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The Daily Northwestern Thursday, October 8, 2015
DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM
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Waiting on Blaze
Student groups report long wait times for Blaze fundraiser checks Lauren Duquette/The Daily Northwestern
By ALICE YIN
daily senior staffer @alice__yin
When Sandeep Bharadwaj signed up his student group for a fundraiser at Blaze Pizza in Evanston, he did not expect that it would take 11 weeks — and what he said were more than 20 phone calls — to get his money. The McCormick junior, who is president of Northwestern Global Medical Brigades, is one of 17 students who said their student groups encountered delays and communication issues while attempting to secure checks from Spring Quarter
fundraisers with the Blaze Pizza at 1737 Sherman Ave. Blaze Pizza’s Evanston location opened March 5 and began to host fundraising events for student groups that month. Fourteen student groups who held fundraisers with Blaze Pizza during Spring Quarter said this week they had not received checks from the fundraiser as of Monday afternoon: 1.Academy of Music and Arts for Special Education 2. A-NU-Bhav 3. Dance Marathon 4. Extreme Measures 5. Korean American Student
InclusionNU board gets $14,000 By KARA STEVICK
the daily northwestern @kara_stevick
Following the reorganization of Multicultural Student Affairs, Campus Inclusion and Community’s InclusionNU Funding Board received $14,000 for its budget this academic year. The board, which was formed last year, works with student groups to promote inclusivity. The funds will be distributed among selected student groups and initiatives to support events that address topics such as social justice education, community awareness and identity celebration and awareness, said Amanda Walsh, one of the four undergraduates on the funding board and president of Northwestern’s Quest Scholars chapter. “The InclusionNU Funding Board right now has been incredibly successful,” the Communication senior said. “We’ve had a lot of great applications right now within the past cycle and we’re really, really excited about the events that we were able to help put on.” SESP junior Matt Herndon, Associated Student Government’s vice president for accessibility and inclusion, said funding resources on campus are
often limited, making it hard for small groups to get funding. Walsh said she hopes the board secures a larger budget in the future. “It’s about making sure that student organizations who typically don’t have opportunities to get funding but are very in line with the Campus Inclusion and Community mission to know that they’re just as important as everyone else,” Walsh said. “Their events are special to the university, and they deserve funding and they should get funding.” To realize such efforts, the board has recently taken measures to make the application process smoother as well as easier to access throughout the year. Last year, applications for funds were due in a monthly cycle, but the board has moved the application deadline to weeks three, six and nine of each academic quarter. “It gives (student groups) the opportunity to still fund programs and events happening within the same quarter without having students negotiate having to apply during midterms or finals,” said Alejandro Magaña, assistant director of Multicultural Student Affairs and a member of the board. Upon discovering most student organizations applied for one grant » See INCLUSION, page 10
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Association 6. NU Gives Back 7. Phi Sigma Pi 8. NU Raas 9. Sigma Alpha Iota 10. Spoon University 11. Supplies for Dreams (NU Chapter) 12. Students for Sensible Drug Policy 13. Undergraduate Premedical Society 14.Women’s Club Lacrosse City manager Wally Bobkiewicz said Evanston officials have no role in these types of fundraisers. “Private businesses can share
Teenage boys rob city gas station at knifepoint
Police are searching for two teenage boys suspected in an armed robbery Tuesday night at a Mobil gas station in central Evanston. The two teenagers entered the
profits as they see fit,” he wrote in an email to The Daily. University spokesman Al Cubbage was unable to provide information Wednesday on whether NU has any oversight of student group fundraising agreements. The Daily first contacted Blaze Pizza’s corporate offices and Evanston location on Monday inquiring about the checks NU student groups said they never received. Since then, two of the 14 student groups told The Daily they have been able to pick up their checks in person. Four other groups reported that they received their funds, although three, including Global Brigades,
said they sent multiple emails or phone calls inquiring about their money:
gas station, 1950 Green Bay Road, at about 9:30 p.m. and demanded cash from the gas station attendant while flashing a metallic object, said Evanston police Cmdr. Joseph Dugan. The attendant responded by hitting a panic alarm, Dugan said. After receiving the money, the teenager fled with another boy who was acting as a “lookout.” Police recovered an eight-inch
knife from the area where witnesses reported seeing one of the teenagers throw an object to the ground while fleeing northbound on Green Bay Road, Dugan said. Detectives are processing the knife for DNA. The gas station owner estimated as much as $150 was stolen, Dugan said.
1. Burlesque Show 2. Northwestern Global Medical Brigades 3. Relay for Life 4.They Forget, We Remember “It was a very long, tedious, arduous process,” Bharadwaj said. “It makes us not know if we’re going to do a fundraiser again.” On Tuesday, Adam Cummis, president of the Chicago area franchises » See BLAZE, page 9
— Joanne Lee
EPL to hold storytelling festival By JULIET FREUDMAN
the daily northwestern
Evanston Public Library aims to celebrate the art of storytelling during a festival this weekend in locations across the city. In addition to students from elementary schools and colleges, six featured storytellers who tour nationally will perform in the “Stories by the Lake” festival from Friday to Sunday. In an effort to make the festival an inclusive event for the entire community, there will also be an open mic night at the Celtic Knot pub where anyone can participate. The venues include EPL, the Celtic Knot and Woman’s Club of Evanston. The free festival targets a variety of audiences, said Jill Schacter (Medill ’84), EPL’s marketing and » See STORYTELLING, page 9
Daily file photo by Melody Song
SHARING STORIES Evanston Public Library will host its first-ever storytelling festival this weekend. The free festival features six nationallytouring storytellers as well as students from elementary school to college.
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