022613 Chicago Maroon

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TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 26, 2013

ISSUE 29 • VOLUME 124

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892

CHICAGOMAROON.COM

FLY, SHE protest opening day at CCD Southsiders face off in Madhu Srikantha News Editor

2nd district primary

In response to the opening of the $700 million Center for Care and Discovery (CCD) on Saturday, Fearless Leading by the Youth (FLY) and Students for Health Equity (SHE) held a march in protest of the University’s refusal to re-establish a level-one adult trauma care center as part of their ongoing campaign. The demonstration was the groups’ second protest at the site of the new hospital. On Wednesday, an email from Kenneth Polonsky, executive vice president for medical affairs and dean of the Division of Biological Sciences, asked people to stay away from the hospital to facilitate a smooth transfer of patients to the new facility. UCMC spokeswoman Lorna Wong said the e-mail was not intended as a response to the January 27 protests.

Hamid Bendaas News Staff

In response to the opening of the UCMC’s new Center for Care and Discovery, students and community members from Southsiders Together for Organizing Power (STOP) and Fearless Leading by the Youth (FLY) protest outside President Zimmer’s house and call for the demands on their petition to be answered by the University Saturday afternoon. SYDNEY COMBS | THE CHICAGO MAROON

Marlon Lynch, chief of UCPD, Eleanor Daugherty, assistant VP for student life, and an administrator from UCMC met on Monday with third-years

Patrick Dexter and Michael McCown from SHE and Molly Cunningham, a graduate student in the anthropolog y department, to ensure that the demonstra-

tion would abide by restrictions including temporary noise ordinances and roadblocks. FLY and SHE held a brief CCD continued on page 2

Residents in parts of Chicago’s South Side and the southern suburbs will be casting their votes in the 2nd Congressional District primary today to decide the Democratic nominee expected to take the Congressional seat formerly held by Jesse Jackson, Jr. Front-runners among the 15 Democrats on the ballot are former Congresswoman Debbie Halvorson, Ninth Ward Alderman Anthony Beale, and Cook County Chief Administrative Officer Robin Kelly. While the only area of Hyde Park included in the 2nd District is the streets east of Stony Island Avenue and south of 53rd Street, its influence on the race has been notable. Hyde Park political figures like Alderman Will

Burns, Congressman Bobby Rush, and State Senator Kwame Raoul have all endorsed Kelly and supported her campaign. Cheryl Whitaker, wife of University of Chicago Medical Center’s Executive Vice President of Strategic Affiliations Eric Whitaker and friend of the Obamas, signed on to be Kelly’s campaign chair. “I think we’ve had a significant impact on the race, but I wouldn’t say it’s inordinate,” Cheryl Whitaker reflected. “[Kelly] has a list of supporters that is quite extensive, but we were early supporters, and I’d like to think we’ve been instrumental [in] bringing others to the table to support her.” Whitaker also saw major projects in the Hyde Park area as integral issues affecting the larger South Side, including the 2nd ELECT continued on page 2

Part I: Rent an increasing burden for HPers Uncommon: Harunobu Coryne Senior Editor Hyde Park renters are paying heavily for their homes—more so than in recent memory—and the current supply of affordable housing may not be enough to keep people in the neighborhood, according to a study published last month of Census and housing data since 2000. The majority of Hyde Park

residents rent, but more than half of them are paying at least 30 percent, and even as much as 50 percent, of their income on rent alone, the study found. The trend is especially pronounced among the neighborhood’s lowest earners, for whom the costs of housing are disproportionately high and the shortage of affordable options is sharpest. The threshold for what is considered affordable rent by fed-

eral guidelines is 30 percent of household income, adjusted for family size. Families are facing particular difficulties, since few affordable rental units have three or more bedrooms, while the disabled and elderly have fewer options still. The portrait that emerges from the data complicates the long-held impression of Hyde

Toussaint Losier Madhu Srikantha News Editor

When fourth-year Mauriece Dawson was arrested in the Regenstein Library in 2010, prompting a backlash from students who felt the arrest was racially-motivated, Tous-

saint Losier co-chaired the ad hoc committee that reviewed the procedures involved in the incident. Three years later, on January 27, Losier, an eighth-year history Ph.D. candidate, found himself handcuffed to a bench in the 2nd District Police Station LOSIER continued on page 3

RENT continued on page 2

Uncommon: David Plouffe Noah Weiland & William Wilcox News Staff As senior advisor to President Obama from 2011 to 2013, David Plouffe said his challenge was “to make sure you’re giving advice that’s consistent with what he’s promised the American people and [with] his record.” Plouffe also served as campaign manager for Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign and, according to the Chicago Tribune, was “the mastermind behind a winning strateg y.” Before giving the keynote address for the Institute of Politics panel

High Tech and Highly Targeted: Inside the Obama Campaign’s Digital War Room at the Booth School on Saturday, Plouffe sat down with the Maroon to talk about privacy in politics, how his college classes informed his career, and his old boss. Read the full interview at www.chicagomaroon.com. Chicago Maroon: What kind of effect did your undergraduate education have on you as a consultant and advisor?

of political science is of value, but it’s no substitute for real world experience. I learned a lot in my undergraduate days in terms of macroeconomics, microeconomics, constitutional law, the classes I took that weren’t necessarily just about politics that helped inform my worldview. The magical formula here is great education that you’re able to use, [and] not all of it, but a lot of it into your professional life, married with real world experience. CM: President Obama’s White

David Plouffe: I think the study

PLOUFFEcontinued on page 3

In the wake of his recent arrest by UCPD during the protest at the UCMC’s new Center for Care and Discovery, History Ph.D. candidate Toussaint Losier discusses his experience fighting for a trauma center on the South Side. He will face misdemeanor charges of trespassing and resisting arrest in his trial against the University this afternoon. SYDNEY COMBS | THE CHICAGO MAROON

IN VIEWPOINTS

IN ARTS

IN SPORTS

The greatest gift of all » Page 4

At Logan, directorial screening keeps the true Bird out » Page 7

Wins across the field: Maroons take five individual UAA titles » Back Page

For Sendak fans, posthumous tribute is a lovely, wild thing » Page 8

Individual performances come into focus at Midwest Invitational » Page 11

Study group dynamics » Page 5


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