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The Daily Northwestern DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynu Thursday, May 1, 2014 The Current Medill grad goes from documentary to fictional films » INSIDE NU-Q prof examines use of ‘Arab Spring’ » PAGE 3 High 48 Low 42 OPINION Patel Why we Take Back the Night » PAGE 4 Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 6 | Classifieds 6 | Sports 8 Nathan Richards/Daily Senior Staffer BACK TO WORK Sodexo employee Rafael Marquez addresses activists at The Arch during a rally supporting him on April 21. Marquez subsequently retained his job with Sodexo. Title IX next steps presented By REBECCA SAVRANSKY daily senior staffer @beccasavransky Members of the Associated Student Government presented Wednesday future steps to facilitate student dis- cussion on Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 in an update on previously passed legislation. In the initial piece of legislation, passed on April 9, a three-week deadline was implemented for those involved to report back to Senate with actions they plan to take to improve resources for sexual assault victims and create more effective prevention methods. Members involved in the effort said they had reached out to the heads of sev- eral groups including Sexual Health and Assault Peer Educators, Men Against Rape and Sexual Assault and students who participated in the Title IX protests over the past few months, among oth- ers. Chris Harlow, ASG student life vice president, said the team has spoken to the administration and is in the process of setting up an initial meeting with stu- dents to outline further actions. “Right now, the administration has a Title IX Committee,” Harlow said. “is will kind of be a committee for students working independently away from administration just to kind of serve as a community forum.” Harlow said they will report back to Senate to discuss the next steps and give further information. Chief marketing officer Mary Baglivo also spoke to ASG about her efforts to better market the University through developing a “compelling and cohesive” overarching idea. Baglivo said the Uni- versity is outperforming its ranking. “In many ways, the performance of the product, if you will, was ahead of its reputation,” she said. “I’m trying to work on the overall Northwestern brand.” e objectives for her project include improving the University’s reputation, increasing alumni participation rates and increasing student satisfaction rates, which she said was the most “pivotal” goal. e ASG operating budget was also discussed, with the addition of several By BAILEY WILLIAMS the daily northwestern @news_BaileyW The transition to Ventra will be nearly complete Thursday, largely ending old payment methods previ- ously used for the Chicago Transit Authority and Pace Suburban Bus Service. Starting on May 1, customers will not be able to purchase cards with magnetic stripes or reload their Chi- cago Cards and Chicago Card Plus. Customers will still be able to reload old magnetic stripe cards until June 1. Both the CTA and Pace buses are offering ways to transfer funds that customers may have remaining on outdated payment methods after May 1. CTA and Pace customer service departments will hold “balance trans- fer events” in Chicago on May 8 at Jefferson Park Branch Library, 5363 W. Lawrence Ave., and May 10 at Marie Sklodowska Curie Metropoli- tan High School, 4959 S. Archer Ave. There will be more events in June. Additional Ventra transfer events will be held at CTA headquarters every Tuesday. Additionally, customers who have remaining balances will have the opportunity to transfer those funds to their Ventra cards through a “mail-in option” later this spring, although the complete details have not yet been disclosed. About 86 percent of CTA rides and 61 percent of Pace rides are already paid for using Ventra, according to a CTA and Pace news release. Ventra cards can be purchased at vending machines at CTA rail sta- tions or online at ventrachicago.com, CTA and Pace officials said in a news release. Ventra cards purchased in machines are activated upon pur- chase, but cards received in the mail must be activated before use. On June 1, riders will be prevented from using their Chicago Cards and reloading their magnetic stripe fare cards. Despite this deadline, the CTA’s website warns that some Chicago Card or Chicago Card Plus cards may not be accepted prior to June 1. By July 1, magnetic stripe cards will no longer be accepted as payment, according to the CTA website. [email protected] City leadership against fire bill CTA’s Ventra rollout enters final stages Nathan Richards/Daily Senior Staffer BUILD YOUR BRAND Chief Marketing Officer Mary Baglivo addresses Associated Student Government Wednesday night. Baglivo outlined her vision on how to establish the NU brand in her presentation. » See SENATE, page 7 Employee returns to work By PAIGE LESKIN the daily northwestern @paigeleskin Evanston officials took a strong stance this month against a proposed Illinois bill that would give local leaders less power in determining the appropriate number of firefight- ers and paramedics in their own communities. The measure, which passed the state House of Representatives on April 3, would amend the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, which originally gave public employees the right to collective bargaining. The new legislation would make depart- ment-manning requirements and issues concerning wages, hours and employment conditions subject to arbitration by an outside source. “The city believes that staffing lev- els should be determined by man- agement,” Evanston fire department Chief Greg Klaiber said. “(The bill) takes control away from management and puts it in the hands of a third party.” The bill was introduced by Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-Waukegan) and Sen. Kwame Raoul (D-Chicago) in Febru- ary and would apply to all communi- ties in Illinois, with the exception of Chicago, which employs more than 4,500 firefighters and paramedics. The bill has garnered support from the firefighters’ union and advo- cates for helping to resolve safety concerns. However, Klaiber said standards imposed by an arbitrator who would not understand the needs of Evanston as well as local officials do could cost the city money. “We could have layoffs in other departments, just to comply with the arbitrator’s decision,” he said. Klaiber said he believes Evanston currently holds a sufficient number of employees in its fire department, with just more than 100 full-time members. He touted leaving the deci- sion about staffing levels in the hands of the city and city manager Wally Bobkiewicz. Other organizations have also expressed their opposition to the “manning bill.” The Northwest Municipal Conference, an authority that presides over local governments in Chicago’s north and northwest sub- urbs, has staged a full-blown effort to stop the legislation’s progress. The bill “would leave taxpayers on the hook for tens of millions of dollars of unnecessary fire depart- ment staffing costs,” executive direc- tor Mark Fowler wrote April 18 in a weekly city report. NWMC’s legislative committee formulated a plan that would pub- licize the bill’s possible negative impact. Fowler called for government officials to contact their legislatures and express their desire to defeat the measure. Bobkiewicz and Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl traveled to Springfield on Wednesday for the annual Illinois Municipal League Lobby Day, where Associated Student Government By REBECCA SAVRANSKY daily senior staffer @beccasavransky A Sodexo employee who was put on temporary suspension last week returned to work Tuesday aſter he said he received a final written warning stating that simi- lar behavior in the future would result in “further disciplinary action.” Rafael Marquez, a food service worker in 1835 Hinman dining hall, said he was initially accused of being “overexcited” and “under the influence” at the work- place, aſter which he was put on tem- porary suspension and required to turn in statements attesting to his stability to the Sodexo Human Resources Office. He said at the time he was accused, he was defending another worker who was being reprimanded for poor labor. His situation spurred student action, with a march being organized to walk Marquez from e Arch to Sargent Hall where he turned in his statements to the Sodexo Human Resources Office. Since his suspension, Marquez said he has been in contact with several students about possibly planning further protests or organizing petitions. During his time off, he said he was called into the Sodexo office and “inter- rogated” for about an hour. Sodexo officials then further accused Marquez of engaging in threatening actions and violating parts of the official Sodexo documents, he said. Due to privacy rights, Eddie Skid- more, Sodexo area marketing coordi- nator, said he could not comment on the situation. Rick Siwecki, Sodexo district human resources manager, referred comment to Erich Geiger, resident din- ing operations manager, who could not be reached. Marquez said being given a final writ- ten warning violates the progressive dis- cipline agreement in his union contract. is agreement says an employee must be given a set number of warnings prior to being terminated or given further dis- ciplinary measures, he said. “ey’re skipping the first warning and second warning and just going » See BILL, page 7 » See RESPONSE, page 7

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The Daily NorthwesternDAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynuThursday, May 1, 2014

The CurrentMedill grad goes from documentary

to fi ctional fi lms » INSIDE

NU-Q prof examines use of ‘Arab Spring’ » PAGE 3

High 48Low 42

OPINION PatelWhy we Take Back the

Night » PAGE 4

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 6 | Classi� eds 6 | Sports 8

Nathan Richards/Daily Senior Staffer

BACK TO WORK Sodexo employee Rafael Marquez addresses activists at The Arch during a rally supporting him on April 21. Marquez subsequently retained his job with Sodexo.

