Vol. CXXXI, No. 9

Page 1

THE STUDENT

LIFE

The student newspaper of the Claremont Colleges since 1889 CLAREMONT, CA

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2018

VOL. CXXXI NO. 9

PITZER PRESIDENT DECRIES MOTION TO SUSPEND ISRAEL STUDY ABROAD PROGRAM

Students, faculty split on decision; joint council to vote next semester HAIDEE CLAUER Suspending Pitzer College’s study abroad program with the University of Haifa in Israel would be a “major blow” to the college, Pitzer President Melvin Oliver said in a Pitzer College Council meeting Nov. 29. The Council, a student and faculty governance board, is expected to vote on the motion at its next meeting next semester. According to the bylaws of the Council, the vote will be taken as a recommendation to the president of the college, who will make the final decision on whether to suspend the study abroad program. Historically, these decisions are usually aligned with the recommendation, according to Pitzer Student Senate member Isaiah Kramer PZ ’20. The Council’s discussion followed a Nov. 8 Pitzer faculty meeting vote, in which two motions encouraging the college to boycott Israeli products and the study abroad program were adopted. The second motion was later reviewed by the Faculty Executive Committee, which decided to bring it before the College Council for discussion due to contradictions over which committee was supposed to handle the study abroad motion. The motion calls for a suspension of the University of Haifa program until “the Israeli state ends its restrictions on entry to Israel based on ancestry and/or political speech,” and ends discrimination in granting visas to exchange students at Palestinian

CHLOE ORTIZ • THE STUDENT LIFE

Pitzer College Council hosted a meeting Nov. 29 to discuss whether to suspend Pitzer’s study abroad program at the University of Haifa in Israel.

versus Israeli universities, according to a Claremont Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) blog post. Oliver opened the discussion with a speech opposing the faculty motion, saying it would provide “paltry support for Palestinian rights” and would “foolishly alienate a large population” of the school’s community. Anthropology professor Dan

Segal, who brought forward both motions at the faculty meeting, disagreed. Segal, a faculty representative on Pitzer’s Study Abroad and International Programs Committee, said Palestinian responses to the motion were “overwhelmingly positive” and that “Palestinians don’t agree with President Oliver that this is paltry support.”

Pitzer College and Scripps College student governments are expanding their funding options to fund a variety of gender-affirming actions for transgender, intersex, and non-binary students, according to then-Pitzer Student Senate Treasurer Jessica Miao PZ ’21 and Scripps Associated Students President Irene Yi SC ’19. Pitzer Senate Budget Committee now offers up to three hundred dollars per student toward gender affirming processes including “therapy, a legal name change, hormone replacement therapy, surgery, or any other gender-affirming process,” Miao wrote in an email to the Pitzer student body. Miao wrote that the students applying for funds must fill out a request form before attending a Budget Committee meeting themselves or by seeing a proxy. Only Miao and the vice president of finance will know the identity of those who made the requests. The SAS board voted Nov. 11 to expand Funding Advisory Committee funding to pay for genderaffirming processes and fees for Scripps students, Yi wrote in an email sent to Scripps students Nov. 29. The FAC will fund up to $300 per student. The funding is available for

“non-medical fees including, but not limited to, legal name changes, transportation, accommodations, etc,” Yi wrote. “However, each case will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis to best support each student’s individual needs.” The request form is available on SAS’ website. Harvey Mudd College’s organization THEY/THEM will be renewing their funding options for this school year, according to an email Carrie Saada HM ’19 sent to the student body Oct. 24. Students are eligible for up to $200 to fund non-medical gender transition related expenses. Kim Nykanen, executive assistant in the Division of Student Affairs at Mudd, processes funding requests. “It’s really important for students who are already marginalized and already have to constantly work to correct other people for their gender or their name and have to constantly validate themselves and put all this work in just so other people will respect their lives and experiences.” Yi said. “It’s so much on their plate already. If there’s anything we can do to lighten their load and to provide any help that we can, that’s the least that we can do.” Pitzer Senate President Shivani Kavuluru PZ ’19 said their vote to

Eric Gofen PO ’19 has never missed a snack. Every Sunday through Wednesday between snack’s designated hours of 10-11 p.m., Gofen can be found munching on classics like peanut butter and jelly sandwiches or nachos at Pomona College’s Frary Dining Hall.

