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The Daily Northwestern DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynu Friday, November 30, 2012 SPORTS Men’s Basketball NU focuses on rebounds after tough loss » PAGE 8 The Daily wraps up fall’s biggest news stories By CAT ZAKRZEWSKI the daily northwestern Amid the tears and grief, candles shone upon the smiles of hundreds of students touched by Alyssa Weaver. e Northwestern community gath- ered at e Rock on ursday evening to commemorate the life of the Wein- berg junior who took her life while abroad in London last week. e vigil was hosted by Chi Omega, the Cultural and Community Studies Residential College, the Boxing Club and the Brady Scholars Program. “All I find are memories of her laugh,” said Mallorie Barber, Weaver’s Chi O sister and a Communication junior. “Her awkward giggle that was somehow deep and high-pitched, her huge smile that started with a tug in the corner of her mouth and spread across her lips as it lit up a room.” is laughter recurred through- out the memories shared by Weaver’s friends and peers from various orga- nizations. McCormick junior Abby Christman, a Chi O sister who lived with Weaver in CCS, remembered in bittersweet tears the way Weaver pur- posely “crunched” on the leaves as they walked from their dorm to the dining hall, laughing. “en everyone else started laugh- ing too because her laugh was so infec- tious,” she added. SESP junior Erica Rodriguez also lived in CCS and was on the boxing team with Weaver. Rodriguez talked about Weaver’s passion for CCS. Rodri- guez said CCS typically won the spirit award at the annual homecoming parade, and when they were upset by the Ayers College of Commerce and Industry last year, Weaver would not accept the loss. Instead, she went to the other residential college’s celebra- tory bonfire on the Lakefill and stole the trophy. “Turns out there are only so many places you can run on the Lakefill, and they ultimately caught up to us,” she said with a laugh. “CCI walked away with their trophy, and Alyssa and I walked away with a lot of new friends.” Rodriguez also remembered how Weaver convinced her to trek to boxing practice despite the “Snowpocalypse” » PAGE 14 High 50 Low 37 OPINION Goodman Give back during holidays » PAGE 6 Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Forum 6 | Classifieds & Puzzles 12 | Sports 16 Community gathers to mourn loss of sister, friend @NUWILDSIDE | #B1GCATS TAKE THE SHUTTLE! CHICAGO’S BIG TEN TEAM TM NORTHWESTERN VS. UIC TOMORROW AT 1 PM FREE WILDSIDE T-SHIRTS *WHILE SUPPLIES LAST By PATRICK SVITEK daily senior staffer Aſter more than two months of interviewing witnesses, Evanston Police believe Harsha Maddula’s death was the result of an accident and are waiting on toxicology results that could reveal whether alcohol was involved in the McCormick sopho- more’s disappearance. “At this time, Maddula’s death appears to be accidental in nature and alcohol may have been a contributing factor,” EPD Cmdr. Jay Parrott said ursday. “However, Evanston Police are not confirming anything until toxicology results are returned.” Maddula was last seen leaving an off-campus party in the early morn- ing hours of Sept. 22. Five days later, a fisherman discovered Maddula’s body floating in Wilmette Harbor, which is about two miles north of Ridge Avenue house Maddula was last seen leaving. A spokeswoman in the Cook County medical examiner’s office said earlier this week that “no new information” has been added to Mad- dula’s autopsy report since the cause of death — drowning — was announced the day aſter his body was found. e manner of death remains undeter- mined, meaning it could have been an accident or suicide. Parrott stressed that witness interviews are “subjective opinions based on people that were involved with (Maddula) that night,” some of whom admitted to being intoxicated themselves. Witness statements have already confirmed that Maddula was seen consuming alcohol at the off- campus party. It remains unclear when the toxi- cology test on Maddula’s body will be Death appears accidental, police say Rafi Letzter/Daily Senior Staffer IN MEMORIAM Weinberg junior Anne Jaconette, SESP junior Nicole Williams and Medill sophomore Carley Lintz, all Chi Omega sisters, listen as friends of Alyssa Weaver remember her at a vigil at The Rock. Representatives from Chi O, Brady Scholars, CCS and the Boxing Club shared memories of Weaver’s years at Northwestern. » See MEMORIAL, page 15 Courtesy of Facebook WAITING GAME McCormick sophomore Harsha Maddula appeared to have consumed alcohol at parties before he went missing earlier this quarter, witnesses say. His body was found five days later. The investigation hinges on the release of a toxicology report. » See MADDULA, page 15 Harsha Maddula Evanston man shot, killed dead near ETHS ursday A 19-year-old Evanston man was shot and killed Thursday night near Evanston Township High School. The shooting occurred at 6:15 p.m. in the 1800 block of Brown Avenue, according to a news release. While investigating reports of shots fired on Brown Avenue, Evanston Police found Evanston resident Justin Mur- ray wounded. Murray was transported to Evan- ston Hospital, where he was pro- nounced dead shortly before 7 p.m. EPD is investigating the case and had no suspects in custody as of Thursday night. Murray’s death comes less than two months after another Evanston teenager, 14-year-old Dajae Cole- man, was shot and killed while walk- ing home from a party. A 20-year-old man mistook Coleman for another man and was charged with first- degree murder. Police are investigating the case, and there are no suspects currently in custody. — Patrick Svitek EPD awaits toxicology results to determine involvement of alcohol Alyssa Weaver Vigil commemorates Weinberg junior’s laughter, passions

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Page 1: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

The Daily NorthwesternDAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynuFriday, November 30, 2012

sports Men’s BasketballNU focuses on rebounds after

tough loss » PAGE 8

The Daily wraps up fall’s biggest news stories

By cat zakrzewskithe daily northwestern

Amid the tears and grief, candles shone upon the smiles of hundreds of students touched by Alyssa Weaver.

The Northwestern community gath-ered at The Rock on Thursday evening to commemorate the life of the Wein-berg junior who took her life while abroad in London last week. The vigil was hosted by Chi Omega, the Cultural and Community Studies Residential College, the Boxing Club and the Brady Scholars Program.

“All I find are memories of her laugh,” said Mallorie Barber, Weaver’s Chi O sister and a Communication junior. “Her awkward giggle that was somehow deep and high-pitched, her huge smile that started with a tug in the corner of her mouth and spread across her lips as it lit up a room.”

This laughter recurred through-out the memories shared by Weaver’s friends and peers from various orga-nizations. McCormick junior Abby

Christman, a Chi O sister who lived with Weaver in CCS, remembered in bittersweet tears the way Weaver pur-posely “crunched” on the leaves as they walked from their dorm to the dining hall, laughing.

“Then everyone else started laugh-ing too because her laugh was so infec-tious,” she added.

SESP junior Erica Rodriguez also lived in CCS and was on the boxing team with Weaver. Rodriguez talked about Weaver’s passion for CCS. Rodri-guez said CCS typically won the spirit award at the annual homecoming parade, and when they were upset by the Ayers College of Commerce and Industry last year, Weaver would not accept the loss. Instead, she went to the other residential college’s celebra-tory bonfire on the Lakefill and stole the trophy.

“Turns out there are only so many places you can run on the Lakefill, and they ultimately caught up to us,” she said with a laugh. “CCI walked away with their trophy, and Alyssa and I walked away with a lot of new friends.”

Rodriguez also remembered how Weaver convinced her to trek to boxing practice despite the “Snowpocalypse”

» PAGE 14High 50Low 37

opinion GoodmanGive back during

holidays » PAGE 6

Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Forum 6 | Classifieds & Puzzles 12 | Sports 16

Community gathers to mourn loss of sister, friend

@NUWILDSIDE | #B1GCATSTAKE THE SHUTTLE!

C H I C A G O ’ S B I G T E N T E A MT M

NORTHWESTERNVS. UIC

TOMORROW AT 1 PM

FREE WILDSIDE T-SHIRTS

*WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

Output On: November 29, 2012 9:49 AMHigh-Resolution PDF - PRINT READY

By patrick svitekdaily senior staffer

After more than two months of interviewing witnesses, Evanston Police believe Harsha Maddula’s death was the result of an accident and are waiting on toxicology results that could reveal whether alcohol was involved in the McCormick sopho-more’s disappearance.

“At this time, Maddula’s death appears to be accidental in nature and alcohol may have been a contributing factor,” EPD Cmdr. Jay Parrott said Thursday. “However, Evanston Police are not confirming anything until toxicology results are returned.”

Maddula was last seen leaving an off-campus party in the early morn-ing hours of Sept. 22. Five days later, a

fisherman discovered Maddula’s body floating in Wilmette Harbor, which is about two miles north of Ridge Avenue house Maddula was last seen leaving.

A spokeswoman in the Cook County medical examiner’s office said earlier this week that “no new information” has been added to Mad-dula’s autopsy report since the cause of death — drowning — was announced the day after his body was found. The manner of death remains undeter-mined, meaning it could have been an accident or suicide.

Parrott stressed that witness interviews are “subjective opinions based on people that were involved with (Maddula) that night,” some of whom admitted to being intoxicated themselves. Witness statements have already confirmed that Maddula was seen consuming alcohol at the off-campus party.

