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The Daily Northwestern DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynu Wednesday, May 14, 2014 High 54 Low 45 OPINION Cui Experiencing total, abject failure » PAGE 4 Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Classifieds & Puzzles 6 | Sports 8 NU Students, get your Today thru Friday at THE ROCK 10 am – 3 pm look for the van 2014 SYLLABUS YEARBOOK Forgot to order? Still time: download an order form at NUsyllabus.com or call 847-491-7206 to pay with credit card By TYLER PAGER the daily northwestern @tylerpager 2 Chainz has been confirmed as the nighttime headliner for Dillo Day this year, Mayfest announced Tuesday evening. Mayfest and Northwestern Ski Trip teased the name Tauheed Epps, 2 Chainz’ legal name, on the Dillo Day website Monday night. 2 Chainz, a rapper who hails from College Park, Georgia, released his debut solo album, “Based on a T.R.U. Story,” in 2012. He has collaborated with many well-known artists includ- ing Kanye West, Nicki Minaj and Jason Derulo. Michael Bass, Mayfest’s director of concerts, said 2 Chainz’s perfor- mance at Lollapalooza, a musical festival in Chicago, solidified his committee’s desire to bring the art- ist to Dillo Day. “e energy was just so incred- ible,” the Communication junior said. “is is something we want for our nighttime headliner. We want the energy to increase throughout the day.” Although Chance the Rapper has already been announced as the fes- tival’s daytime headliner, Bass said his committee was not focused on specifically having two rappers serve as the main acts for the event. “We were trying to capitalize on trends,” he said. “Just through our understanding of campus taste – via polls, going to parties, talking to peo- ple – it seemed like both these acts just have massive popularity.” Bass added that even though both confirmed artists are rappers, their styles are different. “We do think that they have very different styles that complement each other very nicely, so it’s not redundant,” he said. Mayfest spokeswoman Bri High- tower said the results from the group’s campus-wide survey played Source: Facebook ALL I WANT FOR MY DILLO Rapper 2 Chainz was confirmed as the headliner for Dillo Day Tuesday. 2 Chainz is well-known for his songs “I’m Different” and “Birthday Song” and his collaborations with Kanye West, Drake and Nicki Minaj. D65 asks to change concealed carry law By BAILEY WILLIAMS the daily northwestern @news_BaileyW Evanston/Skokie School District 65 board members and parents are peti- tioning the Illinois General Assembly to ask that having a concealed gun be illegal anywhere on school grounds. “We believe that all school prop- erty, including school grounds and parking lots, should be exempt from the Concealed Carry Law regardless of where and how those guns are stored,” the District 65 School Board said in a draft of a letter to the state legislature approved May 5. Illinois passed the Firearm Con- cealed Carry Act in July 2013, making it the last state in the U.S to legal- ize concealed carry. The act, which allows residents to bring concealed weapons into public places, came after a lawsuit that prompted the state to address the legislation. A provi- sion in the law sparked discussion within District 65. Board members discussed concerns they had with the law in reference to their visitors policy at an April 1 school board policy meeting. Under the concealed carry act, firearms that are locked in vehicles are allowed in school parking lots even though firearms are not allowed on school grounds. Upon reviewing the district’s visitors policy, District » See DILLO, page 6 » See CONCEALED, page 6 Panel talks NU workers’ rights Mayfest plans for Dillo Day 2014 2 Chainz confirmed as nighttime headliner App, rotating stage among new features By PAIGE LESKIN the daily northwestern @paigeleskin Mayfest representatives announced the launch of a smart- phone application for Dillo Day at a dialogue on Tuesday night with rep- resentatives from the Northwestern and Evanston communities. The application will provide users with a detailed timeline of the events of Dillo Day, as well as the music lineup and a shuttle schedule, Mayfest co-chair Patrick Leonard said. “That is going to be for us a really useful tool to make sure that we’re communicating with everyone in the community that day of,” said Leon- ard, a McCormick senior. “We’re just making sure that it’s a centralized source of information for anybody that is either an Evanston resident or a guest of somebody.” The announcement came at a Community Conversations event, hosted in Fall and Spring Quarters with the goal of connecting off- campus students and their neigh- bors through a discussion about city issues. Attendees included Evan- ston and NU policemen, aldermen, representatives of Associated Stu- dent Government and Mayfest and University staff, who talked about plans for Dillo Day and the end of the academic year. Leonard said he hoped the smart- phone app and other changes will allow the music festival to run more safely and smoothly. Mayfest staff will also be able to send out notifi- cations through the app to provide people with updates in the event of inclement weather, he said. “This year, we’re really focused on making sure we’re giving people as much information as we think they need, and that’s something that hasn’t necessarily been done in the past,” Leonard said. “I think that it’ll help spark a shift in sort of the way people interact and behave,” he said. Among the modifications for Dillo Day are the revised wristband policies, which restrict attendees to those from the NU community, their personal guests and Evanston residents over the age of 19, unless accompanied by a chaperone. Dean of Students Todd Adams discussed an initiative to have Dillo Day events run more continuously, with the goal of keeping students on the Lakefill as much as possible and not wandering through the city. “We’re moving the activities closer into where the people are, the core of the venue … in an effort to really concentrate the programming Nathan Richards/Daily Senior Staffer TALK DILLO TO ME Tori Zuzelo, university relations chair for Mayfest, explained several updates about Dillo Day during a community meeting. By OLIVIA EXSTRUM the daily northwestern @olivesocean Northwestern workers and students spoke Tuesday night about the increas- ingly corporate culture of universities like NU and announced a petition support- ing the rights of campus workers. e talk, “$$$: Workers’ Rights & Neoliberalism at the University,” was held in University Halland sponsored by Peace Project, NU’s oldest social justice and anti-war organization, as a part of Social Justice Week at NU: Oppression at the Academy. Two Northwestern employees, Rafael Marquez and Tom Breitsprecher, kicked off the discussion by sharing their per- sonal experiences as campus workers. On April 16, Marquez, a food service worker in 1835 Hinman dining hall, said he attended an aſternoon meeting with other workers and members of Sodexo management. Aſter an employee was called out at the meeting for working too slowly, Marquez defended her, and members of Sodexo management subse- quently threatened to call campus police, Marquez said. He said he was accused of being “overexcited” and “under the influ- ence” at the workplace and was then put on temporary suspension. In an effort to maintain his job, he was required to turn in statements to the Sodexo Human Resources Office. “As my duty as a steward, I will not back down or shut up when it comes to defending one of my coworkers when something unjust is put upon them,” Marquez said. “If I don’t stick up for my coworker, it’s like we don’t have a right to freedom of speech.” Marquez said a week before his accu- sations, a fellow employee had been laid off but was not replaced. Instead, the former employee’s responsibilities were allocated to other workers, he said. Students in support of Marquez organized a march from the Arch to the Sodexo Human Resources Office where he turned in his statements. During the suspension, he said he was also called into the office and “interrogated.” Marquez said support and solidarity from students is key in changing the way Sodexo and the University engage with workers’ issues. Breitsprecher, a cook at the Willard Residential College dining hall, said even though there is a union, there are oſten incidents in which workers are unfairly treated and not represented equally by campus management and the University. “Although this was a single incident, » See CONVERSATIONS, page 6 » See WORKERS’ RIGHTS, page 6 SPORTS BASEBALL Paul Stevens still has ‘fiery’ approach after 27 years of coaching » PAGE 8
Transcript
Page 1: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

The Daily NorthwesterndailyNorthWEStErN.Com Find us online @thedailynuWednesday, may 14, 2014

High 54Low 45

OPINION CuiExperiencing total,

abject failure » PAGE 4

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

NU Students, get your

Today thru Friday at THE ROCK 10 am – 3 pmlook for the van

2014 SYLLABUS YEARBOOK Forgot to order? Still time: download an order form at NUsyllabus.com or call 847-491-7206 to pay with credit card

By tYLer PaGerthe daily northwestern@tylerpager

2 Chainz has been confi rmed as the nighttime headliner for Dillo Day this year, Mayfest announced Tuesday evening.

Mayfest and Northwestern Ski Trip teased the name Tauheed Epps, 2 Chainz’ legal name, on the Dillo Day website Monday night.