Title IX next steps presentedBy REBECCA SAVRANSKYdaily senior staffer@beccasavransky

Members of the Associated Student Government presented Wednesday future steps to facilitate student dis-cussion on Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 in an update on previously passed legislation.

In the initial piece of legislation, passed on April 9, a three-week deadline was implemented for those involved to report back to Senate with actions they plan to take to improve resources for sexual assault victims and create more e� ective prevention methods.

Members involved in the e� ort said they had reached out to the heads of sev-eral groups including Sexual Health and Assault Peer Educators, Men Against Rape and Sexual Assault and students who participated in the Title IX protests over the past few months, among oth-ers. Chris Harlow, ASG student life vice president, said the team has spoken to the administration and is in the process of setting up an initial meeting with stu-dents to outline further actions.

“Right now, the administration has a Title IX Committee,” Harlow said. “� is will kind of be a committee for students working independently away

from administration just to kind of serve as a community forum.”

Harlow said they will report back to Senate to discuss the next steps and give further information.

Chief marketing o cer Mary Baglivo also spoke to ASG about her e� orts to better market the University through developing a “compelling and cohesive” overarching idea. Baglivo said the Uni-versity is outperforming its ranking.

“In many ways, the performance of the product, if you will, was ahead

of its reputation,” she said. “I’m trying to work on the overall Northwestern brand.”

� e objectives for her project include improving the University’s reputation, increasing alumni participation rates and increasing student satisfaction rates, which she said was the most “pivotal” goal.

� e ASG operating budget was also discussed, with the addition of several

By BAILEY WILLIAMSthe daily northwestern@news_BaileyW

The transition to Ventra will be nearly complete Thursday, largely ending old payment methods previ-ously used for the Chicago Transit Authority and Pace Suburban Bus Service.

Starting on May 1, customers will not be able to purchase cards with magnetic stripes or reload their Chi-cago Cards and Chicago Card Plus. Customers will still be able to reload old magnetic stripe cards until June 1.

Both the CTA and Pace buses are offering ways to transfer funds that customers may have remaining on outdated payment methods after May 1. CTA and Pace customer service departments will hold “balance trans-fer events” in Chicago on May 8 at Jefferson Park Branch Library, 5363 W. Lawrence Ave., and May 10 at Marie Sklodowska Curie Metropoli-tan High School, 4959 S. Archer Ave. There will be more events in June. Additional Ventra transfer events will be held at CTA headquarters every Tuesday.

Additionally, customers who have remaining balances will have the opportunity to transfer those funds to their Ventra cards through a “mail-in option” later this spring, although the complete details have not yet been disclosed.

About 86 percent of CTA rides and 61 percent of Pace rides are already paid for using Ventra, according to a CTA and Pace news release.

Ventra cards can be purchased at vending machines at CTA rail sta-tions or online at ventrachicago.com, CTA and Pace officials said in a news release.

Ventra cards purchased in machines are activated upon pur-chase, but cards received in the mail must be activated before use.

On June 1, riders will be prevented from using their Chicago Cards and reloading their magnetic stripe fare cards. Despite this deadline, the CTA’s website warns that some Chicago Card or Chicago Card Plus cards may not be accepted prior to June 1.

By July 1, magnetic stripe cards will no longer be accepted as payment, according to the CTA website.

[email protected]

City leadership against fi re bill

CTA’s Ventra rollout enters � nal stages

Nathan Richards/Daily Senior Staffer

BUILD YOUR BRAND Chief Marketing Offi cer Mary Baglivo addresses Associated Student Government Wednesday night. Baglivo outlined her vision on how to establish the NU brand in her presentation.

» See SENATE, page 7

Employee returns to work

By PAIGE LESKINthe daily northwestern@paigeleskin

Evanston officials took a strong stance this month against a proposed Illinois bill that would give local leaders less power in determining the appropriate number of firefight-ers and paramedics in their own communities.

The measure, which passed the state House of Representatives on April 3, would amend the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, which originally gave public employees the right to collective bargaining. The new legislation would make depart-ment-manning requirements and issues concerning wages, hours and employment conditions subject to arbitration by an outside source.

“The city believes that staffing lev-els should be determined by man-agement,” Evanston fire department Chief Greg Klaiber said. “(The bill) takes control away from management and puts it in the hands of a third party.”

The bill was introduced by Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-Waukegan) and Sen. Kwame Raoul (D-Chicago) in Febru-ary and would apply to all communi-ties in Illinois, with the exception of Chicago, which employs more than 4,500 firefighters and paramedics.

The bill has garnered support from the firefighters’ union and advo-cates for helping to resolve safety concerns.

However, Klaiber said standards

imposed by an arbitrator who would not understand the needs of Evanston as well as local officials do could cost the city money.

“We could have layoffs in other departments, just to comply with the arbitrator’s decision,” he said.

Klaiber said he believes Evanston currently holds a sufficient number of employees in its fire department, with just more than 100 full-time members. He touted leaving the deci-sion about staffing levels in the hands of the city and city manager Wally Bobkiewicz.

Other organizations have also expressed their opposition to the “manning bill.” The Northwest Municipal Conference, an authority that presides over local governments in Chicago’s north and northwest sub-urbs, has staged a full-blown effort to stop the legislation’s progress.

The bill “would leave taxpayers on the hook for tens of millions of dollars of unnecessary fire depart-ment staffing costs,” executive direc-tor Mark Fowler wrote April 18 in a weekly city report.

NWMC’s legislative committee formulated a plan that would pub-licize the bill’s possible negative impact. Fowler called for government officials to contact their legislatures and express their desire to defeat the measure.

Bobkiewicz and Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl traveled to Springfield on Wednesday for the annual Illinois Municipal League Lobby Day, where

Associated Student Government

By REBECCA SAVRANSKYdaily senior staffer@beccasavransky

A Sodexo employee who was put on temporary suspension last week returned to work Tuesday a� er he said he received a � nal written warning stating that simi-lar behavior in the future would result in “further disciplinary action.”

Rafael Marquez, a food service worker in 1835 Hinman dining hall, said he was initially accused of being “overexcited” and “under the in� uence” at the work-place, a� er which he was put on tem-porary suspension and required to turn in statements attesting to his stability to the Sodexo Human Resources O ce.

He said at the time he was accused, he was defending another worker who was being reprimanded for poor labor.

His situation spurred student action, with a march being organized to walk Marquez from � e Arch to Sargent Hall where he turned in his statements to the Sodexo Human Resources O ce. Since his suspension, Marquez said he has been in contact with several students about possibly planning further protests or organizing petitions.

During his time o� , he said he was called into the Sodexo o ce and “inter-rogated” for about an hour. Sodexo o cials then further accused Marquez of engaging in threatening actions and violating parts of the o cial Sodexo documents, he said.

Due to privacy rights, Eddie Skid-more, Sodexo area marketing coordi-nator, said he could not comment on the situation. Rick Siwecki, Sodexo district human resources manager, referred comment to Erich Geiger, resident din-ing operations manager, who could not be reached.

Marquez said being given a � nal writ-ten warning violates the progressive dis-cipline agreement in his union contract. � is agreement says an employee must be given a set number of warnings prior to being terminated or given further dis-ciplinary measures, he said.

