THE AMHERST
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF AMHERST COLLEGE SINCE 1868
STUDENT VOLUME CXLVII, ISSUE 25 l WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2018
Women’s Golf Claims First Victory of Spring Campaign See Sports, Page 9 AMHERSTSTUDENT.AMHERST.EDU
Counseling Center Sees OneThird of Student Body Natalie De Rosa ’21 Assistant News Editor
Photo courtesy of Emma Swislow ’20
The Counseling Center has seen 34 percent of Amherst’s student body in the 2017-18 academic year, an increase of 19 percentage points since the 2012-13 academic year, according to Director of the Counseling Center Jackie Alvarez.
Amherst to Go Half-Solar By 2019 Olivia Gieger ’21 Managing Arts and Living Editor Amherst, along with Bowdoin, Hampshire, Smith and Williams, has formed the New England College Renewable Partnership, a collaborative contract to purchase solar electricity from a solar farm in Farmington, Maine. Starting in 2019, Amherst will annually receive 10,000 Megawatt hours (MWh) from the farm, enough to power around half of its total electricity use and all of its purchased energy. The facility, a 25 Megawatt hour (MWh) array, will produce enough energy to offset 46,000 MWh annually among all five colleges. Amherst is currently powered through fossil fuel energy. Once it switches to solar energy, the college will continue to obtain approximately half of its electricity use from an on-campus combustion-based power plant. An energy assessment predicts that this shift to 50 percent solar electricity will reduce the college’s carbon dioxide emissions by over 3,200 metric tons. This reduction will decrease the school’s greenhouse gas emissions by 17.5 percent. However, as Amherst’s Director of Sustainability Laura Draucker said, “17.5 percent is not 100 percent. We still have a ton of work to do to get even more renewables on and off campus.” This collaboration marks the first joint renewable energy purchase among higher education in-
stitutions, according to a press release by the Office of Environmental Sustainability (OES). According to Draucker, the project began over two years ago, when Hampshire president Jonathan Lash suggested that the Five-College Consortium use funds previously set aside for a joint renewable energy project among the Consortium. Representatives from each of the five colleges and Williams decided to use the funds to hire an energy consultant to assess what sort of project would successfully increase renewable energy-use for the five-college schools. Later, Mount Holyoke and UMass Amherst abandoned the project, and Bowdoin joined the group. Draucker explained that the addition of Bowdoin helped strengthen the group’s purchasing power, as each of the schools have small energy demands and do not individually need an entire solar grid. By increasing the number of schools in the partnership, the group was able to raise the total demand for renewable energy. Bowdoin was a particularly strategic partner because of its proximity to the farm. While the project has significant implications for the college’s carbon footprint, it also brings educational opportunities. The contract requires that all involved colleges, including their student bodies, have access to energy collection data, as well as the opportunity to visit the site. Now, local experimentations with renewable
energy can focus on other factors, rather than scale and magnitude. “We capture a big chunk of solar energy with this project,” she said. “It will allow us to try closer, on-campus renewable projects.” The introduction of this contract corresponds with the OES’ Climate Action Plan, which sets an overall vision for the school to reduce reliance on fossil fuels. “To transition away from fossil fuels, we are going to need to electrify or find liquid fuel options,” Draucker said. “We are going to need to do much more.” She added that some of these other steps to help transition away from fossil fuels include purchasing more off-site renewable energy and exploring ground-source heating and cooling systems. The project is based on long-term rather than immediate benefit, as the school will not begin receiving energy from it until late-2019 and will remain in contract with the solar farm for 20 years. President Biddy Martin said in a comment over email that the college is looking forward to Amherst’s involvement in the renewable energy initiative. “Amherst is delighted to be part of this important partnership, which illustrates how changes in sustainability practices at our institutions can have a larger impact,” Martin said. “It also sends an important message that every institution and every individual can be an agent for positive forward movement on the urgent challenge of sustainability.”
