is 17-3 overall this season. “They’re a very good team,” Chan said, referring to the Boilermakers. “We know we’re going to have to play well, but I think (playing) at home and coming after what we’ve just been through, I think we realize we’re fallible. We needed to be humbled, and just need to come out and play the best volleyball we can (Friday).” Although this season is regarded as one of NU’s most successful in recent

years, proven by the team’s first top 25 ranking since 2010 and the emergence of freshmen duo setter Taylor Tashima and hitter Symone Abbott, the current losing streak caused Chan and the Cats to refocus their energies on what they emphasize in practice. “We need to be better in the firstcontact phase of the game,” Chan said. “Serving and passing has definitely been an issue, and then attacking decisions. Our attacking efficiency’s really taken a tumble these two weeks. … We’re trying to get back to some basics and relax a little bit.” Morin also added on to Chan’s points. “We’ve really been emphasizing communication, focusing on the little details like coverage for example, if one of our teammates gets blocked,” she said McGreal emphasized that the team has to focus more on itself than its opponents. “I think we’ve just been getting back to the basics, and focusing a lot on just getting better at things we can control,” she said. “Just improving the skills we have control over.” NU will look to control the game against Purdue on Friday at 7 p.m. and win its first game since Oct. 5 when the team defeated Minnesota. maxgelman2018@u.northwestern.edu

Volleyball Daily file photo bySeam Su

rookie and veteran Freshman outside hitter Symone Abbott and senior middle blocker Katie Dutchmann leap for the ball. The two have appeared in each of the Wildcats’ 19 games this season.

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