It remains unclear when the toxi-cology test on Maddula’s body will be

Death appears accidental, police say

Rafi Letzter/Daily Senior Staffer

in mEmoriAm Weinberg junior Anne Jaconette, SESP junior Nicole Williams and Medill sophomore Carley Lintz, all Chi Omega sisters, listen as friends of Alyssa Weaver remember her at a vigil at The Rock. Representatives from Chi O, Brady Scholars, CCS and the Boxing Club shared memories of Weaver’s years at Northwestern. » See mEmoriAl, page 15

Courtesy of Facebook

wAitinG GAmE McCormick sophomore Harsha Maddula appeared to have consumed alcohol at parties before he went missing earlier this quarter, witnesses say. His body was found five days later. The investigation hinges on the release of a toxicology report. » See mAddulA, page 15

Harsha MaddulaEvanston man shot, killed dead near ETHS Thursday

A 19-year-old Evanston man was shot and killed Thursday night near Evanston Township High School.

The shooting occurred at 6:15 p.m. in the 1800 block of Brown Avenue, according to a news release. While investigating reports of shots fired on Brown Avenue, Evanston Police found Evanston resident Justin Mur-ray wounded.

Murray was transported to Evan-ston Hospital, where he was pro-nounced dead shortly before 7 p.m.

EPD is investigating the case and had no suspects in custody as of Thursday night.

Murray’s death comes less than two months after another Evanston teenager, 14-year-old Dajae Cole-man, was shot and killed while walk-ing home from a party. A 20-year-old man mistook Coleman for another man and was charged with first-degree murder.

Police are investigating the case, and there are no suspects currently in custody.

— Patrick Svitek

EPD awaits toxicology results to determine involvement of alcohol

Alyssa Weaver

Vigil commemorates Weinberg junior’s laughter, passions

Page 2: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

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Check out dAilyNOrthwEstErN.COM for breaking news

Around TownMy business is all about partnering with other small busi-ness in the community to see how we can joint-market.

— Lynette Martin, Bottle and Bottega Evanston owner

“ ” Small businesses come together to avoid closing Page 4

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Churches offer ex-offenders supportBy rachel janikthe daily northwestern

After retiring from his decades-long career as a pastor at Fisher Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church in Evanston, the Rev. Hardist E. Lane continued his life’s work: helping reintegrate ex-offenders into the community.

“If a person’s paid his debt to society, you don’t want to rob him of a chance at a real life,” Lane said.

The rate at which ex-convicts re-offend upon release from prison, called recidivism, is startlingly high in Illinois. A 2011 Pew Research Center study found that more than half of Illinois prisoners vio-late parole or commit another crime within three years of being released.

Through offerings such as counseling and job training, Lane’s organization, the H.E. Lane Center for Positive Change, tries to fight poverty, home-lessness and boredom, forces that might cause ex-offenders to recommit crimes or miss parole meetings. Much of the faith-based charity’s focus is on sustainable commitments, Lane said. Instead of quick fixes, the center works on life skills, careers

and long-lasting relationships.“We kind of monitor these fellows, and we have

a lot of success,” Lane said.Lane said the program typically gets an influx of

letters and calls around the holidays, with offenders or their families hoping to move forward during a season when they spend time thinking about one another.

During the last year, Lane’s re-integration pro-gram has encouraged members of Evanston’s Reba Place Church, from which Lane rents space, to pursue similar efforts.

Congregation member Brenda Overton said she volunteers for the church’s newly formed initiative to provide counsel and support for those incarcer-ated or recently released, specifically children whose parents are incarcerated or recently released.

“What we’re trying to do is use a whole family approach,” Overton said.

The church holds game nights and potlucks that Overton said take stress off already strained families. In the fall, the church group hosted trips to apple orchards and hayrides.

“It’s fun for the children, and it gives them a place to belong,” she said. “They have that com-mon denominator, and they feel very free to be

who they are.”Members are hopeful about the program’s poten-

tial, and are looking into expanding with some additional support from the city, Overton said.

Lane, on the other hand, said his organization has received little help from the city and none from the state. Ordinances to financially back Lane’s pro-gram failed to garner support, he said. To raise funds, Lane’s center organizes fundraisers with other area churches, including one on Saturday, when North Shore pastors will sing and worship in Evanston’s Unitarian church.

“Our only support is from the community, from the people that believe in what we’re doing,” Lane said.

Some of the young men Lane’s center counseled “have gone on to great things,” Lane said. Although at times incredibly trying, his work with the pro-gram has given him some of the most rewarding and humbling experiences of his life, Lane said.

“The people that come to us, they are ready to change, but they need us to lift them up, show them something positive,” Lane said. “They need more hope than help.”

[email protected]

three students found with alcohol and cannabis in dorm room

Alcohol and cannabis were found in a second floor dorm room in mid-November at 1835 Hin-man when University Police responded to an odor investigation reported by a Community Assistant.

UP officers arrived at 1835 Hinman on Nov. 15 around 11:23 p.m. in response to a CA who reported strong odor of burned cannabis emanating from a dorm room while conducting regular checks of the hall. Officers proceeded to the room, having detected the strong odor, and subsequently asked for permission to enter the room when a female student answered the door.

Two other girls, both NU students, were seen sit-ting by the window. All three were observed to have

“glassy and bloodshot” red eyes, Deputy Chief Dan McAleer said. One girl admitted they were smok-ing cannabis when asked, two were in possession of cannabis, 16 and 26 grams respectively, which they had bought from an unknown person on the street for personal use. The cannabis found was worth approximately $350. The third girl said she was just in the room to smoke but admitted she had alcohol in her room, which she later turned over to the police as well. All three students were underage and taken into custody around 12:01 a.m. Nov. 16, and issued local ordinance citations.

Two students were charged with underage pos-session of alcohol and possession of cannabis. They are scheduled to appear in court on Dec. 18.

Northwestern student loses iPhone while walking on University Place

UP received a lost property report on Nov. 23 from a student who said he lost his iPhone while walking on campus.

The student was heading west in the 600 block of University Place on Nov. 21 around 7:53 p.m. with his iPhone 4 in his front pants pocket. How-ever, when he arrived at his dorm around 9 p.m., the phone was no longer there. After unsuccessful attempts to call his phone and retrace his steps, the student notified UP.

Investigation is still ongoing, McAleer said.

— Ina Yang

Page 3: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

On CampusThe performance, along with the cost of batteries, has become the single most limiting factor for electronic vehicles and consumer electronics.

— McCormick graduate student Thomas Yu

“ ” Student cleantech startup earns national prize Page 13

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 3

[email protected]

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By SOPHIA BOLLAGthe daily northwestern

A Weinberg senior has been awarded a compet-itive scholarship for two years of graduate study in the United Kingdom.

Triple science major Jennifer Mills was one of 34 U.S. students named 2013 Marshall Scholars on Tuesday. e scholarship allows American stu-dents to pursue two years of graduate research in any � eld at any university in the U.K.

Mills applied for the scholarship in October. e Marshall Aid Commemoration Commission noti� ed her that she had won in early November a� er her interview.

Mills, who is a chemistry, earth science and integrated science major and a physics minor, said she plans to study for the � rst year at the Univer-sity of Cambridge in England and for the second year at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. During the two years, she will continue the type of research she is currently doing in Northwestern earth and planetary science Prof. Brad Sageman’s lab.

“She wants to devote her scienti� c work to solv-ing a major problem facing humanity, which is climate change,” Sageman said.

At the University of Cambridge, Mills will con-tinue academic research in the subject.

“ e earth science department at Cambridge is probably the best in the world,” she said. “I’m

very interested in the speci� c project I’ll be work-ing on.”

at project involves studying the global car-bon cycle in order to learn about the history of climate change to understand the way it will a ect

the earth in the near future.“What Jenny has done as an undergraduate

at Northwestern is dip her feet into the puddle of doing paleo-climate research in our research group,” Sageman said. “What she’s seeking to do

at Cambridge is continue that kind of work but perhaps also consider its application to modern environments.”

At the University of Edinburgh, Mills says she will pursue a different aspect of climate-change research: the legal one.

“I’m also interested in the policy side of things,” she said. “I’d like to enhance my back-ground and improve my knowledge of the eco-nomics and policy side of climate.”

At Edinburgh, she will earn an LL.M., or Master of Laws, a postgraduate degree focus-ing on a law in a specific field, according to the Master of Laws Programs Worldwide website.

After her studies in the U.K., Mills says she plans to return to the U.S. to earn her doctorate. Ultimately, she would like to work in academia, she said.

“I’m a researcher at heart,” Mills said, laugh-ing. “I always am, and I always will be.”

Sageman said he expects Mills to make important contributions to the field in the future.

“Her academic path is going to take her in who-knows-what directions, but one thing I can say for sure is I’ll be keeping my eyes open because Jenny Mills is going to be in the head-lines,” he said. “She’s going to do exciting and fundamental things in the future. I’m confident of it.”