“� ey’re skipping the � rst warning and second warning and just going

» See BILL, page 7 » See RESPONSE, page 7

The Daily Northwesternwww.dailynorthwestern.com

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First copy of The Daily is free, additional copies are 50 cents. All material published herein, except advertising or where indicated otherwise, is Copyright 2014 The Daily NorThwesTerN and protected under the “work made for hire” and “periodical publication” clauses of copyright law.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily NorThwesTerN, 1999 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208. Subscriptions are $175 for the academic year. The Daily NorThwesTerN is not responsible for more than one incorrect ad inser-tion. All display ad corrections must be received by 3 p.m. one day prior to when the ad is run.

Check out dAilyNOrthwEstErN.COM for breaking news

Around Town2 NEWS | ThE DAILy NORThWESTERN ThURSDAy, MAy 1, 2014

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Distinguished Annual Lecture

the Silver Bullet:Progress and Perspectives on Contaminated Subsurface Restoration

Linda Abriola, Dean of Engineering at Tufts University

Thursday, May 8, 20143:00 – 4:00 p.m.Ford Building, ITW Lecture Room

In Search of

Chlorinated solvent contamination of aquifers is a recalcitrant problem that has challenged environmental engineering professionals, regulators, and site managers for decades. When solvents are introduced to the subsurface, whether through accidental spills or leaking containment facilities, they create

health risk to downstream receptors. This presentation provides an overview of interdisciplinary research designed to improve our ability to predict the migration and fate of DNAPLs in natural subsurface formations and to develop improved methodologies for site characterization and management. Numerical simulations and experimental observations are used to illustrate advances in our understanding of the hydrologic and abiotic and biotic

Linda M. Abriola is Dean of the School of Engineering at Tufts University. She recently served as an elected member of the NAE Governing Council and as a member of the NSF Engineering Directorate Advisory Committee. She currently serves on the National Academies Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy and the NRC Committee for the Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences. Dr. Abriola received her Ph.D. and Master’s degrees from Princeton University and a Bachelor’s degree from Drexel University, all in Civil Engineering.

By julian gerezthe daily northwestern @JGerez_news

Though more than 8,000 Northwestern students occupy Evanston during the school year, the city is preparing a project to make Evanston a better place to grow older in response to changing demographic trends.

While the total population of the city increased by less than 1 percent between 2000 and 2010, the number of people over the age of 65 increased by more than 13 per-cent, according to the United States Census Bureau.

Additionally, the median age has increased from 32.5 years old to 34.3 in that same time period.

In response, Evanston is starting an age-friendly initiative as part of the World Health Organization’s program to create a global net-work of age-friendly cities that “foster the exchange of experience and mutual learning between cities and communities worldwide,” according to the WHO website.

However, Christina Ferraro, assistant

director for Evanston community services, said making the city age-friendly helps all of the residents of the city, not just the older ones. She said Evanston will become a “good place to grow up and grow old.”

“Any changes will be for all ages and will benefit an 8-year-old as well as an 80-year-old,” Ferraro said. “It really is for the entire community.”

The initiative is being generated through community action as well. Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl established and appointed a nine-member task force January to develop the project, which includes overseeing a three-year city-wide action plan. Members of the task force include representatives from the Human Relations Commission, the Men-tal Health Board and the Commission on Aging.

Ferraro said making an age-friendly city includes assessing outdoor spaces, build-ings, transportation, health services and civic participation.

Susan Cherco, the chairperson for the task force, said the plan has been received positively.

“We’re not there to tell residents what

makes Evanston age-friendly,” Cherco said. “Our charge is to have enough conversations with residents, including residents who are normally hard to reach and not traditionally participants, to really reach them and develop a plan based on the input from the actual community.”

Cherco said this bottom-up approach includes surveys, focus groups and round table discussions.

The initiative started unofficially in Octo-ber with community meetings to inform resi-dents of the project which more than 200 residents attended. It will launch officially on May 23 with an open meeting at the McGaw YMCA, 1000 Grove St. The data collection portion of the project to help arrange the action plan will last two years, so the plan itself could be implemented as early as 2016, Ferraro said.

“Other cities around the world have done this and had really good results,” Ferraro said. “Really it’s just adapting our structures and services to being accessible and inclusive to people of older ages.”

[email protected]

More than $6K worth of goods stolen from lA Fitness

More than $6K worth of goods stolen from LA Fitness

Someone stole more than $6,000 worth of items from an LA Fitness in downtown Evanston on Tuesday afternoon.

A 28-year-old Evanston resident, who owns a Northwestern identification, left his backpack on a shelf without any sort of lock, Evanston Police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said. The man returned from working out at the LA Fitness, 1618 Sherman Ave., and found the

backpack was missing from the shelf. The backpack contained a Dell laptop worth about $2,000, a leather wallet, a pair of sunglasses, $200 in cash and a gold wedding ring worth about $4,000, police said.

Parrott said the backpack was later located on a bench, unzipped with those items miss-ing. Video surveillance is only on the outside entrance and exits of the locker room, making it difficult to identify a suspect.

City teen arrested in connection with possession of a controlled substance

A 19-year-old Evanston man was arrested in connection with possession of a controlled

substance less than a block away from Evan-ston Township High School on Monday.

Parrott said police responded to a call reporting a man with a gun in the 1800 block of Brown Avenue and attempted to stop the Evanston resident. The teenager dropped a white substance, which police recovered and determined to be cocaine. The 19-year-old was taken into custody and charged with pos-session with intent to deliver a controlled substance and unlawful possession of a con-trolled substance, both felonies. The Evanston resident was also charged with possession of a BB gun which was recovered at the site.

— Julian Gerez

City prepares age-friendly initiative

Police Blotter

On Campusthursday, may 1, 2014 the daily northwestern | news 3

WHAT’S NEXT IN SOCIAL MEDIA?Monday, May 5, 2014, 4 pm McCormick Tribune Center 1870 Campus Drive

Associated Press Sports Editors & Medill Sports Immersion Program present

ESPN

Social Media Director

Ben Shields

NU-Q study examines ‘Arab Spring’ languageBy JORDAN HARRISONthe daily northwestern @MedillJordan

A Northwestern University in Qatar profes-sor has published a study about the use and ori-gins of the term “Arab Spring” to refer to unrest and change in the Arab world since December 2010. The paper is part of a series published by NU-Qatar.

Ibrahim Abusharif, an associate professor of journalism at NU-Q, published the paper, “Pars-ing ‘Arab Spring,’” in February. He wrote the term originated from Western media and not from the

countries that experi-enced unrest and revo-lution, such as Egypt and Tunisia.

“The success of naming, then, is vested in marbling shared assumptions and familiar narratives into vocabulary that makes implicit sense to an audience that often is far removed—geo-graphically, culturally and even sympatheti-cally—from the named event,” Abusharif wrote in the study. “And given the unprecedented capacity for news and

nomenclature to spread so widely and swiftly, the ‘Arab Spring’ phrasing has become somewhat of a phenomenon. It embodies an ‘interpretative pack-age’; that is, it offers more or less immediate cultural meaning that pivots on the idea of democratization in a region that has resisted democracy.”

The term “Arab Spring” is more complex than

commonly thought and falls short at capturing the variation in the revolutions in the Middle East and North Africa, Abusharif said.

“What happened in Tunisia is different than what happened in Egypt, and what happened in Egypt is really different than what happened in Libya. And of course Syria is another thing alto-gether,” he said. “(Arab Spring) covers the wider angst that you do see in the Arab world about the status quo, but of course it needs to be parsed out because there are marked differences between different nations and how they ultimately want to move.”

The study examines the history of the word “spring” to refer to a political revolution, the terms used by Arab media to refer to the movements and objections to the term in the Arab world.

Early on, Arab press referred to the movements as “Arab Revolutions,” or “thawrat.” Some com-mentators object to the term “Arab Spring” because it suggests too optimistic an outcome, and it repre-sents a Western, “imperial reach” over the language of the phenomenon, according to the study.

