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101024

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NEWS: New Policy Requires Students in Dorms to Preregister Guests

OCTOBER 10, 2024 SECOND WEEK VOL. 137, ISSUE 2

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Paul Alivisatos Discusses Free Speech, Budget, and 2030 Climate Plan By KAYLA RUBENSTEIN | Co-Editor-In-Chief EVA MCCORD | Co-Editor-In-Chief and TIFFANY LI | Head News Editor In an exclusive interview on October 2, co-Editors-in-Chief Kayla Rubenstein and Eva McCord and News Editor Tiffany Li spoke with University of Chicago President Paul Alivisatos. In his autumn quarter welcome email to the community, Alivisatos reiterated the University’s stance on free speech expressed in the Chicago Principles. The University announced on September 26, a few days before classes started, that it had received a $100 million donation dedicated towards free speech which it intended to use for the Chicago Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression, and that it was launching a new climate and energy

institute on October 30. The University also continues to face the financial challenges that came to light last year. The Maroon spoke with Alivisatos about the donation, the boundaries of the Chicago Principles, the University’s approach towards reducing its budget deficit, and its progress on the emissions reduction goals in the 2030 climate plan. The following transcript has been edited for clarity and brevity. Chicago Maroon: What, concretely, is the recent $100 million donation towards free speech going to do to make CONTINUED ON PG. 4

University President Paul Alivisatos speaks at the MLK Commemoration Celebration in January 2024. nathaniel rodwell-simon.

University Updates Protest Policies Ahead of Autumn Quarter By NATHANIEL RODWELL-SIMON | Senior News Reporter In an email sent to students on September 24, Interim Dean of Students in the University Michael Hayes informed the University community that, heading into the 2024–25 academic year, the University has updated several of its policies regulating protests on campus. “The University regularly evaluates and revises policies and regulations to address the evolving needs of our community. This year’s changes include updates that clarify existing policies and help foster a diversity of voices across our student body, in alignment with our free expres-

sion principles,” Hayes wrote in the email. The changes include an explicit ban on “staying overnight in outdoor structures on campus or in non-residential campus buildings,” a clarification that “the erection or construction of any structure on campus” requires advance approval from the Director of Student Centers, and that amplified sounds are only permitted on campus at certain times and “not inside campus buildings.” Versions of the student manual captured by the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine show that, as of July 14, the

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manual did not explicitly prohibit overnight occupation of approved structures on campus. The revised policies also include guidance for counterprotesters, changes to how and where signs and flyers can be posted on campus, and new locations for tabling, hanging banners, and temporary quad reservations. Counterprotesters are instructed to not engage in actions that deprive others from participating in an activity or event, “impinge on space reserved by others,” or “interfere with signs, installations, or other materials associated with an activity.” The posting of signs on “windows,

doors, building columns, structural supports, woodwork, flag poles, light poles, or fencing” is now prohibited, as is the use of “glue, packing/shipping tape, and stickers” to post signs. Earlier versions of the policy only referred to unspecified “designated areas” as being approved for posting signs, and stickers were not prohibited. The new policy also includes an update to how “out-of-policy” postings can be reported. “The University policies and regulations on these subjects are intended to support free expression while restricting individuals from using violence, threats, or harassment while expressing their

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