2 Chainz, a rapper who hails from College Park, Georgia, released his debut solo album, “Based on a T.R.U. Story,” in 2012. He has collaborated with many well-known artists includ-ing Kanye West, Nicki Minaj and Jason Derulo.

Michael Bass, Mayfest’s director of concerts, said 2 Chainz’s perfor-mance at Lollapalooza, a musical festival in Chicago, solidifi ed his committee’s desire to bring the art-ist to Dillo Day.

“Th e energy was just so incred-ible,” the Communication junior said. “Th is is something we want for our nighttime headliner. We want the energy to increase throughout the day.”

Although Chance the Rapper has already been announced as the fes-tival’s daytime headliner, Bass said his committee was not focused on specifi cally having two rappers serve as the main acts for the event.

“We were trying to capitalize on

trends,” he said. “Just through our understanding of campus taste – via polls, going to parties, talking to peo-ple – it seemed like both these acts just have massive popularity.”

Bass added that even though both confi rmed artists are rappers, their styles are diff erent.

“We do think that they have very diff erent styles that complement each other very nicely, so it’s not redundant,” he said.

Mayfest spokeswoman Bri High-tower said the results from the group’s campus-wide survey played

Source: Facebook

ALL I WANT FOR MY DILLOrapper 2 Chainz was confi rmed as the headliner for dillo day tuesday. 2 Chainz is well-known for his songs “i’m different” and “Birthday Song” and his collaborations with Kanye West, drake and Nicki minaj.

D65 asks to change concealed carry lawBy BaiLeY WiLLiaMSthe daily northwestern@news_BaileyW

Evanston/Skokie School District 65 board members and parents are peti-tioning the Illinois General Assembly to ask that having a concealed gun be illegal anywhere on school grounds.

“We believe that all school prop-erty, including school grounds and parking lots, should be exempt from the Concealed Carry Law regardless of where and how those guns are stored,” the District 65 School Board said in a draft of a letter to the state legislature approved May 5.

Illinois passed the Firearm Con-cealed Carry Act in July 2013, making

it the last state in the U.S to legal-ize concealed carry. The act, which allows residents to bring concealed weapons into public places, came after a lawsuit that prompted the state to address the legislation. A provi-sion in the law sparked discussion within District 65. Board members discussed concerns they had with the law in reference to their visitors policy at an April 1 school board policy meeting.

Under the concealed carry act, firearms that are locked in vehicles are allowed in school parking lots even though firearms are not allowed on school grounds. Upon reviewing the district’s visitors policy, District

» See DILLO, page 6

» See CONCEALED, page 6

Panel talks NU workers’ rights

Mayfest plans for Dillo Day 20142 Chainz confi rmed as nighttime headliner

App, rotating stage among new features

By PaiGe LeSKinthe daily northwestern@paigeleskin

M a y f e s t r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s announced the launch of a smart-phone application for Dillo Day at a dialogue on Tuesday night with rep-resentatives from the Northwestern and Evanston communities.

The application will provide users with a detailed timeline of the events of Dillo Day, as well as the music lineup and a shuttle schedule, Mayfest co-chair Patrick Leonard said.

“That is going to be for us a really useful tool to make sure that we’re communicating with everyone in the community that day of,” said Leon-ard, a McCormick senior. “We’re just making sure that it’s a centralized source of information for anybody that is either an Evanston resident or a guest of somebody.”

The announcement came at a Community Conversations event, hosted in Fall and Spring Quarters with the goal of connecting off-campus students and their neigh-bors through a discussion about city issues. Attendees included Evan-ston and NU policemen, aldermen,

representatives of Associated Stu-dent Government and Mayfest and University staff, who talked about plans for Dillo Day and the end of the academic year.

Leonard said he hoped the smart-phone app and other changes will allow the music festival to run more safely and smoothly. Mayfest staff will also be able to send out notifi-cations through the app to provide people with updates in the event of inclement weather, he said.

“This year, we’re really focused on making sure we’re giving people as much information as we think they need, and that’s something that hasn’t necessarily been done in the past,” Leonard said. “I think that it’ll help spark a shift in sort of the way people interact and behave,” he said.

Among the modifications for Dillo Day are the revised wristband policies, which restrict attendees to those from the NU community, their personal guests and Evanston residents over the age of 19, unless accompanied by a chaperone.

Dean of Students Todd Adams discussed an initiative to have Dillo Day events run more continuously, with the goal of keeping students on the Lakefill as much as possible and not wandering through the city.

“We’re moving the activities closer into where the people are, the core of the venue … in an effort to really concentrate the programming

Nathan richards/daily Senior Staffer

TALK DILLO TO ME tori Zuzelo, university relations chair for mayfest, explained several updates about dillo day during a community meeting.

By OLiVia eXStrUMthe daily northwestern@olivesocean

Northwestern workers and students spoke Tuesday night about the increas-ingly corporate culture of universities like NU and announced a petition support-ing the rights of campus workers.

Th e talk, “$$$: Workers’ Rights & Neoliberalism at the University,” was held in University Halland sponsored by Peace Project, NU’s oldest social justice and anti-war organization, as a part of Social Justice Week at NU: Oppression at the Academy.

Two Northwestern employees, Rafael Marquez and Tom Breitsprecher, kicked off the discussion by sharing their per-sonal experiences as campus workers.

On April 16, Marquez, a food service worker in 1835 Hinman dining hall, said

he attended an aft ernoon meeting with other workers and members of Sodexo management. Aft er an employee was called out at the meeting for working too slowly, Marquez defended her, and members of Sodexo management subse-quently threatened to call campus police, Marquez said. He said he was accused of being “overexcited” and “under the infl u-ence” at the workplace and was then put on temporary suspension. In an eff ort to maintain his job, he was required to turn in statements to the Sodexo Human Resources Offi ce.

“As my duty as a steward, I will not back down or shut up when it comes to defending one of my coworkers when something unjust is put upon them,” Marquez said. “If I don’t stick up for my coworker, it’s like we don’t have a right to freedom of speech.”

Marquez said a week before his accu-sations, a fellow employee had been laid

off but was not replaced. Instead, the former employee’s responsibilities were allocated to other workers, he said.

Students in support of Marquez organized a march from the Arch to the Sodexo Human Resources Offi ce where he turned in his statements. During the suspension, he said he was also called into the offi ce and “interrogated.”

Marquez said support and solidarity from students is key in changing the way Sodexo and the University engage with workers’ issues.

Breitsprecher, a cook at the Willard Residential College dining hall, said even though there is a union, there are oft en incidents in which workers are unfairly treated and not represented equally by campus management and the University.

“Although this was a single incident,

» See CONVERSATIONS, page 6

» See WORKERS’ RIGHTS, page 6

SPORTS BASEBALLPaul Stevens still has ‘fi ery’ approach after 27 years of coaching » PAGE 8

Page 2: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

Around TownOwners, managers and staff need to make sure they know how to communicate with people who have disabilities confidently and appropriately.

— JJ Hanley, JJ’s List founder

“ ” Nonprofit trains local businesses in disability awarenessSee story on page 6

By tyler pagerthe daily northwestern @tylerpager

Northwestern student-run nonprofit Lend-ing for Evanston and Northwestern Develop-ment has partnered with Evanston’s First Bank & Trust to expand the organization’s loaning capacity.

As part of the partnership, the bank has invested $10,000 into LEND’s microfinance fund. LEND provides microfinance loans and training to small businesses in the Evanston community. Traditionally, LEND gives loans between $500 and $10,000 to Evanston busi-nesses that do not qualify for bank loans due to insufficient assets or lack of credit.

For future loans, half of the money will come from LEND’s funds and half will come from the bank. All interest generated from the loans will be reinvested into the fund. First Bank & Trust will not make any financial gains from the partnership.

Since LEND was founded, it has loaned more than $27,000 to nine businesses.

Salil Gupta, president of LEND, said the

agreement is a great opportunity for the group to increase its outreach.

“First Bank & Trust has been heavily embed-ded in the Evanston community for a long time,” the McCormick junior said. “They have been great community partners for Evanston entrepreneurs and to be able to get their help just solidifies LEND’s mission and goal and really shows people that we are really out there to help the community.”