Everette Dennis, the dean of NU-Qatar, called Abusharif ’s work a “distinctive contribution” and said research at NU-Qatar helps build an identity for the school and interact with the surrounding region.

“Research for us can be a platform for discuss-ing topics that would be harder otherwise,” he said. “It becomes a real template for taking on topics that are otherwise quite controversial in this country or in the Middle East in general.”

Abusharif said how we name movements influ-ences our understanding of them.

“Language is a very interesting thing to look at, and we should not be very passive about looking at descriptors and framing of phraseology,” he said. “It’s very important to stop and look at them and see what they really mean beyond the surface.”

[email protected]

By AmulyA yAlAmANcHIlIthe daily northwestern

The chief technology officer for Presi-dent Barack Obama’s 2012 re-election cam-paign spoke at Northwestern on Wednesday about his experiences in technology and entrepreneurship.

About 40 students and faculty members gath-ered in Harris Hall to hear software engineer and self-proclaimed hacker Harper Reed speak. Before working for the campaign, Reed was the CTO at the clothing company Threadless. He is currently founder and CEO of upcoming startup Modest, Inc.

Reed spoke about his experiences at Thread-less, explaining the company’s strategies behind product creation and delivery. The company is an online clothing retailer that holds compe-titions for user-generated designs, which are voted on by the online community. It then prints and sells t-shirts and other merchandise based on the winners and shares royalties with the artists.

“We accidentally invented crowd-sourc-ing,” Reed said. “People like you designed the shirts.”

When discussing his transition from CTO of Threadless to CTO of Obama’s re-election campaign, Reed described the technologies he helped create and implement while working for the president. He said in order to succeed, the campaign needed people who were passionate about using technology to engage voters.

“The campaign really needed technology, but it wasn’t a technology organization,” Reed said. “In order to get the technology they wanted and needed, they needed to go to the engineers. We had to do real enterprise-level technology. No one had ever done this before.”

Using a micro-targeting strategy, one

application used for the campaign raised $615 million and encouraged voting by implement-ing quick donation and voting technology cus-tomized to each voter, Reed said.

Reed explained his keys to success, such as the importance of communication and building a strong team.

“You have to think big, get your big thoughts out or no one will care,” Reed said. “When build-ing a team, look for the people who are better than you, and who are stronger than you.”

The event was organized by the Contempo-rary Thought Speaker Series, a student group that brings speakers from various fields to campus, in conjunction with the Offices of the President and the Provost and the Division of Student Affairs.

Weinberg senior Victoria Zuzelo, an orga-nizer with CTSS, said the group asked Reed to speak at NU in order to appeal to the cross section of the student body interested in tech-nology and entrepreneurship.

“We want people to think critically about different topics,” Zuzelo said. “Our hope is that eventually, students will come to our events even if they don’t have a particular interest in the topic so they will be encouraged to think with a broader perspective.”

Weinberg freshman Edwin Wu, who attended the speech, called Reed’s presentation “enter-taining and insightful.”

“Harper really connects well with a col-lege audience, and I was very entertained by his casual approach,” Wu said. “As someone who is interested in technology and business, I loved hearing about Reed’s experiences in a tech startup, as well as his work on Obama’s campaign.”

The talk was followed by a question-and-answer session.

[email protected]

Former Obama staffer talks innovation, business

“(Arab Spring) covers the wider angst that you do see in the Arab world about the status quo, but of course it needs to be parsed out.Ibrahim Abusharif,NU-Q journalism professor

A� er 82 years of theatrical tradition, North-western’s Waa-Mu Show is trying something new. � is year’s production, “Double Feature at Hollywood and Vine,” is a book musical com-plete with a narrative arch and a potential shelf life beyond NU. It breaks the mash-up mold of previous Waa-Mu shows while still holding fast to Waa-Mu’s most important traditions.

One of these traditions is commitment.“All of us have to play so many di� erent roles

(in the show) and roles in the production of Waa-Mu,” said Communication senior Ryan Bernsten, a Waa-Mu co-chair and actor. “It really teaches you to roll with the punches and be adaptable, to really learn how to collaborate with other people, which is a skill that only this process can teach you.”

� e annual process itself starts once the previ-ous Waa-Mu show ends and the new co-chairs are announced. � e new co-chairs spend the summer bouncing ideas o� each other until they settle on a general outline. � is year’s produc-tion is an adaptation of William Shakespeare’s “Twel� h Night,” set in the glamorous days of 1930s Hollywood. � e show follows protago-nist Violet as she achieves silver screen fame by pretending to be a male actor.

But that’s just the basic outline. Creating a concrete script is much more di� cult, especially

when that script is, per Waa-Mu tradition, com-pletely student-written.

Imagine it like this: Your professor says you’ll be working in groups for your next paper, and then he tells you that 65 people per group should be su� cient. What? Welcome to the Waa-Mu

format. But instead of a psychology paper or a literary analysis, the 65 Waa-Mu writers are in charge of creating and producing a full length theatrical performance complete with a script, music and lyrics. It’s quite the endeavor.

“But when you set those challenges, you have

to rise to them,” Bernsten said.� e co-chairs said they are proud of this year’s

script, and they hope great things come from it, including future productions beyond the NU campus. Ryan Garson, a Bienen senior, as well as a co-chair and actor for “Double Feature,” added, “Northwestern’s really becoming a breed-ing ground for the next generation of theater writers.”

Garson has been working behind the scenes for years, but on Friday, he has the honor of saying the very � rst line of the show.

“I probably will forget it opening night,” Garson said. “I’m so nervous about that, but also it’s like I’ve worked on Waa-Mu for four years, behind the scenes, o� stage, producing, whatever. And now I get to be a part of being on stage with my best friends and my North-western family.”

For the co-chairs, Waa-Mu is an essential part of their college career.

“Purple is to Northwestern as Waa-Mu is to Northwestern,” Garson said. “It’s in the blood.”

And it will continue to be in the blood of these co-chairs and actors.

“I � nd myself getting nostalgic for it even though I’m still doing it,” Bernsten said. “If I could do what I’m doing now for the rest of my life, I would be the happiest person in the world.”

[email protected]

THE CURRENTYour weekly dose of arts and entertainment • Thursday, May 1, 2014

Few names at Northwestern have the kind of awesome, deity-like sheen about them as the name “David Catlin.” Ever since co-founding Chicago’s Lookingglass � eatre Company in 1988, Catlin’s work has been revered, both throughout Chicago and nationwide. Even before I knew I would attend Northwestern myself, people informed me about this upcoming adaptation of “Moby Dick” and all the circus styles it would encompass in production. Basically, the show has been hyped for about a year now.

Understandably, I was slightly wary when walk-ing into the theater. It’s one thing for a play to have a lot of really good ideas, but another entirely for it to fully follow through with them and make everything come together onstage. I’d also heard stories about the show’s tumultuous rehearsal process beforehand and knew that the show I’d be seeing wasn’t perfectly polished yet. It would, however, be nonetheless impressive.

� at’s why I am recommending that you see “Moby Dick,” speci� cally this next weekend. Not last weekend. Let me explain.

“Moby Dick,” adapted by Catlin from Herman Melville’s 1851 novel, was co-created along with � e Actors Gymnasium in Evanston. � e show employs many acrobatic tricks to tell its story, which all appear to feel motivated and never seem to be thrown in randomly. Many of the e� ects work quite well, such as the six Fates (the only female actors in the produc-tion) becoming everything from lightning to seagulls to grieving wives to the sea itself. True, many of the moments before our narrator Ishmael (Commu-nication senior Sammy Zeisel) actually steps onto the ill-fated Pequod don’t exactly lend themselves to acrobatic technique. A scene in a church or the initial signing of him and his bedfellow Queequeg (Com-munication senior Brandon Powers) to the ship’s crew aren’t particularly active. Still, Catlin and the 16 actors � nd ways of representing these moments on stage in ways that capture the audience’s attention.

