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Volume 52, Issue 103 | tuesday, march 27, 2018 | ndsmcobserver.com
Panel discusses harassment prevention South Bend community leaders share ideas for building gender inclusion in the workplace By JORDAN COCKRUM Saint Mary’s Editor
Saint Mar y’s hosted the first of a series of workshops addressing sexual harassment in the workplace Monday in Rice Commons. The workshop, “Leading by Example: The Impact of Change,” featured six community leaders: South Bend mayor Pete Buttigieg; College President Jan Cer velli; Scott Ford, associate president for economic development at the University of Notre Dame; Jeanine Gozdecki, partner at Barnes & Thornburg, LLP; Kristin Pruitt, executive vice president, chief administrative officer and general counsel at Lake City Bankand and
Amish Shah, chief executive officer of Kem Krest. “This is an important moment. Victims of workplace sexual harassment are making their voices heard and employers are striving to improve the professional environment,” Cer velli said. “These workshops will help individuals and organizations be proactive in developing policies that prevent harassment, establishing investigative processes that foster just outcomes and show ing empathy for v ictims.” The panel was moderated by Tricia Sloma, co-anchor of WNDU’s “16 Morning News.” The panel began with see HARASSMENT PAGE 3
Lecture considers home life of next generation
ANN CURTIS | The Observer
Kristin Pruitt speaks on a panel about sexual harassment in the workplace in Rice Commons on Monday. In the workshop, panelists led a discussion about tactics for combating sexism and gender inequality.
Sorin College residents explore dorm’s history By ANDREW CAMERON News Writer
For well over a centur y, Notre Dame’s first residence hall, Sorin College, has stood on God Quad beside the Basilica of the Sacred Heart. Much has changed since its construction in 1888. For instance,
SARAH OLSEN | The Observer
Professor Julia Faisst lectures on the state of housing in the United States Monday night. The talk addressed millenial homeownership. By JOSEPH CLARK News Writer
Professor Julia Faisst, the 2018 Max Kade distinguished visiting professor at Notre Dame, delivered a lecture entitled “Nowhere Matters: The Unmaking Of The American Home”; examining the concept of the home particularly for American college graduates and those displaced by evictions and foreclosures. “The threat of losing one’s home
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and becoming temporarily, or not, unhoused is no longer perceived as exclusive to the lower classes,” Faisst said. “But something that holds the middle class equally in its grip.” To explore this concept, Faisst examined Damon Casarez’s collection of photographs entitled “Boomerang Kids,” which presents images of college graduates living with their parents. Faisst described see HOME PAGE 3
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the dorm’s front porch has not always been a part of the building, and Sorin has not always been know n as a “college,” Sorin rector Fr. Bob Lougher y explained. “That’s what defines us, hav ing that kind of histor y as a dorm,” Lougher y said. Prior to 1888, all students lived in residential areas
in Main Building. As the Universit y grew and liv ing quarters became crowded, Notre Dame’s founder, Fr. Edward Sorin, decided upon the construction of a separate residence hall, originally intended to be called “Collegiate Hall.” It was see SORIN PAGE 4
Saint Mary’s conference seeks to foster tolerance By MARTHA REILLY Senior News Writer
Saint Mar y’s Diversit y and Leadership Conference — which aims to promote attitudes of inclusion and dispel stereot y pes about marginalized populations — kicked off in Carroll Auditorium on Monday night w ith a speech from Yosimar Reyes, a poet and activ ist who discussed his
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desire to amplif y the oftenmuted voices of undocumented indiv iduals. Those who quick ly cast judgment and make assumptions about immigrants often struggle to cope w ith their ow n insecurities and fears, Reyes said. “I can only be myself,” Reyes said. “If you don’t like me based on the fact that I don’t have a social securit y number, then there’s a
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deeper investigation that you need to do w ithin your ow n an x iet y and your ow n healing.” Reyes said w riting grants him the opportunit y to relay and disseminate the lesser-know n narratives of the undocumented communit y, which he said societ y often v iews strictly in terms of the labor, ta xes see DIVERSITY PAGE 4
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