Ohio
The Weekly: Dining worker transfers, football loss to Ohio State, Rock repainting The Weekly: Dining workers, Ohio State loss, Rock repainting

BAYLEE KRULEWITZ: Compass Group has transferred some Northwestern dining workers accused of harassment and abuse — and the misconduct continues.
NU football lost to Ohio State at Wrigley Field, 31-7.
And Taco Bell’s Evanston location rings once more.
From The Daily Northwestern, I’m Baylee Krulewitz.
EDWARD SIMON CRUZ: And I’m Edward Simon Cruz. This is The Weekly, a breakdown of our top headlines from the past week.
As you just heard, one of our reporters, Baylee Krulewitz, is helping me out today. She interviewed Gameday Editor Jake Epstein for one of our segments. Baylee, welcome to The Weekly.
BAYLEE KRULEWITZ: So glad to be here.
EDWARD SIMON CRUZ: You’ll hear that segment in a few minutes. But first, we revisit a big story that The Daily broke almost two weeks ago.
Joining me today, we have Cole Reynolds. He’s a senior staffer, but he started working on this story when he was an In Focus editor last academic year. You worked on this pretty big story, our first In Focus of the quarter, with Jerry Wu, who is currently our campus editor, about some things you learned about Compass Group and the way it’s handled complaints against dining workers.
How did the reporting process kind of start, and where did you start going from there once you realized there was a story to tell?
COLE REYNOLDS: Well, I think it really just started by chance. This is sort of how these things sort of happen, I think, is I was getting food in Allison (Dining Hall), when one of our main sources, Ms. Mary — that’s how — all the students know her as Ms. Mary, but Mary Flemming was there with a piece of paper asking students to sign a petition against discrimination. Of course, Compass and dining hall workers are going through contract renegotiations now, and this petition was Ms. Mary’s contribution to that conversation, and I asked, “Well, Ms. Mary, why do you need a petition against discrimination?” And so, she sort of, just there standing in Allison, it just all sort of kept tumbling out, and the result is this sort of In Focus that’s 3,300 words about how, when dining hall employees are faced with allegations of misconduct, sexual harassment, Compass has a tendency to sort of move the employees, just to different dining halls where some of the misconduct continues.
That’s 3,300 words dedicated to that topic, but there were — Ms. Mary had a laundry list of different sort of complaints about how Compass does business, and same with a bunch of other employees, and so there’s 3,300 words about this specific topic, but that first conversation was just sort of — we just heard about a lot of things about the workplace, and this is one of them. And so it — I just sort of sat back and thought about it, and of course you mentioned that I was editing investigations at this point, last quarter or spring quarter with Pavan (Acharya), and I was just thinking and thinking and just, out of curiosity, I wanted to see if other employees had similar things to say.
And I’m off campus now. I fend for myself in the kitchen. I don’t go to the dining hall anymore. But when you’re on campus you’re in the dining hall a couple of times a day. You know the workers, and it’s sort of just an easy setting to just have a quick chat with, and I found myself just asking workers about some of the things that Ms. Mary was saying — not formally, just sort of off the record. And sort of certain themes kept coming and coming up, and, and that’s when I finally sat down with Ms. Mary for a formal interview, and we talked through a lot of these things, and one thing that she stuck up that stuck out was this, her telling a story of a student that had been harassed allegedly by a dining hall employee and telling how that employee was just sort of moved and things like that, and so that story really became the foundation of the In Focus.
I went and talked to the student, talked to friends that were with her during this time and then really sort of fleshed out this narrative of — when you report an employee, whether you’re a dining hall worker or a student — when you report a Compass employee for harassment, a lot of the times they can end up just working elsewhere, and that became sort of the focus of our In Focus piece, even though there was plenty of other issues that could have been discussed just from that first conversation with Ms. Mary.
EDWARD SIMON CRUZ: You worked on this as I previously mentioned with Jerry, so what was it kind of like from a kind of behind-the-scenes end, collaborating on this, divvying up the different parts of the work and reporting that went into putting a piece like this together?
