Leaf Pile Media LLC wins $20,000 topprizein the fourth Freirich Business Plan Competition

The final round of the Fourth Annual Kenneth A. Freirich Business Plan Competition was held Friday April 11. The $20,000 first prize went to seniors Walter Barber, Ian Van Nest and Andrew Zimmerman for Leaf Pile Media LLC, a "transmedia fictional universe," to put it in their words.

Their business's next priority will be to market the game, Champions of Hara, that the three freshman year roommates created two years ago, including the development of a promotional video. The prize money will also go to constructing a website to advertise their product and support sales as well as to setting up exhibits at game conventions and also manufacturing the game.

The game takes players on a fantastical journey through a fictional universe called Hara. "Aesthetically, Hara is grounded in everything we've ever loved. It's a hybrid fantasy, drawing in equal parts from ancient mythologies, pop culture, folklore, and everything in between. We've been really influenced by some of today's giants like Adventure Time and Skylanders, but obviously our roots are in franchises like Pok??mon and Harry Potter.  Our characters are a little whacky but they all have deep motivations and goals, and I think people are really going to connect with that," Barber said.

The game will sell for $50 and, if popular, will be developed further into other medias.

" Our primary intention behind the board game is to be the first vehicle for telling their story - it is going to be accompanied by graphic novels and a mobile game, all of which serve to build the world and the characters," Barber said.

On what inspired them to create Hara, Barber said, "Hara comes from a mutual love of games and stories. The three of us lived together freshman year and used to pour over comic books together in the window seat and spend hours crowded around a tiny TV playing games when we should have been doing homework. We still play games like Magic whenever we can steal some spare time. As weird as it sounds we really study this stuff; we've been life-long nerds who have always believed we can contribute to the industry." 

To keep up to date on the happenings of Hara and its creators, visit their Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/leafpilemedia

The Freirich Business Plan was started four years ago by Freirich, a serial entrepreneur who is now president of Health Monitor Network. In that time span, more than 170 students and 100 businesses have entered the competition.

The second prize of $10,000 was awarded to Alexander Nassief '16 and Zach Rohde '14 for Rum Dogs, Inc., a Dominica-based luxury rum brand that ages its rum in barrels submerged in the Caribbean Sea.

Third prize went to Seth Berger '14 for East Coast Lacrosse, a maker of custom lacrosse apparel. Berger projects sales to reach $200,000 for 2014 as lacrosse continues to expand in popularity across the nation.

Three other teams competed in the final round of the competition and were given $1,000 each. Stella Langat '16 is currently registering Double Dee's LLC in Kenya. Double Dee's LLC will be the nation's first undergarment production company. Adam Beek '15 has launched Munchi Heaven Agri, an organic farming enterprise in Jamaica, and Ezra Levy '15 and Marcella Jewell '15 have started a web-based business called Open Campus, which matches college students with businesses offering real-world projects.

This year's competition was coordinated by Paula Tancredi Penman, lecturer in Management and Business. The other judges in this year's competition were: Nancy Cohen Wekselbaum '73, owner of The Gracious Gourmet; Jody Klein '85, chief executive officer of ABKCO Music & Records, Inc.; Susan Magrino Dunning '83, president of Susan Magrino Agency; Nick MacShane '91, senior managing director of Progress Partners; and Ellen Sherman '68, producer for Dateline NBC. 

Campus Safety Reports: April 4 to 10

Incidents of Note:

  • Saturday, April 5-Criminal Mischief: Multiple street signs found at 1:52 a.m. on the Clinton Street walkway. Signs were brought to the Saratoga Springs Police Department.
  • Saturday, April 5-Fireworks: Report received at 11:42 p.m. that fireworks were being set off at 9 Dayton Drive. Report was unfounded.
  • Wednesday, April 9-Sex Offense: A sexual assault reported at 11:32 p.m. that had taken place during the evening in late August 2013 at an on-campus location.
  • Wednesday, April 9-Sex Offense: Report received at 11:32 p.m. of a sexual assault that had occurred during an evening in early March 2014 at an off-campus location.

Further Incidents:

Friday, April 4:

  • Criminal Mischief: A broken window reported at 12:01 a.m. on the west end of the second floor of Penfield Hall. Report taken.
  • Criminal Mischief: A hole was found at 12:29 a.m. in the wall on the west side stairwell of Penfield Hall between the first and second floors. Report taken.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm received at 2:07 a.m. at Wiecking Hall. Dispatched officers and advised the Saratoga Springs Fire Department.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 1:14 p.m. at Wilmarth Hall. Dispatched officers and advised the Saratoga Springs Fire Department.
  • Larceny: A chair reported missing at 1:39 p.m. from the Wagner Room. Report taken.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 2:05 p.m. at 10 Whitman Way. Alarm was due to maintenance.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm received at 6:51 p.m. at Sussman Apartment F. Dispatched officers and advised the Saratoga Springs Fire Department.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm received at 9:34 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments K. Dispatched officers and advised the Saratoga Springs Fire Department.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm received at 11:56 p.m. at Sussman Apartments L. Dispatched officers and advised the Saratoga Springs Fire Department.

Saturday, April 5:

  • College Violation: Excessive noise reported at 12:32 a.m. at 9 Dayton Drive. Students agreed to quiet down.
  • College Violation: Loud music reported at 2:38 a.m. on the first floor of Penfield Hall. Alcohol violation referral.
  • Theft of Services: Report received at 3:05 a.m. that a student left without paying cab fare at the Case Center Lot. Report taken.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 7:29 p.m. at Sussman Apartments K. Alarm was due to cooking. Report taken.
  • Suspicious Activity: Suspicious males reported at 8:49 p.m. in front of the Scribner Library. Officer spoke with the males who went to an event on campus and purchased food in Case Center.
  • College Violation: A loud noise reported at 11:07 p.m. on the seventh floor of Jonsson Tower. Report generated and alcohol violation referral made.
  • Suspicious Activity: Report received at 11:26 p.m. that a laser was being pointed at people from Jonsson Tower. Report taken. Drug Law Violation and a Liquor Law Violation referral made.