On Saturday, LEND finalized its first con-tract that will use funds from First Bank & Trust to provide a $10,000 loan to Eco Green-ergy Properties LLC. The company was con-tracted by Evanston to replace some windows

in apartment buildings the city owns. The busi-ness specializes in environmentally-friendly construction and the owner of the company will use the loan to put a down payment on the windows, Gupta said.

Michael Corr, senior vice president of com-mercial banking at First Bank & Trust, said LEND’s connection to promoting Evanston served as a catalyst for the partnership.

“The fact that LEND is doing these microloans for businesses that are in Evan-ston is very attractive because we are always looking to invest in the community,” he said. “An organization like LEND is able to reach the people in the community who we are not able to reach.”

Corr added First Bank & Trust will provide training sessions for NU students.

“We are also very interested in providing guidance and training to the students who are eager to learn more and participate in this pro-gram,” he said. “There’s a lot that we can teach the students about how the process works from the bank perspective and how it differs in some ways from what they are doing.”

[email protected]

Setting therecord straight

In “Documentary honoring life of alum completed” in Tuesday’s print edi-tion, Jesse Swedlund was misidentified as a current student. He is an alumnus. The story also misstated the documentary’s filming dates and information about the preliminary screenings.

The Daily regrets the errors.

Woman finds three bullet holes in her car

A 34-year-old woman found three bullet holes in her car in west Evanston on Friday.

The woman found a bullet hole in the rear driver’s side of her vehicle, a gold 1992 Lexus, along with bullet holes in the gas tank and the driver’s side door, Evanston Police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said.

She had parked her vehicle in an alley in the 2100 block of Emerson Street, where police said the incident occurred at about 11:45 p.m.

Several rooftop air-conditioning parts stolen

Someone stole parts belonging to three rooftop air-conditioning units from down-town Evanston sometime before Monday.

An unknown person removed electrical parts from rooftops in the 1600 block of Sher-man Avenue, which could cost about $2,000 to repair, Parrott said. The management company of the building reported the incident, with the damages only being noticed Monday, when the air conditioning was turned on, police said.

The incident occurred in the same building in which World of Beer, 1601 Sherman Ave., is located.

— Julian Gerez

Police Blotter

LEND partners with First Bank & Trust The Daily Northwesternwww.dailynorthwestern.com

Editor in Chief Paulina Firozi [email protected]

General ManagerStacia [email protected]

Newsroom | 847.491.3222

Campus [email protected]

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Fax | 847.491.9905

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 2014 The Daily NorThwesTerN and protected under the “work made for hire” and “periodical publication” clauses of copyright law.

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

Check out dAilyNOrthWEStErN.COM for breaking news

“That LEND is doing these

microloans for businesses that are in Evanston is very attractive

because we are always looking to invest in the community.

Michael Corr,First Bank & Trust senior VP of

commercial banking

2 NEWS | ThE DAILy NORThWESTERN WEDNESDAy, MAy 14, 2014

A prize of $100 will be awarded to the BEST PHOTOGRAPH (any subject) taken by a Northwestern University student and published in a print or online publication between May 25,

2010 and May 20, 2011.

Contest rules and entry forms are available fromStacia Campbell, General Manager,

or e-mail: [email protected]

Deadline for submissions: May 20th by 3 pm

Presented by Students Publishing Company in memory of Northwestern alum Kay Krieghbaum (1946-1969), whose dedication to photojournalism inspired this event.

PHOTOGRAPHICCONTEST

the kay krieghbaum memorial

Contest rules and entry forms are available from Students Publishing Company on the third floor of Norris or e-mail [email protected]

Presented by Students Publishing Company in memory of Northwestern alum Kay Krieghbaum (1946-1969), whose dedication to photojournalism inspired this event.

1st Place - $2002nd Place - $1503rd Place - $100Hon. Ment. - $50

Deadline for submissions: Monday, June 2, 2014

A weekly 3 hour evening Intensive Outpatient Program for recovery from interpersonal trauma.• Separate programming for

emerging adult (ages 18 -30) women and men.

• Developmental and neuroscience informed approach to recovery.

• Educational, experiential and interpersonal group psychotherapy formats.

For more information, contact Yellowbrick today.866.364.2300 ext. 233 www.yellowbrickprogram.com

1560 Sherman Avenue, Suite 400, Evanston, IL 60201

Trauma Recovery Program

• Multimodal experiential components including meditation, mindfulness, yoga, drama and art therapy.

• Becoming Safely Embodied and Kundalini Yoga educational curricula.

• In collaboration with other professionals and treatments.

TRP Ad-Daily Northwestern 3.indd 1 4/24/14 9:38 AM

Page 3: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

On CampusWEDNESDay, may 14, 2014 thE Daily NorthWEStErN | NEWS 3

SPEND WINTER 2015 IN WASHINGTON D.C.

Have you ever dreamed of rubbing elbows with the movers and shakers on Capitol Hill? Would you like to learn how D.C. operates from the inside as legislators, the Obama administration and advocacy groups grapple with key issues facing the country?

The Northwestern undergraduate program in Washington is an exciting opportunity for students to gain invaluable knowledge and experience about how DC operates, working as interns in the mix of organizations involved in a variety of important national issues while taking seminars in privacy and civil liberties in an era of National Security Agency scandals, and presidential power versus congressional clout.

The program, which provides four units of academic credit through the internship/practicum and two seminars, also gives students the oppor-tunity to forge ongoing relationships with organizations and companies in D.C. that have yielded subsequent internships and jobs. The program is offered every winter quarter so that students are there to witness either an inaugural address or a State of the Union address. Students work out of Medill’s D.C. Bureau at 1325 G Street, NW, Suite 730, about two blocks from the Metro Center subway stop.

If you are interested in finding out more about the Winter 2015 program, attend a meeting on Friday, May 16, at 11am in McCormick Tribune Center, Room 3-127.

If you are interested but can’t attend the meeting, please contactProf. Ellen Shearer at [email protected].

What’s the most convenient way to reacha community of20,000 STUDENTS,7,700 FACULTY/STAFF,75,000 EVANSTONIANS, & MORE?*

YOU’RE READING IT!Advertise in The Daily NorthwesternFor more info, contact the Ad Office at 847.491.7206 or email [email protected] or visit www.dailynorthwestern.com/advertising*Based on NU 2010 enrollment figures (~8600 undergrads, ~11,000 grad) & 2010-11 full time staffing totals.

6 current, former NU students make Crain’s ‘20 in their 20s’ list

Crain’s Chicago Business recently recognized former and current Northwestern students on its annual “20 in their 20s” list, which honors local individuals under 30 who have made significant accomplishments within their industries.

The students recognized include one current

undergraduate, one graduate student and four NU alumni.

Weinberg senior Zoe Damacela, a fashion entrepreneur, was named to the list for her work in the fashion business. Damacela has been fea-tured on the cover of Seventeen magazine and will continue her career at Macy’s, Inc. after graduation.

Graduate student Sam Barnett was also recog-nized for his work as the CEO of SBB Research Group. Through his position, Barnett will col-laborate with film distributor AMC Theatres to

assess the ways individuals react to movie trailers. Barnett is also working toward a doctorate in neuroscience and finance.

Four other NU alumni were also given the honor, including Matt Bogusz (Weinberg ‘09) the mayor of Des Plaines, Illinois. During his time in office, Bogusz has shortened the time it takes to get a business license and increased the budget for infrastructure improvements, among other accomplishments.

Mert Iseri (McCormick ‘11) and Yuri Melina (Weinberg, ‘11) were recognized for a company

they co-founded called SwipeSense Inc. The device works as a portable hand sanitizer that clips onto clothing. The device is for use in hospitals in an effort to ensure proper hygiene is maintained.

Tristan Meline (Communication ‘07) made the list for his contribution to MillerCoors, where he works as the associate marketing manager. Meline was responsible for guiding a multi-million dollar ad campaign for the company’s in-house line of hard cider.

