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Exec Board Doesn't Show Up

According to the meeting minutes recorded by Abi Darin '10, all five Executive Board members were absent from last Sunday's Senate meeting. Only Communications Secretary Leah Kahn gave notice that she wouldn't be attending. Abi's minutes [blogger's emphasis supplied]:

Student Senate currently meets at Sunday at 6:30 pm in the Founders room above the d-hall.

Attendance: Garbo, Jerzy, Nick, Rob, Sophy, Sean, Abi, Misa, Julia, Liz, Jaclyn, Marie Claire, Hale, Will, Michael, Mimi, Megan, Alex, Christine, Angie, Liz.

We appoint Rob Ramlow-Sachs as Chair for the evening of February 14, 2010. A day for the lovers. Since Rob is a love symbol (lover of the outdoors) for Pitzer College, he was the obvious choice for a makeshift chair person for the evening.

Motion has been passed to move the budgetary requests to the front of the meeting.
HMC Two300 2010 Party on March 6, 2010. Ask for $300. Approved $300.
Sophy is coming to ask for the third time for monetary aid for the Super Mash Bros/ SAC birthday party for February 27, 2010. Now asking for $1200. Sean makes a new motion that we should change it from $400 to $1200. Will thinks Sophy has suffered enough, and we should approve $1200 today. Approve $1200 for Super Mash Bros/ SAC birthday.

What's happening on your campus this week?
5-C social chair: this coming weekend there is a CMC RAVE (Flauster Damus?)
APC: met at 8am, Sean forgot everything that happened. Director of local global studies position was discussed. Talks of creating an Ad-Hoc.
SAC: says come join us at 9 PM in the G-H.
PAct: Trips Medieval Times and Chinatown for the Chinese new year.
NRS: Meeting every other Tuesday, throwing a staff luncheon for the 10th of March. April 15, 2010 for a NRS prom.
***Brief interruption by the 5-C Mariachi Band. Happy Valentine’s Day everybody. That includes the lovers, the haters, and the fools. Dancing ensues. Senate just got about 100% more entertaining and pleasant. Motion for musical interruptions every week?
Holden Hall Council: meets on Monday at 7pm
Campus life: met on Thursday
FEC: talked about the global local position
Senior Class: meeting on Monday at unidentified time.
Junior Class: meets on Thursday, party on March 26, 2010. From 7-10.
OA: had a lot of applications, several proposed trips, keep proposing. Saturday afternoon is CPR.
Aesthetic committee: new benches will be for announcement painting purposes. (like walker wall)
New Dorms: got approved painting abilities.
Mead hall: is having some attendance issues, COME TO MEAD HALL COUNCIL.

WELCOME NEW SENATORS. Hazing ensues.
Senate Items
Sean motions to create an Ad-Hoc to reach out to the Senators that are not here this week and absent in previous weeks. Question if missing Senators are planning to resign or had alternative reasons for not showing up to Student Senate.
Sean, Nick, Megan, Liz, Charles, Marie Claire, Alex want to be on this proposed ad-hoc.
Megan recommends we reform senate. We talk about this collectively for 7 minutes.
Most people are looking to move forward, perchance by talking to the student body instead of just the senate. Megan recommends a Senate Retreat 4pm Thursday. Marie Claire recommends that we have the retreat next Sunday during senate.
Motion to add this lengthy discussion to the agenda next week. We ayed it.
Motion to only have this discussion at Senate next week. Approved. Abi will send out an e-mail asking students to solicit input on Senate, not on budget requests. This will include requesting agenda items.
Nick brings up the by-laws and the constitution and the ad-hoc to amend these. The biggest issue was with appointments and elections. We decide to not put this on the Agenda for next week.
Sean motions to put Marie Claire and Megan in charge of creating the agenda for next week. Motion passes.
THE END.
Expect an email about senate agenda for next week. Happy Valentine's Day Pitzer College. Stay Classy.

Constitutional Proposal Fails

From Secretary Buddy Bennett:

Dear Students,

While the results of other elections will be forthcoming this week, I am able to report on the status of the constitutional change on the ballot:

The proposed constitution was defeated by a margin of 330 to 148. There were between 510 and 487 votes (depending on how duplicate votes and other abnormalities are counted) in the election, although not all who participated in the election voted on the constitutional change.

Especially as these are unofficial results, I will not hesitate to express a few personal sentiments. Many students at Pitzer expect more from their student government, and came to Pitzer with hopes that have yet to be met. We are by no means back to where we started in the process of attempting to bridge the gap between our expectations and reality. I am truly impressed by the amount of energy and time that students have put into attempting to create this reality; and, I am proud to think that Pitzer is one of the few institutions where students make manifest their commitment to the school by attempting to make it reflect their wants. I hope that the attached essay (Student Essay - The Political History of Pitzer College, 1988) is pleasurable reading for those who have already invested so much in trying to meet expectation with reality.

Happy Travels,

--
Buddy Bennett
Pitzer College c/o 2011
Student Government Secretary

What Happened At Senate

200th post, and it's an important one.  Here's the timeline leading up to tonight.

  • 8 months ago, "the Vanguard" was elected to the Executive Board of Student Senate.
  • This Fall, they made 9 secret, illegal appointments to Senate positions.  By "secret" I mean that they were never announced to be senators during a meeting, not ratified via meeting minutes, and they were not listed anywhere public, except perhaps on a Senate attendance sheet.  By "illegal" I mean that the positions are constitutionally required to be filled by election.
  • In September Arthur Levine '13 was persuaded to run for First-year representative in order to vote "yes" on the constitutional proposal.  This election, which was botched and had to be redone, was the only election of the entire 2009-2010 school year.
  • Since the start of the school year, the Executive Board refused to elect senators to fill vacant seats and refused to hold elections for Judicial Council.
  • Since the start of the school year, the Executive Board willfully made a large number of Constitutional violations that would have promoted transparency, accountability, efficiency, environmental responsibility, and student participation.
  • On November 15, 2009, Senator Megan Dooley asked for approval of the creation of an ad hoc that would aim to fix constitutional issues and improve student government.  Chair Brian Orser refused its approval.
  • On November 22, 2009, a proposal was introduced for a new kind of governance system that would significantly decentralize power and create a once-a-month student assembly.  The meeting was well attended and a wide range of opinions on a new system were voiced.
  • For following two weeks, several "town hall meetings" were held under the guise of soliciting student input.  There was very little critical input on the proposal itself, and none of that "input" was ever incorporated into the document itself.
  • On December 2, 2009, Dean of Students Jim Marchant sent an email asking for Student Senate to get into compliance with its own Constitution by having elections to fill vacant senate positions and to legitimize the 9 positions that were illegally appointed.
  • On December 6, 2009, Chair Brian Orser began the Senate meeting by saying that Senate's legitimacy was called into question.  Later that meeting, an ad hoc committee was formed to address these issues, handpicked by Treasurer Christopher Wohlers.  Twice, other Senators were blocked from joining the committee.

Last night, Senate voted to "approve" the 9 students who were illegally appointed.  I strenuously objected, on the grounds that it would be completely unconstitutional, anti-democratic, and illegitimate to do so.  I also stated that it would set the precedent that the Executive Board can appoint students to elected positions whenever it wants to, with no recourse.  A member of the ad hoc committee, Nick Tagliarino '11, said that the approval of those students would be a one-time fix to an undesirable situation, and the committee wouldn't endorse it as setting a precedent.

The approval of those 9 students passed anyway, with those 9 students voting in that very decision.

Then discussion turned to the Constitutional proposal.  Senate Chair Brian Orser opened the discussion, and I was the only one to raise my hand.  I asked in the plainest terms: what are the main objectives of the document?  Why, specifically, is it superior to the operative Constitution?  Who wrote it?
Nick Tagliarino spoke up and "objected" to my questions on the grounds that they had been answered during the first meeting in which it was proposed, back in November.
Official document author Liana Schecter said, essentially, that we had already discussed those things.
And with that, discussion ended.

Brian Orser began to initiate the vote proceedings.  I spoke up and said it would be a good idea to calculate the number of affirmative votes needed before the vote started, to preempt a procedural conflict.  Because there are so many vacant positions, there are only 36 sitting senators, by the Chair's count.  Therefore Orser placed the number of affirmative votes needed at 25.  (36*.67=24.12 --> 25)

The Chair began the role call vote as Secretary Buddy Bennett kept a running tally of votes on the chalkboard.  When Jasper Kosokoff's name was called, an email that he had sent ahead of time was counted as an affirmative vote.  The same happened for Marie Claire Burt.  A few students objected to that on the basis that the 'email privilege' wasn't made available to everyone.  I spoke up and said that it was not pre-announced that the proposal would come to a vote tonight.  Eleanor Green immediately spoke up and read from a section Robert's Rules that stated that vote by mail was allowed.  Based on a liberal reading of Robert's Rules, those two votes-by-email were counted.

After the Chair finished the roll call, the tally stood at 24 to 7 (or 8, it's unclear to me).

Brian Orser then yielded his position as chair to Christopher Coughlin, who is the Trustee Investment Senator and does not have a vote.  Brian cast his vote in favor of the proposal to reach 25 affirmative votes.

That's how the Constitutional proposal passed.

Not through consensus building.   Not through persuasion.  Not through community organizing.

No elections.  No letter writing.  No petitions.   No protests.   No debates.   No hearings.

5 people got elected 8 months ago, and managed to destroy a student government from the inside in order to force through an unproven, untested document that nobody can explain well. It's an embarrassment.

The current group of people currently masquerading as Senators just destroyed the trust Pitzer College places in students to participate in College Governance.  And they proved nothing except this:  the idea they are pushing must be so bad that they had to cheat to "pass" the proposal.

New Version of Constitutional Proposal!!!

