The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

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The Daily Northwestern DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynu Thursday, January 9, 2014 SPORTS Men’s Basketball Despite struggles, Sobolewski will keep shooting » PAGE 8 Pipe bursts in University Hall » PAGE 3 High 25 Low 23 OPINION Gates Two quarters before break, one after? » PAGE 4 Serving the University and Evanston since 1881 INSIDE Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Opinion 4 | Classifieds & Puzzles 6 | Sports 8 CAPS to form new coalition By ANNIE BRUCE daily senior staffer @annie13 A campus coalition is expected to form this quarter in hopes of improv- ing Northwestern’s mental health services. e coalition is designed to review the ways NU has addressed men- tal health issues and point out areas for improvement, according to John Dunkle, executive director of Counsel- ing and Psychological Services. It will incorporate a survey formed by the Jed Foundation, an organization focused on providing mental health support for college students. “e survey walks each campus through various components of a comprehensive approach to addressing mental health and suicide prevention,” Dunkle said. “At the end of it, we get recommendations of how we’re doing, places where we can improve and a seal of approval from the Jed Foundation.” On its website, the Jed Foundation outlines criteria needed to meet its seal of approval. It evaluates universities’ ability to encourage peer connectedness, identify students who need help, restrict stu- dents’ ability to access lethal materials, offer services to better mental health and correctly handle crises. irty colleges received a JedCam- pus Seal in October, meaning the schools provide widespread mental health programs on campus. Dunkle will co-chair the new coalition along with Weinberg Col- lege of Arts and Sciences Dean Sarah Mangelsdorf. Dunkle hopes to send invitations to potential participants over the next couple of weeks. One of the goals of the program is to include a “representa- tive sample,” including faculty, staff and undergraduate and graduate students from the Evanston and Chicago cam- puses, Dunkle said. Naina Desai, co-president of NU Active Minds, said she believes the coalition will have a long-lasting effect on mental health services at Northwestern. “In the next few years, I think we’ll be able to put what we learned from it to good use and hopefully improve the treatment of mental health on campus,” the Weinberg senior said. “It’s some- thing that (Dunkle is) really excited about and he really hopes will show people how far we’ve come and will show people how far we have to go.” In addition to the coalition, Dunkle emphasized the desire to continue to meet student demand for CAPS and make sure outreach programs, such as the suicide prevention program Question-Persuade-Refer, are a top priority. e development of a peer listening service is also in the works. “It’s … another avenue to address mental health issues as a community issue,” Dunkle said. “Engaging students to help us with that will create a more comprehensive approach to mental health issues on campus.” A peer listening group would require a psychologist to supervise and oversee the program. Funding has not been made available to add a new position. Desai said she thinks CAPS has improved over the last few years but cites lack of funds as a persisting problem. “ey just don’t have the resources to handle the mental struggles of the Northwestern community, and a lot of it’s because they just don’t have the money or they can’t find the right By PRESTON R. MICHELSON the daily northwestern @PrestonMich Kemper Hall became the second package facility on campus Monday, following student complaints about the distance and wait times at the Foster- Walker Complex mailroom. “We heard from students that the distance between where they lived to where the existing package system was was too great,” said Paul Riel, executive director of Residential Services. “And particularly with the weather, we began to look at a satellite model.” Students who live north of Noyes Street — in effect, Sargent Hall and the buildings north of it — will have their packages sent to Kemper. Ayers College of Commerce and Industry and Slivka Residential Col- lege were also considered for the satel- lite location. “We have a neighborhood desk (at Kemper Hall) now that’s 24 hours, so that made some sense,” Riel said. The mailroom, which is much smaller than the one at Foster-Walker, is located on the first floor of Kemper, directly across from the neighborhood desk. According to Riel, a satellite facility for the main mailroom was always a consideration. Students who live on North Campus said they liked the change because of its convenience. “It’s really close,” Weinberg fresh- man Adyut Khazanchi said. “I live in Ayers, so it’s next door.” Residential Services first presented the idea of a second location Nov. 6 at a Slivka Residential College forum. “We were hearing from students that that was something that they would like to see and it was something that we thought that we could work out,” Riel said. e opening of the mailroom was announced Dec. 2 in an email to the Northwestern community. e new facility could also help alle- viate traffic at Foster-Walker. Ebony Calloway/The Daily Northwestern SIGNED, SEALED, DELIVERED Residential Life opened a new package center in Kemper Hall. The package center will service all North Campus residents as a means of supplementing the Foster-Walker Complex center. » See KEMPER, page 7 » See CAPS, page 7 Kemper’s new mailroom opens NU receives more than 33K apps for class of 2018 With Regular Decision appli- cations due Jan. 1, Northwestern received approximately 33,200 applications for the class of 2018, a 1.3 percent increase from last year. With 45 percent of the class already filled through early decision applicants, Christopher Watson, dean of undergraduate admissions, predicted the overall acceptance rate will fall somewhere between 12 and 13 percent. For the class of 2017, NU received 32,772 applications with a 13.9 percent acceptance rate. Early applications increased by nearly 15 percent for the class of 2018. Applications have risen by more than 10,000 since 2007, when NU admitted 27 percent of all applicants. Admissions decisions will be released in late March. — Tyler Pager Dunkle, Mangelsdorf will chair new mental health review group Illinois bans phone use while driving By BAILEY WILLIAMS the daily northwestern @news_BaileyW A new Illinois law that prohibits using handheld devices while driv- ing went into effect statewide Jan. 1, following the passage of similar ordinances in Evanston and other municipalities. “More drivers will be aware of the state law,” Evanston Police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said. Under the law, drivers caught using handheld devices such as cell phones will face a $75 fine for the first offense, a $100 fine for the sec- ond offense, a $125 fine for the third and a $150 fine for any subsequent offenses. After four offenses, drivers also face a possible suspension of their driver’s license. The Evanston City Council unan- imously passed a similar ordinance in 2010. If drivers are caught using handheld devices while driving in the city, drivers have to pay $50 each time without possible loss of driv- ing privileges, Parrott said. The offi- cer who pulls a driver over decides whether they will be charged at the state or city level. At the city level, drivers also face a possible $200 fine for being caught using a handheld device in the event of a car crash, according to the city’s website. “In terms of hands-free tech- nology, I think it would be a safer option,” said Weinberg junior Aash » See CELL BAN, page 7 Weather, wait times bring second facility Infographic by Jordan Harrison/The Daily Northwestern