— Rebecca Savransky

Schakowsky talks youth engagement, voters’ rightsBy jordan harrisonthe daily northwestern @MedillJordan

Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Evanston) spoke Tuesday at Northwestern about the Voting Rights Act and how college students can become more politically engaged.

More than 20 individuals attended the talk, held at Technological Institute and hosted by Delta Sigma Theta sorority. Schakowsky began by speaking about voter registration efforts dur-ing the Civil Rights Movement, contrasting that work with a recent trend of “voter suppression” laws and the low voter turnout of young adults in non-presidential election years.

“In Texas, you can use as identification your gun registration card,” she said. “You may not use your student ID in order to register to vote.”

She announced her support for a new, non-partisan voter registration effort to help voters who encounter obstacles from new voting laws and gave students a signup sheet to receive more information about the initiative.

“The NAACP and the Leadership Council on Civil Rights are going to be conducting a ‘Free-dom Summer and Fall’ and start doing recruiting and training and dispatching and organizing and publicity around this idea of getting people out to vote,” Schakowsky said. “Anywhere there are

these barriers to voting, to physically help people get over them.”

After the talk, she held a question-and-answer session, inviting questions and comments from the audience. Several students said they noticed

a trend of political apathy among young people. Others asked her how to encourage women to run for office and how best to be heard by political representatives.

Weinberg senior Leah Jones, president of NU’s

Theta Alpha chapter of DST, said she met the congresswoman in February at a conference in Washington, D.C., and has wanted her to speak on campus since.

“She’s very personable,” Jones said. “I’m glad that the audience asked the questions that we wanted to hear, things that were relevant to the audience and not just things that she had planned to talk about. She was very open to having an open dialogue.”

Jones said she thought it was important for Schakowsky to speak at NU because of the rela-tionship between the University and Evanston.

“She is representing the Evanston community and Northwestern as part of that,” Jones said. “And I think a lot of times as students, we don’t see ourselves interacting with the greater Chicago area or being a part of it, but we are. It was a great opportunity for people to bridge the gap between Northwestern and Evanston.”

Communication junior Maya Collins, a mem-ber of DST, said she enjoyed Schakowsky’s talk and admired her candidness.

“We appreciated her for just being open to dis-cussing what it’s like to be a woman in Congress because we know Congress is very male-domi-nated,” Collins said. “Personally, I just appreciated her advice on standing up as a woman and not being afraid to confront conflict.”

[email protected]

Jordan harrison/the Daily Northwestern

bridging the gap rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-ill.) spoke about youth involvement in politics at Northwestern on tuesday. She encouraged students to vote in off-season elections and spoke about a new initiative to register voters.

Page 4: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

The Daily NorthwesternVolume 134, Issue 121

Editor in ChiefPaulina Firozi

Managing EditorsJoseph DieboldCiara McCarthyManuel Rapada

Opinion EditorsJulian Caracotsios

Yoni Muller

Assistant Opinion Editor

Caryn Lenhoff

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR may be sent to 1999 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208, via fax at 847-491-9905, via e-mail to [email protected] or by dropping a letter in the box outside THE DAILY office. Letters have the following requirements:• Should be typed• Should be double-spaced• Should include the author’s name, signature, school, class and phone number.• Should be fewer than 400 words

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 DAILY’s student editorial board and not the opinions of either Northwestern University or Students Publishing Co. Inc.

Join the online conversation atwww.dailynorthwestern.comOPINION

Wednesday, May 14, 2014 PAGE 4

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Walking down Sheridan during January’s Polar Vortex, I never thought I would make the same walk wearing sandals, shorts and a t-shirt. But I guess seeing that even the Midwest has nice weather to o� er will be one of the last great parts of my freshman year experience. However, noth-ing comes without a price, even nice weather. Too much exposure to the sun’s rays comes with negative health consequences, the most infamous of which is skin cancer.

At least among many Americans, tanning is considered a summer pastime. However, tanning is known to increase one’s risk of skin cancer. Moreover, sun exposure, especially when it leads to blistering sunburn, is most damaging early in life. One blistering sunburn during childhood doubles a person’s risk of developing melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, later in life. For this reason, the college-aged popula-tion should understand the risks that come with tanning.

� e idea of a “healthy tan” may come from people who get tanned running outside dur-ing the summer or playing sports on the beach. However, for those born with a naturally pale complexion, healthy and tan may be at odds. I have heard of a “Health, Fitness and Recreation Center” near my hometown that includes a tan-ning room. For someone with a high risk of skin

cancer, tanning a� er a workout is like taking a smoke break at the gym. � ere is a di� erence between looking healthy and being healthy.

“You have cancer” are three words no one ever wants to hear. Yet some people seem to think that if their diagnosis is “just skin cancer” they have nothing to worry about. While some patients may be fortunate enough to have skin cancer suc-cessfully treated with a comparatively minor procedure, not everyone is so lucky. Melanoma in par-ticular is aggressive and estimated to result in 8,790 deaths in the U.S. each year.

Many people have told me they know they are taking risks by not protecting against UV radia-tion but they are doing so to avoid another det-rimental health condition: vitamin D de� ciency. While it is true that UVB rays are involved in the

production of vitamin D, it is also true that UVB rays can only result in the production of a limited amount of vitamin D. Dietary sources such as oily � sh and supplements are recommended to pro-

vide vitamin D.It is also important to note that white

people are not the only ones who can su� er from skin cancer, despite the com-

mon misconception. Not only can black, Latino and Asian individu-

als also develop skin cancer, these groups are generally diagnosed with melanoma

later and therefore have lower sur-

vival rates. My doctor started

lecturing me on the risks of skin cancer when I was old enough

to be out on my own

and had to apply sunscreen

myself. I still get warned about it every year. If I were not white, would doctors have taken the time to explain this to me? It is understandable that someone with light skin and a family history is more in need of this information. However, people should know that anyone can develop skin cancer.

Everyone should be able to make an informed decision about tanning. Moreover, no one should be pressured into tanning. Having a family his-tory of skin cancer, I have never appreciated it when people have told me I shouldn’t worry about sun exposure unless I’m spending a whole day at the beach, I should use a lower SPF or skin cancer is not serious. I would rather go without the freckles and coats of red that peel away back to white.

Northwestern students seem less likely to tan or at least less likely to pressure others to do so. Maybe we really are smarter or at least better informed. Maybe we spend all our time studying. Maybe we are older than we were in high school and know better. Maybe it’s just the Midwest’s weather patterns, and some of us will be tanning at home this summer. At any rate, skin cancer is something to think about this summer.

Luckily, if you are like me and � nd yourself unable and unwilling to get a fashionable tan, there’s something else you can try. Sunglasses are not only fashionable but also practical: � ey may help prevent eye cancer. A� er you � nish up classes this year, you might be eager to catch up with your home friends by tanning or relaxing on South Beach if you are staying on campus. We all deserve a beautiful summer a� er this year of snow, wind and cold. But we also deserve to stay healthy and able to use our NU educations for as many years as possible.

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

Consider the e� ects of too much sun exposure

Experiencing total abject failure with no solution

During Spring Quarter of freshman year, eager to expand on my passion for philosophy, I took a class in moral philosophy. I had fallen in love with the idea that ethics could change the world. I spent innumerable hours reading the assigned texts. I was shocked to receive a C on the � rst assigned paper. “No matter,” I told myself; my passion for the subject is pure, and the long-term bene� ts of the course material would trump any low grade.

� en another C was handed back to me, and another. � e grade I received in that class dragged my grade point average down by a tenth of a point. How many reading this column would consider taking that class a good decision?

Not surprisingly, I think taking that class was a bad decision. It was not bad in a comical sense — where others laugh along at the story and act like it matters less than it should — because I still love phi-losophy with a passion. Its e� ects were severe enough that its badness cannot be shrugged o� . It is an example of total

abject failure: an attempt that ended up in a result as bad as I dared to imagine.

� is notion of total abject failure is not o� en talked about at NU. For one, we tend not to think of any sign of failure as total. A bad test score in one major class only inspires hopes of making the grade up, and a badly planned student group event evokes soul-searching and restored optimism. For another, failure is not interpreted as abject. If the � rst major does not work out, switching to a di� er-ent one takes only some paperwork and process-ing time. � ere are so many other opportunities on this campus that you can � nd the right one eventually.

