8
The Daily Northwestern DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynu Monday, January 12, 2015 SPORTS Women’s Basketball Wildcats sneak by Spartans » PAGE 8 Fire ignites home in northwest Evanston » PAGE 2 High 21 Low 11 OPINION Kirkland Freedom of expression means defending those who offend » PAGE 4 Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Classieds & Puzzles 6 | Sports 8 EPD to consider body cameras By AMULYA YALAMANCHILI the daily northwestern A resident at the Feinberg School of Medicine has started a program partnering Northwestern with an Ethiopian medical school to decrease maternal mortality in the country. Last week, Dr. Gelila Goba, a fourth-year resident at Feinberg, returned to NU after a weeklong trip to Ethiopia, her home country. Goba’s program, the Mela Project, partners Feinberg with Mekelle Uni- versity’s obstetrics and gynecology department in Ethiopia. Feinberg has sent three teams of medical fac- ulty, residents and students to Ethio- pia since October for the program, which aims to improve medical edu- cation and healthcare delivery in the country’s Tigray region. In Ethiopia, the majority of women deliver at home without a skilled birthing professional, and less than 15 percent deliver at a hos- pital, according to Dr. Magdy Milad, a Feinberg professor and leader on the Mela Project. The high number of home births, along with a lack of physicians and access to health- care, contributes to one of the high- est maternal mortality rates in the world. “Four years ago, Gelila inter- viewed for (an obstetrics and gyne- cology) residency here and expressed a strong drive and passion to develop a sustainable relationship with a medi- cal school in Ethiopia,” Dr. Milad said. “I thought it was a very important opportunity for us to consider, and we recruited her for residency with this partner- ship in mind.” Goba is juggling all the expec- tations of a resident at Feinberg, such as exams and hospital hours, while also supporting a family and developing the Mela Project. After deciding to partner with Mekelle, Goba secured a grant from the Chi- cago-based nonprofit IDP Founda- tion, Inc. which was matched and exceeded by NU and the Center for Global Health, as well as by Mekelle in order to develop a program that aims to meet U.S. and international standards. “We want to contribute to the efforts to decrease maternal mor- tality in Ethiopia, as well as across Africa,” Goba said. “We hope it will become a training site to transform medical education in Ethiopia.” The first visit to Ethiopia in October was conducted as a needs assessment to understand the region’s model of healthcare delivery » See ETHIOPIA, page 6 By ALICE YIN daily senior staffer @alice__yin Two scholars warned against the peril of the war in Ukraine during a talk Sat- urday at the Evanston Public Library. John Mearsheimer, a professor at the University of Chicago, and Rick Rozo, manager of the Stop NATO website, met at EPL, 1703 Orrington Ave., for the event. Neighbors for Peace, an Evan- ston-based community organization aiming to promote peace throughout the world, hosted the talk, which drew about 40 people. e event featured a speech from both guests and a question-and- answer session from the audience. e two speakers spoke on the civil unrest in Ukraine. e crisis began in late 2013, amid movement to integrate Ukraine with NATO and the European Union. e removal of Ukraine’s pro- Russian president and Russia’s annexa- tion of Ukraine’s Crimea region sparked further tension in the country — and between the West and Russia. Discussing the dwindling United States-Russia relationship and the expan- sion of NATO, the speakers encouraged taking a more critical view of the West’s role in the crisis. “We continue to encourage (Ukraine) to become part of the West … while doing nothing to help the Ukrainians,” Mearsheimer said. “This is highly irresponsible.” Mearsheimer, who wrote an article on the Ukrainian crisis published in the magazine Foreign Aairs last fall, said although Putin is not innocent, he is misunderstood. His involvement in Ukraine is a reaction to an increased Western presence near Russian borders, Mearsheimer said. “Putin is not bent on conquering Ukraine,” Mearsheimer said at the talk. “He is wrecking Ukraine and destroying it as a functioning society. We have two choices: the West backs oor (Russia continues) to try to make Ukraine part of the West by wrecking the country.” Dale Lehman, a member of Neigh- bors for Peace, said he felt the event was important to the organization’s mission of establishing peace in the international community. He said both speakers pro- vided insight that the media and general public have not. “Mearsheimer is a very prominent professor and knowledgeable about U.S. foreign policy,” Lehman said. “We were lucky to get him. Rozohas all kinds of credentials as an independent researcher who’s followed changes in NATO — things that slip through media without context.” Rozospoke on NATO’s growing threat as a military bloc, especially with talks in recent years to align the organization with Ukraine. e panelist underlined the danger in NATO’s failed promises to stop its expansion. “Almost half of the countries in the world attended NATO’s last summit in Wales,” Rozotold e Daily. “In 1991 if anyone had suggested this, they would be accused of being crazy.” Libby Frank, a Chicago resident who attended the event, said both speakers helped her understand the dierent actions of the United States and Russia that led to the crisis. “I don’t feel like I’m getting a real, true picture out of mainstream media so that’s why I came and that was the main takeaway,” Frank said. “is is very serious, and (the United States) had an unfortunately negative role.” Rozosaid he was glad to come to Evanston and speak on the situation, which could become very “grave and dramatic,” as two nuclear superpowers are involved. “Either NATO blinks or Russia blinks,” Rozosaid. “Or we may be heading into a warning about nuclear war.” [email protected] Library panelists discuss Ukraine crisis Daily file photo by Ciara McCarthy CAMERA CONCERNS Evanston police say they will consider adopting body cameras once such cameras are made explicitly legal in Illinois. Police departments across the country are debating the use of body-worn cameras in the aftermath of a police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri. By SOPHIA BOLLAG and CIARA McCARTHY daily senior staffers @sophiabollag, @mccarthy_ciara In the wake of national debate over law enforcement practices, Evanston police say they will consider adopt- ing body cameras for ocers when such cameras are explicitly legalized in Illinois. “I do think the day will come where we will be using them in Evanston in the next two to three years,” Evan- ston police Cmdr. Jay Parrott told e Daily. “I think that’s going to be the standard in law enforcement.” The shooting death of black teenager Michael Brown by a white police ocer in Ferguson, Missouri, launched a national conversation about the use of cameras in law enforcement. In December, Presi- dent Barack Obama called for $263 million from Congress to make 50,000 body-worn cameras available to police. Since then, police depart- ments throughout the country have reconsidered their use of surveil- lance technology. In December, Los Angeles announced it will order 7,000 body cameras for police. New York and Chicago police plan to launch body camera pilot programs in the coming months. Illinois formerly had one of the most stringent eavesdropping laws Alice Yin/Daily Senior Staffer PEACE TALKS University of Chicago Prof. John Mearsheimer speaks at the Evanston Public Library about the Ukrainian crisis. He was one of two panelists at a talk hosted Saturday afternoon by local activist organization Neighbors for Peace. » See POLICE, page 7 NU project addresses healthcare in Ethiopia We hope it will become a training site to transform medical education in Ethiopia. Gelila Goba, Mela Project founder

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Page 1: The Daily Northwestern — Jan. 12, 2015

The Daily NorthwesternDAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynuMonday, January 12, 2015

SPORTS Women’s Basketball

Wildcats sneak by Spartans » PAGE 8

Fire ignites home in northwest Evanston » PAGE 2

High 21Low 11

OPINION KirklandFreedom of expression means

defending those who offend » PAGE 4

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Classifieds & Puzzles 6 | Sports 8

EPD to consider body cameras

By AMULYA YALAMANCHILIthe daily northwestern

A resident at the Feinberg School of Medicine has started a program partnering Northwestern with an Ethiopian medical school to decrease maternal mortality in the country.

