Vol. CXXXV No. 7

Page 1

VOL. CXXXV NO. 7

FRIDAY, November 3, 2023

CLAREMONT, CA

Pitzer community mourns Faculty and alumni release recent student death statements on violence in

Israel and Palestine

ANNABELLE INK & REIA LI

EMMA JENSEN • THE STUDENT LIFE On Oct. 29 and Nov. 1, the Pitzer community honored Jesse Lopez PZ ‘24, who passed away the previous Friday.

JOHN PAUL FERRANTINO CW: Recent student death Through altars and memorials, the Pitzer College and 5C community mourned the death of Jesse Lopez ’24 over the past week. On Oct. 27, Pitzer College President Strom Thacker sent an email to the community announcing Lopez’s death. He offered support resources for students, faculty and staff as they process their grief. Lopez was remembered by the Pitzer community in memorial services on Sunday at the Multipurpose Room at the Gold Student Center (GSC) and Wednesday at Benson Auditorium. Students, faculty and staff attended Wednesday’s memorial both in person and through Zoom. Over the weekend, Pitzer’s Latino Student Union also created a community altar for Lopez in the GSC’s Huerta room. Students wrote messages and memories on note cards to place at the altar. On Thursday, the altar was on display at Scott Hall as part of a larger Day of the Dead altar, which commemorated the lives of multiple people. Lopez was born in Aspen, Colorado, on March 30, 2001. He was 22 years old at the time of his death. At the memorial on Wednesday, students, faculty and loved

ones offered their reflections on Lopez’s life. They mentioned his loving hugs, dedication and welcoming nature. “Jesse wasn’t just my cousin; he was my twin flame, my person. Most importantly, he was my brother. A piece of my heart will forever and always go out to Jesse,” his cousin Amy Gisselle Amaya Argueta said. “He was my superman and saved me from my scariest monsters since I was born until he passed.” He was an avid member in the Claremont Colleges Ballroom Dance Company (CCBDC) and the Claremont Christian Fellowship (CCF) while working at Pitzer’s GSC gym. Lopez is survived by his brother Eliseo Mauricio Lopez, his aunt Blanca Edith Argueta Amaya, his uncle Jose Antonio Amaya Lopez and Amy Gisselle Amaya Argueta. His family asks that contributions in Lopez’s memory be made to the Movember Foundation and Aspen Hope Center.

Over the past two weeks, faculty members at the Claremont Colleges have responded to escalating violence in Palestine and Israel, adding to the polarization and divide between various campus communities. Two groups of faculty members released statements on this violence — one expressing solidarity with Palestine and the other condemning Palestinian militant group Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack in Israel. In addition, alumni groups at Pomona College and Scripps College released statements demanding administrative action and calling for a ceasefire in Gaza. On Oct. 31, faculty members from across the Claremont Consortium released a statement expressing support for Palestinian civilians and calling for readers to take action. As of Nov. 2, the statement has received 139 signatures, with 31 additional anonymous signees. The statement followed an Oct. 23 statement released by faculty

members at Claremont McKenna College with 65 signatures denouncing the Oct. 7 attack. The Oct. 31 faculty statement begins by expressing faculty concerns with ongoing violence in Palestine and Israel: “As faculty at the Claremont Colleges, we continue to watch with concern the escalation of violence in Palestine and Israel; to mourn, without reservation, all loss of human life in Gaza, in Israel and across the occupied Palestinian territory.” Before addressing the historical context of the situation, the statement notes that as of Oct. 30, Israeli bombardment has killed over 8,300 Palestinians in Gaza. By the time of this article’s publication, that number is over 9,000. The letter also says the Israeli state response to the events of Oct. 7 should be understood in the context of settler-colonialism and Israel’s apartheid regime, which has led to “two distinct legal regimes that systematically privilege the rights of Israeli settlers in illegal settlements while denying the most basic rights of housing, freedom of movement

