The Daily Northwestern — Oct. 18, 2021

Page 1

Serving the Northwestern and Evanston communities since 1881

The Daily Northwestern Monday, October 18, 2021

DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM

Find us online @thedailynu

THE HOUSING ISSUE READ ON PAGES 4-9

Here’s how to donate blood in Evanston

‘THE BLACK HOUSE IS BACK’

Residents, officials talk donating in a national shortage By AVIVA BECHKY

the daily northwestern @avivabechky

Evanston resident Mike Kegler gave blood for the first time at a high school drive. Now, years later, he has turned blood donation into a habit, making appointments at Evanston Hospital every 10 weeks. “You might be saving somebody’s life,” Kegler said. “It’s a small inconvenience, a small discomfort, for a potentially very large payoff.” As the nation faces a blood shortage, prospective donors from Evanston have two local options: they can donate at Vitalant, which supplies blood to hospitals locally and nationwide, or at Evanston Hospital, which supplies blood to hospitals in the NorthShore University HealthSystem. Hospitals canceled or postponed many elective surgeries at the beginning of the pandemic. Now, those surgeries are happening again. “In the last few months, the demand has shot way back up from the hospitals, but the donations are

» See DONATE, page 10

Maia Pandey/Daily Senior Staffer

After over two years of renovations, alumni, faculty and students celebrate the reopening of NU’s dedicated on-campus space for Black students By MAIA PANDEY

daily senior staffer @maiapandey

In 1968, Herman Cage (Weinberg ’69, Kellogg ’73) protested with more than 100 other Northwestern students, calling for a dedicated space for Black students on campus. When the Black House was finally established, Cage said it was the first time he felt NU was

addressing his “fears, loneliness and isolation” as a student. Cage stood on the porch of 1914 Sheridan Rd. Friday and declared to more than 300 cheering NU community members that, after two years of renovation, “The Black House is back.” Friday’s rededication ceremony opened with speeches from alumni, faculty and administrators, followed by a ribboncutting and reception. Several

rows of seats on the lawn were reserved for members of the B100 — the group of students, including Cage, that participated in the landmark 1968 Bursar’s Office Takeover. “The same space, the sacred space, that refuge is now available, whether you are an incoming freshman for the class of 2025 or you are a fifty-year alumni,” Cage said. “It’s yours and it’s our legacy to future generations.”

“Historical truth-telling”

After its initial closure for renovation in June 2019, the Black House reopened more than a year behind schedule due to pandemicrelated delays. But the renovation has been in the works for much longer. Development on the changes began in 2016, after students protested University plans to move administrative offices into the Black

» See BLACK HOUSE, page 10

Cinnaholic adds an Evanston store IFC extends ban Vegan cinnamon roll chain offers up sweet and savory treats for residents By KHADIJA AHMED

the daily northwestern

With 18 frosting flavors, 25 topping choices and a 100% vegan menu, the possibilities are plentiful at Cinnaholic Evanston. Phillip Morales co-owns the Evanston location of the franchise along with his mother and cousin. After building on the success of their first location in Schaumburg, the management hopes to make a place for itself in Evanston after its Aug. 6 opening. The Cinnaholic chain appeared on “Shark Tank” in 2014, where the idea for vegan cinnamon rolls caught the judges’ attention. While the co-founders did not ultimately take the offer they received on the show, the chain now includes dozens of locations nationwide and in Canada, with more set to open this winter.

Recycle Me

Some Northwestern students are already familiar with Cinnaholic from its Sept. 14 appearance on North Area Lawn, when the shop gave free samples to students. Weinberg freshman Monica Jones said she waited in line for over an hour to secure a cinnamon bun. “We got there right when it started and there was still a pretty long line,” Jones said. “I’m not normally super interested in cinnamon buns, but that one was pretty good. Also, the frosting was really good, which was surprising because I really don’t like frosting, but it was a nice sweetness.” The shop also wants to sweeten the deal for NU students by giving them a 20% Wildcard discount. Morales has his own personal favorites from the store, including the banana cream pie version of the cinnamon roll.

» See CINNAHOLIC, page 10

on social events Recruitment ban also extended to at least Nov. 7

Angeli Mittal/Daily Senior Staffer

Cinnaholic treats sit on the table. Cinnaholic participated in Big Bite Night earlier this month, offering free samples of its cinnamon rolls and cookie dough..

Northwestern’s Interfraternity Council extended its ban on chapter-sponsored social events until at least Jan. 3, 2022, the first day of Winter Quarter, the organization announced Friday. IFC also extended its suspension on recruitment activities until at least Nov. 7. The organization and the University will review the recruitment suspension on Nov. 1 and decide whether to shorten or extend it. The social ban applies to events with or without alcohol present, both onoff-campus. Chapters can still engage in alcohol-free education, philanthropy and member development programs after gaining approval from IFC and Fraternity and

Sorority Life. The new policy builds upon an existing ban on IFC social events and chapter-sponsored recruitment events the University and IFC put in place from Sept. 25 to Oct. 17. Days after the University announced the initial ban in a University Police crime notice, students protested outside the SAE and AEPi houses, advocating for the permanent eradication of Greek life. IFC President Nick Papandreou said the new policy, which the council passed unanimously, is the result of discussions between IFC and FSL. If a chapter violates the ban, it will be required to pay a $1,000 fine and moved to associate status for the following quarter, resulting in the loss of its ability to vote in IFC matters. — Waverly Long

INSIDE: Around Town 2 | On Campus 3 | Housing Issue 4 | Classifieds & Puzzles 10 | Sports 12


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.