More than a regular, Gofen’s consistent attendance has reigned him “the king of snack,” according to a comment by Annie Price PO ’20 in the public Facebook group “What’s at Snack.” However, Frary began frequently cancelling the late-night tradition this semester. According to the Pomona Dining Services General Manager, Jose Martinez,

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See HAIFA page 2

snack has been cancelled about 10 times this semester, one-eighth of all free snack nights. “We have been experiencing a big shortage of staff,” Martinez wrote in an email to TSL. He attributes this shortage to a myriad of issues, including medical, disability, sick days, and open

See SNACK page 2

ANOUSHKA SAMEER • THE STUDENT LIFE

Pomona Snack has been cancelled multiple times this semester due to major staffing shortages.

OPINIONS

Have you been to Ramen Lounge in the Village yet? Stephanie Du SC ’21 talks to owner Mark Perone and chef Leo Dinglasan about Ramen Lounge’s focus on Asian fusion, and reviews the contemporary restaurant’s ramen dishes and steamed buns. Read more on page 3.

Follow TSL on the web.

BECKY HOVING

expand the Budget Committee bylaws should have happened sooner. “We need to be a lot more proactive in our allyship because this entire thing started really because a trans student spoke up in Student Senate and said we need to do better,” Kavuluru said. Funding for Pitzer ’s and Scripps’ trans community is currently from their funding boards, but they hope to potentially pull money from the reserve fund or elsewhere in order to have money set aside specifically for the purpose of supporting marginalized groups. “One of the biggest faults in how our college and the consortium reacted [to the trans memo] was by not reacting at all,” Kavuluru said. “It was dead silent, and I think that was the first mistake that all of us made. Not only do we support these communities, but we are actually going to put our money where our mouth is.” Yi said that SAS’ actions reflect a natural step in supporting students. “If our school and our student body clai[m] to be really in support of [marginalized groups], and have these as a part of our values, we should step up and make sure that our actions reflect this,” Yi said.

LIFE AND STYLE

in spring 2016, according to Segal. “[The suspension of the Haifa program] is in fact completely necessary given Pitzer ’s stated commitment to social justice,” Segal said. “Right now is when it is controversial, right now is when it will have the most impact, and doing the right thing is often hard.” Oliver argued against singling out the Haifa study abroad pro-

Pomona frequently cancels snack, concerns students

Pitzer, Scripps student governments offer funding for gender-affirming processes EMILY KUHN

A major faculty voice in the discussion, Segal said he and other faculty members had attempted to bring the motions forward for two years, and that “various inappropriate delays were imposed to block the debate because they were so controversial.” Eleven students have participated in the University of Haifa program since 2007, most recently

gram from others. “Why would we not suspend our program with China? Or take our longest standing program in Nepal where the Pitzer in Nepal program has been run for over 40 years. During that time they have had a bloody civil war that killed 19,000 people,” Oliver asked. “Why Israel?” Kramer and Claire Wengrod PZ ’19 are two of the Pitzer Student Senate members who proposed a resolution condemning the faculty’s motion to suspend the program. The resolution, which failed to pass an official vote without quorum present in a Nov. 18 Senate meeting, will face a revote in the upcoming meeting Dec. 2. “The Pitzer College Student Senate denounces the Faculty’s desire to suspend the study abroad program at the University of Haifa and the Faculty’s decision to act unilaterally without regard to Student Voice, which constitutes an abuse of power and rebuke of Pitzer’s tradition of shared governance,” the resolution states. In an email sent to Segal as well as numerous students, faculty, and staff, Kramer wrote, “I have a career after Pitzer College, and I do not want to be handcuffed to your anti-Israel political agenda.” Kramer said the faculty meeting was “very controversial,” and that half the faculty had left before the study abroad motion was introduced, which occurred past the scheduled duration of the meeting.

SPORTS

“Unfortunately, the Stalinist adage that a single death is a tragedy, while a million is a mere statistic, holds,” writes Christopher Salazar PZ ’21. “Khashoggi risked his life to speak against the Saudi Arabian government, to criticize its role in the war in Yemen. Yet, with the tragedy of his forfeited life, comes a new hope.” Read more on page 7.

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A strong defense and a few early season adjustments helped the CMS football team find success during the 2018 season, and led them to winning their first SCIAC title in 31 years. Read more on page 8.

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NEWS................................1 LIFE & STYLE.....................3 OPINIONS........................5 SPORTS.............................8


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Vol. CXXXI, No. 9 by The Student Life - Issuu