8
DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynu Wednesday, May 15, 2013 SPORTS Old and new Q&A with standout senior and decorated freshman » PAGE 8 Conservative activist O’Keefe screens Breitbart lm » PAGE 2 High 75 Low 55 OPINION Watters Growing pains as the year ends » PAGE 4 Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Classieds & Puzzles 6 | Sports 8 Mayfest unveils wristband policy Schools question online classes By JEANNE KUANG @jeannekuang Non-Northwestern Dillo Day attend- ees under the age of will be more strictly monitored with a new wristband policy, Mayfest announced Tuesday. Like last year, Dillo Day guests who are not registered by a NU student will need to be accompanied by an adult. is year, that adult must be over the age of . NU students will only be permitted to register four guests, and only two may be under the age of . Under- guests will be registered under the contact information of their accom- panying NU student or over- adult and given di erent wristbands that link to the chaperone’s wristband through a serial number. e adult can’t leave Dillo Day,” said Mayfest promotion co-director Bri Hightower. “ey have to stay at Dillo Day with their guest.” e Communication junior said this system is meant to ensure under- guests could be tracked back to an adult. is is the second year that May- fest has enacted policies to restrict the entrance of guests under the age of . e policies began as a result of the physical, alcohol-related or medical inci- dents that came with a rising number of local high school students attending Dillo Day in recent years. e reason why we were targeting under- guests speci cally was because we’ve seen that a lot of these problems … were coming from these under- guests,” said Jesus Roman, Mayfest’s director of university relations. “We wanted to limit that population and track how many people came.” By LAUREN CARUBA @laurencaruba As registration deadlines near for tak- ing the new for-credit Semester Online classes, concerns over cost and educa- tional value have provoked shi s among participating universities. Since it was rolled out in November, the group of Semester Online schools shrank from the initial participating schools to seven. Including Northwest- ern, six universities will oer courses this fall. Applications for the classes are due May . Duke University recently opted out of the new online platform based on a fac- ulty council vote in late April. Vanderbilt University and the University of Rochester also pulled out earlier this year, and several other schools remain on the fence. In its decision, the Duke council cited numerous issues, including a lack of con- trol over curriculum, educational qual- ity and little interaction with students. Duke ocials could not be reached for comment. Vanderbilt is instead pursuing other online platforms like Coursera, a massive open online course provider. Vanderbilt recently passed the , mark for stu- dents taking its Coursera oerings, Cyrus said. e University of Rochester has also chosen Coursera over Semester Online’s for-credit classes. NU will participate in both platforms. Besides NU, University of Notre Dame, Emory University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Brandeis Uni- versity and Washington University in St. Louis remain in the consortium. Boston College, not originally included, is now oering two courses, while NU will oer an integrated marketing communications class. e uidity of the consortium’s makeup has not fazed NU ocials. “We’re watching it, we’re aware, but I don’t know if concern is the right word,” said Jake Julia, associate provost of aca- demic initiative. Julia said changes within the consor- tium do not diminish its potential. Many NU faculty members have expressed interest in engaging with the platform, he said. “More than anything, there’s just an excitement about giving us an opportu- nity to innovate,” Julia said. e courses cost , each and include individual assignments and weekly video interactions with professors and classmates. e price has put o some schools, including Vanderbilt. Cynthia Cyrus, the school’s associate CAESAR alternative goes live Proposed state bill would protect gang witnesses By CIARA MCCARTHY @mccarthy_ciara Illinois state senators will vote in the coming weeks on a bill that would provide protection to witnesses of gang crimes, a measure that could help the eorts of Evanston police. e Gang Crime Witness Protection Act of unanimously passed the Illi- nois House in April. Police have determined the two most recent homicides in Evanston are gang- related. Justin Murray and Javar Bamberg were killed last year in an ongoing gang- aliated family feud. e investigations have been stalled because not all witnesses are cooperating, according to police. Evanston Police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said witnesses to gang crimes are oen unwill- ing to cooperate with police because of a “no-snitch culture.” Parrott said the bill could provide greater incentive for them to come forward. State Rep. Chris Welch (D-Westchester), the chief sponsor of the bill, said it would create a new fund that would protect and, in extreme cases, relocate, witnesses of gang crimes who are unwilling to pro- vide information out of fear of retalia- tion. Welch (Communication ‘ ) said he observed gang problems while living in Evanston that are similar to those in his district. “I think it’s a good tool for law enforce- ment throughout the state of Illinois to break the code of silence and get these crimes solved,” he said. e Illinois Criminal Justice Informa- tion Authority would create the program, Welch said. Local police could apply for funding through the ICJIA in the event of a gang crime. Parrott acknowledged the bill would be another tool for lawmakers but said the legislation might have limited impact in the face of a larger no-snitch culture. Parrott said gang members or wit- nesses to gang crimes would have to be willing to leave the gang environment before working with police or accepting protection services. State Sen. Patricia Van Pelt (D-Chi- cago), who is sponsoring the bill in the Illinois Senate, said she expected the bill to pass. [email protected] By REBECCA SAVRANSKY @beccasavransky As preregistration for Fall Quarter classes begins, a group of Northwestern students is trying to make the process faster and easier. Seven students teamed up to cre- ate a website called “Courseseek” that addresses some of the aws of the Uni- versity’s course registration system, CAESAR. Courseseek went live May and has had , unique visitors thus far, according to the students who cre- ated it. “We wanted to do something to help people make their schedule,” said Corey McMahon, a Weinberg sophomore on the team. “In the beginning, all we had was a table with course informa- tion, which isn’t useful. en, the whole project was nding a way that the infor- mation could be put to good use, and we decided on something that lets you put classes in a calendar and easily see conicts.” Courseseek has a calendar feature, something CAESAR lacks in the pre- registration stage. CAESAR’s course registration process is not conducive to how most students want to visualize their schedule, said Weinberg junior Moritz Gellner, a member of the development team. e website puts each class the user looks at on a calendar to view and alerts users if there is a time con- flict before adding subsequent classes to their lists. e devel- opers started working on the website at the begin- ning of the quarter as a class project and have spent upwards of nine to ten hours a week on it since. e team encourages users to submit any problems they nd while using the website. “People have been really good about coming to us and saying what isn’t work- ing about speci c classes,” said McMa- hon, a former Daily staer. “Most of them fall under the same bug, but it’s good to know that we have speci c incidences of this bug so we can always make sure it’s xed and working properly.” Some students have been impressed with the website and are giving feedback. Weinberg sophomore Augustine Santil- lan made a few suggestions for the site aer using it to search for his classes. “I think it’s a really cool interface, and it’s so much easier than CAESAR to just see when all the courses are,” Santillan said. “It could provide more information based on the ve digit course identi er, the location of the class and maybe a link to the description.” Weinberg sophomore Alex Krule agrees that Courseseek is a great con- cept and would benet from a few added features. “I thought it was great,” Krule said. “If it could have descriptions or CTECs, those would also be great features. But now, it’s really easy to look at the time on Courseseek and then go back to CAESAR to look at the CTECs for the professor.” While the developers are spending most of their time trying to x the bugs users have brought to their attention, some members of the team plan to make new additions to the website in the future. “We have big plans with this,” Gellner We wanted to do something to help people make their schedule. Corey McMahon, Courseseek team member Daily file photo by Meghan White ENTRANCE EXAM Dillo Day, which will be held June 1, will enforce new restrictions on high school attendees this years. Mayfest said the event last year saw fewer problems after enacting stricter entrance policies. » See ONLINE, page 7 » See COURSEWEEK, page 7 » See DILLO, page 7 The Daily Northwestern Source: Semester Online screenshot ‘A NEW VENTURE’ Semester Online, a new online for-credit education platform, incorporates weekly video conferences with classmates and individual assignments. Applications for the classes are due May 24. Dillo Day

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Page 1: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynuWednesday, May 15, 2013

SPORTS Old and newQ&A with standout senior and

decorated freshman » PAGE 8

Conservative activist O’Keefe screens Breitbart !lm » PAGE 2

High 75 Low 55

OPINION Watters Growing pains as the year ends » PAGE 4

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

Mayfest unveils wristband policy

Schools question online classes

By JEANNE KUANG!"# $%&'( )*+!",#-!#+) @jeannekuang

Non-Northwestern Dillo Day attend-ees under the age of ./ will be more strictly monitored with a new wristband policy, Mayfest announced Tuesday.

