The Bowdoin Orient - Vol. 144, No. 20 - April 10, 2015
The Bowdoin Orient - Vol. 144, No. 20 - April 10, 2015
The Bowdoin Orient - Vol. 144, No. 20 - April 10, 2015
BRUNSWICK, MAINE
BOWDOINORIENT.COM
1st CLASS
U.S. MAIL
Postage PAID
Bowdoin College
The
Digital studies
program offers
new computer
science path
BY PHOEBE BUMSTED
ORIENT STAFF
Sky Monaco16 performs at the Battle of the Bands, which was put on by the Bowdoin Music Collective in Jack Magees Pub and Grill last night. Monacos band, Treefarm, won first place in the competition and as a result will open for
Reel Big Fish on the Thursday of Ivies. The Duck Blind, the band that placed second in the competition, will play on the Saturday of Ivies before the White Panda and Logic take the stage.
Additional Content:
On April 2, DeRay McKesson
07 came to campus to discuss activism, his role in protests throughout the country
and the merits of using social
media.Following his talk in
Kresge, McKesson sat down
for a Q&A with members of
the Orient. Visit bowdoinorient.com for a full transcript
of the exclusive
interview.
infrastructure.
At the time of publication, an
estimated 500 students from across
the state of Maine are expected
to gather in front of the Capitol
Building in Augusta. Forty students from the College are expected to attend.
This rally comes a week after
Bowdoin Climate Action (BCA), a
primary member of MSCJ, ended
its sit-in for fossil fuel divestment
on the second floor of Hawthorne-
BY VERA FENG
ORIENT STAFF
OPINION:
Page 9.
Page 7.
Page 12.
Page 16.
Zachary Albert 16, Evan Eklund 16 and Rachel Snyder 16 on SJPs one-sided approach
to Israel-Palestine.
Page 16.
news
MTV CRIBS MEETS BOWDOIN: To prepare students for the lottery and provide a sneak peek of the room choices, the Orient visited every upperclassmen housing
option, like sophomore Ella Driscolls School Street apartment. Take a closer look into students rooms by visiting www.bowdoinorient.com. Please see page 3 for a guide to the
housing lottery.
CAFFEINE CHECK:
New Items
Cookies
Baked at 12:30 p.m., 8 p.m., and
throughout the evening after 8 p.m.
Sugar packets
1 case of 1,000 per month
Average Sales
To-go cups
1,500 per week
The Cafe offers five percent discounts if you bring your own mug or silverware!
BY THE NUMBERS
As the years winds down, papers, lab
reports and readings seem to multiply.
The lines at the printing stations seem
longer than ever as students rush to print
Here are some statistics about printing.
STUDENT SPEAK
42,628
30,603
print jobs for the Class of
2018 in the fall semester
Steve Cho 17
Chlo Dietrich 16
Ben Troen 17
Daisy Wislar 18
729,063
total sheets of paper used
across all four class years in
the fall semester
WRITTEN AND COMPILED BY OLIVIA ATWOOD
news
52 HARPSWELL
Brand new
Used to be a retirement home
Nice kitchen
Lots of shared living spaces
Has parking
12 QUADS
Mostly seniors
Good party space
Far from campus
Has parking
No laundry
HOWARD HALL
11 QUADS, 3 QUINTS
Good location
Window seats
Large rooms
Have to clean your own bathroom
STOWE HALL
11 QUINTS
Communal efficiency kitchen
Good location
Mostly sophomores
Have to clean your own bathroom
COLES TOWER
SMITH HOUSE
8 SINGLES, 1 DOUBLE
Close to athletic complexes
Feels more like a house
Full kitchen
Has parking
BRUNSWICK APTS
37 DOUBLES, 51 TRIPLES
Kitchens
Shortcuts to Harpswell and
Farley
Thin walls
Ivies Brunswick Quad
MAYFLOWER APTS
4 DOUBLES, 8 TRIPLES
Quiet
Far from campus
In a neighborhood
CHAMBERLAIN HALL
PINE ST APTS
Great location
Nice, spacious rooms
Quiet
Shared bathrooms
12 QUADS
Pinefest
Far from campus
Close to science/language buildings
Has parking
No neighbors
No laundry
CLEAVELAND ST.
