TUESDAY • MAY 14, 2013
CHICAGOMAROON.COM
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892
ISSUE 45 • VOLUME 124
Ginsberg offers alternative, critical perspective on Roe Marina Fang News Editor Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg recounted her work on women’s rights cases that led up to the decision in Roe v. Wade at an event analyzing the events of the 40 years since the case at the Law School on Saturday. Despite her continual support for a woman’s right to choose, Ginsburg expressed misgivings regarding the Court’s monumental 1973 ruling. Interviewed by Law School Professor Geoffrey Stone— who clerked for Justice William Brennan from 1972–1973, Ginsburg recalled that before Roe, there were few options for a woman with an unwanted pregnancy. “For most young women, the option was to marry the guy,” she said. With a 7–2 majority, the Court ruled every abortion ban across
the country unconstitutional in Roe v. Wade. Ginsburg said that she would have supported a more incremental approach had she been on the Court then, noting that previous women’s rights cases were decided on a more narrow reading of the Constitution. Many of these she argued before the Court, as the first director and chief litigator of the Women’s Rights Project of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). “I wanted them to buy my argument, but not so soon, not the second time up at bat,” she said, referring to the argument she made in Frontiero v. Richardson (1973), the second case she argued before the Court regarding the extension of the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment to include women. She said that many states had already adopted positions in which they recognized exceptions for abortion in cases of rape, incest, ROE continued on page 3
During a conversation with Law Professor Geoffrey Stone at the Law School on Saturday, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Ruth Bader Ginsburg expressed her disagreement with the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision 40 years ago. JULIA REINITZ | THE CHICAGO MAROON
TEDx takes it down a notch UCPD lights the way home Sindhu Gnanasambandan News Staff Eleven speakers chosen by UChicago students came together to share stories and ideas related to the chosen theme, “Theory in Action,” at the third annual TEDxUChicago conference on Saturday. TEDxUChicago, the independent iteration of the nonprofit TED (Technology, Education, and Design), tries to promote “ideas worth spreading” in brief speaker presentations on
a local scale. UChicago’s version, with speakers as diverse as human rights activists and psychology professors, also featured a student selected from a pool of 40 applicants: this year, first-year Robert Lipman, who created an underground restaurant known as The Hearth. The conference was completely student-coordinated, with a group of nine executive board members, all new this year, and 38 other volunteers. The new board members were only one of many changes that
took place, several of which were due to reduced funding. The conference was smaller, with 10 speakers instead of the usual 15. The $50 VIP tickets, which had included lunch with speakers, entrance to a party, and a gift bag, were converted into an option of paying $10 beyond the regular price for preferred seating. They also cut the post-conference cocktail party. “We cut the cocktails for a couple reasons. I thought it didn’t really add anything. TED continued on page 2
Rachel Landes Maroon Contributor Editor’s Note: Douglas Everson, Jr. is a Maroon staffer. A new app protects both students and their smartphones from the dangers of walking home alone at night.
Pathlight, released earlier this quarter, lets students activate their phones so that UCPD can keep track of their location as they walk, find their phone if it is stolen, and answer distress calls placed directly through the app. Students can download
the app from the App Store for iPhones or from Google Play for Android devices. Once authenticated, students set their destination and estimated travel time anytime they feel unsafe walking around campus. The UCPD monitors students’ progress PATH continued on page 3
Class of ’17 yield above 50 percent Joy Crane Senior News Staff Fifty-five percent of students accepted to the class of 2017 have decided to attend, marking the highest yield rate in the history of the College. This is a nine– percentage point increase from
last year’s 46 percent yield. At 1,479 students, the incoming first-year class exceeded the College’s target class size for the second year in a row. However, it is lower than the class of 2016’s class size of 1,527. Despite the demolition of Pierce Tower at the end of
the school year, the class is not expected to merit special housing accommodations. The yield rate of students from the city of Chicago jumped to 63 percent this year from around 46 percent in 2012. According to News Director Jeremy Manier, YIELD continued on page 3
Losier to file UCPD complaint Madhu Srikantha News Editor
Top of the List The victorious BROSTOMP FM team, comprising students from Pierce Tower, Broadview Hall, Stony Island, and Maclean Hall, as well as Flint House (from Max Palevsky Residential Commons) and Midway House (from New Graduate Residence Hall) pose after Scav results were released yesterday. See the MAROON’s Scav photo essay on pages 6-7. COURTESY OF AGNES MAZUR
History department Ph.D. student Toussaint Losier, who was charged with three counts of resisting arrest during the January 27 protest at the University of Chicago Medical Center (UCMC) that were later dropped, revealed discrepancies
between his arrest report and new video evidence of his arrest during an open meeting with the Ad Hoc Committee on Dissent and Protest yesterday. While the report claims that he refused to leave the hospital’s Center for Care and Discovery (CCD) and instigated further protest, the video shows that he was walking off the property when police officers
pushed him back to the hospital. Losier intends to file a complaint with the UCPD’s Independent Review Committee based on this new evidence, which was distributed to the Maroon and other media outlets that attended the meeting yesterday. According to University of Chicago Police Department AD HOC continued on page 2
IN VIEWPOINTS
IN ARTS
IN SPORTS
Safety in knowledge » Page 4
Luhrmann’s Gatsby looks so cool, but nobody’s loving it » Page 8
Maroons take fifth straight regional title »
Trouble finds The National stripped down and on repeat » Page 9
Chicago’s season ends on sour note with losses to WashU » Page 11
Baseless instinct » Page 4
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