COLE REYNOLDS: Well, we know, we both know that Jerry is one of the most connected men on campus, you know? He knows a lot about what’s going on on this campus, and he sort of came to the same story that I did just unrelated, right? Same sort of situation, talking to dining hall workers, learning about the same thing. And we just figured out that we were reporting and learning some of the same things just by virtue of sitting in the newsroom together.
And that’s sort of when we started talking about, “Okay, let’s maybe compile our research, compile the manpower and really report this thing out together,” and that’s what we did, and we both had our own niches. I sort of took the lead on some of the narrative structures and talking to some of the people impacted by these situations, and Jerry had sources deep into the union and different sort of management positions and Compass and such, and so he really nailed down on the sort of details — the, really, “why” of, “Why is this happening?”
And what we landed on was, it’s this reporting system that’s sort of obscure and vague, that you send off a complaint to Compass and you don’t really know what happens to it, you know? You don’t know what they investigate. You don’t know what’s the result of their investigation. You just might see the person you reported pop up somewhere else, you know.
And so he is the one that sort of was able to dig into that, sort of, “Why is this occurring?” Tackle that question. And I sort of focused on, “Okay, this is happening. What does it look like from just a personal level, from the people that are affected by it?”
In that way, it really did work out. It had sort of a natural synergy to the reporting that I don’t think the story would have, would have looked the same as if it was just one of us reporting it.
EDWARD SIMON CRUZ: Once again, that was Cole Reynolds, one of our senior staffers, talking about an In Focus story he worked on with Campus Editor Jerry Wu about Compass Group and its handling of complaints against some of its dining workers on campus. Cole, thank you very much for your time.
COLE REYNOLDS: Thank you so much for having me, and please give this story a read if you haven’t already. Thanks.
BAYLEE KRULEWITZ: Now moving on to sports, the sadly unranked Wildcats took on the No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes at Wrigley Field and lost with a final score of 31-7 Buckeyes. This week’s game is on the heels of a bye week after the Nov. 2 overtime win at Purdue. While Saturday marked a disappointing finish in a stadium that was, for some reason, massively overpopulated by Ohio State fans, the Wrigley experience is always a unique one and gives fans a chance to ditch the library and get into the city. Anyway, back to the game.
Right now, I have Gameday Editor Jake Epstein here with me to take us through what happened. Jake?
JAKE EPSTEIN: All right. Well, first off, thank you for having me. It’s an honor to be back on The Weekly after a few weeks where I was not present on this show, but it’s always a pleasure. So, thank you so much, Baylee and to get into the game, you know, awesome venue, Wrigley, unmatched. It’s gonna be great to close out the season in two weeks time there against Illinois.
But, yeah, the first 18 minutes, Northwestern looked ready for an upset shot. I mean, dominated time of possession, outgained Ohio State 151-to-30 in terms of yardage, got on the board first, courtesy of a Jack Lausch eight-yard rushing score.
But, from that point, the No. 2 team in the country came alive in Ohio State, and when you wake up a sleeping giant like that, a national championship contender, it’s always gonna be a rude awakening, and it surely was that — 31 unanswered points for the Buckeyes. Will Howard was pretty unfazed back there in the pocket connecting with Emeka Egbuka, Jeremiah Smith, to name a few. They, they, I mean, their receiving core is simply one of the best in the country, and when you have one of your top (defensive backs) in Theran Johnson out of the game somewhat unexpectedly, but he did not participate today, it’s always gonna be a struggle.
Now, there were signs from some of NU’s DBs, like redshirt freshman corner Josh Fussell and redshirt sophomore corner Braden Turner, and they looked pretty solid at times, but there was, I mean, they showed signs of youth and that’s always gonna happen when you don’t have a real veteran out there at corner.
But, but I mean, this Northwestern team has two more chances to pick up that vital fifth win for a potential bowl bid on academic progress rate or if they can get two wins out of these last two games that could potentially, that will be enough to get them to a bowl. Now, will this be a high tier bowl like last year’s game in the Las Vegas Bowl? Definitely not. We’ll probably be looking at something along the lines of Detroit, maybe Guaranteed Rate, who knows? But at this point, the goal, as it has been all season, is to make a bowl.