STOWE INN
In town
Colorful walls and slanted
floors
Feels like a house
Has kitchens
2 TRIPLES, 2 QUADS
Right next to the Orient House
Spacious rooms
In between campus and Maine St.
Isolated from other housing
Close to academic buildings
No laundry
news
ONLY ONE CAN WIN: From left: Robo Tavel16, Danny Mejia-Cruz16 and Justin Pearson17 are running for BSG President for the 2015-2016 school year. The three candidates shared their visions for next year at a debate at Jack Magees Pub and Grill on Tuesday night. Voting
begins today at 8 a.m. and closes Sunday at 8 p.m. Please see page 16 for the Orients endorsement and page 19 for candidate statements.
BOYCOTT
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
occupation but in fact have endorsed
whats happening and presenting a narrative that erases the ethnic cleansing of
Palestinians.
J Street U, a student organization
that describes itself as the political
home for pro-Israel, pro-peace Americans, issued a statement in opposition
to SJPs petition.
J Street U is a secular student group
that supports a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including the
Palestinian right to statehood. However,
our student group does not feel that a
Bowdoin boycott of Israeli academic
and cultural institutions is a helpful step
toward peace, the statement read.
Bowdoins chapter of Hillel, the largest Jewish student organization in the
world, declined to take a stance.
Hillel doesnt typically speak out on
political issues. We tend to be a more
apolitical organization, said Leah Khan
15, president of the Colleges chapter.
According to its website, Hillel International will not partner with any host
organizations that Support boycott of,
divestment from, or sanctions against
the State of Israel.
SJP has reached out to students by tabling in David Saul Smith Union and distributing relevant literature to students.
I cant say if I exactly see it making
[it to the ballot], said Lilian Gharios 18,
a member of the SJP. We [have] a lot
of different kinds of students, students
in those issues. He hopes to rejuvenate what the BSG means to its own
members and to make BSG meetings
and its administrative processes less
of a chore.
The race for Vice President for Student Government Affairs features Michelle Kruk 16, Riley OConnell 18
and Emily Serwer 16.
Kruk emphasized her experience
working with Bowdoin staff, faculty,
dean and trustee members. She mentioned her current discussion with
McLaughry for the creation of a multicultural liaison to BSG and pledged
to continue to represent marginalized
groups on campus.
OConnell stated that he would like
to bring an air of transparency to the
BSG by keeping students better informed on its meetings and agendas.
He stressed the importance of improving BSGs relationship with the administration and hoped to help facilitate
consistent meetings with President
Rose next year.
Serwer expressed her plan to improve BSGs presence on campus
through the use of social media platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter and
Instagram. She emphasized her work
ROSE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
the time commitment, he said in
an interview with the Orient. Im
fortunate that I live and work in
Boston, so its manageable for me to
be here.
Rose plans to move to Brunswick
in late June, and will live with his
family in the house currently occupied by the Mills family.
Rose estimated that he has met
with 60 to 70 faculty members in
small meetings over coffee. He hasgotten to know the senior staff in
most departments of the College,
and met recently with the Bowdoin
Student Government (BSG).
On campus, my work has been
to try to begin to meet as many
people as possible in all parts of the
Bowdoin community, and then...to
begin the process of understanding
the issues that are facing Bowdoin,
and how the work is done here, he
said.
Hes also introduced himself to
students in other ways.
Ive gone over to Moulton and
gotten a tray and...asked people to
sit and have lunch, and thats been
awesome, he said.
Rose said he does not expect the
news
COURTESY OF COMMUNICATIONS
EVERYTHINGS COMING UP ROSES: President-elect Clayton Rose has been visiting campus and meeting with students and faculty in the past few weeks. He said he hopes these meetings will
help get him acquainted with theissues that are facing Bowdoin and how the work is done here.
day-to-day running of the College
to change very much in the early
months of his presidency.