Sunday, April 6:

  • College Violation: A loud noise reported at 1:07 a.m. on the second floor of Penfield Hall. Students complied with the request to lower the volume.
  • College Violation: Loud music reported at 1:44 a.m. at Moore Way. Report was unfounded.
  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported at 10:58 a.m. that hose bits had been removed from Kimball Hall. Report generated.
  • Accident: Officer reported at 4:13 p.m. that the Saratoga Springs Police Department was on campus for a reported motor vehicle accident near the Tang Teaching Museum. Report taken.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 8:11 p.m. at Sussman Apartments G. Alarm was due to cooking. Report taken.

Monday, April 7:

  • Criminal Mischief: Officer made a check at 1 a.m. of the hallway of Starbuck Center and discovered vandalism on the hallway walls, stairs and ceiling. Officer canvassed the area for the person(s) responsible with negative results.
  • Accident: Report received at 2:12 p.m. that a business vehicle had been damaged while parked in the Jonsson Tower Lot. Unknown perpetrator at the time. Report issued.
  • Parking: A vehicle reported at 2:41 a.m. blocking the access road by the Janet Kinghorn Bernhard Theater. Officer dispatched reported that the vehicle was unregistered and possessed multiple tickets. Vehicle towed. Report issued.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 11:39 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments. Dispatched officers who reported that the subject complied with the request to lower the volume of the television.

Tuesday, April 8:

  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 12:46 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments. Officers, maintenance and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Officer reported that the activation was due to cooking. Alcohol violation found. Report issued.
  • College Violation: Loud disruptive music reported at 6:37 p.m. playing outside a classroom in Case Center Lot. Officer dispatched reported that the subjects were identified and left the area.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 10:39 p.m. on the third floor of Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officer reported that a faint odor was detected, although no source was determined.

Wednesday, April 9:

  • Accident: Reporting person stated at 2:17 p.m. that while she was in the Jonsson Tower Lot, she struck a sign post and railing with her vehicle. Officer was dispatched to taken the report as well as the Saratoga Springs Police Department for a Property Damage Auto Accident assessment.
  • Criminal Mischief: A parking enforcement sign that was previously located in the rear of the Sussman A 30-minute parking area was reported missing at 2:49 p.m. The sign read "Don't leave vehicle idling."
  • College Violation: Excessive noise reported at 11:44 p.m. on the first floor of Howe Hall. Dispatched officer.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 11:09 p.m. at the Art Center. Dispatched all units and advised the Saratoga Springs Fire Department. Officer reported finding smoke in an elevator room. Elevator was shut down. Facilities on-call notified. Repair persons called in.

Thursday, April 10:

  • College Violation: Noise reported at 2:05 a.m. in the common area of Penfield Hall. Officer spoke with the subjects who returned to the rooms for the night.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 10:13 p.m. at Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officer was unable to detect an odor at the time.

SGA Discusses Minimum Wage With IPPC

Posted by Danny Graugnard

When the minimum wage in New York State was raised to $8 per hour, Skidmore College chose not to. The issue was a hot topic for debate and many discussions and actions were held among students, such as the petition on change.org, particularly by those are still being paid $7.25 for their on-campus job. Recently, SGA has met with the IPPC in order to propose raising the wage for these students, and are working with them to do so.

Based on the conversation with IPPC, it was determined that it wouldn't cost the College too much money for it's next fiscal year if the wage was increased. The issue however, is that IPPC hasn't determined if wage compression is pertinent at the moment, but for now, the goal is raise the minimum wge of students from $7.25 to $8. The pay roll for students that are already at $8 will not see a relative increase.

Research is being conducted to understand how to increase the wage without having an adverse effect on the budget. The College is looking at how other private institutions are working on their budgets to meet the higher minimum wage. Mary Lou Bates, Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid, could not be reached in time for this article's publication.

Although the matter is currently at a stand still, SGA and IPPC will be meeting again on April 18th to touch base and decide how to move forward.

Faculty Discuss the Next Academic Year, Finances, and Skidmore in China in April 4 Faculty Meeting

Posted by Emily Singer

The Skidmore College faculty discussed upcoming changes and studies on the school in their monthly faculty meeting on April 4. The faculty listened to the College's plans for refinancing its $74.4 million debt, the latest statistics from Admissions for the Class of 2018 and voted to terminate the Skidmore in China study abroad program.

President Philip A. Glotzbach opened the meeting by calling Head of Finances Mike West to speak of the American Association of University Professors faculty assessment and data statistics, focusing on the salary data of professors, associates and assistants. West provided visual graphs which indicated that the College provides the average salary and benefits for faculty in comparison with our peer aspirant schools. The salaries of the faculty indicated that we are at a median level (nine out of 18) for full professor compensation benefits, not including retirement.

Glotzbach then discussed the College's efforts to refinance. Glotzbach stated that the College is currently $74.4 million in debt and will refinance $41.5 million over the next 10 years, which will ultimately save the school several million dollars. On the Moody's rating, the school has an A1 rating, which is very good for an academic institution, according to Glotzbach.

Regarding Admissions, the College received just over 8,700 applicants, a five percent increase in applicants from last year, and of these students, 34 percent self-identified as of color, 1,700 were international and 42 percent of accepted students will be on some form of financial aid.

37 percent of the students who applied were accepted, which, according to Glotzbach, is a larger number than most years due to the large size of the current graduating Class of 2014. Therefore, the school is accepting more students than usual to make up for the deficit in the fall. The first-year class, however, will not be exceed 700 students.

Dean of the Faculty and Vice President for Academic Affairs Beau Breslin announced the 60 new full-time faculty hired, which every current faculty member helped play a role in selecting.

Peter von Allmen, representing the Committee on Education Policies and Planning, said revisions to the all-college requirements are still underway. He then brought to the faculty a vote on terminating the Skidmore in China program, which cost the school too much money with few students interested. The faculty almost unanimously voted to terminate the program, thus beginning a search for a new program in another country.