Like last year, Dillo Day guests who are not registered by a NU student will need to be accompanied by an adult. 0is year, that adult must be over the age of 12. NU students will only be permitted to register four guests, and only two may be under the age of ./. Under-./ guests will be registered under the contact information of their accom-panying NU student or over-12 adult and given di3erent wristbands that link to the chaperone’s wristband through a serial number.

“0e adult can’t leave Dillo Day,” said Mayfest promotion co-director Bri

Hightower. “0ey have to stay at Dillo Day with their guest.”

0e Communication junior said this system is meant to ensure under-./ guests could be tracked back to an adult.

0is is the second year that May-fest has enacted policies to restrict the entrance of guests under the age of ./. 0e policies began as a result of the physical, alcohol-related or medical inci-dents that came with a rising number of local high school students attending Dillo Day in recent years.

“0e reason why we were targeting under-./ guests speci4cally was because we’ve seen that a lot of these problems … were coming from these under-./ guests,” said Jesus Roman, Mayfest’s director of university relations. “We wanted to limit that population and track how many people came.”

By LAUREN CARUBA $%&'( -#)&*+ -!%55#+ @laurencaruba

As registration deadlines near for tak-ing the new for-credit Semester Online classes, concerns over cost and educa-tional value have provoked shi6s among participating universities.

Since it was rolled out in November, the group of Semester Online schools shrank from the .7 initial participating schools to seven. Including Northwest-ern, six universities will o3er .. courses this fall. Applications for the classes are due May 18.

Duke University recently opted out of the new online platform based on a fac-ulty council vote in late April. Vanderbilt University and the University of Rochester also pulled out earlier this year, and several other schools remain on the fence.

In its decision, the Duke council cited numerous issues, including a lack of con-trol over curriculum, educational qual-ity and little interaction with students. Duke o9cials could not be reached for comment.

Vanderbilt is instead pursuing other online platforms like Coursera, a massive open online course provider. Vanderbilt recently passed the 177,777 mark for stu-dents taking its Coursera o3erings, Cyrus said. 0e University of Rochester has also chosen Coursera over Semester Online’s for-credit classes. NU will participate in both platforms.

Besides NU, University of Notre Dame, Emory University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Brandeis Uni-versity and Washington University in St. Louis remain in the consortium. Boston College, not originally included, is now o3ering two courses, while NU will o3er an integrated marketing communications

class.0e :uidity of the consortium’s makeup

has not fazed NU o9cials.“We’re watching it, we’re aware, but I

don’t know if concern is the right word,” said Jake Julia, associate provost of aca-demic initiative.

Julia said changes within the consor-tium do not diminish its potential. Many NU faculty members have expressed interest in engaging with the platform, he said.

“More than anything, there’s just an excitement about giving us an opportu-nity to innovate,” Julia said.

0e courses cost ;8,177 each and include individual assignments and weekly video interactions with professors and classmates. 0e price has put o3 some schools, including Vanderbilt.

Cynthia Cyrus, the school’s associate

CAESAR alternative goes liveProposed state bill would protect gang witnessesBy CIARA MCCARTHY!"# $%&'( )*+!",#-!#+) @mccarthy_ciara

Illinois state senators will vote in the coming weeks on a bill that would provide protection to witnesses of gang crimes, a measure that could help the e3orts of Evanston police.

0e Gang Crime Witness Protection Act of 17.< unanimously passed the Illi-nois House in April.

Police have determined the two most recent homicides in Evanston are gang-related. Justin Murray and Javar Bamberg were killed last year in an ongoing gang-a9liated family feud. 0e investigations have been stalled because not all witnesses are cooperating, according to police.

Evanston Police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said witnesses to gang crimes are o6en unwill-ing to cooperate with police because of a “no-snitch culture.” Parrott said the bill could provide greater incentive for them to come forward.

State Rep. Chris Welch (D-Westchester), the chief sponsor of the bill, said it would create a new fund that would protect and, in extreme cases, relocate, witnesses of

gang crimes who are unwilling to pro-vide information out of fear of retalia-tion. Welch (Communication ‘/<) said he observed gang problems while living in Evanston that are similar to those in his district.

“I think it’s a good tool for law enforce-ment throughout the state of Illinois to break the code of silence and get these crimes solved,” he said.

0e Illinois Criminal Justice Informa-tion Authority would create the program, Welch said. Local police could apply for funding through the ICJIA in the event of a gang crime.

Parrott acknowledged the bill would be another tool for lawmakers but said the legislation might have limited impact in the face of a larger no-snitch culture.

Parrott said gang members or wit-nesses to gang crimes would have to be willing to leave the gang environment before working with police or accepting protection services.

State Sen. Patricia Van Pelt (D-Chi-cago), who is sponsoring the bill in the Illinois Senate, said she expected the bill to pass.

[email protected]

By REBECCA SAVRANSKY!"# $%&'( )*+!",#-!#+) @beccasavransky

As preregistration for Fall Quarter classes begins, a group of Northwestern students is trying to make the process faster and easier.

Seven students teamed up to cre-ate a website called “Courseseek” that addresses some of the :aws of the Uni-versity’s course registration system, CAESAR. Courseseek went live May .< and has had 1,.<< unique visitors thus far, according to the students who cre-ated it.

“We wanted to do something to help people make their schedule,” said Corey McMahon, a Weinberg sophomore on the team. “In the beginning, all we had was a table with course informa-tion, which isn’t useful. 0en, the whole project was 4nding a way that the infor-mation could be put to good use, and we decided on something that lets you put classes in a calendar and easily see con:icts.”

Courseseek has a calendar feature, something CAESAR lacks in the pre-registration stage. CAESAR’s course registration process is not conducive to

how most students want to visualize their schedule, said Weinberg junior Moritz Gellner, a member of the development team. 0e website puts each class the user looks at on a calendar to view and alerts

users if there is a time con-flict before adding subsequent classes to their lists.

0e devel-opers started working on the website at the begin-ning of the quarter as a

class project and have spent upwards of nine to ten hours a week on it since. 0e team encourages users to submit any problems they 4nd while using the website.

“People have been really good about coming to us and saying what isn’t work-ing about speci4c classes,” said McMa-hon, a former Daily sta3er. “Most of them fall under the same bug, but it’s good to know that we have speci4c incidences of this bug so we can always make sure it’s 4xed and working properly.”

Some students have been impressed with the website and are giving feedback. Weinberg sophomore Augustine Santil-lan made a few suggestions for the site a6er using it to search for his classes.

“I think it’s a really cool interface, and it’s so much easier than CAESAR to just see when all the courses are,” Santillan said. “It could provide more information based on the 4ve digit course identi4er, the location of the class and maybe a link to the description.”

Weinberg sophomore Alex Krule agrees that Courseseek is a great con-cept and would bene4t from a few added features.

“I thought it was great,” Krule said. “If it could have descriptions or CTECs, those would also be great features. But now, it’s really easy to look at the time on Courseseek and then go back to CAESAR to look at the CTECs for the professor.”

While the developers are spending most of their time trying to 4x the bugs users have brought to their attention, some members of the team plan to make new additions to the website in the future.

“We have big plans with this,” Gellner

“We wanted to do something to help people make their schedule.Corey McMahon,Courseseek team member

Daily file photo by Meghan White

ENTRANCE EXAM Dillo Day, which will be held June 1, will enforce new restrictions on high school attendees this years. Mayfest said the event last year saw fewer problems after enacting stricter entrance policies.» See ONLINE, page 7

» See COURSEWEEK, page 7

» See DILLO, page 7

The Daily Northwestern

Source: Semester Online screenshot

‘A NEW VENTURE’ Semester Online, a new online for-credit education platform, incorporates weekly video conferences with classmates and individual assignments. Applications for the classes are due May 24.

Dillo Day

Page 2: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

The Daily Northwesternwww.dailynorthwestern.com

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Newsroom | 847.491.3222

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THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except vacation periods and two weeks preceding them and once during August, by Students Publishing Co., Inc. of Northwestern University, 1999 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208; 847-491-7206.

