VOL. CLXXII NO. 84
SHOWERS
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2015
HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE
Twelve selected for Schweitzer Fellowships
THIS IS (NOT) A DRILL
HIGH 80 LOW 50
By HANNAH HYE MIN CHUNG The Dartmouth Staff
WEJIA TANG/THE DARTMOUTH STAFF
SPORTS
SOFTBALL FALLS IN BOTH NCAA GAMES PAGE 8
OPINION
WOODWARD: THE POTENTIAL OF DELIBERATION PAGE 4
ARTS
PINKAS TO DEBUT SONG ALONGSIDE CLASSICS PAGE 7
READ US ON
DARTBEAT DARTBEAT CHECKS IN WITH ILL FAYZE A REVIEW OF A BOLOCO BURRITO FOLLOW US ON
TWITTER @thedartmouth COPYRIGHT © 2015 THE DARTMOUTH, INC.
Students enjoy their drill section on the lawn in front of Dartmouth Hall.
Memorial Challenge will raise funds for cardiac research B y EMilia Baldwin The Dartmouth Staff
Students and community members alike will have the opportunity to participate in the Memorial Challenge this Saturday, an event dedicated to the memories of Blaine Steinberg and Torin Tucker, members of the Class of
2015, who both died suddenly last year due to heart complications. The event, which is centered around physical fitness, encourages participants to challenge themselves with CrossFitand nordic ski-themed exercises as well as raise money for the Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Heart and Vascular Center. “We wanted to do something different and fun and something that both [Steinberg] and [Tucker] would have really loved,” Jessie Frieder ’15, one of the event’s co-founders, said. Steinberg was on the
Ten first-year students from the Geisel School of Medicine and two first-year students from the College were selected as fellows for 2015-2016 New Hampshire-Vermont Albert Schweitzer Fellowship. The 12 fellows will each receive a $2,000 stipend for 200 service hours over the course of year. In addition, they have on-site faculty mentorship, along with other forms of support including orientation, retreats and meetings. College faculty, Geisel administrators and previous fellows selected the five teams from Geisel and one team of undergraduate engineering students, Fellowship program director Nancy Gabriel said. “We tried to find a range of projects, working with different populations in different parts of the community, and I think we did that,” she said. Marvah Hill Pierre-Louis, one of the 12 fellows, said that upon reading about Albert Schweitzer, a renowned physician for whom the fellowship is named, she was inspired by his values and wanted to continue his spirit by participating in the program. John Mascari, Pierre-Louis’ teammate, said the program will be a rare learning opportunity that will help him throughout his medical career. Mascari and Pierre-Louis will be working with the Vermont Department of Health to help the Good Neighbor Health Clinic implement protocols in the effort to eliminate subjectivity in doctors’ observation
SEE MEMORIAL PAGE 3
SEE FELLOWS PAGE 2
Harjo discusses activism around Native American mascots B y LAUREN BUDD The Dartmouth Staff
Suzan Harjo’s fight for Native rights began as early as the second grade, when she debated the true details of the battle of Little Bighorn with her teacher and was thrown out a window and into a rosebush. Harjo recounted this experience, for which the teacher was not punished, as well as her lifetime of activism for Native American people, in a lecture held in Haldeman Hall on Monday afternoon. “It’s hard to find a piece of Na-
tive American legislation that doesn’t have her fingerprints on it,” Native American studies department chair Bruce Duthu said in his introduction of her. Harjo said she was invited to the College by Duthu in order to talk to different groups of his students. Her talk focused on the issue of using Native Americans as mascots, detailing the history of the usage of such imagery and the current legal fight to eliminate this occurrence. The use of Native Americans as mascots is an insult to everything actual Natives know and to every-
thing they are, Harjo said. The first school to retire a native mascot was University of Oklahoma in 1970, Harjo said. The mascot, known as “Little Red,” was retired due to increasing demonstrations by progressive student groups and the fact that eventually, no actual Native people were willing to play the role, Harjo said. Though the retirement of Little Red was a positive, Harjo said the mascot’s existence has since been largely erased from the University of Oklahoma’s history. While the retirement of the mascot was a good
step, it is also valuable for an institution to look back upon such mistakes as learning opportunities, she said. “That’s always a positive message, I think, but a lot of institutions feel that it may shake the institution if you confess error,” Harjo said. Several other institutions officially retired their Native mascots relatively soon after, Harjo said, with Stanford University and Dartmouth retiring the “Indians” in 1972 and 1974, respectively, and Syracuse University retiring the “Saltine Warrior” in 1978. SEE LECTURE PAGE 5