TUESDAY • APRIL 16, 2013
ISSUE 37 • VOLUME 124
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892
CHICAGOMAROON.COM
Multiple Chicago sites vie for Obama library Boston-area students respond to bombing Ankit Jain Associate News Editor
In June 2009, only five months after President Obama took office, the University of Chicago convened a committee to look into bringing Obama’s presidential library to the South Side of Chicago. The committee was made up of nine pre-eminent faculty members, led by Geoffrey Stone, a current professor and former Dean of the Law School. The committee was created to look into the various issues that bringing a presidential library to campus would entail. Stone said the committee is tasked with “planning for the possibility [of a library]. That’s our job—to think about, if it were to happen, how would we want to do it.” Now, almost four years after the committee was first created, several different sites in Chicago and Hawaii are openly jockeying for the library, but the University remains closed-lipped about its interest. The committee reports directly to President Zimmer, who has been kept abreast of the committee’s actions through Susan Sher, his cur-
Ankit Jain Associate News Editor
library, several news reports have indicated that it is interested. When asked to comment, University spokesperson Jeremy Manier
Twin explosions at the finish line of the Boston Marathon yesterday left a trail of terror and devastation in Boston, killing at least three people and injuring over 100. But the effects of the blasts stretched far past the city, as friends and family of the attendees anxiously waited to hear news of their loved ones. UChicago students from the Boston area had a particular plight, dealing with the tragedy in their hometown from almost 1,000 miles away. Second-year Mike Andersen’s brother, a Boston College student, ran the Marathon and finished shortly before the blast occurred. “My brother was finished with his race, and he was in the train station, and he said that they started evacuating the train station…and then they
OBAMA continued on page 4
BOSTON continued on page 3
The Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center, located in Bronzeville and abandoned since 2008, is one of the locations being considered for Obama’s presidential library. TIFFANY TAN | THE CHICAGO MAROON
rent senior advisor and Michelle Obama’s chief of staff from June 2009 to December 2010. Sher has visited several functioning presidential libraries to get a
sense of what kind of commitment UChicago would be required to make, Stone said. While the University hasn’t openly expressed its interest in a
SG pres. candidate Underneath the glass bubble accused of foul play Alex Hays Associate News Editor
Madhu Srikantha News Editor Two separate complaints have been filed against second-year Yusef Al-Jarani, current SG vice president of student affairs and the presidential candidate of the Ignite Slate, accusing him of early campaigning and offering individuals appointments on the SG cabinet. He has been
issued a warning for early campaigning, but the Elections and Rules Committee (E&R) has not released a verdict for the second complaint. Pre-campaigning is explicitly against the by-laws of E&R. Offering appointments is not explicitly mentioned in the by-laws but was addressed by E&R, according to committee members. Al-Jarani SG continued on page 3
SSN and Chicago allies discuss student debt Celia Bever News Editor Southside Solidarity Network (SSN) and a coalition of similar organizations from area colleges, together forming the IIRON Student Network, held a public meeting about student loans and efforts to combat the problem
at the Chicago Temple on Saturday. The speakers pointed out that the sum of the outstanding student debt in the country is over $1 trillion—larger than all of the credit card debt combined. The average student debt per recent graduate is approximately DEBT continued on page 4
Approaching the library’s two-year anniversary, the University is offering unique, behindthe-scenes tours of Mansueto, its newest and most state-of-the-art library. In addition to the tour, the maroon got a special chance to see the preservation department, and speak with Library Director and University Librarian Judith Nadler about her insights into the new facility on Friday. The tours, which are being held every other Friday during spring quarter, offer University faculty, students, alumni, and prospective students a chance to explore Mansueto beyond the Grand Reading Room and to see how the $81 million facility supports academic life at the University. Associate University Librarian for User Services James Vaughan led a small group through Mansueto’s Grand Reading Room and over 50 feet underground to see the library’s unique approach to storing some of the University’s most prized and least accessed volumes. Currently housing some 1.5 million volumes of books, jour-
nals, and even a small video game collection, Mansueto plays host to a wide range of materials from different libraries on campus, including a portion of Special Collections’, Vaughan said. Large metal bins, which run the length and breadth of the underground space, store the library’s collection by the material’s physical size and are accessed by five robotic cranes that can quickly retrieve a selection. “We average about seven and a half minutes to retrieve a book after it is requested,” Vaughan told the group. The robotic cranes are an integral part of the storage and retrieval system of the library and have even been affectionately named by student workers after other famous robots, including Bender and R2-D2, said Matt Warnock, head of Mansueto circulation. He then walked over to a computer next to the bins and demonstrated a request for a book that a library patron can make online. “The cranes run at about four miles per hour,” he added, which is quick enough to handle at least 50 simultaneous requests, the most requests LIBRARY continued on page 3
Tours of Mansueto Library give students and faculty an opportunity to see the library’s innovative robotic book storage and retrieval system. JOHNNY HUNG | THE CHICAGO MAROON
IN VIEWPOINTS
IN ARTS
IN SPORTS
Granting the right to a debt-free education » Page 5
Happy trails for HPAC resident » Page 7
Maroons grab 11 top five finishes at penultimate UAA tune-up » Back Page
A new trauma epicenter» Page 5
GastroConference takes a bite of Chicago’s food scene » Page 7
Hot bats smoke Monmouth, but pitching falters at St. Norbert » Page 11