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Transcript of The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

Page 1: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

The Daily NorthwesternDAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM Find us online @thedailynuThursday, January 9, 2014

sports Men’s BasketballDespite struggles, Sobolewski will

keep shooting » PAGE 8

Pipe bursts in University Hall » PAGE 3

High 25Low 23

opinion GatesTwo quarters before

break, one after?» PAGE 4

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

CAPS to form new coalition

By Annie BruCedaily senior staffer @anniefb13

A campus coalition is expected to form this quarter in hopes of improv-ing Northwestern’s mental health services.

The coalition is designed to review the ways NU has addressed men-tal health issues and point out areas for improvement, according to John Dunkle, executive director of Counsel-ing and Psychological Services. It will incorporate a survey formed by the Jed Foundation, an organization focused on providing mental health support for college students.

“The survey walks each campus through various components of a comprehensive approach to addressing mental health and suicide prevention,” Dunkle said. “At the end of it, we get recommendations of how we’re doing, places where we can improve and a seal of approval from the Jed Foundation.”

On its website, the Jed Foundation outlines criteria needed to meet its seal of approval.

It evaluates universities’ ability to encourage peer connectedness, identify students who need help, restrict stu-dents’ ability to access lethal materials, offer services to better mental health and correctly handle crises.

Thirty colleges received a JedCam-pus Seal in October, meaning the schools provide widespread mental health programs on campus.

Dunkle will co-chair the new coalition along with Weinberg Col-lege of Arts and Sciences Dean Sarah Mangelsdorf.

Dunkle hopes to send invitations

to potential participants over the next couple of weeks. One of the goals of the program is to include a “representa-tive sample,” including faculty, staff and undergraduate and graduate students from the Evanston and Chicago cam-puses, Dunkle said.

Naina Desai, co-president of NU Active Minds, said she believes the coalition will have a long-lasting effect on mental health services at Northwestern.

“In the next few years, I think we’ll be able to put what we learned from it to good use and hopefully improve the treatment of mental health on campus,” the Weinberg senior said. “It’s some-thing that (Dunkle is) really excited about and he really hopes will show people how far we’ve come and will show people how far we have to go.”

In addition to the coalition, Dunkle emphasized the desire to continue to meet student demand for CAPS and make sure outreach programs, such as the suicide prevention program Question-Persuade-Refer, are a top priority.

The development of a peer listening service is also in the works.

“It’s … another avenue to address mental health issues as a community issue,” Dunkle said. “Engaging students to help us with that will create a more comprehensive approach to mental health issues on campus.”

A peer listening group would require a psychologist to supervise and oversee the program. Funding has not been made available to add a new position.

Desai said she thinks CAPS has improved over the last few years but cites lack of funds as a persisting problem.

“They just don’t have the resources to handle the mental struggles of the Northwestern community, and a lot of it’s because they just don’t have the money or they can’t find the right

By PreSton r. MiCHeLSonthe daily northwestern @PrestonMich

Kemper Hall became the second package facility on campus Monday, following student complaints about the distance and wait times at the Foster-Walker Complex mailroom.

“We heard from students that the distance between where they lived to where the existing package system was was too great,” said Paul Riel, executive director of Residential Services. “And particularly with the weather, we began to look at a satellite model.”

Students who live north of Noyes Street — in effect, Sargent Hall and the

buildings north of it — will have their packages sent to Kemper.

Ayers College of Commerce and Industry and Slivka Residential Col-lege were also considered for the satel-lite location.

“We have a neighborhood desk (at Kemper Hall) now that’s 24 hours, so that made some sense,” Riel said.

The mailroom, which is much smaller than the one at Foster-Walker, is located on the first floor of Kemper, directly across from the neighborhood desk.

According to Riel, a satellite facility for the main mailroom was always a consideration.

Students who live on North Campus said they liked the change because of

its convenience.“It’s really close,” Weinberg fresh-

man Adyut Khazanchi said. “I live in Ayers, so it’s next door.”

Residential Services first presented the idea of a second location Nov. 6 at a Slivka Residential College forum.

“We were hearing from students that that was something that they would like to see and it was something that we thought that we could work out,” Riel said.

The opening of the mailroom was announced Dec. 2 in an email to the Northwestern community.

The new facility could also help alle-viate traffic at Foster-Walker.

Ebony Calloway/The Daily Northwestern

SIGNED, SEALED, DELIVERED Residential Life opened a new package center in Kemper Hall. The package center will service all North Campus residents as a means of supplementing the Foster-Walker Complex center.

» See KEmPER, page 7» See cAPS, page 7

Kemper’s new mailroom opens

NU receives more than 33K apps for class of 2018

With Regular Decision appli-cations due Jan. 1, Northwestern received approximately 33,200 applications for the class of 2018, a

1.3 percent increase from last year.With 45 percent of the class

already filled through early decision applicants, Christopher Watson, dean of undergraduate admissions, predicted the overall acceptance rate will fall somewhere between 12 and 13 percent. For the class of 2017, NU received 32,772 applications with a 13.9 percent acceptance rate.

Early applications increased by nearly 15 percent for the class of 2018. Applications have risen by more than 10,000 since 2007, when NU admitted 27 percent of all applicants.

Admissions decisions will be released in late March.

— Tyler Pager

Dunkle, Mangelsdorf will chair new mental health review group

Illinois bans phone use while drivingBy BAiLey wiLLiAMSthe daily northwestern @news_BaileyW

A new Illinois law that prohibits using handheld devices while driv-ing went into effect statewide Jan. 1, following the passage of similar ordinances in Evanston and other municipalities.