But we must note how this faith against fail-ure is a product of our institutions. Due to the number of faculty and amount of cash slushing through campus o� ces, the chances of a total failure occurring is low; a class can be dropped and retaken, and groups maintain access to funds despite one bad event. � e size of the administra-tion — one administrator for around every � ve undergraduates — allows for pain-free major

changes, counseling and funding. All the above is possible due to a network of tuition, drug royalties, withdrawals from the $8 billion endowment and the like.

Institutions buttress our faith, but what institu-tions give, they also take away. Certainly they are known to suspend support under the guises of “medical leave” or “academic dismissal,” notions shrouded in secrecy. Undergraduates subject to these punishments are ripped away from campus society — and who knows when we will have enough free time to notice their absences?

More commonly, we observe cases where institutions notice competition among students, but they let it spread without considering whether more support is needed. Two years down the line, when you are told to commit to the path you have chosen, these cases become more apparent. A pre-med student knows this feeling all too well, as she haggles with department advisers and pays out of her own pockets for practice standardized exams. A Medill student slaves away through her journal-ism residency for small stipend. A theatre student stacks onto her back as many production credits as possible until it breaks.

� e problem, unfortunately, is that we do not talk about total abject failure. � ere is considerable discussion on campus about restoring success – conquering personal demons in order to get back on track. But this assumes there is a track you can return to. � e feeling of total abject failure, whether it starts a� er freshman chemistry or at the end of junior year, is seeing no further path in sight. Standing on the abyss, a student has to perform something much harder than conquest: She has to reinvent herself by generating new passions for di� erent things.

We know that total abject failure is bad. We know very little about how reinvention works on this campus. Its mechanisms are better known by close friends or kept to a Counseling and Psycho-logical Services report. But this means we observe a bad phenomenon on campus without knowing any solution. Is that really tolerable?

Since I admit I know very little about the problem at hand, I should not propose any solu-tions. What I have tried to do is acknowledge the problem exists and, eclipsed by more feel-good e� orts, lingers in the corners. � ose who have had to reinvent themselves into a newfound profession should continue to speak up, highlighting their unique experiences. � is is a necessary � rst step to improve our community’s general happiness.

Tom Cui is a Weinberg junior. He can be reached at [email protected]. If you would like to respond publicly to this column, send a letter to the editor to [email protected].

TOM CUIDAILY COLUMNIST

MATTGATESDAILY COLUMNIST

“We know that total abject failure is bad. We know very little about how reinvention works on this campus.

Sun risks

No such thing as a healthy tanSkin cancer can a� ect anyone

Melanoma can be deadly

Healthysun exposure

Know the dangersAvoid tanning

Apply sunscreenWear sunglasses

Graphic by Kelsey Ott/Daily Senior Staffer

What do you think about the decision to replace Blackboard with Canvas?

Graphic by Elizabeth Kim/The Daily Northwestern

I never go on my

courses’ page anyway, so

it doesn’t really matter.19%

50%It’s great! Blackboard

is too slow and not

user-friendly.

31%Canvas seems unnecessary. Who wants to get texts about their grades?

Page 5: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

WEDNESDay, may 14, 2014 thE Daily NorthWEStErN | NEWS 5

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Swimming education program more than doubles in size

A program to teach Evanston second graders to swim has more than doubled in size and moved out of its pilot phase, the Evanston Community Founda-tion said Monday.

Evanston Swims!, which provides free monthly swimming lessons to second graders in Evanston/Skokie School District 65, started through Evan-ston150, an initiative to improve Evanston in

celebration of the city’s 150th anniversary in 2013.The program launched in October 2012 in three

elementary schools and has since expanded to include eight elementary schools.

“The success of Evanston Swims!, is the result of true community partnership,” Bill Geiger, out-going CEO of the McGaw YMCA, said in a news release. “Evanston/Skokie School District 65, the YWCA Evanston/North Shore, YMCA, and U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary, as well as many community volunteers and donors have all come together to support our youth.”

Since the program began, ECF collected money to support the program. On Monday, ECF said it

transferred the more than $17,000 fund for the pro-gram to the YWCA Evanston/North Shore.

Pam James, who served as chairwoman of the Evanston Swims! committee, helped develop the program.

“While Lake Michigan is beautiful, it’s also dan-gerous,” James told The Daily in 2012, saying the program would promote water safety.

“In addition to being life-saving, it’s also some-thing that’s life-long and that’s life-enhancing and that opens the door to so many other opportuni-ties,” she said.

— Sophia Bollag

City’s new renewable energy contract part of statewide trend

Evanston approved a contract Friday with a new energy supplier that will allow residents to purchase 100 percent renewable energy, making it one of more than 90 communities in Illinois with such a contract.

The new three-year contract with Homefield Energy will replace the city’s existing contract with Verde Energy USA, which expires in August.

“This program builds on Evanston’s tradition of environmental stewardship by providing residents and small businesses with 100 percent renewable energy, while also delivering price certainty,” Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl said in a news release.

At the City Council meeting April 28, Jonathan Nieuwsma, vice president of Citizens’ Greener Evan-ston, spoke in support of the city choosing a contract that would continue to allow Evanston residents to use 100 percent renewable energy.

“I want to congratulate City Council and the mayor on achieving our first climate action plan goal of 13 percent emissions reduction by 2012,” Nieuwsma said during citizen comment. “Citizens’ Greener Evanston looks forward to working on our next goal of a 20 percent reduction by 2016, and the only way we’re going to do that is if we continue to use 100 percent renewable energy under our aggregation contract.”

Evanston is one of 91 communities in the state buying only renewable energy, making Illinois the state with the highest number of communities that offers 100 percent renewable energy to residents, according to the publication Illinois Issues.

— Sophia Bollag

French foreign minister says Syria has likely used chlorine gas in recent attacks

WASHINGTON — In comments to report-ers Tuesday, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said there was strong evidence that Syr-ian President Bashar Assad’s forces had used chemical weapons, including chrlorine gas, in 14 small-scale attacks since Syria agreed to join the world’s ban on such weapons last fall.

The French minister, however, did not raise the allegations in talks that he held with Sec-retary of State John Kerry before he met with reporters, the State Department said.

Fabius made his comments shortly after the advocacy group Human Rights Watch released a report that said that evidence it has reviewed “strongly suggests” that regime helicopters dropped improvised explosives known as bar-rel bombs loaded with chlorine gas cylinders on three towns in northern Syria in mid-April. The report noted that only the Syrian govern-ment operates helicopters.

Rebel activists have accused the Syrian government of using chlorine gas on several occasions in recent weeks. The Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons, the international body that monitors compliance with the Chemical Weapons Convention, cur-rently is investigating whether chlorine muni-tions have been used in Syria. Syria agreed to join the convention, which bans such weapons, after the United States threatened it with mili-tary attacks after hundreds of Syrian civilians

died in a chemical attack last August outside Damascus.

Chlorine is found in numerous house-hold and industrial products, but its use as a weapon is banned under the convention.

“We have at least 14 indications that show us that in the past recent weeks again chemical weapons in a smaller scale have been used,” Fabius said. “Right now we are examining the samples that were taken.”

Fabius said that the evidence suggests that Assad still can produce chemical weapons even though OPCW inspectors have said the equipment needed to manufacture and load chemical weapons has been destroyed. Most of Syria’s chemical weapons stores have been shipped out of Syria, but a small amount remains on a base in Damascus.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel acknowl-edged Tuesday reports that the last shipment has been delayed because rebels control the roads leading to Syria’s coast.

“The problem that we have is that there are security challenges to get those moved to the port and to get the last chemical weapons and the precursors onto the ship,” he told report-ers accompanying him on a visit to Saudi Arabia, according to a Defense Department transcript.

Kerry and Fabius are to meet again in Lon-don on Thursday for further talks on Syria with nine European and Arab governments that also back the flagging, divided moder-ate Syrian opposition, whose leader, Ahmad Jarba, has been in Washington this week seek-ing more aid, including heavy weapons.

