Vol. CXXXIII No. 6

Page 1

VOL. CXXXIII NO. 6

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2021

CLAREMONT, CA

Angela Davis at Pomona: ‘It’s always been about collaborations, communities and collectives’

Pomona’s pandemic changes add to disabled students’ frustration ELINA LINGAPPA

“I think I just had the opportunity to be among people who developed those approaches. I don’t think there’s a single idea that I have written about that I can claim as exclusively as my own. So I’m going to have to say that it’s always been about collaborations, communities, and collectives,” she said. Tuesday’s event offered a glance into Davis’s revolutionary upbringing, the events that led to her winding up on the FBI’s Most Wanted Fugitive list and her career advocating at the forefront of the prison abolitionist movement. The interview highlighted

This summer, Pomona College announced that due to COVID-19 precautions, students would not be allowed the same flexibility with move-in as in prior years. But the new rules didn’t impact all students equally. The resulting issues added yet another topic to a long-needed conversation about accessibility and resources for disabled students on Pomona’s campus. When Rachel Howard PO ’22 first heard of the new guidelines, she contacted Pomona’s administration in May about move-in accommodations. She requested an early move-in, because as a legally blind person, she required extra time to adjust back to campus. She was on track to get a seeing-eye dog in August, which would also necessitate a transition period. “It’s really important for me to be able to learn routes to classes and relearn the places on campus and how to get to different places,” Howard said. “I need to be acclimated to campus before classes start, so that I’m [on] an equal playing field with my peers.” Howard also asked administrators to allow one or both of her parents to help her with move-in. Both of her parents are fully vaccinated and said they were happy to get tested before arriving and follow any other health precautions.

See DAVIS on page 2

See SUPPORT on page 3

ANNA CHOI • THE STUDENT LIFE

“If you go slow, you will probably forget what you wanted in the first place. If you water down your demands, you forget what you are fighting for,” Angela Davis told students at Thursday’s Ena H. Thompson Lecture.

SIENA SWIFT, ANUSHE ENGINEER & JENNA MCMURTRY Renowned activist and scholar Angela Davis drew crowds of students, faculty and staff to Bridges Auditorium Tuesday and Thursday evening as she delivered the 2021 Ena H. Thompson lectureship. Hosted by the Pomona College history department, history professor Tomás Summers Sandoval joined Davis for Tuesday’s interview-style discussion of her life. Davis presented her lecture on Thursday, entitled “Radical Agendas and Possible Futures.” The event had been postponed from its original April 2020 date

and was Davis’s first in-person speaking engagement since the pandemic began. Davis was well received at the Claremont Colleges this week as hundreds of students lined up for photos and autographs after her various sessions around campus. But her time teaching at the Claremont Colleges in 1975 took place under very different circumstances. Her brief tenure was marred with backlash from alumni and trustees, forcing faculty and administrators to minimize her presence on campus. Yet, at Tuesday’s event Sandoval introduced the significance of Davis’s presence in regard to the

5Cs and Claremont roll out new rules for wheels

monumental revolutionary work she has done with both her activism and within academia. “We have somebody before us who has been consistently a genius at analyzing structures of oppression,” he said. “She’s done so in ways that are always interdisciplinary and intersectional even before those were named.” Sandoval added that Davis’s work in academia has been pivotal to the development of critical race studies and approaches. But Davis responded, “I can’t really claim that. I want to challenge you on that.” She posited that while scholars think of their work as individual, it is actually a collective process.

Return to campus brings new goals for Harvey Mudd, Pomona mutual aid groups ELINA LINGAPPA & ABBY PORTER This piece is the second in a series on mutual aid groups at the 5Cs.

CECILIA RANSBURG • THE STUDENT LIFE

Recent policies developed by Claremont McKenna, Harvey Mudd, Pomona and the city of Claremont limit the use of student vehicles.