Im more mindful of thinking
about the medium- to longer-term
issues...that we want to think about
for the next three to four years, that
will have an impact for a long period of time after that, he said.
One of Roses first decisions
came on Monday, when he named
President-elect Clayton Rose appointed William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of the Humanities in Gender
and Womens Studies and Associate
Dean for Faculty Jennifer Scanlon to
fill the position of dean for academic
affairs on Monday. Scanlon will act
as an interim dean for the next two
years, and there will be a national
search for a permanent dean during
the 2016-2017 academic year. The
news followed last weeks announcement that Dean for Academic Affairs Cristle Collins Judd will leave
the College for the Arthur W. Mellon
Foundation at the end of the current
academic year.
Scanlon said that she anticipates
continuing many of the ongoing initiatives within the Office of the Dean
for Academic Affairs, including the
Digital and Computational Studies
Initiative, during her two years in the
position. Scanlon has also been focused on faculty diversity in her position as associate dean for faculty, and
said that she plans on continuing that
work in her new position.
We will continue those kinds of
conversation on campus, she said.
I have every confidence that we will
continue to carry on these initiatives
that weve started.
According to Scanlon, conversations have been underway for some
time regarding transitions that may
occur within the Academic Affairs
office as Rose prepares to begin his
presidency. The 2015-2016 year
would have been the final year of
Judds contract, which also contributed to those initial conversations.
With the news that she had accepted a position at the Mellon
Foundation, we started to have much
more serious and engaged conversations over a week or so, said Scanlon. Clayton Rose invited me to
take the position on an interim basis
for two years which we thought was
really in the best interest of the Collegesince hes going to be new
that it would really be two years of
someone who could help introduce
him to the place and provide some
kind of continuity.
RALLY
RHETORIC
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3
student body, said McCarroll.
McCarroll recognized that the new
program will require a period of review
before it is able to reach its full potential.
I think that the first stage will really
be one of asking a lot of questions and
listening to the responses, she said. The
COURTESY OF COMMUNICATIONS
news
A
group of
minor
stu-
DIGITAL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Intro to CS in order to take later CS
courses.
However, Hall and Irfan note that
the two introductory courses can
serve as complements to each other.
We imagine that students who are
really excited about computer science
will perhaps take both courses in tandem, Hall said.
Intro to CS teaches students to
write computer code and uses one
programming language throughout
the semester. Intro to DCS, however,
uses a variety of computational tools,
only one of which is programming.
Topics in Intro to DCS include
spatial analysis, text analysis and social networks as well as the societal
impact of these technologies.
Co-teaching is also a great way
of saying this isnt a computer
science course; its not a history
FEATURES
SEW WHAT?
PENELOPE LUSK
EAT UP: During his gap year in Taiwan, Eduardo Jaramillo 17 spent a significant amount of time
renting mopeds with his friends and traveling to a beach community famous for its seafood.
throughout the year and theyre still
some of my best friends, he said.
When the three got off from
school they would go the beach,
bowl and sightsee.
We learned that we could rent
these little mopeds, which was
against the rules of our program, but
we did it anyway, said Jaramillo.
Transgressing at low to moder-
WHO AM I?: Professor of Asian Studies and Cinema Studies Shu-chin Tsui has focused much of her academic work and personal time on questions of
identity. She also designed her own house here in Brunswick to make sure it was a beautiful and peaceful space.
side to do labor work for ten years.
So when you ask me, Whats your
odd job?, we didnt have that. We
were in the fields doing labor by
hands, by shoulders, by back. No
machines. It was kind of like the
American lost generation in that
we lost education. I remember
when I came here for graduate
FITTING IN: Jamarillo 17 is a Chinese minor, but said that being immersed in Mandarin helped him
learn better than any class could. He is planning on going abroad to Kunming, China.
GAP
features
beer? While it may be owned by the industrial brewers, Goose Island consistently produces delicious beer. Goose
Islands inclusion among the list makes
the implicit argument that craft beer is
about taste, and taste alone.
Goose Islands CEO and founder
John Hall stands by that argument.
Goose Island is a craft beer, period,
he stated to time magazine in an August of 2013 article that questioned the
status of Goose Islands craft identity.