— Jonathan S. Landay (McClatchy Washington Bureau)

National News

Page 6: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

we deal with managers all the time who threaten, intimidate and bully workers,” Breitsprecher said. “That’s coercion, and often we’re powerless to stop it.”

The discussion continued with Jackson Bartlett, a doctoral student in the Department of African American Studies, who discussed neoliberalism and corporate culture on college campuses. Essentially, Bartlett said neoliberalism is defined as the emphasis on individual accountability as being necessary for success. He added that it is important for those in higher education to be able to critically analyze and empathize.

“The unavoidable fact is that most students here have had little experience with working class com-munities,” Bartlett said. “We should be teaching about these struggles in the classroom.”

Communication senior Isabella Pasbakhsh echoed Bartlett’s statements, saying the switch from structural and social responsibility to individual responsibility is a product of “corporations setting agendas and deciding what the University does.”

“Self-interest is the ultimate interest,” she said. “It’s the idea that if you aren’t able to manage academics, student groups and work study, it’s on you for not succeeding.”

At the end of the talk, Weinberg sophomore Hazim Abdullah-Smith, treasurer of Peace Project and a member of the organizing committee for Social Justice Week, announced the petition, which lends support to NU workers, and encouraged attendees to sign it.

“We implore Northwestern University to ensure Sodexo workers (and workers of other corpora-tions under contract by NU) are respected and able to return to their full-time positions,” the petition reads.

Abdullah-Smith said the event was held because “there are a lot of things going on here that require awareness and compassion,” including the workers’ rights issues.

“This event was important in order to call atten-tion to the everyday injustices we may overlook and come to understand that things may not be as simple as they appear,” he said.

[email protected]

6 NEWS | thE daily NorthWEStErN WEdNESday, may 14, 2014

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Businesses trained in disability awarenessBy Katherine richterthe daily northwestern @krichter_medill

A nonprofit hosted a workshop Tuesday morning in south Evanston to improve business owners’ com-munications with disabled customers and clientele.

The Networking Breakfast and Disability Aware-ness Boot Camp, held at 824 Dempster St., was hosted by JJ’s List, a nonprofit that aims to integrate disability-accessible marketing and confident customer services into core business practices, in collaboration with the Evanston Chamber of Commerce.

Participants registered online to participate in the session. Breakfast and networking will began at 7:45 a.m. and concluded at 9:15 a.m.

People with disabilities are the fastest-growing minority group in the country with more than $200 billion in spending power, making awareness crucial, according to the JJ’s List website.

“After learning from JJ’s List that people with dis-abilities have over $200 billion in spending power, I’m excited to see what Chamber members can do to bet-ter engage their customers and staff with disabilities,” said Jessica VandenBergh, manager of administration at the Chamber, in an email to The Daily. “JJ’s List does a great job of providing that education. Having family members with disabilities, I’m also interested

to see what informa-tion I can take home as well.”

Busi-ness own-ers could sign up at the break-fast for the JJ’s List free directory, which connects owners to 30,000 other disability-aware partners. The directory is a part of Search, Inc.and it also helps disabled com-munity members find jobs.

JJ’s List provides training to businesses to help them accommodate disabled customers’ needs. Businesses that complete the training receive the “Disability-Aware Business Seal of Approval.”

JJ Hanley, founder and executive director of JJ’s List, said training like the kind the organization pro-vides can be beneficial to all types of businesses.

“It doesn’t matter whether your business is small or large,” Hanley said in an email. “Owners, man-agers and staff need to make sure they know how to communicate with people who have disabilities confidently and appropriately.”

[email protected]

an important role in the booking process.“After analyzing our survey results that we

sent out in Winter Quarter, it became very clear that our hip-hop slots are one of the most highly attended slots of the day, so we put extra focus on that,” the Communication senior said.

In conjunction with the announcement of 2 Chainz’s performance, NU Ski Trip announced the dates of the 2014 trip, which will be held Dec. 13-19. Participants will be flying into Denver International Airport. The official location of the trip will be announced in early October.

NU Ski Trip co-president Harris Goodison said the partnership with Mayfest is an oppor-tunity for the group to give back to the NU community.

“It’s really exciting new territory for us,” the Weinberg junior said. “Ski Trip has traditionally been confined to one short period of exposure, and we felt like we had a really great opportunity to give back to Northwestern.”

Mayfest co-chair Xander Shepherd said the partnership is “a two-way street” and will extend into future initiatives.

“We are both really working together to make sure we both get positive outcomes on Dillo Day and then in the future,” the Weinberg senior said. “I think there is good faith that we both have mutual interest in reaching each others com-munities and doing so in ways that make sense to both organizations.”

Dillo Day is scheduled for May 31.

[email protected]

DilloFrom page 1

65 school board members reached out to the Illinois Association of School Boards, a nonprofit organization that offers services to public schools, for clarification of the law.

Kimberly Small, a lawyer who works at the IASB, told The Daily the organization does not hold any authority over any state school boards but works with school boards on their policies. Small said that it was a part of the association’s policy to clarify existing laws and then to inform school boards.

Small said she has observed the concealed carry law to be controversial.

“People don’t like conceal (carry),” Small said. “There’s definitely political discourse about the law.”

In the letter drafted and approved by the board, the body called upon state legislators to reconsider the concealed carry law so that the board could “ensure the maximum safety of (the district’s) approximately 7,500 students and 1,000 employees.”

The letter states that the interpretation of the law that allows firearms in school parking lots goes against the board’s and others’ understanding of the law, which

to them was supposed to exclude school grounds from the discussion entirely.

“Any risk of a child entering a car that contains a gun is a risk we do not want nor should be forced to take,” the school board wrote in the letter.

The board concludes the letter by asking legislators to take the necessary measures “to extend the complete prohibition of firearms on all public and private school property, including school parking lots.”

Four days after the board approved the letter, a Facebook post on the “District 65 Parents” group called on parents of the district to support the letter as well. Candance Parks Chow, who made the post, said she believed legislators agreed with the board on the policy but that “they need(ed) fuel to speak against at minimum this ludicrous loophole in the law.”

“There is no possible way a school can enforce that the cars are locked, and this just flies in the face of prohibiting guns on school property,” Chow said in the post.

Chow wrote in the post that she hoped District 65 parents and board members’ opposition to the law would go “viral.”

[email protected]

ConcealedFrom page 1

that we’ve got throughout the day,” Leon-ard said. “There are a lot more opportu-nities for people to really experience the festival atmosphere.”

As part of centering events around the Lakefill, Mayfest leaders said the organi-zation will continue to provide students access to Norris, smartphone charging stations and various food options, includ-ing a free breakfast before and after the music festival.

In addition to the second performance stage, introduced last year, Dillo Day will feature a new rotating main stage.

At the event, representatives from both the Evanston and University police departments shared their input on ensur-ing the health and safety of all Dillo Day attendees.

The app will feature a quick-touch but-ton to call 911 in the case of emergency, Mayfest co-chair Xander Shepherd said.

Anthony Kirchmeier, director of off-campus life, said meetings between Evanston and NU community members are integral in keeping the relationship strong and getting past any problems that develop.

“We need some kind of forum to dis-cuss these issues in a constructive way,” he said. “It’s good to have them in the same room offering different perspectives.”

[email protected]

ConversationsFrom page 1

Workers’ RightsFrom page 1

“Owners, managers and

staff need to ... know how to communicate

with people who have disabilities.

JJ Hanley,Founder, JJ’s List,

Page 7: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

WEDNESDay, May 14, 2014 thE Daily NorthWEStErN | NEWS 7

The Daily NorthwesternSpring 2014 | An independent voice since 1923 | Evanston, Ill.

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GENEral MaNaGEr | Stacia CampbellShoP MaNaGEr | Chris Widman

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aDVErtiSiNG rEPrESENtatiVESryan Daggs, Erica Witte___________________

BUSiNESS oFFiCE StaFF hailey arterburn, arielle Chase, Megan hernbroth, Kelly hwu

Megan McCormack, taylor Mitchell___________________

aDVErtiSiNG ProDUCtioN StaFF annabel Edwards, Brandon Chen,

Virginia Van Keuren___________________

every word he was saying.”When Stevens gets on his players, it’s not just

about baseball, it’s about their post-baseball futures. With pride, he lists program graduates who have become bankers, lawyers, business-men, even Marines, not taking credit for their successes but drawing a line between his hard-line discipline and what they’ve gone on to.

