TUESDAY • OCTOBER 22, 2013
CHICAGOMAROON.COM
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892
ISSUE 6 • VOLUME 125
Chance the Rapper to headline fall show Marina Fang News Editor Chance the Rapper will headline the Major Activities Board (MAB)’s fall show on November 9 at 7 p.m. in Mandel Hall, according to MAB chair and fourth-year Jack Friedman. Friedman said that in selecting the headlining act, the Board hoped to bring in someone relatively unknown to students but who could excite a wide audience. “We wanted to highlight something new and emerging. He’s someone who’s a fresh face on the scene,” he said. Another tipping point in the Board’s selection was the rapper’s affiliation with the city of Chicago. Chance, 20, launched his career while a student at Jones College Prep High School in the South Loop. In addition, as he told Interview magazine, he was inspired by the work of fellow Chicagoan Kanye West, whom he first heard on the radio at Edwardo’s
Pizza on East 57th Street. Chance started working on his first mixtape, 10 Day, after being suspended during his senior year in 2011. The release of the mixtape in the spring of 2012 received positive feedback and led to a mention in Complex magazine’s “Top 10 New Chicago Rappers to Watch Out For.” As a result of his newfound fame, Chance was invited to make guest appearances in songs by Childish Gambino, Hoodie Allen, Lil Wayne, and Joey Badass. “We wanted to show someone innovative and honor someone from our city, so those were the two biggest factors,” Friedman said. Chance the Rapper is currently promoting his second mixtape, Acid Rap, which was released in April. In addition to his own headlining tour, he has appeared with Eminem and Kendrick Lamar on their recent world tour. Rolling Stone magazine recently named him its 2013 “Hot MAB continued on page 2
A happy homecoming Second-year Cole Thoms scores the first touchdown in the Homecoming game against Macalester College on Saturday. See back page for story. FRANK YAN | THE CHICAGO MAROON
East to west, alum bikes for better housing Stephanie Xiao Associate News Editor For Max Rubinstein (A.B. ’10), what started out as a fun way of de-stressing after work quickly spun into a cross-country bicycle journey spanning 10 weeks and
more than 4,000 miles. This past summer, Rubinstein biked across America as a participant in Bike & Build, a nonprofit organization centered on raising money and awareness for affordable housing. As part of the southern U.S. regional
team, Rubinstein and 30 other riders pedaled 4,058 miles from Jacksonville, FL, to Monterey, CA, traveling through and volunteering in cities like New Orleans, Dallas, and Santa Fe along the way. “I thought it was a really cool
way to do something that was both fun personally but also meaningful more broadly, in terms of the affordable housing cause,” Rubinstein said. During the course of the 10 weeks, riders fundraised and BIKES continued on page 2
University mourns Austin Hudson-LaPore Burns talks health care, housing at meeting Alex Hays Associate News Editor
Family, cherished friends, and colleagues congregated to remember and celebrate the life of Austin Hudson-LaPore
(1992-2013) in a memorial service held yesterday evening in Rockefeller Chapel. Hudson-LaPore, 20, went missing on June 12 after he ventured out without his wallet or cell phone to
watch the aftermath of a large thunderstorm that had rolled through the area earlier that evening. His body was found a week later in Lake Michigan, and soon after, his death was declared an accidental
Laurie Hudson, Austin Hudson-LaPore’s mother, recounts Austin’s adventurous spirit and curiosity during a memorial held in his memory on Monday evening. JAMIE MANLEY | THE CHICAGO MAROON
drowning by the Cook County Medical Examiner. He was planning to work at a lab on campus over the summer and preparing for his fourth year at the University. A dedicated biochemistry student, Hudson-LaPore was described as a kind and intelligent friend. Fellow students shared their memories of HudsonLaPore’s tenacity in the face of grueling problem sets and his willingness to help his friends succeed in whatever they were doing. In opening remarks, Reverend Elizabeth Davenport, dean of Rockefeller Chapel, told those in attendance to take the opportunity Monday evening to grieve and to remember their loved ones. She invited anyone to share their memories of Hudson-
AUSTIN continued on page 2
Isaac Stein Maroon Contributor Fourth Ward Alderman Will Burns (A.B. ’95, A.M. ’98) played host to a lively community discussion on Monday evening, fielding questions ranging in subject from local enrollment in the Affordable Care Act to a new housing development in Bronzeville. Angela Gibson, a member of Burns’s staff, gave a presentation on the implementation of the Affordable Care Act and encouraged attendants of the meeting to buy health insurance through the new online exchanges set up by the government to provide a marketplace for citizens to purchase health care. She reminded interested residents that they must sign up by December 15.
Additionally, Gibson said that if anyoneattemptingtobuyinsurance online could not access the federal government’s enrollment forms on healthcare.gov, he or she could sign up via the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services Web site instead. After Gibson finished, Robert Turner, director of the soon-tobe-completed Sullivan Station apartment complex on East 41st Street in Bronzeville, presented an outline of the project at the meeting. Turner said the project, owned by real estate firm Draper and Kramer, represents a residential revitalization of an area previously occupied by public housing. The land had been left vacant for more than a decade after the housing was destroyed. “Fifteen years ago, a large BURNS continued on page 2
Check out our
IN VIEWPOINTS
IN ARTS
IN SPORTS
HUMANITIES
Coping mechanisms » Page 4
DAY 2013
MAB: Give us a Chance » Page 5
Big laughs as CSO stages nightmare on South Michigan» Page 7
Lee Kocher, coach for 35 years, honored by National Wrestling Hall of Fame » Back Page
coverage » Page 3
Pressing issues in print » Page 8
In the Chatter’s Box » Page 11