THE AMHERST
THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER OF AMHERST COLLEGE SINCE 1868
STUDENT VOLUME CXLIV, ISSUE 16 l WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2015
Men’s Hockey Scores Two Wins See Sports Page 9 AMHERSTSTUDENT.AMHERST.EDU
Aquaponics Club to Build Greenhouse Ricky Choi ’18 Staff Writer
On Tuesday, Feb. 17, Amherst College’s Mead Art Museum hosted a special event to celebrate the Lunar New Year, featuring a capella group DQ as the night’s main performance. Photo courtesy of Sydney Tate ’18
Green Games Returns With Modifications Jingwen Zhang ’18 Staff Writer
The Green Amherst Project will host its second annual Green Games next week. The Green Games are a competition between the first-year dorms to see which can be the most environmentally friendly. Winners will be determined by measuring dorms’ respective water, electricity and waste usage over the four-week duration of the event. The Green Games, with a name inspired by the popular “Hunger Games” series, is intended to make a long-term impact on the usage of resources at the college and raise awareness of environmental issues on campus. Representatives, or “tributes,” will be selected from each first-year dorm to lead and organize the efforts of each dorm to win the competition. Each week, the Green Games will hold dormwide challenges and monitor resource usage. Through these challenges, each dorm can collect points and be awarded a prize at the end of
the four-week long event. Each week will seek to educate students about one of four different themes: food, electricity, waste and water. The Green Amherst Project made several changes this year to how the Green Games would run. One of the major changes is the duration of the competition: It was shortened to four weeks from last year’s six. “Many students found it hard to sustain commitment and enthusiasm across such a significant portion of the semester,” said Alexz Chalmers ’17, the member of the Green Amherst Project who will be heading the Green Games this year. Additionally, the Green Amherst Project will aim to provide more support to the representative tributes from each first-year dorm. Last year, two tributes were selected for each dorm, which led to unequal organization methods and difficulties due to the widely varying sizes of different dorms. “As an example, last year’s winner, Williston, is also the smallest of the first-year dorms,” Chalmers said. “It was easier for two students to
organize in Williston than in Charles Pratt. This year, we seek to level the playing field by providing additional support and guidance for tributes.” The Green Amherst Project also seeks to involve more students on an individual basis. “We hope to provide a more comprehensive education ... on the potential individuals have to make a difference through their actions,” Chalmers said. While she declined to provide specifics on the event, she said that students can earn more points for their dorms by attending visiting speakers’ talks and participating in events such as “Meatless Monday.” According to Chalmers, the mixed responses to last year’s Green Games inspired many of these changes. “Our goals are not quantitative, so it’s hard to measure success. Last year, some students had great experiences with the Games while others were unaware or uninterested,” she said.
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A student club recently received funding from the President’s Office to construct a selfsustaining, soil-free greenhouse by Valentine Dining Hall. The club, Hooked on Aquaponics, is co-founded by Pete Suechting ‘15, Jim Hall ’15 and Thais Correia ‘16. Aquaponics is a combination of aquaculture, which is the farming of aquatic animals, with hydroponics, a technique for growing plants without soil. The fundamental process behind aquaponics farming lies in repurposing fish waste into plant food. “Bacteria in water take the ammonium in fish waste and turn them into nitrates and nitrites, which the plants need to grow,” Hooked on Aquaponics member Eli Mansbach ’18 said. Additionally, the greenhouse allows for fish farming alongside its soil-less agriculture. While the project intends to initially use carp, a freshwater fish, future advancements in design may allow for tilapia and trout farms. Originally, Suechting sought to introduce this project as a part of his environmental studies senior thesis. However, he said his adviser cautioned him that he would be limited by the one-year duration of his thesis and by his impending graduation. As a result, Suechting reached out to students who shared his interest in the aquaponics system and eventually co-founded the club. “It reminded me that Amherst is filled with incredible people with all sorts of hidden great skills,” Suechting said. In the original conception of the project, the idea was to set up the greenhouse at the Book and Plow farm as a supplementary measure. To prevent burdening the farm employees, however, the club was created in order to convert the project into a student-run organization. Currently, the club is solving logistical issues that range from generating publicity for potential new members to ordering the necessary materials for constructing the greenhouse. The greenhouse itself will likely be an ongoing project, passed down from senior members, with constant changes to improve the efficiency of the system. “Things will come up even after we think that we’ve figured it out. It’s a process that keeps you humble, constantly tinkering for
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Faculty Discuss Changes to Fall Academic Calendar Dan Ahn ’17 Managing News Editor
The faculty discussed changes to the academic calendar, accreditation for Five College certification programs and archival of theses at the first faculty meeting of the calendar year on Feb. 17. Following opening remarks from the president, Dean of the Faculty Catherine Epstein presented the minutes of the Committee of Six, which met on Feb. 16. The committee had discussed, then rejected changes to the faculty tenure policy. The committee had also talked about changes to the position of academic department chair, with the goal of decreasing the workload and
increasing the authority and compensation of the position. The faculty then held a minute of silence in memory of former faculty member Rose Olver, the first woman to be appointed to a tenure-track position at Amherst. Olver was a member of the Sexuality, Women’s and Gender Studies and Psychology departments. On behalf of the executive committee of the faculty, Professor Christopher Kingston then proposed changes to the academic calendar of 2015-2016 to accommodate a later Labor Day in the fall. Fall break was shortened by one day, reading period by one and a half days, and examination period by half a day. Kingston said that this was necessary to maintain a 13-week semester. The new calendar was
approved by voice vote. Professor David Hall proposed an amendment to the academic calendar changes stating that all school-wide closures must be decided by a vote of the faculty. After a lengthy and heated discussion, the faculty voted via paper ballot, and the results were 46 in favor, 58 opposed and 12 abstaining. Professor Mark Marshall proposed that Amherst join the other Five Colleges in offering accreditation for the Five Colleges Coastal and Marine Sciences certificate program. The program has existed since 1983, and while Amherst was unable to accommodate the certificate program at the time due to a lack of faculty members and courses, the college now has the resources to do so. The motion passed
with a voice vote. On behalf of the Committee on Educational Policy, Professor Adam Honig proposed Frost Library’s new policy on archiving theses. The committee proposed that theses be collected and archived digitally, both in order to streamline the collection process and to allow audiovisual documents to be officially archived. The proposition would also allow faculty advisers to restrict access in the library to the theses of their advisees. Previously, this right had been limited to the thesis writers themselves. After a lengthy debate over access rights to theses, the faculty voted on the motion by paper ballot. The result was 62 in favor, 41 opposed and 12 abstaining. The meeting was then adjourned.