“More drivers will be aware of the state law,” Evanston Police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said.

Under the law, drivers caught using handheld devices such as cell phones will face a $75 fine for the first offense, a $100 fine for the sec-ond offense, a $125 fine for the third and a $150 fine for any subsequent offenses.

After four offenses, drivers also

face a possible suspension of their driver’s license.

The Evanston City Council unan-imously passed a similar ordinance in 2010. If drivers are caught using handheld devices while driving in the city, drivers have to pay $50 each time without possible loss of driv-ing privileges, Parrott said. The offi-cer who pulls a driver over decides whether they will be charged at the state or city level.

At the city level, drivers also face a possible $200 fine for being caught using a handheld device in the event of a car crash, according to the city’s website.

“In terms of hands-free tech-nology, I think it would be a safer option,” said Weinberg junior Aash

» See cELL bAN, page 7

Weather, wait times bring second facility

Infographic by Jordan Harrison/The Daily Northwestern

Page 2: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

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Around Town2 NEWS | ThE DAILy NORThWESTERN ThURSDAy, JANUARy 9, 2014

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Chicago man arrested in connection with attempted theft of $9K in electronics

Police arrested a Chicago man Monday at the Best Buy in Evanston after he attempted to steal about $9,000 worth of electronics, police said.

The man tried to use a fraudulent Visa gift card to buy the electronics from the store, 2301 Howard St.

He tried to purchase the items with the card after 8 p.m. Monday, police said.

He was charged with attempted theft and is

scheduled to appear in court March 4.

truck hit by drunk driver, injuring city employee

A man was arrested Tuesday night after he drunkenly crashed his car into a city truck in cen-tral Evanston, police said. Street supervisor Don Cornelius was in the driver’s seat of the truck at the time of the crash and later went to the hospital. He was released with no serious injuries, Public Works Director Suzette Robinson said.

The truck was parked to protect workers who

were clearing snow off of Central Street, Robinson said. The driver was going westbound on Central Street and did not see the truck, Evanston Police Cmdr. Jay Parrott said.

The accident happened near the intersection of Central Street and Bennett Avenue. The driver claimed he didn’t see the truck because his wind-shield was fogged, Parrott said. The man driving the car was arrested and charged with driving under the influence.

— Ciara McCarthy

Report details invasive species’ spread to Great Lakes, prevention tactics

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers released a report Monday focused on how to prevent the spread of invasive species between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River Basin.

The report, titled the “Great Lakes and Missis-sippi River Interbasin Study,” takes a closer look at man-made and natural waterways in the Chi-cago area that are potential hot spots for invasive species.

“The overarching goal of this study is to develop a range of options and technologies to protect the Great Lakes and Mississippi River aquatic eco-systems from ANS that could transfer via aquatic pathways connecting the ... basins,” USACE said in the report.

Researchers accounted for a total of 13 inva-sive species that can displace those native to both watersheds, as well as lower water quality and affect the economy.

The list of species includes the Asian carp, which is at the center of an ongoing battle involving state officials who oversee electric barriers designed to deter the fish from Chicago waterways.

Although the Corps outlined eight options to prevent the further spread of invasive species in its report, it did not recommend a specific course of

action. Instead, its options ranged from taking no new federal actions to creating physical barriers between the two basins.

Creating physical separation in waterways in cities such as Wilmette and Chicago would likely restrict passage of the invasive species listed in the report. However, the Corps estimated the project would take 25 years to complete and cost more than $18 billion.

The Corps also suggested smaller projects such as using herbicides and encouraging education to prevent spread of invasive species.

These would cost $68 million and the effects would be seen immediately, according to the report. However, they would affect a much nar-rower range of breeds.

— Edward Cox

Police Blotter

Annabel Edwards/Daily Senior Staffer

CArP, KEEP OUt The Great Lakes and Mississippi River Interbasin Study evaluates methods for preventing the transfer of nuisance species between the Great Lakes and Mississippi River Basins. The study, released Monday, focuses on how to keep Asian Carp out of the Great Lakes.

Page 3: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

On CampusOne of the things Mayfest really, really prides itself on is that we’re a memory that every Northwestern student will have some sort of association with.

— Mayfest spokeswoman Bri Hightower

“ ” Site ranks Dillo Day among top college traditions Page 6

thursday, january 9, 2014 the daily northwestern | news 3

SIGN UP FOR YOUR SENIORYEARBOOK PORTRAITBEFORE IT'S TOO LATEABSOLUTE LAST CHANCE THIS YEARWednesday, January 15–Thursday, January 23 @ NORRISSign up at: www.OurYear.com NU Code: 87150Walk-ins welcome (but appointments have priority).

AMONG THE GREATS

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

CLASS OF 1988 NU SYLLABUS YEARBOOK

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

By Ciara MCCarthy and ally MutniCkdaily senior staffers @mccarthy_ciara, @allymutnick

Students and professors were evacuated from University Hall on Wednesday afternoon after a burst pipe caused flooding and triggered the building’s fire alarm.

The building was evacuated after the fire alarm went off at about 2:15 p.m. The Evan-ston fire department and University Police responded to the scene shortly after.

The extreme outside temperature caused a sprinkler head in the building’s fire suppression system to freeze and burst, said Gary Wojtow-icz, the director of Facilities Management. The sprinkler head was located on the top floor, causing “water inundation” all the way down to the first floor, Wojtowicz said.

Evanston fire department Division Chief Dwight Hohl explained that water flow through the sprinkler system automatically triggered the fire alarm and alerted the fire department, which

is why officers showed up to investigate.“It wasn’t anything significant,” Hohl said.The Office of the Registrar moved one class

from University Hall 102 when the instructor called requesting a different room, said Maria DiBenedetto, associate University registrar.

The registrar’s office is also planning to reschedule classes tomorrow that are in the same room, along with any other professors who ask to be relocated.

A class scheduled in University Hall 102 on Thursday has been relocated to Seabury-West-ern Theological Seminary until further notice, according to an email sent by the office.