ence Foundation, studied why marine life thrives in Andvord Bay and how calving glaciers impact marine life. Michi Wiancko is an internationally acclaimed violinist and composer who has performed and toured with many ensembles and soloists, including the Silk Road Ensemble, the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and Yo-Yo Ma. She runs Antenna Cloud Farm in Gill, Massachusetts, which hosts music festivals and artistic retreats. Martha Umphrey, the director of the CHI, introduced Stenzel and Wiancko. Before the start of the performance, Wiancko explained how she uses a looper pedal, a tool that helps musicians add layers to their live act, in her performance. She records a segment of music, loops the segment and then adds layers to that loop. A loop cannot be deleted once it has been recorded, she
explained, and she would improvise on top of the loops. Stenzel then spoke, explaining that the film “is not a science film in the sense that you are not going to see any interviews. You’re going to see scientists at work. Everything was shot from the drone or GoPro cameras that were mounted on the helmets of the scientists.” The film followed scientists as they went about their daily lives, doing things like retrieving the equipment that they had previously set out and working with the data that they collected. It also showed the beauty of the Antarctic landscape with its glaciers and swirling waters. Following the screening and performance, Stenzel and Wiancko answered questions from the audience. First, Stenzel talked about how she edited hundreds of hours of footage into a 10-minute short
During the 2017-2018 academic year, the Counseling Center has seen a steady increase in the number of students utilizing its services — the center reports having seen 34 percent of the student body so far, and anticipates this figure to rise to about 36 percent by the end of the semester. Over the past four years, the number of students who have used the counseling center doubled, increasing from 15 percent in the 2012-2013 academic year, according to Director of the Counseling Center Jackie Alvarez. Compared to other small colleges, Amherst observes a higher number of students seeking counseling, but has similar trends to other highly selective colleges. Alvarez sees this trend as positive, a sign that the Counseling Center’s services have become more accessible over the years. “We worked to overhaul our service and how we deliver our service in order to increase accessibility, and I think we’ve been successful because in four years we’ve bumped up more than 100 percent,” she said. According to Alvarez, the center has implemented a number of additional services, including everyday urgent care, which allows students to book same-day appointments with the Counseling Center. “Students are more likely to follow up this way than if our first opening was in two weeks,” she said. Additionally, the Counseling Center worked to decrease the wait time for nonurgent care appointments. Currently, the average wait time for an appointment is approximately four days. Psychiatry appointments have a slightly longer wait time, with the average being eight days. These figures are small in comparison to colleges nationally, in which some students might wait up to two weeks for an appointment. In order to meet demand, the counseling
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Photographer Maria Stenzel Debuts Short Movie on the Antarctic
Sehee Park ’20 Staff Writer
The Center for Humanistic Inquiry (CHI) hosted a screening of a short film about the daily life of scientists working in the Antarctic filmed by the college’s photographer, Maria Stenzel on April 18. Violinist Michi Wiancko, who composed an original film score to accompany the film performed it live at the screening. In addition to her work for the college, Stenzel is a freelance multimedia journalist and has worked for National Geographic for 20 years. In April 2016, Stenzel spent a month aboard the Nathaniel B. Palmer icebreaker filming the work of benthic marine biologists, physical oceanographers and phytoplankton specialists on their voyage to the western Antarctic Peninsula. The expedition, funded by the National Sci-
film. The film was originally for Live Art Magazine, a live performance event, so she knew the time limitations beforehand. She also mentioned that, in the beginning, Wiancko had wanted the film to build up to a climax, but Stenzel said that “science doesn’t work that way.” “I wanted to show what fieldwork was like, and fieldwork is repetitive — it is a gamble,” she said. Stenzel then talked about the scientific instruments that were shown in the film, such as the weather station, the moorings, the sediment traps and the conductivity, temperature and depth (CTD) sensors. The moorings were left in a water column for four months to record the water temperature and
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