The meeting closed with a discussion on changing the language of the Faculty Handbook concerning tenure and promotions. During this talk a governance reform proposal was posed, suggesting a new method of having more efficient, equitable and effective committees. The new committees would be restructured to work better for faculty, enabling greater changes to be done in a timely manner. 

Campus Safety Reports: March 28 to April 3

Incidents of Note:

  • Saturday, March 29-Lost/Missing Property: An American Flag reported missing at 7:05 a.m. from the main field of the Williamson Sports Center. At 2 p.m. the flag was found hanging between the second and third floor in the stairwell of Jonsson Tower. The flag was returned to maintenance.
  • Sunday, March 30-Sexual Misconduct: Reporting person arrived in the Campus Safety office at 1 p.m. to report unwanted sexual contact an an off-campus location. Report conducted.
  • Tuesday, April 1-Trespass: An email was received at 3:50 p.m. reporting that an unknown middle-aged white male was using expensive equipment in a secured lab in the Dana Science Center. Investigation pending. Report issued.

Further Incidents:

Friday, March 28:

  • Intoxicated Subject: Reporting person called at 12:23 a.m. on behalf of her friend who was intoxicated and wanted someone to evaluate her. Campus Safety and the Skidmore College Emergency Medical Service dispatched.
  • College Violation: A loud noise reported at 12:30 a.m. in Penfield Hall. Officers were dispatched, spoke to the resident and requested that the volume be lowered.

Saturday, March 29:

  • College Violation: Officers on patrol noted at 12:35 a.m. that several subjects were standing outside an apartment at 4 Cane Crossing being loud. Officers broke up the large party within.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm sounded at 9:38 a.m. for the Sussman Apartments J. Dispatched all units and notified the Saratoga Springs Fire Department. Alarm was due to burnt food. Alarm reset.
  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported a hole at 11:30 a.m. in the wall of Penfield Hall adjacent to the telephone closet. Report made.
  • Criminal Mischief: A window was discovered broken at 1:30 p.m. in the Surrey Inn. Officer and Unit 10 dispatched.
  • College Violation: A band reported at 5:20 p.m. in the Wait Hall basement. Officers dispatched. At 5:29 p.m. officers reported finding two people in the basement playing electric guitars. They were asked to turn down the volume and complied with the request.
  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported at 9:25 p.m. finding a button in the Wiecking Hall elevator that has been damaged. Report made.
  • College Violation: A party reported at 10:24 p.m. on the fifth floor of Jonsson Tower. Officers dispatched and partygoers dispersed. Report made.
  • College Violation: A loud noise reported at 11:23 p.m. at Wiecking Hall. Officer dispatched and reported advising a student to turn down the music. The resident complied with the request.
  • College Violation: A loud party reported at 11:57 p.m. coming from the area of Dayton Drive. Dispatched officers to check on the location.
  • College Violation: While doing rounds, officers heard a loud noise at 10:15 p.m. coming from a room in Wiecking Hall. Officers reported finding an alcohol violation.

Sunday, March 30:

  • Intoxicated Subject: A possible intoxicated subject reported at 12:30 a.m. in Case Center. Dispatched officers who reported that the male was sleeping, not intoxicated.
  • Intoxicated Subject: Reporting person called in an intoxicated subject at 1:30 a.m. on the first floor of Case Center. Dispatched Officer Fiorini who found an unconscious subject and requested the Emergency Medical Service.
  • Intoxicated Subject: An intoxicated subject reported at 1:23 a.m. in the basement of Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officers and the Skidmore College Emergency Medical Service.
  • Disorderly Conduct: A fight reported at 1:47 a.m. between a male and a female outside of Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officers who reported that both subjects left the area as they approached.
  • Intoxicated Subject: An intoxicated subject reported at 2:30 a.m. in Wiecking Hall. Dispatched officers who requested the Emergency Medical Service.
  • College Violation: Officers dispatched at 3:21 a.m. to the Wait basement for a loud party. Officers broke up an unauthorized gathering.
  • Criminal Mischief: While on patrol at 8:43 a.m. an officer discovered that a stop sign was down on the Case Center roadway with the post broken in half.
  • Criminal Mischief: While on patrol at 9:04 a.m. an officer discovered that the direction arrow signs on North Broadway had been broken down from the post.
  • Criminal Mischief: Two large holes reported at 10:15 a.m. on both of the second floor landings in Penfield Hall. Officer was dispatched to document and issue a report.

Monday, March 31:

  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported finding a large dumpster tipped over at 2:44 a.m. at 7 Dayton Drive. Campus Safety will notify Grounds in the morning. Photos taken.
  • Criminal Mischief: An exterior window reported broken at 6:46 a.m. in rehearsal room A of the Janet Kinghorn Bernhard Theater. Officer was dispatched to investigate and document the incident. Unit 10 dispatched.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 10:57 p.m. at 5 Dayton Drive. Dispatched officers who reported that they had spoken with students, who have now dispersed.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 11:36 p.m. on the first floor of Penfield Hall. Dispatched officer who stayed in the area for a few minutes until it quieted down.

Tuesday, April 1:

  • Drug Law Violation: Loud music reported at 12:06 a.m. in Wait Hall. Officer dispatched reported that the subject lowered the volume upon request. Drug paraphernalia found in plain sight in the room while performing the service call. Report issued.
  • Harassment: Reporting person sent an email at 6:04 p.m. about a possible sexual harassment. Investigation initiated and report issued.
  • Criminal Mischief: Two holes reported at 9:09 p.m. in the wall on the second floor lounge of Wait Hall. Officer recorded the damage and issued a report. Unknown perpetrator(s).