Medill junior Sunny Choo said her sociology class was cancelled after students evacuated the building. Choo said her professor indicated all the cancellations would take a toll on the class.

“She said that now since this is the second time were missing class, she’s going to have to completely adjust our syllabus,” Choo said.

Wojtowicz said he did not have an estimate for when the building would be ready for occupancy.

“Repairs are underway to the sprinkler head,” he said. “We’re still addressing the damage.”

[email protected] [email protected]

By reBeCCa savranskythe daily northwestern @beccasavransky

Associated Student Government held its first Senate meeting of the new year Wednes-day, outlining proposed legislation for the quarter and discussing ASG support for Body Acceptance Week and the need for increased openness within legislative initiatives.

ASG President Ani Ajith discussed the ini-tiative to promote more transparency within Senate through creating an online documenta-tion of ASG events.

“We’re working on a playbook right now,”

said Ajith, a Weinberg senior and former Daily staffer. “It’s a record of every single project, initiative and event that happens. We’ll record everything about it. We’ll be publishing it online for anyone, everyone to see.”

Senate also outlined its project to institute new measures promoting better communi-cation within ASG, specifically within the Diversity and Inclusion and Sustainability committees.

Due to low attendance, Senate was unable to vote on legislation. Voting was delayed on initiatives including Hoop for Haiyan, a col-laboration with the Northwestern athletic department to raise money for recovery from Typhoon Haiyan, which hit the Philippines

in November. The proposed event is a basketball tourna-

ment that would send proceeds to victims of the typhoon through the “Hope After Haiyan” campaign. Senate plans to vote on the delayed measures at its Jan. 15 meeting.

During the meeting, Alex Van Atta, ASG executive vice president, touted the success of the 10K initiative, noting it received 203 submissions, surpassing the goal of 200. The 10K Initiative committee will review the sub-missions through the quarter and limit them to five to seven ideas to be presented to Senate at the end of quarter and eventually voted on by the student body, Van Atta said.

Ajith also recommended using $200 from

the Senate Project Pool to contribute to the fund for Body Acceptance Week’s keynote speaker, Lisa Lee, the diversity program man-ager for Facebook and the former publisher of Hyphen Magazine.

A $200 donation would cover 10 percent of the cost of the speaker, Ajith said.

“She does amazing things,” Ajith said. “She has a great website. She’s very accomplished for someone very young and she does really cool things. She’s very much someone who is cutting edge and has a great platform to talk about some of these issues, and we’d love to be part of that.”

[email protected]

Classes relocate after pipe bursts in NU’s University Hall

ASG talks Acceptance Week, better communication

tanner Maxwell/daily senior staffer

PIPE DOWN OVER THERE a fire truck comes to university hall after a pipe burst. students and faculty in the building were evacuated and several classes relocated or were canceled.

Page 4: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

Join the online conversation at www.dailynorthwestern.comOpiniOn

Thursday, January 9, 2014 PAGE 4

The Daily NorthwesternVolume 134, Issue 49

Editor in ChiefPaulina Firozi

Managing EditorsJoseph Diebold Manuel Rapada

Opinion Editors Julian Caracotsios

Caryn Lenhoff

Assistant Opinion EditorBlair Dunbar

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, occupation and phone number.• Should be 400 words or fewer.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.

What is your New Year’s resolution? Can you even remember it after the eight whole days that have elapsed since New Year’s Day? That mild case of amnesia emanating from the late-night blur during the waning hours of 2013 and the first few of 2014 probably is not helping much.

If you can remember your resolution, how is that going for you? Have you made any active changes to your life since that senti-mental essay you posted on Facebook about how great a year it was but how you want to make 2014 even better?

I don’t mean to admonish individuals for their actions — or lack thereof — in the first week of the new year, but I do think that it is important for us to take a look at how we view and celebrate the turning over of the calendar.

In the literal sense, the first day of Janu-ary is no more than an arbitrary benchmark

of when the Earth has completed its orbit around the sun. For many of us, as Christmas has come and gone, the arrival of Dec. 31 represents the abrupt arrival of stress from the ultimate questions we ask ourselves each year: First, “What the heck am I going to do for New Year’s Eve?” — because we are all losers if the last night of the year is not the

best — followed by, “What should my New Year’s resolu-tion be?” and finally, “Wait, what was my New Year’s resolution last year?”

As we realize that we have no real answers to these ques-tions, we sneak into the other room while the relatives are in town for the 47th day of Christmas. Maybe creating an Instagram montage highlight-

ing my best photos of the year will help me with my New Year’s resolution? Nope, that’s no help. Perhaps checking out the published-

in-November “Biggest Fashion Fails of 2013” will help? Nah, not that either. How about seeing if that girl you sort of knew in high school is hosting a gathering tonight, just because she has parents who don’t mind spending their first day of the new year with a completely trashed house? Yeah, sounds good. A resolution can wait. There’s no way I’m missing another year of staring at a clock that is two minutes slow — or is it fast? I can’t remember — pretending that seeing 11:59 turn into 12:00 holds any significance in our lives.

Then the day finally comes. We spent all of yesterday promising ourselves that begin-ning today, it’s a fresh start. A whole new person will be born. We just didn’t imagine the rebirth would begin with a throbbing headache and a volcanic stomach. Any New Year’s resolutions we made were hastily thrown together, mere excuses to say that we had a resolution — wait, what did I decide it was again?

To be clear, I believe it is great to take a look back at the year that was and consider how we have changed as people and how our lives have changed. A year ago today, the idea that right now I would be a Northwestern

Wildcat was far from my consciousness. However, the problem that I seek to bring to light is that New Year’s for many people represents a superficial, temporary moment of sentimentality that is quickly forgotten; moreover, it is often immediately enveloped by a night of partying and foolish decisions.

If Jan. 1 really is a catalyst — the first day of a new, better you — I totally respect that. Even if you want to call New Year’s Eve — an excuse to party for most — an ultimate catharsis before you change yourself for the better, that is fine with me.