But none of the tricks feel — what’s the word — safe?

I know they all are. Gymnastic performance is very stringent in making sure there are spotters and catch-ers for every move they do. It feels like the actors, as well as the impressive crew, haven’t settled into a routine yet. � ere’s still a hyper-awareness for every trick: a sense the tricks have failed before or the hope from the actors that “it should work this time!”

I was informed by a friend who worked on the show that the performance I saw was the � rst time everything worked perfectly. It showed, in two ways. First, every e� ect was as impressive as it should have been, and not a rope was out of place in the expansive and open scenic design. But secondly, I could feel the cast breathing a sigh of relief a� er every move. I can’t blame them for this, because it’s not their fault, or Catlin’s. It’s just a lack of time. If “Moby Dick” had had another week to really settle into its run and move from “the trick worked that time” to “the trick works every time,” it would be really impressive.

� at’s not to say the show wasn’t incredible when I saw it. I can hardly even bring up speci� c moments, there are too many to mention — though the moment when Captain Ahab (Communication junior Daniel Chenard) pulls himself up a rope without using his ivory peg leg is a particular standout. Costume and lighting work together in many cases to make the story both time-period speci� c as well as timeless (though there’s one tech very clearly wearing a leather jacket). I guess it’s a question of what you value more: that they try to do so many impressive things, or that they succeed at most of them.

But these issues will slowly fade with time, and “Moby Dick” will have time. Even as you read this, the show is fermenting in the minds of its cast and crew. We got a taste of it last weekend, and it needed to cook for a little longer. � is weekend, though, the boil will be just right.

“Moby Dick” runs through May 4 in the Ethel M. Barber � eatre on campus.

[email protected]

The Current Thursday, May 1, 2014

SARAH RENSECURRENT REPORTER

Finding facts in fiction

Disclaimer: I am essentially the cookie monster.

I have quite the active sweet tooth and have � nally decided to take a bit of a break from real food and make deli-cious, wonderful desserts. Let’s be honest: Vegetarian chili, chicken tortilla soup and buttermilk pancakes can only do so much against a well-Kra� ed dessert. � is week, I took over the kitchen in Allison Hall to combine two of my favorite dessert ingre-dients in the simplest dish I have ever made: maple pecan shortbread squares.

One quick note: � e maple syrup is essentially the main � avor in this des-sert, so don’t get any crappy old bottle of sugary goop you usually use on pancakes. I’m talking 100 percent pure. I literally bought the most expensive bottle I could � nd (which was still only like $7.58).

Serves 16 (1-inch pieces) | Hands-on time: 15 minutes | Total time: 50 minutes | Source: Allrecipes

Ingredients:1 cup � our2/3 cup brown sugar1/2 cup so� ened butter1 egg3 tablespoons pure maple syrup1/2 cup chopped pecansOptional: powdered

sugar2 cups shock and awe at how few ingre-dients there are – WOW!Directions:

Preheat an oven to 350 degrees.Combine the � our and 1/3 cup brown

sugar.Mix in the so� ened butter until a

dough has formed.Press into an ungreased 8x8-inch bak-

ing dish and prick with a fork.Bake the shortbread in the preheated

oven until golden brown, about 20 minutes.

While the shortbread is baking, beat the egg in a mixing bowl along with 1/3 cup brown sugar, maple syrup and pecans.

Pour the pecan mixture over the hot crust and return to the oven. Continue baking until � rmed, 12 to 15 minutes.

Remove from the oven and immediately run a knife around the edges to prevent sticking.

Cool completely, then cut into 1-inch squares to serve. If you want to make it look fancy, sprinkle a tiny bit of powdered sugar over the top and on the plate around each square.

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BENJAMIN KRAFTFOOD COLUMNIST

Gita Pullapilly (Medill ’01) laughs as she remembers the rough cuts she made in her

� rst editing class. � e mistakes are far behind the � lmmaker, whose lat-est project screened April 18 at the Tribeca Film Festival.

Pullapilly and her husband, Aron Gaudet, are part of a small niche of moviemakers who shi� between documentary and narrative � ction � lms.

� e pair � rst rose to the spotlight for their work on “� e Way We Get By,” a documentary that aired on Public Broadcasting Service about a group of senior citizens in Maine who greet U.S. troops at the airport. � e couple returned to Maine for their � rst foray into writing and directing � ction for the screen, “Beneath the Harvest Sky.”

� e � lm, which hits limited the-aters in May and is available for digital download, tells the coming-of-age story of two boys, Casper and Dominic, in a small farm town. � e pair plans to leave the town behind in hopes of � nding a better life in Boston, but their dream is threatened when Casper (Emory Cohen) gets caught up in his father’s drug smuggling and his girlfriend gets pregnant.

Critics praised the couple’s depar-ture from documentary work to � c-tional narrative for its authenticity. For Pullapilly, the greatest challenge

in creating a � ctional � lm was man-aging a much larger crew. In the past, Pullapilly and her husband had made � lms with each other and maybe one other person, she said. For “Beneath the Harvest Sky,” she said they adapted to leading a 50- to 70-person crew.

But despite initial “growing pains,” Pullapilly said her documentary background was an asset. She said her ability to help the actors develop real, believable characters and express emotional dimensions came from her roots in journalism. She and Gaudet met when they were working for tele-vision news stations in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

“We kept it as much like a docu-mentary as possible,” Pullapilly said. “We would say, would we believe (the actors) if this were a documentary? If not, we would work on it.”

Chicago resident Zoe Levin plays Tasha, Casper’s girlfriend who gets pregnant right as the pair is set to leave town. She said Pullapilly’s female perspective helped her develop her character more.

“Tasha can be very one-dimen-sional with her language, but I wanted to bring out her vulnerability,” Levin said. “Gita really helped me play around with that. She also helped me � nd girls in the town … real girls who felt the way Tasha did.”

Timm Sharp, who plays Casper’s uncle Badger, said the highlight of working with Pullapilly and Gaudet was how welcoming the pair was to his ideas. Sharp brought his dog to the � lming location and later realized having the dog appear in the � lm with him would add an extra dimension to his character. Pullapilly loved it, he said.

“She’s so respectful and open for whatever,” Sharp said. “� at makes it a better movie.”

� e pair’s decision to � lm on loca-tion in Bar Harbor, Maine, also con-tributed to the production’s authen-ticity. � e whole cast and crew lived in the small town for about a month while shooting. Cohen even arrived a few weeks early to completely immerse himself in the town’s culture and lived

with the young adults he was attempt-ing to portray, Sharp said.

Because the town was not equipped to host a crew of that size, the team took residence in a Christian retreat center. Sharp described the arrange-ments as “dorm life.”

“We would all hang out and talk a� er work,” he said. “� ere were pic-tures of Jesus everywhere.”

Levin said the unique living situ-ation made her feel like the cast and crew were a family and helped her immerse herself in the � lm.

“I found it hard to separate reality from � lming,” Levin said. “It felt like we were really kind of living it. � ere wasn’t a lot to do in that town. We really felt that angst those teenagers experience.”

But for Pullapilly, critics’ praise of the authenticity have been the “big-gest compliment.” She said she really learned how to tell a story about social issues without hitting an audience over the head from the same profes-sor who had to wade through her � rst rough edits for journalism class, Larry Stuelpnagel.

“He would always tell us it’s about bringing them into the story and then telling them the facts,” Pullapilly said. “I’ve always remembered that.”

