051013 Chicago Maroon

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FRIDAY • MAY 10, 2013

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892

CHICAGOMAROON.COM

ISSUE 44 • VOLUME 124

Speaker warns against affirmative action ban Andrew Ahn Maroon Contributor In light of the upcoming Supreme Court case Fisher v. University of Texas, Loyola University Professor Mark Engberg stressed the social and educational vitality of affirmative action and warned about the consequences of a potential overturning of the policy at an Office of Multicultural Student Affairs (OMSA) event on Wednesday night. In 2003, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Grutter v. Bollinger that the University of Michigan Law School’s admission policy supporting affirmative action was constitutional. While this

case set a precedent for admission policies across the nation, this race issue resurfaced in 2008 when two white women, Abigail Fisher and Rachel Michalewicz, claimed that the University of Texas at Austin denied them admission on the basis of race. In February 2012, the Supreme Court decided to consider the case. Affirmative action, said Engberg, “allows colleges to intentionally bring diversity to their campuses in order to prepare students for the reality of our society. We are an increasingly diverse democracy. Students need this exposure... in order to be good citizens ACTION continued on page 2

And so it begins Members of the I-House Scav team cheer in anticipation of the release of this year’s Scav list. JAMIE MANLEY | THE CHICAGO MAROON

ORCSA to try new RSO advising model Hamid Bendaas News Staff This fall, the Office of Reynolds Club and Student Activities (ORCSA) will adopt a new model for classifying registered student organizations (RSOs) based on the range and scale of the RSO rather than its subject focus. The new model was outlined in a presentation given to a group of RSO leaders in Bartlett Trophy Lounge by ORCSA staffers Jen Kennedy and Arthur Lundberg yesterday evening. The color-coded system ranges in order from emerging and new RSOs (red), those which run small, low-maintenance meetings (orange), RSOs which organize several large programs a year (green), RSOs with complex organizations and frequent largescale programs like University Theater (blue), and RSOs which

have a high impact on the wider community and which deal with significant financial and risk management considerations like Scav (purple). RSOs will also be assigned to advisers based on their color code. Orange RSOs, which comprise the majority, will be assigned peer advisers who can sign off on expense reports. This, Kennedy believes, will allow advisers to “spend less time signing transaction documents… and spend [more] time advising, which is what they’re here to do.” Kennedy said she hopes the new model will also be less strenuous on student leaders, who will now be able to go through more tailored trainings that fit their RSO’s needs. In the past, all RSOs were required to attend annual, three-hour trainings. Beginning next year, orange RSOs will have to complete online

trainings, while only the more complex RSOs will still participate in in-person trainings. Though both Kennedy and Lundberg stressed the increased ease of the new model for student leaders and advisers, a subtext throughout was the issue of funding and the need for increased collaboration and partnership. RSOs would now be allowed to identify as multipurpose, as both “political” and “academic,” and thus be allowed to explore new and innovative partnerships. Before, groups could only officially identify as one type of RSO. ORCSA is hoping that the new model encourages RSOs to partner with similar-subject RSOs, departments, and institutions on campus, with Kennedy offering the example of fine arts partnerships with the Logan Center, or religious groups partnering with the Institute of Politics.

Under ACA, Dr. supply won’t meet demand Sindhu Gnanasambandan News Staff A study published in the journal Health Affairs by University of Chicago Medical Center (UCMC) Associate Professor Elbert Huang forecasts that 29 million people will be insured for the first time in 2014 as a result of the Affordable Care Act

(ACA), requiring 7,200 more primary care providers at a time when prospective doctors are being driven into more lucrative specialty areas. The likely influx of insured patients has medical researchers, practitioners, and leaders in the industry worried that the South Side of Chicago, particularly the neighborhoods of Lawndale and

Englewood, will be hit especially hard because of the number of currently uninsured people. Englewood, for example, is predicted to see a 10 percent increase in demand for primary care, requiring the addition of four doctors to the existing group of 40 practitioners in the neighborhood. ACA continued on page 3

Broadview residents table complaints on dining move Stephanie Xiao Associate News Editor Following a flurry of student complaints over the decision to relocate Broadview Hall’s house tables to Cathey Dining Commons next year, administrators have announced a series of transportation and dining accommodations, including extended shuttle routes and the relocation of Fourth Meal to Cathey. The table relocation, first announced last quarter, is part of a series of housing and dining changes to be implemented next autumn after the demolition of Pierce Tower and Dining Hall, where the Palmer, Talbot, and Wick House tables are currently situated. Over the course of the last two quarters, Broadview residents have voiced their dissatisfaction about the new location to their Resident Heads and at Dining and Inter-House Council (IHC) meetings, second-year Palmer House President Molly Blondell said. A letter-writing campaign to housing and dining administrators was also proposed at one point, but never materialized. Despite the official relocation, Blondell said many Broadview residents intend to go to Bartlett Dining Hall, which is roughly 11 blocks away from Broadview in

contrast to Cathey’s 16. “A lot of people are worried about not even having a house culture in South next year because people are going to eat in Bartlett anyway because that’s closer and more convenient,” she said. Ideally, said Blondell, Broadview tables would be moved to Bartlett, which will expand this summer to accommodate the relocation of the Maclean house tables. Other solutions proposed by residents earlier this quarter and last quarter included implementing a direct shuttle route from Broadview to Cathey, as well as giving Broadview residents the option to choose the Apartment Meal Plan. “Everyone in Broadview is just discouraged by the fact that whenever we bring up any issues, we don’t feel like we’ve been heard. Many of the issues that we faced last year or in years past, we’ve gotten no response,” Blondell said, referring to an incident last year in which fire alarms went off in Broadview almost every night for two weeks. In recompense, she said, Broadview residents only received an apolog y. “The University is very accommodating for students in large dorms. Last year they gave Pierce residents $500 gift certificates to the bookstore for the toilet situBROADVIEW continued on page 2

IN VIEWPOINTS

IN ARTS

IN SPORTS

How financial aid reinforces our values » Page 4

Ongoing discussion series at Incubator engages artist and audience » Page 6

How’s DI treating you, Wildcats? » Back Page

Criminal neglect » Page 5

Creative Cloisters » Page 9

Hedonism Bots, Junk, and Supersnatch: This is Chicago Ultimate » Page 10


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