Last week, Dr. Gelila Goba, a fourth-year resident at Feinberg, returned to NU after a weeklong trip to Ethiopia, her home country.

Goba’s program, the Mela Project, partners Feinberg with Mekelle Uni-versity’s obstetrics and gynecology department in Ethiopia. Feinberg has sent three teams of medical fac-ulty, residents and students to Ethio-pia since October for the program, which aims to improve medical edu-cation and healthcare delivery in the country’s Tigray region.

In Ethiopia, the majority of women deliver at home without a skilled birthing professional, and less than 15 percent deliver at a hos-pital, according to Dr. Magdy Milad, a Feinberg professor and leader on the Mela Project. The high number of home births, along with a lack of physicians and access to health-care, contributes to one of the high-est maternal mortality rates in the world.

“Four years ago, Gelila inter-viewed for (an obstetrics and gyne-cology) residency he re and expressed a strong drive and passion to develop a sustainable relationship with a medi-cal school in Ethiopia,” Dr. Milad said. “I thought it was a very important opportunity for us to consider, and we recruited her for residency with this partner-ship in mind.”

Goba is juggling all the expec-tations of a resident at Feinberg, such as exams and hospital hours, while also supporting a family and developing the Mela Project. After deciding to partner with Mekelle, Goba secured a grant from the Chi-cago-based nonprofit IDP Founda-tion, Inc. which was matched and exceeded by NU and the Center for Global Health, as well as by Mekelle in order to develop a program that aims to meet U.S. and international standards.

“We want to contribute to the efforts to decrease maternal mor-tality in Ethiopia, as well as across Africa,” Goba said. “We hope it will become a training site to transform medical education in Ethiopia.”

The first visit to Ethiopia in October was conducted as a needs assessment to understand the region’s model of healthcare delivery

» See ETHIOPIA, page 6

By ALICE YINdaily senior staffer @alice__yin

Two scholars warned against the peril of the war in Ukraine during a talk Sat-urday at the Evanston Public Library.

John Mearsheimer, a professor at the University of Chicago, and Rick Rozoff, manager of the Stop NATO website, met at EPL, 1703 Orrington Ave., for the event. Neighbors for Peace, an Evan-ston-based community organization aiming to promote peace throughout the world, hosted the talk, which drew about 40 people. The event featured a speech from both guests and a question-and-answer session from the audience.

The two speakers spoke on the civil unrest in Ukraine. The crisis began in late 2013, amid movement to integrate Ukraine with NATO and the European Union. The removal of Ukraine’s pro-Russian president and Russia’s annexa-tion of Ukraine’s Crimea region sparked further tension in the country — and between the West and Russia.

Discussing the dwindling United States-Russia relationship and the expan-sion of NATO, the speakers encouraged taking a more critical view of the West’s role in the crisis.

“We continue to encourage (Ukraine) to become part of the West … while doing nothing to help the Ukrainians,”

Mearsheimer said. “This is highly irresponsible.”

Mearsheimer, who wrote an article on the Ukrainian crisis published in the magazine Foreign Affairs last fall, said although Putin is not innocent, he is misunderstood. His involvement in Ukraine is a reaction to an increased Western presence near Russian borders, Mearsheimer said.

“Putin is not bent on conquering Ukraine,” Mearsheimer said at the talk. “He is wrecking Ukraine and destroying it as a functioning society. We have two choices: the West backs off or (Russia continues) to try to make Ukraine part of the West by wrecking the country.”

Dale Lehman, a member of Neigh-bors for Peace, said he felt the event was important to the organization’s mission of establishing peace in the international community. He said both speakers pro-vided insight that the media and general public have not.

“Mearsheimer is a very prominent professor and knowledgeable about U.S. foreign policy,” Lehman said. “We were lucky to get him. Rozoff has all kinds of credentials as an independent researcher who’s followed changes in NATO — things that slip through media without context.”

Rozoff spoke on NATO’s growing threat as a military bloc, especially with talks in recent years to align the

organization with Ukraine. The panelist underlined the danger in NATO’s failed promises to stop its expansion.

“Almost half of the countries in the world attended NATO’s last summit in Wales,” Rozoff told The Daily. “In 1991 if anyone had suggested this, they would be accused of being crazy.”

Libby Frank, a Chicago resident who attended the event, said both speakers helped her understand the different actions of the United States and Russia that led to the crisis.

“I don’t feel like I’m getting a real, true picture out of mainstream media

so that’s why I came and that was the main takeaway,” Frank said. “This is very serious, and (the United States) had an unfortunately negative role.”

Rozoff said he was glad to come to Evanston and speak on the situation, which could become very “grave and dramatic,” as two nuclear superpowers are involved.

“Either NATO blinks or Russia blinks,” Rozoff said. “Or we may be heading into a warning about nuclear war.”

[email protected]

Library panelists discuss Ukraine crisis

Daily file photo by Ciara McCarthy

CAMERA CONCERNS Evanston police say they will consider adopting body cameras once such cameras are made explicitly legal in Illinois. Police departments across the country are debating the use of body-worn cameras in the aftermath of a police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri.

By SOPHIA BOLLAG and CIARA McCARTHYdaily senior staffers @sophiabollag, @mccarthy_ciara

In the wake of national debate over law enforcement practices, Evanston police say they will consider adopt-ing body cameras for officers when such cameras are explicitly legalized

in Illinois.“I do think the day will come where

we will be using them in Evanston in the next two to three years,” Evan-ston police Cmdr. Jay Parrott told The Daily. “I think that’s going to be the standard in law enforcement.”

The shooting death of black teenager Michael Brown by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri,

launched a national conversation about the use of cameras in law enforcement. In December, Presi-dent Barack Obama called for $263 million from Congress to make 50,000 body-worn cameras available to police. Since then, police depart-ments throughout the country have reconsidered their use of surveil-lance technology.

In December, Los Angeles announced it will order 7,000 body cameras for police. New York and Chicago police plan to launch body camera pilot programs in the coming months.

Illinois formerly had one of the most stringent eavesdropping laws

Alice Yin/Daily Senior Staffer

PEACE TALKS University of Chicago Prof. John Mearsheimer speaks at the Evanston Public Library about the Ukrainian crisis. He was one of two panelists at a talk hosted Saturday afternoon by local activist organization Neighbors for Peace.

» See POLICE, page 7

NU project addresses healthcare in Ethiopia

“We hope

it will become a training site

to transform medical

education in Ethiopia.

