THE
STUDENT
LIFE
The student newspaper of the Claremont Colleges since 1889
CLAREMONT, CA
FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 2019
VOL. CXXI NO. 15
Pitzer alumna argues at Supreme Court hearing
HMC to leave I-Place College creating Mudd-only intl’ programming
HAIDEE CLAUER
KYLE GRACE & JAIMIE DING After several years of debate, Harvey Mudd College decided in December to end its partnership with the 5C international students office and establish its own Office of International Students and Scholars in an effort to provide enhanced support for international Mudders. As a result, international students at HMC will no longer participate in orientation at the International Place of The Claremont Colleges (I-Place). The $40,000 HMC previously contributed to I-Place is being redirected to supporting the international student office’s programming and staff on its own campus, according to HMC Dean of Students Anna Gonzalez. In a November email to the HMC student body, Gonzalez announced that Evelyn Real was joining the Office of Institutional Diversity team as the new program manager for International Students and Scholars. The creation of the HMC-only office will speed up the paperwork process, which is important for seniors who want to receive Optional Practical Training work authorization. OPT allows students to work in the U.S. without sponsorship for one year after graduation. “Now my sole job is just to cater to the international students, [by] doing programming and doing the immigration work and anything else in-between,” Real said. Before the split, I-Place managed all immigration and visa paperwork for HMC and Claremont McKenna College. Real had already been assisting international students with acquiring visas and completing their immigration paperwork before the official change, according to her bio on HMC’s website.
See I-PLACE on Page 3
IAN POVEDA • THE STUDENT LIFE
METAMORPHOSES
Since graduating from Pitzer College, Monica Miller PZ ’08 has served as lead counsel in more than 25 federal court cases. But she’d never argued in front of the Supreme Court before — until last week. On Feb. 27, Miller gave oral arguments in front of the nation’s highest court about the principles of religious freedom and separation of church and state on behalf of the American Humanist Association, a nonprofit that advances secular humanism — a philosophy of life affirming the ability of people to lead meaningful lives without a belief in God. She’s representing a coalition of residents of Bladensburg, Maryland, who sued a bi-county state parks and planning commission over a 40-foot tall cross memorial on public land. The
Ancient tale makes a splash on Page 5
Pitzer Senate approves bill to buy opioid overdose reversal medication SIENA SWIFT In response to the opioid epidemic gripping the country, Pitzer College’s Student Senate unanimously passed a bill March 3 to use $500 of its reserve funds to buy 12 doses of naloxone, a non-prescription nasal spray that can save the lives of people who overdose on opioids. The resident assistant on duty will carry two doses of the naloxone spray, two doses will be kept in the Mead Hall lobby, two in the demonstration kitchen in West Hall, two at the East Sanborn Hall emergency phone and the remainder in the Residence Life office in East Sanborn, according to the bill. Visual instructions will be kept with the sprays, allowing untrained students
to administer them, according to senator Claire Wengrod PZ ’19, a co-sponsor of the bill. Wengrod said she had been interested in pursuing this proposal for a few years. “The growing possibility that [opioid overdoses] could affect our community is scary and I want Pitzer and the Claremont Colleges to be prepared to help students,” she said. “It feels like something that is necessary to have easily accessible on Pitzer’s campus [and] college campuses in general.” The locations in West and East Sanborn do not require swipe access, which would allow students from other campuses or students who don’t have their ID to get the naloxone, according to Wengrod. Naloxone is meant to provide only temporary medical assistance, and students
would be encouraged to call 911 or Campus Safety after administering it, said Rebecca Zimmerman PZ ’21, the representative who proposed the bill. Campus Safety officers started carrying doses of naloxone with them last November, according to Ernie Didier, a Campus Safety captain. “Our department is one of the very first private public safety agencies in California to gain full certification and approval by the Los Angeles County Department of Health [to carry naloxone],” Didier said via email. “There are several training, policy and reporting requirements we needed to satisfy before we could gain our own program certification.”
See OPIOID on Page 2
Harvey Mudd students designing world’s first nonprofit solar panel factory BEN REICHER
BEN REICHER • THE STUDENT LIFE
Nate Smith HM ’19 and Chris McElroy HM ’19 pose next to a solar panel they’re assembling in Parsons engineering building at HMC.
In the basement of Parsons Engineering Building at Harvey Mudd College, five engineering majors are working on an ambitious plan: bringing a solar panel plant to Pomona. The goal is to provide free or low-cost solar power to Claremont and other local communities. Called Locally Grown Power, the plan is an initiative of Community Home Energy Retrofit Project, a Claremont environmental nonprofit. “Being able to start a factory from the beginning and see the whole thing through
LIFE AND STYLE
is a manufacturing engineer’s dream,” said Nate Smith HM ’19, one of the students involved. Slated to open this summer, the plant will be the first solar panel company in the world run by a nonprofit. The plant will be located in a former welding shop that Pomona Unified School District helped locate. The HMC students are working on a variety of important decisions, including the design of an efficient layout for the factory floor and the selection
See SOLAR on Page 3
See COURT on Page 2
‘Just a game’: Recent tragedies put sport in perspective
AMY BEST • THE STUDENT LIFE
Michelle Calcany Blair PZ ’21 makes an over-the-shoulder catch in deep center field against CMS March 2.
DELANEY HARTMANN After defeating rival Pomona-Pitzer in both games of a doubleheader Saturday, Clare m o n t - M u d d - S c r i p p s ’ All-American pitcher Chloe Amarilla CM ’19 acknowledged that softball wasn’t the only thing on the teams’ minds. “The wins this weekend meant something completely different than they ever have because of what has happened on campus in the past two weeks,” she said, regarding the recent deaths of two CMC students. The Sixth Street rivalry is unique in its proximity, which brings its own set of superficial challenges — like gameday dining hall interactions with opponents. But following the tragic events on campus, the close relationship between the schools uplifted
OPINIONS
both teams. “We were all so happy to be playing P-P this weekend, because we felt like they were the only team in the conference that would know what we were going through,” said Amarilla, the Athenas’ starting pitcher in game one. Both games of the weekend doubleheader were close, with the first dragging into the 10th inning before CMS won 3-2 on a Meghan Perron CM ’21 walk-off single. The Athenas took the second 2-0 after a clutch sixth inning two-run home run from Maddie Valdez CM ’21. “I knew when I went to pitch that I was going to give it everything I physically had, but I just had to hope that my team could pick me up because I knew I was mentally and emotionally absent,” Amarilla said.
See SOFTBALL on Page 10
SPORTS
“Free Food for Thought” is a student-run podcast that tells the personal stories of Athenaeum speakers.
Flagrantly ignoring the guidelines of LGBT-centric parties is disrespectful, Elyse Endlich PZ ’22 argues.
Both P-P basketball teams’ seasons ended last week with NCAA tournament losses.
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