The Daily Northwestern Monday, February 18, 2019
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Schapiro reportedly considered for USC Report says Morty is on shortlist for vacant presidency By ALAN PEREZ and ELIZABETH BYRNE daily senior staffers @_perezalan_, @lizbyrne33
University President Morton Schapiro is on the short list for the University of Southern California’s next president, according to a report by 247Sports affiliate USCFootball.com, a role the school has been slow to fill since its embattled chief executive stepped down more than six months ago. USC’s board of trustees is considering Schapiro, a former administrator and professor at the Los Angeles-based university, to be its next president, the online sports news website reported last week. He is one of two leading candidates, including the current Northeastern University president, Joseph E. Aoun, according to the report. In a statement sent to The Daily by a University spokesperson, Schapiro said he hasn’t been in contact with USC. “While I spent a wonderful eleven years at USC, I haven’t spoken with anyone on their search committee or on their
board,” Schapiro said. “Even though I am completing a decade as president of NU, I am still having a great time here and there is much left to accomplish.” USC did not respond to multiple requests for comment. A return to USC would complete a full circle for Schapiro, who was appointed to be dean of USC’s Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences in 1994 after chairing the school’s economics department. He also served as the private school’s vice president for planning. The higher education economist began his career in academia as a professor of economics and assistant provost at Williams College, where he later served as president after his stint at USC. He became Northwestern’s 16th president after the board appointed him in 2008, citing his “grasp of the issues facing higher education, the complexities of a research university (and) his impressive record of academic achievement.” In an interview with The Daily last week, Schapiro reflected on his NU career. He is now entering his 10th year as » See USC, page 6
Allie Goulding/Daily Senior Staffer
Students working on a set in Locy Hall. The Undergraduate Radio/Television/Film Student Association plans to open a new props closet in hope of reducing waste and making film production more financially accessible.
URSA plans shared prop closet
New RTVF initiative aims to increase accessibility, decrease waste By AMY LI
daily senior staffer @amyhitsthebooks
The Undergraduate Radio/ Television/Film Student Association plans to open a new closet for Department of Radio,
Television and Film students to share prop resources and increase financial accessibility for students while eliminating waste within the department. Students will be able to donate props they no longer need and rent out props other students have donated –– free
of charge –– from a communal storage space near campus. The project is a response to reusable props sitting idly in storage while new props are purchased only to be used once or twice, said Madeline Hertz, the co-chair of URSA. The Communication senior added that
URSA is looking into a storage space near Green Bay Road and hopes to open the closet by spring of 2019. Communication senior Jen Schonberger said she believes the closet would decrease waste » See PROPS, page 6
Evanston kicks off first Hygge Fest Startup provides
Residents cozy up with warm beverages, Danish vocabulary By ASHLEY CAPOOT
CatsWork intends to make career recruitment easier
the daily northwestern @ashleycapoot
In the back room of Bookends & Beginnings on Saturday, Evanston residents kicked off Downtown Evanston’s first-ever Hygge Fest, cozying up with warm beverages and practicing the pronunciation of the tricky Danish word. There is no direct English translation for hygge, but it encompasses the feeling of comfort that comes from moments like reading a book on a cold winter night or having a candlelit dinner with close family and friends, said Anne Petersen, who facilitated the event. Downtown Evanston’s Hygge Fest, which includes a knitting event and a wine and game night, will continue through Feb. 22. Petersen said they lived in Denmark for a year to learn Danish and have a long lineage of family members from Denmark. They explained that hygge is pronounced “hue-gah,” and that it is regularly used as a noun, verb and adjective. “It’s part of what makes it
career resources By PRANAV BASKAR
the daily northwestern @pranav_baskar
Noah Frick-Alofs/Daily Senior Staffer
Sweaters and hot beverages are an important part of hygge. Downtown Evanston kicked off the first Hygge Fest this weekend.
such a versatile word because it can be used in combination with so many other things,” Petersen said. “People will
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
have hyggebukser, which are hygge pants, so they’re pants that aren’t super publicacceptable, but they’re super
comfy.” The Spice & Tea Exchange » See HYGGE, page 6
A new startup called CatsWork, headed by two NU undergraduates, is aiming to ease NU students’ career transitions by equipping them with tailored resources to navigate the career recruitment process. The organization, based in The Garage, was started by Weinberg junior Vincent Park and McCormick sophomore Nicholas Tan. According to its website, CatsWork provides “end-to-end recruitment resources that are affordable, quality and curated for Northwestern students.” Part of the product is a Google Chrome extension, which Tan said is “free for NU users.” Students can use the extension to automatically gather and store key information for the networking process. “Let’s say you go to LinkedIn to figure out who you should reach out to as a part of your networking journey,” Park said. “Then, while you’re on a person’s profile page, fire
up our chrome extension and click the LinkedIn autofill button. Our (product) will autofill networkingspecific fields — name, undergraduate school, firm information, position, etc. — and compile it in a Google Sheet which is part of your Northwestern Google suite.” Tan said because it’s important to expand your network during the networking process, finding internships and job opportunities inevitably includes reaching out to many people. Through the extension, Tan said students will be better able to organize and centralize their contacts, allowing them to pinpoint firms they haven’t reached out to and avoid feeling overloaded. Students can also use the extension to steer their career processes. For example, Park said, one student may look at their personalized spreadsheet and see they’ve reached out to five contacts at J.P. Morgan but none at Goldman Sachs. That student can use analytics from the extension to diversify their networking strategy. CatsWork also provides informational guides with tips for students to navigate the recruitment process.These informational guides are currently relayed to students in » See CATSWORK, page 6
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