Will it be, will it happen if I had to say so? Probably not, but it was, today showed that Northwestern is a team that can go into The Big House against Michigan next Saturday and potentially put up a fight. Michigan is not a team that’s gonna out, they’re not gonna drive all over another team. They’re not going to outgain them and not going to blow them out on the, on the scoreboard, but they do have pretty stout defense and so will Jack Lausch be able to pick up the momentum from a pretty good start and a decent finish today’s game? We shall see.
Then, of course, after Michigan is an Illinois squad that just put a real licking on Michigan State today. So, yeah, this road ahead for Northwestern appears a bit bumpy. It’s gonna be tough to get that bowl eligibility, but, there’s one person I wouldn’t bet against, it’s David Braun, reigning Big Ten Coach of the Year, and hopefully the ’Cats can turn things around these last two weeks.
BAYLEE KRULEWITZ: Yeah. Awesome. Thank you so much, Jake. Pleasure as always.
JAKE EPSTEIN: Of course. Thank you so much.
BAYLEE KRULEWITZ: Here are the other top headlines from the week:
NU College Republicans painted The Rock red. The Rock read “NUCR 4 Unity” and later “MAGA Unity” in reference to President-elect Donald Trump’s slogan, “Make America Great Again.” Unidentified students have since painted over the “MAGA” acronym.
The Cook County Circuit Court struck down Evanston’s ranked choice voting referendum.
A therapist from suburban Glenview won a Jeremy Allen White lookalike contest in Chicago.
NU women’s basketball scored its first win of the season, defeating Utah 71-69.
And Taco Bell rings once more with the opening of its new location on Sherman Avenue.
From The Daily Northwestern, I’m Baylee Krulewitz. Thanks for listening to another episode of The Weekly. This episode was reported and produced by me, Edward Simon Cruz, Cole Reynolds and Jake Epstein.
The audio editor of The Daily Northwestern is Edward Simon Cruz. The digital managing editors are Carlotta Angiolillo and Sasha Draeger-Mazer. The editor in chief is Jacob Wendler.
Our theme music is “Night Owl” by Broke for Free, used under a Creative Commons Attribution License and provided by the Free Music Archive.
Make sure to subscribe to The Daily Northwestern’s podcasts on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or SoundCloud to hear more episodes like this. Follow us on X and Instagram @thedailynu. We’ll be back next Monday with another episode of The Weekly.
Email: [email protected]
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X: @charcole27
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X: @jakeepste1n
Related Stories:
— In Focus: Students and staff report some dining workers for harassment. Compass transfers them — and misconduct continues.
— Football: Northwestern’s turnovers decimate early momentum in 31-7 loss to No. 2 Ohio State
— Evanston Taco Bell — minus the cantina — opens with a Baja Blast
Ohio
No. 9 Penn State men’s lacrosse stays perfect in Big Ten play, beats No. 6 Ohio State on the road
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Ohio
Math plan would help a generation of Ohio students | Opinion
Aaron Churchill is the Ohio research director for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education policy think tank based in Columbus.
In November, the Ohio Senate unanimously passed math reforms that would help a generation of struggling students. House lawmakers should send that excellent package known as Senate Bill 19 to the governor’s desk post haste.
Math difficulties start early for many Ohio students. Last year, 45,000 third graders, or 36% statewide, fell short of proficiency on the state math exam. These youngsters had difficulty solving basic arithmetic and measurement problems. Without such skills, big trouble lies ahead for them.
Meanwhile, even larger percentages of high schoolers fare poorly in this subject. On last year’s algebra I state exam, 53,000 students – 41% of test takers – did not achieve proficiency, while a staggering 72,000 students (57%) fell short in geometry.
These failure rates are unacceptable. Students should not be left to struggle with the routine math needed to manage their personal finances, bake a cake or do a home repair. Nor should they lack the critical thinking, data interpretation and problem solving skills that are demanded by today’s employers and essential to career success.