[email protected]

Triple science major earns scholarship to study in UK

Photo courtesy of Jennifer Mills

‘RESEARCHER AT HEART’ Weinberg senior Jennifer Mills will spend two years studying earth and planetary science in the United Kingdom through the national Marshall Scholars program.

NU ranked again, this time among most stressful universities

The Daily Beast has ranked Northwestern fifth on the 2012 list of the most stressful schools.

NU’s ranking comes into question as the debate about the state of mental health resources

on campus grows, following the suicide of Wein-berg junior Alyssa Weaver last week while she was studying abroad in England.

At an NU Active Minds and Undergraduate Psychology Association panel discussion about mental health, Alison May, assistant director of the Office of Services for Students with Dis-abilities, said she thought the high stress level on campus resulted from students taking four courses a quarter. She took only three courses a quarter as an undergraduate at Dartmouth

College and said she experienced an increased level of stress when she began taking four courses at NU.

“It makes Northwestern a pressure cooker,” she said.

The online publication wrote that the rank-ings were compiled by evaluating “the total price of attendance, the percentage of students receiving financial aid, as well as the average amount of financial aid, the selectivity based on the average SAT or ACT score and the

percent of applicants admitted.” The publica-tion weighted each of these five factors at 20 percent and additionally factored in the U.S. Department of Education’s crime record for the past three years as a bonus percentage.

Washington University in Saint Louis, Uni-versity of Pennsylvania, Columbia University and Harvard University placed in the top four ahead of Northwestern.

— Cat Zakrzewski

Page 4: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

4 NEWS | thE daily NorthWEStErN friday, NovEmbEr 30, 2012

DECEMBER 2 - 14, 2012upcoming events@ P I C K - S TA I G E R

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2 3 4 5 6 7 8Concert BandPick-Staiger, 3 p.m.Women’s ChorusLutkin, 3 p.m.PhilharmoniaPick-Staiger, 7:30 p.m.

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“My Beloved Is Mine ...”:Benjamin Britten and Peter PearsLutkin, 7:30 p.m.

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Bienen Contemporary / Early Vocal Ensemble: At Winter’s EdgePick-Staiger, 7:30 p.m.

73rd Annual Holiday ConcertPick-Staiger, 7:30 p.m.Watercolors: Music of Claude DebussyLutkin, 7:30 p.m.

9 10 11

December 8: Watercolors December 14: Keyboard Conversations

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December 8 & 9: 73rd Annual Holiday Concert

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Contemporary Music EnsemblePick-Staiger, 7:30 p.m.

Northwestern University Chamber OrchestraPick-Staiger, 7:30 p.m.

A Festival of Lessons and CarolsAlice Millar, 10:40 a.m.73rd Annual Holiday ConcertPick-Staiger, 3 p.m.

Keyboard Conversations: Claude Debussy— Clair de lune, Fireworks, and BeyondPick-Staiger, 7:30 p.m.

By Sammy Caiolathe daily northwestern

With the holidays approaching, the spot-light has shifted to Evanston’s newest small businesses, which will either sail smoothly into the new year or sink like other shops before them. In an effort to survive, some business owners are collaborating with one another to increase revenue and expand their customer bases.

January 2012 brought the closure of sev-eral Evanston small businesses, including Tiny Dog Cupcake, 616 Davis St., and Merle’s BBQ, 1727 Benson Ave. However, the same month also ushered in the opening of Pret A Man-ger, 1701 Sherman Ave., and Soulwich, 1634 Orrington Ave.

Now, the open-close trend may be repeat-ing itself with the impending closure of Ten27 Cycles (formerly Turin Bicycle), 1027 Davis St., which has been in Evanston for more than 40 years. Owner Chris Mailing said the poor economy, in conjunction with a problematic name change, made closure necessary.

“It was going to end up in some kind of a

lawsuit, and I don’t have the money given my current economic environment,” he said of the attempted name change. “The better solution was just to close up shop and be done with it. It’s a difficult decision, but it’s the right way to wrap things up.”

A new bike shop ca l l ed Wheel & Sprocket will soon replace Ten27 Cycles.

There are also sev-eral new restaurants, including JT’s Bar and Grill, 1639 Orrington Ave. , and Found Kitchen, 1631 Chicago Ave.

In a community as locally focused as Evanston, new busi-nesses can turn to both city officials and neigh-boring businesses for early troubleshooting.

In March 2009, Bloomberg Business-week magazine named Evanston the best city in Illinois for startups. Now, small businesses work together to mutu-ally benefit the area, said Steve Griffin, the city’s director of community and economic development.

“I’ve been very impressed since I’ve been

here, seeing how they meet as a group and in individual groups and work on common issues and problems,” Griffin said. “It’s not like what you’d think might happen — they’re not pitted against each other. They’re collaborating.”

Collaboration comes in several forms, rang-ing from group meetings to online networking to joint events, Griffin said. There are eight different Evanston business associations, such as the Central Street Business Association and Downtown Evanston, that meet monthly with the city to discuss maintenance and care of their business locations, he said.

The Central Street merchants also band together to throw mutually beneficial events, such as the Central Street Holiday Open House coming up Sunday. The event, which takes place from noon to 5 p.m., allows individual stores to gain publicity by offering discounts to passers-by, said Patty Erd, co-owner of The Spice House, 1941 Central St. Erd said she has participated in many similar events during her 15 years as an Evanston small-business owner.

However, making a new business well-known in the tight-knit local scene is not always easy, Erd said. She and her husband could not afford advertising at first, so they spread their name through word of mouth and by putting their pamphlets and products in the windows of other stores.

“If you don’t have the money in the account to cover the first year’s rent, you absolutely

should not do it,” Erd said. “We’ve been on a shoestring budget much of our life. … You just have to sit out the time, so people get to know you’re there.”

After becoming established, Erd said she found Evanston to be a wonderful community for a young small business.

Lynette Martin, who started Bottle and Bottega Evanston in August, said she found the Evanston Chamber of Commerce and the Downtown Evanston organization to be help-ful in her launch process.

Bottle and Bottega Evanston, a mobile business that grew out of the original Chi-cago Bottle and Bottega launched in 2009, provides art supplies and professional artists for paint parties around the city, Lynette said. Any Evanston business can host a Bottle and Bottega party, during which a team of artists will provide a three- to four-hour paint lesson to guests while they eat, drink and socialize.

So far, Lynette said she has worked with WineStyles, Koi and Creative Coworking.

“My business is all about partnering with other small business in the community to see how we can joint-market,” she said. “All of these organizations also benefit from me throwing the parties there. I’m bringing in clients who may not otherwise know about them. ... This is truly a partnership that I create with different businesses.”

[email protected]

Small businesses collaborate to combat closingsSeveral Evanston groups work together to monitor establishment turnover

“It’s

not like what you’d think

might happen — they’re

not pitted against each

other. They’re collaborating.

Steve Griffin,director of

community and economic

development

Evanston residents invited to hearing on Walgreens location

Evanston is encouraging residents living near Har-rison Street and Crawford Avenue to attend a Skokie Plan Commission hearing to weigh in on a proposed Walgreens.

Skokie is planning to construct a new, 14,490-square-foot Walgreens on Crawford Avenue, which is the current site of an old bar now up for sale. The fam-ily-owned Ubaa Tap has been closed for months.

In addition to plans to move into the space, the

Walgreens is applying for a liquor license and a build-ing permit for a drive-thru. Other discussion topics at the plan commission meeting will include adjacent real estate, map adjustments, vacation of nearby alleys and other zoning relief measures.

The proposed Walgreens would be located in Skokie, but Evanston residential neighborhoods lying directly across the street to the north of the project could be affected by the new store, according to a news release. Concerned residents are encour-aged to attend the Village of Skokie’s plan commis-sion meeting Dec. 6 at 5127 Oakton St. or submit comments online.

— Susan Du

Construction begins on Trader Joe’s Evanston, set to open in 2013

Construction of the Trader Joe’s at 1211 Chicago Ave. began this week, Evanston Patch reported Tuesday. The new business is set to open this summer, developer Terraco said.

The store is set to open in June or July 2013, Scott Gendell, president of Terraco, Inc., told Patch.

Demolition of the site, which now houses a Blockbuster video store, will begin early Monday, according to the article. After two weeks of fencing,

the crew will begin the actual construction.The building process will most likely begin in

December and take up to six months, depending on winter weather conditions, Gendell said in the article.

Adam Mutolo, regional vice president for Trader Joe’s, said hiring would most likely begin four weeks before the opening of the store. The official date and the number of openings have not been settled on, he said in the article.

Earlier this month, Steve Griffin, the city’s director of community and economic develop-ment, told The Daily that the Trader Joe’s opening would generate $550,000 in revenue.

— Olga Gonzalez-Latapi

Page 5: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN | NEWS 5

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Students, alumni panel discuss TFA Sigma Nu to return to campus next quarter

After leaving campus in 2004, Sigma Nu fraternity is recolonizing at Northwestern this winter.