The article explains that smaller, independently owned craft breweries initiated the questioning because they saw
Goose Island as a threat to the meaning
of the word craft.
TSUI
HOME
MY OWN WIFE: Evan Horwitz 15 acts as Charlotte von Mahlsdorf in the play I Am My Own Wife directed by Jamie Weisbach 16. Horwitz plays more
than 20 dierent characters in the one-man metadramatic show, which opens tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Pickering Room of Hubbard Hall.
who has been involved with dramaturgy, directing and tech, chose
I Am My Own Wife to embark
upon as an independent study
project. Weisbach and Horwitz
have been working on the production since last May, and began rehearsing in January.
For Weisbach, directing a oneman-show comes with its chal-
MATTHEW GOODRICH
I have a confession, gentle reader, and I hope the same grace which
brings me to admit my sin also
inspires you to forgive it. When
last we met, I declared the impossibility of the singer-songwriter in
2015. Sincerity is dead, I thought,
taking with it our affable acoustic mensches. I spoke
too soon. (Even
tastemakers
are mortal.)
Carries
ghost haunts every song
on the album. She died in 2012,
but Stevens recounts that she had
abandoned him long before that,
whether she forgets about her toddler at a Blockbuster or takes him on
a car ride and drug trip to Oregon. As
much as he may wish it, Stevens cannot escape the memory of his mother,
whom he both pines for and despises.
10
a&e
SHARING TRAUMA: Charlotte Dillion 16, a member of Safe Space, watches a multimedia presentation that was part of the Alliance for Sexual Assault Preventions (ASAP) installation last night in Quinby
House. The exhibition features online articles, social media posts and videos, and is interspersed with questions to the viewer. The exhibition will be open through the weekend.
stories are being told?Whose
voices are silenced? What does
it mean if we hit like or share?
What are the effects of all these
narratives on survivors?
With the power of social media,
sexual assault news is being circulated much more widely and quickly. The installation aims to provide
a setting for students to think about
the implications of that.
That was really our idea, to get
people thinking about the proliferation in the media of these issues
DRIVEL
MEDIA BIAS: The installation featured articles and frequently-shared images from the Internet. It
asked viewers to think critically about web information on sexual and domestic violence.
MEDIA
DOVE
a&e
ONE-MAN
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9
SKIN-DEEP: Noliwe Rooks spoke in Kresge Auditorium on Monday night. Rooks, an associate
professor in Africana Studies and Feminist, Gender, Sexuality Studies at Cornell spoke on the connections between beauty and race in pop culture, focusing on the failure of a Dove campaign.
11
PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST
Diamond Walker 17
HIP N HOPPIN: Walker 17 practices in the dance studio. She is a choreographer and leader of
Obvious, the hip-hop group, and looks forward to incorporating dance into a future career.
band and wife dance duo from
the TV show So You Think You
Can Dance.
Diamond Walker 17 tried out
They do the craziest isolations
for an Irish dancing team though a
and choreography, said Walker.
program at her elementary school
To this day I still watch some of
at age eight. She was accepted into
my favorite pieces of theirs to get
the program, which turned out to
inspired in my own work.
be the beginning of a lifelong love
Walker also finds inspiration
of dance. Now a sophomore inin music of all kinds.
volved in many projects on camI love listening to classical
pus, Walker still finds the time to
music when Im doing my homepursue her passion.
work, she said. Ill be sitting
Though Walker was an Irish
there and Ill start dancing to a
dancer in her childhood, she
classical beat which is very unswitched to hip-hop when she
heard of.
was 15. Walker took dance classes
Walker is involved with many
as a first year, and has continued
clubs and organizations outside
to be involved in dance through
of dance. She is currently a memher choreography and leadership
ber of Residential Life, serving as
of
Obvious
a proctor in
Dance Crew.
