The Miscellany News Since 1866 | miscellanynews.com
November 17, 2011
Vassar College Poughkeepsie, NY
Volume CXLV | Issue 9
Plainclothes officers’ use challenged
Orgs face financial concerns Ruth Bolster
Joey Rearick
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News Editor
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Mia Fermindoza/The Miscellany News
n response to a series of thefts perpetrated on campus this year, Vassar Safety and Security is considering employing plainclothes officers to catch culprits and prevent further larcenies, in addition to their current job: upholding student safety rules regarding drugs and alcohol. The officers, who do not wear the standard Safety and Security uniform, would most likely stand inside the lobbies of residential buildings and the Library and attempt to stop anyone entering without swiping a Vassar identification card. Recently, the presence of these plainclothes officers has been criticized by the Vassar Student Association (VSA). According to Director of Safety and Security Don Marsala, Vassar has used plainclothes officers for about 15 years on major holiday weekends like Halloween or on nights that include large campus events, like concerts. These officers have often been deployed at the behest of the See SECURITY on page 4
O’Mara Taylor ’12 and Margaret Kwateng ’14 embrace after the women’s rugby team bested Rutgers University last Saturday, advancing to the National Championship tournament. For more, see Page 18.
Students experience Good Samaritan difficulties at polls limits questioned Erik Lorenzsonn Senior Editor
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s soon as Natalie Allen ’12 arrived at Arthur S. May Elementary School to vote in the annual Dutchess County elections on Tuesday, Nov. 15, she sensed something was awry. “This guy stopped and held the door open for me on my way in, and was looking at all my clothes,” said Allen, who was wearing a Vassar sweatshirt and Vassar athletic shorts. “Already, I had a funny feeling.” The man, as it turned out, was a Republican Party poll watcher— an individual appointed, often by a political party, to oversee electoral proceedings. He followed Allen into the polls, and asked for her address
as she was checking in; once she told him, he promptly challenged her right to vote. “This guy said, ‘I challenge this vote!’, and I was just like, ‘Huh?’” said Allen. “I was still signing in [the poll records], and hadn’t even been paying attention. It caught me off guard.” Allen’s experience reflects a perennial issue of Vassar students encountering voting difficulties, often at the hands of Republican election officials, because of students’ tendency to vote Democratic; this was memorably exemplified by the injunction filed by the Town of Poughkeepsie Republican Party during the 2009 elections. See VOTING on page 7
Mary Huber
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Features Editor
veryone remembers the Good Samaritan Policy, which exempts students seeking medical assistance for themselves or others from punishment for use of a controlled substance, from Freshman Orientation, and some Vassar students have taken advantage of it over their school career. But the policy is more nuanced than one might imagine, and it occasionally faces challenges from concerned students and administrators.
“There’s always the question of whether we should keep it now, from the administration and students, and whether it’s encouraging students to increase high-risk drinking behaviors,” said EMS Captain Sam Black ’12 of the policy. “It’s a good question, but I think the argument that the Good Samaritan Policy encourages high-risk drinking has flaws.” “First, the College doesn’t approve or condone underage drinking and writes-up students that break this college regulation. See POLICY on page 8
Assistant Features Editor
or student organizations, one of the foremost advantages of being certified by the Vassar Student Association (VSA) is an entitlement to a set amount of school funding each year. In many instances this funding becomes one of the primary sources of income for each organization, providing the financial means for these clubs to execute their day-today activities. Yet a number of student organizations are suffering financial troubles or going into debt, raising questions about the proper management of student organizations and the ability of the VSA to support them financially. Although the Vassarion is intended to be a self-funded publication that pays for its costs with the money garnered through yearbook sales, it does receive a set amount of money from the VSA’s Council Discretionary Fund which provides VSA-certified organizations with up to $5000 additional funding at the discretion of the VSA Council. However, the Vassarion began the academic year with $14,000 of debt. “We are currently in debt from last year, with a large enough sum that it will be extremely difficult for us to get out of by ourselves. This year we are trying to raise money from yearbook sales, advertisements and from other departments in order to cover our costs. But otherwise, it will be difficult for a yearbook to be put out this year,” noted Vassarion Editor-in-Chief Alia Heintz ’12 in an emailed statement. The Vassarion’s debt was recently cleared by funds provided by Dean of the College Chris Roellke and the Campus Activities Office. However, from this point forward, the Vassarion is expected to generate a surplus that is used not only to pay for next year’s yearbooks, but also to pay back their loan. According to VSA By-Laws, any organization that begins the school year in debt will receive the recommended amount of money to cover their operations for the upcoming school year but See FUNDING on page 8
Pre-holiday theatrical marathon A
Eric Schuman/The Miscellany News
Several students who went to vote at Arthur S. May Elementary School on Nov.15 found their vote challenged by Republican poll watchers and election inspectors.
Inside this issue
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NEWS
Cornel West to lecture about inequalities
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FEATURES
Pavel Shchyhelski/The Miscellany News
Emma Daniels Reporter
lthough most dread final exams and papers towards the end of the fall semester, die-hard theatergoers at Vassar look at it more positively. The majority of the fall plays go up during this period, and a large proportion of them hit the stage this coming weekend. Three student theater productions will take place: Future Waitstaff of America’s (FWA) “She Loves Me,” Philaletheis’s “Yellow Ribbon Oaks” and Woodshed’s “Kitty, Kitty, Kitty.” Notably, each play will allow for a completely different experience. The works are diverse in their content as well as their presentation and style. “She Loves Me” is a classic musical, “Yellow Ribbon Oaks”
Walkway over the Hudson offers sandwich feast
Above, members of Philaletheis conduct a meeting. The theater group will perform “Yellow Ribbon Oaks” in the Kenyon Club Room this weekend. is a student-written play and “Kitty Kitty Kitty” is a staged reading that is also, in line with the organization producing it, a non-hierarchal collaborative work. “She Loves Me” will be per-
15 ARTS
formed in the Susan Stein Shiva Theater on Nov. 17 to 19 at 8 p.m. with a matinee on Nov. 19 at 2 p.m. The plot of the play, which opened on Broadway in 1963, is centered See THEATER on page 16
VRDT to perform “Final Showings”