VOLUME 100, ISSUE NO. 17 | STUDENT-RUN SINCE 1916 | RICETHRESHER.ORG | WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2016
Objection, your Honor! Acquitted student: Honor Council needs changes
see Ops p. 5 Modern Love Popular New York Times column expands franchise
see A&E p. 6 Give a hoot Recent efforts to draw spectators not sufficient
see Sports p. 9
Students launch boba business Elizabeth Myong For The Thresher
Bubble tea, or “boba,” a sweet tea-based drink with tapioca pearls, is coming to campus. This past Saturday, the on-campus boba business East-West Tea launched its first promotion in Seibel Servery by handing out 200 free samples in under 40 minutes. The founders claim that EastWest Tea is better than Kung Fu Tea, and in the coming weeks, students can find out for themselves. On Feb. 14, East-West Tea will officially launch with an assortment of five flavors: milk tea, taro milk tea, jasmine green tea, Thai tea and coffee at $4 for a 20 oz. drink. The entrepreneurial venture was founded by five Rice students — Baker College senior Glenn Baginski, Lovett College junior Tommy Bennett, Hanszen College senior David Cooper, Sid Richardson College senior Leo Meister and Jones College senior Drew Sutherland. Baginski, the head of analytics and strategy, has a background in math, economics, statistics and database consulting. Bennett, the marketing manager, is a tennis athlete studying economics. Cooper, the supply and operations manager, and Meister, the assisting manager, are both studying engineering. Sutherland, the general manager, said he draws from an economics and math background to oversee operations with a military-like approach that comes from his experience in ROTC. The idea for East-West Tea began in the spring semester of 2015, when Sutherland, Bennett and Meister worked on a Marketing (BUSI 380) group project to come up with a new business or product line of an existing business. By chance, the fascination with boba came when witnessing the massive lines of students that would form during Hoot specialty nights or in front of West Servery. “I was shocked that students that were busy and stressed were willing to wait in lines that were timeconsuming for a drink that cost $4,” Sutherland said. “And what shocked me even more is that they would run out and not supply any more.” 0see BOBA, page 3
Critical Thinking in Sexuality Task Force releases website, video series Drew Keller News Editor
Rice University’s Critical Thinking in Sexuality Task Force launched a new website, Facebook page and video series this week as part of their effort to garner support and student input for a new mandatory course educating incoming students about healthy sexuality. The task force, which was created by the Student Association Senate in November with a mandate to develop a proposal for the course, is working to gain the Rice community’s backing, according to task force member Angela Masciale, who also serves as president of Hanszen College. According to its website, the task force meets
weekly and will soon begin posting its agenda online. “It is essential to have the student body behind us in order for the faculty to support us,” Masciale, a senior, said. “Without the students, the faculty will not be convinced. The next few weeks are divided into enhancing student body support and scheduling meetings with the Faculty Senate members to answer the hard hitting questions.” The task force is chaired by SA President Jazz Silva and includes Graduate Student Association President Lynn Fahey and seven undergraduate students including Masciale. Masciale said Associate Dean of Undergraduates Matthew Taylor advises the group.
Silva, a Sid Richardson College senior who proposed the idea for the course last fall, said the task force has been discussing curriculum possibilities with Wellbeing Office staff and Rice’s Title IX coordinators, but details have not yet been decided. “We have a ‘rough outline’ of what the semester could look like, but it obviously would be revised by the [Committee on Undergraduate Curriculum] and other stakeholders,” Silva said. Silva said the timeline specified by her original proposal, which aimed to have the class developed and approved in time for this year’s incoming students, is not certain. “The timeline is more of a ‘goal,’ but we always have to be aware of
what is possible and reasonable,” Silva said. Masciale also said rapid creation of the course was not the task force’s top priority. “We understand that rushing implementation would not be the best way to establish this proposed course,” she said. “We are thinking of thoughtful alternatives.” In response to a question regarding the implementation timeline and the task force’s plans to present to Faculty Senate or pursue alternative ways of creating the mandatory class, Silva said the task force’s primary motivation is keeping the Rice community aware of the issue of sexual assault. 0see CTIS, page 2
photo courtesy ctis youtube
Brown College senior Samuel Waters passes Abigail Panitz Thresher Staff
The Rice community lost an uplifting mentor and extraordinary voice last Wednesday. Samuel Waters, a Brown College senior and voice performance major at the Shepherd School of Music, passed away Jan. 27 at home in Falls Church, Virginia after a five-year battle with cancer. He was 22 years old. Waters is survived by his parents, James and Claire, and younger brother, Tyler. In spring 2011, Waters was admitted to study at Rice under Stephen King, the Lynette S. Autrey Chair of Voice at the Shepherd School. Soon after, he was diagnosed with cancer and postponed his undergraduate studies for one year to undergo treatment. Waters maintained an active presence both on Facebook and his blog, titled Samwisewaters, which he started early last month. His final post, “Heroes of Weakness,” discussed facing death. “I simultaneously find comfort in the thought that at the end of this fiveyear process I opted to avail myself of every medical option and that I never chose to give in to circumstance; with this knowledge in hand, I can take my next step knowing that I fought the good fight.” Brown masters Krista Comer and Jose Aranda got to know Waters and his family on a personal level. “Sam was very talented, and his
voice was heard by many,” Comer said. Waters received many accolades while studying at Shepherd, including the Frances C. Atkinson Memorial Scholarship in Voice this school year. Tom Jaber, director of choral ensembles and vocal coach at Shepherd, played the accompaniment for Waters during his audition to the school. “He was so poised and had a lovely and mature quality for a 17-year-old young man,” Jaber said. “Of course everybody wanted to teach him.” Waters expressed a zeal for life and helping friends, according to Brown senior Amritha Kanakamedala. “He was genuinely concerned for his friends’ well-being and would do whatever he could to brighten up our day,” she wrote. Larisa LaMere, a Brown senior, said she too felt the spontaneous joy he produced. “I think especially toward the end he didn’t take himself too seriously, and he wasn’t a victim at all,” LaMere said. Sam Gavenman, a Wiess College junior, was a friend of Waters’. He wrote him a goodbye letter through Facebook describing how he met Waters when Gavenman auditioned at Rice. “I was so hung up on every word you said, and just how sincerely you spoke,” Gavenman wrote. “I realized that you had convinced me: This was the school for me. Your guidance
through this difficult, but undeniably beautiful field we call music has helped me more than you may ever know.” Other friends expressed their gratitude at the opportunity to have known Waters. “He would always tell me that I was special, that my voice was special,” Gloria Palermo, a Martel College senior and voice performance major, said. “He knew what I needed when I didn’t know; he always gave me guidance when I really needed it.” “Samuel understood how to love more then anyone I know,” Cory Gross, a McMurtry College senior and voice
performance major, wrote. “Even when he was sick and weak, he still cared about people more than himself.” LaMere said Waters’ presence was almost divine. “Regardless of how much struggle there was it was like Samuel attracted these miracles to him,” LaMere said. “Perseverance and love and light that just shined out uncontrollably even when he was sitting in a wheelchair.” Students from Shepherd are organizing a memorial service and concert for Waters, scheduled for this spring. Donations can be made to the Samuel J. Waters Memorial Fund for the Arts.
Sam Waters and Family