The Daily Northwestern Monday, October 10, 2016
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4 OPINION/Op-Ed
Ending Greek life not as hard as you think
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8 SPORTS/Women’s Soccer
Cats knock off No. 19 Michigan 2-1
Scenes from on campus and in the city caught by Daily photographers Pages 6-7
Sen. Kirk tells GOP to drop Trump
Illinois senator criticizes candidate after tape emerges By SAM KREVLIN
the daily northwestern @samkrevlin
U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.), who withdrew his support from Donald Trump in June, has called on the Republican Party to engage “rules for emergency replacement,” after the Washington Post published leaked footage of Trump bragging on a hot mic about groping women, saying “when you’re a star they let you do it.” In a tweet posted Friday, the Republican senator wrote that Trump should drop out of the race. Kirk, who is locked in a tight Senate race against U.S. Rep. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), has criticized Trump before. Kirk previously called Trump “too bigoted and racist” to be president, making Kirk one of the few Senate Republicans who has not endorsed the billionaire. The leaked video was recorded in 2005 and includes audio of Trump speaking with Billy Bush of “Access Hollywood” about trying to seduce a married woman, saying, “I moved on her like a bitch.” He was also recorded talking about kissing women immediately, telling Bush, “It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. Don’t even wait.” Many Republicans have » See KIRK, page 5
Lauren Duquette/Daily Senior Staffer
Daily file photo by Zack Laurence
Daily file photo by Melody Song
Students and a professor speak during a panel at Harris Hall on Sunday. The panelists said theater productions on campus should cast actors of color in non-stereotypical roles and represent the American population more accurately.
Waa-Mu panel talks diversity in theater Some students call for less-stereotypical casting for actors of color in Sunday discussion By MARIANA ALFARO
the daily northwestern @marianaa_alfaro
Students and a professor said Northwestern theater productions need to cast actors of color in nonstereotypical roles during a panel Sunday sponsored by the Waa-Mu Show, arguing productions should represent the American population more accurately.
Communication senior and theater major Adhana Reid spoke about her experience growing up watching plays, movies and television shows in which black women were typecast as the sidekick or the “sassy black girl.” Reid, who performed in the last two Waa-Mu shows — “Gold” and “Another Way West” — said she has experienced microaggressions while working on these projects. In “Gold,” for example, Reid
said she felt disconcerted when her character and the only other black character in the show sang a duet gospel song, even though all other songs in the show were contemporary music. Reid said she spoke to members of the Waa-Mu community about her distress singing the gospel song, saying she felt stereotyped. “I thought I was heard, and I was made to feel like I was heard,” she said. “But
City releases proposed 2017 budget State has forced Evanston to keep ‘lean’ budget, city manager says By NORA SHELLY
the daily northwestern @noracshelly
A proposed budget for Evanston’s 2017 fiscal year includes recommendations to hire an equity and empowerment coordinator and raise property taxes to fund police and fire pensions. The budget also proposes raising property taxes 2.4 percent to fund the police and fire pension funds. The total proposed budget is about $304 million, which is 0.8 percent less than last year’s budget. The budget, which was
Daily file photo by Zack Laurence
Daniel Tian/Daily Senior Staffer
City manager Wally Bobkiewicz attends a city council meeting. Bobkiewicz released a proposed 2017 budget for the city on Friday.
released by city manager Wally Bobkiewicz on Friday, includes about $114 million in
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
revenues and about $112 million in spending for the year. Bobkiewicz said Illinois’
uncertain budgetary state after January has forced Evanston to keep a “lean” budget. This June, the Illinois legislature passed a six-month stop-gap budget after a year-long budget impasse. Although Evanston’s proposed budget is balanced, the city is preparing to make up to $3.7 million in reductions and revenue adjustments to several funds if state funding is withheld or lessened at some point, Bobkiewicz said. “ We’re struggling still with what the state of Illinois is going to do with us,” » See BUDGET, page 2
they were placating me and making me think that things were better, and nothing really changed.” Reid said being one of the “few black theater majors here” has always made her question the reasons why she’s cast in roles, saying she sometimes worries she receives parts because of her race. During the panel, some of the roughly 20 students in attendance said Waa-Mu
Students report harassment, robbery Friday
Two Northwestern students reported separate incidents of robbery and harassment near the CTA Purple Line early Friday morning, said an email from University Police sent to students on Friday. The email said one male student said he was robbed of cash by two teenage males between 12 a.m. and 1 a.m. on Friday at the Noyes CTA station. He reported that the teenagers made him walk to an ATM on campus, but after he was unable to withdraw money there, he was brought back to the station
needs to speak with members of the Virginia Wadsworth Wirtz Center for the Performing Arts — the office that sponsors the show — about making the show more inclusive. Communication junior Chamaya Moody, a Waa-Mu student outreach coordinator and panel moderator, told The Daily that students involved in Waa-Mu are » See WAA-MU, page 5 where he withdrew money and gave it to the suspects. The second incident occurred near the Main Street station, said the email from Bruce Lewis, associate vice president and chief of police. The male student reported he was intimidated in an effort to get money and described the same suspects. One suspect was described as having had a “faint mustache” and wearing a dark blue hoodie and gray headphones, and the other as wearing a white hoodie and ripped jeans, according to the email. The incidents did not involve weapons, and the students did not require medical attention. — Yvonne Kim
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