[email protected]

Medill alumna’s ‘Beneath the Harvest Sky’ brings authenticity to silver screen

Source: Waa-Mu

STUDENT SHOWCASE Waa-Mu co-chairs Desiree Staples, Ryan Bernsten and Ryan Garson helped create “Double Feature at Hollywood and Vine, a reimagining of Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night” set in 1930s Hollywood. The show opens May 2.

Waa-Mu celebrates 83 years by breaking some traditions, honoring others

MARK FICKENREPORTER

@MARK_FICKEN

Ambition consumes us: Reviewing “Moby Dick”

Benjamin Kraft/The Daily Northwestern

Source: Facebook

CALL ME ISHMAEL Adapted and directed by David Catlin, “Moby Dick” runs through May 4 and tells the story of Herman Melville’s 1851 novel.

ZACH BARRTHEATER COLUMNIST

Theater review

Maple pecan shortbread squares

Source: Shane Leonard

REACH FOR THE SKY Medill alumna Gita Pullapilly and her husband Aron Gaudet have shifted from documentary fi lmmaking to writing and directing fi ction with their newest project, “Beneath the Harvest Sky.” The fi lm screened April 18 at the Tribeca Film Festival.“We kept it as

much like a documentary as possible. We would say, would we believe (the actors) if this were a documentary?Gita Pullapilly,writer and director of “Beneath the Harvest Sky”

Source: Ryan Alexander Kahm

GREAT HARVEST Actors Callan McAuliffe, Sarah Sutherland and Emory Cohen star in Gita Pullapilly’s fi lm “Beneath the Harvest Sky.” The fi lm opens in select theaters in May and is available for digital download.

CAT ZAKRZEWSKICURRENT REPORTER

Recipe

Source: Steven Capitano Calitri

MAINE ATTRACTION “Beneath the Harvest Sky” tells the story of two boys in a small farm town in Maine.

Join the online conversation atwww.dailynorthwestern.comOPINION

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What it means when we Take Back the Night

Sexual assault and rape are topics that are hard to talk about. It takes a great deal of courage to talk about something so personal, to reveal something about yourself that you don’t usually share with people. There are feelings not usually associated with being assaulted or raped that only people who have gone through the same thing can understand. It affects so many different aspects of life. You feel like you don’t have control over what happens to you, as if it was your fault or that you did something to deserve what hap-pened. (For the record, it wasn’t your fault, and you definitely didn’t deserve it.)

Take Back the Night is about supporting survivors and showing that there is a com-munity of people who understand exactly what they are going through. It’s about show-ing people that rape and sexual assault don’t just happen in dark alleys to unsuspecting victims; they happen to people we know all the time. It’s about showing each and every person who has gone through something like this that there are people who will listen to him or her and support him or her without judgment. The purpose of Take Back the Night is to help everyone understand that you can have control over what happens to you in the future. You can take back control over your own life and decisions, and if you aren’t a survivor yourself, you can help those you know who are.

I personally think the speakout is the most important Take Back the Night event. It’s a forum for students to share their experi-ences, to have the courage to talk about what happened, to show control over the situation and to have people listen and support them. I can’t decide what is more terrifying: That there are people who you don’t know who know your story or that there are people who you know extremely well and see every day that now know exactly what you’ve been through. It’s hard to be reminded of some-thing painful that you’ve gone through, but all your experiences change you and make you who you are as a person. The way that you process what happened to you or what you want to do about it is what helps you take control. The entire point of the speak-out is to give survivors the opportunity to be brave and claim their experiences as their own and see the faces of people who com-pletely understand looking back at them.

Calling attention to the issue of sexual assault and rape is a key part of Take Back the Night. Increasing awareness may seem pointless: You may wonder what passing out ribbons or organizing a walk around campus actually accomplishes. Having over 100 peo-ple on campus marching up Sheridan Road may seem like it doesn’t do much, but think about the people who carried banners in the march. Why did so many different organiza-tions participate? Because a large variety of groups wanted to support the cause however they could. Spreading awareness is all about numbers and attendance. We can’t spread awareness without having a way for people to get involved one way or another.

Why do we need people to know that this

happens? So that people know what they can do and what they can’t do. So that instead of watching movies about Prince Charming kissing a sleeping Snow White (there was no consent there), we have realistic expectations of our interactions with people. It’s a two-way street — no one should do something to any-one without their permission. That’s just not okay. And consent has to be verbal and very obviously affirma-tive for anything to happen between two people. It’s not an idea that only a few people can spread around. We need everyone to be aware of what could go wrong and what people feel if consent is not given.

What is an effective way to convey that it’s not okay to take advantage of someone? Emotion. Hearing the stories of people you know that move you to tears because you can’t believe that one event can make them feel that way, stories that give you that burn-ing feeling of anger in your chest that any-thing like this could have happened to them, stories that makes you feel so strongly about

it that it lights a fire in you to personally make sure that nothing like this ever hurts anyone again.

The events for Take Back the Night pro-vide constructive, logical ways for people to learn about sexual assault and how they can take control over their experiences or help someone they know who has experienced it. Post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression, all of these serious mental health concerns often arise from sexual assault. There have to be constructive venues for survivors to talk about it where people can see that it’s an actual, tangible social problem facing society today.

There are many different ways we can combat violence. Take Back the Night is a national organization that is over a decade old and goes back to issues that were pres-ent long before its founding. Its mission is to support survivors of rape and sexual assault and to talk about these issues in a way that helps create safe communities and respectful relationships through awareness and support initiatives. Members are here to listen and to support survivors for as long as they need support. There is no time cap on the healing process, and there’s no set rule on how to go about healing. The goal of Take Back The Night is to spread awareness and encourage discussion in a constructive, non-judgmen-tal, supportive manner, and that’s something we can all get behind.

Meera Patel is a McCormick junior and an incoming co-chair of Take Back the Night. 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].

Sterling punishment about more than basketball

On Tuesday, NBA commissioner Adam Silver announced in a press conference that Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling will be banned for life from the NBA, fined the maximum $2.5 million and forced to sell the franchise, pending a vote from the 29 other NBA owners. The punishment came after TMZ and Deadspin released recordings of Sterling privately making racist comments to his girlfriend.

The NBA’s handling of the controversy is monumental in the league’s ability to act quickly while enforcing a succinct and deservedly drastic punishment, especially considering Silver is just two months into his tenure as commissioner. Silver and the NBA deserve the utmost respect for their reaction to such a nasty turn of events, but we need to be careful when expressing the significance of this decision.

A number of athletes and fans expressed their gratitude to the NBA and its decision to force Sterling out of the league. Many times throughout the Clippers’ playoff matchup with the Golden State Warriors on Tuesday, commentators and fans on social media praised the NBA for setting an example for society that racism will not be tolerated.

Obviously kicking a man out of the league and fining him $2.5 million shows intoler-ance for racism, but in reality, the NBA has

looked the other way throughout Sterling’s decades of horrible racism, including settling the largest housing discrimination lawsuit of its kind in American history. While we are all grateful for the NBA finally banishing a man who has no place in the league, we must understand that Sterling’s racism was in fact tolerated for most of his 33 years as Clip-pers owner. As much as we laud the NBA for an exemplary striking down of racism, the league may actually be behind the curve on American racial issues by waiting so long to ban Sterling.

On a different level, the NBA’s forcing Sterling to sell could have dangerous implica-tions for the future of the league. Dallas Mav-ericks owner Mark Cuban called a forced sale a “very, very slippery slope.” The decision — which looks inevitable based on statements made by owners around the league — sets a precedent that an owner can be forced out of the league via the vote of other owners. This sounds like a scary proposition, but given that this is an extreme and unprecedented scenario, it is safe to trust that the NBA will not abuse this precedent.