First copy of THE DAILY is free, additional copies are 50 cents. All material published herein, except advertising or where indicated otherwise, is Copyright 2013 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 WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2013

Mom always loved you best...

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Buy one entree atregular price and getyour second entree of equal or lesservalue for just 99¢

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Mon. - Fri. 6:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.Sat. - Sun. 7:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

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Offer expires 10/22/07Offer expires 11/19/07

Breakfast, Brunch or LunchEvanston, 827 Church St.

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She always wanted you to have a good breakfast.

Breakfast at Le Peep.Mom would be pleased.

Mon. - Fri. 6:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.Sat. - Sun. 7:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

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Offer good only at restaurants listedLimit one offer per coupon. Offer expires 4/26/13.Offer expires 5/3/13.5/29/13.

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Men steal peanuts, chips from 7-Eleven

Two men stole from a !-Eleven on "ursday evening, Evanston police said.

"e men, wearing hoodies, entered the store, #$! Dodge Ave., at %%:&' p.m., Cmdr. Jay Parrott said. One man started asking questions about cigars at the check-out counter while the other looked around the store and picked out various items, including

peanuts and Pringles chips, Parrott said. "e man in the aisle then put everything in his

bag and le( without paying, while the other man distracted the employee at the counter, Parrott said. "e pair later )ed north.

Parrott said an o*cer identi+ed one of the men from surveillance video, and he was later arrested and identi+ed by the store clerk as being involved in the incident.

Parrott said the man was treated at Evanston Hospital for a cut on his hand from an incident before police took him into custody.

He was charged with retail the( and is scheduled to appear in court June ,.

Car windows smashed on South Boulevard

Someone smashed the rear windows of three

cars in Evanston between Sunday and Monday, according to police.

"e cars, including a &''' Saturn, a %--' Olds-mobile and a &''. Jeep, were all parked in the &'' block of South Boulevard, Parrott said. Police believe the incidents occurred during the same time.

— Ina Yang

Police Blotter

Tavern mural endorsed by city boardBy EDWARD COX/01 23456 789/0:1;/197 @EdwardCox%.

Evanston tavern Farmhouse trotted closer to its summer opening as a city board endorsed its artistic plan Tuesday.

The tavern’s designer, Peter Hurley, appeared in front of Evanston’s Public Art Committee during a meeting at the Noyes Cultural Arts Center, -&! Noyes St., with a proposal to position a mural behind the bar, which plans to open its second location Evan-ston this summer at !'< Church St.

The mural would consist of landscape scenes, Hurley said.

“Part of its exterior application of this art is trying to celebrate the rural roots and the farm connections to that part of the town,” he said.

Because the mural did not fall into the strict category of a sign, it was passed down to the commit-tee for consideration as public art, said Jeff Cory, director of the center’s cultural arts division.

The committee unanimously recom-mended the project to the city’s Sign Review and Appeal Board.

Farmhouse owner TJ Callahan said although the restaurant is opening three months later than expected, the grand open-ing will be timed with the Northwestern graduation.

The committee also discussed a public arts project at the Sherman Plaza Garage, the sec-ond venture completed at the garage inside

the Washington National TIF district.The artist team Krivanek+Breaux will cre-

ate a multimedia project at the garage, funded by the city’s Percent for Art Program, which allocates a portion of city construction funds to public art works.

Those funds have diminished during the last few years as the city put fewer funds into the Community Public Art Program, Cory said. The committee will try to acquire more funds in next year’s budget, he said.

In addition, committee members discussed adding temporary sculpture displays in pri-vate and public venues throughout the city, a

suggestion hindered by financial constraints. Artist David Geary, who was introduced as a new committee member at the meeting, said it would be difficult to make high end artists display their work in Evanston for free.

Members brought up the Evanston%,' initiative as a possible source of revenue for arts projects.

“There has to be something included for the artist to work out there,” Geary said. “(For) the higher end and quality work, they all want something.”

[email protected]

Edward Cox/The Daily Northwestern

FINE ART Artist Peter Hurley discusses plans for a mosaic at Farmhouse, a tavern, in front of Evanston Public Art Committee members Tuesday night at the Noyes Cultural Arts Center.

Beach litter mars national, global coastlines

WASHINGTON — It’s a beach bummer. Shore-lines worldwide are clogged with trash, so much so that during their annual cleanup last year, volunteers with the Ocean Conservancy picked up refuse that weighed as much as %' Boeing !$! jumbo jets.

Cigarettes, food packaging and plastic bottles topped the list from the &'%& cleanup. Debris from the Japanese tsunami and Hurricane Sandy also marred some U.S. beaches, the Ocean Conservancy, a non-pro+t group that works on ocean protection, reported Monday. Volunteers turned up some weird stu=, too: mattresses, candles, toothbrushes and sports balls.

More than ,,',''' people picked up in excess of %' million pounds of trash along %!,!%- miles of international coastlines in September during the Ocean Conservancy’s annual cleanup. Billed as the largest ocean-related volunteer e=ort in the world, the event spotlights just what sort of ocean trash washes

up on beaches around the world and what can be done to scale back the refuse.

Every piece of trash a=ects the health of the ocean and as a result the economy, the environment and animal health, said Nicholas Mallos, Ocean Conser-vancy’s marine debris specialist and a conservation biologist. Plastic debris has two risks, he said. "ere’s an entrapment or strangulation risk to wildlife. But the longer plastics are in the ocean, the more likely they are to absorb other toxins, too.

“Plastics leach chemicals into the environment, but plastics also absorb chemicals from the environment,” he said. “And certainly when animals _ +sh or other marine organisms _ ingest those plastics, there’s some accumulation of those toxins in their systems and as they move up the food chain.”

"ere’s also a real cleanup cost to coastal commu-nities. In tourism-dependent beachfront destinations such as Myrtle Beach, S.C., having a pristine appear-ance is crucial to attracting visitors. In the summer

months, the city mushrooms from &!,''' year-round residents to the biggest city in South Carolina.

Upward of %$ million tourists visit each year, and they’re accompanied by tons of trash, said Mark Kruea, a spokesman for the city. Myrtle Beach spends about >%.% million annually on trash pickup, which includes raking the beach for trash every morning.

“Because we welcome a lot of people, we want to make sure that we look good,” he said. “As a result, we pick up a lot of trash.”

"ere’s also been a greater demand for recy-cling facilities in recent years, Kruea said. "e city has had visitors from out of state say they’ve taken their crushed cans and cardboard home with them, because recycling isn’t readily accessible at some vaca-tion rentals. Recently, the city has been testing the use of recycling bins along a seven-block stretch of the beach.

Beaches in places like Alaska, with more than $$,''' miles of coastline, and much of it remote,

face a separate challenge. Currents and winter storms bring signi+cant debris to the state each year, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "ere, the problem is more likely to be abandoned +shing equipment.

It’s not enough just to pick up the trash, Mallos said. "e Ocean Conservancy would like people to focus next on producing less waste before it even makes its way into the oceans. "at means taking simple steps such as avoiding single-use products and embracing reusable water bottles, co=ee mugs and grocery bags.

“By getting out there and removing everyday forms of trash from our beaches, and really systematically re-evaluating our daily lives and the choices we make,” Mallos said, “we can keep trash from the beaches and ensure that in the face of future natural disasters, we have a more resilient ocean ecosystem.”

— Erika Bolstad (McClatchy Washington Bureau)

National News

“Part of its exterior application of this art is trying to celebrate the rural roots and farm connections to that part of the town.Peter Hurley,Farmhouse designer

Page 3: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

On CampusI can’t do it alone. ... They have come at me with everything. I’m still standing.

