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The Daily Northwestern DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
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Faculty call for Native program By Madeline Fox
the daily northwestern @MadelineFox14
Daniel Tian/The Daily Northwestern
FAITH TALK Sheil director Kevin Feeney, Rabbi Aaron Potek and associate chaplain Tehera Ahmad discuss stereotypes in their religions during an event hosted at the Sheil Catholic Center. The panel attracted about 40 attendees.
Faith leaders talk stereotypes By Mariana Alfaro
the daily northwestern @marianaa_alfaro
Campus religious leaders spoke Tuesday night about characteristics and stereotypes of their respective religions in an event at the Sheil Catholic Center. Sheil Center director Kevin Feeney, Fiedler Hillel Rabbi Aaron Potek and NU’s associate chaplain and director of interfaith engagement Tahera Ahmad addressed issues such as spirituality, prayer and sexuality in their religions at the event, which was attended by about 40 people and hosted by Catholic Undergrads, a student group.
The participating leaders discussed which aspects of different faiths they wished more people embodied. “I wish we loved one another more,” Feeney said. “The core of the faith, I think, is love God, love neighbor, love self, love the world … and we share that belief that God the creator made the world good, made us human beings good, but we also get in trouble.” Potek said many faiths are different paths toward the same goal and, at the core, they are all trying to make the world a better place. “That’s something about the Jewish faith that I wish was embraced more,” he said. “It’s being able to see that multiple truth aspect, that no one has exclusive claim on truth and no one has
the one way toward that.” Ahmad said one thing she admires about young Muslims is their passion for social justice. She said college-aged Muslims, “even if they don’t pray or fast,” are involved in activism. “Even if they’re not interested in the rituals of Islam, they’re interested in these aspects of Islam,” she said. “It’s powerful.” The panelists also discussed what they perceive as the most misunderstood aspect of their religion. Feeney said non-Catholics misjudge the role of Mary and the Saints. “People do ask, ‘what’s going on there?’ You seem to place them in the » See INTERFAITH, page 6
Several Weinberg professors are calling for a Native American Studies Department in a proposal submitted to the dean’s office last week. The seven professors who submitted the proposal comprise a committee tasked with creating a plan for a Native American Studies program and Indigenous Research Center. Senior Associate Dean for Faculty John Franks in February asked the committee to create a proposal for the research center and academic program. Asian American Studies Prof. JiYeon Yuh, a member of the committee who has also been active in advocating for an Asian American Studies major, said the committee was not given a specific framework or budget constraint for the proposal. She said the committee used recommendations from the Native American Outreach and Inclusion Task Force as a guide. “We were told we could interpret it however we wanted to interpret it, so that’s what we did,” Yuh said. The Native American Outreach and Inclusion Task Force was established in Fall 2013 to examine how the University can improve relationships with Native American students, staff and faculty and with Native groups in the Chicago area while a committee investigated University founder John Evans’ role in the Sand Creek Massacre, a mass killing of members of the Cheyenne and Arapaho tribes. The task force released its recommendations in November
2014 and called for the establishment of an Indigenous Research Center and a minor or certificate program in Native American Studies. The committee pushed the task force’s recommendations further, calling for a fully staffed department with 12 tenure-track faculty lines split between it and the research center. The committee is also urging existing Weinberg departments to use their own tenure track lines to staff the department. “We really want to push all these departments to be invested, materially invested, in Native American studies,” Yuh said. The professors on the committee also call for four search committees to be formed in Fall Quarter: one for the director of the Indigenous Research Center, one for the head of the Native American Studies Department and two more for scholars in the department, Yuh said. She said she hopes the positions will be filled by next spring. Weinberg senior Heather Menefee, co-founder of the Native American and Indigenous Student Alliance and a member of the Native American Outreach and Inclusion Task Force, said the committee’s recommendations reflected the task force’s intentions. “In the task force meetings, everyone on the task force pretty much wanted there to be a Native American Studies department and not just a minor,” Menefee said. “In a lot of ways the committee’s recommendations are truer to the intention of the task force than the actual report that was produced by the task force.” » See NATIVE, page 6
Governor to sign ban Schaefer to replace Howard on Israel boycotts By Tyler pager
By Kevin Mathew
daily senior staffer @kevinwmathew
Gov. Bruce Rauner will sign into law the first-ever state action against Israel boycotts, he announced via Twitter on Monday. Rauner made the announcement after the Illinois House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill that would require the state to identify companies that boycott Israel and to withhold investing Illinois pension funds from the companies. The bill passed the house 102-0 on
Monday and passed the state Senate 49-0 with 3 “present” April 22. “We’re deeply supportive of Israel, and anything that’s going to threaten it by economically isolating it … is going to be of concern to us,” said Suzanne Strassberger, associate vice president of government affairs at Jewish United Fund. “We are pleased to have legislation pass with such strong support.” The Illinois Coalition to Protect Academic Freedom and Free Speech was originally formed to fight legislation last year that would have punished or condemned » See BOYCOTTs, page 6
daily senior staffer @tylerpager
Kelly Schaefer, executive director of Norris University Center, will replace Burgwell Howard as assistant vice president for student engagement. Patricia Telles-Irvin, vice president for student affairs, announced Schaefer’s promotion in an email to the Student Affairs division on Monday. Schaefer will assume the position July 3. Howard is leaving Northwestern for Yale University, where he will be associate vice president for student
engagement and the senior associate dean of the undergraduate school. In her new position, Schaefer will oversee areas of Campus Inclusion and Community, including Multicultural Student Affairs and Student Enrichment Services. She will also supervise religious life and the Center for Student Involvement. “Her creative approach, new ideas and solutions have garnered her widespread support and respect across the University,” Telles-Irvin wrote in the email. “Additionally, her collaborative and open leadership style will certainly be valuable in her new role, as she works with multiple » See SCHAEFER, page 6
Source: Northwestern
Kelly Schaefer
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