ABBY PORTER The whir of wheels and ring of bells are familiar sounds to 5C students on a campus where skateboards, scooters and bikes are popular methods of transportation. But recent policies announced by Claremont McKenna College, Pomona College, Harvey Mudd College and the city of Claremont seek to limit the use of these vehicles around pedestrians, citing safety concerns. At CMC’s campus, A-frame signs popped up in September indicating that students are no longer allowed to ride motorized vehicles like powered skateboards, scooters and hoverboards through the campus. Brandon Frieberg PZ ’25 said he recently started riding his motorized skateboard, a Boosted Mini Board,

around the 5Cs. “I have to go down to Pomona sometimes for band and to go around the different campuses for work,” he said. “And it’s really downhill from Pitzer in the direction of other schools, so with an electric skateboard I feel safer because I can brake slightly and maintain a constant speed.” Frieberg said that he hasn’t noticed signs up around any of the campuses prohibiting motorized vehicles, but while crossing CMC’s campus on his skateboard last weekend he was told to dismount by a campus security officer. “Camp Sec yelled at me on a megaphone and was like, ‘No

See WHEELS on page 2

When Pomona College sent students home in March 2020, some were left scrambling to find housing on just days of notice. Occupy Pomona emerged almost immediately following the announcement, advocating to allow housing-insecure students to remain on campus. Soon after, Pomona allowed around 100 students to remain on campus for the remainder of the semester. The group’s work soon became a crowdfunding effort to financially support students who lacked secure housing. In the coming months, the group expanded its efforts, becoming the first in a collective of organizations supporting students around the 5Cs. As the year unfolded, the students following Occupy Pomona’s lead continued to adapt, responding to new challenges and developing strategies to get community members what they needed. Linda Phan PO ’24 recalls joining Occupy Pomona as a first-year and organizing to support Pomona staff, raising mutual aid for campus workers furloughed by the college during the pandemic. “We were in contact with workers [who] had been fully cut off by the college and didn’t have any other means of supporting their families,” Phan said.

“Occupy didn’t just fundraise for students, they recognized the need for workers who were unemployed and didn’t have other means.” Pomona FLI Scholars, a mentorship program for low-income and first generation students, also took on a major role in mutual aid efforts, raising nearly $170,000 for impacted students and workers. “It wasn’t just Occupy doing that work, FLI was doing it alongside them.” said Phan, who is also a mentor for FLI Scholars. “Mutual aid doesn’t just come in [the form of] money. The mentorship program is one example of mutual aid.” Shaheen Collen-Baratloo HM ’23 was one of several Harvey Mudd students who, inspired by other 5C student-led fundraising efforts, created Harvey Mudd Solidarity to address the growing need for financial support.

Occupy Pomona, FLI Scholars, and Harvey Mudd Solidarity ran mutual aid campaigns throughout the year of remote instruction. But the shift to fall of 2021 brought major changes, and not every organization was able to sustain membership and leadership. Occupy Pomona was the largest of the groups that didn’t make it past the pandemic. Phan was one of the only underclassmen in Occupy Pomona, and as older students began to graduate or make plans for graduation, the organization faltered and has since been relatively inactive, she said. Phan said she doesn’t view Occupy’s hiatus as a bad thing because many other organizations began to step up in Occupy’s wake such as the Black Student Union, Broken Silence 5Cs, Student-Workers Alliance and

See AID on page 3

CLARE MARTIN • THE STUDENT LIFE

SAMSON ZHANG • THE STUDENT LIFE

ARTS & CULTURE Prison abolitionist and Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation founder Patrisse Cullors spoke at an event hosted by Pomona College’s Humanities’ Studio on Oct. 21. Read more on page 6.

The student newspaper of the Claremont Colleges since 1889

OPINIONS

SPORTS

Pomona College’s handling of COVID-19 cases on campus has been worrying, inefficient and endangering, argues Abby Loiselle PO ’23. Read more on page 8.

Halfway through her first competitive collegiate season, uprising tennis talent Nina Ye PO ‘24 became crowned the ITA women’s singles champion while also earning All-American honors. Read more on page 10.

INDEX: Boos 1 | Warts & Vultures 4 | Goblinions 7 | Spirits 10


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Vol. CXXXIII No. 6 by The Student Life - Issuu