FRIDAY • MAY 24, 2013
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SINCE 1892
CHICAGOMAROON.COM
ISSUE 48 • VOLUME 124
Night author advocates a more moral politics Jon Catlin Maroon Contributor
Nobel Peace Prize recipient and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel discussed his moral outlook with Institute of Politics director David Axelrod (A.B. ’76) on Wednesday in Rockefeller Chapel. KRISTIN LIN | THE CHICAGO MAROON
SG to update E&R rules Ankit Jain Associate News Editor After a contentious election cycle, Student Government (SG) is strongly considering amending its constitution and by-laws to give the Elections & Rules (E&R) Committee clearer directives on election procedures and dealing with potential complications. Amendments to the constitution and by-laws will be proposed by an ad hoc committee convened by the current SG executive slate. The sevenmember committee—which includes fourth-year Lester Ang, current E&R chair, and third-year Michael McCown, incoming SG president—met yesterday and will present its recommendations to the SG assembly next Thursday. The committee was formed with a broad mandate: “thinking critically about any areas for improvement within SG’s governing documents,” SG president and third-year law student Renard Miller said. But McCown said the committee would mostly be focused on E&R continued on page 3
Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel reflected on the nearly seven decades since his traumatic childhood experience in the Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps in a conversation with Institute of Politics (IOP) director David Axelrod (A.B. ’76) on Wednesday evening. In the culminating event of the IOP’s inaugural year, Wiesel spoke at a packed Rockefeller Chapel—the largest indoor venue on campus—for what turned out to be the IOP’s most popular event yet. The author of 57 books, Wiesel, 84, has spent his life speaking out against injustice and genocide all over the world. The Nobel Peace Prize committee called him “a messenger to mankind” for his work raising awareness of the Holocaust and other human rights violations. Recalling Wiesel’s visit to Buchenwald with President Barack
Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in 2009, Axelrod said that he asked Wiesel how he could stand side by side with German authorities. “The children of murderers are not murderers,” Wiesel responded at the time. “Once you start [hating], you never stop,” he said on Wednesday. “Hatred becomes self-hatred, ultimately.” In his questions, Axelrod inquired into what enabled Wiesel to endure the camps and retain optimism in humanity despite the atrocities perpetrated against him. “I tried to look at the other side,” Wiesel said, “But I don’t know what sustained me.” In his introduction of Wiesel, thirdyear IOP student advisory council member Eric Wessan lauded the IOP’s aims of engaging students in “the ultimate human art of politics.” But Wiesel did not seem to share this view, as he began one response to a political question by positing, “I don’t WIESEL continued on page 2
French activist lifts the veil on the burqa ban Celia Bever News Editor Fadela Amara, an activist and former minister in the French government, spoke about the situation of Muslim women in France and defended the controversial “burqa ban” at International House on Wednesday night. Amara began by relaying the history of banlieues, the working class neighborhoods that surround French cities. Originally diverse, composed of native French and immigrant populations fighting for the same social and labor issues, now many neighborhoods primarily house poor Muslim families. During this transition,
few politicians took up the cause of improving the lives of residents, and their political alienation provided fertile ground for fundamentalist movements. This led to a surge in what Amara referred to as “more arcane traditions” —namely forced marriage, polygamy, circumcision, and violence against women. It was around this time that Muslim girls and women began wearing the veil and the burqa. As the founder of the activist group Ni Putes Ni Soumises, translated as “Neither Whores nor Submissive,” and later as the Secretary of State for Urban Policies, Amara strongly supported the 2010 law that banned face coverings. Though the ban TALK continued on page 3
Activist Fadela Amara, right, talked about the French ban on face coverings in I-House on Wednesday. Deborah Joyce translated. SARAH BLAUSER | THE CHICAGO MAROON
Students plan future dorm The frat is back in town Andrew Ahn Maroon Contributor Plans for the residence hall set to replace Pierce Tower are taking shape, as students work with administrators to select the architecture firm that will design the building. According to first-year Ethan Stockwell, a member of the Pierce working group, administrators have narrowed the selection of architecture firms down to four, from the 24 that responded to the University’s call for design proposals. “The four firms are all over the
map. Some of them focus on modern architecture, and some on Gothic,” he said. Second-year David Goldfeld, a member of the working group, said the decision will likely be based on the exterior layout. While Gothic may fit the traditional University of Chicago architecture, Stockwell said that, according to administrators, this style costs three times more than modern architecture. The University aims to select the final design for the hall, currently called Campus North by the end NORTH continued on page 2
Stephanie Xiao Associate News Editor Espousing ideals of social and academic balance and community engagement, the newly rechartered Zeta Psi fraternity hopes to leave a positive mark on campus. The long inactive chapter received its official rechartering and recognition from Zeta Psi headquarters on May 11. The chapter, which was first established in 1864 as part of the Baptist-founded Old University of Chicago, was terminated with the closing of the school in 1887. According to second-year Robin Greif, the president of the fraternity, the founders
of Zeta Psi began meeting informally as friends in the middle of spring quarter last year and gained colonization status at the end of autumn quarter. Currently, the 25 founders span first-, second-, and third-years in the College and come from a variety of academic and extracurricular backgrounds. “There’s a very special character to what we try to bring. We’re not trying to bring people from one sports team, from one major; we don’t want to have just one thing. We’re trying to find people who are diverse, who are very unique. We want to have passionate people,” Greif said. FRAT continued on page 3
IN VIEWPOINTS
IN ARTS
IN SPORTS
Trivializing translations » Page 4
Creative Cloisters » Page 8
Letter: In defense of Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions » Page 5
Daft Punk gets lucky with Random Access Memories » Page 10
Sizek fourth in 10,000m, will run with Young in 5,000m » Back Page Tang, Sdvizhkov overpowered by nation’s best » Page 11