ON REWIND
Museum of Contemporary Art ready for ch-ch-changes
See what’s on deck for Cassette Store Day, page 16
‘David Bowie Is’ review, page 21
Volume #99 | Issue #2 | Sept. 22, 2014 | depauliaonline.com
Women’s soccer continues win streak, moves to 8-0-1 By Matthew Paras Sports Editor
After scoring four goals in four games, DePaul sophomore Abby Reed saw her scoring drop off a bit. Reed, a transfer from Indiana State, said she hadn’t been feeling herself the last couple of games. Against Cincinnati, Reed was back. Reed scored two goals early in the second half to lift DePaul to a 3–1 victory over the Bear Cats. The win extended the Blue Demons streak to eight — setting a school record for the longest undefeated streak for women’s soccer. “It shows how much we want it,” Reed said of the team’s streak. “It shows how much we’ve come together since the start of the season.” Reed scored her first goal in the 48th minute after she was set up perfectly by freshman Alexa Ben, allowing her to just tap it in and
Grant myatt | THE DEPAULIA
Krystal Ortiz, as Nina in “In the Heights,” performs the song “Breathe” while at rehearsal Sept. 19.
Such great ‘Heights’ Theatre School prepares their spin onTony Award-winning musical ‘In the Heights’ By Grant Myatt Managing Editor
GRANT MYATT | THE DEPAULIA
Abby Reed and Alexa Ben celebrate after Reed scores. giving the Blue Demons a 2–1 lead. Her second goal came just five minutes later. Reed hit a beautiful kick from the top of the box as the ball curved in at the top of the goal, capping off a blazing start to the half. Both goals were much needed. Cincinnati controlled the tempo in the first half, keeping DePaul’s athleticism in check with a physical style. The Bearcats tied the game in 17 seconds after a hard-earned Elise Wyatt goal put the Blue Demons on top briefly in the 24th minute. “I had felt like we needed to get something going because we didn’t play that well in the first half,” Reed said. “I thought we were playing to their strengths and hit over them. At the end of the first half, we started to get it going and I think we picked it right by up in the second.”
See SOCCER, page 26
Standing center stage, Wesley Toledo’s focus was all forward as director Lisa Portes gave him notes, while the cast of about 15 buzzed with excitement from behind. As Portes turned to walk back to her seat, his eyes began to wander looking at the set and cast behind him. Turning back around he said to Portes, “It just hit me that we are actually doing this.” What started as a mere joke is now reality for two Theatre School students who
brought the idea of doing the musical “In the Heights” as part of the 2014-15 season. “I have to say Krystal (Ortiz) pushed for it a lot more than I did,” Paola Sanchez, a junior who plays Camila, said. “I didn’t really believe that students had any power in the season.” However, with The Theatre School’s policy to perform a musical every two to three years, “In the Heights” was a good pick for today’s audiences. The show is a story of a bi-cultural community living in the
See HEIGHTS, page 8
Entrepreneurship programs ranked in top 20 By Randy Vollrath Contributing Writer
The Princeton Review released its top 50 schools for Entrepreneurship Programs for 2015 annual survey results last week, listing DePaul’s undergraduate entrepreneurship program as 15th, and the graduate program as 20th best in the country. “DePaul has a history of being involved in these rankings for a long time, and it’s very exciting for us to be recognized among our peers to be leading in this area,” said Terri Lonier, executive director of the Coleman Entrepreneurship Center at DePaul. The university was one of 14 to be ranked
on both lists, and the only one on both lists from Chicago. “I don’t think it comes down to any single reason, I think it’s because we have so much to offer DePaul students in many areas of entrepreneurship. It’s our outstanding faculty, it’s the diverse numbers of classes we can offer,” Lonier said. “It’s our track record with alumni who have started successful entrepreneurial companies. And it’s also the events and the hands-on learning opportunities that we can offer at the center.” Both Lonier and professor Harold Welsch emphasized the two parts of entrepreneurship at DePaul. There is the academic side, which contains the classes, the undergraduate and graduate programs
of entrepreneurial study; the theoretical aspects. The Coleman Entrepreneurship Center handles the hands-on aspects of entrepreneurship, with programs, seminars, workshops, competitions and outreach to the community. “The ranking really affects both dimensions. It gives legitimacy to both the academic discipline, and it enhances the credibility of the center in that more people are aware now of the services that we offer, and more people would like to learn about entrepreneurship,” Welsch said. Students involved with entrepreneurship at DePaul raved about the programs put on
See ENTREPRENEUR, page 6