Finally, the least important but most annoying effect of the Sterling fallout has been the media narrative surrounding the Clippers-Warriors series. On Sunday, in the first game following the release of Sterling’s comments, the Warriors destroyed the Clip-pers in Oakland. Following the game, media all across the country looked at the result and pointed to Sterling’s comments as a key reason for the loss. An ESPN SportsNation poll asked, “How much do you think the Donald Sterling situation hurt the Clippers

in their 118-97 loss at the Warriors in Game 4?” As many as 59 percent of fans answered “a lot,” while 30 percent answered “a little” as opposed to the 11 percent answering “not at all.”

Narratives make sports exciting. They tell a story and give the games significance. While this story certainly has implica-tions beyond basketball, we must be careful when using it to explain what happens on the court. Sterling’s nasty racism did noth-ing to propel Warriors star Stephen Curry — whom some analysts are already calling the best shooter in NBA history — and his seven three-pointers or account for the dif-ference in the Warriors’ 66 percent effective field-goal percentage versus the Clippers’ 49 percent. As much as the media wants to tell you the story that the NBA’s Sterling punish-ment gave the Clippers the subsequent lift to a 113-103 win on Tuesday night, the real-ity is that both teams were merely playing basketball.

Despite all the noise surrounding players’ and coaches’ lives, once they step onto the court, they play basketball – just like they do all year. They try just as hard, hit just as many of their shots and call the same plays they normally do.

I don’t say this to take the air out of the story and its effect on basketball; in fact, the ability to forget the outside world and simply play is what makes sports so amazing. Now that Sterling is gone and we have examined the extent of the decision’s meaning, we can all move on and watch some of the most entertaining basketball in the history of the sport.

Bob Hayes is a Weinberg freshman. 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].

BOBHAYESDAILY COLUMNIST

MEERAPATELDAILY COLUMNIST@soshaloni

The Daily NorthwesternVolume 134, Issue 112

Editor in ChiefPaulina Firozi

Managing EditorsJoseph DieboldCiara McCarthyManuel Rapada

Opinion EditorsJulian CaracotsiosYoni Muller

Assistant Opinion EditorCaryn Lenhoff

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:• Should be typed and double-spaced• Should include the author’s name, signature, school, class and phone number.• Should be fewer than 300 wordsThey 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.

“Members

are here to listen and to support

survivors of rape and sexual

assault and to talk about these

issues in a way that helps create

safe communities and respectful

relationships through

awareness and support initiatives.

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THE ROCK MAY 12

thursday, may 1, 2014 the daily northwestern | news 7

straight to a final written warning,” he said. “They’re stating it’s a fireable offense, and that’s why they’re stating this is a final warning,” Marquez said.

The official warning drew on two main clauses in the Sodexo documents, he said. Marquez said he was accused of engaging in actions “in direct violation of Sodexo rules” and was described as “threatening, intimidating or interfering with several employees, management, client employees, students or any other person on company and/or client premises.”

“These new allegations say nothing about being under the influence or overexcited,” Marquez said. “Now they’re trying to conjure up new allegations.”

Marquez denied the accusations, noting he had more than 15 statements from students and cowork-ers confirming he did not “act under the influence or act out of the ordinary.”

He said Sodexo had about five statements from various members of the managerial staff which included documentation that reflected poorly on Marquez’s behavior.

In protest of the allegations, Marquez said he plans to file a grievance with the union appealing both the final written warning and the denial of pay during the time he was suspended, noting the process of filing a grievance could eventually lead to arbitration.

“I’m going to fight it to the end, to arbitration if it leads to that,” Marquez said.

He added that the student support he has been

receiving throughout the process helps to both spread awareness about the issues and demonstrate to Sodexo that he will not stop fighting.

Weinberg sophomore Cinthya Rodriguez, one of the organizers of the march showing support for Marquez, said although she has not yet planned any other formal initiatives, she would continue activism efforts based around workers’ needs. She included the possibility of starting a petition or planning other similar acts to show the community the importance of workers’ rights.

“It’s all dependent on the workers’ need and what they want,” Rodriguez said. “Student and workers are very much in solidarity in this campus.”

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they met with local governors and state legisla-tors to discuss two main issues: police and fire department pension reform and the measure for fire staffing.

Bobkiewicz said he learned the bill had not yet been assigned to a committee in the state Senate and was not making forward progress. He said he took this as a sign the opposition lobbying has been successful.

“I’m glad to hear that we’re having an impact,” he said.

[email protected]

new funds created in an effort to cater to the student body. Members of the budget committee proposed adding subsidies for students to pay for NU spon-sored or hosted events, stipends for students leaders with the financial need and rewards for students groups that take measures to become more environ-mentally sustainable. Most of the budget increases stemmed from grants and subsidies that would be given to students and student groups.

The operating budget also included the addition of a new fund of $25,000, called “Wild Ideas Fund,” which would combine the money from both the 10K Initiative and the Senate Project Pool. This new fund would give students the opportunity to request funds and Senate would have the option to send the

requests received to the student body to be voted on campus-wide or to vote on them at the meeting, similar to how the project pool currently works.

Senate will vote on the proposed operating bud-get in two weeks.

Senate also lent their support to the “Bottled Water-Free Northwestern” initiative proposed last week which asks that the University completely eliminate the sale of bottled water in all on-campus locations by April 2015.

The initiative was proposed by members of Pura Playa, a project focused on plastic waste reduction run under Engineers for a Sustainable World. Members of the group presented a plan with steps they will take to implement the proposal. Students involved said they will educate students and host awareness events, gather student support, meet with administrators and begin contract negotiations with

the end goal of being bottled water free by April 2015.

Several other students requested project pool money to fund their group’s activities and goals for the quarter. Mayfest representatives asked for money to fund specific pieces of art to be displayed at Dillo Day. They highlighted four major compo-nents they hoped to add for this year’s event which includes large wooden letters that say “Dillo,” and other interactive boards.

Students also requested money to begin a pre-medical peer mentoring program on campus and to fund sound and lighting for the South Asian Student Alliance Spring Concert, among others.

These requests will be voted on at next week’s ASG meeting on May 7.

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BillFrom page 1

Brian lee/daily senior staffer

sound the alarm the fire station on emerson street is one of five in evanston. City officials are worried legislation being considered by the illinois General assembly would give them less control over fire department staffing decisions.

ResponseFrom page 1

SenateFrom page 1

By JOSH WALFISHdaily senior staffer@JoshWal� sh

I’m back with the men’s sports version of my Mount Rushmore of Northwestern athletics.

If you missed my women’s sports version last week, I looked at the best four women in Wildcats his-tory, and I’ll attempt to do the same with the men. Much like the women, there are plenty of people who could make this list, but only four will earn this highly prestigious honor. Keep in mind this only takes into account what was accomplished at NU.

I’ll start by naming the three people I strongly considered for the No. 4 position but ultimately didn’t make the cut. John Shurna is NU basketball’s leader in career points, blocks and games played, but failed to get NU to the Big Dance. Mark Loretta, the only NU player to be named Big Ten Player of the Year in baseball, doesn’t make it because his 1993 season didn’t break any single-season records. Matt Grevers won three individual NCAA titles, a title in a team medley and propelled NU to a sixth-place finish as a team in 2007. He misses out on this list by a whisker on a literal coin flip.

Coming in at No. 4 is Luke Don-ald, the most famous golfer NU has ever had. Most people know what the Englishman has accomplished as a professional, but his success could have been predicted by his collegiate results.

The only four-time All-American in program history, Donald won the 1999 national title as an individual, helping the Cats to a third-place fin-ish. He won three consecutive Big Ten team titles from 1999-2001 with NU and took home the Big Ten indi-vidual crown in 2000 and 2001. He also has the top three season scoring averages and holds the career record by nearly two strokes.

So what can beat one national title? Two, of course. That’s how many Jake Herbert won during his wrestling career and why he edges out Donald for the No. 3 spot. Herbert was also a four-time All-American, and he and Donald are the only two NU athletes to win the Jesse Owens Award as the Big Ten Male Athlete of the Year.

