VOLUME CLI, ISSUE 23
WEDNESDAY, April 13, 2022
amherststudent.com
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF AMHERST COLLEGE SINCE 1868
Altered Housing Selection Process Elicits Student Concerns Liam Archacki ’24 Senior Managing Editor
Photo courtesy of Matai Curzon ’22
The AAS has voted to establish salaries for officials following the upcoming election cycle. Questions remain about whether the bylaw opens up avenues for other student groups to get paid.
AAS Passes Bylaw to Pay AAS Officials Eleanor Walsh ’25 Managing News Editor The Association of Amherst Students (AAS) has voted to establish salaries for AAS officials following the upcoming election cycle, as announced in an email to students on Friday, April 8. The new bylaw, proposed by Senator Cole Graber-Mitchell ’22, aims to boost participation in the AAS and make it more accessible.
OPINION
However, questions remain about whether the bylaw opens up avenues for other student groups to get paid. The new bylaw will pay $15 an hour to all senators, executive board members, and at-large members on the Budgetary Committee and Judiciary Council. Officials will only be paid for mandatory, minuted meetings held by the Senate or any standing, constitutional, or ad-hoc committee of the AAS.
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How to Make Challah: Cole Graber-Mitchell ’22 reflects on his Jewish identity, his connections to the Amherst community, and a very special loaf of bread.
Hours are capped at six hours a week, meaning officials can earn up to $90 a week. This money will come from the AAS rainy day fund, which the Senate can vote to use for any purpose they see fit. “By paying people, we hope to make the entire AAS more accessible and inclusive to those who don’t really have spare time to get involved with student government without being paid,” said Graber-Mitchell
ARTS & LIVING
on one of his motivations for proposing the bylaw. He hopes that low-income students who might otherwise spend their time working an on-campus job will consider running, which would also help diversify the Senate. Ankit Sayed ’24 describes himself as someone who is able to run for Senate “almost exclusively because of the new
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Compelling Concertos: Alex Brandfonbrener '23 reviews Saturday's orchestra concert with insights from Conductor Mark Lane Swanson.
SPORTS
Running from Tuesday, April 12, to Thursday, April 14, the 2022-2023 general housing selection process has taken a form different from both the process used since the pandemic began and the system in place before the pandemic. In no longer assigning group housing assignments or allowing students to receive selection times as groups, the new process has elicited concerns from some students trying to live in close proximity to their friends. In a shift away from the Covidera system in which students ranked their dorm preferences as groups and were assigned their rooms by Housing Operations, this year marks the first time students are selecting their own rooms since the pandemic began. In a March 10 email from Housing Operations, students were informed of their randomly assigned selection number, which determines the start time for the window in which they may choose their room, with lower numbers corresponding to earlier times. The email also announced a notable change from pre-Covid years in the discontinuation of “time groups,” which had allowed students who wished to live near
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An Ode to Coach K: Liza Katz ’24 reflects on her experience as a longtime Duke fan as the legendary coach heads into retirement.