Stevens admits he doesn’t get along with every player to come through, in part because he hates to see someone fail to live up to his potential for lack of effort.

“He expects a lot out of you when you come in, and he’s hard on you. But he expects you to do things because he believes in you as a player,” said Jon Mikrut, who played for Ste-vens from 2002-05 and is now an NU assistant coach. “He cares about the players 100 percent on and off the field. He wants you to be suc-cessful baseball-wise, but more importantly he wants you to come out of here graduating with a degree. And he’ll do anything for our guys to make sure they’ve done that.”

Former first baseman Patrick Thompson remembered a time in the late 1990s when Stevens gave everyone on the team a copy of Dr. Seuss’ “Oh, the Places You’ll Go!” with per-sonalized notes penned inside. Through rhyme, the book suggests readers embrace their future, uncertainty and all, while mindful that success is, at best, “98 and 3/4 percent guaranteed.”

“Now I have kids, and we read that book to our kids. And the book that he gave us had such foresight in terms of life,” Thompson said. “It goes to him caring about us, having a big picture view of life beyond Northwestern base-ball and trying to help instill in us a drive to do great things but send us off with a realistic view that life will never be easy. There’s going to be bumps along the way, but the places that we can go because of the foundation that we have in place and the opportunity that we had to play ball at Northwestern.”

When it comes to Stevens’ heart, every for-mer player has a story, an uncanny number of them regarding the death of fathers.

When infielder Chris Beacom’s dad Terry, a former NU coach, died several years after Chris had graduated, Stevens was one of the first to visit the family’s home.

When outfielder Jason Anderson’s dad died, Stevens escorted the player home to Rockford, Illinois, two hours away.

When just-graduated infielder Chris Peder-sen’s dad died around Thanksgiving in 1998, Stevens drove to Lincoln, Nebraska, to attend the funeral.

Perhaps Stevens reacts so supportively to players’ paternal tragedies because of his own experience with father-son relationships.

When Stevens transferred back home mid-way through college, his father — also named Paul — wasn’t happy. The elder Stevens feared his son was sacrificing a promising baseball career on his account. Forty years later, the younger Stevens can hardly hold himself together recounting the situation.

“That brings back some pretty hard conver-sations,” he said, eyes welling. “You can just see how a father’s love for you surpasses anything else that’s out there. My parents were pretty special. But a lot of people’s are.”

Today, Stevens and his wife, Kenan, have three children, Kara, Cody and Trevor, the lat-ter two of whom joined their father in NU’s baseball program. Trevor graduated in 2013 after starting for four seasons and now plays in the Chicago Cubs’ farm system. Cody is a junior and the team’s starting shortstop.

Stevens says coaching his sons has been as rewarding as it has difficult, but he’s glad to have provided Cody and Trevor the chance to attend NU and reap its benefits. And, more selfishly, he appreciates all the time spent with them, on and off the diamond.

“There are a lot of (coaches) who don’t get to watch their sons play,” Stevens said. “I’m very fortunate they’ve been along for the ride.”

On the field, Stevens’ tenure as Cats head coach has been relatively successful, but not unequivocally so.

He has been Big Ten Coach of the Year three times — in 1991, 1995 and 2006 — each time

after leading NU to the top echelon, but not the pinnacle, of the Big Ten. In Stevens’ 27 years, his teams have finished in the top three of the conference four times but never won the regular season or tournament titles.

Stevens has coached and won far more games than anyone else in program history but compiled only a lukewarm .450 winning percentage.

NU’s financial and structural disadvantages relative to their Big Ten counterparts surely contribute to the program’s muted success. With about 600 seats, Evanston’s Rocky Miller Park is by far the smallest stadium in the con-ference, and the Cats’ practice facilities don’t measure up to powerhouses like Nebraska or Indiana.

Meanwhile, Chicago’s weather makes recruit-ing and preparation difficult when competing with more mild-wintered conference rivals and impossible when up against southern schools.

For these reasons and more, NU has finished in first place just once — in 1957 — in more than a century of Big Ten baseball.

But other NU athletic programs have over-come similar disadvantages to become at least consistent conference contenders. That the baseball team hasn’t gotten there eats at Ste-vens. Until the Cats win that elusive Big Ten title, if they ever do, Stevens’ tenure will — like his playing career — include an element of near-miss.

“We bust our tails with what we have to deal with,” he said. “The only thing I can keep mov-ing forward on is, we’ll keep trying. One of these years, we won’t get hit with this, that and the other, and we’ll find a way to do it. At the end of the day, you always want to do that.”

2014 has been a particularly tough season for NU.

The Cats lost five of their best players in 2013 to graduation, then saw their returning star, Kyle Ruchim, forced to undergo season-ending arm surgery. The team started the year losing 22 of its first 26 and currently stands 17-32, with a 5-15 conference record that has it near the bottom of the conference standings.

After wins, Stevens bounds around the field, smiling and cracking jokes. After losses, he camps in the dugout to quietly gather his thoughts. At first, he seems solemn, even pained. But inevitably, that disappointment bleeds into optimism.

Forget about today. The win streak starts tomorrow.

Twenty-seven years is an awfully long time to hold any job, especially in sports.

Of NU’s 19 varsity coaches, only fencing coach Laurie Schiller has manned his position longer, and among baseball coaches, Stevens is second in the Big Ten and tied for 11th in Division I in longevity.

Few show up to their first day of work imag-ining repeating the routine for three decades.

And yet Stevens considers himself lucky to have stuck in Evanston so long. Growing up on the South Side, he said, the school had a special air about it, and he hasn’t stopped admiring what he thinks it is that the University stands for.

“I felt special being asked to come here as an assistant,” he said, lowering his voice to a forceful whisper. “And that really hasn’t changed much because what I have seen this University create for the people that go through their athletic program, the academic programs. Whether you’re in one area of this University or another, this University cre-ates an atmosphere for all of (the students) to be successful, for all of them to do something extraordinary.”

Still, Stevens is 60 years old and for 27 years has handled administrative minutiae all morning so he could stand in a dirty dugout all afternoon.

The question is valid: Will he call it quits any time soon?

Then again, he works a dream job at a place he loves, where he mentors young men he con-siders sons. Plus, scrappers don’t quit. They persist until they can’t anymore, until someone drags them away.

Hours have passed since Stevens’ non-committal response about his future, and in that time the coach has gained some clarity. Now, standing along the first-base line at Rocky Miller Park after a Cats victory, he points to the ground and smiles.

“They’ll bury me here,” he said.

[email protected]

StevensFrom page 8

“He

expects you to do things because he

believes in you as a player.

Jon Mikrut,assistant coach

“My parents

were pretty special. But a lot of people’s are.

Paul Stevens,baseball coach

Page 8: The Daily Northwestern - May 14, 2014

SPORTSWednesday, May 14, 2014 @Wildcat_Extra

ON DECK ON THE RECORDBaseballNU at Ohio State, 4 p.m. Thursday

His voice just commands attention He can be on the other side of the field ... and (you would) just know that’s the guy in charge. — Brad Niedermaier

MAY

15

After 27 years, Stevens still scrappingBy alex puttermandaily senior staffer @AlexPutt02

For once, Paul Stevens doesn’t quite know what to say.

Usually brash and decisive, Northwestern’s baseball coach stumbles for a response to a damn-ing allegation from former players: They think he has mellowed.

Mellowed? Stevens? The guy who’s spent 27 years yelling at players until his throat hurts? The guy everyone describes as “passion-ate,” “intense” and “fiery?” The guy whose bellowing voice echoes into the next county?

“I don’t know,” Stevens said after a pause. “Maybe they’re right. Maybe they’re not right. I may tend to agree with them a little bit, but at the end of the day, maybe things change a little bit, and you have to change with things.”

If Stevens’ win-or-die attitude has softened over the years, it’s hard to blame him. It’s possible the monotony of nearly three decades at one job has taken its toll.