Gelila Goba,

Mela Project founder

Page 2: The Daily Northwestern — Jan. 12, 2015

The Daily Northwesternwww.dailynorthwestern.com

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Check out DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM for breaking news

Around Town2 NEWS | THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 2015

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PHOTOGRAPHERS WILL BE IN NORRIS FOR A LIMITED TIME. Several poses will be taken – in your own clothes and with cap and gown. Your choice will be available for purchase. All senior portraits must be taken by Prestige Portraits/Life Touch. $10 sitting fee required.

NU SENIORS:PANIC NOT!

JAN. 2015 SIGNUPS ARE OPEN

Photographers will returnbeginning January 16, 2015Signups available soon at:

www.OurYear.com NU Code: 87150

questions? email: [email protected] site: www.NUsyllabus.com

2015 Syllabus YearbookNorthwestern University

F CUS

City schedules community meeting to discuss Divvy bikes

Before Divvy bikes arrive in Evanston, res-idents will have a chance to share input on the program at a community meeting Tuesday, the city announced last week.

In September, Gov. Pat Quinn’s office announced funding to expand Divvy, a Chi-cago-based bike-sharing service, to Evan-ston in spring of 2015. Eight docking sta-tions will be installed throughout Evanston, possibly including some near Northwestern’s campus.

“It’s a really good opportunity to get more people riding bikes in that short commute from one part of downtown to another part of downtown,” Ald. Coleen Burrus (9th) told The Daily in November.

At Tuesday’s meeting, from 7-9 p.m. at the Civic Center, Divvy and Evanston officials will outline the program and allow residents to ask questions, voice concerns and vote on potential locations for the bike-sharing stations.

In partnership with the University, Evan-ston will offer students with WildCARDs $20 discounts off the $75 Divvy membership.

When Divvy’s expansion to Evanston was first agreed upon, Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl said the program will help improve residents’ health and reduce the city’s carbon footprint, and Quinn spoke to Divvy’s effectiveness in Chicago.

“The Divvy program has proven to be a successful and innovative way to commute, navigate congested city streets and explore vibrant Chicago communities,” Quinn said in a news release. “Expanding Divvy outside of the city limits means fewer cars on the roads and gives more residents and visitors the fun opportunity to take a ride.”

Evanston is currently looking for busi-nesses to become partners or sponsors of the bike sharing program.

— Alex Putterman

Source: Evanston fi re department on Twitter

FIRE ON HARRISON An Evanston house fi re broke out Friday afternoon. Evanston fi refi ghters were able to contain the fi re with help from other departments.

Fire breaks out in northwest Evanston home

A fi re broke out at a northwest Evanston home Friday aft ernoon.

Th e family of six who lives in the home, 2519 Harrison St., was able to exit the house safely.

Evanston fi re department Division Chief Dwight Hohl said the fi re started at around 12:33 p.m. in the attic space of the three-story house.

“It was a very tough fi re,” he said. “It took about three hours to get it under control. We had 10 other fi re departments from 10 communities assist us.”

Th e fi re caused nearby McDaniel Avenue to be closed to vehicular traffi c between Central Street and Lincoln Street, police said.

One fi refi ghter was injured at the home and taken to the hospital in stable condition, city offi cials said.

— Julian Gerez

Police fi eld shots fi red call Thursday morning

Offi cers responded to a shots fi red call in south-west Evanston on Th ursday morning.

A call came in of one shot fi red in the 900 block of Grey Avenue near the Robert Crown Center at around 6:04 a.m., police said. Police responded but did not locate any evidence, Evanston police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said.

“We can’t confi rm that it was shots fi red,” he said. “Th e call came in that way but it could have been something else.”

Evanston resident arrested in connection with retail theft

A 29-year-old Evanston woman was arrested in connection with retail theft Th ursday.

Th e assistant manager at an Evanston Walgreens observed the woman enter the store and put items in her purse, then go to the cashier and pay for other items in her cart, Parrott said.

Th e stolen items had a value of about $33 and included juice boxes, hair dye, Oreo cookies and miscellaneous groceries.

Th e 29-year-old was charged with misdemeanor retail theft and will appear in court Feb. 5.

— Julian Gerez

Police Blotter

Page 3: The Daily Northwestern — Jan. 12, 2015

On CampusMONDAY, JANUARY 12, 2015 THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 3

15THUThomas Robertello Flute Master Class

Lutkin, 4:30 p.m.

free

A former member of the Pittsburgh Symphony, National Symphony, and Cleveland Orchestras, Thomas Robertello has DSSHDUHG©DV©JXHVW©SULQFLSDO©¾XWH©ZLWK©WKH©&KLFDJR©6\PSKRQ\©Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and Houston Grand Opera. He has held faculty positions at Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Notre Dame, Roosevelt University, and the Cleveland Institute of Music. He is currently on faculty at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music.

Andy Kozar Lecture-Recital

Lutkin, 7:30 p.m.

free

1HZ©<RUN©&LW\õEDVHG©WUXPSHWHU©$QG\©.R]DU©SUHVHQWV©D©OHFWXUHõUHFLWDO©RQ©SHUIRUPLQJ©ZLWK©HOHFWURQLFV�©+LV©SOD\LQJ©KDV©EHHQ©praised by the International Trumpet Guild Journal as “agile as he QDYLJDWHV©OHDSV©DQG©VOXUV©ZLWK©JUDFH���KH©VKLIWV©EHWZHHQ©O\ULFLVP©and aggression deftly.”

16FRILincoln String Quartet

Winston Choi, piano

Pick-Staiger, 7:30 p.m.

$24/10

Qing Hou and Lei Hou, violin; Lawrence Neuman, viola; Kenneth Olsen, cello

/XGZLJ©YDQ©%HHWKRYHQ�©6WULQJ©4XDUWHWV©1R�©�©LQ©'©0DMRU and No. 15 in A Minor %HHWKRYHQ�©&HOOR©6RQDWD©1R�©�©LQ©$©0DMRU

Lincoln String Quartet

JAN 12 - 16THIS WEEK IN MUSIC

www.pickstaiger.org y 847.467.4000

Bienen School of Music y Northwestern University

NU to hold annual extern programBy EMILY CHINthe daily northwestern @Emchin24

The Northwestern Alumni Association and Northwestern Career Advancement are put-ting on the annual Northwestern Externship Program, which pairs NU alumni with stu-dents for a day of career shadowing. Students accompany alumni for a day to their job in places all over the United States to explore potential careers.

Alumni were able to register for NEXT, which has been held for more than a decade, last week. As of Friday afternoon, 462 alumni had signed up, said Tracie Thomas, director of career development at NCA.

“We’re looking for alumni who are interested in connecting with students, supporting them, providing mentorship, really making those connections where they can not only answer questions and be a resource but also provide students with practical experience on the job,” said Ben Hancock, associate director of alumni professional development at NCA.

Alumni come from all different fields, giving students an opportunity to explore a variety of career options, Thomas said.

“I think the best thing that students gain is an opportunity to build their professional net-work and explore careers in a meaningful way

and gain exposure to multiple career fields,” she said. “I think just gaining exposure to dif-ferent industries and different companies is a great way for students to gain knowledge of different career fields.”

Students have the option to complete appli-cations for up to eight externships, which resemble an internship application. Alumni then receive these applications and decide who would be best fit for their particular externship.

