012913 Chicago Maroon

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TUESDAY • JANUARY 29, 2013

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892

CHICAGOMAROON.COM

ISSUE 22 • VOLUME 124

UCMC protests, four arrests prompt rapid response from supporters Madhu Srikantha News Editor A longer version of this article, detailing the police action against the protesters, the arrests, and Student Government’s response can be found at chicagomaroon.com. The University of Chicago Police Department (UCPD) broke up a demonstration at the new hospital building on Sunday, arresting and pressing misdemeanor criminal trespassing charges on four of the participants, including a University graduate student, a College alum, and a minor. The demonstration was in protest of the lack of an adult trauma care facility at the UCMC in light of the $700 million spent by the University on the Center for Care and Discovery. Protesters from the South Side organization Southside Together Organizing for Power (STOP) and their youth group affiliate,

Fearless Leading by the Youth (FLY), organized the sit-in at the new hospital building, set to open February 23. The sit-in was also attended by members of the group Students for Health Equity (SHE), which comprises students from the College. A small group of the protesters were prepared to be arrested during the occupation of the hospital property, according to Darius Lightfoot, co-founder of FLY. Two of the arrested protesters, Alex Goldenberg and a 17-yearold local high school student, were part of this group. According to several protesters, the situation became violent a few minutes after the declaration of the protesters’ intentions to peacefully occupy the building, around 2:10 p.m. According to fourth-year SHE member Nastasia Tangherlini, the rapid escalation was shocking. UCMC continued on page 2

University of Chicago police officers subdue fourth-year Nastasia Tangherlini while graduate student Toussaint Losier lies handcuffed at Sunday’s protest at the University’s new Center for Care and Discovery. COURTESY OF JOE KAPLAN

App numbers challenge competition Number of applicants for each class

Stephanie Xiao Associate News Editor The College received a record 30,369 applications for the class of 2017, a total surpassing those of other elite institutions, including Yale and Princeton. Not only is this year’s total number of applicants the highest yet in the College’s history—representing a 20-percent increase over last year’s 25,307 applications—it also exceeds the 29,790 received by Yale and the 26,505 received by Princeton this year.

2014

2015

2016

2017

UChicago

19,370

21,774

25,277

30,369

Harvard

30,489

34,950

34,285

N/A

Yale

25,869

27,282

28,974

29,790

Princeton

26,247

27,189

26,664

26,505

Columbia

26,178

34,929

31,851

33,460

Northwestern

27,533

30,975

ADMISSIONS continued on page 3

Hamid Bendaas News Staff

Sarah Miller Senior News Staff

Indian activist Erando Leichombam described the desperate state of Northeast India under the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) in a talk Monday evening. AFSPA, instituted in 1958, allows security forces from the Indian Army to search, arrest, and shoot anybody suspected of insurrection, placing Manipur and its neighboring states under a form of martial law. Leichombam, the founder of the Manipur International Center, estimated that there is about one soldier for every seven civilians. In highlighting the brutal-

This fall will bring the introduction of the University’s first course sequence geared towards College students interested in education. The sequence will expand on a class first offered to undergraduates last spring entitled “Schools, Communities, and Urban School Reform” and taught by Kavita Kapadia Matsko (A.M. ’03, Ph.D. ’07) and Sara Stoelinga (A.B. ’95, A.M. ’01, Ph.D. ’04). Stoelinga and Matsko will teach the course again this spring. The sequence, which will expand on topics covered in the original course, is part of an emerging partnership between the Urban Education Institute (UEI), the Urban Teacher Education Program (UTEP), and the new UChicago Careers in Education Professions (UCIEP). Matsko is the Director of Teacher Preparation at UTEP and Stoelinga is the senior director at the UEI. Nahida Teliani (A.M. ’12), director of UCIEP, has been working closely with Stoelinga and Matsko to create the sequence from the original one-course template. Like the original course, the sequence will be offered through the public policy studies department. Maria Bavaro, a third-year student and board member of UCIEP, credits her in-

The National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago has released the results of a comprehensive independent survey, concluding that regardless of individual experiences with finance and healthcare, people were likely to vote along partisan lines in the 2012 presidential election. The three-part survey, titled “2012 NORC Presidential Election Study: Americans’ Views on Entitlement Reform and Healthcare,” was designed to gauge public opinion about three key issues of the election—economic recovery, health care costs, and political polarization. The survey was carried out in partnership with five academics across the country, including two University of Chicago faculty—John Mark Hansen, Charles L. Hutchinson Distinguished Professor in Political Science, and Kirk Wolter, a statistics professor and NORC’s Executive Vice President of Survey Research. “The [2012] election was shaping [up] to be one of the more interesting ones in my lifetime and certainly the most interesting [election] in recent memory,” Wolter said. “We felt we wanted to shed light on the election because many polls in the media were quite shallow and use me-

INDIA continued on page 3

EDUCATION continued on page 2

NORC continued on page 2

32,066 32,772 Source: The New York Times

Activist details Northeast India’s plight Sindhu Gnanasambandan News Contributor

Erendro Leichombam, founder of the Manipur International Center, criticizes a Manipur law that he claims violates human rights in the name of security. SARAH BLAUSER | THE CHICAGO MAROON

New courses Voters put guide future party first, educators study shows

IN VIEWPOINTS

IN ARTS

IN SPORTS

Explanation needed from campus cops » Page 4

In new collection, Saunders sets the perfect literary date » Page 7

Fundraising with class: WAA to host raffle benefiting local schools » Back Page

Stranger in a familiar land » Page 5

Daddy Love in dangerously shallow psychological straits » Page 8

Chicago comes up (just!) short in pair of UAA contests » Page 11


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