Osher, and is
Im a small person, so
Wa l k e r s
a student dicurrent projrector for the
in my dancing I like to do
ect has been
Womens Rebig expressive movements to
choreographsource Center.
show the big person I am
ing a piece for
Walker is also
the Asian Stua staff member
on the inside.
dents Assoat the McKeen
ciation (ASA)
Center for the
Fashion Show, which is coming
Common Good. She recently
up in two weeks. However, she
co-facilitated a four-week group
plans to do a more personal piece
discussion series about identity at
for the student show in May.
Bowdoin for Undiscussed, a stuUsually my dances are more
dent group dedicated to discussfun and I usually do my dances for
ing difficult issues.
other people, said Walker. I reIn her spare time, Walker loves
ally want to do a dance thats about
to learn about the science of hair
identity and about race with all the
and how to take care of it. She is
events that have been happening
passionate about social activism
this year, like Ferguson.
and loves to discuss issues surWalker said her family inspired
rounding race and diversity at
her to become a dancer.
Bowdoin. Walker wants to bring
Dancing in my family is norher love of dance into everything
mal. My mom played music in the
that she does and plans to incormornings while cooking or cleanporate her passion into whatever
ing and music is always on in the
career path she chooses to go
house, said Walker. We would
down. She uses dance as a methalways be moving which was
od of expressing herself.
something that I loved. I love to
I love to be big when Im
move. It was a way that I enjoyed
dancing. Im a small person, so
expressing myself and it was comin my dancing I like to do big exfortable for me, she added.
pressive movements to show the
Walker recalls times when she
big person I am on the inside,
would choreograph dances for
she said.
her cousins to perform.
My male cousin was always the
To suggest an artist for Portrait
footstool. He hated it, said Walker.
of an Artist, email Arts & EnterOne of Walkers sources of
tainment Editor Emily Weyrauch
inspiration is Nappytabs, a husat [email protected].
BY ARIANA REICHERT
ORIENT STAFF
12
SPORTS
Mens tennis races past Brandeis, ranked No. 8 Womens tennis remains
undefeated in conference play
BY RACHAEL ALLEN
SCORECARD
ALL ABOUT THAT BASE: Chase Savage 16 and Kyle Wolfe 18 work the base line in their 8-2 doubles win against Brandeis. The team went a perfect 9-0 against the Judges.
BY MADDIE JODKA
ORIENT STAFF
SCORECARD
Sa 4/4
Th 4/9
v. Brandeis
at Bates
W
L
9-0
6-3
BY YASMIN HAYRE
ORIENT STAFF
SCORECARD
Fri 4/3
Tue 4/7
Wed 4/8
at Bates
at Bates
at Bates
v. So. Me. @ St. Josephs
v. So. Me. @ St. Josephs
W 5-1
W 4-1
W 5-2
L 9-1
W 12-4
SCORECARD
Sa
Tue
4/4
4/7
v. Endicott
v. Colby
W 13-8
W 8-7
sports
13
Joulia Likhanskaia 17
WOMENS TENNIS
HIGHLIGHTS
Has won all but two sets
this season playing first
singles
Undefeated in her last seven
singles matches and three
doubles matches
BY ALEX VASILE
ORIENT STAFF
SCORECARD
Su 4/5
v. Bates @ F. Pierce
v. Bates @ F. Pierce
W 15-3
L 9-5
BY COOPER HEMPHILL
ORIENT STAFF
SCORECARD
Sa
Tue
4/4
4/7
v. Endicott
at Babson
L 16-3
W 16-11
SOFTBALL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12
14
sports
NESCAC Standings
MENS LACROSSE
NESCAC
W
Amherst
6
Middlebury 6
Tufts
6
Wesleyan
4
Williams
4
Bates
4
Hamilton
4
Colby
2
Trinity
2
BOWDOIN 1
Conn. Coll.
0
L
1
1
1
3
3
4
4
4
6
5
7
T
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
OVERALL
W L T
11 1 0
10 2 0
10 1 0
7
5 0
7
3 0
7
4 0
8
4 0
6
4 0
4
8 0
2
9 0
2 10 0
SCHEDULE
Sa 4/11 v. Conn. College
Tu 4/14 at Colby
1 P.M.
7 P.M.
WOMENS LACROSSE
Trinity
Middlebury
BOWDOIN
Hamilton
Tufts
Colby
Amherst
Williams
Bates
Conn. Coll.
