The Rice Thresher | Wednesday, November 1, 2017

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VOLUME 102, ISSUE NO. 9 | STUDENT-RUN SINCE 1916 | RICETHRESHER.ORG | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2017

SPORTS

Swimming takes down defending C-USA champ ANDREW GROTTKAU SPORTS EDITOR / ABG4@RICE.EDU

For three straight years, Rice swimming has finished second in the Conference USA Championship. For three straight years, Florida International University has finished first. It wasn’t the conference championship meet, but on Friday, the Owls exacted some revenge on FIU, defeating the Panthers 136.5-84.5 in a dual meet in New Orleans, Louisiana. According to senior Kaitlyn Swinney, it was a signature win for Rice.

I think this win was a huge confidence boost. Kaitlyn Swinney Senior Swimmer

“There are few times that I’ve been as proud of our team as I was Friday night,” Swinney said. “We fought from start to finish and just didn’t let up. I think this win was a huge confidence boost for us because we’ve never bested them in any meet since I’ve been here.”

SWIMMING CONT. ON PAGE 11

SPEAKING UP Assault survivors’ stories are not just a hashtag

ROUGH RIDE Cycling and triathlon team’s 177-mile ride cut short

FUTURE PRO Ellerbee remains a force in his senior season

SEE OPS P. 4

SEE SPOTLIGHT P. 6

SEE SPORTS P. 10

Students pitch ideas to shape Rice’s future CAMERON WALLACE ASST. NEWS EDITOR / CFW2@RICE.EDU

Sixteen students had a chance to sell their ideas for improving Rice to University President David Leebron at the Student Association’s 100 Ideas Senate on Monday, with over a hundred students looking on. Provost Marie Lynn Miranda and Dean of Undergraduates John Hutchinson were also present at the event. The ideas were chosen by the SA 100 Ideas task force, which blindly read through and ranked over 450 ideas according to SA President Justin Onwenu. Students presented for three minutes with slideshows in the Rice Memorial Center Grand Hall. The event was open to all students, and there was free bubble tea, cookies and donuts to entice them. Those who submitted top-ranked ideas were then contacted and asked to present. “[The pitch session] was really great. It’s exactly the kind of process that generates ideas to think about,” Leebron said. “I thought the students overall were actually very positive about Rice, but offering ‘Here’s something else we could do,’ I think that makes all of us want to do more.” One of the presentations, by Alex Amari, a Jones College senior, suggested that Rice pursue a Rice-NASA Scholars program similar to the Rice-Baylor Medical School program. Amari also proposed that Rice invest in creating a space laboratory comparable to the California Institute of Technology’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

“I think Rice will be the first school to have a study abroad campus on Mars, in space, whenever that is,” Amari joked in closing. “It might be a few decades down the road, but I think we’re positioned to get there.” A presentation by Valerie Kass, a Sid Richardson College sophomore, argued that Rice should increase campus sustainability by investing in solar power. According to Kass, many of the buildings on campus are already fitted for solar panels, but the spaces have not been utilized. “As students and faculty members of a research university, we have the resources to learn and design solutions to this crisis,” Kass said. “We must use our education as a renewable resource.” Jennifer Kroeger, a Lovett College junior, suggested that every student should have a mandatory senior project. Kroeger said that many departments already encourage some type of senior project, so implementation would be as easy as standardizing project requirements. “This would mean that seniors who leave here would leave with something really tangible to show to future employers, to their grad school applications, to their professional school applications,” Kroeger said. “Rather than just leaving Rice with the number on your GPA and a diploma, you would have something to show people.” Natalie Zur, a Brown College sophomore, said the Rice Memorial Center should be renovated to be more accessible as a collaborative and academic commons for students. During Leebron’s comments after the event, he said

IDEAS CONT. ON PAGE 3

IMPROVING ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE Compulsory senior projects

Living, learning community at Rice Centralized research database

ENHANCING CAMPUS SUSTAINABILITY Redesigning Rice’s energy infrastructure

EXPANDING EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING Rice-NASA scholars’ program Health-based hackathon Scientific diving certification

