Swarthmore Phoenix, November 30, 2017

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Today in OPINIONS: Editorial: Fixing the academic calendar A4, Letter to the editor: SCF and anti-queer policies A4,

PHOENIX

THE

Athlete of the Week: Connor Harkins

VOL. 144, NO. 10

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SSUCC hosts open mic comedy show

November 30, 2017

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The independent campus newspaper of Swarthmore College since 1881

SGO sees resignations, calls for change by George Rubin News Writer Co-president Josie Hung ’19, Chair of Student Life Ivan Lomeli ’19 and Senator Christian Galo ’20 resigned from Swarthmore’s Student Government Organization last week as the group debated improvements on its structure, communication, and efficiency. The body will hold elections for these open positions after winter break. In an e-mail to SGO members announcing her resignation, Hung said she left the post for “personal and mental health reasons.” She also described her goals for the organization, which included making

The week ahead

structural changes and increasing its inclusivity and ability to represent all students. Hung expressed frustration at the difficulty of achieving these goals. “There are times when I was disappointed that the effort and time dedicated to pushing for these changes did not play out to the same degree in results,” she said in the e-mail. “However, I encourage people to still engage with these complex issues, no matter how difficult they are to address.” SGO Senator Akshay Srinivasan ’21 echoed Hung’s call for persistence. “I respect her decision,” he said, “and I hope we can carry on and enact the plans she had set out to achieve.”

Galo was also annoyed with SGO’s structure, which was one of his reasons for leaving. He expressed a desire for the group to experiment with other forms of team organizing. As a first-year in SGO, he said, it was unclear what his committee actually did, and he spent significant time discussing that. The Academic Affairs Committee, according to Galo, doesn’t have much power other than to make suggestions to the Chair of Academic Affairs, because the Chair is the only one included in the college committee meetings where the action actually happens. Galo was more interested in committee work than debating SGO structural politics.

“I felt like I was just sitting there listening to people deliberate on what it meant for SGO to do something,” he said about Senate meetings. “I don’t understand why I’m a necessary part of this conversation because I’m not saying anything.” Last week, senators discussed the effectiveness of the organization’s use of point teams and committees to turn initiatives into the concrete proposals it submits to the administration. SGO is structured on a system in which senators appoint members of the Senate to committees covering different policy areas. These committees then meet and draft proposals advocating for a certain policy

which can be sent to members of the administration. However, these committees have vastly differing obligations. For example, the Student Life Committee has only four members, but its responsibilities are vast. “Anything that’s not sustainability or academics could essentially fall into student life: dining, dorms, everything else,” said David Pipkin, co-president of SGO. This is what necessitated the creation of point teams, which are more informal teams — not listed on the website — created to deal with specific issues, like dining for example. Appointing point teams on continued on page A2

Parrish chalkings respond to allegations against SCF

THURSDAY At 4PM, join the English Department for “Careers for Humanities Majors: A Conversation and Resumé Workshop.” in LPAC 301. Learn how the panelists navigated careers in a variety of fields and how their backgrounds as humanities majors prepared them for their current professions. Note: workshop space is limited. To pre-register, send your resumé to englishswarthmore@gmail.com FRIDAY Living the Liberal Arts: A Celebration of Eugene Lang ‘38, H’81. This day’s events celebrate the vision and legacy of Eugene Lang ‘38, H’81 who, in his generous support of the arts, education, and the common good at Swarthmore College and around the world, let his life speak and inspired many others to live liberal arts lives. Living the Liberal Arts Presentations: 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM Location: Pearson-Hall, Lang Performing Arts Center. Living the Liberal Arts Poster Sessions and Reception, 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM Location: Lobby, Lang Performing Arts Center. HIR by Taylor Mac will be staged on Friday at 8PM, Saturday at 2PM and 8PM, and Sunday at 8PM in the Frear Ensemble Theater. Taylor Mac’s HIR is a hysterically queer spin on the classic American living-room drama that asks the age-old question – what makes or breaks a family? MONDAY There will be a Visibility Zine Interest Meeting on Monday at 7PM. you’re interested in learning more about the publication, info on how to contribute your work (art, essays, ruminations, poetry, photography, paintings, sketches, ideas for a better and more beautiful world, etc. etc. etc.) or if you want to join the zine team ($$) please make sure to come by the IC on Monday.