The national fraternity finalized plans to come back to campus the week before Thanks-giving, said Sigma Nu leadership consultant Spencer Montgomery. He said he has been working on bringing the Gamma Beta chapter back to campus for a couple of years and has collaborated with Patricia Telles-Irvin, vice president for student affairs, and Dominic Greene, director of fraternity and sorority life.

Montgomery added although Sigma Nu is returning in January, the chapter will not be participating in formal recruitment and will have its own recruitment process.

“We’re going to start the day after (formal recruitment),” he said. “We’re sending three representatives from a national organization to recruit for six weeks. Then they’re going to live there for six months to do recruiting and training.”

Nationals are in conversations with student groups and with the University to find the optimal men to join Sigma Nu.

“We focus on people who wouldn’t normally join a fraternity,” he said. “It especially helps the community to have a larger market than fraternities already on campus.”

Montgomery said he wasn’t sure when exactly the conversation began between the University and chapter alumni to bring Sigma Nu back but said they finally decided “the best timetable would be to comeback this winter.”

New chapter members will be able to move back to Sigma Nu’s currently abandoned house on North Campus. Montgomery said the chap-ter will use $800,000 of a $1.5 million fund donated by alumni to renovate the house and get it running by next school year.

“I’ve been doing this for a couple of years and I’ve seen a lot of great campuses,” Mont-gomery said. “But the caliber of students that go here, that’s what I’m excited about. This is somewhere our fraternity can be very suc-cessful. We want to have a positive impact and make fraternity and sorority life better and be a complement to what’s already here.”

— Paulina Firozi

By JEANNE KUANGthe daily northwestern

During an educational discussion on Thursday evening, Northwestern students highlighted their various perspectives on Teach for America.

Teach for America, a national nonprofit dedicated to solving educational inequity, recruits recent college graduates and trains them to teach for two years in low-income and underprivileged schools.

About 30 students attended the discussion hosted by the Center for Civic Engagement in Norris University Center’s Louis Room. A panel of people involved with TFA, including two recent NU alumni, shared their experi-ences working with the organization.

Ten percent of Northwestern gradu-ates from the Class of 2012 applied to work for TFA, said Wein-berg senior Lena Peck, a Center for Civic Engagement fellow who organized the discussion. Despite the high involvement of NU students, Peck said, many people still do not have clear per-spectives of the pro-gram from current or

previous corps members.“You hear a lot of stu about (Teach for Amer-

ica), there’s a lot of info sessions,” she said. “But what is it really like?”

Panelist Rob Crawford (Weinberg ‘12) said he stumbled upon the group when, after col-lege, he said he wanted to “do something that I would never have the opportunity to do again in my life.” He and fellow corps member Dal Ackerman (Communication ‘12) have

been working for Teach for America for three and a half months. Crawford acknowledged that the organization combines “a lot of work” with “an incredible experience.”

In addition to recent college graduates, the panel also included two TFA alumnae. One pan-elist described how the program sparked her inter-est in education issues and another explained how she did not take the traditional two-year route, instead joining the organization later on.

e panelists then answered questions about the e ect of TFA on members’ future careers, as well as teachers’ experiences during the Chicago Public Schools strike in September.

Student attendees broke into groups to dis-cuss their views on TFA. While some were inter-ested in applying to become a teacher, others questioned the e ectiveness of recruiting recent college graduates with no teaching experience to help students in struggling schools.

Some students were surprised by criticism

of the organization. Weinberg junior Katie Funderburg said she was interested in hearing varying perspectives on Teach for America.

“Our conclusions were just that there are a lot of differing opinions about (Teach for America),” she said. “It’s possible to have a lot of positive views about TFA and also a lot of reservations about it.”

Peck said she was glad that the discussions brought up some of the lesser known issues surrounding TFA. Heidi Gross, program manager at the Center for Civic Engagement, said the event was intentionally planned not as an information or recruitment session, but rather as an opportunity for students consid-ering Teach for America to ask questions and voice concerns.

“We wanted to provide a venue for that conversation to happen,” she said.

[email protected]

Melody Song/The Daily Northwestern

COMING HOME Alumni panelists Rob Crawford, Dal Ackerman, Micki O’Neil and Catherine Gibbons speak about their experiences working with Teach for America programs.

Recent NU graduates speak about Teach for America experiences, challenges

“It’s possible to have a lot of positive views about TFA and also a lot of reservations about it.Katie Funderburg,Weinberg junior

Page 6: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

The Daily NorthwesternVolume 134, Issue 45

Editor in ChiefKaitlyn Jakola

Managing EditorsMarshall Cohen Michele Corriston Patrick Svitek

Forum EditorJoseph Diebold

Assistant Forum EditorsBlair Dunbar Arabella Watters

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.

The Drawing Board by Tanner Maxwell

Firing Squad

The perfect trifecta of possibilities for my column this week was almost too good to be true for a huge college football fan like me — Notre Dame was ranked first in the country for the first time since the year I was born, Maryland and Rutgers joined the Big Ten, and ineligible Ohio State earned an undefeated season. But when I saw an inspi-rational video on Thanksgiving evening, I knew it took precedence over these historical sports milestones.

Stuffed with turkey, sides and pie, I lay awake in my room at midnight, absent-mindedly browsing the web, when I stumbled across a “Today” segment. It featured St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital’s “Thanks and Giving” Program on their show, borrow-ing from St. Jude’s motto, “Give thanks for the healthy children in your life, and give to those who are not.” This particular segment featured a grinning 10-year-old boy named

Brennan Simkins. Brennan described his journey through

four bone marrow transplants starting at the age of six, when he was diagnosed with leu-kemia. “I didn’t want to die,” said Brennan, explaining why he continued with grueling treatment even after several doctors recom-mended hospice care. Brennan was shown smiling, laughing and golfing (he loves golf and is quite the avid golfer) in the video, a world away from his pictures during cancer treatment.

Like Oprah would, I had a very “ugly cry” that night with this tear-jerker. With no tissues in sight, I nearly cried myself to sleep, wiping my tears on my blankets and pillow. I’m even tearing up as I write this column now.

When I thought about writing this col-umn, I was concerned about it being a Jerry Lewis-style plea to donate to charity. I do not want to lecture my readers on how to spend their money. But I wanted to bring attention to a phrase that has caught my eye at the bottom of The New York Times over several years: “Don’t forget the neediest.”

I want a lot of things in my life, especially with the holiday season upon us. I want a Northwestern zip-up (please Mom and

Dad?), an A on my economics final, a sum-mer internship in Chicago, a great set of pic-tures at formal and Northwestern to win its first bowl game since 1949. But I only need a few things in my life. I need my health, the

love of my family, the support of my friends, water, shelter and food.

NU has truly shaped my views on my wants and needs. I participated in Dance Marathon last year, and I complained the whole way through it. I constantly texted my parents a list of “wants” — I wanted food, sleep, a shower and for someone to play the music I wanted to hear. How-ever, as the children

and families of the B+ Foundation, which works to support childhood cancer patients, attested, I had satisfied all of my needs. These families were shaken up by the health

of their children and in need of money for everything that chemotherapy required of them — extra gas, food, hospital bills, etc.

This quarter I completed a partner proj-ect for my Introduction to Global Health class on healthy food access in Evanston. We interviewed a local soup kitchen patron who explained his hopeless unemployment status and constant search for meals. At Northwest-ern I am often dissatisfied with the options that my sorority meal plan offers (too much salad), but I should really be thankful for the fact that I have hot meals to look forward to every day with absolute certainty.

Every year during the holiday season, The New York Times begins to publish the phrase “Don’t Forget the Neediest” at the bottom of select articles. This holiday season, I am going to take a cue from St. Jude’s and “give thanks” that my own needs are fully met. I will take from my experiences at Northwest-ern and remember Brennan and the B+ kids and be grateful for my own incredible life.

Meredith Goodman is a Weinberg sophomore. She can be reached at [email protected]. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, email a Letter to the Editor to [email protected].

According to a poll that went up on The Daily’s website last week, 58 percent of Northwestern students are either inter-ested in taking online courses in the fall of 2013 or might be interested depending on course offerings, which means 42 percent of those polled indicated no interest in taking advantage of such offerings (my mathemati-cal abilities are astounding, aren’t they?). While these numbers don’t exactly blow me away, I am slightly surprised — I would have expected a greater number of Wildcats to be in favor of such opportunities, which NU will begin offering through Semester Online, a consortium between ours and nine other universities.

After thinking for a bit about why stu-dents might not like to take courses in this new format, I came to a few possible expla-nations: 1. Online courses don’t provide optimal professor-student interaction; 2. Online courses might encourage laziness and procrastination (as if these don’t already exist); and 3. Learning from videos and uploaded PowerPoints is far from equivalent to traditional in-classroom teaching.

I must give credit to each of these deter-rents. While relevant and credible, however, I do feel that there’s an appropriate response to each. For instance, while I understand why some might think online courses don’t provide the same level of professor-student interaction as normal classes, I must argue in defense of Semester Online that this isn’t necessarily the case.