SESP junior James Keane participated in the NEXT program last year by shadowing Roy Elvove (Communication ’75, Medill ’76), executive vice president of New York adver-tising agency BBDO Worldwide. Keane said the program exposed him to the world of advertising and helped him secure a summer internship.

Prior to the externship, Keane had trouble getting employers’ attentions because he had no connections. He “cold-emailed” employers without any previous history with them.

“I was just trying to find anyone who would take me under their wing,” he said.

Through NEXT, Keane was able to connect with Elvove, who said it was Keane’s proactiv-ity and hands-on work during the externship that led him to extend an internship offer to him.

“In our department we meet as a group and everyday we review what’s going on. James

participated in that meeting and asked ques-tions,” Elvove said. “He got a sense for the magnitude and the volume of work that we’re handling and the diverse nature of them.”

Last year was Elvove’s first time participat-ing in NEXT. He said he will participate this year as well.

“It was great because it was an opportunity for me to give something back to the Univer-sity,” he said. “It was a chance for me to help a student and in the process expose them to it and get them excited about it.”

Keane said he was rewarded with the con-nections he got through the program and will apply again this year.

Applications for the program open Jan. 26. Keane also pointed out some “hidden gems”

to the program last year. Adrienne Moore (Weinberg ’03), who plays Cindy “Black Cindy” Hayes in “Orange Is the New Black,” is an NU alum and offered the chance for students to meet the show’s cast and see the set.

“This was an opportunity that only people who look into the program saw,” Keane said.

Despite these opportunities, Thomas said the program isn’t particularly competitive, and that all students have a good chance of getting matched.

“It’s just important that students are con-nected with alumni,” she said.

[email protected]

Childhood ‘word gap’ can be combated early, study finds

A Northwestern psychology professor co-au-thored a study arguing the “word gap” between lower income children and more affluent chil-dren, who hear more words during early child-hood, can be combated at as early as two or three months of age.

Psychology Prof. Sandra Waxman and New York University Prof. Athena Vouloumanos write in their article “Listen Up! Speech is for Thinking During Infancy” that parents should speak to their infants more.

“It’s not because (children) have low vocabu-laries that they fail to achieve later on,” Waxman said in a University news release. “That’s far too simple. The vocabulary of a child — raised in poverty or in plenty — is really an index of the larger context in which language participates.”

The “word gap” refers to the difference in

the number of words lower income children and more affluent children hear during their early childhoods. A 2003 study found children from “professional” families will hear 30 mil-lion more words in their first three years than children from “welfare” families.

In their article, Waxman and Vouloumanos summarize new research that shows infants who listen to speech gain more than language skills. In the news release, Vouloumanos said listening to speech also “promotes the babies’ acquisition of the fundamental cognitive and

social psychological capacities that form the foundation for subsequent learning.”

“These new results, culled from several different labs including our own, tell us that infants as young as 2 or 3 months of age not only love to listen to speech, but that they learn about fundamental cognitive and social rela-tions better in the context of listening to speech than in any other context we’ve discovered yet,” Waxman said in the release.

— Shane McKeon

Obama pitches tuition proposalKNOXVILLE, Tenn. — President Barack

Obama traveled to this Southern city Friday to sell his new proposal for making community college as widely available as high school, the culmination of a tour outside Washington to promote policy initiatives aimed at the middle class.

In unveiling the proposal, Obama promised to “bring down to zero” the cost of tuition at community colleges and technical schools around the country.

“Two years of college will become as free and universal as high school is today,” Obama pledged.

The president laid out his vision at the Pel-lissippi State Community College here, a venue chosen as part of a familiar — if not entirely successful — White House playbook.

Obama is using a strategy he has employed on issues including raising the minimum wage and broadening pre-kindergarten education: talking about the subject in front of a friendly audience, and building on local initiatives already in place.

The community college plan has a template in Chicago and Tennessee programs that basi-cally cover the cost of tuition for any eligible student who wants to attend a two-year college or technical school.

— Christi Parsons and Kathleen Hennessey (Tribune Washington Bureau/TNS)

Across Campuses

Page 4: The Daily Northwestern — Jan. 12, 2015

Join the online conversation at www.dailynorthwestern.comOPINION

Monday, January 12, 2015 PAGE 4

The Daily NorthwesternVolume 135, Issue 53

Editor in ChiefCiara McCarthy

Managing EditorsSophia Bollag Jeanne Kuang

Opinion Editors Bob Hayes Angela Lin

Assistant Opinion EditorNaib Mian

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR may be sent to 1999 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208, via fax at 847-491-9905, via e-mail to [email protected] or by dropping a letter in the box outside THE DAILY office. Letters have the following requirements:

class and phone number.

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 DAILYeditorial board and not the opinions of either Northwestern University or Students Publishing Co. Inc.

Let art tell you the truths that journalism can’t

“I’m not sad for the martyr in you, but los-ing you hurts,” a weeping woman said in “The Square,” to her deceased daughter killed in an army attack on the Egyptian revolutionaries.

My heart filled up with overwhelming grief and tears trickled down my cheeks. In my head, I heard myself say the same words I said to myself ever so often, “There’s too much pain and suffering in this world.”

“The Square,” a documentary directed by Jehane Noujaim, depicted recent Egyptian revolutions through the eyes of revolutionaries, like Ahmed Hassan, Khalid Abdalla and Ramy Essam, who Noujaim followed around with her camera into their debate-heated homes, the tented Tahrir Square and the tear-gassed streets of Cairo.

“The Square” beautifully humanized the Egyptians by engrossing us in their personal journeys and built a bridge for us to connect with the perceived “other.”

For centuries, the East has been repre-sented in Western media as an inferior crowd of savages, a practice called Orientalism. I remember a discussion we once had on ethics

of journalism in my “Multimedia and Visual Journalism” class last semester, about how the Western media portrays the “other” in unre-latable ways: When Darren Wilson, a white policeman, shot Michael Brown, an 18-year-old black man, the media initially used photos of Brown flashing gang signs, portraying him as a menacing “other,” distracting people from the truth. In the study, “National Identity and Attitude Towards Foreigners in a Multinational State,” researchers found that if a person iden-tifies with a nation that promotes preserving its own culture, he or she will be hostile toward foreigners because they will be seen as the “other” or a threat to his or her culture.

“The Square” diffused the otherness of the people of the Middle East and allowed us to even embrace their otherness. It cut beyond cultural differences and sent a message of humanness.

“I felt that if I could really bring people into the lives, personal lives [of the Egyptians] and humanize the people that are going through this so that when you see the Egyptian Revolu-tion, it’s not just this massive crowd that you see on Television,” Noujaim said during a visit to my university, Northwestern University in Qatar, after we watched “The Square.” “You really experience the characters and what they’re feeling,” she added.

When you see a revolutionary like Abdalla, the protagonist of “The Kite Runner,” your idea

of the savage men of the Middle East is thrown out of the window.

As I sat back in my seat in the cinema, I found soulful human connection in the ciga-rette-puffing of a distressed Hassan, the pluck-ing of guitar strings of a passionate Essam and the tears of joy of the Egyptians, amidst flailing Egyptian flags, when Hosni Mubarak stepped down. How do you not connect with such moving humanness?