I just ask that if we are going to evaluate our past and look forward to the future, why does it have to be on New Year’s? Jan. 1 is no better a day to improve ourselves than Aug. 14.

It is great if the Instagram montages inspire you to change yourself on New Year’s, but for many, it is just an annual deja vu of false promises and alcoholic beverages.

Oh well. Maybe next year.

Bob Hayes is a Weinberg 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].

Heading back to my dorm this week in negative double-digit weather, I couldn’t help but think of my semester-schedule friends resting at home. Northwestern’s quarter system results in students returning to school earlier in January than those who attend semester schools. NU students also begin and end their summers later.

Though abolishing the quarter system has been discussed, this would eliminate many of the unique opportunities that made us choose NU. We can take up to 50 percent more courses than many semester schools allow. We can study abroad for a quarter, even a semester, and only miss a third of the academic year. We know a class we hate will be over relatively quickly and any one class has less of an impact on our grade point averages than it would at a semester school.

However, many students have recog-nized the quarter system calendar has its

drawbacks. One reason NU’s academic calen-dar is so strange is because scheduling Win-ter Break in the middle of a quarter would be a nightmare. Therefore, we cannot start Fall Quarter any earlier than late September. Yet, there is a solution. Scheduling two quarters prior to Winter Break would maintain the benefits of the quarter system but avoid its many drawbacks. School could begin in early August and end in early April.

Currently, NU fits two quarters and Spring Break in just more than five months, between early January and the second week of June. Why not try to fit two quarters between Aug. 1 and Dec. 23? Losing a few days of class each quarter would be worth it to give stu-dents better opportunities to work or intern by starting their summers earlier.

Winter Break would shift back, beginning right before Christmas and ending later in January. This would avoid students having to begin their second quarter during the coldest period of weather in Chicago and align fur-ther with our semester school compatriots.

Meanwhile, summer would move forward, beginning in early April and ending in early August. Students looking for summer jobs near their hometowns would not be at a

disadvantage by returning home later than other students. As an East Coaster, my sum-mer vacation begins about a month after many of my friends from home. Students who come to NU from a southern state may be home a month and a half after peers in their hometowns. With this change to the quarter system, students would be able to begin job searching and work-ing earlier in the summer.

Students could also take advan-tage of summer courses at a college near their home. Many schools have a two-part summer session, where the first course in a sequence is only offered during the first session. NU’s late summer prevents

students from taking a class during the first session at many schools. This makes it dif-ficult for students on a quarter schedule to take classes in a sequence. An early calendar may keep students from finishing a course sequence over the summer. Students would be better served by being able to begin or to complete a course sequence over the summer at another school than be unable to take this opportunity at all.

While an early August start date may seem extreme, when one considers the schedules of some other schools — especially those located in the south — this schedule does not seem so radical. University of Georgia’s orientation this year began Aug. 7 and classes started five days later.

NU should change the academic calendar so that it can still maintain the quarter sys-tem but shift the placement of the quarters themselves. This would allow us to have all the benefits of quarters but reduce their drawbacks.

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

What significance does New Year’s really have?

Time has come to rearrange the quarter system

“I just ask that if we are going to evaluate our past and look forward to the future, why does it have to be on New Year’s?

“Why

not try to fit two quarters

between Aug. 1 and Dec. 23?

Losing a few days of class

each quarter would be

worth it to give students better

opportunities to work or intern

by starting their summers earlier.

bObhAyEsDaIly columnIsT

MATTGATEsDaIly columnIsT

The Drawing Board by Selena Parnon

Page 5: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014
Page 6: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

6 NEWS | thE daily NorthWEStErN thUrSday, JaNUary 9, 2014

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HOSPITAL Northwestern appointed a new president of Northwestern Memorial hospital as well as a new director of the lurie Cancer Center on tuesday.

BP, claiming fraud, wants to stop oil-spill payments

WASHINGTON — The Deepwater Horizon set-tlement agreement is in turmoil, with BP attempting to stop the payments and saying money shouldn’t have gone to an adult escort service, a global nuclear consultant and others that haven’t proved the mon-ster 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico cost them business.

BP is waging an aggressive campaign in the courts and the news media against the settlement it signed two years ago. The company agreed to the settlement under pressure as claims mounted from the oil rig explosion that killed 11 workers, led to the biggest environmental disaster in U.S. history and did major economic damage to businesses in the region.

When it signed the settlement, BP expected a cost of about $7.8 billion. But it soon became clear that payouts would swell. Now BP is in court argu-ing that the claims administrator and the judge overseeing the settlement are misinterpreting the terms of the deal. The company is trying to persuade a federal appeals court to block payments to compa-nies that can’t prove the spill caused their losses.

“BP has been ordered to pay hundreds of mil-lions of dollars — soon likely to be billions — of fic-titious and inflated losses,” the company argues.

Blaine LeCesne, a law professor at Loyola Uni-versity in New Orleans who’s followed the case closely, said BP was trying to back out of the settle-ment terms it had signed.

“It’s a mess. It’s a total mess.” LeCesne said.The class-action settlement, which BP reached

with private plaintiff ’s lawyers, never said that com-panies must prove the spill directly caused their losses, LeCesne said.

That’s because the only way to prove such a thing is through a trial, he said. And going through trials in tens of thousands of cases would be long and expensive. Instead, he said, BP and the plaintiffs agreed to a formula where, if a business met the criteria, its loss was presumed to be a result of the 2010 spill.

The formula takes into account the business’s distance from the Gulf and compares revenue for certain months before and after the spill. Businesses in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and some coun-ties on the west coast of Florida and in southeast-ern Texas are eligible to apply under the formula. The names of the businesses and the amounts they received are confidential, but some details have become public as a result of the battle between BP and the claims administrator.

— Sean Cockerham (McClatchy Washington Bureau)

National NewsCollege news site ranks Dillo Day among ‘Greatest College Traditions’

The national college news website Cam-pus Grotto listed Dillo Day as number 26 in its recent list of 100 Greatest College Traditions.