Grace Zhang / The Phoenix

After an op-ed discussing Swarthmore Christian Fellowship systemic anti-queer policies was published in campus publications, a series of queer-affirming chalkings appeared overnight in front of Parrish and around campus.

by Abby Young News Writer Recently, there have been changes made to the offcampus study program that have affected students’ experiences. Some of these changes include the use of a single travel agency to book tickets for travel and a new system to calculate credit from studying abroad, the latter of which has the most impact on students, especially those seeking credit for off campus study. Pat Martin, director of the off-campus study office, estimates that over

50% of students have study abroad experiences that include credit. According to an email from Martin, other changes include a new domestic off campus study program, Semester in Hawaii, at the University of Hawaii. In addition to the new domestic option, students studying abroad receive a budget that covers living costs during break periods abroad if their programs or universities do not provide them accommodations during those times. In that email, Martin also noted that starting last semes-

Next semester, the college will begin the planning process to build a new dining hall and renovate Sharples as a student union space. In the last few years, the college has created two comprehensive reports about necessary improvements to the campus and student life in general: the Campus Master Plan in 2013, and the Student Experience Visioning Study Report in Feb. 2017. These two reports cover a wide variety of issues and include input from students, faculty, staff, and alumni. The reports includes recommendations ranging from “adjustment in faculty members’ teaching load,” to making McCabe more open and limiting the “fortress-like appearance.” Both reports also included much about the need for a change in the way food is served on campus, and the need for a student union space. The new construction project is meant to address these problems. “We engaged both a dining consultant and an architect last summer just to give us some ideas and I’d say sort of the key findings there was that the existing Sharples building has outlived its useful life as a dining hall,” said Greg Brown, Vice President for Finance and Administration. Sharples was built in the 1960s and was designed to hold around 900 students. As the college has grown and student preference has changed, the building has seen different limitations. Both the design and the size of Sharples lead to limitations. The small size makes it difficult for continued on page A5

ter, students with a “demonstrated high level of financial need” are able to apply to the Dean’s Office emergency fund if they have uncovered costs such as visas and immunizations but are subject to the emergency fund’s rules. All of these changes are relevant to the entire off-campus study program, which includes all international student trips, Lang Center sponsored activities, conferences, debates, athletic competitions, and externships. However, the new changes most prominently affect students who are study-

ing abroad for credit. Students who receive off campus credit typically do so through end of semester courses that have an international field component, summer courses, and fall/ spring semester study abroad. In terms of receiving credit for study abroad, there is a new online credit evaluation system built by ITS. Students who will study abroad next semester will use this system. Martin explained that the previous system required that students “physically go from department to department to request credit and to obtain

signatures on a piece of paper.” In addition, the new system replaces a similar “paperbased” system that applied to students who sought credit after returning to campus. The benefits of the new system, Martin explained, are that it allows all parties involved in the process of transferring and approving credit to see where courses are in the approval process and that students are now able to utilize the system to ask for additional courses to be approved from abroad. In spring of 2017, a new continued on page A2

Student Disability Services gains new directors by Reuben Gelley-Newman News Writer

The Training Tuesdays series will continue this week with “Hook-ups to Break Ups: When Good Relationships Turn Bad” at 4PM in Science Center 105. Come learn strategies for ending harmful relationships and supporting those navigating them. CONTENTS Campus news A1-A2 Arts news A3 Opinions A4 Sports A5-A6

Copyright © 2016 The Phoenix

by Lauren Knudson Editor-in-Chief

Online system, travel agency among changes to study abroad

TUESDAY

Read more at swarthmorephoenix.com

College to make plans to build new dining hall, update Sharples

Shelby Dolch / The Phoenix

Following the resignation of former director of Student Disability Service Leslie Hempling in late October, assistant directors Erin Leuthold and Jenna Rose are supervising the office. “[Leuthold and Rose] were selected for their roles after a competitive national search process that involved the opportunity for students, faculty, and staff to provide feedback on candidates during the process,” said Tomoko Sakomura, associate dean for academic affairs, in an e-mail. As Sakomura shared in an Aug. 16 email announcing the change to the campus community, Leuthold’s and Rose’s position is a fixed 10-month term for the 2017 - 2018 academic year. Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs Dean Liz Derickson anticipates searching for a

permanent director of disability services in the spring. Leuthold and Rose, having worked with students with varying accommodations and disabilities for many years, bring years of experience to the role. Leuthold was a K-12 teacher in public schools in Rochester, N.Y., taught students with intellectual disabilities at Camden County College, and served as the coordinator of disability services at Holy Family University since 2014. Rose worked with college-age students with disabilities at Bowling Green State University and The College of New Jersey and served for four years as an assistant director of Marvin’s Camp, a camp for children with disabilities at the Jewish Community Center of Staten Island. Leuthold reiterated the goals of Student Disability Services in an e-mail.

“The primary goal of the Student Disability Services office is to provide equal access to students with disabilities through providing reasonable accommodations,” said Leuthold. These accommodations include academic, housing, and dining accommodations. In the process, the office is guided by laws like the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. The ADA is described on a government website as “one of America’s most comprehensive pieces of civil rights legislation,” and “an ‘equal opportunity’ act for Americans with disabilities.” It defines a disability as “a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, a person who has a history or record of such an impairment, or a person who is perceived by others as having s continued on page A5


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