“The Square” has been criticized for being biased and tell-ing just one side of the story. The struggles the characters faced, however, and the emotions they felt were truth. Just because “The Square” doesn’t focus on Egyptians outside Tahrir Square, doesn’t mean it’s any less true.

Even though journalism asserts to pursue the truth, its boundaries sometimes constrain the telling of the truth. As Jason Silva, a film-maker, said on The Huffington Post, “Whereas a literal journalist might have certain facts straight, the articulation of a poet or art-ist, though less ‘factual,’ can actually reveal a deeper truth.”

As journalists, we look for black-and-white

facts, but truth is rarely that simple. Truth writhes in the mysterious, the unknown and the misunderstood.

“He was willing to sacrifice a naive realism in order to achieve realism of a deeper sort, like a poet who, though less factual than a journalist in describing an event, may never-theless reveal truths about it that find no place in the other’s literal grid,” Alain de Botton wrote about an artist in his book, “The Art of Travel.”

Maybe we can call a documentary like “The Square” artistic journalism, for art has the power to reveal truths mere facts cannot.

“You are expressing an emotional truth about who your characters are and their jour-ney,” Karim Amer, the producer, said when addressing the audience at NU-Qatar with Noujaim.

Let art tell you what journalism can’t. Let it reveal shades of truth beyond the black and white. Give room to otherness — to all kinds of truths. You can then lie back in your futon and make your own judgments. Your percep-tion of other people’s truths will be your truth, because there’s no one thing that’s true.

Rhytha Zahid Hejaze is a sophomore studying journalism at Northwestern University in Qatar. She can be reached at [email protected]. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, send a Letter to the Editor to [email protected].

RHYTHAHEJAZEDAILY COLUMNIST

When walking to the Bastille Metro sta-tion from the east, just before you descend the stairs under the old Metropolitain sign, you can see for a moment the massive, green Colonne de Juillet framed perfectly by the trees lining the boulevard Saint-Antoine. It is an image of Paris in all of its expected beauty, a boulevard culminating in a grand column commemorating the long Revolutionary struggle for freedom and fraternity.

Not five blocks north from the bustling Place de la Bastille, on Wednesday, 11 civil-ians and journalists at satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, and one French Muslim police officer charged with guarding them, were savagely gunned down in the middle of an editor’s meeting.

Every morning this past fall on my way to classes at the university Sciences Po, I’d see that image of the Bastille on my way to the metro. I’d never heard of Charlie Hebdo before Wednesday, but for four months I unknowingly shared a metro stop with its writers, cartoonists and editors. Only two weeks after I had flown back to the United

States, my old neighborhood had been com-pletely transformed from the spitting image of classic Paris to an epicenter of fear and a new ground-zero in the war on the freedom of expression.

What Charlie Hebdo published in its weekly paper was highly provocative — this in the country whose left-wing politicians celebrate Robespierre, whose president is an atheist and whose tradition of tolerance gave the world ménage à trois. As David Brooks

wrote in a New York Times column on Friday, their cartoons were so provocative they would probably never have been pub-lished on an American college campus such as our own. Looking through some of their controversial cartoons in the last few days, I’d even say that I was offended by some of them, and I’m not Muslim or Jewish, nor am I particularly religious. If you look

through some of them, I think you might have the same reaction.

Despite the newspaper’s potentially offen-sive remarks, we still shared the “Je Suis

Charlie” image on our Facebook pages all the same. We still tweeted the #JeSuisCharlie hashtag. Some of us even wrote a column in tribute and support of “Charlie.”

Does our doing so mean that we support what they wrote and drew?

One cartoon from 2013 depicts a Jewish man with an over-exaggerated nose and an Uzi, gunning down a Palestinian woman and shouting, “Here, take that Goliath!”

I find cartoons like that offensive, and not even remotely funny.

But I joined the many millions of others who paid their small tribute to the newspaper all the same. Je suis Charlie. And that’s the whole point.

Freedom of expression is not about defending the words and cartoons that the majority of us would support. It’s not about defending what all of us would feel comfort-able posting on our Facebook and Twit-ter feeds. Freedom of expression is about defending what most of us would not publish on social media, what we might shudder at or grimace about in polite company, what would make us feel uncomfortable. The entire point of freedom of expression is the protection of the kind of thing that the majority finds overly provocative.

As George Packer wrote in The New Yorker, “The cartoonists died for an idea. The killers are soldiers in a war against freedom of thought and speech, against tolerance,

pluralism, and the right to offend — against everything decent in a democratic society. So we must all try to be Charlie, not just today but every day.”

The truth is that we are not all Charlie, at least not individually. I probably wouldn’t have published those cartoons, because I don’t necessarily agree with them and even so, I don’t think I would have had the cour-age to do so. But we are all Charlie, together. Because we believe in the cartoonists’ right to offend, we applaud their satire that chal-lenges us, we cherish their role in our democ-racies, we believe in their cause of freedom to say anything to anyone.

This coming Wednesday, with the help of the French daily Libération, Charlie Hebdo will publish its next issue with a print run of one million copies. I hope it will be for sale in all of the corner newsstands of Paris, espe-cially at the one in the Place de la Bastille.

The appalling massacre of these journal-ists — and the attacks on other civilians and police in the days after — are a horrifying rally cry for freedom of expression and soli-darity. However far from the Bastille and Charlie Hebdo we may be, we can all rightly say, “Nous sommes tous Charlie.”

William Kirkland is a Weinberg junior. He can be reached at [email protected]. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, send a Letter to the Editor to [email protected].

WILLKIRKLANDDAILY COLUMNIST

We are Charlie, however much we disagree with them

Pick a simpler New Year’s resolution

It’s been 11 days since 2015 kicked off and an estimated 40 percent of Americans made New Year’s resolutions. But how many Americans have held true to their resolu-tions? As college students, many of us may have resolved to fulfill lofty goals to improve ourselves, our Northwestern experiences and our futures: getting higher grades, exercising more or spending more time with friends and family. But how many of us actually adhere to our plans?

According to a study completed at the University of Scranton, only 8 percent of New Year’s Resolutions are successfully com-pleted. Some of us may have already seen friends or relatives fall short of completing their New Year’s resolutions. Why is it that we can commit ourselves to spending a year working towards a goal but then fall short of

it only days later? Perhaps we are too busy. Perhaps we are just not consistently motivated to complete our goal. Perhaps we are just lazy. Or perhaps we have made our goals too complicated?

Everyone has moments when they strive for perfection rather than moderate and attain-able improvement. Ambitious NU students are as likely as most to adopt this tendency. Rather than creating goals that are too com-plicated to ever achieve, we should simplify our New Year’s resolutions to a few small steps required to improve our lives.

Simple resolutions have the obvious benefit of being easy to follow. It is far easier for a student seeking to improve his or her aca-demic performance to remember to do read-ings on time than to remember to do readings on time, study early for exams and check over problem sets with a friend.

