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The Daily Northwestern DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Find us online @thedailynu
Prof Ludlow sues for lost opportunities By ally mutnick
daily senior staffer @allymutnick
In a defamation lawsuit filed Tuesday, philosophy Prof. Peter Ludlow claimed the Medill senior who accused him of sexual assault made defamatory statements that interfered with both his job at Northwestern and his prospective employment at Rutgers.
Ludlow is asking for more than $120,000 in damages from the student, who he says knowingly spread false claims about him to local media outlets and NU professors. In the suit, filed in Cook County Circuit Court, Ludlow said the student propositioned him on the night of the alleged sexual assault, but he rejected her advances. » See ludlow, page 7
Hal Jin/The Daily Northwestern
digging in City, county, state and national officials take part in the groundbreaking ceremony for two Evanston housing project apartments. The units are undergoing a $25.7 million renovation in order to better house low-income senior citizens and people with disabilities.
Housing project breaks ground By hal jin
the daily northwestern @apricityhal
Government officials celebrated Wednesday the groundbreaking of the $25.7 million renovation of two apartment housing projects in Evanston. A collaboration between local and national government made the renovation possible. The two apartments undergoing construction are the Jane R. Perlman Apartments, 1900 Sherman Ave., and Victor Walchirk Apartments, 2300 Noyes Court. The apartments provide housing for low-income
senior citizens and residents with disabilities. The project is managed by Evanston Senior Redevelopment, LLC, an affiliate corporation of the Housing Authority of Cook County. HACC manages and owns more than 2,000 public housing units in Cook County, many dating back to the 1950s. Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, Evanston Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl and Evanston Ald. Judy Fiske (1st) gave remarks at the Perlman Apartments in front of an audience of about 70. Other officials in attendance included HACC executive director Richard
Medill contributes to new Pakistani journalism center The Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications is helping to establish a U.S. State Department-funded
» See haac, page 7
Sean Su/Daily Senior Staffer
bearing the weight Weinberg freshmen Troy Thisler (front) and Aaron Clarke carry a mattress together as they walk through The Arch on Wednesday. Students participated in a demonstration of support for sexual assault survivors around Northwestern’s campus and on college campuses nationwide.
Students carry mattresses in national demonstration By Olivia Exstrum
daily senior staffer @olivesocean
Northwestern students carried mattresses and pillows around campus Wednesday in a display of solidarity with survivors of sexual assault nationwide. The Carry That Weight Day of Action
journalism training center in Karachi, Pakistan. The school is working with the project’s leader, Washington-based organization the International Center for Journalists, and Karachi’s Institute of Business Administration, which will house the new Centre for Excellence in Journalism. “We at Medill are serving as a consulting capacity,” said Medill Prof. Craig Duff. “Some of us will go every once in a while and conduct workshops.” The center, which is being constructed and
Serving the University and Evanston since 1881
took place on college campuses across the country. The movement began at Columbia University, where students have organized in support of Emma Sulkowicz, a senior at the university who is carrying her dorm mattress around campus every day until her alleged rapist is expelled. Sulkowicz’s actions are both her performance art senior thesis and a protest toward Columbia’s administrators, who
is scheduled to open in 2015, offers journalism courses similar to those taught at Medill, Duff said. Medill will provide faculty members or recommend other teachers for the center’s courses, he said. “There is a definite consensus that there is a great deal of need for journalism training there,” Duff said, adding that Pakistan has seen a “huge burst” of media outlets recently, but the country lacks professional training programs. Work on the center began about a year ago, Duff
found her alleged assailant not guilty of the rape. She said she was raped during her sophomore year in her dorm room by a fellow student who was also the subject of other sexual assault accusations. The event on NU’s campus was organized by Weinberg senior Jazz Stephens, who said carrying her mattress » See weight, page 7
said, when Medill and the International Center for Journalists won their bid for a grant from the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad. “We’re using the great minds of the faculty of Medill to help them build this place,” Duff said. “We’re also going to be working in tandem with Pakistani trainers and they will take it over. We’ll back away after a year or two.” — Jeanne Kuang
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