FRIDAY • MARCH 1, 2013
CHICAGOMAROON.COM
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892
Students call for marriage equality
Second-year Tessa Weil calls local community members to garner support for marriage equality as part of an effort by Illinois Unites for Marriage. TIFFANY TAN | THE CHICAGO MAROON
Marina Fang News Editor For nearly two weeks, a coalition of student organizations including ACLUofC, Students for Barack Obama, and Queers & Associates (Q&A), have hosted phone banks on campus
to advocate for Illinois state legislation that would legalize gay marriage. According to ACLUofC Managing Director Matthew Cason, the phone banks are an offshoot of a larger statewide campaign, Illinois Unites for Marriage, a coalition led by
three civil rights organizations, including the Illinois chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Equality Illinois, and Lambda Legal. “Marriage equality is an issue that our membership has been interested in all year…. Once we got the word from the ACLU
of Illinois that they were doing this, we hopped on immediately,” Cason said. He added that the Illinois chapter of the ACLU was interested in attracting students to the cause because “college campuses are relatively easy to have phone banks on.” The marriage equality bill passed the Illinois Senate on February 14 and the House Executive Committee on Tuesday, but it faces opposition in the House. As a result, Illinois Unites for Marriage mobilized phone banks reaching out to constituents. “We call constituents in various target districts where the representatives are either against the bill currently or are wavering… so we commit the constituents to call their congressman or congresswoman,” Cason said. Second-year Anastasia Golovashkina, who spearheaded the initial organizational efforts, said that between 40 and 50 students have participated in at least one of the phone banks. The CALL continued on page 3
ISSUE 30 • VOLUME 124
Part II: High rent threatens school closures Harunobu Coryne Senior Editor When Chicago Public Schools (CPS) issued a list of 330 schools with ailing enrollments last December, marking them as early candidates for a coming sweep of cost-saving closures and consolidations, parents and teachers held their breath. Four Hyde Park schools made that list. Kozminski Community Academy at East 54th Street and South Ingleside Avenue, Canter Leadership Academy at East 49th Street and South Blackstone Avenue, Reavis Elementary at East 50th Street and South Drexel Avenue, and Ray Elementary at East 57th Street and South Kimbark Avenue, all had attendance rates that slipped below—in some cases well below—the threshold CPS had set for acceptable enrollment. The city’s decade-long popula-
tion decline has long been implicated in under-enrollment, with its particular toll on school-age children and families. But the neighborhood’s own contribution to the trend may be fueled particularly by the increasingly burdensome cost of living here, according to a study published last month of Hyde Park’s rental housing stock. And the schools appear to be feeling the effect. Ray made it off the short list of 129 schools CPS released February 19, but Kozminski, Canter, and Reavis did not, and are still on shaky ground. “Every year, the numbers are declining,” said Lauren Sommerfeld, a language arts teacher at Kozminski who remembers that when she arrived at the K–8 school five years ago, enrollment was over 500 for a capacity of 780. Now, it’s 372. Although not all Kozminski RENT continued on page 3
Uncommon Interview: Auschwitz survivor New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza speaks to students Noah Weilend & William Wilcox News Staff The list of people profiled by The New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza reads like a “who’s who” of the major American political figures of the last five years: Paul Ryan, Rahm Emanuel, Michele Bachmann, and
President Obama have all been subject to his sharp scrutiny. For the past 15 years, Lizza has covered politics for such publications as The New Republic, The Atlantic, GQ, New York Magazine, and The New York Times. On Saturday, Lizza moderated an Institute of Politics panel discussion on the 2012
Obama campaign’s technolog y and social media strategies. After the event, he sat down with the Maroon to discuss the role of long-form journalism in the digital age, the key to good reporting , and the “Twitterification” of campaign coverage. The full interview can be found on LIZZA continued on page 4
Forum examines prosecutions Ankit Jain Associate News Editor A crowd consisting of mostly campus and community members expressed their concern about the alleged opacity of the University’s investigation into the January 27 UCMC protest at an open forum led by faculty yesterday. The intention to hold a discussion on the protests was stated in a campus-wide e-mail sent by Provost Thomas Rosenbaum on February 1. Many community members expressed frustration and confu-
sion over the continued prosecution of the three arrested activists. The original complainants, a University of Chicago Medical Center (UCMC) official on the trespassing charges and a UCPD officer on the single resisting arrest charge, passed over prosecution to the State Attorney’s Office. Jacob Klippenstein, one of the arrested activists, revealed that the University had convinced the State to toughen the plea bargain offered to him and Alex Goldenberg from just supervision, to a different offer of conditional discharge and a no contact order.
Supervision would have allowed the charges to be left off Klippenstein’s and Goldenberg’s criminal record in exchange for periodic check-ins with the authorities. Conditional discharge means the two would not face sentencing for the trespassing charge, on the condition they not have contact with the UCMC. The charge would remain on their record. Several other community members questioned why the police officers involved in the incident were not being individually FORUM continued on page 3
During his talk on Wednesday, 93-year-old Holocaust survivor Ben Scheinkopf shows the audience his concentration camp identification number. PETER TANG | THE CHICAGO MAROON
Ingrid Sydenstricker News Contributor Holocaust survivor Ben Scheinkopf, 93, shared his story as an Auschwitz barber to a packed Kent Hall on Thursday night.
Scheinkopf grew up in Płońsk, Poland and watched as German soldiers turned his hometown into a ghetto in 1941, when he was a teenager. In December 1942 he, along with his parents and eight siblings, was relocated to the Auschwitz concentration
camp in Poland. He saved his own life through his work as a barber: Every day, Scheinkopf and 25 other barbers shaved and cut the hair of over 1,000 prisoners. “I was lucky I was a barber,” BARBER continued on page 2
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