Complicated resolutions also tend to be more ambitious and therefore easier to give up on. Losing 50 pounds may be preferable to losing 10 pounds, but losing 10 pounds is far easier to achieve. A goal of losing 50 pounds will require far more complex diet

and exercise plans. Complicated workout routines are hard to follow because the “all or nothing” mentality that can accompany them may actually undermine the resolutions of those who seek to improve their physical fitness. For example, someone who resolves to spend an hour at the gym each day might find themselves not going to the gym at all if they only have an hour to spare on a certain day. It may seem that a complex goal will accomplish more than a simple goal, but a complex plan could be abandoned and accomplish noth-ing while a simple goal is more likely to be completed.

Remember, we may already be 11 days into 2015, but it’s never too late to edit your reso-lutions. Take that lengthy plan to become the first ever NU graduate to win a Nobel Prize and an Olympic Gold medal and reduce it to a simple one that could someday pave the way for the same results.

Matt Gates is a Weinberg sophomore. He can be reached at [email protected]. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, send a Letter to the Editor to [email protected].

MATTGATESDAILY COLUMNIST

“Despite the newspaper’s potentially offensive remarks, we still shared the “Je Suis Charlie” image on our Facebook pages all the same.

“As

journalists, we look for black-

and-white facts, but truth

is rarely that simple.

Page 5: The Daily Northwestern — Jan. 12, 2015

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6 NEWS | THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 2015

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Wisconsin shuts down NU in second Big Ten lossBy ALEX LEDERMANdaily senior staffer

The home environment did not help the Wildcats on Friday night, as the team dropped another Big Ten contest.

Three Northwestern wrestlers got pinned in No. 18 NU’s 30-16 loss to No. 11 Wisconsin (6-1, 4-0 Big Ten) at Welsh-Ryan Arena, and No. 2 heavyweight senior Mike McMullan was defeated.

“It obviously wasn’t a great meet for us,” coach Drew Pariano said. “It’s strange because we had really good preparation leading up into it, even this week and today. But that doesn’t mean a lot if you don’t perform a lot when the lights are on.”

The night actually started out well for the Cats.

The meet opened with the 149-pound weight class, in which NU (8-3, 0-2) seems vir-tually unstoppable. The Badgers’ Rylan Lubeck took on No. 1 sophomore Jason Tsirtsis, the defending NCAA Champion, but walked away as all of Tsirtsis’ past 37 opponents had — in defeat. Tsirtsis advanced to 22-0 on the season with a 6-1 victory and gave the Cats an early 3-0 lead.

“It was a pretty good performance,” Tsirtisis said. “But there were some moments that could have been better. I need to wrestle better for the whole seven minutes.”

NU’s luck went downhill from there.Sophomore Ben Sullivan and No. 7 senior

Pierce Harger suffered falls in the next two matches to Jarod Donar and No. 3 Isaac Jordan. Sullivan was pinned directly after having his leg looked at and then limped off the mat.

“With Sullivan it was an unfortunate situ-ation where it goes from a normal 3-point

decision to a fall, a 6-point team score for them, and he kind of tweaked his knee or ankle or whatever it is,” Pariano said. “We’re gonna see how bad that is. It’s unfortunate, but all you can do is come back.”

As for Harger’s pin, it was a similar cruel twist in fate.

“(The Wisconsin athlete) was in on a nice shot, and we kind of just stopped wrestling for a second,” Pariano said. “That kid’s good, he’s very good. He’s an opportunistic type wrestler and he capitalized on it.”

The half concluded with two more defeats for NU: A forfeit at 174 pounds and a 4-0 loss by redshirt freshman Mitch Sliga at 184 pounds to Ricky Robertson. NU entered half-time down 21-3.

“It’s hard on the team,” Pariano said of fall-ing behind early. “But the message to the team and the message at the break was, however the first five matches went, that doesn’t dictate how you’re going to wrestle. (Alex) Polizzi was a prime example of that, beating a really good guy.”

Senior No. 12 Polizzi at 197-pounds won a nail-biter after the break over No. 10 Timmy McCall. After falling behind 6-4, Polizzi pulled a reversal to get 2 points and scored the riding time point to win a 7-6 decision.

“He didn’t allow the momentum of the match at the time affect him,” Pariano said. “He was in a pretty precarious spot there, but he wrestled through it and rode the guy out.”

Next came one of the night’s biggest blows, McMullan lost 7-6 to No. 5 Connor Medbery in a thriller.

Medbery pulled ahead early 3-0 with a take-down and an escape, but McMullan fought back to tie it up 4-4. Down 6-4, McMullan got a reversal to tie it up in the final minute, but he ultimately could not maintain control and

Medbery escaped with about 15 seconds left to come away victorious 7-6.

“There’s 15 seconds left,” McMullan said. “I know I’ve got to get a takedown to win the match, so I’m going all out. It was sloppy. I thought I had it at the end there, but I wasn’t able to secure it.”

Next NU won the 125-pound bout by forfeit, but No. 20 Dominick Malone, a junior, was pinned by No. 14 Ryan Taylor at 133.

In the final matchup, junior Jameson Oster turned in NU’s best performance of the night

with a 16-5 major decision over Jesse Thielke at 141. But it was too late. The Wildcats were already down 30-12 and his 4 points were not enough to close the gap.

“It wasn’t the lack of effort as much as we just didn’t finish some of our crucial positions, and it cost us in a significant way,” Pariano said. “We’re not happy, but we’re gonna let this motivate us as we get back to work.”

[email protected]

WrestlingSean Su/Daily Senior Staffer

BADGER POWER Wisconsin’s Ricky Robertson puts Northwestern’s Mitch Sliga in a precarious position Friday night. Three NU wrestlers were pinned in a 30-16 loss to the Badgers.

and access to resources. Members of the NU team performed surgeries and participated in rounds with the goal of “training the trainers” at Mekelle.

Subsequent trips included the addition of subspecialty physicians, such as family plan-ning and oncology specialists, to implement a more extensive training program.

Joan Tankou, an NU medical student involved in the project, first surveyed Mekelle residents in June and traveled to the region again in November. She noted that although Mekelle doctors were knowledgeable about theory, training in procedures and diseases

specific to the region needed improvement. In Ethiopia, medical students use textbooks similar to those used in the U.S., so they often learn about diseases more prevalent in the U.S. than in Ethiopia.

Like Goba, Tankou, who is from Cameroon, originally hails from Africa. She hopes to use her education to improve the healthcare system in the area.

“For me, this partnership really enforces that it is possible to change the medical system in Africa,” Tankou said. “I hope this initiative to train doctors will reduce the overall mortality and morbidity in Ethiopia.”

Tankou encouraged medical students in the U.S. to consider working abroad in areas like Ethiopia with limited resources, because

increased reliance on physical exams instead of expensive diagnostic tools provides students an opportunity to improve basic skills while developing cultural competency and awareness of health disparities.

Dr. Melissa Simon, an assistant professor in obstetrics and gynecology at NU, stressed the importance of recognizing such health dispari-ties both abroad and domestically.

“An opportunity to train and experience patient care in a low-resource setting like Ethi-opia gives students and residents an improved perspective on healthcare delivery,” Simon said. “But we also need to recognize disparities in our own backyard. People forget that there are disparities in Chicago almost as stark as in other countries.”