Wesleyan
W
7
5
5
5
5
4
3
2
2
1
0
L
1
1
2
2
2
3
4
5
6
6
7
T
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
W
11
9
9
9
9
9
7
5
6
3
4
L
1
1
2
2
2
3
4
5
7
8
8
T
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
SCHEDULE
Su 4/12 at Conn. College
Th 4/16 v. Southern Me
NOON
7 P.M.
SAILING
SCHEDULE
Sa 4/11
L
0
1
2
3
0
L
0
2
2
3
2
OVERALL
W L
15 6
5 10
5 11
1 12
16 0
OVERALL
W L
14 3
8 11
11 5
10 11
9
6
SCHEDULE
Sa 4/11 v. Tufts
v. Tufts
Su 4/12 at Trinity
at Trinity
at Trinity
Tu 4/14 v. Saint Josephs
v. Saint Josephs
NOON
2:30 P.M.
10 A.M.
2 P.M.
4 P.M.
3:30 P.M.
5:30 P.M.
BASEBALL
NESCAC EAST
W L
Colby
2 1
Tufts
2 1
Bates
1 1
BOWDOIN
2 3
Trinity
1 2
NESCAC WEST
W
Amherst
3
Wesleyan
3
Williams
3
Hamilton
0
Middlebury
0
L
0
0
3
0
6
OVERALL
W L T
11 4 0
15 4 0
6
8 0
7 11 0
9
7 0
OVERALL
W L
10 6
13 4
6
9
7
5
0 12
Sa 4/11
Tu 4/14
at Wesleyan
at Wesleyan
at Husson
at Husson
NOON
2:30 P.M.
5 P.M.
7:30 P.M.
MENS TENNIS
WOMENS TENNIS
at Amherst
at Hamilton
v. Skidmore at Hamilton
NESCAC EAST
W
BOWDOIN
3
Trinity
2
Colby
1
Bates
0
Tufts
0
NESCAC WEST
W
Williams
2
Hamilton
3
Middlebury
2
Wesleyan
2
Amherst
0
SCHEDULE
9:30 A.M.
9:30 A.M.
9:30 A.M.
SCHEDULE
SCHEDULE
Sa 4/11
Su 4/12
SOFTBALL
10 A.M.
9 A.M.
2 P.M.
Sa 4/11 at Hamilton
Su 4/12 at Amherst
We 4/15 at Colby
10 A.M.
11 A.M.
4 P.M.
SCHEDULE
Sa 4/11
at UNH Invitational
11 A.M.
SAVED BY THE GOAL(IE): Peter Mumford 17 lunges into position to save a shot against Endicott in the Polar Bears 16-3 loss. The defeat was the teams sixth in
a row, tying it with Conn. College for the worst record in the NESCAC. Later in the week, though, the team beat Babson for its second win of the season.
M. LAX
W. LAX
W. TENNIS
BY SAM SHAHEEN
ORIENT STAFF
sports
15
16
OPINION
Vote Mejia-Cruz
hen the polls open for the Bowdoin Student Government (BSG)
elections today, the student body will have the choice of three
candidates for president. While all three candidates have impressive rsums and plans for the future of BSG, the Orient endorses
Danny Mejia-Cruz 16.
The president of BSG heads an organization that serves as a liaison between the student body and the Colleges administration, a role that will
be particularly important next year when President-elect Rose begins his
tenure. BSG has a real opportunity to determine Roses relationship with
the student body and help set the tone for his presidency. Each candidate
expressed his discontent with aspects of BSGs performance in previous
years, citing that BSG has to work on reconnecting to the students it represents. This disunion has prevented BSG from achieving important goals,
and we are eager to see it reversed next year.