Monsour Counseling and Psychological Services is located in the Tranquada Student Services Center. The student crisis line phone number is 909-621-8202. Staff and faculty can call the 24/7 Employee Assistance Program number at 800-234-5465.

and security to Palestinians.” Professors in the statement urged the 5C community to support the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, which calls for institutions and individuals to pressure Israel to comply with international law regarding its treatment of Palestinians. They also urged the colleges to uphold academic freedom and freedom of speech, both of which were recently reaffirmed by the Claremont Colleges AAUP Chapter Executive Committee. “We call upon our colleagues in Claremont to join us in this solidarity, by contacting Congressional representatives to demand a ceasefire, supporting BDS efforts and upholding academic freedom and free speech protections for all community members,” the statement says. Signee Lara Deeb, Scripps professor of anthropology and Middle East and North African studies, said current events are a new phase in a long history of “Israeli settler colonialism, apartheid and occupation that began

See STATEMENTS on page 2

SASHA MATTHEWS • THE STUDENT LIFE

Divest 5C files legal complaint against Pomona College ENOCH KIM & NITYA GUPTA On Monday, Oct. 30, Claremont’s Divest 5C filed a legal complaint against Pomona College. In their complaint, students called on California Attorney General Rob Bonta to review Pomona’s investments and force the administration to divest its endowment from fossil fuels. 41 faculty and staff members signed in support of Divest 5C’s complaint. Alex Marquardt, executive director of the Climate Defense Project, an organization that provides free defense representation for communities involved in climate-related legal action, explained that the complaint was meant to bring attention to legal violations and raise public pressure. “The purpose of the complaint is to alert the attorney general about potential legal violations of charitable laws, which higher education institutions are tasked with enforcing, and to increase public pressure on schools that have lagged behind others,” Marquardt said in an email to TSL. This action follows a wave of divestment complaints on the university level that started when students at Boston College filed a legal complaint against their uni-

institutions across the U.S. have. The following year, Fossil Fuel Divest Harvard filed a legal complaint against Harvard, and subsequently, Harvard announced its divestment from fossil fuels.

versity in 2020 in an attempt to push the administration to divest from fossil fuels. Despite the complaint, Boston College has still not divested, though hundreds of higher education

ARTS & CULTURE With regard to transformative shifts in society, Dr. Anita Hill wouldn’t say she identifies as an optimist, but is ever hopeful to overcome a number of impossible challenges. On Oct. 28th Hill was welcomed by Pomona College as the sixth speaker of the Payton Distinguished Lectureship.

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Student groups at Vanderbilt University, MIT, Stanford University, Yale University and Princeton University followed suit, filing legal complaints against their schools in 2022.

Princeton divested soon after. Monday’s complaint wasn’t a solitary endeavor, though. Divest 5C worked in conjunction with students at University of Pennsylvania, Washington University at St. Louis, University of Chicago, Penn State University and Tufts University to file legal complaints against their respective colleges, pushing each of their administrations to divest their endowment from fossil fuels. Marquardt said that the reason student groups from these six schools chose to simultaneously file their complaints is because collaboration could bring them more media attention, pressuring administrators to take action. Divest 5C’s complaint alleged that Pomona has invested millions of dollars in the fossil fuel industry. This violates the California Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act, a law which states that all non-profits — including colleges and universities — must invest in alignment with their institutional missions, said Nicholas Black PO ’24, co-president of Divest 5C. “Pomona’s mission statement, and the mission statement of the sustainability department, explicitly state that they want to

SASHA MATTHEWS • THE STUDENT LIFE

See DIVEST on page 3

OPINIONS

SPORTS

Dania Anabtawi PO ’26 and University of Vermont sophomore Ayelet Kaminski push their peers and institutions to acknowledge Palestinian voices.

Hens avoid the goose egg; after a 0-0 draw in their last meeting ruined the Sagehens’ dreams of a perfect season, P-P came back with vengeance, defeating the Athenas 2-1 with a last minute penalty.

INDEX: News 1 | Arts & Culture 4 | Opinions 7 | Sports 9


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