As part of NU’s interest in exposing medical residents to these local disparities, the John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County in Chi-cago was recently integrated into Feinberg’s residency program. Goba hopes expand upon this interest internationally by eventually inte-grating Mekelle University into NU’s residency program as well.

“Without a robust experience in under-re-sourced facilities, you won’t become completely self-actualized as a doctor,” Milad said. “We’re able to share what we are privileged with, and it’s a truly profound experience.”

[email protected]

EthiopiaFrom page 1

Page 7: The Daily Northwestern — Jan. 12, 2015

MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 2015 THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 7

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in the nation before the state’s Supreme Court struck down the law in March. In December, the General Assembly replaced the eavesdropping law, which regulated audio surveillance, with a more flexible law that doesn’t directly address body cameras.

There is debate among law enforcement as to whether the use of such cameras in the state is legal.

State Rep. Elaine Nekritz and state Sen. Kwame Raoul, who sponsored the legislation that replaced the eavesdropping law, are drafting legislation to regulate police body cameras. They hope to bring a bill before the legislature this year, said John Amdor, a spokesman for Nekritz.

Amdor said the current law does not forbid the use of body cameras but also does not provide guidelines for police departments that wish to implement them, something the new legislation will aim to address.

“There are a lot of questions when you think about this issue,” he said. “When is the camera on, when is it off? What type of data storage require-ments are there for the footage? Who is allowed to access the footage?”

Proponents of body cameras note the technol-ogy’s ability to verify citizen complaints regarding police abuses of power and to protect officers from baseless accusations.

“I am now very pro-camera as a crime sup-pression tool and evidence collector,” Evanston police Chief Richard Eddington said.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which often opposes surveillance programs, supports the use of police body cameras — provided they are regulated, Illinois ACLU spokesman Ed Yohnka said.

“We recognize there is an inherent value in the ability of law enforcement officials to actually know what their officers are doing on the streets when they interact with civilians,” Yohnka said. “Our view is that we ought to put in place some statewide protections about body cameras.”

Discussion about body cameras has begun in Evanston as well, but Eddington said no changes would occur without a public conversation on cost and privacy concerns.

Yohnka said the ACLU would prefer that police departments wait for laws regulating body cameras to be passed before starting cam-era programs.

Elgin, Illinois, began a pilot program for police

body cameras roughly a year ago, said Bill Wolf, deputy chief of the city’s police department. The western suburb equipped its SWAT team and a handful of other officers with body cameras worn on the officers’ vests.

Elgin Police Department’s program is still in its pilot phase, and the department does not have set rules for how long the video captured by the cameras is stored, Wolf said. Officers turn on the cameras — which cost upwards of $200 per officer — when they interact with civilians, but Wolf said so far the cameras have not recorded any serious altercations between officers and residents.

“We have not had a situation yet where the camera was being used on a critical incident where it really helped the officer justify something they did,” Wolf said.

Although Evanston does not currently use body cameras, most of the EPD’s cars are equipped with dashboard cameras, Parrott said, which are used to monitor traffic stops. In addition, whenever the Taser’s safety is switched off, Taser cameras automatically capture both audio and video footage.

Ald. Jane Grover (7th) said the City Coun-cil has not yet discussed equipping EPD with body cameras, but she said if the issue does come before the aldermen, she will weigh the costs of equipping the officers with cameras against the benefits.

She said she thinks Evanston police officers have a relatively good relationship with the com-munity, adding that unlike in Ferguson, the racial composition of the department roughly matches that of the city.

According to data obtained by The New York Times, 30 percent of Evanston police officers are black, compared to 18 percent of Evanston residents, and 62 percent of officers are white, compared to 61 percent of residents.

“The Evanston police really do look like the community,” Grover said. “We’re not Ferguson. That’s for sure.”

[email protected] [email protected]

PoliceFrom page 1

“I am

now very pro-camera

as a crime suppression

tool and evidence collector.

Richard Eddington,

Evanston police Chief

Page 8: The Daily Northwestern — Jan. 12, 2015

SPORTSMonday, January 12, 2015 @DailyNU_Sports

ON DECK ON THE RECORDMen’s BasketballIllinois at NU, 8 p.m., Wednesday

I know we started off slow, but we just really wanted to win this and game and prove we were the better team. — Ashley Deary, guard

JAN. 14

NU holds on for sweep against SpartansBy KHADRICE ROLLINSthe daily northwestern@KhadriceRollins

It was a different venue, but a simi-lar result for the Wildcats (13-2, 3-1 Big Ten), as they picked up a 77-70 win at home against Michigan State (8-8, 0-5) on Sunday.

After falling behind 14-5 at the start of the game, Northwestern used a 20-0 run to establish a lead it would not relinquish for the rest of the game.

“We just tried to settle down,” coach Joe McKeown said. “We knew the shots that we wanted to get, and felt like they were there, it was just that people were a little hyper com-ing out.”

During the run, NU had assists on six of the eight baskets from the field that put the team ahead 25-14. Along with that, the Cats started playing a pace the Spartans did not look com-fortable competing at.

Clearly NU’s competitiveness was not lacking.

“(There was) just a drive to want to win,” sophomore guard Ashley Deary said. “I know we started off slow, but we just really wanted to win this game and prove we were the better team.”

From there, the Cats got into a back-and-forth game with the Spar-tans until the 5-minute mark, when NU started a 15-4 run that netted a 44-29 halftime lead.

Deary led NU offensively. She shot

6-of-6 from the field and 2-of-2 from the free throw line in the half to post 16 points to go along with her four assists. Junior Maggie Lyon added 10 points of her own, as the other lead-ing scorer at the break.

To start the second ha l f , t he Cats looked to get soph-omore Nia Coffey more involved. Coffey leads the team in scoring for the season, averaging 15.6 points per game, but s h ot 1-of-7 in the first half and had only 2 points.

“We were just trying to get her in different spots, get her shots in differ-ent locations,” McKeown said. “She’s such an explosive player, you want to make sure she gets touches. I’m glad she’s on my team.”

Coffey scored 8 of the team’s first 15 points out of the break. The Cats looked like they were ready for a blowout victory against the Spartans as they established a 20-point lead with 12:25 left in the game.

Unfortunately, it would not be smooth sailing for the Cats. Michigan

State, led by the game’s leading scorer, sophomore Aerial Powers, was able to fight back into the game.

Powers put up 24 points, includ-ing 15 in the second half to help cut the NU lead to 4 points with 3:20 remaining.

“I think that being at home, it definitely helps to maintain compo-sure, especially when the other team is making a run,” Lyon said. “They were getting momentum and energy that they hadn’t had earlier in the game with that run, and I think we countered that pretty well.”

The final counter punch for the Cats came from Lyon as she sank a three-pointer with 41 seconds left on an assist from Deary. This put NU up 77-70 and following a missed shot from the Spartans, Lyon grabbed the game’s final rebound so the Cats could run out the clock.

Five NU players ended the game in double figures. Deary was the team leader with 18 points and had a game-high 10 assists as well. Lyon finished with 15 points and seven rebounds while senior Alex Cohen totaled 14 points. Coffey and fellow sophomore Christen Inman had 12 and 14 points respectively.