He recruits and fundraises, ana-lyzes scouting reports and moni-tors player grades, throws batting practice and coaches the bases. Day after day, year after year.

How much longer can he do it?“I don’t think about that,” Ste-

vens said. “It’s like a baseball game. You’ve got to take one pitch, one hitter, one inning, one game at a time. Right now I’m concentrating on today, and then I’ll worry about the weekend. When there’s a plan for me to do something else, I’ll do that.”

In many ways, Stevens personi-fies the baseball-coach cliche.

He struts about in sneakers and athletic shorts, a windbreaker over his portly frame and a ball cap, of course, concealing a thinning head of hair.

With that booming voice and ship captain’s bravado, he leaves no question who’s the boss.

“He’s got the loudest voice I think I’ve ever heard,” former Wildcats pitcher Brad Niedermaier said. “And his voice just commands attention. He can be on the other side of the field, and you would hear it and just know that’s the guy in charge.”

Stevens is fond of axioms about grit and hard work and loves a good, sometimes mixed, metaphor. The pitcher rubs his lamp to make magic. The changeup hits a wall and

drops off the table. The season is a flowing river building momentum down a mountain.

As far as wit goes, Stevens is Casey Stengel on a good day, Yogi Berra on a bad one.

Everyone is Stevens’ favorite player, and they all deserve superla-tives. Even when forced to acknowl-edge a hitter’s slump, Stevens quali-fies that the guy plays great defense, works extremely hard and “com-petes” every day.

More often than not, to hear Ste-vens tell it, it’s not a pitcher’s cur-veball that gets batters out so much as his “intestinal fortitude.”

Former players say Stevens’ mes-sage is consistent: That they played well was important, but that they played their hardest was para-mount. It’s a familiar sentiment of coachspeak but one Stevens believes with six decades’ worth of scrappy fervor.

After graduating Luther South High School in 1972, the Chicago native committed to the University of South Alabama to play for for-mer Major League all-star Eddie Stanky. But two years into Stevens’ college career, his father grew sick, and he transferred to Lewis Uni-versity in Romeoville, Illinois, to be closer to home.

At Lewis, Stevens was coached by the legendary Gordie Gillespie, who until seven weeks ago held the record for most wins in college baseball history. Gillespie’s impact on Stevens was indelible.

“Gordie Gillespie was one of the greatest men I’ve ever been around,” he said. “And what a tremendous coach. His winning percentage was ridiculous, and what he taught us about doing things the right way is still something that I resort back to. He was a special man, and I was very, very blessed for him to allow me to go to Lewis University.”

After graduating college, Ste-vens was selected by the Kansas City Royals in the 16th round of the 1976 Major League Baseball draft. In many ways, he embodied the average minor leaguer, suitcase always packed, spending five sea-sons in two organizations, playing for eight teams in six leagues across five levels.

For his career, Stevens hit .259 and stole 79 bases while playing solid defense wherever he was needed, most often in the middle infield.

By all accounts, including his own, the switch hitter lacked excep-tional natural talent. Generously listed at 5-foot-11, Stevens hit only six home runs in more than 1,500 minor-league plate appearances, and 237 of his 304 career hits were singles.

To make up for physical deficien-cies, he worked as hard he could off the field and played as hard as he could on it.

“He was the player that on the other team you would hate and on your team you would love,” said longtime NU assistant coach Tim Stoddard, who grew up near Ste-vens and played against him in col-lege summer leagues. “He played the game extremely hard, not dirty in any sense, but he played as hard as you could. He was what you would call a gamer.”

More than anything, Stevens found success by focusing on one skill outside the purview of tra-ditional baseball talents: drawing walks.

Stevens reached base at a rate that would make Barry Bonds

proud, posting a .424 career on-base percentage, impressive at any level. His best year was 1978, when he averaged more than a walk a game at low-A Grays Harbor, fin-ishing with a remarkable .517 on-base percentage.

He figured getting on base by any possible means — using that innate scrappiness to his advan-tage — would help his team and advance his career. In another time, he would’ve been right.

But in the ‘70s, on-base percent-age wasn’t quite mainstream, and most talent evaluators looked first to batting average. Stevens said he was often told, “You can’t walk to the big leagues.”

As it was, Stevens topped out with eight games at the AAA level. He admited that had he been born 25 years later and played in the post-

“Moneyball” era, in which walks are widely appreciated and rewarded, his career could have been different.

Decades removed, Stevens’ feel-ings toward his near-miss playing days and ahead-of-his-time skill set remain complicated. On one hand, he’s bothered to have fallen short of his Major League goal. On the other, he’s a big believer that every-thing happens for a reason.

“There’s always a reason why,” he said. “Maybe if I didn’t get to those scenarios, I wouldn’t have ever gotten the opportunity to come (to NU) and experience the things I’ve been able to experience, to be as fortunate as I believe I am.”

Stevens was hired as an assistant coach at NU before the 1985 sea-son and promoted to head coach in October 1987, just before his 34th birthday. Only a few years removed from professional ball, he remained

as good a player as any on his early teams — and at least as intense a competitor.

One practice in 1993, Cats ace Chad Schroeder was pitching to Stevens as part of a drill in which the coach would pepper balls to the defense and punish hypotheti-cal runs with pole-to-pole sprints. With the bases loaded and a full count, Stevens reached his bat back and slapped the catcher’s glove for a run-scoring catcher’s interference.

“That was a microcosm of who he was,” Schroeder said. “We were geared up ready for the play, and he just went and did that. And we’re like, it’s unbelievable. The lesson that he probably taught us was there’s more than one way to get on base, but the real lesson is that he’s just a scrapper.”

In those days, former players said, Stevens was as “fiery” and “intense” as they come.

Mark Loretta — who played four years at NU in the early 1990s before enjoying a 15-year Major League career — says Stevens was a “pretty strict disciplinarian,” cit-ing the coach’s disgust after one particular road trip.

“We get off the bus in the middle of the night, and he goes, ‘We’re having practice right now,’” Loretta recalls. “It was like 2 o’clock in the morning. And (afterward) he goes, ‘Be back here at 8 o’clock.’ We pro-ceeded to have four practices in one day the next day.”

Today, Stevens emphasizes the importance of graduating players, turning them into men and pre-paring them for life after baseball and other talking points all college coaches trumpet but only some fol-low through on.

Last week, the baseball team was one of 12 NU programs to earn a Public Recognition Award for its Academic Progress Rate. Stevens’ teams have earned the distinction — given to programs with APR scores in the top 10 percent of their sport nationally — in six of the 10 years the measure has existed.

But Loretta said when Stevens began at NU, his mindset was different.

“When he first was coaching, he was probably more shortsighted in terms of learning about baseball and wins and losses,” Loretta said. “He learned over the time that he could really have a big impact on the lives of kids at that age. I think at first he didn’t realize that as much, but now he realizes that’s a formative time of life for these guys, and he can make a real posi-tive impact on them.”

Senior pitcher Jack Quigley hears the murmurs of Stevens’ gradual mellowing but isn’t fully convinced.

“Sometimes that’s hard to believe,” Quigley said. “There’s no doubt there are times he can be as intense as anybody I’ve ever met. If they say it’s true, maybe it is, but while we’re sitting in the dugout it certainly feels like he’s as intense as it gets.”

Quigley offers an anecdote to prove his coach’s spirit hasn’t gone extinct:

“My freshman year, I was pitch-ing here, and I wasn’t throwing strikes,” he recalls. “And coach Stevens ran out to the mound — I don’t even think he called ‘time’ — and he got in my face and yelled at me so loudly to trust myself and throw strikes that I think every-body in the entire stadium heard

Brian Lee/Daily Senior Staffer

fiERy Northwestern coach Paul Stevens is nothing if not intense, but former players say he has mellowed over the years. “Maybe they’re right. Maybe they’re not right,” he said.

Brian Lee/Daily Senior Staffer

WaTchful EyE For 27 years, Paul Stevens has watched Northwestern from the Rocky Miller Park dugout. The team has accumulated a record of 654-799-6 during Stevens’ tenure.

“He

learned over time that he could really

have a big impact on the lives of kids at

that age.Mark Loretta,former player

» See STEvENS, page 7


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