All three candidates highlighted their desire to address two of the most
high-profile policy issues that have been discussed on campus over the
past few years: pushing back the Credit/D/Fail deadline and lengthening
Thanksgiving Break. The Orient editorial board has supported both efforts, as have recent BSG presidents, and yet they have fallen short every
year. Mejia-Cruzs willingness to apply constant pressure to the administration, as well as his intimate understanding of the work required to bring
these initiatives to fruition, weighed heavily in our decision. In recent
years, the faculty have nixed both an extended Thanksgiving Break proposal and a change to the Credit/D/Fail policy despite widespread support
from students and members of the administration. Achieving these policy
goals will require winning over skeptical professors, and we believe that
Mejia-Cruz will be best able to mobilize students and aggressively lobby
the faculty.
Mejia-Cruz will be a tireless advocate for the student body. His willingness to engage both himself and BSG as a whole in important campus
conversations will bring the student government out of the shadows. Additionally, his proposal to have a representative from the multicultural center
on BSG highlights his recognition that BSG could benefit from including
a voice that would speak specifically to issues of multiculturalism on campus. With three years of service in a variety of student government positions and various campus committees, Mejia-Cruz is familiar with both
the institutions and individuals that shape the College and he knows what
is required to maintain continuity with them in a transitional period. His
platform includes a plan to acquaint President-elect Clayton Rose with the
authentic student experience through forums and programming to be held
throughout the fall semester.
Mejia-Cruzs opponents, Robo Tavel 16 and Justin Pearson 17, are also
well qualified. Very rarely is the student body fortunate enough to have
so many excellent candidates to choose from. All three would make outstanding BSG presidents, but we feel that Mejia-Cruzs outspokenness and
energy make him uniquely suited to help BSG overcome its inertia.
This editorial represents the majority view of the Bowdoin Orients editorial
board, which is comprised of Garrett Casey, Ron Cervantes, Sam Chase, Matthew
Gutschenritter, Nicole Wetsman and Kate Witteman.
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opinion
17
privilege
does not
exempt him
from it. Rather, it inhibits his
ability to listen.
Choosing
to
be an activist, Jelin
writes, is committing
yourself to a cause that
transcends just your identity An
activist has a responsibility to remove blame, recognize that we all
want the same thing, and strive for
understanding. This is not activ-
petuate,
knowingly
and
unk n o w i n g l y,
means breaking
through the fear
that keeps it hidden.
DIANA FURUKAWA, THE BOWDOIN ORIENT
Activists make those who
are privileged feel temporarily unhim to recognize this fear and see
comfortable so that they might unthrough it.
derstand the discomfort of others in
Activists are idealists, not antagothe face of egregious, pervasive and
nists. They do not intend to speak on
persistent wrongs.
behalf of the students, but perhaps
What does it really mean to, as the
author implores us, listen and empathize, in the context of addressing issues of inequality? No one
will listen to you if you dont listen
to them first, the author writes. But
havent systematically oppressed
people listened enough? Isnt that
what the voices of privileged people
like this self-proclaimed White
Male compel them to do?
I am writing from a place of concern at best and outrage at worst
about the issue of dialogue on Bowdoins campus. On the one hand, we
dont have enough of it. Productive
conversations about divisive topics
generally occur in private spaces
and include the voices of individuals who are already more or less in
agreement. On the other hand, we
have public forums like the Orient
which (at least in theory) convene
the voices of any and all who elect
to speak.
I admire Jelin for taking advantage of this public forum to share
his ideas and inspire ideas in others;
but if he chooses not to listen, and
models this kind of irresponsible
engagement with his community in
an Orient column every other week,
then I fear that positive change will
never come.
When an individual rightfully
takes advantage of a space like
this to illuminate any issue, it is
imperative that we listen, but it is
also imperative that we reflect and
respond. If we feel that we agree,
then we should articulate our sound
reasoning. If we do not agree, then
we should challenge what we have
heard. There can be no free speech
in a community that is satisfied with
the end of a conversation. There is
no democracy in a community that
discourages lively debate.
Emily Simon is a member of the
Class of 2017.
18
opinion
opinion
19
Roberto Tavel 16
So, youve seen the posters. I
know, Robo fo Bobo may not be
the cleverest catchphrase. But my
campaign is about more than my
name and a slogan. I look toward
next year as a once-in-a-generation
opportunity for the BSG to regain
its footing in discussions with the
administration. In my time as Class
President and VP for Student Affairs, I have seen numerous policy
suggestions from the BSG fall flat.