— Conservative activist James O’Keefe

“ ” Students view screening of “Hating Breitbart” Page 5

WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2013 THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 3

COMPARATIVE LITERARY STUDIES278-0 Loneliness, Eros and Isolation in Modern Hebrew LiteratureMarcus Moseley, TTh 12:30-1:50279-0 Modern Jewish Literature in Translation: An Introduction(co-listed as JWSH_ST 279-0-20) Marcia Gealy, MWF 10:00-10:50

GENDER STUDIES 382-0 Gender, Race, & the Holocaust Phyllis Lassner, MWF 11:00–11:50

GERMAN German 266 Introduction to Yiddish Culture: Images of the Shtetl(See JWSH_ST 266) Marcus Moseley, TTh 3:30-4:50

HEBREW LANGUAGE111-1-20, Hebrew I Edna Grad, MTWThF 11:00–11:50121-1-20 Hebrew II Edna Grad, MTWF 2:00–2:50216-1-20 Hebrew III: Topics in Hebrew Literature Edna Grad, TTh 12:30-1:50

HISTORY101-6-21 Freshman Seminar: Origins of Zionism Yohanan Petrovsky-Shtern, MW 9:30-10:50203-2 Jewish History I: Early Modern, 1492-1789 Yohanan Petrovsky-Shtern, MW 11:00-12:20300-20 Historical Background to the Establishment of Israel: the 1920s-1940sElie Rekhess, TTH 12:30-1:50349 History of the Holocaust Peter Hayes, MW 9:30-10:50392-20/395-31 Arabs in a Jewish State: The Arab Minority in Israel Elie Rekhess, TTH 9:30 –10:50SCHOOL OF CONTINUING STUDIES History 392 Historical Background of the Arab-Israeli Conflict* Jacob Lassner, T 6:15-9:15PM *must register for this course through SCS

JEWISH STUDIES266 Introduction to Yiddish Culture: Images of the Shtetl(co-listed as German 266 and Yiddish 266) Marcus Moseley, TTh 3:30-4:50279-0 Modern Jewish Literature in Translation: An Introduction (See Comparative Literary Studies 279) Marcia Gealy, MWF 10:00-1050

RELIGIOUS STUDIES210-1 Struggling with God—Creating the Self in Modern Jewish TheologyYakir Englander, TTh 3:30-4:50230 Introduction to Judaism Barry Wimpfheimer, MWF 12:00-12:50

YIDDISH101 Beginning Yiddish Anita Turtletaub, TTH 3:30-4:50201 Intermediate Yiddish Anita Turtletaub, MW 12:30-1:50266 Introduction to Yiddish Culture: Images of the Shtetl(See JWSH_ST 266) Marcus Moseley, TTh 3:30-4:50

Jewish Studies Courses FALL 2013For more information and course descriptions: http://www.jewish-studies.northwestern.edu/courses

Time capsule marks 40 years of NorrisBy JARED GILMOUR!"# $%&'( )*+!",#-!#+) @jaredgilmour

A time capsule will be dedicated Friday as part of the yearlong celebration of Norris University Center’s ./th birthday.

“We just really wanted to mark the occasion because this is such a big milestone,” Tracey Gib-son-Jackson said, an organizer and Norris Center for Student Involement’s coordinator of student theater and performing arts organizations.

0e time capsule will be opened ./ years from now.

Gibson-Jackson and others will dedicate the time capsule during Norris’ Blues and Barbeque event 1 p.m. Friday on the East Lawn. Blues and Barbeque will feature music, games and food for kids, college students and adults. 0e highlight is a free concert featuring blues musician Shemekia Copeland, who is also the headliner of the 2/34 Chicago Blues Fest.

“We’re really hoping for 5// to 3,/// people,” said Gibson-Jackson, adding that the concert and time capsule dedication are the biggest events Norris has planned all year. “0is is really the

icing on the cake. We wanted to do something that involves the entire community.”

Gibson-Jackson and her fellow organizers decided to forgo burying the time capsule, the traditional way to dedicate it. Instead, organizers

are working with the University Archives to store the capsule in the archives.

James McHaley, assistant director of student affairs mar-keting for Norris, said burying the time cap-sule would be unwise given possible Norris renovation plans in the future. Any renovation would likely involve digging up land around Norris, he added.

“We don’t want to bury something just to dig it up in the near

future,” McHaley said.Gibson-Jackson said she has plans to sub-

mit some Northwestern buttons, lapel pins and

laminated photos for the capsule.“We’re looking for anything personal or

unique from people,” McHaley said. “Obviously, the smaller the better.”

McHaley said no one has brought in items for the time capsule yet, and he encouraged students to consider contributing. Items should be non-hazardous and non-perishable.

But sometimes perishables hold the most meaning.

“I think we should just cut out a piece of sod from Norris East Lawn,” Weinberg junior Alex Matelski said.

He said the East Lawn is a special part of NU because it’s home to schoolwide events like Phil-fest and Dance Marathon.

“0at grass is holy ground,” Matelski said.Interested students, faculty and Evanston

residents can drop o6 items for the time capsule at the Student A6airs Marketing o7ce on the third 8oor of Norris any time before noon Fri-day, McHaley said. People can also bring mem-orabilia to Friday’s Blues and Barbeque event, where there will be a table accepting items for the collection.

[email protected]

Job prospects improve slightly for new college graduates

WICHITA, Kan. — 0e chilling mix of rain, sleet and wind last week may have felt like a metaphor for the local college students scurrying across campus.

Many of them entered school in 2//9 as the reces-sion began battering Wichita. Four years later, many are :nding they didn’t escape its e6ects.

0e prospects for the class of 2/34 appear to be bet-ter than last year, but not much, say college o7cials.

Students in accounting, engineering, computer science and the health professions are seeing pretty good demand, said Jill Pletcher, director of the career services for Wichita State University.

“Beyond that, it’s a very, very tight market,” she said.

0at jibes with the recently released Job Outlook Spring Update from the National Association of Col-leges and Employers. Companies in the survey, all large national employers, say they expect to hire 2.3 percent more new college grads this year than last.

Last fall, these employers said they expected the new-grad hiring to increase 34 percent. 0e more recent, lower :gure seems in line with the subdued economic expectations of many businesses and a frustratingly slow job market.

A di6erent survey, from consulting and outsourc-ing giant Accenture, reports that about ;/ percent of 2/34 college graduates expect that :nding a job will be di7cult or extremely di7cult.

In the same survey, .3 percent of 2/32 graduates reported that they were working in jobs that didn’t require a college degree. An additional < percent said they were still unemployed.

Devon Hummel, a December graduate in market-ing and management from Wichita State University, appreciates having a job as assistant manager at an apartment complex, but it’s not what she wants in life.

She is pushing her husband to move out of Kansas to someplace warmer with more prospects in her :eld.

She’s :nding it di7cult to enter the job market of a distant place. Visiting for interviews is expensive.

“I’ve applied for many, many jobs in Texas,” she said. “At :rst I was setting my sights high, applying for marketing jobs, and then lowered it to just about anything to get out of state. It’s a little discouraging not :nding anything.”

She said she regrets not being more aggressive in seeking out internships while in college. Now, she said, they may wind up just moving and looking for work a=er they move.

Connie Dietz wishes more people like Hummel would stop by her o7ce, Cooperative Education and Work-Based Learning at Wichita State.

Dietz, the o7ce’s director, said :nding an intern-ship can be crucial to getting a foot in the door of a career-starting job. If nothing else, she said, it will give students a good feel for the profession and some real work experience for their resume.

— Dan Voorhis (The Wichita Eagle)

USC lures two prominent brain researchers from rival UCLA

LOS ANGELES — In a major case of academic poaching involving cross-town rivals, University of Southern California has lured away two prominent neuroscientists from the University of California, Los Angeles, with a promise to expand their internation-ally renowned lab that uses brain imaging techniques to study Alzheimer’s disease, schizophrenia, autism and other disorders.

Arthur Toga and Paul 0ompson will move to the USC Keck School of Medicine campus next fall, along with scores of graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and sta6ers who now work at UCLA’s Laboratory of Neuro Imaging, known as LONI. In establishing a new institute at the USC campus in Boyle Heights, they will also move substantial government and private grants that fund the lab’s >32 million annual budget as well as some of the highly sophisticated equipment used to investigate the brain’s inner workings.

0e new hires mark another chapter in a long Los Angeles rivalry in sports and, increasingly, in aca-demic prestige. It also raises concerns about the ability of :nancially strapped public universities.

Toga and 0ompson said they do not think their departure from UC signi:es a brain drain from the 3/-campus University of California sys-tem, which has grappled with budget cuts over the last four years. 0ey said USC has pursued them for years with o6ers of larger facilities, addi-tional :nancial resources and the chance to hire more researchers. Scientists around the country said the move would further elevate USC, which recently has hired away professors and research-ers from Caltech, Harvard and other prestigious institutions.

