SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 2017
VOLUME CLII, ISSUE 40
WWW.BROWNDAILYHERALD.COM
Unopposed Steele ’18 elected UCS president, Akasaka ’18 wins UFB chair Roughly 22 percent of undergraduates vote in election, all UCS positions uncontested By EDUARD MUÑOZ-SUÑÉ SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Running unopposed, Chelse-Amoy Steele ’18 was elected the presidentelect of the Undergraduate Council of Students. Naveen Srinivasan ’19 will become the vice president of UCS. Both ultimately ran unopposed, as the race for vice president became uncontested after Alex Volpicello ’18 dropped out Monday night. Steele assumes her position with no previous UCS experience, and Srinivasan currently serves as chair of student activities on UCS. Yuzuka Akasaka ’18 and Drew To ’19 won the race for chair and vice chair of the Undergraduate Finance Board, respectively, announced Katherine Barry ’19 and Kathryn Stack ’19, chairs of the UCS Election Board, Thursday night just after 10 p.m. on the steps of the Stephen Robert ’62 Campus Center. With 74 percent of the vote, Akasaka decisively defeated Aryan Chhabria ’18. Akasaka received 943 votes to Chhabria’s 307 out of 1,269 total votes, according to the
UCS Election Board. With only 52 percent of the vote, To narrowly defeated Julian DeGeorgia ’20, 595 to 533, out of 1,152 total votes. Akasaka previously sat on UCS and To was a member of UFB. Voting began Mar. 21 at noon and ended Mar. 23 at noon. Candidates were announced Mar. 15 and campaigning began the following day. Roughly 22 percent of the undergraduate body voted — approximately 1,400 out of 6,320 students — a decline from the 1,892 students who voted last year. Last year’s figures, however, represented an immense decrease from the 3,152 student who voted in 2015. 1,148 students cast a vote for Steele and 1,118 voted for Srinivasan, though both candidates ran unopposed. Just after the results were announced, Steele said she felt “excited to continue working with different student groups (and) with the administration.” Though the race for UCS president was uncontested, Steele felt it did not affect her priorities. Running uncontested was “definitely not something I take lightly,” she said, but “it hasn’t changed how I want to run my campaign or how I want to conduct the rest of the next year. I still want to be diligent in being
the best liaison I can possibly be for the Brown community. I still want to be open to critique.” Steele recognized it was not only her race that was uncontested but also the elections of all other UCS positions. “I understand that … people have limited options for where to place their trust,” Steele said. “That is an issue.” Steele reiterated her platform’s priorities, which include addressing the understaffing within the Title IX Office and within the Office of Institutional Diversity and Inclusion. “My first priorities are working with the folks who are in charge of the interim process for the Title IX Office and re-staffing that office, but also addressing the reasons for why that understaffing is a current problem,” Steele said. For the OIDI, Steele wants to address the “burden that’s placed on them from being needed from so many places on campus.” In addition to Steele and Srinivasan, three other uncontested UCS positions were filled. William Zhou ’20 will be the chair of student activities, Sharon Zeldin ’20 will be the chair of student wellness and Camila Pelsinger ’20 will be the chair of campus life. No student ran for the position of chair of academic affairs.
Orwa Mohammad ’20 details uncertain future Shifting immigration policies force Syrian student to make tough choices affecting future
SKIING
Ski team places third at USCSA Nationals Bears seek future stability under new head coach after almost losing varsity status in 2015
By PRIYANKA PODUGU SENIOR STAFF WRITER
Over spring break, many students will return home to their families, but for Orwa Mohammad ’20, that option isn’t so simple. Home, for him, is Syria. As a Syrian citizen, Mohammad must complete a compulsory military service for two years. Next month, he will be required to return to Syria to serve, but he can postpone his enlistment by proving his university enrollment to the Syrian embassy. However, that requires traveling to the nearest embassy — which is located in Vancouver, Canada. Though Trump’s revised immigration ban was placed on hold by federal judges from Hawaii and Maryland, the University still advises international students like Mohammad not to leave the United States, according to the office of global engagement. This has created problems for students, like » See MOHAMMAD, page 2
INSIDE
SAM BERUBE / HERALD
UCS President-Elect Chelse-Amoy Steele ’18 poses with campaign staff members, Molly Naylor ’19, Jonathan Powell ’18 and Alex Karim ’17.
By TESS DEMEYER STAFF WRITER
DOROTHY WINDHAM / HERALD
Two months before the 2017 season, Brown’s skiing team found itself without a head coach. Former Head Coach Michael LeBlanc resigned in November 2016, leaving the team’s seniors to lead preseason conditioning. Current Head Coach Alex Norden was hired in late November but did not begin working with the team until early January, two weeks before the first competition. “It wasn’t easy … we had to adjust (to a new coach) right away,” said Ali Gunesch ’17. “(The fall conditioning period) is when everyone gets really comfortable with the coach. We didn’t really have that, so that made it a little bit tougher.”
That transition did not stop the Bears from continuing to find success on a national level. Brown finished third at the USCSA National Championships after winning the Eastern regional competition. Natalie Pearl ’17 earned First-Team All-American honors in both the giant slalom and slalom, where she finished third overall. “Nationals was a solid showing,” Pearl said. “We all skied very strong and solid. Everyone worked hard, and we got it together as a team.” Despite being one of the most successful athletic programs at Brown, the team’s varsity status has been hanging in the balance since 2011. Fundraising struggles and safety concerns were cited as reasons for a possible demotion to club level in 2015, The Herald previously reported . But later in the year, Director of Athletics Jack Hayes recommended to President Christina Paxson P’19 that the team should retain its varsity status and set long-term » See SKIING, page 3
WEATHER
FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 2017
NEWS Lives of two Iranian graduate students upended by Trump’s immigration bans
SPORTS ECAC Co-Gymnast of the Year Morant ’17 to compete at NCAA Regional Championships
COMMENTARY Campbell ’17, Campanelli ’18: UCS cannot delitgitmize BDH, paper vital to campus discourse
COMMENTARY Colby ’20: Underfunding for athletics appropriate, admissions should prioritize academics
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