Next year, with President-elect
Rose taking over, we have the
chance to create a new consensus
on the BSGs role as a policy advocate. If elected, I will work with the
BSGs Vice Presidents to craft specific proposals to be submitted to
the administration in the fall. These
proposals would cover a range of issues such as Credit/D/Fail, Health
Center hours, Thanksgiving break,
and campus WiFi capacities. I have
immense hope that the administration will be a willing partner. I
ask for your vote not because you
laughed at my posters, but because
you too believe that the BSG can
and should be a vibrant voice for
the student body.
Vice President
for Student
Government Affairs
Michelle Kruk 16
Hello! My name is Michelle Kruk,
member of the Class of 2016, and I
am running for the Vice President
for Student Government Affairs.
My qualifications include sitting on
two College Committees (Advisory
Committee for a Diverse Community and the Committee for Multicultural Affairs), being a member
of Residential Life for the past two
years, and co-leading two student
groups (Salsa Club and the Latin
American Student Organization).
Through my participation in the
aforementioned groups I have interacted with Trustees, Deans, Administrators, and current BSG representatives. I am a skilled communicator,
thoughtful listener, and unapologetic advocate. I would be honored to
serve as the VP of Student Government Affairs and know that I would
fulfill that role to its fullest extent.
Please consider voting for Michelle
Kruk as the VP of Student Government Affairs! Thank you!
Riley OConnell 18
Changethis word epitomizes
the new era our school is about to
enter. With a new college president
on the horizon, brand new possibilities are sure to follow. As Vice
President for Student Government
Affairs, I plan to take full advantage of this once-in-a-generation
opportunity to reinvent BSGs relationship with the administration
and with the student body. My first
action would be to work with the
Executive Committee to establish
consistent meetings with Presidentelect Rose, setting an important
precedent for BSG-administration
relations that will hopefully continue long after my time in office. I
also plan to bring transparency and
Vice President of
Student Affairs
Lucia Gibbard 18
Hello, my name is Lucia Gibbard and I am running to be the
Vice President of Student Affairs.
I believe I could be great in this
position because I have the necessary experience, as I sat on the
Committee of Student Affairs this
year. I therefore learned the ropes
on how the committee should be
run, and gained a good idea of
what I could improve, if given the
chance to. I also work in the Office
of the Dean of Student Affairs, and
through this I have made many
faculty connections which I could
utilize in the VP position. For the
past year, I have sat on BSG as an
At-Large Representative, and listening to my fellow classmates
has really made me realize the
importance of student opinions.
If elected, I would take everyones
ideas on board. I have put a lot of
thought into what I would do if
elected to this position. I hope to
Vice President
for Facilities and
Sustainability
Kevin Hernandez 18
Hi, I am Kevin Hernandez and Im
running for the Vice President of Facilities and Sustainability. Because of
my current experience on the Committee of Facilities and Sustainability,
I believe that I can continue to ensure
current projects are achieved, such
as the implementation of new printers in Smith Union and Thorne, and
also creating greater collaboration
between the green groups on campus.
My primary mission, if appointed as
the VP for Facilities and Sustainability, would be to increase overall efficiency. I hope to work with the Health
Center to implement online appointments, improve campus-wide WiFi
issues, and also look to restructure
the Rideshare app to make it much
more user friendly. Serving as the VP
for Facilities and Sustainability would
be a tremendous honor, and I hope
you consider me when you vote!
20
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LECTURE
WORK-IT: Featured Portrait of an Artist Diamond Walker '17 (far left) and fellow students walk the runway in the African Fashion Show hosted by Bowdoin's Africa
Alliance. The show celebrated African culture and fashion last Saturday night in Kresge Auditorium. See page 11 for the feature on Walker.
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#Carbonfeed
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Talent Show
FILM
SUNDAY
RELIGIOUS SERVICE
Chapel Service
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EVENT
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TUESDAY
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H ld
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FILM
"The Arrival of
Drones"
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"L'Image
Manquante"