“It’s a feather in USC’s cap,” said Dr. Bruce Rosen, director of a biomedical imaging center at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

— Larry Gordon and Eryn Brown (Los Angeles Times)

Across Campuses

“We’re looking for anything personal or unique from people. Obviously, the smaller the better.James McHaley,Norris assistant director of student a!airs marketing

Page 4: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

The Daily NorthwesternVolume 133, Issue 122

Editor in ChiefMichele Corriston

Managing EditorsMarshall Cohen Patrick Svitek

Opinion Editor Jillian Sandler

Assistant Opinion EditorsCaryn Lenhoff

Yoni Muller

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.

Editorial

Join the online conversation at www.dailynorthwestern.comOPINION

Wednesday, May 15, 2013 PAGE 4

I have been trying for a few weeks now to !gure out what I want to say and how to say it. "e past few weeks have been some of the most disheartening weeks in my four years here at Northwestern. I never thought I would be so disappointed in my classmates, many of whom I have worked with through various initiatives.

In the past month, I have seen mean-spir-ited events and conversations, hurtful Tumblr posts and memes, and angry students verbally attack others in a recent Associated Student Government meeting. Students posed loaded questions and made hurtful remarks meant to entrap and demean their peers. Please do not interpret this the wrong way: Anger lights the fuse; it is essential to diversity initiatives across campus. But anger can only get you so far. Anger must be vented before entering a situ-ation where you must be respectful. It is one thing to voice your opinion, it is another to yell misinformation and hate at another person.

Many students came up to me following that meeting and shared that they no longer feel comfortable talking about diversity in fear that they will be yelled at and disrespected. One student even told me that he was afraid to share an opinion that evening because he was “scared of being massacred.” "is is a problem. "ere is so much work to be done on campus, and now we are one step back from where we were a week ago. We need all students on campus, regardless of race, color and back-ground, to listen to our cause and understand that we are are advocating for inclusion. Now, many students that we have been trying to reach do not even want to hear from us. Anger and disrespect turn people away from the cause; we have seen this before and now we see this again. We need every student on campus to feel comfortable voicing their opinions. If their opinion o#ends you, you need to be just as comfortable respectfully sharing with this person why it hurts you.

We need to inspire a culture of respect at Northwestern. While it may seem like what happened in Senate was an isolated incident, in my four years here, I have seen students from all areas of campus attack people for so many di#erent reasons. "ere is never any reason to emotionally or verbally (or God forbid, physi-cally) attack another student here. We are all here to learn, and while half of our education comes from the classroom, we all know that

the other half comes from our peers, student groups and our undergraduate experiences as a whole. We need to transform our com-munity to include open cultural education and dialogue as well. For example, a$er the Senate meeting, a student asked whether a certain phrase was o#ensive. He then admitted that I was the only person he felt comfortable asking because he felt like I wouldn’t get mad at him for asking in the !rst place.

We need more students to ask questions and we need more students to feel comfortable answering respectfully. It is okay to inquire about one another. It is okay to ask questions. It is okay to not know something. It is okay to educate. Let’s create a campus culture and community that promotes cooperative learn-ing where we learn from one another in every aspect of our day. No one will ever understand what it is like to walk in another person’s shoes, but we need to get to a point where we can listen to any individual’s experience and empa-thize and learn just from hearing about their background. We need to develop this sense of community, because right now, we are just let-ting anger divide us.

Diversity and inclusion is perhaps the larg-est issue facing Northwestern; we are a com-munity of so many incredible backgrounds and perspectives, but it pains me to see that some students !nd exploring each other’s experi-ences irrelevant to their personal perspective. Diversity means more than talking only about race, religion or ethnicity. We need to widen our scope, and we can start by listening to one another. "is might sound silly, trite or cliche to say, but let’s promote kindness. We are so ready to jump on people and get angry about how they seem or what they represent and we fail to ever applaud their contributions or their acts of compassion and kindness. Let’s be nice to one another. Let’s care for one another. Let’s support one another.

I’m not going to end this on some mushy note about One Northwestern, but let’s be a Northwestern that treats every person here with greater respect, even people who seem like they have nothing in common with you. Just listen, be kind, and be respectful. Everyone has something positive to contribute, you just have to be willing to hear it.

Hayley Stevens is a Weinberg senior and a member of Associated Student Government’s outgoing cabi-net. She writes this column as a student rather than from an official perspective. She can be reached at [email protected]. If you want to respond publicly to this column, send a Letter to the Editor to [email protected].

The end of the quarter is bittersweet.I remember this time last year vaguely.

Spring Quarter was lost in an exhilarating blur of sunshine, grass, afternoons on the Lakefill and the enjoyment of Northwestern in an entirely new light. There was sun-light and warmth for the first time, and as a freshman I was completely caught up in the indulgent freedom of being young and rela-tively without obligation. High school was far enough away that I felt starkly grown up, but it was still close enough that coming home didn’t feel stifling.

I specifically remember one night I spent on the Lakefill with my friends, the air hot and muggy, clinging to my arms. The sky was that delirious orange, the familiar glow from Chicago drifting, inking the stars into one another. I laid in the grass and thought about the glory of the last nine months. There was nothing but time stretching languidly in front of me and instead of being daunting, that expansiveness felt freeing. The summer would drift by slowly and then I’d return to Northwestern in the fall.

Experience brings certainty, and the fact that I had survived freshman year brought

that certainty.Fast forward a whole year, and things are

just slightly different. I say slightly because I’m still the same person who I was, except time doesn’t have that luxurious dilated feeling any longer. Instead of watching the end of the quarter fade into summer, I’m watching the quarter end without the hope of

seeing Northwestern in the fall, I’m looking at a long six months without being here. Six months and then I’ll be here for all of %& weeks. Thank you, Medill, for schedul-ing my Journalism Residency in my same year as when I’ll be studying abroad. I’ll surpass the bitter-ness because it’s not really worth it. I’ll be here for %& weeks next year. Ten weeks of snow, ice, pain,

misery, angst. OK, maybe I hyperbolize just a little bit, but it’s safe to say that Winter Quarter is most definitely nobody’s favorite. Regardless, it’s odd to contemplate my next year without Northwestern as really part of the equation.

Growing up is odd that way; nothing really ever stays the same. From this point in our

lives, change is basically inevitable. This next year will pass by in a beautiful, chaotic whirlwind of experience, memories, fear and elation, and then I’ll be back at school where I’ll have one last year of glory until the real world happens. I don’t really like it, but I realize that it’s part of what we have come to terms with as we get older. The fact is that things aren’t segmented in the neat little boxes they used to be in when we were kids, even during that summer before college or freshman year.

Being halfway done with college kind of throws into perspective the ephemeral nature of our time in this halfway, peaceful limbo. Northwestern is my home in a way that I could never have fathomed would be pos-sible two years ago. Places grow on us and we grow into them, just as people come into our lives, shifting and shaping who we are with poignant subtly.

I’m prone to this kind of existential mus-ing. All this sunshine might just be going straight to my head, but the quarter ticking down is more than the end of the springtime. It’s a halfway point that I really don’t find very much excitement in reaching. Sorry, real world, things are pretty sweet over here, just the way they are.

Arabella Watters is a Medill sophomore. She can be reached at [email protected]. If you want to respond publicly to this column, send a Letter to the Editor to [email protected].

ARABELLAWATTERSDAILY COLUMNIST @bellawatters

End of Spring Quarter brings growing pains

Throughout last month’s Associated Stu-dent Government election campaigns, each presidential ticket expressed a desire to increase the efficiency of Senate meetings and enhance transparency for students and campus groups. Last week’s Senate meeting brought neither of these feats to fruition. In rejecting nominees for three cabinet posi-tions, Senate has compromised its efficiency and effectiveness, while simultaneously displaying an alarming lack of profession-alism in the run-up to the controversial votes. Although we understand the tensions surrounding the nominations are an inher-ent part of the political process, The Daily believes attendees should have conducted themselves more respectfully at last week’s meeting.