In a post published in late December, the site noted Dillo Day’s high profile musi-cal acts and Mayfest’s Battle of the Bands competition.

Events from other Midwest Big Ten schools topped the list. Indiana University’s Little 500 bike race and the University of Wisconsin’s Mifflin Street Block Party placed in the first two spots.

This is not the first time Dillo Day has received local and regional attention. Chi-cago Magazine listed the music festival in a May 31 post titled “Here are Five Things You Should Do in Chicago this Weekend.”

The real estate blog Motovo listed it as number four in its “21 Reasons You Need to Move to Evanston.” NextGen Journal also gave it a nod in its list of college music festivals.

Mayfest spokeswoman Bri Hightower said the organization was excited about the national recognition.

“I know one of the things Mayfest really really prides itself on is that we’re a memory that every Northwestern student will have some sort of association with no matter how far out they are,” she said. “That’s a lasting Northwestern impression that we want to help create.”

— Ally Mutnick

Jim an/the daily Northwestern

DILLO Students brave the rain during dillo day in 2011. Campus Grotto recently put dillo day on its list of 100 Greatest College traditions.

Lurie Cancer Cancer, Northwestern Hospital get new top administrators

As they enter the new year, both North-western Memorial Hospital and the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center have new heads in charge.

Richard Gannotta was appointed president of the hospital, after serving seven years as chief operating officer and then president of Duke Raleigh Hospital.

“Rick is an accomplished healthcare execu-tive who understands academic health systems like ours,” said Dean Harrison, Northwest-ern Memorial Healthcare president and chief executive officer, in a news release. “He has a track record for working collaboratively and achieving results. We expect Rick to play an important role in the leadership of Northwest-ern Medicine.”

Gannotta will report to Northwestern Memorial Healthcare executive vice president and COO Peter McCanna.

“Attracting an executive of Rick’s caliber

will help us to continue to advance our efforts to develop clinical programs of distinction and expand access to Northwestern Medi-cine,” McCanna said in the release. “Through our recently aligned physician organization, Northwestern Medical Group, we have the combined strengths of top physician, clinical and administrative leaders to provide the best possible care to the patients and communities we are privileged to serve.”

Meanwhile, Feinberg Prof. Leonidas Plata-nias will serve as interim director of the Lurie Cancer Center.

Previously the deputy director, Platanias replaces Steven Rosen, who is leaving the cen-ter Jan. 31 after 24 years to become the provost and chief scientific officer of Duarte, Calif.-based City of Hope.

“Leon has provided great leadership over the past decade, recruiting numerous faculty and helping build the Lurie Cancer Center’s international prominence,” said Eric Neilson, dean of the Feinberg School of Medicine, in a news release. “As interim director, he will carry forward the Lurie Cancer Center’s reputation as one of the nation’s premier cancer research facilities.”

— Joseph Diebold

Page 7: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

Chalasani, who drives in Evanston but was not aware of either the Evanston ordinance or the new state law. “It will for sure have an impact.”

Ald. Jane Grover (7th), sponsor of the Evan-ston ordinance, said car crash rates dropped following the passage of Evanston’s cell phone ban. According to EPD statistics, the city saw a 17 percent reduction in road-related crashes and 14.5 percent reduction in injury-related crashes between 2009 and 2012.

Grover praised Illinois’ passage of the ban, saying although there may not be a causal rela-tionship between cell phone usage and reported crashes, there is certainly a correlation.

“I hope statewide we will see the same results,” Grover said.

Grover added Evanston helped in push-ing toward a statewide ban as one of the first municipalities to enact such an ordinance.

More than 100 citations for cell phone viola-tions were issued in the last week of December, according to an EPD newsletter.

Parrott said citations under the law fluctuate and cell phone usage while driving is “still (a) prominent violation.”

[email protected]

Thursday, January 9, 2014 The daily norThwesTern | news 7

people even when they do get the allowance for it,” Desai said.

Dunkle said he is hopeful a new psycholo-gist will be hired to coordinate the peer listening program.

“I think we’ve been very much supported by the administration in my tenure as director,” Dunkle said.

In addition to hiring someone to supervise the program, a peer listening group would also require significant student training, according to Dunkle.

“It takes a lot of supervision and oversight to make sure that it’s done responsibly and making sure we’re giving the best possible services to our students,” Dunkle said.

[email protected]

“If there’s fewer people going there, it’ll prob-ably help wait times,” Weinberg freshman Grant Klein said.

Last year, the package system was based out of six locations — including Kemper — and proved unreliable, according to Riel.

“Packages would simply be dropped off in six locations around campus and there was no account-ability,” Riel said. “So most people got their packages — it was kind of an honest man’s process — but some students didn’t.”

Because packages get logged at Foster-Walker when they first arrive, the addition of a second location still keeps the current, centralized model intact. If a package arrives on a weekend, it will be checked in and stay at Foster-Walker until it is taken to Kemper on Monday morning. If a student wants the package over the weekend, they can pick it up at the primary mailroom.

All packages addressed to North Campus resi-dents that were in Foster-Walker over Winter Break were transported to Kemper.

The Kemper facility is open from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekdays and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on week-ends. The Foster-Walker mailroom has longer hours on weekdays, opening at 8:30 a.m.

“We’re looking forward to seeing how it plays out,” Riel said. “That’s the goal for everything we’re doing here, having to make it better for students.”

[email protected]

CAPSFrom page 1

KemperFrom page 1

annabel edwards/daily senior staffer

‘SHUT UP AND DRIVE’ Medill sophomore shelbie Bostedt checks her phone in her car. an illinois law banning the use of handheld devices while driving went into effect Jan. 1.

California student denies hate crime in bullying of black roommate

SAN JOSE, Calif. — The San Jose State student accused of being the ringleader in the relentless harassment of his black roommate pleaded not guilty Monday to misdemeanor hate-crime and battery charges.