In fact, the type of video conferencing utilized by Semester Online requires that all participants — both instructors and students — be live on camera. The software doesn’t simply deliver pre-recorded video segments to students; it will be based on live interaction. Both students and profes-sors can speak, type messages in the media section, and present material. In this way, professors and students are actually forced to interact more than they might in a tradi-tional setting — not less.

Initially, one might also assume that online courses encourage procrastination and laziness. While this argument holds merit — students do indeed work at their own pace — it’s not quite as simple as it may seem. Online courses students might have heard about in the past or taken in high school are oftentimes entirely self-paced. Semester Online’s classes, however, will require weekly attendance in discussion sec-tions (very much like NU’s current discus-sions). These sections, which will have 15 to

20 students each, will provide an opportu-nity to get questions answered in a smaller setting and will also require students to keep up with the course material.

Touching again on the issue of students’ past experience with online classes, respon-dents may be mistaking existing formats for Semester Online’s new format. The new for-mat, while still including some pre-recorded materials, is not simply a dropbox full of PowerPoints and handouts for students to browse at their own leisure. Classes are taught in an interactive way, with opportunities for questions to be asked (both by the professor and by pupils) in real time. Semester Online will provide the ideal balance of self-paced learning and innovative interactivity.

When one looks at NU’s new partner-ship from a more knowledgeable vantage point, it’s clear to see that these courses are a great addition to our curricular offerings. Some students may decide that the learning environment provided is not right for them. I fully appreciate that, but I do believe that students should be wholly informed before making any decisions about these new offer-ings. Who knows — econometrics might be more bearable in a warm, comfy bed.

Connor Regan is a SESP freshman. He can be reached at [email protected]. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, email a Letter to the Editor to [email protected].

meredithgoodmanDAIly ColuMnIst

This holiday season, don’t forget the neediest

Give learning in pajamas a chanceconnorreganDAIly ColuMnIst

“I wanted to bring attention to a phrase that has caught my eye at the bottom of The New York Times over several years: “Don’t forget the neediest.”

oPinionS from The Daily Northwestern’s Forum Desk

Join the online conversation at www.dailynorthwestern.comForUm

Friday, november 30, 2012 PAGE 6

Fewer shuttle runs not cool with this California girl

After being banished into the 1970s furniture nightmare that was North Mid Quads in my fresh-man year, it’s a miracle that I wasn’t so emotionally compromised that a flee to North Campus was necessary. I admit, I do tend toward hyperbole; NMQ wasn’t really that bad, or at least it wasn’t bad enough that a move to the mythical land of North Campus was necessary. That being said, I know I chose to live on South Campus, but is it so much to ask to have more than two shuttles per hour arriv-ing at the Weber Arch? Last year there were three, and it was beautiful.

Yes, it was vaguely thrilling in the beginning of the quarter to walk to SPAC, Sargent and Tech wearing shorts and embracing the “warm” weather. Fast-forward two months and it’s no longer that fun of a game. It’s cold, and no longer in that novel way, but in the horrid, I-have-to-wear-my-parka-and-my-gloves-to-walk-two-feet way. A little cold never killed anybody, but planning my trips up north around 30-minute (unreliable) intervals just isn’t really feasible. Why did that third shuttle have to be eliminated? I miss the days of: 16,: 36, :56. Now all that’s left is a bleak :04 and: 34. I know walking a mile isn’t exactly crossing the Aegean, but I’m a Californian; we really weren’t bred for the cold.

— Arabella Watters

Page 7: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

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Page 8: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

GO CATS!The Daily Northwestern

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Bring this paper to the game and show your NU pride in the Wildside section!

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Page 9: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

10 NEWS | thE daily NorthWEStErN friday,NovEmbEr 30 2012

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Evanston City Council approves 3 percent increase on water rates

The City Council voted Monday to intro-duce an ordinance that would raise water rates by 3 percent.

For the average single family home, one that consumes approximately 86,000 gallons a year, the annual water bill will increase $5.39, jumping from $186.19 to $191.58, according to a city memo.

Aldermen had the option of instituting the rate hike on either Jan. 1 or delaying the hike until Jul. 1, 2013, the option ultimately selected.

Evanston will still have lower water rates than any other municipality in the Chicago area, Ald. Jane Grover (7th) said at Monday’s council meeting.

On Wednesday, the city posted a price comparison of water rates on its Facebook page. Under the proposal, the city would charge $2.41 for every 1,000 gallons of water. By comparison, the Village of Skokie, which receives its water from Evanston, charges $4.35

for the same amount, according to the post. In Chicago, the city’s water rate will increase from $2.51 to $2.89 for every 1,000 gallons of water.

Other suburbs that receive water supplied by Chicago pay even more for water. For instance, Morton Grove pays more than three times more than the city of Evanston, even after the proposed hike.

The sewer rate, which has not been raised since 2004, will not be affected by the proposal, utilities director David Stoneback said. Ald. Delores Holmes (5th) said many residents con-sider this part of their bills to be expensive.

Further, residents have expressed concern over the continuous water bill increases, city manager Wally Bobkiewicz said at the meet-ing. Despite paying some of the lowest water rates in the area, residents think water rates in Evanston are too high, Bobkiewicz said.

Regardless, residents believe the city does not do a good job handling this issue and must improve how citizens are informed on water rates.

The rate hike ordinance introduced at Mon-day’s meeting stll needs to be approved in a final vote at a later council meeting.

— Olga Gonzalez-Latapi

Water Bills in Nearby CommunitiesAssumes annual usage of 86,000 gallons and 3/4 inch or smaller water meter (minimum charges vary by meter size in some communites including Evanston).

Evanston$186.54(current)

Evanston$192.14

(proposed)

Wilmette$286.35

Skokie*$356.62

Chicago$216.20

*Water in Skokie is supplied by Evanston. All other communities listed supply their own water.

Students evaluate campus EMT service possibilitiesBy cat zakrzewskithe daily northwestern

Students from Northwestern Emergency Medical Organization continue in their attempts to organize an emergency student response service.

Although students first drafted a proposal for an emergency response service in 2010, liability concerns and logistical problems have completely transformed the organization’s initial goal of creat-ing a “full-fledged” emergency medical technician team, EMS University relations manager Mike Hernandez said.

“We need to start on a small scale,” the Wein-berg senior said. “First we really need to identify the needs of the Northwestern community.”

The organization is currently working with administrators to research what those needs are.

NEMO president Yoon Lee said students made progress in achieving their goal to bring an emergency response service to campus this fall by meeting with Patricia Telles-Irvin, vice presi-dent of student affairs, and Northwestern health services executive director Dr. John Alexander. Both Telles-Irvin and Alexander were unavailable for comment.

Lee explained that until they work out liabil-ity issues with the University, they cannot plan exactly what their service will provide.

“Liability is the utmost concern,” the McCor-mick junior said. “While this service can provide great service to the students, we want to make sure we actually provide that service.”

Hernandez said the group is currently col-laborating with the University’s Office of Risk Management and emergency response programs implemented at other schools to address these liability concerns. Currently, he explained they are

examining the most effective insurance options and how Illinois state laws differ from laws in other states where universities have EMT student responders.

He also said NEMO was working with these collaborators to determine how to best train students.

“Obviously Northwestern does not want to have students making mistakes on the scene,” he said.

Both Lee and Hernandez emphasized that NU is one of few top-ranked universities in the nation that does not have an emergency response team in place.

“This is something the University needs to do in order to bring itself to the front line with regards to that,” Hernandez said.

Lee said although the group does not yet know the logistics of their EMT plans, a survey that 300 students responded showed that people want peer support and paramedics who do not know their

way around NU’s campus often take a long time to arrive on the scene.

“We could provide a link between when the students call and when the paramedics arrive,” she said. “A lot of people who we surveyed want someone their age to be with them even when the paramedics come.”

NEMO has reached out to Georgetown Uni-versity’s successful student-run EMT program, known as GERMS. Katie McClellan, a George-town student who works with GERMS, said her group has been sharing information with NEMO and answering their questions. GERMS, a campus staple for 30 years, operates under the university’s program.

“Just in general I think it’s a very valuable resource can be a very valuable organization on any college campus,” McClellan said.

[email protected]

infographic by Nova hou/the daily Northwestern

Page 10: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

friday, november 30, 2012 the daily northwestern | news 11

norris.northwestern.edu/er

Higher expectations placed on testing students

By manuel rapadathe daily northwestern

In preparation for Illinois’ transition to assess-ments covering more rigorous Common Core State Standards, state officials are increasing stu-dent performance expectations on the Illinois Standards Achievement Test.

Measures are in place at Evanston-Skokie Dis-trict 65 to ensure students succeed under these higher standards, superintendent Hardy Mur-phy wrote in a letter to parents last week. Efforts to improve classroom instruction and perfor-mance evaluations are some of the D65 efforts highlighted this school year to prepare students for Common Core standards and multi-state assessments geared toward college and career readiness.

The Illinois State Board of Education currently administers the ISAT in reading and mathematics to third through eighth graders in the spring.

