Chicago-Maroon-10-11-30

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MAROON V V CHICAGO

OICES

The student newspaper of the University of Chicago since 1892

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2010 • VOLUME 122, ISSUE 18 • CHICAGOMAROON.COM

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TRANSPORTATION

FACULTY

SafeRide forum draws four students

Council bridges faculty gender gap Part two of a two-part series on the

Faculty Gender Gap By Christina Pillsbury Associate News Editor

CRYSTAL TSOI/MAROON

By Jonathan Lai and Crystal Tsoi News Staff Just four students attended the forum on concerns over SafeRide organized by Student Government (SG) and Director of Transportation Rodney Morris in response to an online petition that garnered 500 student signatures. At the meeting Tuesday in Cobb, Morris said he believes current plans for improvement, combined with more student

input, can improve the SafeRide system. Among the four students attending, three were creators of the petition; the other student, fourth-year Katherine Isaac, was the only unaffiliated undergraduate to attend. Though Morris expressed frustration over the low turnout and called for future meetings, he discussed several changes being made that are intended to improve evening transportation. “There are deeper issues, and we can’t just do it with seven people in the

room,� Morris said, referring to the three administrators and four non–SG affiliated students who attended. “Getting things changed takes a little time, but we are working on the process. I need your help, I need your input, I need your honesty.� Morris said that the University is looking into hiring a dedicated dispatcher for SafeRide, that transit supervisors will take two-hour shifts at night, and that a script is being written that will

SAFERIDE continued on page 3

HYDE PARK

Former UCMC admin starts alderman campaign By Jingwen Hu News Staff Anne Marie Miles, a former president of the U of C’s Comer Children’s Hospital Service Committee, announced last Tuesday that she would join eight other candidates challenging incumbent Fifth Ward Alderman Leslie Hairston. Miles is on the steering committee of Safe Youth Chicago of the Union League Club of Chicago. A former president and secretary of the U of C’s Comer Children’s Hospital Service Committee, she has also been an active presence in the Lab

Schools, which both her daughters attended. Miles hopes to stimulate economic development and increase security in the ward that encompasses Hyde Park and South Shore, advocating the expansion of emergency blue lights to beyond the immediate University of Chicago vicinity. “The fifth ward has for many years been known for the independent voice of reason in the city council‌I just don’t see it in the current moment,â€? Miles said. Last summer, Hairston used ward funds to finance $62,000 worth of free parking lots. Miles said she

would have used that money to fund employment. “I thought in a summer of astronomical youth unemployment that money could have been used to employ people,� Miles said. “Full-time jobs, part-time jobs, summer jobs...it just seemed wrong to me.� Miles grew up in Morningside H e i g h t s , Ne w Yo r k C i t y. S h e practiced elder law in New York City before moving to Hyde Park in 1999 with her husband Emil Coccaro, chair of the department of psychiatry at the University of Chicago.

INSIDE

Grey City Journal The MAROON's quarterly magazine

In this issue Lipstick Killer (X ’50) A question of corporatization Q&A with Andrew Abbott Woodlawn, revisited Daddio, a personal essay

WLC continued on page 3

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Director of Transportation Rodney Morris and second-year Undergraduate Liason to the Board of Trustees and Frank Alarcon share thoughts on future SafeRide improvements at a poorly attended forum last Tuesday in Cobb.

Women make up about a quarter of full-time faculty at the University of Chicago, leaving many women in departments with few or no other female colleagues. “If you’re the only woman [on a faculty], this is not a good place to be,� said Linda Zerilli, director of the Center for Gender Studies. “There’s always that feeling that you’re the woman up there speaking, and that you represent all women, so you’d better say something smart.� Designed to help eliminate obstacles to recruiting and retaining female faculty, the Women’s Leadership Council (WLC) is trying to make the University of Chicago “the destination for women in academic careers,� WLC member

and Associate Dean of the department of medicine Halina Brukner said. The WLC now holds semiannual luncheons in an effort to help female faculty find support from women across academic disciplines. They are the group’s latest efforts to make the University more welcoming and supportive to women at an institution where women are largely underrepresented. In every department save one—Slavic Languages and Literature—women account for less than one-third of faculty. The University’s gender gap is comparable to that of peer institutions, but Zerilli said that’s a poor measure. “We’re always comparing ourselves to Princeton and Harvard, and saying ‘We’re not worse,’� she said. “Yes, but what’s the standard?� Associate Provost for Program Development Mary Harvey established the 12-member WLC in June 2008 at the request of Provost Thomas Rosenbaum. WLC member and Professor of medicine Suzanne Conzen said the group is still gathering data on

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LAW SCHOOL

Law students promise public service with pro bono pledge By Jonathan Lai News Staff Along with 95 of her peers, firstyear law student Mishan Araujo promised to donate at least 50 hours of legal volunteer work through a new, Law School–run program at the end of October. “I would have probably tried to do it on my own, but it would have been more difficult,� she said. Araujo is taking part in the Law School’s new pro bono pledge, which is itself part of the larger Public Interest Program. The pledge, which took place during National

Pro Bono Week, is part of an effort to encourage students to serve the public and to help them get experience in real-world situations. “This is another way of telling law students that even though they’re not quite yet lawyers, they have a professional obligation to give back to the community in their new profession, in a law-related way,� said Susan Curry, director of public interest law and policy. “They can help meet great client need, and we know that students will be receptive to this.� The program, which helps students find pro bono projects in order

PRO BONO continued on page 3


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