“I’m really proud of our team,” McKeown said. “We’re still young, we still do things that we got to get better at, but we aspire to be a great team. I think it’s good that we have some teaching points too.”

[email protected]

By BOBBY PILLOTEdaily senior staffer@BobbyPillote

Aft er Northwestern was held score-less in the opening four minutes of Sunday’s contest against Michigan State, the game appeared to be all but over.

Although the Wildcats (10-6, 1-2 Big Ten) ultimately fell 84-77 in over-time to the Spartans (12-5, 3-1), the contest was far from being a blowout. Th e teams were tied at halft ime and again at the end of regulation, with each team claiming several leads throughout. NU had a good shot at winning until it faltered in the fi nal fi ve minutes.

“I’m really proud of my team, we won the game,” coach Chris Collins said aft er the game on WGN radio. “Th e way we started the game … (it) could have gotten out of hand really quickly, and I thought our bench was tremendous.”

JerShon Cobb was the player who got the Cats going. Aft er NU’s start-ers went down 9-0 at the fi rst offi cial timeout, the senior guard came off the bench to score 10 of the Cats’ next 12 points. Cobb fi nished the game a per-fect 5-of-5 shooting with 12 points, four assists and two rebounds but was limited in the second half due to his ongoing health problems.

“I think he got his foot stepped on or something and they said he couldn’t go,” Collins said on WGN about Cobb. “So it was a tough break because I thought he was playing his best game of the year … We could’ve used him there at the end.”

Aft er Cobb ignited the off ense,

freshman guard Bryant McIntosh and junior guard Tre Demps kept the points coming. McIntosh in particular impressed, running the off ense and tying for a game-high 18 points to go along with fi ve rebounds and fi ve assists.

“We ran our same off ense,” McIn-tosh said. “We just hit shots today … We got great looks, and I thought we got to the basket a lot.”

But despite McIntosh’s continued strong play, Collins turned to the more experienced Demps for NU’s most important possessions.

Revered among Cats fans for his late-game heroics, Demps had the ball in his hands for the fi nal shot of regula-tion with the game tied at 72. As time expired he dribbled left off a screen and elevated for a minimally-contested long two, but the shot fell just short to send the game to overtime.

Despite the disappointing loss, Col-lins lauded his team’s performance. Th e coach said his players “bring it every night” and felt that ferocity was evident Sunday.

NU’s downfall was its sputtering overtime off ense. In regulation, the Cats shot an astounding 54 percent from the fi eld, along with an equally absurd 55 percent rate from 3-point range. In the extra period, though, NU shot just 11 percent from the fi eld and 20 percent from behind the arc, scor-ing just 5 points in overtime to the Spartans’ 12. But normally stout NU also struggled defensively throughout the game.

Michigan State shot 50 percent from the fl oor and all fi ve of the Spar-tans’ starters fi nished with double-digit point totals. Michigan guard Travis Trice led the way, recording a double-double with 18 points and 10 assists. He also got to the free throw line 10 times, making eight of those attempts.

And despite NU being the bigger team (Michigan State doesn’t have a player on its roster listed taller than

6-9), the Cats struggled on the boards. NU was only out-rebounded by one but didn’t have an off ensive rebound until 4:05 remaining in the second half. Th e diff erence in second chance points proved critical for the Spartans.

Collins was dissatisfi ed with the loss but still saw plenty of positives with his team’s tough performance in a diffi cult game.

“I was really proud of our guys, we fought tremendously well,” he said on WGN. “Th is is not an easy place to play, it’s one of the toughest venues in the Big Ten and we were really ready to play … It’s just heartbreaking for my guys because I feel like we should be the team in there celebrating right now.”

The Cats continue conference play Wednesday when they return to Welsh-Ryan Arena to take on Illinois.

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By JESSE KRAMERdaily senior staffer@Jesse_Kramer

Height only matters if you know how to use it, and Northwestern is surely a work in progress in this regard.

Despite being signifi cantly taller than Michigan State, the Wildcats failed to match up down low with the Spartans in Sunday’s overtime loss in East Lansing, Michigan.

NU is at +1.9 in eff ective height, according to kenpom.com. Mean-while, Michigan State is last in the Big Ten at -0.9.

Although Michigan State is known for having a trio of guards who can shoot the lights out, the Spartans outscored the Wildcats 34-26 in the paint. Th ey also out-re-bounded the Cats and held a major advantage on the off ensive glass.

Michigan State turned 11 off en-sive rebounds into 12 second-chance points. Eight of those boards came from 6-foot-6 forward Branden Dawson and 6-foot-9 forward Gavin Schilling, who was giving up three inches to Cats center Alex Olah.

Dawson and Schilling outworked NU’s big men. Even when they could not fully corral a rebound, they oft en got a piece of the basket-ball, leading to three tip-ins in the second half.

However, coach Chris Collins said he was satisfi ed with the Cats’ eff ort.

“You might not always make shots, but you can bring eff ort, you can bring attitude and you can bring fi ght,” Collins said to WGN. “And we defi nitely did that tonight.”

NU fi nished with a respectable seven off ensive boards but did not get its fi rst until the 4:02 mark of the second half. Even so, the Cats

turned those seven second-chance opportunities into just 4 second-chance points.

NU has lost the rebounding battle in all three of its Big Ten games, and off ensive rebounding in particular has been an issue. Th e Cats are 11th in the Big Ten and 232 in the nation with a 29.4 off ensive rebounding percentage, at time of publishing.

For a team that does not shoot the ball well from the fi eld, having so many possessions with just one shot attempt makes scoring even

more dif-fi cult. Th e Cats scored 1.11 points per posses-sion Sun-day against an el ite defense, but their track record shows that is an anomaly.

Head-ing into Sunday’s

contest, NU was averaging just 1.01 points per possession against a set of defenses far easier than the Spar-tans’ stingy unit.

If the Cats can keep up Sunday’s stellar shooting performance (54 percent from the fi eld in regula-tion), the rebounding question becomes less of an issue.

More than likely though, NU will revert back closer to its off ensive average.

And unless rebounding becomes much improved, NU will seriously struggle on the off ensive end going forward.

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Wildcats fall to Spartans

Northwestern

77Michigan State

84

Women’s Basketball

Rebounding woes follow Cats to East Lansing

NU nearly slays Michigan State on road

“They

were getting momentum

and energy that they hadn’t had

earlier in the game with that run, and I think

we countered that pretty well.

Maggie Lyon,junior guard

Sean Su/Daily Senior Staffer

SCORING DYNAMO Ashley Deary weaves her way through traffi c. Five Wildcats scored double-digit points against Michigan State on Sunday, but the sophomore led the way with a team-high 18 points.

“You might not always make shots, but you can bring eff ort, you can bring attitude and you can bring fi ght.Chris Collins,head coach

Source: Erin Hampton/The State News

PAINT PRODUCTION Michigan State forward Gavin Schilling shoots over Northwestern forward Sanjay Lumpkin. Schilling had 13 points and 6 rebounds Sunday.

Men’s Basketball