Logan Beaschler, 18, of Bakersfield, faces up to a year in jail if he is convicted in last year’s alleged hazing, which has sparked tremendous anger in the community and on the diverse campus.

Three other young men—Joseph Bomgard-ner, 19, of Clovis, Colin Warren, 18, of Wooda-cre, and an unidentified juvenile—have not yet entered pleas.

The hazing took place last fall in a suite of a campus dorm, according to reports by police and housing officials obtained by the Mercury News.

The defendants are accused of displaying a Confederate flag, writing a racial slur on a dry-

erase board in the living room, repeatedly lock-ing the then-17-year-old victim in his room and clamping a U-shaped bicycle lock around his neck.

Officials said the hazing began with nicknam-ing the black student “Three-fifths,” referring to the way the government once counted blacks as just a fraction of a person. When he pro-tested, they dubbed him “Fraction.” Beaschler’s lawyer, Chuck Mesirow, asked Judge Ronald T. Lisk on Monday to waive his client’s $15,000 bail and allow him to remain free on his own recognizance.

But Lisk denied the request. The other two adult defendants also are out on $15,000 bail. The juvenile proceedings are sealed.

All four have been suspended from the university.

Mesirow said in a telephone interview that Beaschler still is awaiting final word from the university, but expects to be expelled. Expulsion

would bar him from enrolling at another Cali-fornia State University campus.

“We apologize, and we’re very ashamed of this,” Mesirow said, speaking for the family. But Mesirow said the incidents were part of a broader series of pranks that included others in the dorm. Some of the participants appar-ently were motivated by a desire to be “edgy,” not racially offensive.

“I’m not defending these insensitive, stupid acts by immature young men,” he added. “But I don’t think anyone (who knows Beaschler) thinks my client was racist.”

San Jose State also has set up a task force to investigate the incident and hired Myron D. Moye, a prominent black San Francisco law-yer with experience handling sensitive issues, to conduct an independent review and produce a report.

— Tracey Kaplan (San Jose Mercury News)

Across Campuses

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

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Cell banFrom page 1

Page 8: The Daily Northwestern - Jan. 9, 2014

SPORTSThursday, January 9, 2014 @Wildcat_Extra

ON DECK ON THE RECORDMen’s BasketballNU at Iowa, 8 p.m. Thursday

We feel like if we keep getting the shots we’ve been getting, they’ll definitely start to fall. — Junior point guard Dave Sobolewski

JAN.

9

Misses aside, Sobolewski keeps on shootingBy Alex puttermAndaily senior staffer @AlexPutto2

Dave Sobolewski doesn’t have many answers about his enduring shooting woes.

The junior point guard has been the face of the Wildcats’ offensive putridity through the first half of the season but can’t seem to place the problem.

Sobolewski is shooting just 26.4 per-cent from the field and 17.7 percent from behind the arc on the season, rates well below the norm for a player expected to contribute on offense. Northwestern as a team is last in the Big Ten in both overall and 3-point shooting percentage and ranks 257th in the country in offensive efficiency according to teamrankings.com.

Coach Chris Collins says the shoot-ing struggles might be mental, but Sobolewski insists they’re not.

“I don’t (think so), actually,” he said Tuesday. “We’re all as a group getting good looks. They all feel good leaving our hands.”

If the misses are not mental — and Sobolewski said they’re not mechanical either— are they attributable to some kind of misfortune? Rim-outs and bad bounces?

“It’s part of the game,” Sobolewski said. “I don’t think it’s bad luck.”

Whatever the cause of such chronic misfiring — from Sobolewski as well as his teammates — it has become a major problem.

The Cats haven’t cracked 60 points in any of their past four games (the lat-ter three losses) and their first two con-ference games were particularly ugly.

Sobolewski’s issues are only a frac-tion of the problem, but he is the most dramatic example of NU’s widespread struggles. The junior is posting career lows in points, rebounds and assists per game. The statistical drops are due in part to substantially dimin-ished playing time, which has come

largely in response to Sobolewski’s poor shooting.

Sobolewski might be suffering from Collins’ fresh offensive system. The point guard was recruited into for-mer coach Bill Carmody’s methodi-cal Princeton offense, which involves

numerous off-ball cuts and quick passes. Collins runs a more tradi-tional offense, with the point guard respon-sible for facili-tating scoring and, of course, hitting shots when open.

Collins says Sobolewski is shooting well in practice and continu-ally refers to

the struggles as something that can be overcome by shooting until the slump busts.

“He’s putting a lot of work in,” Col-lins said. “We’re keeping his confidence up. We’re telling him — everybody, his teammates, our coaching staff — he’s got to take those shots. We need him to take those shots. And the next step is they need to go down in the games.”

Collins has no choice but to encour-age his co-captain. NU has no other true point guard on its roster and depends on sophomore guard Tre Demps and junior guard JerShon Cobb to play the position when Sobolewski sits.

The Cats’ general lack of offense also makes Sobolewski a necessary rota-tion staple. Only senior forward Drew Crawford has produced consistently,

and Collins has been perpetually in search of alternate scoring options. Sobolewski, who averaged nearly 10 points per game last year, holds prom-ise as a potential future producer.

So he continues to play because NU lacks depth at his position and because the team is desperate for points, and at least its veteran point guard has shown some degree of offensive capability in the past. In fact, Sobolewski showed his ability to contribute as recently as six weeks ago.

Against Illinois-Chicago on Nov. 20, the junior exploded for a career-high 25 points on 9-of-14 shooting, as NU scored 93 points in a 35-point victory. It was the only game this season in which the guard has converted more than two field goals. The nine baskets he scored that night are more than he has hit from the floor in his last eight games combined.

Collins isn’t asking for another 25-point outburst (although “I’d take that for sure,” he said) but said he hopes a few made baskets will get Sobolewski back on track.

“We need him to have that game where maybe he hits three, four threes,” Collins said. “A game where you string two, three, four together, where he gets that confidence to be able to make them in games.”

