THE
STUDENT
LIFE
The student newspaper of the Claremont Colleges since 1889
CLAREMONT, CA
FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 2019
VOL. CXXI NO. 16
PZ president vetoes Haifa suspension After 67-28 vote to end Israel study abroad program, Pitzer community blindsided by Oliver’s prompt override MARC ROD, PATRICK LIU & JAIMIE DING
TALIA BERNSTEIN • THE STUDENT LIFE
Pitzer President Melvin Oliver prepares to open Thursday’s College Council meeting at the McConnell Center, which ended with the council voting to suspend Pitzer’s study abroad program with the University of Haifa in Israel. Oliver overrode the decision hours later.
Less than three hours after the Pitzer College Council voted 67-28 Thursday to suspend Pitzer’s study abroad program with the University of Haifa in Israel, Pitzer President Melvin Oliver vetoed the decision and said he will not implement the suspension. “I fully respect the actions of the College Council, thus I do not make this decision lightly,” Oliver said in a press release. College Council votes are officially non-binding recommendations to the president. Oliver said the veto was based on the political nature of the suspension. “The recommendation would effectively cause the college — not some of its constituent members, but the college itself — to take an unavoidably political position on
one of the most controversial issues of our time,” Oliver said. “It is rarely, if ever, the role of the college to be taking such positions.” To take such a position, the college must have consensus across “internal and external constituencies in support of the position,” Oliver said. “This recommendation fails that test. … If implemented, the recommendation would unnecessarily alienate a large cross section of the college’s constituencies.” The motion the College Council passed Thursday afternoon in the McConnell Center’s Founders Room, which was packed with more than 200 students and onlookers, laid out a more broad policy than previous motions. The revised motion was an attempt to address concerns raised by Oliver and others
See HAIFA on Page 2
5CS SPRING INTO ACTION AHEAD OF BREAK Students pressure Scripps ‘Just not enough’: Pomona students PZ DACA protest draws rally for improved mental health to drop Sodexo 200+ students EMILY KUHN
Scripps College’s contract with Sodexo, a food services company that operates prisons in other countries, is set to expire in 2020, and students have been putting pressure on the administration to not renew its contract. More than 40 students protested the school’s involvement with the French multinational company outside Malott Dining Hall March 8 at a rally hosted by Drop Sodexo, a campaign to end Scripps’ contract with the company. A petition with more than 1,000 signatures was also delivered to Scripps President Lara Tiedens during the rally. Tiedens seemed receptive to students’ complaints. She said via email that students’ concerns over the past few years are in part responsible for the creation of
a Dining Services Advisory Committee, which will be composed of students, faculty and staff. “I know that the Sodexo contract is a topic about which there are some strongly held views in the Scripps community,” she said. “I encourage our students, and the Scripps community, to be informed consumers and I welcome information sharing about corporations’ practices, histories and structures.” This summer, Scripps will request and consider proposals from a number of food service companies, Tiedens said. “The college will evaluate the proposals based on a range of criteria, including cost, food quality and alignment with Scripps values, among others,” she said.
See SODEXO on Page 3
AMY BEST • THE STUDENT LIFE
Organizers Griffin Cloud PZ ’19, Sophie Peters SC ’20 and Alex Hammond SC ’19 give individual statements to kick off the Drop Sodexo rally March 8.
BEN REICHER
More than 100 students rallied at Pomona College’s Smith Campus Center on Monday to demand that the Pomona administration improve services for students with mental health issues, especially students from marginalized communities. The rally was organized by a coalition of 5C student groups under the name Students for an Accountable Pomona. “It’s not enough to admit low-income students, it’s not enough to admit students with disabilities, it’s not enough to admit black and brown students,” said Daniel Garcia PO ’21, an executive board member of First-generation and Low Income Scholars, one of the groups that organized the event. “I feel like we’ve just been admitted and not accepted here; we’re not being supported, we’re just being used for statistics.” On Feb. 6, Garcia published an op-ed in TSL urging Pomona to establish a summer bridge program to better integrate incoming first-generation and low-income students. Subsequently, a coalition consisting of FLI; College Community Action Network; Mental Health Alliance; and Disability, Illness, and Difference Alliance launched the rally. In a document released online prior to the ral-
LIFE AND STYLE
ELINOR ASPEGREN
IAN POVEDA • THE STUDENT LIFE
Diana Rodriguez PO ’19 and Rene Valenzuela PO ’20 pose with a sign demanding transparency from the Pomona College administration at a Smith Campus Center rally for improved mental health care March 11.
ly, the organizers outlined four concrete demands: the reinstatement of full coverage of off-campus therapy co-pays for students on the Student Health Insurance Program after a pre-existing program was canceled last fall, a Pomona-specific therapy program to relieve long wait times at Monsour Counseling and Psychological Services with at least four on-campus therapists, two full-time disability coordinator positions and a summer bridge program. Under the slogan “Nothing about us without us,” students at the rally stressed the need for transparency and accountability from Pomona’s administration. “On this important issue of mental health, there are many and growing needs,” Dean of Students Avis Hinkson said in an email
See HEALTH on Page 2
OPINIONS Pomona rescinding admission to students whose grades dropped after significant hardship signals the college’s priorities.
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See DACA on Page 3
ELINOR ASPEGREN • THE STUDENT LIFE
Students protest the withholding of an undocumented student’s scholarship money.
SPORTS
Todrick Hall, an American Idol finalist, YouTuber and judge on RuPaul’s Drag Race, visited Pomona for a performance and Q&A.
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to TSL prior to the rally. “We welcome all voices, and are continuing to consider ways to address the concerns that have been raised.” Pomona does plan to hire one new disability services director to begin work in the fall, Hinkson said. “I’ve been involved with DIDA for two years now, and the whole time I’ve been here there’s been consistency among Pomona students having really bad experiences with disability services,” DIDA leader Manya Singh SC ’19 said prior to the rally. Singh praised Pomona’s decision to hire a disability services director, but said more needs to be done.
More than 200 students marched to protest Pitzer College’s decision to withhold scholarship money from an undocumented student Tuesday. Damaris Esquivel PZ ’19, a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals beneficiary, had her scholarship revoked due to “a course credit deficit,” which jeopardises her ability to graduate this year, according to a survey from the protest organizers. “Pitzer has proven to not be a sanctuary campus, nor safe to its undocumented and DACAmented students,” the statement said. In 2017, Pitzer President Melvin Oliver said
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Abby Johnson SC ’21, a foodie and star athlete, has emerged as a leader of the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps track team.
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NEWS.............................1 LIFE & STYLE..................4 OPINIONS.....................6 SPORTS..........................8