The Blue & Gray Press

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THE

BLUE &GRAY

THE UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON STUDENT NEWSPAPER

PRESS

March 22, 2018

VOLUME 91 | ISSUE 19 SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE

1922

Professor inspires undergraduate research for UMW student Sarah Goodnough Senior Writer

Over Spring Break, UMW Assistant Professor Pamela Grothe and student researcher Andrea Moore flew to Christmas Island in the Republic of Kiribati to conduct paleoclimate research. “We will be servicing our loggers on the reef...and collecting fossil coral samples to bring home,” said Dr. Grothe. The researchers collected data regarding ocean salinity and temperature

up to 90 percent of the coral reef at Christmas Island. Since then, researchers have been keeping track of the reef’s state. “Most of the reef was dead, as was the last time,” said Dr. Grothe. “However, we are starting to see both new baby coral recruits as well as macro algae.” The research conducted over Spring Break is a continuation of Dr. Grothe’s doctoral research, which involved the reconstruction of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) over the past several thousand years. ENSO is the varia-

“My work aims to better understand if these events are happening more frequently and more strongly with global warming.”

Andrea Moore Pamela Grothe drilling into a 5,000 year old fossil coral. Dr. Alyssa Atwood (Georgia Tech) assisting the placement of the drill head.

-Dr. Grothe from the loggers and changed out the batteries to redeploy them. They also gathered numerous fossil coral samples. Once such sample was taken from a 5,000-year-old coral, measuring more than a meter in length. The samples will be used for paleoclimate reconstructions, which enable researchers to understand how past climatic events have affected the coral. This trip was a collaboration with Georgia Tech and other marine biologists to monitor the reef, which recently underwent a bleaching event during the El Niño of 2015. It bleached and killed

tion of winds and sea surface temperatures over the eastern Pacific Ocean. It affects the climate of that region as well as causes damage to marine ecosystems, such as the coral reef at Christmas Island. By reconstructing these events, Dr. Grothe is able to examine past climate change to better understand how El Niño interacts with today’s climate. “El Niño is a climate phenomenon in the tropical Pacific where the trade winds weaken, allowing the warm water piled up in the western Pacific to flow back towards the eastern Pacific,” said Dr. Grothe. •RESEARCH TRIP | 11

Local islander Alyssa Atwood, Pamela Grothe, Andrea Moore (left to right) holding the final meter long coral drilled from the 5,000 year old fossil coral head

Minority students feel underrepresented in SGA

Grace Winfield Senior Writer

On February 19, several minority clubs and groups attended a Student Government Association meeting and demanded that their voices be heard. At the meeting some of the groups did not feel like they were being heard. “I showed up [to the meeting] ready to engage, but I felt as though the members of the executive SGA cabinet, well most, were not willing to do so and were actively trying to avoid many of the topics we were trying to bring up, such as hate speech on campus and taking responsibility in the wake of a national tragedy regarding gun violence,” said Alex Rudenshiould, who is currently running for SGA President. “It felt like they were trying to deflect from those points; I was frustrated.” Rudenshiould was not the only student who felt disheartened after the

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meeting. Students of multiple minority groups on campus that voiced their demands, including Brothers of a New Direction (BOND), Black Student Association (BSA), and People for the

forum was meant to educate and inform students on campus of the issues they felt went unheard at the meeting, continuing to urge SGA and UMW to take initiative on the concerns of safety and

“My biggest responsibility is representing the voices of all students on campus, and it is a big challenge for my role specifically.” -Sarah Karwowski Rights of Individuals of Sexual Minorities (PRISM), hosted an open forum as a result of the disappointing response they felt they received from SGA. The

Selection SEASON

diversity. Sarah Karwowski, SGA President, says that at times it is difficult to appeal to the student body while maintaining

formal FRENZY

the non-partisan approach SGA is expected to possess. “My biggest responsibility is representing the voices of all students on campus, and it is a big challenge for my role specifically,” said Karwowski. “One of the hardest things is I have to be neutral at times, because there’s a lot of different opinions, so I try not to choose one side or the other. I know for a lot of people that’s very frustrating, but when I’m representing a mass of students, I can’t choose sides.” Some SGA members suggest that people of minorities that feel marginalized by the school and SGA should run for committee and senate positions to ensure their voices are heard, though there are also those amongst SGA members who disagree. “I don’t think it’s their fault nor their responsibility,” Matt Good, SGA Director of Communications and is also running for SGA President, •SGA | 2

BOUNCE BACK

Students share details about housing options.

Spring formal ticket sales cause stress for students.

Women’s Lax looks to bounce back after tough loss.

LIFE | 7

VIEWPOINTS | 5

SPORTS | 3


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