NU (7-8, 0-2 Big Ten) visits Iowa City, Iowa, on Thursday to face No. 20 Iowa (12-3, 1-1), the conference lead-ers in field goal defense. It may not be the optimal occasion for Sobolewski to return to form.

But there’s no question Sobolewski will fire if he finds himself open. Col-lins — who knows something about scoring from his days at Duke, where he averaged 16.3 points per game as a senior — is adamant the cure for poor shooting is more shooting.

“Shooting is a fragile thing mentally with guys,” Collins said. “The only way you can get out of it is you have to be tough-minded. You can’t be afraid to shoot your way out of it. If you stop

shooting, or you get more hesitant, that’s not the way you get out of it.”

In that vein, Sobolewski says he and his teammates won’t be holding back. As the playground adage goes, “shoot-ers gotta shoot.”

“We feel like if we keep getting the shots we’ve been getting,” Sobolewski said, “they’ll definitely start to fall.”

[email protected]

By reBeccA FriedmAndaily senior staffer

Northwestern begins its Big Ten season against two of the tough-est teams in the country — No. 18 Nebraska and No. 21 Purdue.

After a nail-biting 66-65 loss to the Cornhuskers, the Wildcats’ road gets no easier as they look to take the intensity they displayed in Lincoln, Neb., into their matchup against the Boilermakers. NU is coming off an unexpected break after the team’s contest slated for Monday against in-state rival Illinois was canceled due to severe weather.

The extra practice time allows NU to prepare for a Purdue team coming off a weeklong break since opening their Big Ten season with a loss to Ohio State.

The Cats can take numerous posi-tives out of their matchup against the Cornhuskers and into the rest of the season. NU’s young guns led the team in its near upset. Freshman guard Christen Inman led the team with 19 points. Inman’s classmate, forward Nia Coffey, tallied 16 points and sopho-more forward Lauren Douglas added 13 off the bench to round out the top three NU scorers.

The success of the young members of the roster has been key for the Cats early in the season and adds depth to a roster that has been light in the past.

Three freshmen — Coffey, Inman and Ashley Deary — remain consis-tent starters for the Cats.

The Cats’ inexperienced but

potential-laden lineup will battle a Purdue team that started two juniors, two seniors and a sophomore in its last contest. Purdue’s experience on the court undoubtedly has them favored in the matchup, but as they demonstrated against Nebraska, the Cats’ young guns can hang with the best.

With an inexperienced team, con-fidence is a key factor in notching the results NU wants to see throughout the rest of conference play. Coach Joe McKeown has instilled a sense of confidence in his young players, rewarding their consistent play with increased playing time thus far this season.

And the newcomers have fully

taken advantage of the opportunity.Coffey leads the team in points,

averaging 15.6 per game, and Inman has the second-most points per game for the Cats.

After a promising pre-conference season and an impressive battle against a Big Ten favorite in what was expected to be a rebuilding year, NU heads into its matchup against Purdue, as well as the rest of its Big Ten contests, with confidence.

[email protected]

By John pAschAlldaily senior staffer @John_Paschall

Snow and crippling wind chill wasn’t the only thing slapping Northwest-ern across the face when the Wildcats returned from their annual training trip in Hawaii.

NU now faces the cruel reality of its daunting second half schedule, which includes defending national champion No.1 Michigan and rival Notre Dame Saturday at the Norris Aquatics Center.

But battling the fierce competition is something coach Jarod Schroeder has always wanted for his team. The Cats have not had a great deal of success against some of the nation’s best teams, and Schroeder has attributed some of the difficulties to NU’s mental approach as the meets progress. Schroeder hopes the upcoming string of opponents will help the Cats prepare for the Big Ten Cham-pionships in late February.

“That was the design of the schedule,” Schroeder said. “I wanted them to face challenges.”

NU entered the break riding a wave of success with a dominating win at the TYR Invitational as well as an impressive dual meet victory over Wisconsin the week before. Pool records were falling off the walls of the Norris Aquatics Center with the team giving significant credit for those results to the work it did out of the pool. The Cats put a heavy emphasis on team building through various activities

including anything from a split-squad Jenga competition to buying goofy, cheap Hawaiian shirts on the training trip.

But the fun and games will be over when NU looks across the pool and sees a handful of internationally decorated and accomplished swimmers from Michigan and Notre Dame. The Cats, who feature mostly underclassmen, will aim to follow their usual preparation method and put their blinders on, focusing on their own individual races.

Senior Chase Stephens said the young swimmers cannot afford to lose their swagger when they finally get back on the blocks.

“I definitely think you need a lot of confidence in yourself,” he said. “There’s a big difference between being confident in yourself and being cocky. You got to say, ‘Hey, I made it this far. Why can’t I be racing them?’”

While the confidence will undoubt-edly be there, Stephens and the rest of the team will embrace the underdog role and believe there’s no reason to count them out.

“You got to say, ‘Here’s the top dog and I’m the underdog. Might as well just race with the best of the best and see what happens,’” Stephens said.

[email protected]

NU returns to face lethal schedule

Young Cats ready for Big Ten

Northwestern vs. No. 20 IowaIowa City, Iowa8 p.m. Thursday

No. 21 Purdue vs. NorthwesternEvanston7 p.m. Thursday

Annabel Edwards/Daily Senior Staffer

SOPhOMORE SIxTh-MaN Lauren Douglas is only a sophomore, but that makes her a veteran next to the cast of freshmen on her team. The forward averages 11.2 points per game off the bench for 10-4 Northwestern.

SwimmingWomen’s Basketball

Brian Lee/Daily Senior Staffer

SaY IT aIN’T SOBO Point guard Dave Sobolewski has struggled with his shooting this season. The junior’s 26.4 percent field goal percentage is the worst on the team, and his 17.7 percent rate from beyond the arc is similarly troubling.

“Shooting is a fragile thing mentally with guys. The only way you can get out of it is you have to be tough-minded.Chris Collins,Men’s basketball coach

No. 1 Michigan/Notre Dame vs. NorthwesternEvanston1 p.m. Saturday

Men’s Basketball