ESTABLISHING MENTORSHIP INITIATIVES Cohen House student-faculty voucher program Mentorship program for low income students

BROADENING AREAS OF STUDY Investment banking and consulting courses Journalism/communication major

CONNECTING RICE INTERNATIONALLY Grant for immersion after language aquisition Establishing abroad campus

UPDATING FACILITIES AND PROGRAMS Reimagining Beer Bike track Improving athletics

Renovating RMC infographic by sydney garrett and christina tan

NEWS

Evening of Elegance attendance surpasses NOD for first time EMILY ABDOW NEWS EDITOR / ESA2@RICE.EDU

Two parties competed for the attention of Rice students on Oct. 21: Wiess College’s Night of Decadence and Chi Alpha’s Evening of Elegance. Attendance at NOD dropped to

around 800 students this year from around 1,100 last year, according to estimates by current and past Wiess social vice presidents, while Chi Alpha Assistant Director Eric Mingle said attendance at this year’s Evening of Elegance surpassed 1,000 attendants compared to less than 700 last year.

ATTENDANCE OVER THE YEARS EVENING OF ELEGANCE 1000

data from thresher reporting, chi alpha, weiss socials 650 500 350

2014

2015

2016

2017

NIGHT OF DECADENCE 1500 1200

1300

1400 1100 800

2008

2009

2010

2011

2016

2017

infographic by sydney garrett

NOD, a public party hosted by Wiess starting in 1972, drew national attention in 2012 when 10 students were hospitalized during the party. This year, zero students were transported the night of NOD, according to Wiess social vice president Sarah Silberman. Silberman said this year’s costume contest and clothing drive may have made students feel more comfortable coming to NOD more clothed and reduced their need to pregame before the party. “I think that having a safe party culture on campus is extremely important, and I feel like NOD this year was very safe,” Silberman, a sophomore, said. “I also feel that NOD can be a great time to express body and sex positivity, two things that are integral to Rice’s culture.” Chi Alpha started EOE four years ago to provide an alternative to NOD, according to Chi Alpha staff member Mathison Ingham (Hanszen ’14). Ingham said the increase in EOE attendees likely occurred as students who had fun in past years invited their friends. “We decided to throw a party that would be a true alternative so that people wouldn’t feel like NOD

was the only socially acceptable option,” Ingham said. “We wanted to create an event that gave dignity to people and let them have fun in an uplifting atmosphere.” NOD attendees could pay $10 for a ticket before the party or $15 the night of the party. This year, about 650 of the around 800 tickets sold were bought before NOD, Silberman said, while last year, Dickman said around 800 tickets were pre-sold. The decrease in this year’s ticket sales may have been caused by the rainy forecast or the $15 entry price at the door, Silberman said.

I like the idea of being able to be both elegant and decadent. Simran Rahman Wiess College Sophomore Wiess spent $14,500 on this year’s NOD, Silberman said. Last year, Wiess spent $15,000 with over half of the budget covering

security costs that include the Rice University Police Department and Rice Emergency Services, according to Kristina Dickman, who coordinated the event last year. EOE was free to attendees with over $20,000 raised for this year’s party, which included horse-drawn carriage rides, a silk climber and a live band. The funds came from donations by individuals and churches such as West University Baptist Church, according to Ingham. McMurtry College freshman Tyler Sakakeeny said he felt he had to attend NOD after hearing all the hype surrounding the party. “I personally was looking more to dress down than dress up,” Sakakeeny said. “To be frank though, I thought NOD was a little overrated.” Wiess sophomore Simran Rahman attended both Evening of Elegance and NOD. “[EOE] was something straight out of a romcom,” Rahman said. “For NOD, as a Wiessman, I love to see so many students involved in security and caregiving — the culture of care is evident. I also love the body positive aspect of it. I like the idea of being able to be both elegant and decadent,” Rahman said.


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The Rice Thresher | Wednesday, November 1, 2017 by The Rice Thresher - Issuu