Issue 21

Page 1

THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF AMHERST COLLEGE SINCE 1868

THE AMHERST

STUDENT

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VOLUME CXLVIII, ISSUE 21 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 2019

@amherststudent AMHERSTSTUDENT.COM

Legacy Admissions Scrutinized in Wake of Varsity Blues Shawna Chen ’20 and Natalie De Rosa ’21 Editor-in-Chief and Managing News Editor

Photo courtesy of Matai Curzon ‘22

After a complaint filed by a student alleging that the Unity Ticket broke campaign expenditure rules in their election campaign, the Judiciary Council held a hearing on the issue, ultimately ruling against the ticket in a 5-0 decision.

AAS Voids Election, Disqualifies Ticket Zach Jonas ’22 and Alison Poussaint ’22 Managing News Editor and Staff Writer On April 9, the Judiciary Council (JC) issued a decision on a complaint regarding the recent Association of Amherst Students (AAS) executive board (E-board) elections, deciding that certain candidates had spent money above the allotted expenditure cap. The ruling disqualified four candidates and led the AAS to hold E-board elections again this week. On Thursday, April 4, students selected their preferred AAS candidates through an online poll. Once voting ended, a student submitted a complaint to the JC about the campaign finances of a group calling themselves the “Unity Ticket.” The group originally comprised of five students: Gabriel Echarte ’22 running for president, Isiaha Price ’21

for vice-president, Serena Lee ’21 for treasurer, Dorjohn Boakye ’21 for JC chair and Angelina Han ’22 for secretary. Lee dropped out of the race before voting began. The group had purchased fliers and used Instagram and other social media platforms to encourage fellow students to vote for the Unity Ticket, pooling together their campaign funds to advertise. The complaint claimed that the Unity Ticket violated the Elections Committee section H. subsection ii. clause of the Constitution. According to that clause, each candidate spent $148 instead of the $29.60 they had intended to spend. As outlined in the AAS Constitution, “Total campaign expenditures shall be limited to $30 for all campus positions and $15 for class positions. An additional $15 shall be allowed for each candidate in a run-off election. Contributions shall be included in this sum. Any

campaign item promoting a candidate counts toward this sum. No reimbursement shall be granted without official receipts.” The JC met to evaluate the validity of the complaint, and on April 9, the AAS sent an email regarding the results of the public hearing held to assess the students’ candidacies. In a 5-0 vote, the JC voided the students’ campaigns and banned them from running in the redone, upcoming election cycle. Emails for the new election cycle went out on April 11. Price — who ran for the position of vice president on the Unity Ticket — said that the five members of the ticket pooled their money together to buy $148 worth of posters that advertised their ticket’s campaign. They bought 2,500 cards, Price said. “If you look at the posters and cards that we bought, they have all of our ticket’s names on it. It’s not $150 of ‘Gabriel Echarte for President’ propaganda,” Price said.

According to JC Chair Daniyal Ahmad Khan ’22, the complaint filed to the AAS stated that the four Unity candidates “violated the [Elections Committee section H. subsection ii.] clause in their respective campaigns.” “We understand that this action came from a misinterpretation of a clear passage in the AAS Constitution. Though candidates made efforts to ensure they were acting in compliance, their breaking of the constitution gave the mentioned candidates an advantage above other candidates,” Khan wrote. Price said that he was confused by the decision. “We checked with both the AAS secretary and AAS treasurer to see if it is consistent with the AAS Constitution,” he said. The AAS Constitution, he said, does not explicitly talk about ticket policy.

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In 2004, around 45 students and parents visited Amherst for what was deemed an “admissions workshop” tailored specifically for alumni and their children. Then-Dean of Admission and Financial Aid Katie Fretwell ’81 answered questions from the group, explaining the application process and the college’s expectations for yield rates. At one point, a visitor raised his hand. “I feel a little bad asking about it, but is there an advantage to a family relationship?” he asked Fretwell. “The director paused to choose her words, recognizing that her answer would be of critical importance to the alumni whose gifts filled Amherst’s coffers — and who likely wondered whether the president’s ambition for economic diversity would leave their children in the cold,” journalist Dan Golden observed in his 2006 book “The Price of Admission: How America’s Ruling Class Buys Its Way into Elite Colleges.” “There can be,” Fretwell eventually answered, adding that the admissions office communicates with the alumni office throughout the admissions cycle. According to this section of Golden’s book, over the 15 years prior to 2004, Amherst had admitted 50 percent of alumni children as opposed to 20 percent of all applicants. When

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