FOR THE WEEK OF TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014
Highlander University
Volume 62
of
C a l i f o r n i a , R ive r s i d e
Issue 14
Serving the UCR community since 1954
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DIVESTMENT DEBATES BEGIN IN ASUCR SENATE
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Guest lecturer of Palestinian civil rights met with criticism MICHAEL RIOS Senior Staff Writer
JASON LIN / HIGHLANDER President of Highlanders for Israel Ben Morag brings to the senate chambers his points regarding the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict. WINNIE JENG Senior Staff Writer AARON GRECH Contributing Writer
During the special report portion of last Wednesday’s ASUCR senate meeting, a representative of Highlanders for Israel gave a 15-minute presentation, questioning a student-led divestment campaign that calls for the UC administration to cut off business partnerships with
any company that allegedly supports apartheid in Israel. The presentation provoked contentious viewpoints among senators as well as members of the public, including one faculty member and a student representative from Students for Justice in Palestine. Ben Morag, president of Highlanders for Israel (HIFI), expressed that he felt offended by the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, criticizing the idea of divest-
ment as exclusionary and unsupportive of the UC spirit. On justifying the Israeli government’s motive in setting up a separation wall between Israel and West Bank, Morag claimed the seperation is not due to any discriminative racial reasons, but rather, for the safety of the Israelis. “Before Israel became a state, people in that area (were) being slaughtered just because they are Jewish,” said Morag. “Constantly, through our ex-
istence, there have been wars from all the neighboring countries around us. Between the period of 2000 and 2005, (there were) over 147 different suicide bombings, and 71 percent of the dead and wounded are civilians. When this happens to your people, you have to defend yourself and you have to have some separation.” In addition, Morag claimed that in the Gaza strip, ► SEE DEBATE, PAG=E 4
ASUCR senators aim to establish diversity council for UC Riverside COLIN MARKOVICH Senior Staff Writer
A group of ASUCR senators is working to bring representatives from various ethnic and gender programs together in a diversity council that supporters say would give the programs greater representation in ASUCR and enable them to work toward common goals more easily. “The diversity council is really about working on things in solidarity with one another,” CHASS Senator Abraham Galvan said. “So maybe necessarily we won’t get all the issues of all the ethnic and gender programs solved, but we
can focus on these bigger things … and all the ethnic and gender programs will work on it, or at least representatives from them, in an effort to really make a movement.” Galvan described understaffing and a general lack of funding, in addition to the recently formed Middle Eastern Student Center (MESC)’s lack of space, as examples of problems the diversity council could work to solve. Sarah Radi, a second-year biochemistry major, Muuath Aleraj, a third-year political science major and Mariam Saleh, a third-year English and Middle East and Islamic studies double major all expressed support for the
idea. “It’d be fantastic,” Saleh said, noting that it can be difficult for organizations to coordinate events together. The idea for a diversity council originated last year, but never fully got off the ground and virtually disappeared when ASUCR failed to pass the resolution that would have established it. The plan regained momentum last fall, when a group of senators floated an idea to change the name of Chicano Student Programs (CSP). Opposition surfaced shortly thereafter, and the proposal was ► SEE DIVERSITY, PAGE 6
Palestinian civil rights activist Omar Barghouti visited UC Riverside last Tuesday afternoon to give a 30-minute lecture about pressing issues surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The lecture was met with criticism from a few attendees, however, as some questioned both Barghouti’s talking points and the merit of CHASS F1RST for presenting the lecture and offering credit to students who attended and wrote a reflection on the lecture. During the presentation, Barghouti offered anecdotes that accused Israel of oppressive treatment of Palestinians. He told a story of a Palestinian woman who gave birth at an Israeli checkpoint only to see her child die due to alleged negligence from Israeli soldiers. Later in the speech, Barghouti also read an account that accused Israeli soldiers of hunting Palestinian children for sport. He called for an end to the alleged oppressive treatment of Palestinians, whom he believed were treated as “less than humans,” and advocated for the boycott of, divestment from and sanctioning of (BDS) institutions in Israel. “Calling for a boycott of Israel and its complicit institutions is still quite controversial in the United States,” he said, but added, “but it is no longer taboo.” After the presentation, a Q-and-A session followed, where Barghouti ► SEE LECTURER, PAGE 4
INSIDE: California implements a new law that will bring new freedoms for transgender gradeschool students.
OPINIONS
PAGE 9
Circle K International knows how to give back as well as put on a good show. PAGES 10-11
FEATURES
Kevin Hart steals the comedic spotlight in “Ride Along.” ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
PAGE 16
Track and field begins season in record-breaking fashion. PAGE 18
SPORTS
UPCOMING EVENTS
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STAFF
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