Ohio must help more students gain fluency in math. Senate Bill 19 does this in the following ways.
First, it supports students with math deficiencies. The bill would require schools to provide math interventions to students scoring at the lowest achievement level (known as “limited”) on state tests. Importantly, schools must engage a child’s parents to create an individual improvement plan that outlines the interventions and how progress will be monitored.
Second, the bill promotes strong math curricula. The Ohio Department of Education and Workforce would be tasked with reviewing math materials and establishing a high-quality list. With dozens of programs and textbooks on the market – some far better than others – this vetting process would aid school districts in finding the best curriculum for their students.
Third, it asks colleges of education to better prepare elementary teachers. Research from the National Council on Teacher Quality shows that teacher training programs often lack serious math content, especially in the elementary grades, leaving teachers ill-prepared for effective instruction. To help address the problem, the bill mandates that prospective educators pass the math section of the state licensure test to teach the subject, something that is not presently required.
Fourth, it gives high-achieving math students a boost. Traditional course placement practices rely on teacher and parent referrals, which tend to overlook economically disadvantaged students who excel in math. Yet, as a recent Fordham Institute study found, access to advanced coursework is critical to high-achieving, low-income students’ college prospects. Through automatic enrollment provisions, Senate Bill 19 would ensure that all high achievers are placed in challenging math courses, including algebra I in eighth grade.
Some may view Senate Bill 19 as burdensome on schools. But the need for significant improvement in math is urgent and the reforms are commonsense. Students struggling in math ought to get help. Schools should use the best-available textbooks and materials. Teachers should know math before they teach it. Schools must push high achievers to reach their full potential.
Math and reading are the academic pillars that support students’ long-term success as well as the state’s economic growth. Thanks to the leadership of Gov. Mike DeWine, Ohio’s Science of Reading initiative is off to a strong start and promises stronger literacy statewide. It’s now time for policymakers to roll up their sleeves and help students get better at math. Their futures – and the state’s – are at stake.
Aaron Churchill is the Ohio research director for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education policy think tank based in Columbus.
Ohio
Remains of Ohio airmen killed in Iraq will be brought back March 29
Amanda-Clearcreek honors Ohio Air National Guard member Capt. Seth Koval
Amanda-Clearcreek honors Ohio Air National Guard member Capt. Seth Koval
The remains of three Ohio airmen who were killed in the crash of their KC-135 refueling plane in Iraq earlier this month will be returned this weekend, according to a family member of one of the deceased.
The airmen, identified as Master Sgt. Tyler Simmons, 28, of Columbus; Capt. Curtis Angst, 30, of Wilmington, and Capt. Seth Koval, 38, of Stoutsville, will be brought back March 29 to Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base near Columbus, said Charles Simmons, Tyler’s father.
“Tyler will have a hero’s welcome, because he is a hero,” said Charles.
The Columbus Division of Police will be involved in the funeral procession when the airmen’s remains are transferred from the airport to funeral homes, said Columbus police Sgt. James Fuqua. That will take place between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. March 29, said Fuqua.
The airmen’s remains first arrived back in the U.S. on March 18 with a dignified transfer taking place at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.
Curtis, Angst, and Simmons were members of the 166th Air Refueling Squadron connected to the 121st Air Refueling Wing based at Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base in Columbus.
The airmen, as well as three other servicemembers, died on March 12 when their KC-135 tanker crashed in western Iraq during a mission in support of Operation Epic Fury in Iran. The cause of the crash, which occurred in friendly airspace, has not been publicly identified. U.S. Central Command has said the incident did not involve hostile or friendly fire, and military experts have theorized the crash may have been the result of a collision with a second KC-135 that sustained heavy damage to its tail fin but landed safely at an airport in Tel Aviv, Israel.
Reporter Bethany Bruner can be reached at bbruner@dispatch.com.
Reporter Shahid Meighan can be reached at smeighan@dispatch.com, at ShahidMeighan on X, and at shahidthereporter.dispatch.com on Bluesky.
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