April 27, 2016

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Wednesday april 27, 2016 vol. cxl no. 56

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Individuals peering into room windows reported By Marcia Brown staff writer

The University’s Department of Public Safety sent a Campus Safety email alert to University affiliates on Tuesday afternoon about two incidents of individuals peering into residential windows on campus. According to the email, both incidents were recorded by a University student, one on April 2 and another on April 24. The first incident was reported to DPS by a female student. The student described the suspect to officers as “a Caucasian male, approximately 5’8” to 5’10” with a slim to medium build, wearing glasses, no beard but had a light ‘scruff,’ wearing navy or dark grey colored pants with running shoes or Teva sandals peering into residential hall windows.” The second incident was also reported by a female student who described the suspect involved in her incident as “a Caucasian male, approximately 5’8” to 5’9” with a husky build, brown hair, wearing

glasses, wearing a blue shirt and blue jeans and sandals peering into a residential hall window.” The email noted that it is unclear if the two incidents are related. The University is currently soliciting any information concerning either of the incidents. “They occurred separately. There are different levels of alert. There is a sort of rationale behind reporting incidents to the campus community,” University Media Relations Specialist Min Pullan said. The Department of Public Safety deferred comment to Pullan. “The incidents described are not ones that are required to be reported as per the Jeanne Clery Act,” Pullan added. Pullan explained that DPS made the decision to alert the University community when the most recent attack indicated a higher level of threat and the potential for a serial offender on campus. Pullan explained that the email is meant to advise University community members to See WINDOW page 3

STUDENT LIFE

Causes of gastrointestinal illnesses not confirmed By Claire Lee staff writer

By Maya Wesby senior writer

There have been no conclusions made concerning the particulars of the connection between the reported gastrointestinal illnesses among students and their having eaten at Colonial Club, according to Assistant Vice President of Communications Daniel Day. Multiple students reported symptoms of gastrointestinal illnesses last Thursday and Friday after dining in Colonial, University Media Relations Specialist Min Pullan said. The students who reported to

McCosh Health Center with gastrointestinal illnesses all confirmed eating at Colonial within the prior 48 hours, according to Pullan. The cause of the illness has not been determined but sanitizing procedures have been carried out, she said. Day added that administrators will produce a more comprehensive response as to the source of students’ illnesses as soon as more information becomes available. Manager of University Health Services Kristen Palkovich did not respond to request for comment. Jeffrey Grosser, health officer See ILLNESS page 5

A CARPET OF PETALS

ATAKAN BALTACI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR

After the showers on Tuesday, petals from the trees carpeted the campus. ACADEMICS

Program of Archaeology approved as certificate By Andie Ayala staff writer

The Program of Archaeology was approved as a certificate in Monday’s faculty meeting, according to Program Director Nathan Arrington ’02. Dean of Faculty Deborah Prentice deferred comment to Dean of the College Jill Dolan. Dolan deferred comment to Deputy Dean of the College Elizabeth Colagiuri. “The proposal for the newly created certificate program in archaeology was reviewed by the Academic Planning Group and the Faculty Committee on the Course of Study before going the full faculty for approval,” Colagiuri said. Arrington noted that the entire Art and Archaeology

Palestinian diplomat Areikat talks Palestinian-Israeli relations By Kevin Agostinelli staff writer

A student is studying under a tree in McCosh courtyard.

In Opinion

Today on Campus

SUNNY HE :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Guest contributors from the Graduate Student Government criticize the University’s lack of transparency in submitting an amici curiae brief opposing Graduate student unions, and columnist Beni Snow evaluates the decision to cut sprint football. PAGE 6

the study of archaeology as it stands at the University is more suited as a certificate program instead of a division within the Art and Archaeology concentration. Arrington noted that the way that the program is currently written as a major track is limited because it isn’t interdisciplinary as it could be and is constrained within the field of Art History. “The way that the archaeology track is written as a major always struck me as being very much like a certificate; it’s very interdisciplinary in nature and it was quite simple really just to take that model and translate it into a certificate, so it really seemed to See PROGRAM page 2

LECTURE

“I do not see any other solution to the Palestine-Israeli conflict other than an independent, sovereign, viable, contiguous Palestinian state – and when I say sovereign I mean a state that will enjoy all attributes of sovereignty,” Ambassador Maen Rashid Areikat, chief representative of the Palestinian Liberation Organization to the United States, said in a lecture on Tuesday. During the lecture, Areikat gave an overarching view of his position as a major Palestinian diplomat, offering a variety of reasons as to why a two-state solution is not just the best answer for Israel and Palestine – it is the only one. Areikat referenced the existing state of affairs with the Israeli occupation of Palestine, which has grown even tighter as a result of what he refers to as “the most extreme right-wing government in the history of Israel.” According to Areikat, the growing number of legal Israeli settlements within Palestine is

SPRING

faculty approved the proposal earlier in the year, although they had started discussions regarding the program being offered as a certificate at least three years ago. Arrington added that there are currently three tracks that concentrators in the Department of Art and Archaeology can take: History of Art, Studio Arts and Archaeology. He explained that most students pursue the Art History track while a substantial number of students also studying Studio Arts. According to Arrington, there are presently only two students from the Class of 2016 pursuing the Archaeology track within the Art and Archeology department. Arrington explained that

an indication that pulling out of Palestine is not on the Israeli government’s agenda. “You can see it with your own eyes,” Areikat said. The ambassador described in greater detail what the terms of the proposed two-state solution would be in order for Palestine to be able to obtain its own legitimate autonomy. “The reason in the past that our people had refused Israeli offers was because Israel wanted to continue to control the Palestinian people even after they [the Palestinians] established their own Palestinian state,” Areikat explained, “That’s why all the negotiations have failed – because Israel did not want the Palestinians to have sovereignty of the Palestinian state. Areikat listed some of the terms of a two-state solution including no presence of the Israeli military in the future Palestinian state, no control of air space or international checking points and no control of local or natural resources. He explained that the question now is not so much whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will support the Pal-

7:30 p.m.: Daniel Philpott, Professor of Political Science and Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame will deliver a lecture “Religious Freedom in Islam?: Intervening in a Culture War.”Lewis Library 120.

estinian state – rather, it is what kind of Palestinian state Netanyahu would potentially approve of that is at odds with Palestinians’ own wishes. “Imagine the occupiers turning into peacekeepers after nearly 50 years,” Areikat added. “They [the Israelis] want the Palestinians to accept the presence of the Israeli military occupation as peacekeeping forces to protect the security of Israel,” he said. Areikat admitted that this dilemma has convinced some Palestinians to abandon the notion of their own state and instead to promote a binational state between Israelis and Palestinians. To him, however, the historical and current troubles facing those Palestinians living in Israel strongly persuade him that he is fighting for the right decision. He explained that Palestinians who remain in Israel are, even in modern times, struggling to secure social justice. These Palestinians, he explained, are not treated as equal to Israelis. “If we want to create on binational state, we would only See LECTURE page 4

WEATHER

U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

HIGH

66˚

LOW

45˚

Partly cloudy. chance of rain:

0 percent


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