ASG failed to confirm nominees for three cabinet positions: chief of staff, vice president for public relations and associate vice president for diversity and inclusion. The nominations for the former two posi-tions were surrounded by claims of politi-cal favoritism by ASG president Ani Ajith and executive vice president Alex Van Atta. Julia Watson, the nominee for vice presi-dent for public relations, was Ajith and Van Atta’s campaign manager and chosen over David Harris, Ajith’s opponent in the April election. Chief of staff nominee Stephanie Hong was nominated over Carly Blumen-feld, who previously had the job and pub-licly endorsed Harris during the election. Though it’s possible political favoritism played a role in these nominations, Ajith and Van Atta ultimately have the right to support cabinet members they believe most align with their viewpoints and sup-port their agenda. The most troubling part, though, was not the accusation of political favoritism by disgruntled ASG members, but the fact that attendees declared dur-ing the meeting their opinions on “better” candidates while the nominees were on the floor. Never mind the fact that no one was supposed to have information on the identity of the other applicants — we expect people to talk — but explicitly pointing out candidates who would better serve the position is blatantly disrespectful to the nominees. The discussion on nominees is meant to focus on evaluating the nominees themselves, not on who could be more suited to the job.

But this all pales in comparison to

attendees’ poking and prodding and even-tual rejection of Stephen Piotrkowski for associate vice president for diversity and inclusion. Piotrkowski was dubbed the “best candidate” by Hayley Stevens, outgo-ing vice president for diversity and inclu-sion, and other influential diversity leaders. Despite this, Piotrkowski was rejected on the basis that he is a white, heterosexual male. Attendees at the meeting claimed that because of these identifying factors, Piotrkowski could not adequately serve Northwest-ern’s multicultural communities. Some even said his iden-tification with a religious minority and his experiences having a sister who is a lesbian weren’t good enough to make him qualified for the job.

The fact that senators did not take Piotrkowski’s relevant experiences into consideration and rejected him based on the basis of race, gender and sexual orien-tation symbolizes a step backward for our community in diversity conversations. It is ludicrous for members of ASG to expect that the vice president for diversity and inclusion can physically represent every single multicultural community at North-western. Recognizing that one’s ability to do a job well is not dependent on physical attributes is a crucial step in creating an open and respectful community, and as leaders on this campus, it is ASG’s respon-sibility to ensure this occurs. It would be wrong to ban Piotrkowski from reapplying for the position because of this blunder, and we urge him to keep pursuing it in his future years at NU.

Ultimately, Senate needs to take the lead and act much more professionally in order to truly instill a sense of respect and open-ness at NU. We have a long way to go to improve this university as a student body, and ASG needs to resolve all of its internal political issues and overlook physical biases before senators and cabinet members can effect any meaningful change for the rest of us.

HAYLEY STEVENSGUEST COLUMNIST

In diversity conversations, NU needs to widen scope

“All this sunshine might just be going straight to my head, but the quarter ticking down is more than the end of the springtime.

Professionalism lacking in latest ASG controversy

“Ultimately,

Senate needs to take the

lead and act much more

professionally to truly instill a

sense of respect and openness

at NU.

Page 5: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2013 THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 5

Registration opens April 8. Classes begin June 24.www.northwestern.edu/summer

Summer is a great time to catch up, get ahead or try something new.

Choose from more than 300 courses.

If you didn't pre-order a book,

you can still purchase your copy

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2013 NU Syllabus Yearbook has arrivedPick yours up at the ROCK

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College Republicans screen ‘Hating Breitbart’ !lmBy PATRICK SVITEK!"#$% &'(#)* &+",,'* @PatrickSvitek

Conservative activist James O’Keefe on Tuesday urged Chicago-area fans of Andrew Breitbart to take it upon themselves to con-tinue the late provocateur’s legacy.

“I can’t do it alone,” O’Keefe told about -. people in a Technological Institute auditorium.

“They have come at me with everything. I’m still standing.”

O’ K e e f e , w h o brought down com-munity-organizing giant ACORN with a series of undercover videos, was on cam-pus to help promote “Hating Breitbart,” a new documentary about the controver-sial blogger’s life. The film follows Breitbart as he navigates several muckraking projects,

leading up to his involvement in the sexting scandal that culminated in the resignation of U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.).

Breitbart unexpectedly died of heart fail-ure last year after what director Andrew Marcus described as an “incredibly stressful lifestyle.”

Dane Stier, vice president of special events for NU College Republicans, called Breitbart a “very powerful voice for conservatives” and applauded the film for highlighting his jocular

personality.“The documentary showed a side of him

we’re not entirely used to in terms of how other media portray Andrew Breitbart,” the Wein-berg junior said.

After an advance screening of “Hating Breit-bart,” O’Keefe and Marcus answered audience questions on topics ranging from O’Keefe’s next stories to the libertarian billionaire Koch brothers’ rumored interest in buying Tribune Co.

Asked how online pioneers like Breitbart could gain more traction outside conservative circles, O’Keefe stressed his followers have to understand where widespread exposure lies.

“You have to get covered by the mainstream media,” O’Keefe said. “That’s what success is.”

O’Keefe took particular aim at journalism schools, including the Medill School of Jour-nalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Com-munications. He laughed as he recalled walk-ing through the McCormick Tribune Center earlier Tuesday, holding up a video camera and finding visibly uncomfortable students.

“There is a sort of fascist disposition toward what I do” at places like Medill, O’Keefe said.

Stier said he invited “at least a dozen” Medill professors to attend the discussion, but none showed up.

Marcus took a broader view of the state of journalism education, stressing today’s stu-dents must learn from Breitbart and build their own brands.

“They’re going to find out themselves on their own,” Marcus said. “They need to be cre-ative about what they’re going to do.”

[email protected]

Alexa Santos/The Daily Northwestern

‘STILL STANDING’ Fans of the late conservative provocateur Andrew Breitbart watch a documentary about his life Tuesday night in a Technological Institute auditorium. Conservative activist James O’Keefe and the film’s director took questions after the screening.

University Library to return rare Bonaparte family letter to France

University Library will present a letter from Napoleon Bonaparte’s brother and /0. other documents to a top French diplomat serving the Chicago area on 1ursday.

1e letter, written by Joseph Bonaparte, dis-cusses a skirmish in Corsica involving Napoleon Bonaparte. Dated April /2, 324/, the letter was given to NU as part of the McBride Collection in the 345.s and discovered four years ago.

“Issues and problems of displaced cultural material and ownership are common,” associate University librarian Je6rey Garrett said in a news release. “Although works of art receive the most public attention, all kinds of cultural property

are held, but not necessarily owned, by museums and libraries.”

1e collection, which spans about -0. years, was given to the library by the family of Jack McBride.

He saved the documents from destruction toward the end of World War II while stationed in Corsica as a magician and dancer in a USO troupe.

1e collection includes correspondence by

prominent French 7gures, ranging from poets to prominent dramatists. It also contains docu-ments with an unknown connection, ranging from proclamations related to the Oregon terri-tory to a handmade swastika.

1e symposium and ceremony will take place /-- p.m. in the Big Ten Room of Norris Univer-sity Center.

— Cat Zakrzewski

“I can’t do it alone. ... They have come at me with everything. I’m still standing. James O’Keefe,conservative activist

Page 6: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

6 NEWS | THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2013

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Evanston nonpro!t to receive energy-e"ciency funds

!e YWCA Evanston/North Shore will receive "#$,%&& in energy-e'ciency services as part of a utility’s community challenge.

More than %&& Evanston residents participated in the Nicor Gas Energy E'ciency Program Chal-lenge, the utility announced this week. !e money from the three-month competition will help the nonpro(t lower its energy costs.

Utility president Beth Reese will present a check to the organization May #&.

— Manuel Rapada

Power outage a#ects 800 downtown homes

A power outage hit hundreds of customers in downtown Evanston on Tuesday, canceling movies at the local theater.

The outage began about ):*% p.m. and impacted +&& customers at its peak, Common-wealth Edison spokeswoman Noelle Ga,ney said.

!e outage resulted from a cable fault, and workers restored power to the area by about $:*% p.m., Ga,ney said. !e area impacted was bordered by Simpson Street on the north, Davis Street on the south, Benson Avenue on the east and Darrow Avenue on the west, Ga,ney said.

!e outage a,ected Century !eatres, )-)% Maple Ave. Movies were canceled during the outage.