The Constitution of Pitzer College Student Government

Preamble

While we recognize that in the life of the College, We the students of Pitzer College are but passing through, we assert that from the moment we arrive, this academy and its campus become our home, our community, and the foundation of our relationship with the world.  We, the student-people of Pitzer College, establish a new Student Government, founded upon the principles of direct democracy, the collective process of creation, freedom and autonomy, and the continuation of a dynamic student history which creatively joins Pitzer's past and future.  Because the decisions of the College will proceed with or without us, we must organize ourselves into a collective body in order to work alongside faculty and staff in actively creating and directing the future of the College and our community.
We are not a collection of atomized individuals.  Rather, we are an ecological student community, exemplifying mutualism, deep inter-relationality, multiplicity and complementarity.  Recognizing this reality, that the development of one of us depends upon the development of all, we find it necessary to construct a space for the collective process of this communal development.

Statement of Summary and Intention

Article 1.  Statement of Relationship of Pitzer Student Government to Pitzer College Governance and to Other Student Governments

The students of Pitzer College recognize the Pitzer College Student Government as the official body responsible for the formation, protection and implementation of the rights, decisions, and interests of the student body.  Pitzer College Student Government is the student aspect of Pitzer College Governance.  The Pitzer Student Government will collaborate with other student governments to advance the interests of the Pitzer College student body.

Article 2.  Bill of Student Rights

The Bill of Student Rights is an articulation of the rights of Pitzer College students as individuals and as a community, and of the rights of student organizations and Student Government.  The Student Government will protect and uphold these rights against any encroachments.
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Structures of Government

Article 3.  The Office of Student Government

The Office of Student Government serves to coordinate, preserve and support Student Government, to support and unite student organizations, and to ensure and protect student participation in College Governance. The Officers will advocate for the rights, will, and decisions of the student body and Student Government, and will manage the Archives and Website of Student Government. The Officers will also support students and student groups in their interactions with the College Administration, and will facilitate the realization of students' demands.  The Officers will be five: the Convener, the Provost, the Archivist, the Web-Master, and the Financier.  As a sub-office, the Purse Strings is the primary resource for students seeking funding from institutional sources at Pitzer College.

Article 4.  The Assembly of Students

One student, one vote. Once a month, students will assemble at large, in order to discuss and address issues of the community and to steer the Student Government. The Assembly of Students will serve as the highest authority within Student Government and the heart of student action in College Governance. Relevant proposals which are approved by the Assembly will be placed on the College Council agenda. The Assembly of Students will choose two facilitators whose sole job is to ensure focus and fairness, and to draw out marginalized student voices. The Assembly of Students will reserve the right to recall and replace any elected student representation in Student Government.

Article 5. Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement

The  Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement serves to encourage and fund community initiatives and critical community engagement projects, and to foster art, music and creative free expression. The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will protect free expression and diverse community control of space on campus. The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will ensure that the policies and actions of the College support, encourage and allow for the free and full expression of a multiplicity of students.

Article 6. Academic Affairs Council

The Academic Affairs Council is charged with the development, articulation and coordination of a student agenda for the academy. The Council will be responsible for implementing this agenda through concerted cross-Committee action and for advocating for student interests in the academy.  This Council will discuss the ongoing considerations and decisions of College Governance and respond accordingly.

Article 7. Summit for Social Justice

The Summit for Social Justice  is a body which will facilitate collaboration between student groups engaged in a common struggle against interlocking systems of domination. The Summit recognizes that their respective social and political struggles are intimately intertwined and advocates for the active solidarity which emerges from this understanding.  The Summit will be a place for these organizations to recognize shared values and goals, take advantage of shared resources, collaborate, and acknowledge and discuss ideological consistencies and differences.  The Summit will engage in the construction of a statement of shared purpose, organize and collaborate in action, and empower and impassion each other.  The Summit will utilize funds for collaborative efforts between organizations.  The Summit will not necessarily be representative of the majority.

Article 8. Student Activities Committee

The Student Activities Committee is charged with the health and wealth of campus social life.  The Committee will fund both Five College and Pitzer social events.

Article 9. Hall Councils

The Hall Councils are the autonomous student governance bodies which aim to construct an ideal dorm life for the student residents. The Hall Council is a space in which the residents of a dormitory will govern residence life by protecting students' rights, administering dorm art policy, overseeing Residence Life policy and its implementation, and encouraging community through art, music and happenings. The Hall Council will work with staff of the college to ensure the health and saftey of their community.  The Hall Council will defend the freedom of the students to decide how they will conduct their lives and use the Residence Hall and their individual residences as their own homes.

Article 10. Student Organizations

Student organizations are recognized student groups which have coalesced around a particular statement of intention. These organizations will be responsible to fulfill the missions laid out in their charters and will participate variously in the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement, the Academic Affairs Council, and the Summit for Social Justice .

Article 11. College Government

Pitzer College has a unique governance structure which integrates Students, Faculty, and Staff into a collective college governance process.  Pitzer Student Government is an autonomous body which fulfills the student aspect of College Governance.  The chief deliberative governance body of the college community is College Council.  Pitzer students are full and equal participants in College Council and College Committees.
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Operations of Student Government

Article 12. Rules and Responsibilities of Membership

Members of the bodies of Student Government will advocate for the rights, needs and decisions of the student body, within and without the structures of College Governance and with the Administration of the College. While an individual cannot and should not attempt to objectively represent the views of the student body at large, the member should attempt to engage the student community on every issue.  Members will fully participate in College Governance toward the same end.

Article 13.  Community Representation

Community Representatives will be elected by and for particular constituencies within the student body.

Article 14.  Elections, Appointments & Recall

All elected members of student government will be nominated within the Assembly of Students.  Positions of special interest will be elected through a ballot.    All elected members of Student Government may be recalled by the Assembly of Students.  Special elections will be held for Officer and Committee positions if vacated and in the case of recall.

Article 15. Budgeting

The Student Government will budget the Student Activities Fees.  At the end of the Spring semester, the Assembly of Students will construct the following year’s annual budget, allocating funds to student organizations, the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement, the Summit for Social Justice , Student Activities Committee and the Office of Student Government.  Funding will be allocated according to the priorities and values of the student body, considering the ways in which funds have been best used to enrich the community in the past.

Article 16. Amending the Constitution

The community’s relationship to Student Government will necessarily change over time.  As such, a continual reexamination of the Constitution of Pitzer College Student Government will allow for the continued health and relevance of the Student Government.  All amendments to the Constitution will be discussed and voted on by the Assembly of Students; amendments will also be put to a student-wide vote.

The Constitution of Pitzer College Student Government

Article 1.  Statement of Relationship of Pitzer College Student Government to Pitzer College Governance and to the Community

1.1 The students of Pitzer College recognize the Pitzer College Student Government as the official body responsible to construct full and meaningful student participation in all college governance decisions; to actively ensure that these college governance decisions are open, democratic, and transparent; to advocate for the full implementation and protection of the Bill of Student Rights and the rights and interests of the student as a full and autonomous member of the College community; to facilitate and create discourse on college governance and pressing community issues; to provide services to students; and to fund, support and create student organizations and initiatives.

Article 2.  Bill of Student Rights

2.1 The Bill of Student Rights will be written and established at the first meeting of the Assembly of Students.
2.2 Additional amendments to the Bill of Student Rights will be established in the same manner as other constitutional amendments.
2.3 Upon approval of the Bill, this Article will be replaced with the Bill of Student Rights.
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Structures of Student Government

Article 3.  The Office of Student Government

3.1  From the Void sprang the Office of Student Government.
3.2 The Office of Student Government shall be the administrative and coordinative body within the Student Government.
3.3 Five Officers of Student Government will serve: Convener, Provost, Archivist, Web-Master, and Financier.
3.4 The duties of the Office of Student Government shall be:
a) To coordinate the structures of Student Government.
b) To ensure the integration of the Student Government into College Governance.
c) To maintain the membership, history, records and website of Student Government.
d) To coordinate and facilitate the elections and appointments of student representation in College Governance.
e) To report to the Assembly regarding the Officers' activities, the specifics and significance of their actions.
f) To hold weekly office hours for the student body.
g) To appoint eligible students to College Ad Hoc Committees.
h) To administer, to all of these ends, the Administrative Fund monies (See Article X, Budget).
3.5 The duties of each Officer of Student Government are as follows:
a) Convener (President): To coordinate communication between the various bodies of Student and College Government; to serve as the Student Government liaison to the College Council agenda planning meeting (Bylaws Article 2, Section 2.5) and other bodies of College Governance; to meet weekly with the President of the College (in conjunction with the Provost);, to actively pursue the implementation of all Student Government decisions; to attend the Assembly of Students; and to attend Student Government meetings.
b) Provost (President): To serve on the Budgetary Implementation Committee and the Trustee Budget Committee as an advocate in budgetary decisions which are in accordance with Pitzer's Core Values of Social Responsibility, Community, and Action, and which meet the needs of the student body; to advocate for the interests and decisions of the student body; to meet weekly with the President of the College (in conjunction with the Convener); to defend the rights of the Pitzer student, as defined in the Bill of Student Rights, the Faculty Handbook, and the Student Handbook; to advocate for the continued equal and directive participation of the student body in all decisions of the College; and to attend Student Government meetings.
c) Archivist (Secretary): To actively update and maintain the Archives of Student Government; and to ensure, in conjunction with the Web-Master, that the Archives will be hosted in full on the Student Government website.
d) Web-Master (Communications Director): To maintain and update the Student Government website; to announce in a 'College Committee Digest' email each weekend the meeting times and locations of all College Committees for the following week; to announce, via e-mail, at least two days prior, the meetings of the Academic Affairs Council, the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement, Summit for Social Justice , Town Hall meetings, Assembly of Students, College Council, and special College Governance meetings.
e) Financier : To coordinate the Student Government monies, budgetary processes and Budgetary Bylaws; to process budgetary documents and compile information on the state of the budget.
3.6 The Office of Student Government shall have a dedicated office space, where the Officers of Student Government will hold their office hours and where the Archives of Student Government will be stored.
3.7 The Officers will meet at least weekly in order to effectively carry out their duties.
3.8 The Archives of Student Government will be managed by the Archivist, and each year will be continuously updated with: College Council Committee minutes, bylaws, reports, and supporting documents; College Council minutes, agenda, supporting documents; Strategic Planning documents; Master Plan and Residential Planning documents; Faculty Handbook; Student Handbook; the annual Budget of the College; the annual Budget of the Student Government; minutes from all Student Government Councils; minutes from every Pitzer student club and organization; documentation of every Student Government Forum; and a running list of every decision made by every College Governance body, with summary.
3.9 The Purse-Strings shall be the guiding and coordinating body for facilitating student access to the Student Government monies.
a) Six members will serve on the Purse-Strings: the Financier, the Class Representatives, and the New Resources Representative.
b) The Purse-Strings shall collaboratively guide any student seeking funds on campus. The members of the Purse-Strings shall make constructive recommendations to the funding seeker for the improvement of the request and direct the seeker to the appropriate bodies from which to seek money.
c) All funding proposals directed towards the Assembly of Students or Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement must be created in consulataion with the Purse-Strings.
d) The Purse-Strings shall hold accessible office hours in the office of the Student Government during which time the Purse-Strings shall meet with all seekers.
e) The processes and policies of the Purse-Strings shall be set out and determined by the Budgetary Bylaws.
3.10 Ambassadors of the Student Government of Pitzer College may be appointed by the Office of Student Government to serve at any school as liasons.
a) The Office has the right to appoint an ambassador from within the student body of Pitzer College to the student governments of the other members of the Claremont Consortium.
b) The role of the ambassadors will be to facilitate dialogue on issues of shared concern; to convey the messages, actions and requests of the Student Government; and to spread the spirit and values of the Pitzer College student body. All ambassadors will report to the Convenor and may be called to report to the Assembly upon the request of the Assembly.

Article 4.  The Assembly of Students

4.1 Once a month, students will assemble at large, in order to discuss and address issues of the community and to steer the Student Government. The Assembly of Students will serve as the highest authority within Student Government.  The Assembly of Students will reserve the right to recall any person elected by that body throughout the year as detailed in the Process of Assembly.
4.2  Stewards: The Stewards of the Assembly will be charged with the health and continuation of the Assembly of Students, each with the responsibility of encouraging the greatest possible participation of the student body. The Stewards will consist of: two Facilitators, two Historians, one Legislator, and one Town-Crier.
4.3 The duties of each Steward are as follows:
a) Facilitators: To run the Assembly according to the Process of Assembly; to facilitate a democratic and consensus-oriented process of community dialogue and decision-making; and to publicize the Assembly widely and thoroughly at least a week in advance of its meeting.  No more than one facilitator may be a man.
b) Historians: Each to record a complete narrative of the Assembly meeting, summarizing and attributing points articulated, capturing the flow of the meeting, noting decisions made and controversies, and to give these narratives to the Web-Master.
c) Legislator: To act in the Assembly as the authority on the Process of Assembly and on Student and College Governance; to solicit proposals for the Agenda via email; to assemble the Agenda of the Assembly prior to its meeting; and to record the official decisions of the assembly.
d) Town-Crier: To creatively and prominently announce the coming of the Assembly in the days prior to its meeting; to loudly announce the coming of the Assembly while ringing the Bell of Assembly through all campus residence halls and common space in the hour before the Assembly meeting;
4.4 A special Assembly of Students may be called by the Office of Student Government, the Stewards of the Assembly, or the Assembly of Students. A special Assembly may not be called less than 36 hours in advance.
4.5 College Council: Every decision of the Assembly which concerns the community as a whole, or which is dependent upon the cooperation of the Administration of the College, will be placed on the upcoming College Council agenda by the Student Government Convener. The Convener of the Student Government will relay these agenda items to the College Council Planning Committee.
4.6 Proposals: A proposal will be considered by the Assembly only once the proponent has discussed the issue with  enough students to gather six signatures of support. The proponent will then bring the proposal to the relevant Student Government Council for discussion, advice and support. The proponent will submit the proposal to the Legislator of the Assembly at least two days prior to the Assembly. Email notification will be sent, by the proponent, to the student body about the proposal prior to the Assembly.
4.7 Student Assembly Report: The Student Government Archivist will collate a document, the Student Assembly Report, which will contain: a report from the student members of each College Committee (Standing and Ad Hoc), a report from each Officer of Student Government, a report from each Hall Council, a report from each Council of Student Government, the proposed Agenda of the Assembly, the text of the proposals to be considered, and any relevant documents. Before the Assembly the Student Assembly Report will be sent to the student body. At the beginning of the Assembly, the Student Assembly Report will be available in paper format. At any time during the Assembly, an oral presentation of any of the reports in the Assembly Report can be requested.
4.8 Club Charters: The Assembly will consider for approval the charters of Pitzer clubs seeking official recognition.
4.9 Voting: Every Pitzer College student has a vote on the Assembly. The voting will take place as outlined in the Process of the Assembly.
4.10 The student governments of Claremont Graduate University, Claremont McKenna College, Harvey Mudd College, Pomona College and Scripps College may select a student of their respective schools to be a voting ambassador to the Assembly of Students.

Article 5. Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement

5.1  The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement is charged with protecting, facilitating and invigorating the life of the student community.
5.2  The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will meet at least weekly.
a)  The weekly meeting will provide a space in which students can report on and coordinate the activities, project, and agenda of their respective groups, committees, and organizations.
5.3  The composition of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement is as follows:
a)  The following students are voting members of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement:  members of Campus Life Committee, all but one member of Campus Aesthetics Committee, one member of Diversity Committee, the 5 College Social Chair, the Student Activities Committee Representative, each Class Representative, the New Resources Representative, the Transfer Representative, the Off-Campus Representative and the International Representative.  The one member of Campus Aesthetics Committee who is not a voting member of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will be a voting member of the Academic Affairs Council.  This member will be chosen from among the student members of the Campus Aesthetics Committee by the student members of the Campus Aesthetics Committee.
b)  All students are invited and encouraged to attend as full participants, but are non-voting members in the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement.
c)  Non-students may attend as non-voting members whose participation is contigent upon the will of the student members of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement.
d) The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement shall have the option, to be decided by majority vote, to hold a 'special meeting' in which only students or only Pitzer students may attend.
5.4  The student members will elect the officers of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement.
a)  One student member will be elected by the other members to act as facilitator and convener of each meeting of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement.  This student will ensure that meetings of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement are open, accessible, and well-publicized to the student body.  As convener and facilitator this student will ensure the meeting of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement and the faithful attendance of all members to its mission.
b)  One student member will be elected by the other members to act as secretary at each meeting of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement.  The secretary will render complete minutes of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement to the Archivist of the Offices of Student Government.
5.5  The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will administer the monies of the discretionary fund of Student Government. Five College funding is to be administered solely through Student Activities Committee (Art. 8).
5.6 The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will create a full voting representative member for each organization they have identified to be central to life of the community.
5.7  The Bylaws of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement:  The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will establish its own bylaws.  The bylaws of the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement will concern but not be limited to: elections, quorum, establishment of regular meeting time and place, special meetings, membership, eligibility of membership, responsibilities, powers and duties of membership, attendance, recall for removal in the Assembly of Students, budgetary bylaws, voting and rules of order.

Article 6. Academic Affairs Council

6.1  The Academic Affairs Council is charged with coordinating a student agenda on academic issues, and advocating for student interests in the academy.
6.2  The Council will meet at least once every two weeks.
6.3  The composition of the Council is as follows:
a)  Student members on the following committees are full-time voting members whose attendance is necessary for the proper functioning of the Council:  Diversity, Academic Planning Committee, Appointments, Promotions, and Tenure, Faculty Executive Committee, Academic Standards Committee, Trustee Investment Representative, Teaching and Learning Committee, Curriculum Committee, and External Studies Committee.
b)  All students are invited and encouraged to attend as full participants, but non-voting members in the Council.
c)  Non-student members of the Pitzer community may attend as non-voting members whose participation is contigent upon the will of the student members of the Council.
d)  The Council shall have the option, to be decided by majority vote, to hold a 'special meeting' in which only students or only Pitzer students may attend.
6.4  The student members will elect the officers of the Council.
a)  One student member will be elected by the other members to act as facilitator and convener of each meeting of the Council.  This student will ensure that meetings of the Council are open, accessible, and well-publicized to the student body.  As convener and facilitator this student will ensure the meeting of the Council and the faithful attendance of all members to its mission.
b)  One student member will be elected by the other members to act as secretary at each meeting of the Council.  The secretary will render complete minutes of the Council to the Archivist of the Offices of Student Government.
6.5    The Bylaws of the Academic Affairs Council:  The Council will establish its own bylaws.  The bylaws of the Council will concern but not be limited to: elections, quorum, establishment of regular meeting time and place, special meetings, membership, eligibility of membership, responsibilities powers and duties of membership, attendance, recall for removal in the Assembly of Students, budgetary bylaws, and rules of order.

Article 7. Summit for Social Justice

7.1  The Summit for Social Justice  will be an autonomous body with a large degree of self-determination.
7.2  The Summit for Social Justice  will consist of representation from political and activist oriented organizations on campus.
7.3  The Summit for Social Justice  will meet at least monthly.
7.4  The budget of the Summit will be utilized solely for collaborative efforts between member organizations.
7.5  The Summit will elect a Convener and a Secretary at the beginning of each semester.
7.6  The Summit will work together to organize a conference, at least annually, on a specific topic of social, political, economic, or environmental justice and activism.  This conference will aim to address the topic from a multitude of perspectives.
7.7  Eligibility will be determined as follows:
a) Any Pitzer or Five College organization may bring an application for admission to the Summit.
b)  All applications for admission will be considered and voted on by the Summit.
c)  Active Pitzer clubs will have continuous membership into the next year.
d)  Five College clubs with a plurality of Pitzer student members will have continuous membership into the next year.
e)  Five College clubs without a plurality of Pitzer student members must reapply for membership at the beginning of each school year, with the criterion that these organizations share in the values of the Summit’s mission, that these organizations have an active presence within the Pitzer community and that the Pitzer community has an active presence within the organization.
7.8    Each member organization has one vote.
7.9    All students are welcome to attend Summit meetings as non-voting participants.
7.10  Non-student persons are welcome to attend Summit meetings with the permission    of the Summit.
7.11  The Bylaws of the Summit for Social Justice :  The Summit will establish   its own bylaws.  The bylaws of the Summit will concern but not be limited to: elections, quorum, establishment of regular meeting time and place, special meetings, membership, eligibility of membership, responsibilities powers and duties of membership, attendance, recall for removal in the Assembly of Students, budgetary bylaws, voting and rules of order.

Article 8. Student Activities Committe

8.1  The Student Activities Committee will administer funds to Five College social events and campus social events and will foster and encourage student art, music, performance, expression, and enjoyment.
8.2  The membership of the Student Activities Committee is as follows:  Class Representatives, Student Activities Committee Chair, Five College Social Chair, Student Activities Committee Representative, and any student who attends two meetings of Student Activities Committee.
8.3  The Student Activities Committee will establish its own bylaws.  The bylaws of the Committee will concern but not be limited to: elections, quorum, establishment of regular meeting time and place, special meetings, membership, eligibility of membership, responsibilities powers and duties of membership, attendance, recall for removal by the Assembly of Students, budgetary bylaws and rules of order.

Article 9. Hall Councils

9.1 Hall Councils serve to maintain, build and enliven the life of the residence halls and to discuss Residence Life policy and to oversee its implementation.
9.2 The Hall Councils administer their budgeted funds to this end.
9.3 The Hall Council is responsible to facilitate and advocate for artistic engagement with the built environment (e.g. painting, sculpture, installations, etc.). To this end, the Hall Council will write and maintain its own policies and procedures for art, interior and exterior, and display these prominently in the community (See the Pitzer College Outdoor Art Policy).
9.4 The Hall Council will oversee and maintain the common areas of the residence hall (e.g. kitchen, living rooms, rooftop patios, courtyards, etc).
9.5 The Hall Council will write and maintain a constitution which will govern its operations, and which will be published each semester.
9.6 Membership: All student residents of a residence hall are voting members of the Hall Council.

Article 10. Student Organizations

10.1 Student organized and managed groups may come to the Assembly of Students to present their charter and intention, and gain the approval of the Student Government as a recognized student organization.
10.2 Recognized student organizations may seek one-time funding through all available Student Government funding sources and annual funding within the budget of Student Government.
10.3 Recognized organizations will hold open, democratic meetings, and will send meeting minutes to the Archivist.
10.4 Student Cooperatives: Student Cooperatives are vital to the life of the community and the health of the College. A Student Cooperative is a democratic, student-run enterprise, providing a function or service which addresses a need of the community. The Student Government shall be committed to advocating for and supporting the creation of student-run cooperatives. The Assembly of Students will hear proposals for new student cooperatives, offering comment, support, advocacy, and initial funding.
10.4  Student organizations have certain entitlements.
a)  Student organizations have access to assistance from the Office of Student Affairs and the Office of Public Relations.
b)  Student organizations have official and public association with Pitzer College.

Article 11. College Governance

11.1 College Council Meeting: College Council is the deliberative governance body of the college community.
a) Students will constitute no less than one third of the votes in a College Council meeting.
b) The Convener of the Student Government will relay to the College Council Agenda Planning Meeting every decision of Student Government which concerns the community as a whole, or which is dependent on the cooperation of the Administration of the College.
c) The Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement, the Academic Affairs Council, and the Summit for an Egalatarian Society may also independently resolve to place an item on the College Council agenda.
11.2 Standing Committees of College Council and Other College Standing Committees:
a) The student members of standing College Council committees are elected by the Assembly.
11.3 Ad Hoc Committees: The student members of Ad Hoc Committees of College Council will be nominated by the Officers of Student Government and approved by a majority vote of either the Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement or the Academic Affairs Council according to relevance.
11.4 Trustee Committees:
a) The Convener will sit on the Trustee Student Life Committee and the Trustee Education Committee.
b) The Provost will sit on the Trustee Budget Committee and the Trustee Audit Committee.
c) A student will serve as representative to the Trustee Investment Committee.
11.5 Judicial Council representatives will be nominated in the Assembly of Students and elected by the entire student body as defined by the Election Bylaws.
__________________
Operations of Student Government

Article 12. Membership and Its Responsibilities

12.1 No student may serve on more than one College Standing Committee at a time.
12.2 Students may serve on College Ad Hoc and College Standing Committees simultaneously.
12.3 Students may serve in multiple Student and College Government positions, unless specifically prohibited.
12.4 The Officers of Student Government may not simultaneously serve as Stewards of the Assembly of Students.
12.5 The Convener, Provost, and Financier may not be elected or appointed to any other position in Student Government.
12.6  Any member of Student Government wishing to resign from their position must tender their resignation to the Assembly of Students for its acceptance.  The resignation will be an item on the agenda.  The Assembly must seek a replacement for the post immediately upon the acceptance of resignation.

Article 13.  Community Representation

13.1 Community Representatives will be nominated in the Assembly of Students and elected as defined by the Election Bylaws.
13.2 The Community Representatives shall be: Transfer Representative, International Representative, Environmental Representative, New Resources Representative, First Year Representative, Sophomore Representative, Junior Representative and Senior Representative.
13.3 The Community Representatives will be voting members of Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement.

Article 14. Elections, Appointments & Recall

14.1 Student members of standing Committees of College Council, the 5-C Social Chair will be nominated and elected in the Election Assembly. One third of the body may vote to send the election of a particular committee representative position to a campus-wide election.
14.2 Student members of ad hoc Committees of College Council will be nominated by the Officers of Student Government, and these nominations will be sent for a vote of confirmation in the relevant Council.
14.3 Facilitators and secretaries of the Council, Pitzer Endowment for the Arts and Community Engagement, and Summit will be chosen internally.
14.4 Recall: Any person elected by the Assembly may be recalled and replaced by the Assembly. The replacement will be made in an election in the Assembly, except in the case of the Officers, who must be replaced by Assembly nomination and campus-wide election.
14.5 Recall due to lack of attendance: The Chairs of College Council Standing Committees shall notify the Legislator and the Office of Student Government of significant lack of attendance by a student representative. The Legislator will place an item of recall and replacement on the agenda of the Assembly of Students, and will publicize the need for replacement. The recalled representative may address the Assembly in his or her own defense, and may run in the election to fill the position thus vacated.
14.6 Election Assembly: The March and December Assemblies of Students will be split between regular business and a special Election Assembly. The March Election Assembly will nominate and elect students to fill all positions in Student Government for the coming year. The December Assembly will nominate and elect students to fill positions to be vacated by students not returning for Spring semester. Students will nominate candidates for representation to Standing Committees of College Council and the Officers of Student Government. Elections for the representation to Standing Committees of College Council will be held in the Election Assembly. Elections for the Officers will be held in campus-wide ballot. Both elections and nominations are governed by the Election Guidelines and the Process of Assembly.

Article 15. Budgeting

15.1 The Annual Budget of Student Government will be decided in a special budget assembly which will occur as one section of the April Assembly of Students.  Budgeting will be conducted as described in the Process of Assembly.
15.2 Funding will be distributed according to the Budgetary Bylaws.
a) Funding will be allocated according to the priorities and values of the student body, considering past ways in which funds have best been used to enrich the community.
Article 16. Amending the Constitution
16.1 An amendment will be brought to two meetings of the Assembly of Students, first for a discussion and alteration, and again for discussion, alteration, and submission for a two thirds vote. A student-wide ballot must approve the amendment by simple majority.

Well Hello There, Port Side

Jonathan Hirsch of The Port Side gives me a sense of what this whole Senate debacle looks like to an outside observer [blogger's emphasis supplied]:

Jasper [...] has spent a considerable amount of time recounting the shenanigans of Pitzer’s student government, led by the so-called “Vanguard.” According to Jasper, there is a proposal to essentially rewrite the Pitzer Student Government Constitution currently being debated. [...] If adopted, I would lose respect for Pitzer’s student body and I assume that any prospective student who was searching the Pitzer student government site would too. Below are some of the highlights. I’ll try to refrain from commentary. The ridiculousness speaks for itself.

To be honest, there are a lot of "shenanigans" that I haven't yet (un?)covered in this space.  It became very difficult when I was often personally involved in dealing with Senate stuff while being a first-year mentor, studying for the LSAT, and trying not to fail out of school.  Topics include:

  • The Judicial Council debacle, in which the Vanguard attempted to make secret appointments to the college's judicial committee.
  • The Vanguard's many secret, unconstitutional appointments to Student Senate.
  • Dean of Students Jim Marchant's email that called for Student Senate to start following its own Constitution.
  • Senate Chair Brian Orser's call for a College Council meeting, which was smacked down by President Laura Trombley.
  • An open discussion which explored implementing the ideas contained in the new Constitutional proposal through a series of less disruptive Constitutional amendments (led by your humble blogger)
  • Senate Chair Brian Orser's second call for a College Council meeting, which nobody ever canceled (or showed up to).
  • Senate Chair Brian Orser's dramatic monologue during the semester's final Student Senate meeting, saying that he wasn't sure if there was a legitimate Student Senate.
  • My thoughts on Arthur Levine's resignation.

I hope to have these episodes detailed before the start of the spring semester.  Thanks for reading, Jonathan, but it's only going to get weirder.  Stay tuned.

Constitutional History

This has been a busy and difficult week for me and I haven't written anything in this space since the Sunday night Senate meeting; apologies to those who were depending on PUnc for breaking news.

This debate has many different primary and secondary issues, so I am going way back to the beginning.  Since the new proposal, assertions have been made and questions have been asked about both the existing and proposed Constitutions.  Here is my account of the most recent amendment

Last fall, I served on Senate Executive Board.  During the course of the year, I noticed that during meetings and other discussions, the Constitution was hindering progress rather than guiding it.  It was confusingly written and included structures that we didn't use anymore.  In my capacity as Communications Secretary, I wanted to improve communication about the functions of our government.

So when somebody stood me up for a meeting at the Motley, I ordered a cup of something hot, opened up my laptop, and settled in for the evening.  The first thing I did was add a table of contents.  Then I fixed the typos. But in the course of reading through the whole thing,

I realized that it would need a more serious revision.

At 2:38 pm on November 22, 2008, I sent out an email to all Senators with my working draft.  In that email I described it as "My own little ongoing project of getting our Constitution to actually describe how Senate works."

During the next days and weeks, I solicited input from every senator via email.  5 new senators had just been appointed and elected, and I made sure to email them too.  I held meetings anyone who asked to meet with me, and solicited the input of people directly involved with sections of the Constitution that I felt required expansion:

I asked sitting Senate Chair Shatara Ford '09 for her input on the Teaching and Learning Committee.  I met with Asia Bennett '11 over lunch in McConnell.  I met with Daniela Kronenberg '11 to improve the section on the Student Activities Committee.  I met with Nicole Scheunemann '10 to codify the Environmental Senator position.  Jesse Meisler-Abramson '11 pointed out several typos that I subsequently fixed.  Sitting Treasurer Carter Rubin '09 walked me through the budgetary processes he had become expert at, and we worked together to improve the Budget and Finance Article.  Sean Sullivan '10 and I met at least 3 times to discuss the best mechanisms for increasing senator accountability.

I also wanted to give Student Senate a clearer purpose.  So I set about writing a preamble that I hoped would clarify our goals as an assembly of students.  On December 1, 2008, I distributed an early draft of the following paragraph to all senators and asked for help with it [current emphasis supplied]:

The Pitzer College Student Senate is hereby recognized by Pitzer College students as the official body for protecting student rights and interests, facilitating student participation in College policy-making, increasing the quality of students’ educational and academic experience, upholding the core values of the College in all areas of student life, facilitating communication between students and faculty, staff, and bureaucratic organizations, recognizing and funding student organizations, representing the student body in College Council meetings and all official college business, and striving to improve the welfare of students.

On December 7, 2008, I got on the meeting agenda and opened up the draft to the Senate floor.  I explained my original intentions and invited input from everyone who was there.  On the same day, I sent the proposal to student-talk and asked for comments or input.  I got a lot of positive responses from students who weren't on Senate but appreciated an improved student government.

On December 14, 2008, Senate had what would prove to be its final discussion of the document.  I elaborated on the sections that were more significantly expanded upon, and answered all questions asked. During the meeting there was a thorough discussion. A few senators voiced their concerns about one aspect of the proposal, which were incorporated into the terminal version.  It was approved with overwhelming support. A few months later, the Constitution was approved by the Student Body via ballot.

Why should you care about any of this?

There are two things that I want you to take away from this post:

1.  I'm proud of the work I did last fall, but it's not "Amy Jasper's Constitution".  I don't think of it that way and you shouldn't, either.  The Constitution I revised had been continuously adapting and changing for 15 years ((according to Senate Chair Brian Orser, who seemed to have special knowledge of it at last Sunday's Senate meeting)).   Every single senator and student had the opportunity to contribute to the discussion.  Many people did contribute and I incorporated their changes.

2.  The changes I made were not controversial: the structure and operating procedures of our governance system were barely tweaked.  Yet it still took weeks of collaboration, and months until the Student Body approved the update.  I didn't impose a deadline on the project because I felt that these things deserve time and careful consideration.

After Thanksgiving break I look forward to engaging with the text of the new proposal, but right now the number one thing I worry about is this proposal getting pushed through prematurely, with disastrous results.  The proposal on the table entails TOTAL demolition of current governance structures. That's cool with me- I think it's clear to everyone that Student Governance needs reform.  But--

There is a lot at stake:  Let's go slowly, and let's go together.

Constitutions, Continued

From the existing Constitution (the one we took months to vet and that was approved by the student body).  My emphasis supplied:

ARTICLE IX. CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT.
Section 1. Notice.
Amendments must be discussed during at least two separate full Student Senate Meetings. Proposed amendments must be distributed to each member of Student Senate at least 36 hours before official discussion and proposal.

Communications Secretary Leah Kahn released the Senate agenda email to the list-serv at 7:18 am on Saturday morning.  She then sent the email distributing the actual amendment at 8:19 am.  [quote]

Its subject line was "oops!" and it contained the message "Oops! I forgot to attach this."

I don't believe for one damn second that Leah actually forgot to include the attachment of the biggest change to Pitzer student governance structure in 25 years.  (Does anybody?)

The only conclusion we can come to is that the authors of the amendment weren't ready to send it on time.

If the group of people who wrote this amendment didn't even finish writing it until after 6:30 am on Saturday, how can we be expected to read it, process it, analyze it, discuss it, debate it, and improve it?

Now that we are faced with a new Constitutional proposal, one with almost 6,000 words, 35 different sections, and little resemblance to existing structures at Pitzer or any other liberal arts college of which I'm aware, my only hope that we can give it the consideration it requires.

If the Amendment is pushed through before Winter Break:

IT.  WILL.  FAIL.

ConstitutionWatch: Accountability

#1: 1st Year Election is Unconstitutional.
#2: Student Senate Crossed the Line. - 13 Student Senators speak for all students of Pitzer College by approving a purely political statement.
#3: The failure of Treasurer Chris Wohlers to maintain and publicize budgetary bylaws.
#4: The failure to elect an Environmental Senator.

#5: Accountability:

From the Constitution:

Article III, Section 5. Attendance.
a. The Executive Board shall define and publicize the requirements for an excused absence at the first Student Senate meeting of every academic semester.
b. Any Student Senate member who accrues more than two unexcused absences per semester must immediately be replaced by a student appointed by the Executive Board unless a motion to preserve their membership is approved by a two thirds majority of Student Senate.  The senator in question may not vote on this motion.

The Executive Board never defined what counts as an "excused absence", during the first meeting or any other.  This is significant because now we have no standard for judging what excuses given for absences are legitimate, and which shouldn't be accepted.  (If the Executive Board had said during the first meeting (or any other) that "excused absences" will only be granted in the case of a personal or family emergency, that is a lot different than setting the standard at allowing excused absences for being stressed out or hungover.)

As a result, it leaves the door open for Senators to NEVER show up to a Senate meeting.  This is exacerbated by the fact that Executive Board Secretary Buddy Bennett admitted at the last Senate meeting that he doesn't do a good job taking attendance.

I'm not even advocating that we take a "harsh stance" on absences.  I understand that sometimes going to Sunday night meetings is draining.  But, as a non-voting regular student, I want someone making sure my representatives SHOW UP or have a good reason why not.  It's a discussion we should have had a long time ago.

ConstitutionWatch: Environmental Senator

Since the start of the semester I've written a few times on the unconstitutional actions of the Senate Executive Board, and sometimes Senate itself, namely in the #1: first-year rep election, #2: the irrelevant, politically motivated IMF resolution, and #3: the failure of Treasurer Chris Wohlers to maintain and publicize budgetary bylaws.   As a result of Exec Board's recent refusal to approve the creation of an ad hoc committee on the Constitution, I took a closer look at the document in question:  There are even more violations of the Constitution than I originally thought.

I don't know why the Vanguard refuses to adhere to a document that was, I believe, approved by more people than elected any one of them.  Laziness?  Subterfuge?  Incompetence?  Disregard for the will of Pitzer students?  It's still unclear.

Violation #4:  No Environmental Senator.

Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution states:

The Environmental Senator shall be elected at the beginning of each academic year. The Environmental Senator is charged with representing the interests of environmental health and sustainability of the College, reporting on the environmental impact of the College, acting as a liaison between the EcoCenter and Student Senate, and participating in any College governance committees relating to sustainability.

Currently there is no Environmental Senator on Student Senate.  Aren't we concerned about sustainability?

Ad Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc: The Vanguard Suppresses Progress

Yesterday's Student Senate meeting was marked by one of the strangest acts of inaction I've ever come across.  According to Senior Class Representative Megan Dooley '10: despite the direct requests of several senators, Senate Chair Brian Orser refused to create an ad hoc committee on the Senate Constitution.

(For those readers who are rusty on their Latin: ad hoc committees are created to address a specific problem or issue.  It's like a special task force.  In the context of Student Senate, officially recognized ad hoc committees have a specific purpose, regular and public meetings, and make regular reports to the Senate body on Sunday nights.)

Back to Sunday night:  I wasn't at the meeting personally, but according to several senators present, during New and Old Business, Megan requested that Brian approve an ad hoc committee to discuss Constitutional issues.  (Earlier that meeting, various aspects of the Constitution had been discussed.)  Brian refused, and apparently some of the other Executive Board members appeared visibly uncomfortable at the suggestion.  Brian explained that he wanted to wait until next meeting, when there would be more students present.  Megan asked him to approve it anyway, so they could get started in their discussion and have something to present in future meetings.  Again, Brian refused.

In my 3 years at Pitzer and 3 semesters of Senate experience, I have never before never encountered a refusal to create an ad hoc. Why would anybody refuse to recognize one?  As written in the current Constitution, it is the Chair's duty to create ad hocs:

Section 2. Powers and Duties.

The members of Executive Board shall have the following duties:

a. Chair
i.  To act as the official representative of the Pitzer Student Body.

...

vii.  To create ad hoc committees.

The Student Senate Constitution has a long proud history of student amendment:  As early as March 2008, I worked with, among others, Matt Kane '08, and Sean Sullivan '10, and Charles Butler '10 as part of the Constitutional Ad Hoc committee (remember that, guys?  Good times.)  We announced got together on Sundays at 5:30 in McConnell, we had some good discussions, proposed some amendments to the Senate body, and actually got them approved and implemented.

That is how lasting change is made.  You state your ideas upfront, you open it up to the community for adaptation and improvement, and if it's a good idea, it sticks.

Why is this Executive Board attempting to suppress community discussion?

I don't get it.

Student Senate Crossed the Line.

Last Sunday's Student Senate failed at their duties to uphold the Senate Constitution, to represent Pitzer College students, and to uphold the core values of Pitzer College.

Here's what happened:

Secretary Buddy Bennett sent out the meeting agenda, including an item number 6: "Resolution to show solidarity with those in Istanbul protesting the IMF". The text of the resolution was omitted, as was the sponsor of the resolution.

During the meeting, Appointment, Promotions, and Tenure Senator Lianna Schechter '10 briefly explained the text of the resolution, which was projected on the south wall of the Founder's Room [my emphasis supplied]:

The Student Senate of Pitzer College expresses its full solidarity with the resistance to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank occurring during their joint meeting in Istanbul on October 6th and 7th.

The Student Senate of Pitzer College affirms that communities must have democratic control of their governance. The IMF and World Bank are undemocratic and unaccountable institutions that govern communities worldwide through economic control. Therefore, efforts to alter these institutions are necessary.

The Student Senate of Pitzer College supports all those who strive for the ideals of direct democracy in all aspects of society, and specifically efforts to positively alter the economic system of the IMF and World Bank.

(The very latest on the conflict is here and here; background here.)

At first, senators in the room questioned whether this issue fell under Senate's jurisdiction, but Acting Chair Paul Waters-Smith said, out of turn, "we should be engaging in political issues".  (I have to take a moment here to object to Paul's moderation, which included responding to almost every comment that was made.  The role of the Chair is to facilitate the discussion, not to abuse the position in order to steer the discussion towards a specific outcome.  Either Paul did not know the proper role of the Chair, or he disregarded it.)

Eleanor Green '11, Curriculum Senator and returning member of Pitzer's Model United Nations team, was most vocal in debating the resolution on the basis of its content, while Sam Greene '10 pointed out that Pitzer College Student Senate is not itself directly democratic, and that a resolution supporting such a sentiment is disingenuous.

I attended the meeting, and voiced my objections to the resolution during the discussion.  I pointed out that this was way over the line of what Senate should be doing, which is dealing with issues that affect Pitzer College students.  I said that Pitzer College Student Senators are not my personal spokespeople for political issues.  Here is the preamble of the Senate Constitution:

The Pitzer College Student Senate is hereby recognized by Pitzer College students as the official body for protecting student rights and interests, facilitating student participation in College policy-making, increasing the quality of students’ educational and academic experience, upholding the core values of the College in all areas of student life, facilitating communication between students and faculty, staff, and bureaucratic organizations, recognizing and funding student organizations, representing the student body in College Council meetings and all of?cial college business, and striving to improve the welfare of students.

One of Pitzer College's core values is dialogue. Part of the Vanguard's shtick is increasing the representative element of Student Senate.   So it boggles my mind that this resolution, which was seen by NO ONE before 7:30 pm on Sunday, was passed by eleven student senators purporting to represent 900 students of Pitzer College.  In my opinion, this action was an overbroad application of responsibility entrusted by students to Senators.  If Senate decides it will engage in political issues (again, which I object to), it should at least make some effort to solicit and represent student opinions.

On a personal level, I'm deeply offended as a student of this College, a political studies major, a former paid intern at an international research institute, and a new Model United Nations member, that anyone else would have the gall to speak for me on important political issues.

Later that day, I emailed Lianna and asked her to elaborate on why she sponsored the resolution.  Here is (most of) what she wrote back [my emphasis supplied]:

Issues relating to budgeting are important and must be dealt with by Student Senate.  It must be acknowledged, however, that the allocation of funds has important political and ideological implications.  That is, how we spend our money obviously impacts the school, but it is also indicative of the ideology of the Pitzer community.  When one group or individual is given funds by another group or individual, the recipient of funds is being empowered and their mission is being affirmed as being in accordance with the ideology of the funder.  The Senate is ideally representative of the Pitzer community, despite the assertion made by Sam Greene that the Student Senate is not in actuality representative, as many Senate members were not elected directly by the student body.  As a representative body, when the Student Senate makes decisions on the allocation of funds, it is implying that the recipient shares the values of the student body as a whole.

If we are to presume to speak for the values of the student body in this way, Student Senate has a responsibility to discuss issues of ideology and politics. If we are to discuss the allocation of funds, and thus of power, discussions of power dynamics are in order.  If it is appropriate to discuss forums for communication among students within the college, I believe that it is appropriate to discuss ways in which we as students communicate with those outside of the metaphorical walls of this college.  A respected Senator voiced the opinion that because classes exist on campus which encourage dialogue on political issues such as those raised in the proposition (which I have attached to this email), political discussions of this kind are inappropriate in Student Senate.  However, that other spaces on campus encourage dialogue should not discourage the Student Senate from engaging with these issues.  Rather, this implies that these topics are of particular importance to the experience of students and as such should be of particular importance to the Senate.

As Senators and as representatives of a body which is primarily united in our academic pursuits, I believe that we have a responsibility to create a space which encourages dialogue on issue[s] pertaining to our relationships as students to each other, to Pitzer, to the local community and to the world.  I will venture to say that my fellow Senators are a part of the Senate because of a desire to participate in decisions which are of particular importance to the student body (personally, it was partially that and partially because of a desire to be addressed as Senator Schechter).  Pitzer College does not, in fact, exist within a bubble -- within a cloud of smog perhaps, but not within a bubble.  As such, all matters which are of particular importance to the student body, whether they directly relate to the day to day functioning of the school or not, should be welcomed as subjects for discussion by the Senate.

Should Student Senate engage in purely political issues?  Was this resolution passed in an appropriate way?  Do you agree with the content of the resolution?

What do you think?

ClubFiles: Green Bike Program

ClubFiles is an ongoing series of on-campus student organization profiles.

Green Bike Sign

Pitzer College's Green Bike Program is one of the few student organizations that has a permanent physical space, tucked in between the Grand Staircase and the Gold Student Center.  As a staple of our community and sustainability efforts, GBP is here to stay.  (Pomona College seems to be just catching up.)  GBP's Elliot Dumont '10 was kind enough to answer my questions:

Hi Elliot!  Introduce yourself:
My name is Elliot DuMont and I am from the amazing town of Tucson, Arizona located in the heart of the Sonoran Desert. I am a senior. My major is environmental studies with a minor in economics. My life is cycling- hobbies and interests follow.  Among which are gardening, rainwater harvesting, cooking, and reading.

GBP2

In one sentence, can you explain what the GBP stands for and what it does?
The GBP stands for the promotion of bicycle culture by creating a cooperative space where learning, sharing, and experiencing the bicycle takes place.

What services does the GBP provide?
Semester Raffle, Day Use Bikes, Mechanics Courses, Hair Cutting, Volunteer Hours, Work Study, Rides, Socials, Movies, Bike Polo, and General Shenanigans.

What do students involved in the club do during meetings/events?   When and where do you meet?
Students participate in everything from helping to organize events to working on bikes.
We meet every Thursday at 7. Time is subject to change depending on severity of topics.

Did you found the club yourself or did you take it over from another student?  What was the transition process like?
I took it over from Marcus Berkowitz. The transition was hectic. We just moved into a new space and I just arrived back from a semester in Spain.

What is your biggest challenge in maintaining this club?  How do you try to overcome it?
ORGANIZATION!!! Motivation and an openness to agree upon certain rules and regulations. This can be achieved through communal discussion and evaluation on what it means to be a part of the shop and the roles each of us play towards furthering the club.

GBP1

What has been your greatest accomplishment or success since you’ve been in charge of the club?
Helping to achieve a budget from student senate, mechanics courses, wholesale retailer accounts, relationships with local bike shops.

What are your most important goals going into your senior year?
To do the best that I can in supporting the people who will be taking over the club next year.

Where does your funding come from? How much money were you allotted by Student Senate?  If $100 were taken away from your budget, where would you cut your spending?
Our funding comes from student senate as we have become a Pitzer Club, we are allotted 3,000 dollars each year. If $100 were taken away we would probably cut event funding.

If you were given another $200, how would you spend that money?
The money would go to the purchase of new tools.

Is there anything else you want to say about GBP?
We are not unifaceted but a very unique club in our ability to deal with bicycles on multiple levels and create an understanding of the social, institutional, and cultural aspects that are a part of the bicycle.

You can contact Elliot here.

Finally, take a look at the GBP's top-secret in-house training video:[pro-player width='530' height='400' type='video' image='http://pitzeruncovered.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/GreenFreeze.png']http://pitzeruncovered.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Greenvideo.mp4[/pro-player]

If you want your student organization to be included in an upcoming ClubFile, contact me here.

Election Update: Exec Board Calls a Redo!

From Senate Vice Chair Paul Waters-Smith at 10:20 pm tonight:

Regarding First-Year Elections

Pitzer Student Body:

Resulting from a miscommunication with the Information Technology Department, the ongoing First-Year Representative election does not accord with constitutional requirements for instant runoff voting. As a result, the Executive Board of Student Government has instructed the IT Department to immediately cease First-Year Representative elections. New elections will be scheduled as soon as online instant runoff voting can be arranged by the IT Department. Elections guidelines for the new election will be approved at this week's Senate this Sunday, 6:30 PM in the Founder's Room.

We would like to thank the Information Technology Department for its time and patience in this matter. The Executive Board apologizes for any resulting inconvenience, electoral or otherwise. Thank you for everyone who has shown concern for the integrity of these elections.

Thank you,

The Executive Board

Disregarding for a moment that the Exec Board takes no real responsibility for any of the three constitutional violations that happened on their watch, I'm just really happy they decided to start fresh and do things above board.

Well done, Exec Board!  Seriously!  Good luck first-year candidates!

And for another bizarre missive from Treasurer Christopher Wohlers, 23 minutes later:

The incestuous royal family inappropriately yet constitutionally regarded as the Executive Board has awoken from fitful ideological slumber to a disturbing fact: the First Year Representative elections are UNCONSTITUTIONAL.

GOD FORBID

that this would have happened to us wretched huddled masses yet once more.

We are in the grasp of a Constitutional Straitjacket, despite our universally acknowledged UNITY and COMPETENCE.

Some would call this a PICKLE.

A PICKLE.

After long internal consultations with the Oracles, I have decided that there is but one avenue of escape to the blessed FREEDOM that rolls down the foothills of the San Bernardino mountains like honey wine (MEAD): let us bare our primitive selves and fully immerse ourselves in the joyous revelry of the

[Redacted]
:::ANTI-CAPITALIST:::PRO-MUPPET:::

[Redacted]
Post-Paint

For, as Eliphaz himself spake in his Second Speech (Job 15:1-10),

What a wise man, uttering windy wisdom
out of a bellyful of hot air from the East,
instructing with useless speeches
and words that have no value!
That's you: subverting piety,
laying unworthy complaints before the God.
Guilt is what has schooled your mouth,
and so you choose devious language.
Your own mouth proclaims your guilt, not I;
your own lips speak against you.
Were you born first of all mankind?
Were you brought forth before the hills?
DID YOU OVERHEAR THE GODS IN COUNCIL?
Snatch away some wisdom for yourself?
What do you know that we do not?
What do you grasp that we have missed?

Further freedom may be found by joining us tonight at [redacted] in the consumption of holy communion (JIM BEAM or almond milk for sober vegans).

Chris Wohlers
Pitzer College c/o 2010
Student Government Treasurer
Physics & Environmental Studies

1st-Year Rep Election Is Unconstitutional

I realized that there was something very wrong going on with the first-year representative elections when I clicked on the online ballot out of curiosity.

Instead of a ranking system, you only have the option to pick one candidate out of three possible candidates.  When I saw this, I remembered last year's Senate discussion successfully instituting instant runoff voting, so I went back and re-examined the Senate Executive Board's emails about this election.

It turns out there are THREE irregularities with the first-year elections, all of which could alter the outcome of the election.

Because they currently have no representation on Senate, it is our responsibility to represent the interests of first-year students. Furthermore, it is in all of our interests to make sure that EVERY Senate election is run fairly, according to the rules we all agreed upon as a community.

Below are the relevant sections of the Student Senate Constitution followed by my analysis:

ARTICLE VII. ELECTIONS, Section 1. Jurisdiction.

Specific guidelines for Student Senate elections shall be made publicly available at least one week before candidate applications are made available.

No election guidelines were ever made public.  This means the usual limits on campaigning and campaign spending were never discussed or approved.

ARTICLE VII. ELECTIONS, Section 3. Applications.

c.There shall be a be a five day minimum for candidates of the elected positions to submit their application to run for an elected position.

The real application period was shorter:  Buddy Bennett announced the first-year election along with its applications on Monday, Sep 14, 2009 at 11:12 AM.  The email stated that "Applications are due by this Thursday, September 17th," for a total of three days.

ARTICLE VII. ELECTIONS, Section 5. Election Guidelines.

a. Votes must be cast by secret ballot conducted according to the following directives:
i. Voters rank candidates in order of preference.  Ballots shall instruct voters to rank their preferences, with "1" indicating their first choice.  Voters may rank as many or as few candidates as they wish, with lower rankings never counting against higher rankings.

c. Elections must adhere to the principles of instant runoff voting.

The online ballot being used does not adhere to the principles of instant runoff voting, which centers on a ranking mechanism that allows more expression of choice than other systems.  Because there are three candidates for this position, this deviance from the constitution could alter the outcome of the election.

To help understand why "IRV" is important, take a look at the 2000 US Presidential election: if the principles of instant runoff voting were followed, votes for Ralph Nader would not have detracted from votes for the other two candidates: Votes would have transferred from 3rd place Nader to 2nd place Gore, pushing him over Bush. The outcome of that election would have been different.

Here's a screenshot of the online ballot:

[caption id="attachment_1032" align="aligncenter" width="540" caption="Instead of the ability to rank candidates, voters can only choose one."]Instead of the ability to rank candidates, voters can only choose one.[/caption]

In addition to being materially important to THIS election, it is crucial that we set a good precedent of following the constitution in running our Senate elections.  It isn't fair to anyone if we run one election one way, and run the next election a different way under the same constitution.

I emailed the members of Executive Board and asked them to either redo the election, or explain why the arguments below are wrong.  Secretary Buddy Bennett called me to discuss the problems and although we had a pleasant conversation, he did not agree to redo the elections nor did he explain why my assertions aren't right.  Later, the Executive Board sent out another student-talk email asking first-years to vote.

Please encourage your Student Senate representatives to redo this election.

Executive Board Roster

[table id=7 /]

Brian Orser Welcome Day Speech

Brian Orser, Chair of Pitzer College Student Senate

August 27, 2009
“In 1966 students at the University of Strausburg published On the Poverty of Student Life:

Once upon a time the university was respected; the student persists in the belief that he is lucky to be there. But he has arrived too late. The bygone excellence of bourgeois culture has vanished. A mechanically produced specialist is now the goal of the "educational system." A modern economic system demands mass production of students who are not educated and have been rendered incapable of thinking. Hence the decline of the universities and the automatic nullity of the student once he enters its portals. The university has become a society for the propagation of ignorance; "high culture" has taken on the rhythm of the production line. But all this hardly matters: the important thing is to go on listening respectfully. In time, if critical thinking is repressed with enough conscientiousness, the student will come to partake of the wafer of knowledge, the professor will tell him the final truths of the world. Till then--a menopause of the spirit. As a matter of course the future revolutionary society will condemn the doings of lecture theatre and faculty as mere noise--socially undesirable. The student is already a very bad joke.

Almost every book you will read over the next four years at this College is available in your public library. But you are here because, unlike the library, this College will officially recognize you for your thinking. And, unlike the library, this College is going to feed and house you. That is your privilege. Your existence at this College depends on the labor of hundreds in your immediate community, with numberless others toiling for your luxury. The student today sits near the top of a most unusual aristocracy.
Here we are. How should we use this privilege?

We are living in a conservative moment. There is a great deal of fear, and fear is the enemy of clarity, freedom and generosity. We live in a culture which values nothing more than a person's utility; in which a person's right to her life and its sustenance is based on her productivity.

Ours is a world which works perfectly. On the surface of this world, though, we have violently constructed a way of life which violates this perfection, and suppresses the infinite from which it springs; it is a system which allows the growth of vast concentrations of life, even as it denies the value of life itself, reducing it to so much hot and cold, edible flesh. The earth and its people have inborn the potential for life; but we will have to free ourselves.

It is possible that education be liberatory. It is also probable that education become a means for the reinvention and reinforcement of hierarchy, oppression, and unfreedom. If your education consists in a rote internalization of the existing hegemonic analysis of experience, then you are giving up your freedom so that you might more successfully strip away the freedom of others.

A critical pedagogy, on the other hand, teaches the process by which the thinker, or community of thinkers, constructs and reconstructs our collective categories of thought. A pedagogy which is liberating is a poetical one, calling upon us not to liberate ourselves from our experience of the world, but to to liberate our experience of the world from that which is antagonistic to its very living principle. The world is not to be hacked at, boiled down, cut open, and disintegrated until the seed of its virgin Truth is laid bare and bloody. The truth of the matter is in our communal experience of it. No matter how vigorously it is denied, we are here to discover something of the truth, and something of right and wrong. And we are here as a community of individuals to attempt the true and the right.

This College, then, is the space we must take to assert our selves and our community of needs, our imaginations of the potential of our peers to satisfy and heal us, our wildest fantasies of feeling whole and integrated. To honestly identify what we need, and then, in community with our fellow students, to discover how to provide it for ourselves – this is what need drive us forward. We have to stand in warm-blooded solidarity with each other as we learn to resist the pressures of the market, the oppressive inertia of the past, and the comforts of conformity.

Pitzer College was founded in 1963, as an academy on the fringes of the Academy. The brave vision of Pitzer College was of a community of adults, new and old, breaking down and reconstructing their concept of the world, preparing themselves everyday to break down and reconstruct their world itself. It is not enough to learn how the world is currently being discussed by those who made it what it is. That's merely of passing interest. Education can only liberate once it allows a fluid synthesis of the self, the world, and the ideal, this synthesis being the dynamic life of a healthy community.

Remember, what we attempt at this College is only human, all too human. There is something, when all is said and done, which can only be passed from warm hand to warm hand.”

Opening Gambit: The Vanguard Takes the Stage

Yesterday during Opening Day's festivities, Student Senate Chair Brian Orser '11 and Vice Chair Paul Waters- Smith '10 made their traditional welcome address to the new class of 2013.  It's safe to say that the content of their speeches was anything but traditional.

What do YOU think?  What was your response to Paul and Brian's speeches?

[polldaddy poll=1927376]

(I also encourage you to express your views in the comments at the end of the page.  Feel free to disagree with me or post anonymously.)

You can read the full text below, but here are the phrases that stood out to me.

Paul's Speech:

Like any of our peer institutions, Pitzer is directly tied to structures of power and exploitation.  The Endowment of a College – the mass of money all elite institutions jealously grow– is most certainly invested in the very industries many of us so vigorously oppose - though none of us are privy to in exactly which.  Driven by the brutal demands of the market, these transnational corporations are raping the earth, devastating its forests and oceans, and exploiting its people in sweatshops and mines all around the world from Southeast Asia to Africa to right here in the Inland Valley.

Brian's Speech:

The university has become a society for the propagation of ignorance; "high culture" has taken on the rhythm of the production line.

...

In time, if critical thinking is repressed with enough conscientiousness, the student will come to partake of the wafer of knowledge, the professor will tell him the final truths of the world. Till then--a menopause of the spirit.

...

The world is not to be hacked at, boiled down, cut open, and disintegrated until the seed of its virgin Truth is laid bare and bloody. The truth of the matter is in our communal experience of it.

My own impression was mostly confusion and disenchantment.  And as a senior and first-year mentor, I felt disappointment that the incoming class was denied any sort of welcome from the only Pitzer students that would address them on their big day.

New students are excited about taking cues from older Pitzer students.  I vividly remember the welcome speeches of past Chairs Matt Berry and Ben Kramer and thinking to myself, "YES.  This is a school that I want to be a part of."

Download the full text of Senate Chair Brian Orser's speech and Vice Chair Paul Waters- Smith's speech.

Paul Waters-Smith Welcome Day Speech

Paul Waters-Smith, Vice Chair of Pitzer College

Student Senate August 27, 2009

“I’m happy to welcome you all to Pitzer College today.
I’d like to begin by exploring what brought all of you to study at this institution. We are all attracted by Sunny Southern California, a flexibility of study, and the promise of an intimate liberal-arts college experience.    But what sets apart Pitzer for many of us is its avowed commitment to Social Justice. On the Pitzer College website, in the ‘Why Pitzer?’ Section, the college boasts that students here are “Encouraged to ask how the knowledge gained here can be used to make the world a better place” and that the college provides “union of intellect with action”.
If we are intending to unite our intellect with our action, and ‘change the world’, then we might best first consider what is the relation of an elite College like ours to the world. Like any of our peer institutions, Pitzer is directly tied to structures of power and exploitation. The Endowment of a College – the mass of money all elite institutions jealously grow– is most certainly invested in the very industries many of us so vigorously oppose - though none of us are privy to in exactly which. Driven by the brutal demands of the market, these transnational corporations are raping the earth, devastating its forests and oceans, and exploiting its people in sweatshops and mines all around the world from Southeast Asia to Africa to right here in the Inland Valley. Meanwhile College and University endowments like ours form a major part of the accumulation of investment capital that fuels these ravages. Yet we hear only echoes of calls to pull our support from innumerable atrocities.
On a more concrete and personal level, the running of this college depends on the labor of many men and women who cook for and feed us, clean up after us, who built this campus, and who use their expertise to keep this place in working order. These people – who you will have ample opportunity to meet, though few students know many of them – are paid hardly enough to support their families, and are considered ‘at will’ employees, meaning unlike the rest of the college community, they have little security or power over their situation. There is much talk about ‘marginalize communities’ at Pitzer, but when it comes to action – like ceding some of the power we hold over those communities – that becomes a much more difficult thing.
The workers at the college are drawn from the surrounding area – an area too often ignored, called the Inland Valley. Far from barren sprawl, the Inland Valley is home to cities like Pomona that are culturally alive and historically coherent. But these cities have suffered greatly from reckless and uncoordinated expansion at the whims of the market, followed by the current pains of inevitable economic contraction. The incredible and often disastrous physical growth of the human settlements in this region is closely tied to the position of Inland Valley in Global Trade. The ports of L.A. and Long Beach are the points of entry for 40% of imports coming into the U.S., nearly all of Chinese and other Asian-manufactured goods. Most of these commodities are moved to a Sea of Warehouses in the Inland Valley, called the ‘Inland Port’, before being trucked to different areas across the continent. The struggles of harshly exploited construction and Warehouse Workers in this area demonstrate both the problems inherent in our economic system and a prime opportunity for a working class challenge to Global Capital. The inland valley is a place worthy not just of our study, but of our genuine engagement.
When it comes to the stated purpose of a college – Academics – Pitzer College is a very liberal place, one of the most liberal elite colleges in the country - ranked 7th most liberal by the Princeton review. This academic liberalism, however, does not often extend to questioning the premises upon which our society operates. In this way, Pitzer College, like nearly every other college and university, is committed to the reproduction of dominant governing ideologies, though they be slightly more enlightened ones. Thus, so many students studying the social sciences come to College hoping to gain knowledge in order to better ‘change the world’, but leave convinced that it can only be tweaked, and so many studying environmental science in hopes of defending the wondrous diversity of the natural world, leave – like their counterparts – to join the ranks of the government or non-profit bureaucracy, or even to the corporate hierarchies themselves.
Many of us are drawn to a place like Pitzer College in hopes of escaping the pressures of conformity and homogeneity present in society. Yet the experience of a Liberal-Arts college leaves us too often bare to the demands of respectability: so as to be accepted by our professors and administrators, never free from the normative expectations of our peers, we are constrained in our appearance and behavior, as well as our thought. Many of us yearn to be liberated from the commodification of ourselves, the regimentation of our dress, our speech, and our self-image by the industries that win profit by the appropriation, manufacture, and mass distribution of our culture. Yet, the liberal-arts college does not provide the environment for such an authentic liberation. An inherently social problem, combating conformity and mass culture is a necessarily collective project – the college a necessary space for that project to take place.

Recognizing such an unattractive reality, we are left with the question ‘what else could a college do?’. The apparent inevitability of this situation emerges from the college conceived of as a business, in which the competition in the market dictates how a college will act. Fortunately, the history of Pitzer College offers us suggestions of a different way, of a college as a community and not a business. Pitzer is a place where once college decisions were made by students and professors sitting in a circle in lively discussion. Pitzer is a place where students together built their own culture, experimenting with new ways of living their lives. Pitzer is a place where Professors taught critical consciousness as much as facts, and students engaged as not as passive receptacles of knowledge but as active and creative co-constructors of it. Pitzer is a place where students risked their prospects for social ‘success’ in order to challenge injustice, and laid the groundwork for life-long commitments to do so. These strains exist in Pitzer College – revived and combined with the new they present an image of a community many of us might dream to join. Our inheritance from this Pitzer tradition allows the students, together with faculty, to chart the course of the college by making policy in the remarkably progressive College Governance Structures. Unlike other Colleges, our power is already established – we need just to wield it.
President Trombley often says that after Fourty-Six Years, Pitzer College is coming of age. The Question that is ours to face is: ‘what age Pitzer is coming into?’ Is Pitzer going to fulfill its youthful dreams, of critical and innovative intellectual engagement, a space for the flourishing of our vibrant eccentricities, a College with its central drive social consciousness and its primary goal social change? Or is Pitzer College simply to be a less stuffy alternative to Pomona?    This future of Pitzer College, like its history, should be directed by the energies of its students – our role in determining the future of this institution is indispensible.
If we as a community strive towards a ‘union of intellect with action’, then we must learn to act on these problems, and begin to live a different reality. As Subcommandante Insurgente Marcos, Spokesman for the Zapatista peoples in Southeast Mexico, said “Dignity cannot be studied, you live it or it dies”.”

Vanguard Victory Message

Upon the student-talk email announcing the election results, Treasurer-Elect Christopher Wohlers sent the following email as a reply:

"I think Wikipedia has something to say about this:

Taking advantage of the apathy of their colleagues, five "Pro-situs", Situationist-influenced students, had infiltrated the University of Strasbourg's student union in November 1966 and began scandalising the authorities. Their first action was to form an "anarchist appreciation society" called The Society for the Rehabilitation for Karl Marx and Ravachol; next they appropriated union funds to flypost "Return of the Durruti Column", Andre Bertrand's détourned comic strip. They then invited the Situationists to contribute a critique of the University of Strasbourg, and On the Poverty of Student Life, written by Tunisian Situationist Mustapha/Omar Khayati was the result.

The students promptly proceeded to print 10,000 copies of the pamphlet using university funds and distributed them during a ceremony marking the beginning of the academic year. This provoked an immediate outcry in the local, national and international media.[3] The students responsible were duly expelled, and the student union closed under court order.[3][1] The scandal significantly raised the profile of the SI,[4] and lead them to reappraise the revolutionary potential of academia, reversing their previous disillusionment to take seats on the Sorbonne Occupation Committee during May 1968.[5] On the Poverty of Student Life was a key text for the French and German students who rebelled in 1968.

As history consume us, so we consume it.

- Chris Wohlers, member-elect of the Nestor Makhno Society for the Reappropriation of Leon Trotsky"

Vanguard OA Trip: Urban Zapatismo

Posted to the “OA Trips?!” thread of the “The OFFICIAL Pitzer College Class of 2013 Group” Facebook group on May 30, 2009 at 12:28pm.

Depending upon your like of direct action, autonomous communities and revolution; and depending on your dislikes of liberal hegemony, authoritarianism and global capital, you may wish to consider the Urban Zapatismo trip. We'll be exploring the emerging and fighting alternative to life as we know it. The trip is being facilitated by the graciously absurdist leadership of Student Senate, one of whom will prepare for the trip by living in Oaxaca with the Zapatista indigenous insurrectionary movement.

But there a lot of other mighty fine trips as well. Either way, I look forward to welcoming you to Pitzer, my small private kingdom of magical fantasy.

Chris

Treasurer, Pitzer Student Senate

Flight Attendant, Group of Twenty Sleeping and Dreaming of Revolution