Wednesday, April 2:

  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 1:18 p.m. at Moore Way. Officers, Unit 10 and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Activation determined to have been caused by an overheated blow dryer. Report issued.
  • Parking: Officer requested a tow truck at 1:36 p.m. to tow a vehicle parked in the handicap spot in Case Center Lot. The vehicle has had numerous tickets for various violations. Report issued.
  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported criminal mischief at 5:35 p.m. regarding two holes kicked in the walls of Penfield Hall. Damage was recorded and a report issued.
  • Larceny: A larceny of clothing reported at 8:47 p.m. from Jonsson Tower. Report issued.
  • Criminal Mischief: Report received at 10:16 p.m. that someone had damaged the fire extinguisher on the second floor of Penfield Hall. Dispatched officer reported it as a fire hazard as someone had glued the extinguisher case. Report issued.

Thursday, April 3:

  • Parking: Officer reported booting a vehicle at 1:24 p.m. in West Lot as it had numerous tickets for various violations.
  • Suspicious Activity: Report received at 7:55 p.m. of a black truck and a male that has gone in and out of one of the Sussman Apartments H. Dispatched officer who located an employee who had been working in the area. All was okay.

Afghanistan Elections to be Focus of April 15 Skidmore Talk

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. - A political anthropologist who has written two recent books about Afghanistan will lecture on that country's recent elections April 15 at Skidmore College.
"Elections Are Not What You Think They Are: Youth, Intervention, and the Future of Afghanistan," will be discussed by Noah Coburn of Bennington College. Free and open to the public, the talk gets under way at 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 15, in Filene Recital Hall, in Filene Hall on the Skidmore campus. A reception will follow.
He explains, "After 13 years of NGOs, international troops, aid money and diplomacy, the intervention in Afghanistan appears to be winding down. The 2014 elections will mark a clear point of transition. What lies ahead, particularly for the youth of Afghanistan? What is the impact of aid on governance structures? Looking particularly at youth participation in the recent elections, this talk will examine the legacy of the intervention in Afghanistan and in particular the ways in which elections have reshaped the political landscape."
Coburn just returned from monitoring the presidential and provincial council elections in Afghanistan for Chatham House. He previously worked as a specialist for the United States Institute of Peace in Kabul, Afghanistan, as well as a researcher for the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit and the Aga Khan Trust for Culture. Between 2006 and 2008, he spent 18 months doing research in an Afghan village on the Shomali Plain.
He is the co-author (with Anna Larson) of Derailing Democracy in Afghanistan (2014, Columbia University Press), which, according to the publisher, "builds an in-depth portrait of Afghanistan's recent elections as experienced by individuals and communities, while revealing how the elections have in fact actively contributed to instability, undermining the prospects of democracy in Afghanistan." Coburn also wrote Bazaar Politics-Power and Pottery in an Afghan Market Town (2011, Stanford University Press), the first long-term on-the-ground study of Afghanistan since the arrival of allied forces in 2001. The author reveals the ways in which the international community has misunderstood the forces driving local conflict and the insurgency, misunderstandings that have ultimately contributed to the political unrest rather than resolved it.

Coburn's talk is scheduled in conjunction with Saratoga Reads, whose current book of choice is And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini.

Information booth for SGA Round II elections available in Case Center on Wednesday, April 9: Students interested in running for remaining SGA positions may ask questions from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Posted by Julia Leef

The Student Government Association will host an information booth from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Wednesday, April 9, outside of the SGA office for students interested in running in the Spring Round II elections, which will take place next week.

The available positions for this round of elections consist of roles that were not filled during Round I and include the Vice President for Communications & Outreach, the Vice President for Diversity Affairs, the Traditions Committee Chair, the SEC Chair, the Speakers Bureau Chair, the Late Night Chair, Sustainability Senator, Student Life Delegates and approximately 20 Senator-at-Large positions, according to current Vice President for Communications and Outreach Madeleine Kanazawa '15.

Of the available positions, only the two vice president positions require at least one prior semester's worth of experience on the Senate. Candidates must hand in their self-nomination forms before 4:30 p.m. on Friday, April 11.

Candidates will film short videos explaining their campaign, which will be posted to the Skids Scribner Facebook page, as well as to the SGA website by Sunday, April 13. They will be shown during Speech Night on April 16, which will begin at 6 p.m. in the Spa.

Elections will be held for the entirety of April 17, and the results will be announced the following day. Any positions that remain open until the Fall Round I elections will be put up as Willingness-to-Serve positions, for which students must go before the Senate to be approved.

IPPC Subcommittee on Student Affairs Announces New Smoking Policy

Posted by Danny Graugnard

A new policy on smoking was announced today by the Institutional Policy and Planning Committee which prohibits anyone from smoking within designated areas on campus. These smoke-free areas include most of central campus and the surrounding buildings, which are indicated in purple on the Smoking Policy Map (the smoke free areas are a rough estimation and precise parameters will be released in the Fall). The policy will go into effect in the Fall 2014 semester.

The purpose for the ban, according to an email sent out to the student body by Student Government Association President Sam Harris '15, is to reduce the exposure of second hand smoke to non-smoking members of the College community, as well as to visitors. The policy specifically states that smoking is prohibited within all College facilities, College-owned vehicles, and within 25 feet of all facilities.

The policy does indicate that smoking will be permitted in areas facing the loop road and that individuals may smoke in their own vehicles, even when they are parked on campus. In addition, although the policy does not appear to restrict the use of electronic cigarettes or smokeless tobacco, it mentions that users should be mindful of their surroundings. 

The new smoking policy has been discussed and reviewed for two years, beginning with a survey of 615 participants between 2011 and 2012. It then opened up to a college-wide survey with 1000 participants that included students, staff and faculty. The IPPC also factored in advising from the Safety in the Workplace Committee. Although the policy focuses on making part of the campus smoke-free, the IPPC subcommittee on Student Affairs has suggested to the IPPC that the entire campus be smoke-free by 2017; steps and further discussions are underway which will determine if this will pass.

In an earlier interview, Dean of Student Affairs Rochelle Calhoun stated that the College will put up signs for the smoke-free locations, and that while the enforcement of this new policy will mostly be placed on the individual, a student with multiple violations will go before the Integrity Board.

When asked how the College would aid those who would have to change their smoking habits or quit entirely by 2017 should a smoke-free campus policy pass, Calhoun admitted that the current level of support on campus is minimal, but that the College will work to amend this with help from its peer health educators and Health Services.

