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The Daily Northwestern Thursday, April 4, 2024
DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM 5 CITY/Grant Street homes
8 SPORTS/Women’s Golf
Local residents object to small homes project
Northwestern wins PING/ASU Invitational, first tournament victory of 2023-24 season
Find us online @thedailynu Scan this QR code to hear an update about the demolition of Ryan Field
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Faith groups help migrants Evanston churches, migrants. The Margarita Inn, a yearshelters house new- round Evanston shelter operby Connections for the comers amid crisis ated Homeless, is currently at its By EMMA RICHMAN
the daily northwestern @emmarichman_
After attending a training on faith communities helping with the migrant crisis, Grace Lutheran Church congregant Nancy Mathyer proposed hosting a migrant family in the church. The congregation took it to a vote in October 2023, and the measure passed with overwhelming support. “Part of Grace Lutheran Church is putting our faith into action courageously,” Mathyer said. “And this is it.” More than 38,000 migrant individuals and families have arrived in Chicago since August 2022, according to the city’s New Arrivals Situational Awareness Dashboard. Some of these migrants have sought shelter in Evanston, but they’ve found few options. With an already overcrowded houseless shelter system in Evanston, some local faith communities have stepped in to house
capacity of about 60 people and has a four-to-eight month waitlist, according to Nia Tavoularis, the organization’s chief development officer. The Margarita Inn is currently hosting one migrant family. Interfaith Action of Evanston’s emergency overnight shelter is also at its capacity of 30 beds with a waitlist of about 45 people, Executive Director Susan Murphy Berube said. No migrants have approached Interfaith Action, and its shelters don’t provide long-term transitional housing for families, she added. Evanston has been actively searching for “suitable local shelter options for migrants,” according to a Jan. 8 news release. Vacant buildings found thus far are in “such poor condition that they cannot be made safe enough for housing migrants,” Cynthia Vargas, community engagement and communications
» See HOUSING, page 6
Daily file photo by Francesco Thorik-Saboia
McKinley marched through The Arch in Janaury following his release from Stateville Correctional Center, two months after he graduated from the Northwestern Prison Education Program.
NPEP graduate to attend Pritzker
Benard McKinley reflects on his journey from prison to civil rights law By NAOMI TAXAY
the daily northwestern
In 2004, a judge told then 19-year-old Benard McKinley he would spend his next 97
birthdays behind bars. Last month, however, McKinley turned 39 as a free man and opened a hard-won birthday gift: an acceptance letter from Northwestern’s Pritzker School of Law.
With a legal career ahead of him, McKinley wants to give back to the community he once took so much from, he said. After five years of coursework at Stateville Correctional
Center, McKinley graduated in November in the inaugural class of the Northwestern Prison Education Program. According to NPEP Director
» See MCKINLEY, page 6
NU considers lakeside football field Judge declines to University requests city zoning analysis for Martin Stadium expansion
damages — Ex-football coach’s compensatory with $68 million left on his $130-million case contract that ran through 2023 $62 million in calculated survives NU motion and future earning losses — along
By WILLIAM TONG and BEATRICE VILLAFLOR
daily senior staffers @william2tong / @beatricedvilla
Northwestern has applied for a city analysis to determine whether the University’s plans for potentially modifying Martin Stadium to hold football games will meet existing Evanston zoning requirements, according to a March 27 city manager’s report. As Rebuild Ryan Field construction continues, NU is currently searching for a facility to host home football games, University spokesperson Eliza Larson said in a statement to The Daily. NU is considering adding capacity to Martin Stadium — which hosts the University’s lacrosse and soccer teams — for up to 15,000 spectators, according to the city manager’s report. Ald. Eleanor Revelle (7th) said after a “high level analysis,” city staff believes NU’s proposed use will align with current zoning regulations. “On the one hand, it’s kind of a wild idea,” Revelle said. “On the other hand, it’s got a lot of pluses.” Revelle said the Martin Stadium plan could funnel spectators to Evanston businesses on gameday and keep athletic contest tax revenues flowing to the city. In the event NU proceeds with the Martin Stadium option for football
Recycle Me
dismiss Fitz lawsuit By JAKE EPSTEIN
daily senior staffer @jakeepste1n
Daily file photo by Joshua Hoffman
Martin Stadium, which currently hosts NU’s lacrosse and soccer teams, could serve as a temporary home for the University’s football team while construction continues on Ryan Field.
games in the short term, Revelle said she wonders whether alcohol will be sold at the athletic facility. Currently, city code allows alcohol sales on NU’s Evanston campus. Larson did not respond to questions about alcohol sales or potential environmental impacts from Martin Stadium renovations.
“We have been in close contact with local venues to explore opportunities for the Wildcats to play at their facilities,” Larson wrote. “We are also exploring the feasibility of playing games on our campus in a temporary facility.” williamtong2026@u.northwestern.edu beavillaflor@u.northwestern.edu
The Circuit Court of Cook County denied a defense motion to dismiss former head football coach Pat Fitzgerald’s breach of contract and defamation lawsuit against Northwestern and University President Michael Schill on Tuesday. Fitzgerald sued the University last October for breach of an oral contract, breach of employment contract, intentional infliction of emotional distress, defamation, false light and tortious interference with a business expectancy. The former head coach was fired in July 2023 after former players alleged a toxic environment of hazing and racism on the team. Fitzgerald is seeking more than $130 million in
with as-yet unspecified damages for emotional distress and punitive damages. The defendants moved to dismiss the entire 51-page complaint, but NU’s motion was dismissed in its entirety. The Court found that Fitzgerald’s attorneys provided adequate defense for six separate counts NU attempted to dismiss. “The Court finds that the Complaint and the motions themselves contain a detailed recitation of the facts of this matter,” the decision read. The case will now move forward in full. A judge for the Illinois Circuit Court for Cook County previously set an April 2025 trial date and denied Fitzgerald’s efforts to move the date up. “We remain confident that the University acted appropriately in terminating Coach
» See FITZ, page 6
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