Even more impressive is the fact that he lost just four matches in his entire career, for a .971 win-ning percentage, the best in NU history. He went unbeaten his final two years en route to national titles at 184 pounds, and he took home the 2009 Dan Hodge trophy for the most dominant college wrestler.

This sentence serves as a warn-ing that the final two names are extremely predictable. I try hard not to be predictable, but there is no way around these two topping this list.

Sliding in at No. 2 is probably the greatest athlete ever to wear purple – Otto Graham. He was an All-Amer-ica halfback for the football team and an All-America as a basketball player while also hitting .300 as an outfielder on the baseball team.

He was named the Big Ten’s most valuable football player in 1943, the same year he finished third in the Heisman Trophy voting.

The final metaphorical head on this Mount Rushmore is the most recognized f a c e o n campus. Pat Fitzgerald is the best football coach NU has ever had, and his 55 wins on the side-line alone would earn him a spot on this list. However, as an added bonus we also get to consider his playing days.

His statistics were not gaudy, but he was the heart and soul of the teams that won back-to-back Big Ten titles and brought the purple back to Pasadena after the 1995 season. He won both the Bronko Nagurski and Chuck Bednarik awards in 1995 and 1996 in addi-tion to being named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year and earning All-American honors in both years. He will go down as the best defensive player NU has ever had despite not ranking in the top 10 in tackles.

joshuawalfi [email protected]

SPORTSThursday, May 1, 2014 @Wildcat_Extra

ON DECK ON THE RECORDLacrosseVanderbilt at NU, 4:30 p.m. Thursday

We didn’t execute when we needed to. — Emily Allard, outfi elder

MAY

1

NU men’s Mount Rushmore

By REBECCA FRIEDMANdaily senior staffer

Looking to recover from a weekend that didn’t meet expectations against Ohio State, Northwestern traveled downtown Wednesday to battle in-state rival DePaul.

Since 2006, the series between the two Chicago area teams has always gone the way of the home team. � is year wasn’t any di� erent. � e Wildcats (29-15) fell 9-3 to the Blue Demons (37-8).

“We faced a good pitcher, and we prepared for her well,” senior out-� elder Emily Allard said. “We had more good at-bats than bad ones. We didn’t execute when we needed to. We got runners on and didn’t get the big hit. We’ve had better days at the plate.”

DePaul got on the board with a lead-o� home run from start-ing pitcher Kirsten Ver-dun in the bottom of the first inning. However, the Cats were quick to tie it up with two walks and two batters hit by pitches

to force in the run without putting the ball in play.

� e Blue Demons supported Ver-dun in the bottom half of the inning, stringing together a rally to knock in three runs for a 4-1 lead they would never relinquish.

� e rally prompted coach Kate Drohan to replace sophomore starter Kristen Wood on the mound with freshman Nicole Bond.

Bond produced a one-two-three inning with help from stellar defense behind her from senior third baseman Marisa Bast.

� e Cats tried to capitalize on the defensive momentum in the box, as sophomore Andrea Filler’s single prompted a Cats rally narrowing the DePaul lead to 1 run.

Allard knocked in Filler and junior Oliva Duehr to put the score at 4-3 in

favor of the Blue Demons.� e Cats battled back, attempting

to tie it up, but DePaul was able to resist.

� e Blue Demons grabbed hold of the game in the � � h inning, when they knocked in 3 more to go ahead 7-3. DePaul added 2 more in the sixth inning to cap o� the scoring on the evening.

Wood, who is now 16-7 on the sea-son, took the loss, giving up 4 runs on four hits through two innings. Bond pitched the remaining four innings, giving up 5 runs, 4 earned, with six strikeouts.

Allard led the Cats in the batter’s box and on the base paths, with two hits, two runs batted in and a stolen base.

NU faces Michigan State in Evan-ston this weekend for the team’s � nal series of the regular season before hosting the Big Ten tournament.

� e series between NU and DePaul has developed into a decent rivalry over the past few seasons, but the Cats said they did not treat their noncon-ference opponent any di� erently.

“We treat every game like every other game,” Allard said. “It’s fun to play a local team, but we face them the same way we play Michigan State. It doesn’t matter who we play. Our des-tiny is in our hands.”

A� er losing four straight, NU is looking to go into the Michigan State game playing at the level that it was earlier in the season.

“It hasn’t a� ected our con� dence,” Allard said. “We have our backs against the wall. � is will be a de� n-ing moment in our season and we just need to take the opportunity by the horns.”

� e Cats are focusing on taking each game pitch by pitch and each series opponent by opponent.

“We’re taking one game at a time,” Allard said. “It doesn’t matter who’s in the other dugout. We have to focus on ourselves.”

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By ALEX PUTTERMANdaily senior staffer@AlexPutt02

In baseball — as in most sports — you can’t win if you don’t score.

Northwestern (12-29) was shut out by Northern Illinois (14-30-1) 4-0 Wednesday night at Standard Bank Stadium in Crestwood, Ill.

� e loss was the Wildcats’ fourth in a row, a� er NU was swept at Michigan State last weekend. � e team has now endured losing streaks of four or more games � ve di� erent times this season.

Before the current cold stretch, the Cats had won eight of their past 11 games, including two out of three in Nebraska, causing players to express con� dence in the team’s progress. � ese four straight losses — in which NU has been outscored 29-6 —are undoubtedly a setback.

� e Cats’ bats have been particu-larly cold during this losing streak, and Wednesday night marked the fourth time this season NU has been shut out.

� e Cats managed only three hits against Northern Illinois starter Jor-dan Ruckman, who entered the game with a 7.83 ERA in 39.1 innings on the season.

� e Huskies tallied just eight hits themselves but were able to push across enough runs.

In the fourth inning, Northern Illinois’ Justin Fletcher doubled, stole third base and scored on a ground ball to shortstop to give the Huskies a 1-0 lead.

� ey added two more runs in the seventh via a 2-run single from Tommy Hook, who had three hits on the day.

Northern Illinois’ last run, in the eighth inning, was aided by an NU error, one of the team’s three miscues on the day.

NU senior starting pitcher Dan Tyson enjoyed one of his strongest

outings of the year, throwing six innings of 1-run ball. He was relieved by fresh-man Matt Hopfner, who allowed 2 runs in his single inning of work, before being replaced by fellow freshman Joe Hoscheit, who allowed a run in his only frame.

� e Cats played without sophomore � rst baseman Zach Jones, who le� Sun-day’s game with an injury. Hopfner, usually the team’s right � elder, started at � rst in Jones’ place. Before Wednes-day, Jones had played in every single game this season, one of only two NU players to do so.

� e Cats hope to snap their brief skid this weekend, when they host Michigan (20-24-1, 9-9 Big Ten).

NU is currently last in the Big Ten with a 4-13 record, three games back from eighth place, the spot necessary to qualify for the Big Ten Tournament.

With only six games remaining on the conference schedule, postseason play is bordering on unattainable. If the Cats are to have any hope, they’ll certainly need to score a few runs.

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Cats can’t get past crosstown rivals

Softball

NU’s losing streak continues with NIU shutout

Daily fi le photo by Brian Lee

BLANKED Dan Tyson winds up for a pitch. The senior gave up just 1 earned run in six innings Wednesday, but it wasn’t enough in a 4-0 loss.

favor of the Blue Demons.

Northwestern

3DePaul

9

� e Cats managed only three hits

Northwestern

0Northern Illinois

4

Baseball

Graphic by Joseph Diebold

“We faced a good pitcher, and we prepared for her well ... We had more good at-bats than bad ones.Emily Allard,senior out� elder

“The � nal

metaphorical head on

this Mount Rushmore is the most

recognized face on campus. Pat

Fitzgerald is the best football

coach NU has ever had.