"If we want to be pro-active and supportive," Calhoun said, "we need to do more on campus."

SGA Senate Passes Resolution to Request Raising the Minimum Wage at Tuesday's Meeting

Posted by Julia Leef

The Student Government Association Senate passed several resolutions, including approving budgets for new clubs and a proposal regarding raising the minimum wage to take to the administration, in the public Student Government Association Senate meeting at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, April 1 in the Spa.

New budgets for the Skidmore Basketball Club and Skidmore E-Sports were approved in Resolutions 24-LXVII and 24-LXVIII, respectively. The Senate also approved a resolution in support of raising the minimum wage in accordance with New York State for student workers at Skidmore College.

Senators Britt Dorfman '14, vice president for Diversity Affairs and Addison Bennett '16, vice president for Club Affairs, proposed the resolution, which will go to the Institutional Policies and Planning Committee on Friday, April 4. The resolution proposes to request the President's Cabinet raise the hourly wage of student workers to the state minimum of $8.00, as well as to take into account the state's efforts to continue to increase the minimum wage to $9.00 per hour by 2015.

Although there is no guarantee the proposal will be incorporated into the College's budget for next year, according to Dorfman and Bennett, the senators said they believed it was important to bring up the issue before the College and to represent student voice on the subject. A recent online petition to increase the minimum wage on campus received 365 student signatures. According to Dorfman, the extra $133,000 needed to cover the cost of raising the minimum wage would likely come from the College's contingency funds.

The Senate also discussed a resolution in support of a clothing optional campus, proposed by Senators Charles Tetelman '16 and Hannah DeGraaf '15, who stated that such a concept had long been a tradition on campus in the form of the Naked Run, and that other colleges, such as Tufts University, The University of Vermont, Lewis & Clark College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have a similar policy.

Other senators, however, felt that such a resolution would violate the right to effective consent of the student body, and expressed concern about allowing expressions on nudity on a campus frequently visited by young children. The resolution did not pass, as it received approximately 35 percent of the vote, which was not enough for the required two-thirds majority.

The meeting then moved on to a discussion of the SGA constitution, in which SGA President Sam Harris '15 and Bennett proposed to expand upon the language in the student handbook that referred to students' freedoms of expression, association and participation and inquiry and speech, as well as to reallocate powers of the constitution into the SGA Senate. The proposal will be discussed for the next few weeks and Harris said he hopes to get it approved by the student body by next spring.

Senators also voted on whether to elect Senators Eric Beriguete '15 and Jessica Strasser '14 to the Responsible Citizenship Internship Award selection committee and Senator Kevin Wang '17 to the Executive Board as a Senator. The ballets were handed in at the end of the meeting but the results were not announced. 

Campus Safety Reports: March 21 to 27

Incidents of Note:

  • Sunday, March 23-Campus Safety Assist: Report received of finding a smoldering campfire found at 4:23 p.m. by the water tower in North Woods. Report unfounded.
  • Sunday, March 23-Criminal Mischief: Officers reported finding a student painting on the North Woods water tower at 4:38 p.m. . Report taken.
  • Tuesday, March 25-Sexual Misconduct: Reporting person advised at 6:11 p.m. of an anonymous report of a sexual offense at an off-campus location. Report issued.

Further Incidents:

Friday, March 21:

  • Campus Safety Assist: A female reported at 12:36 a.m. screaming outside of Penfield Hall. Report unfounded.
  • Criminal Mischief: A vending machine reported at 8:30 a.m. damaged and a fire extinguisher discharged in Wilmarth Hall. Report taken.

Saturday, March 22:

  • Intoxicated Subject: A male student reported at 5:27 a.m. refusing to leave Wait Hall for medical attention. Officers spoke with the student who complied and was transported to the hospital.
  • Suspicious Odor: The smell of incense burning reported at 12:20 p.m. in Penfield Hall. Report unfounded.
  • Accident: A vehicle reported at 3:58 p.m. in the snow bank off Perimeter Road and Case Center. Report taken.
  • Drug Law Violation: Drug law violation referral received at 8:38 p.m. in McClellan Hall. Report taken.
  • College Violation: A hookah located at 11:30 p.m. and confiscated from the Sussman Apartments A. Report issued.

Sunday, March 23:

  • College Violation: A possible party reported at 12:09 a.m. in Sussman Apartments I. Report taken. Officers found an unregistered party and games of mass consumption.
  • Criminal Mischief: A fire extinguisher reported at 12:30 a.m. discharged on the first floor of Wiecking Hall.
  • College Violation: Loud people reported at 2:50 a.m. at 12 Whitman Way. Officer spoke to the residents and advised them to turn off the music.
  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported finding holes at 12:15 p.m. in the wall inside the Starbuck Center stairwell. Report taken.
  • Criminal Mischief: A phone reported at 12:30 p.m. torn off the wall on the first floor of Wait Hall. Report taken.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 12:30 p.m. on the first floor of Wait Hall. Report unfounded.
  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported a broken window at 6:56 p.m. in the Colton House.

Monday, March 24:

  • Campus Safety Assist: Officer provided a student with transportation at 8:10 p.m. to and from the Saratoga Emergency Room. Report issued.

Tuesday, March 25:

  • Aggravated Harassment: Report received at 3 p.m. of an ongoing harassment via e-mail and phone messages.
  • Suspicious Activity: A suspicious phone call received at 5:55 p.m. in Jonsson Tower. Officers and the Saratoga Springs Police Department investigated. Report issued.
  • Campus Safety Assist: An escort requested at 7:19 p.m. in Wait Hall. Dispatched officer completed the transport.
  • Suspicious Odor: An odor of smoke reported at 11:12 p.m. in Jonsson Tower. Officer dispatched located the source and issued a report regarding a smoking violation.

Wednesday, March 26:

  • Criminal Mischief: While locking up the Starbuck Center, officers found eggs at midnight thrown on the wall of the Starbuck stairwell.
  • Accident Property Damage Auto Accident: Reporting person stated at 2:18 p.m. that she was involved in an auto accident in the Case Center Lot. No injuries reported, just property damage.
  • Criminal Mischief: A hole reported at 5:04 p.m. in the wall in the first floor south stairwell of Wilmarth Hall. Dispatched officer. Report filed. Photo taken.
  • Fire Alarm: Phone call received at 9:29 p.m. stating that the smoke detector was sounding at 9 Dayton Drive due to sesame seeds being spilled on the burner. Fire alarm received simultaneously. Dispatched all units and advised the Saratoga Springs Fire Department. Alarm was reset.

Thursday, March 27:

  • Found Property: A chair and a couch reported at 3:59 p.m. that had been taken from another building were both found in a student's room in Penfield Hall. Dispatched officer. Report filed.

Repeat Vandalism in Starbuck Staircase Raises Concern

Posted by Danny Graugnard

Eggshells and yolk were found splattered all over the walls, floors, and staircase by the entrance of Wilmarth Hall Monday night. The incident was taken note around midnight and reported by a Campus Safety officer. What seems like a simple act of criminal mischief has become a growing concern for Campus Safety, facilities, as well as students, for this incident was certainly not the first time it has been reported.
In fact, there have been several reports of food being thrown against the walls and floors in the enclosed staircase by Starbuck Center. On March 20, for example, Campus Safety reported eggs had been thrown at the walls. There had been six incidents prior to that one, which makes a total of eight reports of food thrown in the area, usually occurring during the weekends. "It's very disgusting," says Lawrence Britt, Associate Director of Campus Safety. "The eggs damaged the walls of the room, which needed to be repaired and repainted. The food always leaves bad odor, [and] facilities always tries to clean the mess as much as they can."
Campus Safety is not the only group concerned; students seem to be wary of the vandalism in the staircase as well. One student, who possibly resides in Wilmarth, wrote a note addressing the issue and hung it in the stairwell, remarking that the act was "disgusting," and a violation of the trust within the student community. It further berates the perpetrator to stop vandalizing the staircase. The fact that Wilmarth's main entrance connects to the enclosed staircase and has a significant amount of foot traffic during the day indicates that the incident occurs late at night when the staircase is not occupied.
When asked how to find a possible solution to prevent further vandalism in the future, Britt said that security in the area would be increased. Campus Safety officers on duty will patrol the staircase more often, considering there are no security cameras in the room and a lack of constant surveillance. In the meantime, there does not appear to be any signs that the perpetrator(s) will desist the vandalism anytime soon, but Campus Safety hopes that with better security in the area, the vandalism will stop. Students are advised to be careful when moving through the area during the late night hours and encouraged to report any suspicious behavior.

Students, Faculty and Staff Gather to Discuss Skidmore's Next Strategic Plan

Posted by Hope Spector

Over 200 faculty, staff, and students gathered on the second floor of the Murray-Aikins Dining Hall on Friday afternoon to discuss Skidmore College's present and future Strategic Plans. The strategic plan is a tool that many institutions employ to assess current strengths and weaknesses and to plan for the future. Skidmore's current Strategic Plan was launched in 2005 and will end in 2015. Friday's event marked one in a series of events that kick off the planning process for the next Strategic Plan, which will stretch from 2015 through 2025. The event was titled "Plan 2025: Building the College's Next Strategic Step."

The room was filled with about 25 tables, each with a designated topic. Topics were delineated on large posters all around the room and they ranged from "Academic Excellence" to "Sustainability" to "Civic Engagement." There were place cards at each seat around the table designating it for a faculty member, staff or student to occupy. The room was filled to capacity and filled with lively conversation as members of the community greeted each other before the meeting began.

President Glotzbach opened the event with a series of remarks that stressed the importance of a strategic plan to the College's continued improvement. He spoke about how a strategic plan reflects institutional values and summarized what the most recent plan had accomplished (doubled the endowment, put $150 million towards improving campus facilities, saw an increasingly competitive applicant pool). He urged participants in this workshop to discuss what excellence means for the College and to discuss how we can better reach those goals.

The heart of the event was the roundtable discussion. Each group had the same list of four discussion questions:

Why is this topic important to you and to Skidmore?
How is Skidmore currently performing with this topic?
What changes should Skidmore consider regarding this topic? What evidence do you have to support this recommended change?
Given resource constraints, new initiatives often require cutbacks in other areas. What should Skidmore do less of to advance this topic?

There was a designated scribe and facilitator at each table where 45 minute independent discussions were held across the room. At this reporter's table, the discussion covered topics from the role of the tenure track process in encouraging or discouraging innovation and creativity in academic research to the uniqueness of the liberal arts experience and whether the College promotes that enough.

After 45 minutes had passed, participants were each given three small dot stickers and told to put a sticker on the posters for the topics that they believed were most important for the College to consider in developing the next Strategic Plan. There was no clear winner, a reflection of the diversity of opinions and experiences in the room.

The event continued with Part II: Celebrate 2025, a festive event in Case Center with food vendors and entertainment.

Campus Safety Report: March 7 to March 20

Incidents of Note:

  • Friday, March 7-Sexual Misconduct: Reporting person advised Campus Safety at noon of a possible violation of the sexual misconduct policy on campus. Report issued.
  • Tuesday, March 18-Criminal Mischief: Ice cream found at 1:30 a.m. thrown on the stairs in the Starbuck Center next to Wilmarth Hall. Report issued.
  • Wednesday, March 19-Criminal Mischief: Ice cream reported at 1:20 a.m. thrown and smeared in the Starbuck East stairwell. Report issued.

Further Incidents:

Friday, March 7:

  • Emergency Phone: A person reported stuck in an elevator at 12:03 a.m. in Case Center. Officer and Unit-10 dispatched and reported that the elevators were clear. Prank call or false activation.
  • College Violation: Noise complaint received at 12:24 a.m. at the Sussman Apartments. Officer checked all apartments and detected no excessive noise.
  • Fire Alarm: Stopper activation received at 3:30 a.m. on the second floor of Wiecking Hall. Officer reset the alarm. Unknown perpetrator of the activation.
  • College Violation: Noise complaint received at 5:05 a.m. of a person banging on doors in Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officers reported that the subject was locked out. Access provided. Verbal warning given.
  • Criminal Mischief: Report received at 7:46 a.m. of thrown ice cream in the Starbuck Center stairwell by Wilmarth Hall. Officer dispatched. Damage recorded.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 11:47 p.m. at Cane Crossing. Officers reported that the residents complied with the request to lower the volume.

Saturday, March 8:

  • College Violation: Reporting person requested Campus Safety at 10:13 a.m. to remove the confiscated resident items in McClellan Hall. Report issued.
  • Campus Safety Assist: Officer responded at 12:05 p.m. to a room in Wait Hall to inspect with Staff. Staff was concerned for the room occupant's well-being. Contact with the occupant was made. The subject's welfare was satisfactory. Report issued.

Sunday, March 9:

  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported finding graffiti at 12:51 p.m. on a pillar in Case Center. Damage recorded. Report issued. No known perpetrators at this time.
  • College Violation: Excessively loud base noise reported at 6:58 p.m. coming from an adjoining apartment on Moore Way. Officer dispatched and the resident complied with the request to lower the volume.

Monday, March 10:

  • Safety Check AED: Officers made a check at 9:56 a.m. of all the AED's and Panic alarms on campus. All were functioning properly at the time.

Wednesday, March 12:

  • Campus Safety Assist: Reporting person requested a vehicle jumpstart at 7:33 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments H. Dispatched officer. Jumpstart successful.

Thursday, March 13:

  • Medical Assistance: Transport requested at 4:20 p.m. from the Sussman Apartments B to the Wilton Medical Urgent Care. Officer responded for transport.

Friday, March 14:

  • Accident: Reporting person slipped on ice at 11:20 a.m. in the Arts Quad parking lot, falling and injuring herself that morning. Reporting person was requested to fill out an accident report regarding the accident and sought medical attention. Report issued.

Saturday, March 15:

  • Campus Safety: A welfare check requested at 4:54 p.m. on a student in Jonsson Tower. Officer dispatched reported finding the subject satisfactory and delivering the message.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 7:34 p.m. at the Sussman Village. Officers, maintenance and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Officers reported that the activation was due to a cooking error. Report issued.

Sunday, March 16:

  • Found Property: Officer found a closed 18 pack of beer at 12:37 p.m. in the second floor south side stairwell of Wait Hall. Officer confiscated and secured it at Campus Safety.
  • Campus Safety Assist: A medical transport requested at 4:45 p.m. for a friend in Jonsson Tower. Subject was transported to the Emergency Room by an officer. Report issued.
  • Campus Safety Assist: Student requested a transport at 5:59 p.m. to the Emergency Room. Officer dispatched completed the transport. Report issued.
  • Graffiti: Officer reported finding black marker at 6:45 p.m. in the south elevator of Jonsson Tower. Damage recorded and report issued. No known perpetrator at the time.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 11:57 p.m. for the 7 Dayton Drive apartments. All officers, maintenance and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department dispatched. Alarm was due to a candle burning. The resident was warned and the candle was confiscated. Report issued.

Monday, March 17:

  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm received at 7:37 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments. Dispatched all officers, maintenance and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department. Officers reported that the activation was due to cooking. Report issued.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 8:44 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments. Dispatched officer reported that the residents lowered the volume upon request.
  • Campus Safety Assist: Reporting person expressed concern at 9:07 p.m. for a student in Wilmarth Hall and requested a welfare check. Dispatched officer located the subject and delivered the message.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 10:33 p.m. in Wait Hall. Dispatched officer reported detecting a faint odor but could not determine a specific source.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 10:49 p.m. at Dayton Drive. Dispatched officers reported that the residents lowered the volume upon request.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 10:57 p.m. in Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officers reported that the residents lowered the volume upon request.

Tuesday, March 18:

  • College Violation: Excessive noise reported at midnight in Jonsson Tower. Officers dispatched reported that residents lowered the volume upon request.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint received at 12:05 a.m. at Dayton Drive. Dispatched officers reported that residents complied with the request to lower the volume.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint received at 11:40 a.m. in Jonsson Tower. Officer reported that the residents lowered the volume upon request.

Wednesday, March 19:

  • Criminal Mischief: Criminal mischief reported at 7:16 a.m. to the vending machine located in the lobby of Wait Hall. Dispatched officers documented the damage and issued a report.

Thursday, March 20:

  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 1:18 a.m. in Wait Hall. Dispatched officers conducted a canvas but detected no excessive noise at the time.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 10:52 p.m. on the 11th floor of Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officer reported detecting the odor but finding no drug evidence in plain view. Report issued.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint received at 11:47 p.m. in Sussman Village. Dispatched officers reported speaking with three residents who were dancing in the living room. The residents agreed to lower the volume.

Round 1 SGA election results

Student Government Association President:Addison Bennett

Vice President for Academic Affairs: Charles Tetelman

Vice President for Financial Affairs: Sam Harris

Vice President of Student Life: Dorothy Parsons

Vice President for Club Affairs: Megan Schachter

President of Senior Class and Interclass Council Chair: Soraya Attia

Vice President of Senior Class: Noam Yossefy

President of Junior Class: Prince Kwanele Tsabedze

Vice President of Junior Class: Carmen Lin

President of Sophomore Class: Madison Plummer

Vice President of Sophomore Class: Kengthsagn Louis

Treasurer of Sophomore Class: Julia Elstein

Social Chair of Sophomore Class: Bernice Langyintuo

The Integrity Board shall be removed from Article VIII Section 7 and added to Article IX: Approved

SGA reports that 560 voters turned out for the elections.

Candidates address student questions at Speech Night

Posted by Julia Leef

SGA President Sam Harris will run for the contested VP for Financial Affairs while two candidates will vie for his former position

Twelve of the sixteen student candidates competing for positions on the Student Government Association Executive Committee and the Inter-Class Council gathered at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, March 19 in Emerson Auditorium along with approximately twenty-five members of the Skidmore community. As is customary with Speech Night, students used this opportunity to speak directly to the candidates in order to better inform their decision for the elections, which will run for the entirety of Thursday, March 20.

Each candidate was given three minutes for a short speech, following by a question-and-answer session with the students in attendance. The event was organized and moderated by election coordinators Elizabeth Reisen '16 and Miles Calzini '16.

Of the thirteen positions students will vote on for this round of elections, only three are contested: the SGA President, the Vice President for Financial Affairs and the Sophomore Class President.

Addison Bennett '16 and Madeleine Kanazawa '15, who are running for the position of SGA President, have both had previous experience in working within SGA. Bennett

is the current Vice President for Club Affairs while Kanazawa is serving as the Vice President for Communications and Outreach and has also served on the Senate for two years.

Bennett answered many questions by citing previous endeavors and policies that he had been involved in, including his expansion of the Club Affairs Committee seats to allow for more direct representation by club members, his work with the committee on divestment, his influence on the College's review of the smoking policy and his involvement in the petition to raise the minimum wage of student workers.

"I do not accept complacency for the shutting out of student voice," Bennett said. "With proper communication and the opportunity to get involved, we can make a real change."

Kanazawa emphasized the value of viewing the student body as a community, stating that the two most important jobs of the SGA President are to advocate for the student body and to maintain a cohesive culture within that body, creating inclusive events that celebrate the racial, sexual, socioeconomic, geographical and cultural differences on campus.

"I want to encourage the student body to continue to get involved and to expand outside of the normal environment they are used to," Kanazawa said. She further stated that SGA representatives do not just stand for the clubs and the committees, but for everyone, and it is their job to look at the broader picture and figure out how to serve the student body instead of just themselves.

"This job is not a selfish thing. It is for the student body and at the end of the day I am the student voice in meetings and in various aspects of my work. Understanding that it's not me that's speaking, it's the students, will drive me on to push things the way that I think they should be pushed." Kanazawa said.

When asked about resolving issues of communication between SGA and the student body, Bennett stated that it is important to let students know specifically how they can be involved, instead of just sending out general email updates that most students delete without reading. To him, he said, SGA represents an empowerment that encompasses all students, regardless of their involvement in the student government. He stated that its purpose is to support clubs and student organizations while bringing student voice to the administration and the Board of Trustees.

"I believe that student input is crucial to ensuring success," Bennett said. "When people have an idea they should be willing to bring it forward and we should be willing to make it happen. Without students, there is no Skidmore."

Both candidates emphasized the importance of compromise, whether it ocuurs between the opinions of the students and the administration or in a conflict between a club's desires and SGA's policies. Bennett stated that he is willing to modify his original vision in order to find what works, while Kanazawa said that she learns from her failures but will fight for something if she truly believes in it, as when she brought back a policy change regarding Willingness-to-Serve that had been rejected by the Senate the previous year.

Another student challenged the candidates' desire for compromise by asking what the candidates would do if faced with direct opposition from President Glotzbach. Both candidates stated that they would continue to stand up for the student body, with Kanazawa stating she would refuse to back down if she felt that something was wrong, using facts to support her arguments.

"This is our lives for however many years we have left," Kanazawa said. "If we're here, we should be having this voice that if something is going wrong and is not for our benefit they [the administration] need to be told that."

Bennett said that he would use facts, figures, data and personal stories to create a strong argument in the context of a professional discussion that he felt he had experience with in his interaction with the administration.

The other contested position on the SGA Executive Committee is the Vice President for Financial Affairs, vied for by current SGA President Sam Harris '15 and Senator Anya Hein '15. Hein stated that she joined the Senate because she did not like SGA's relationship with student clubs, and wanted to understand it more and try to change it.

Harris said he missed interacting with clubs and wanted to focus on several economic-based projects that he was not able to as SGA President, such as addressing the inefficient and unsustainable allocation of club budgets by having Budget & Finance committee re-evaluate them every semester instead of annually as a way to detect money that goes unspent.

When asked what they would do if faced with a conflict between SGA policy and a club's best interests, the candidates had slightly different approaches to the problem.

"The larger, more important point is that our current policies are written quite well and when dealing with an issue of policy it's better to rewrite an issue or a policy that doesn't apply than to break it," Harris said.

"At the end of the day, what matters is that the clubs get to do what they want to do because their money helps supplement it," Hein said. "We're here to help the clubs. We exist to help them get what they need to further their education and potential careers. Just following the rules without any sort of compromise closes doors and restricts what they can do."

Several students questioned Harris about his transition from president to a vice president, asking him how he would feel going into Senate meetings with less power than he had as president and why he should be elected over the fresher candidate of Hein. Harris responded that he plans to bring his former experience on the Budget & Finance committee from his sophomore year as well as his work with the Institutional Policy and Planning committee and with the 2025 Strategic Action Plan to the position if elected.

On the Inter-Class Council, Thabang Maphothoane '17 and Madison Plummer '17 are both campaigning for Sophomore Class President. Plummer has had previous experience as the vice president of her class, during which she sat on the Communications and Outreach committee.

"I think I'm ready to take on that role of leading that whole council. I do have the potential to be president and I would love to have that responsibility over just being vice president," Plummer said.

Maphothoane has served as a Senator-at-Large but emphasized that his lack of experience on the council should not deter voters.

"How will either of us get experience unless we are voted into that council," Maphothoane said.

Charles Tetelman '16, who is running for Vice President for Academic Affairs, spoke about his involvement with the re-evaluation of the College's general education requirements, stating that his role is to keep students informed and to help create and structure a general education curriculum to present to the faculty that incorporates the students' voices. He also said he would like to see more out of classroom discussion between students and professors.

"Education is not only me and my views. The important thing is your [students'] views," Tetelman said. "We're here to learn. I think it's very important to get education out there and to encourage it because a lot of times education is lost in student life and it needs to be out there."

Dorothy Parsons '17 is running for Vice President for Student Life. