Vol. CXXIX, No. 5

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Opinions

Life & Style

International correspondent Helena Shannon PO ‘18 dishes on the frustrating, inevitable study abroad slump.

Jolo Labio PO ‘20 calls out the microagressions that English-speaking international students deal with from their American peers.

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THE

STUDENT

LIFE

The Student Newspaper of the Claremont Colleges Since 1889

CLAREMONT, CA

FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 2017

VOL. CXXIX NO. 5

5Cs Address Trump’s Immigration Policies, Limit Admissions for DACA Students Kellen Browning

Liam Brooks • The Student Life

Aldair Arriola-Gomez PO ‘17, a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals beneficiary and Mexican citizen, in his room at Pomona College on Friday.

Keck Faculty Respond to Trump Administration’s ‘Threat to Science’ Julie Tran

The majority of the W.M. Keck Science Department faculty signed a statement supporting science on Feb. 15 in response to the Trump administration’s recent attempts to vet scientific research before being published and to censor scientific findings on topics such as climate change. “The pursuit and communication of unbiased information and the free exchange of ideas among all people form the very basis of our scientific community,” the statement noted in response to the mounting anti-science rhetoric fomented by the Trump administration. “The scientific approach upholds informed decision-making based on continuous efforts to formulate and test hypotheses, collect data and information, and critically examine the evidence.” The statement, however, is not officially endorsed by Keck, as it was not introduced for a department vote. “There were questions [among the writers] about the proper procedure about issuing such a statement,” said Patrick Ferree, associate professor of biology at the Keck Science Department. “This might be the first of such statements raised by the faculty in our department, and we want to be careful. We are currently discussing the crafting of such policy.” According to Ferree, the statement was formulated in order to protect the “free, objective pursuit of science,” which he claims was under threat of restraint by the current federal administration and its supporters. Specific regulations that concerned Ferree were the proposed restrictions on the publication of scientific research. Ferree thinks the Trump administration has played on public fears to overstate the controversy of ideas like climate change. “The goal is to better communicate to the public how important it is that we have all of the facts,” Ferree said. “We need undistorted facts that are not filtered so that we can make the best decisions as citizens,

not just as scientists.” Andre Wakefield, professor of history at Pitzer College, also supports the collaborative statement and explained in an email that these concerns not only affect natural sciences, but human sciences as well. “The Trump administration does not only pose a threat to science, but to all evidence-based inquiry,” Wakefield said. “The administration, led by the President himself, has done much to undermine those networks of trust and reliability. If that strategy succeeds, we will have completely hollowed out public faith in science, evidence, and fact.” Lars Schmitz, assistant professor of biology at Keck, said that he is concerned by how the media has contradicted information that has been proven with scientific data and extensive research. He explained that the falsifying of information undermines educators and the education system. “I am an evolutionary biologist, and I am personally concerned about what may happen with the teaching of evolution because I have never seen so many outspoken evolution critics in charge of education,” Schmitz said. “There should be no controversy because there is absolutely no doubt from a scientific perspective that evolution is happening.” Before the recent outbreak of anti-scientific sentiment, Ferree had planned to teach a first year seminar course at Pitzer College modeled after associate professor of biology Anna Ahn’s Science vs. Pseudoscience course at Harvey Mudd College, solely due to his personal interest in the subject. However, this course now also serves to support the Keck statement and his belief in the critical assessment of evidence-based findings. The course “will focus on how students can recognize pseudoscience and the basis of why there is pseudoscience, as well as give students tools to critically think

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Aldair Arriola-Gomez PO ‘17 has friends, support, and a stable community at Pomona College. But he’s aware that his life could be torn apart at any moment. Arriola-Gomez, a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals beneficiary and Mexican citizen, says the possibility of DACA’s elimination is “an issue that’s always in my mind.” DACA, which permits certain U.S. residents who entered the country illegally as minors to apply for a status that prohibits deportation and allows work eligibility, is the result of an executive order, which means it could be rescinded instantly by President Donald Trump, who has long had a contentious relationship with Mexico. In the first speech of his presidential campaign last June, Trump famously accused the United States’ southern neighbor of sending rapists, drugs and crime across the border. One of his campaign’s central policy proposals was the construction of a border wall to curb illegal immigration, and on Jan. 27 he threatened to send U.S. troops to Mexico if President Enrique Peña Nieto failed to control “bad hombres.” Trump’s administration has moved quickly to address illegal immigration; on Feb. 21, the Department of Homeland Security

released two memos detailing new practices for immigration officials. The memos include rules implementing remote video conference hearings so that undocumented immigrants caught crossing the border can be immediately deported and have hearings later; directing Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to “plan and implement enhanced counternetwork operations directed at disrupting transnational criminal organizations”; and creating the Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement Office. Notably, however, the memos make no reference to DACA, which former President Barack Obama signed into law in 2012. People must reapply to DACA every two years, and the fee is $465. The DACA process is terrifying for many undocumented immigrants because they have to give the government personal information about who they are and where they live, Arriola-Gomez said, which “is a little scary for any undocumented immigrant to offer that up.” “If [Trump] was to cancel DACA, many DACAmented students and people are worried that that data that has been given to the government will be used to target those people,” he said. Although Arriola-Gomez isn’t

See IMMIGRATION page 2

PO, PZ Tie for Second Among Liberal Arts Colleges for Fulbrights Emma Hsu Pomona College and Pitzer College tied for second on a national list of undergraduate liberal arts institutions with most students awarded Fulbright Fellowships for the 2016–17 academic year, according to a report published by The Chronicle of Higher Education on Feb. 19. The Fulbright U.S. Student Program provides fellowship grants for U.S. graduating college seniors, graduate students, young professionals, and artists to study, conduct research, and/ or teach English for one academic year in a participating country outside the United States. The program is primarily funded by an annual appropriation from Congress to the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. Participating governments and host institutions, corporations, and foundations in foreign countries and in the United States also provide direct and indirect support. Pomona and Pitzer had 60 applicants each, 15 of whom were awarded either a Fellow-

ship Research Grant or an English Teaching Assistantship. Fellowship Research Grant awardees typically work on individually designed research projects with advisors at foreign institutes of higher education, while English Teaching Assistants are placed in classrooms abroad to provide assistance to local English teachers as both language instructors and cultural ambassadors. During the 2016-17 school year, seven Pomona students were awarded Fulbright Fellowship Research Grants and nine were awarded Fulbright English Teaching Assistantships (one Research Grant recipient declined and accepted a Watson Fellowship instead). Three Pitzer students were awarded Fulbright Fellowship Research Grants, while twelve were awarded Fulbright English Teaching Assistantships. This past fall, the most popular countries for Pomona applicants were Spain, the United Kingdom, France, Colombia, Morocco, and South Korea. Pomona fellowships and career advisor Jennifer Locke said that at Pomona, the myriad opportunities

See FULBRIGHT page 3

Slavoj Žižek Discusses Applications of Philosophy Amanda Larson Co-founder of the Slovenian Liberal Democratic Party and prominent intellectual Slavoj Žižek spoke at Pomona College’s Rose Hill Theatre on Tuesday, Feb. 28. Žižek, a follower of Hegelian philosophy, is known for his theoretical combination of philosophy and psychoanalysis, and his ability to apply dense academic theory to pop culture and modern-day politics. Žižek’s talk focused on how the process of producing something can result in a “surplusenjoyment,” an idea which can be applied not just to the production of material things, but

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to psychological processes. At one point, Žižek compared the functioning of ideology in our everyday lives to the augmented reality game Pokémon GO. “Instead of taking us out of the real world, and throwing us into an artificial space, [Pokémon GO] combines the two. We look in reality, and we think in reality through the fantasy frame of the digital screen. This frame supplements reality with virtual elements, which sustains our desire to participate in the game... What the technology of Pokémon GO externalizes is simply the basic mechanism of ideology... the primordial ver-

See PHILOSOPHY page 3

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Dominic Frempong • The Student Life

Title IX Coordinator Daren Mooko to Leave Pomona After 20 Years Jack Carroll Associate Dean and Title IX Coordinator Daren Mooko will be leaving Pomona College at the end of the year to become vice president of student affairs and dean of students at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington, according to a Feb. 24 email from Pomona College Dean of Students Miriam Feldblum. Mooko has been with Pomona College since 1997 in various roles. He first served as the director of the Asian American Resource Center, where he helped create the 5C Asian American

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Advisory Board, the Pomona Bias Incident Response team, and the Claremont Colleges Department of Asian American Studies. In 2008, he became the Associate Dean of Students for Student Leadership and Development. In this role, he watched over judicial affairs and launched new leadership programs at Pomona. During this time, he also started to work as Title IX coordinator. He was officially promoted to Title IX coordinator and Clery Officer by Pomona President David Oxtoby in 2015. TSL had the opportunity to in-

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