— Ciara McCarthy and Jia You

Fleetwood-Jourdain Community Center

Cinemark Century Theatres

Smith Park

Simpson Street

Davis Street

Dar

row

Ave

nue

Ben

son

Aven

ue

Emerson Street

Green Bay Road

Rid

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venu

e

Map

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Approximate area that experienced power outages

Evanston man, 20, killed in Chicago

An Evanston man was shot dead on the South Side of Chicago early Sunday morn-ing, police said.

Police found Blake Ross, #&, in the #+&& block of East -.th Street in Chicago with multiple gunshot wounds in his head and body, said Chicago Police Department spokesman Joshua Purkiss. Ross, who lived in the #$&& block of Greenwood Street, was pronounced dead at the scene at $:%% a.m., according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

— Jia You

Source: Facebook

BUSY BEAVERS A Cook County judge ruled Tuesday that the lawsuit between Evanston and food truck Beavers Coffee and Donuts would continue. The legal dispute has continued for nearly a year as attorneys from both sides battled it out in court.

Legal dispute continues between city, food truck

After months spent in a legal back-and-forth, the dispute between Evanston and food truck Beavers Coffee and Donuts is now back where it all started.

A Cook County judge ruled Tuesday the case would proceed after several steps slowed down its progress.

Beavers initially filed a lawsuit against the city in August to protest a city ordinance mandating that mobile food vendors have a licensed, brick-and-mortar food establishment within city limits.

Evanston subsequently filed a motion to

dismiss the case on the grounds that Beavers owners James Nuccio and Gabriel Wiesen had never actually applied for an operating license. After a Cook County judge sided with Evan-ston in January, Beavers officially applied in March for a license to operate in the city. The city denied Beavers’ application in April, citing the fact that Nuccio and Wiesen didn’t own a licensed food establishment in Evanston. Because the city denied Beavers’ application, a judge ruled the case would proceed.

Evanston has until June * to file a response to Beavers’ amended complaint, and the court will hold a status hearing on the case June )+, Beavers’ lawyer Jacob Huebert said.

— Ciara McCarthy

Beach tokens for sale to Evanston residents

Evanston residents can purchase season tokens in preparation for the upcoming beach opening, the city announced Tuesday.

Tokens are available for sale at the Lorraine H. Morton Civic Center and the city’s six com-munity centers, according to the announcement. !e season pass is valid from the time of pur-chase until Labor Day.

!e tokens are available at a discounted rate of "#. for Evanston and Skokie residents and "*# for non-residents now until June )*. A/erward, tokens will be sold at "$* for residents and "%+

for nonresidents.Residents can also purchase daily passes at

a rate of ". for children ages ) to )) and "+ for those )# and older. Infants under the age of ) can enjoy the beaches for free.

!e city also o,ers beach token fee assistance for residents in need and a free beach token program for teens. Evanston teens ages )$ to )+ can pick up a free )&-punch pass at community centers and the Evanston Public Library, )-&$ Orrington Ave., provided they present proof of residency.

!e city’s (ve public swimming beaches will open for the season May #%.

— Jia You

Infographic by Chelsea Sherlock/Daily Senior Staffer

Page 7: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2013 THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 7

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provost for undergraduate education, said Semes-ter Online was incompatible with ! nancial aid packages.

“It’s de! nitely a for-pro! t venture,” Cyrus said.Students like SESP junior Kristina Nolte also

expressed concern about cost.“To have it cost the same as a regular class seems

kind of ridiculous,” she said.Some schools are still exploring their options.Brandeis’ contract has not been ! nalized, but the

school plans to participate in the spring semester, Brandeis spokeswoman Ellen de Gra" enreid told # e Daily. Wake Forest University, an original member of the consortium, is still evaluating the opportunity.

Jennifer Collins, Wake Forest’s associate provost for academic initiatives, said faculty prize a “face-to-face educational experience.”

“It’s a new venture,” Collins said. “You want to make sure that anything that you start that would be this di" erent would add value to our students.”

NU o$ cials have said they are unsure about how students will incorporate the semester classes into NU’s quarter system.

Despite the issues raised by other schools, Julia said NU will ultimately make its own independent decisions.

“Northwestern is really a leader in this area,” Julia said. “We feel we need to do what’s in Northwestern’s interest basically going forward.”

[email protected]

said. “I don’t know how quickly we’ll be able to implement it, but our next big goal is incorporating descriptions and CTECs and to make the calendar shareable over Facebook and Twitter, so you can show people your schedule.”

Although the website is still functioning as an alpha version, it has reached a maximum of %& to

'& visitors at one time. Students have been promoting Courseseek via

social media, encouraging others to experiment with it.

“It’s the ! rst product I’ve ever released that other people have used,” McMahon said. “It’s cool to see other people responding well and wanting to use it.”

[email protected]

Source: Courseseek screenshot

SEEK AND YOU SHALL FIND Developed by students as a CAESAR alternative, Courseseek allows users to create a tentative schedule and view potential confl icts prior to class registration. The students spend more than nine hours each week working on the site.

Last year, students could enter Dillo Day with a WildCARD. Guests had to have a wristband proving registration with an NU student or a state ID proving they were over ('. # e minimum age of accompanying adults for guests last year was only ('.

In addition to limiting NU students to register-ing four guests, up to two of whom can be under (', Evanston adults over )* also can only register up to

four guests under ('. “It was very visible that there weren’t as many high schoolers and weren’t as many problems as years prior,” Roman, a Weinberg senior, said of last year’s Dillo Day.

Mayfest worked extensively with the University “every step of the process” to develop its new policies, Mayfest co-chair Wil Heintz said.

Co-chair and Communication senior Jeremy Shpizner called the re! ning of the regulations a “col-laborative process” and said Mayfest o+ en met with Burgwell Howard, assistant vice president for student

engagement, to discuss the policies. Mayfest also met with University Police.

“We have to check in with them and make sure we’re hitting all the concerns,” Shpizner said.

Weinberg freshman Erik Baker attended Evanston Township High School. He said in high school, “count-less students from all grades went to Dillo Day.”

Baker said he has mixed feelings on the high school-targeting policies.

“I de! nitely don’t think that having unrestricted high school students is a huge problem,” he said. “I

can’t remember any big safety incidents. I do think that Dillo Day is a Northwestern event.”

Heintz said Mayfest must strike a balance between safety and “making sure Northwestern students can come and go as they please.”

“Ultimately this is an event that is paid for by North-western students for Northwestern students, and we want to make sure ! rst and foremost that our students are enjoying it as much as they would like,” he said.

[email protected]

Original consortium members

New Semester Online participant, officially offering courses this fall

No longer participating

Offically particpating, but not offering classes until spring Unsure if participating

Semester Online participation in transition

DilloFrom page 1

OnlineFrom page 1

CourseweekFrom page 1

Infographic by Ellen Garrison/The Daily Northwestern

Page 8: The Daily Northwestern - May 15, 2013

By JOHN PASCHALL !"# $%&'( )*+!",#-!#+)@John_Paschall

While most freshmen on cam-pus are worrying about the dreaded Freshman ./, we know one group of new students who won’t: the athletes. Instead of packing on the pounds, these new faces answer ./ questions about what it’s like to wear purple and white for the next four years.

Name: Maggie Lyon (0-foot-.)Sport: BasketballPosition: ForwardThe Daily Northwestern:

You’re a local girl from Wilmette. Is it weird going to college so close to home?

Mag-gie Lyon: I thought it would be at first, but I really enjoy it . I love the area that I’m from,

so why not stay close to home?The Daily: Have you ever lost

in a game of H.O.R.S.E.?Lyon: When I was younger, I

used to play my brother and my dad in my backyard, and I wouldn’t always win. My brother would try and do some trick shots. Now, it’d be pretty even. He’s not too bad, but I think I would probably win.

The Daily: Who was your idol growing up?

Lyon: Roger Federer was my favorite athlete. I never

played tennis but I always looked up to him because he’s such a classy guy in his sport.

The Daily: I know you’re a big Taylor Swift fan. What’s your favorite song of hers?

Lyon: That’s an impossible ques-tion. But I’ll have to say “All Too Well.”

The Daily: Where’s your favor-ite place to shop?

Lyon: J.Crew.The Daily: What’s a movie you

could watch a million times?Lyon: “Country Strong.”The Daily: With all these

superhero movies coming out now, who’s your favorite superhero?

Lyon: I’d say Batman maybe. I like all those movies.

The Daily: What’s the hard-est class you’ve taken at

NU?Lyon: I’d say social

psychology because I’m not very good

at multiple choice tests.

The Daily: What’s been

your big-gest fresh-man moment so far?

Lyon: I forgot

my ankle braces when

we went to Minnesota, and

I was freaking out. I don’t nor-

mally tape my ankles. But

our trainer always brings extras, so we were all good.

The Daily: Who’s the biggest prankster on the team?

Lyon: Probably Lauren Douglas. She has a good poker face, and you never know when she’s serious or not. She’s always thinking of ways to joke with people. One time, she tried to take this fake cow up the elevator and put it in our coach’s office. But it wouldn’t fit in the elevator.

The Daily: What’s your favorite dining hall on campus?

Lyon: Plex.The Daily: How many half-

court shots have you made in your life?

Lyon: In a game? Never. Some-times after practice we will prac-tice those, and I’ve made quite a few. I’m pretty good at them.

The Daily : Any hidden talents?

Lyon: I would say I’m a pretty good dancer, but nobody on my team would say that.

The Daily: What’s your favorite TV show?

Lyon: “Nashville.”The Daily: Who’s the toughest

player you’ve had to guard this year?

Lyon: Maggie Lucas from Penn State. She’s a great shooter and can get her shot off really quickly. She knows how to use screens to get

By ALEX PUTTERMAN!"# $%&'( )*+!",#-!#+)@AlexPutt12

Zach Morton just cannot get away from Evanston.

3 e redshirt senior grew up two miles from Northwestern and is now 4 nishing his 4 5 h year on campus, studying sports administration as a graduate student.

Along the way, he was named 4 rst-team All-Big Ten at second base as a sophomore, missed a season to injury and anchored NU’s starting rotation this season, hitting in the middle of the order and playing the 4 eld on non-pitching days. 3 is sea-son, Morton has batted .266 with a team-best 7. RBIs and has posted a 7..2 ERA in 86 innings pitched.

3 e senior also boasts a Steve Nash-like hoops game, is distantly related to a Hall of Fame baseball player and crushes on Jessica Biel. He spoke on all that and more in his conversation with 3 e Daily this week.

! e Daily Northwestern: How did you choose your walk-up music (“Harder ! an You ! ink” by Pub-lic Enemy)?

Zach Morton: It’s always kind of a big thing picking walk-up music, and I like Public Enemy, I like the passage that I selected and it just seemed to get me going for my at-bat.

! e Daily: You’re a Cubs fan, right?

Morton: I am a White Sox fan. Had to keep it on the DL for Wrigley.

! e Daily: Who was your favorite player growing up?

Morton: Paul Konerko has been my favorite player for a long time, being a White Sox fan — ’1/ World Series and everything. He’s the

man.! e Daily: Why do you wear No.

.9?Morton: My favorite number

is four, but my uncle — my mom’s brother — married (Hall of Fame center 4 elder) Duke Snider’s daugh-ter, and he wore No. .9. So that’s kind of cool that it worked out that way. Didn’t know that. I wanted a four in there, but it worked out that way too. Stick to that. It sounds better.

! e Daily: Who would play you in a Zach Morton biopic?

Morton: Matt Damon. I don’t know why. I’m not going low-key right here.

! e Daily: Who would play your love interest in that biopic?

Morton: Anyone? I like Jessica Biel.

! e Daily: I’ve heard you were quite the high school basketball player. Which pro player did your game resemble?

Morton: I would kind of like to think I’m a Steve Nash kind of guy. I kind of distribute and am not the most athletic.

! e Daily: If there could only be one Morty at NU, why should it be you and not University President Morton Schapiro?

Morton: Dang it. If there’s anything — which there’s not, he should be the one Morty

that’s recognized — it’s because I’m born and raised in Evanston. But don’t tell him that.

! e Daily:What’s your favorite memory of NU?

Morton: Probably my sophomore year. Paul Snieder hit a walk-off home run against Michigan State, and that sent us to the Big Ten Tournament.

The Daily:We’re coming up on your last Dillo Day. What’s your favorite Dillo memory?

Morton:Honestly it’s not even from

when I w a s

here. I was a senior in high

school, and I saw Common perform, which was pretty cool.

! e Daily: If you could give your freshman self one piece of advice, what

would it be?Morton: Work

harder in school your 4 rst year. Don’t worry so much about baseball and the pressures of trying to adjust to college athlet-ics as much as to college education.

! e Daily: What will you miss most about NU?

Morton: Definitely just being around the

team, being around the team every day. Just jokes,

laughing, the bus trips. I really like the bus trips and traveling. But overall, just being around the team all the time.

[email protected]

SPORTSWednesday, May 15, 2013 @Wildcat_Extra

ON DECK ON THE RECORDBaseballNU at Wichita State, 6:30 p.m. Thursday

“Just jokes, laughing, the bus trips. ... But overall, just being around the team all the time” — Second baseman Zach Morton

May16

Most college sports use a selection committee to decide which teams will compete for the national title.

For the most part, the handful of people do a good job at selecting the teams, but when the bubble gets involved, it gets a little dicey. How do you judge two teams that never played on the 4 eld and determine which one deserves the spot?

3 ere is no right way to split hairs and pick one team, but there should be some concrete guidelines from year to year. What makes selection committees so controversial is the fact the decisions they make are contradictory.

3 e so5 ball committee is a perfect example of this contradictory logic.

Iowa won six of its last nine games and had an RPI of 79 at the end of the season with a 71-29 record. 3 e Hawkeyes 4 nished ninth in the Big Ten with eight conference wins. 3 ey also had six wins over ranked teams.

Mississippi State lost eight of its last .. games to 4 nish with a 72-22 record and ended up with an RPI of 77. 3 e Bulldogs were tied for .1th in the Southeastern Conference and did not make the conference tournament, despite their eight wins in the SEC. 3 ey only had four wins over ranked opposition.

So who got into the 4 eld of 09? Mis-sissippi State, of course.

3 e decision made little sense, and it showcases the issue with selection com-mittees. If Mississippi State made the tournament, certainly Iowa deserved a shot to play for a national title. 3 e Hawkeyes had a better resume, and although the Bulldogs played in the tougher conference, the Big Ten was not terrible like the selection commit-tee made it out to be.

Every March we talk about which teams got snubbed from the NCAA basketball tournament and which schools were lucky to sneak into the 4 eld. However, the committee is clear on what it is looking for in a tourna-ment team. It wants teams who had big wins, few bad losses and challenged themselves out of conference. For the most part, the committee sticks to that and selects the 4 eld based on those principles.

However, most committees are not that consistent. Last year, Northwestern was in the so5 ball tournament based on its strength of schedule, but it seemed strength of schedule played no role this season. Alabama-Birmingham made the tournament despite only winning two non-conference games against tournament quali4 ers from BCS con-ferences. Iowa had four wins and the better RPI.

Selection committees must act like the college admissions process. You know in general what you need to do and will be rewarded for going above and beyond the expectations and will be punished for falling short. 3 e issue is selection committees don’t stick to their guidelines with enough consistency to be trusted with decid-ing which teams can compete for the ultimate prize.

3 ere are two simple solutions: Stick to the criteria or let a computer – some-thing like RPI – decide who will play for the national title.

joshuawalfi [email protected]

JOSH WALFISHSPORTS EDITOR@JOSHWALFISH

Selection committees could use consistency

ColumnQ&A spotlight: ! e rookie and the vet

Freshman 15: Big Ten Freshman of the Year, Maggie Lyon

Baseball: Zach Morton talks being the other Morty

“Work harder in

school your ! rst year. Don’t worry so much

about baseball. Zach Morton,

Second baseman

Daily fi le photo by Meghan White

SENIOR SPRING Redshirt senior Zach Morton batted a team-best 31 RBIs this season. The Evanston native said above all, he will miss being around his teammates when he graduates Northwestern.

knows how to use screens to get

Daily fi le photo by Meghan White

YOUNG BLOOD Big Ten Freshman Player of the Year Maggie Lyon scored 12.8 points per game this season, and is the fi rst Northwestern player in program history to be awarded the conference honor.

“I would say I’m a pretty good dancer, but nobody on my team would say that.

Maggie Lyon,Women’s basketball

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