Come the 2014-2015 school year, Illinois will replace its math and English language arts ISATs with tests developed by the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers, a consortium of 23 states and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

As part of the state’s transition to PARCC assessments, about 20 percent of the questions on the March 2013 reading and math ISATs will assess Common Core State Standards, according to the ISBE website.

ISBE spokeswoman Mary Fergus said the standards, which have been fully adopted by 45 states and the District of Columbia, were an effort to “stop rethinking the wheel” and having states come together to develop more rigorous standards.

“There are a lot of things in common that whether you are a student in Chicago or Montana that you need to know,” Fergus said.

At an October District 65 board meet-ing, officials from several schools discussed

their instructional leadership teams, a marked change in how the district approaches school improvement.

Through strategic distributed instructional leadership, teachers and administrators share responsibility for developing strategies to improve instruction. In his letter, Murphy said these teams ensure instructional practices are “a dynamic part” of curriculum design and delivery.

State officials are also raising ISAT perfor-mance levels, which Fergus said were not aligned to college and career readiness, unlike the Prairie

State Achievement Exam administered to elev-enth graders. The PSAE includes the ACT.

Currently, there’s a “disconnect” between the ISAT and PSAE proficiency levels, Fergus said. On this year’s ISAT exams, 82 percent of students met or exceeded state standard, while only 51 percent met or exceeded standards on the PSAE.

“We must raise our expectations at the elemen-tary level so that students are on track to leave high school prepared to succeed in the work force, career and daily life,” State Superintendent Christopher Koch said in early November.

Raising performance levels, however, will lead to a “significant drop” in students meeting or exceeding those higher expectations, Koch said. Fergus said in January or February 2013, the ISBE will provide documentation on how schools would have performed on the 2012 ISAT under the new performance levels.

How this would affect student growth mea-sures under District 65’s recently revised perfor-mance appraisal system remains unclear.

The revised system, which was unveiled to much pushback from teachers and Jean Luft, president of union District 65 Educators’ Coun-cil, makes significant changes to student growth, which represents 50 percent of a teacher’s rating.

Students are placed into one of four quartiles, from college and career readiness to the lowest quartile. For teachers to receive an “excellent” student growth rating, the percentage of stu-dents meeting growth targets in most categories must exceeds district figures from the previous year. None of the categories may reflect a drop in performance.

Student growth, however, is measured through several assessments, including those written by the district and even measures selected by teach-ers at the beginning of the year.

Luft, at a November board meeting, said 98 per-cent of teachers surveyed do not trust the system to determine an accurate performance rating.

On Dec. 3, District 65 board members will discuss voting on the revised performance appraisal system.

In addition to instructional leadership teams and the revised performance appraisal system, District 65 is also increasing its emphasis on writing, Murphy said in the letter.

Once March 2013 rolls around, Evanston third graders may answer a question on a character’s motivations, not knowing that describing char-acter actions is a Common Core standard.

The potential for dropping student perfor-mance aside, Fergus said students stand to ben-efit from the Common Core transition.

“We’re working to prepare students for success in their own communities but also the nation and the world,” she said.

[email protected]

PSA E I SAT

District 6589 percent

Statewide82 percent

District 20266 percent

Statewide51 percent

Percentage of students meetingor exceeding testing standards

infographic by tanner maxwell/daily senior staffer

DRASTIC DISPARITY raising performance levels on the illinois standard achievement test is necessary in order to address the “disconnect” between isat scores and those of the Prairie state achievement examination, which 11th-grade students take, said mary fergus, illinois state board of education spokeswoman.

D65 rampus up efforts to mitigate negative effects of Common Core transition

Page 11: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

12 NEWS | thE daily NorthWEStErN Friday, NovEmbEr 20, 2012

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The Daily NorthwesternFall 2012 | An independent voice since 1923 | Evanston, Ill.

Editor iN ChiEF | Kaitlyn Jakola PriNt maNagiNg EditorS | marshall Cohen,

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Zakrzewski ___________________

City Editor | Susan duaSSiStaNt Editor | manuel rapada

___________________

ForUm Editor | Joseph dieboldaSSiStaNt EditorS | blair dunbar,

arabella Watters __________________

dESigN EditorS | tanner maxwell, Christine Nguyen

dEPUty Editor | Claire CinquegraniaSSiStaNt Editor | Chelsea Sherlock

vidEo Editor | alejandro Pallares ___________________

iNtEraCtivE mUltimEdia Editor | tanner maxwell

___________________

thE CUrrENt Editor | megan PatsavasaSSiStaNt EditorS | Chelsea Peng

thE CUrrENt dESigN Editor | Kelsey ottthE CUrrENt aSSiStaNt dESigN Editor |

Chelsea Sherlock ___________________

Photo Editor | mariam gomaaaSSiStaNt EditorS | Kaitlin Svabek,

rafi letzter___________________

CoPy ChiEFS | devan Coggan, lydia ramseySlot EditorS | Sarah blau, alyssa brewer, andrea Swejk

CoPy EditorS | Sophia bollag, Fritz burgher, monica Cheng, Callie Counsellor,

bethany delong, lily goldstein, Jenna Katz, Jeanne Kuang, rachel leshin, anne li,

Nina marshall, tanisha Patni, megan Pauly, michael Payant, Zoe Pearl, Katie ross, Preetisha

Sen, grace Schwartzenberger, Khari Shelton, Flora Sun, Katy vogt, Elizabeth yanan

dEvEloPmENt EditorS | tom meyer, Kimberly railey

___________________

SPortS Editor | dan ryanaSSiStaNt EditorS | Nick medline,

rohan NadkarnigamEday Editor | Josh Walfish

aSSiStaNt gamEday Editor | Colin bechtgamEday dESigN EditorS | Christine Nguyen,

Kaitlin Svabek ___________________

gENEral maNagEr | Stacia CampbellShoP maNagEr | Chris Widman

___________________

advErtiSiNg rEPrESENtativESKelly hwu, alice liu, Jennifer yu

___________________

bUSiNESS oFFiCE StaFF hazim abdullah, hailey arterburn, Juli del Prete,

megan hernbroth, megan mcCormack, taylor mitchell, Samantha Stankowicz

___________________

advErtiSiNg ProdUCtioN StaFF ryan daggs, annabel Edwards,

Katie george, Jason vanderlinden

Page 12: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

friday, november 30, 2012 the daily northwestern | news 13

Levi MeleClass of 2013

Ahsin AzimClass of 2013

Sophie FriedmanClass of 2013

Soad ManaClass of 2014

Isabella PasbakhshClass of 2014

Campus Life Award RecipientsThis award recognizes students who have significantly contributed to the improvement o f t h e q u a l i t y o f s t u d e n t l i f e d u r i n g t h e p a s t q u a r t e r a t N o r t h w e s t e r n . We seek to recognize students, on an on-going basis, who have impacted our community through program development and implementation, bridging cultural dif ferences, o r w h o m h a v e t a k e n r e s p o n s i b i l i t y f o r a n d w o r k e d c o l l e c t i v e l y w i t h o t h e r s t o c r e a t e a m o r e e n g a g e d a n d i n c l u s i v e c a m p u s c o m m u n i t y .

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Division of Student Affairs - Student Engagement

Student cleantech startup wins big in global contest

By flora sunthe daily northwestern

The student startup SiNode LLC won a national award earlier this month at the Cleantech Open 2012 Global Forum, the world’s largest cleantech accelerator.

SiNode has commercialized a silicon-based anode for lithium-ion batteries, which causes a significant increase in energy density and a reduced charging time.

The first team from Northwestern to attend the competition, SiNode won the top prize Nov. 9 in the energy efficiency category and secured a place to compete for the national $250,000 grand prize.

“SiNode anodes represent the future of lithi-um-ion batteries, capable of significant increase in energy capacity, faster charging and environ-mentally friendly manufacturing,” SiNode team member Thomas Yu said.

The McCormick graduate student added that wet chemistry and simple equipment are enough to replicate SiNode, making it easy to commer-cialize the technology on a large scale.

SiNode was formed Winter Quarter during the NUvention Energy course, in which students from several graduate schools across campus come together in interdisciplinary teams to develop a product or service and business plan for the sustainable cleantech industry.

SiNode is comprised of two sub-teams: a business development team of several Kellogg students and a research and engineering team of McCormick graduate students.

The team’s goal is to improve energy storage, one of the biggest challenges in today’s tech-nological world. SiNode is designed to narrow the gap between portable energy capacity and power needs.

The team selected the consumer elec-tronics market as the best fit for applying its technology.

“The performance, along with the cost of bat-teries, has become the single most limiting factor for electronic vehicles and consumer electron-ics,” Yu said.

SiNode has participated in multiple national business competitions to raise capital for its projects. The win in this year’s Cleantech Open Global Forum garnered $20,000 in cash and services. The team has also won government grants and is seeking funding from other insti-

tutions, team member Guy Peterson said.

Peterson, a Kellogg student, said extra funding would allow the team to buy equip-ment for larger batch processing. Because battery validation is a slow process requir-ing weeks or months of cycling tests, this money would enable the team to run more tests simultaneously to maximize efficiency and shorten the time to market.

“There is consid-erable overlap in our responsibilities, but we each do the ‘heavy lifting’ in the areas that are most pertinent to our backgrounds,” said team member Joshua Lau, a McCormick graduate student.

Aside from winning this year’s Cleantech forum, SiNode was also a finalist in several other competitions, including the First Look West Clean Energy Business Competition hosted by the California Institute of Technology.

“The exposure from competitions is always nice because we meet contacts interested in investing or collaborative development,” Lau said.

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Soulful sound

anneliese sloves/the daily northwestern

making music hip-hop and nasheed artist Khalil ismail performs at a muslim Cultural student association concert at Cahn auditorium on thursday. ismail is known for his blend of storytelling and soulful music. northwestern a cappella group treblemakers opened.

SiNode earns national award for energy efficiency, will compete for grand prize

“The performance, along with the cost of batteries, has become the single most limiting factor for electric vehicles ...Thomas Yu,SiNode member

Page 13: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

14 NEWS | THE DAILY NORTHWESTERN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

HUMAN-CENTERED TECHNOLOGYHumanities degrees designed for careers in the digital age

www.iit.edu/csl/hum

FALL QUARTER IN

REVIEW

University disassociates from Rabbi KleinNU’s Jewish community was stunned when Rabbi Dov Hillel Klein, rabbi of the Tannenbaum Chabad House, announced

one day before the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur that the University had decided to disa� liate from Klein and the Chabad House. Led by Patricia Telles-Irvin, vice president for student a� airs, the University cited alcohol use by minors at Chabad as the reason for disa� liation. Despite signi� cant outrage from the Chabad community, NU hasn’t backed down from its decision, with University President Morton Schapiro telling � e Daily this month simply, “It was the right decision.” Rabbi Klein’s status remains up in the air thanks to pending legal action � led against NU by national and local chapters of Chabad, as well as a petition distributed to the administration by students and alumni.

Tragedy strikes Northwestern, EvanstonTragic deaths both on and off campus bookended Fall Quarter. Evanston Township High School student Dajae Coleman was shot and killed Sept. 22, the same day McCor-mick sophomore Harsha Maddula disappeared after leaving an off-campus party. Maddula’s body was found nearly a

week later in Wilmette Harbor. Then, late last week, the University confirmed the suicide of Weinberg junior Alyssa Weaver, who was studying abroad in London. The deaths have raised debates about the state of mental health awareness at NU and gun control laws in Evanston.

Prentice demolition riles up preservationistsNU’s plan to demolish the old Prentice Women’s Hospital to build a new medical research facility on the University-

owned site hit a snag when preservationist groups, led by the Save Prentice Coalition, attempted to intervene to save the Bertrand Goldberg building. The University appeared to have won a decisive victory when the Commission on Chicago Landmarks voted 8-1 not to grant the building landmark status, but on Nov. 15 a Cook County judge issued a stay of the commission’s decision, leaving the fate of Prentice uncertain until the next hearing on Dec. 7.

Football team sees improvement, but dreams persist of what could have beenAfter last year’s disappointing 6-7 finish capped off a

four-year run of decreasing win counts for Wildcats football, expectations were low for the 2012 season. A thrilling season-opening win at Syracuse sparked an impressive 9-3 campaign. But though the three-win improvement (which could grow to four if NU is able to snap its infamous bowl losing streak on Jan. 1) is encouraging, NU led going into the fourth quarter of each of its losses, leaving the potential of a Big Ten title tantalizingly out of reach. As CBS Sports blogger Chris Huston tweeted earlier this week, “Northwestern is soooo close to being the worst undefeated team in the country.”

NU fi nally getting new athletic facilitiesAs the only private school and top academic institution in the Big Ten, NU is at a signi� cant disadvantage when it comes to athletic recruiting. � ese concerns have grown in recent years as other schools’ athletic budgets have grown thanks to exploding television revenue around the country. But NU demonstrated its commitment to closing that gap with the announcement of a new $220 million lakeside athletic complex on Sept. 15. NU will never be Ohio State, Michigan or Penn State, but the new facilities will help attract better recruits and make the school’s sports teams more competitive, helping solidify NU’s position as a rising team on the football � eld and on the basketball court.

REVIEW

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1. Rafi Letzter/Daily Senior Staffer2. Rafi Letzter/Daily Senior Staffer

3. Courtesy of Tannenbaum Chabad House4. Creative Commons

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Page 14: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

friday, november 30, 2012 the daily northwestern | news 15

MASTER OF ARTS IN

Public Policy and AdministrationPrepare for leadership roles in government and nonprofit organizations.

Develop expertise in policy development, analysis and implementation.

Earn your Northwestern University master’s degree by attending evening courses in Chicago and Evanston — or study completely online.

Apply today — the spring quarter application deadline is January 15.

Study on campus or online

complete. Officials’ estimates have ranged from six to 12 weeks after the date of death. Mad-dula family spokeswoman Padma Sonti said Maddula’s parents have been told to expect toxicology results by the end of December.

EPD requested a “very thorough” toxicol-ogy analysis that checks for more indicators than a normal test, Parrott said. Such elaborate examinations are normal when a young person is involved and there are no signs of foul play, a premise which authorities have maintained over the past two months.

Maddula’s peers have told The Daily that the McCormick sophomore did not appear

intoxicated the night he went missing. Weinberg sopho-more Linzy Wagner, president of Maddu-la’s dorm and a close friend, described him as “coherent” in the hours before he disappeared.

“I felt like he was handling himself fine,” Wagner said Tuesday. “He seemed in control.”

For the Maddula family, the toxicology results could bring some closure to a two-month saga that

worsened in early November when Superstorm Sandy battered the East Coast. Sonti said the Maddulas lost power for about a week at their home in New Hyde Park, N.Y.

“It’s a very rough thing,” Sonti said. “Since it hap-pened, nothing’s been going right. First it was their son. Then it was Sandy tearing their area apart.”

She added that although the Maddulas want answers about their son’s death, they still have to focus on raising their other children.

University spokesman Al Cubbage said NU officials have kept in touch with Maddula’s par-ents “as appropriate.”

“They have questions and all that,” Sonti said, “but they’re just trying to make it through the day together, too.”

[email protected]

outside their freshman year.“We didn’t know if we were walking on roads or

sidewalks,” she said. “That was life with Alyssa. You never knew where you were going to end up, but you knew it was going to be an adventure along the way.”

Rodriguez then asked the audience to light can-dles in remembrance of Weaver. The crowd was then led in a Jewish prayer and sang a Chi O song called “Shades.”

Following the candle lighting, the podium was opened to anyone who wanted to speak about Weaver. At one candlelit chapter dinner, Weaver entertained the entire sorority when she accidentally set a bread basket on fire, Weinberg senior Holly Nwangwa remembered.

“Every memory any of us have here starts and ends with that lovely laugh of hers,” she said. “Whenever throughout this trying week me or my sisters have smiled, I know that was her throughout all of us.”

Professors Laurie Zoloth and Cristina Traina encouraged the attendees to strive to emulate Weaver as a source of support for one another.

“We’re all so much more aware now that someone with an infectious laugh now who’s given us the most enjoyable funny moments of our memories can also have deep dark places that she is afraid to share with us,” Traina said.

Her message echoed University President Morton Schapiro’s remarks at the beginning of the vigil about how the University could learn from Weaver’s death. Schapiro quoted a clergyman friend of his who said, “the best way to honor memory is to learn and to live fully.”

“I was lying in bed last night thinking about what does that mean in the context of such a tragic, hor-rific loss of a beautiful young women,” he said. “And I think the learning is to learn as an institution how we can be a safer, more inclusive, more welcoming community.”

A formal service will be held in Weaver’s memory early next year. Following the remarks, everyone was invited to write a memory on The Rock, make a dona-tion in Weaver’s memory to a charity, which will be determined in the future, or add a note to a book for Weaver’s family, who were not at Thursday’s vigil.

“As I look around at everyone gathered here tonight, I realize she didn’t really do a good job of making friends,” Rodriguez said. “Everywhere she went, every group she became a part of, she seemed to make a family. I see a lot of families out here today.”

[email protected]

“It’s a very rough thing. Since it happened, nothing’s been going right. First it was their son. Then it was Sandy tearing their area apart.Padma Sonti,Maddula family spokeswoman

rafi letzter/daily senior staffer

loving memories (below) sesP junior erica rodriguez speaks at a vigil for alyssa weaver at the rock on thursday. rodriguez was one of several speakers who shared stories of weaver’s “laugh, her awkward giggle,” and antics that brought laughs from the crowd. (above)

Memorialfrom page 1

Maddulafrom page 1

Page 15: The Daily Northwestern - Nov. 30, 2012

SPORTSFriday, November 30, 2012 @Wildcat_Extra

ON DECK ON THE RECORDWomen’s BasketballNU at DePaul 4 p.m. Sunday

The guards have to stick their nose in there and see if they can pull out some long rebounds or rebounds that hit the floor. — Dave Sobolewski, sophomore guard

By ariel yongthe daily northwestern

The Wildcats’ loss Tuesday was noth-ing more than a bad second half.

Maryland (5-1) handed NU (6-1) its first loss of the season in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge game Tuesday night at Welsh-Ryan Arena, snapping the Cats’ 21 November game win streak.

Despite some speculation, sopho-more guard Dave Sobolewski said the Cats’ battle against the Terrapins was not a statement game but rather just a tough loss against an ACC team.

“It’s not the end of the season,” Sobo-lewski said. “It was nothing more than a loss in November.”

The Cats trailed the Terrapins by only 2 points after a relatively even first half. But the last 20 minutes told a different story when, as Sobolewski put it, “it all went downhill.” NU struggled to put the ball in the net and was outscored 49-31 in the second half.

“I think it was maybe just a lack of concentration (and) lack of focus on our part,” senior guard Reggie Hearn said. “Like Dave said, in the first half, I think we executed very well defensively, but for some reason in the second half, we didn’t come out focused and take care of business like we did the first half.”

NU finished the game shooting a mere 18-of-53 from the field and 6-of-25 from the 3-point line, and the Terrapins crashed the boards on almost every missed shot. Maryland finished with an impressive 47 total rebounds, which was more than double that of the Cats.

Coach Bill Carmody attributed the Terrapins’ ability to snag so many rebounds to the Cats’ over-eagerness to pull the trigger on their shots, something the team is working to improve.

“We were shooting the ball too quickly,” Carmody said. “When you have a pretty decent shooting team and you’re open, you feel pretty good about that, but they just weren’t going down.”

The Cats have their work cut out for them as they face University of Illinois-Chicago (5-1) on Saturday. The Flames are on a four-game win streak, and four

UIC players scored in the double digits and the team is off to its best start in nine years.

With final exams fast approaching the Cats have had a full schedule lately but are still working hard to bounce back from Tuesday night.

“You know, the way our schedule’s been, it’s been pretty hard to practice to tell you the truth,” Carmody said. “It seems like we’ve had a game, and then a day off, and we might have one practice but

(it’s) in prep-aration for a team. On Friday, (we’ll) spend a lot of time on UIC because they look pretty good this year.”

The Cats know that they have to improve on the boards

for Saturday and that it will have to be a collective effort. Although the Flames are not the rebounding machine that is Mary-land, they still managed 34 rebounds in their win Tuesday night.

“It (rebounding) doesn’t even all fall on our bigs,” Sobolewski said. “It falls on guards just as much. The guards have to stick their nose in there and see if they can pull out some long rebounds or rebounds that hit the floor. It was just a horrible effort on the boards by the whole squad.”

However, NU has been using Tues-day’s loss as a learning tool to ensure Sat-urday will not be more of the same.

“We got a lot of work to do for sure,” Sobolewski said. “We’re not going to stop working, and if anything, this will make us hungrier to improve every day in practice.”

[email protected]

By rohan nadkarnidaily senior staffer

Although most students tasted their first bit of home last week dur-ing Thanksgiving break, No. 13 North-western has yet to enjoy the friendly confines of its home arena.

All of that changes this Saturday when the Wildcats (1-0) make their home debut at Welsh-Ryan Arena against Stevens Tech and Duke.

For its first home event, NU will wrestle two opponents back-to-back, with the Ducks (0-1) and Blue Devils (0-0) also wrestling each other for the night’s third bout.

The Cats’ last event should serve them well for Saturday’s test. NU last faced action in the Keystone Classic, a tournament the Cats won by more than 50 points and and in which they saw wrestlers compete numerous times over the course of one day.

“It tests your conditioning level,” coach Drew Pariano said. “It’s a chal-lenge. Both of those teams, you have to be ready. They have good guys up and down their lineup.”

In its only dual of the season against Stanford, NU won every match except one. But with weeks of practice in between as well as an early season tournament, health can become nearly as much of a factor as the opponent later in a grinding season.

“The important thing is to not to let

the season wear on you,” Pariano said. “I think we’re doing a good job of that. We run good, focused practices. We’re where we need to be, but we want to keep increasing our technique and fitness.”

Stevens Tech will come to Evan-ston with two tournaments and a dual under its belt. The Ducks lost their only dual but performed decently in their two tournaments, placing eighth at the Roger Williams Invitational and sixth at the Doug Parker Invitational.

Duke already saw some of NU ear-lier this season, as the Blue Devils also

participated in the Keystone Classic, finishing seventh in the 15-team tour-nament with four wrestlers placing.

The Cats will have three wrestlers who can extend their undefeated mark on the season so far on Saturday, with redshirt senior Jason Welch and sophomore Pierce Harger at 6-0, and sophomore Lee Munster at 5-0.

Welch’s regular season dominance traces back to last season, when he failed to drop a single bout during dual play. An added challenge for the All-American this weekend will be to

focus on the task at hand instead of looking ahead on the schedule to Cats’ next dual against Minnesota — the start of Big Ten play.

“I’m excited that Big Ten season is starting soon,” Welch said. “You wrestle so often it’s all about compet-ing. It’s tough to keep focusing just on what’s ahead of you.”

Munster, on the other hand, has a much narrower focus.

“You always look to the end of the week to what duals you have,” Mun-ster said. “It’s not hard. You wait until the week of to start thinking of what dual we actually have.”

For Pariano, whose team will be favored heavily in both its duals Sat-urday night, the goal will be for each wrestler to improve individually in each of their matches, including finish-ing better and scoring better wins.

But even with room for improve-ment, Welch, the elder statesman, has liked what he’s seen from the young NU team so far in the season.

“I’ve been really satisfied,” Welch said. “To me, it would be great to win a national title for myself, but to see the team succeed, that means more to me.”

[email protected]

The end of autumn is always a good time to reflect and curse yourself for choosing a cold-weather school, espe-cially when you’ve lived in sunny South Florida since you were 4 years old.

This quarter has definitely been emotional for us at the sports desk. You’ve seen our columns and articles on heartbreaking losses, the importance of improving (or is it wavering?) fan sup-port and bowl game invitations.

And although I take what I do very seriously, I would be a fool not to rec-ognize the truly meaningful things that happened around campus during Fall Quarter.

Lauren Caruba wrote an extremely important piece about sexual assault and mental health earlier this week, high-lighting the imperfections of a school that considers itself to be one of the top universities in the world.

True heartbreak is what the entire campus felt after learning that we lost two members of our community in tragic circumstances. I can’t even fathom what those students’ friends and families have gone through. NU may not be as much of “One Northwestern” as the campaign suggests, but at least we can take solace in the fact that maybe the tragedies of this past quarter have brought us all closer together.

Hopefully this makes sense in a moment, but I want to jump to my fam-ily for a bit.

Every Christmas for a long time now, with the Miami Heat fixtures to play, my brother, my parents and myself often find ourselves around the TV for a good portion of the day watching the Heat game. I’ll sleep in, wake up and then watch basketball for hours, anticipating a big meal for dinner.

My dad watches a tiny bit more so than my mom, who’s usually doing important things like making sure the rest of us have food to eat. And though my dad’s favorite sport will always be cricket, he’s not afraid to drop some basketball analysis while watching with my brother and me.

In fact, last week my dad coolly prophesized a Ray Allen game-winning three, then tried to play it off like it was obvious when I freaked out about his prediction.

These memories are selfishly some of my favorite ones because they bring my family together over something I truly love — sports.

But now more than ever, I understand that what we write about is more of an escape than anything else. I’ve inter-viewed a dejected Pat Fitzgerald after an excruciating loss in the bowels of Michi-gan Stadium, but I’ve never spoken to the crying friend or the grieving mother.

These next few weeks, the NU men’s basketball team might suffer another double-digit loss or make you wonder if they will ever have the size to compete. Fitzgerald’s football squad may fail to win a bowl game, extending the school’s ignominious 73-year drought without a postseason victory.

But whether you’re huddled around the television with your family, cursing at the screen every time Trevor Siemian enters the game instead of Kain Colter or doing normal things like eating dinner and catching up, there’s certainly no need to be heartbroken over what happens on the field or on the court.

Happy holidays, everyone.

[email protected]

ROhan naDkaRniDaily SPorTS

NU to finally enjoy home cookingnorthwestern vs. Stevens Technorthwestern vs. DukeEvanston5 p.m. Saturday

DEC.

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Focus on what’s important

Cats concentrate on rebounding

Wrestling

Daily file photo by Ben Breuner

PRacTicE makES PERfEcT Sophomore lee Munster takes the mat in a dual against Michigan last season. This year, Munster is 5-0 after one dual and one tournament, with Northwestern winning both events.

Men’s Basketball

John yang/The Daily Northwestern

BOuncE Back Dave Sobolewski and the Wildcats were beat by Maryland on the boards Tuesday, leading to a lopsided loss. The sophomore guard said the team is focused on improving against UiC.

Column

northwestern vs. uicEvanston1 p.m. Saturday

“I think it may just be a lack of concentration (and) lack of focus on our part.Reggie Hearn,senior guard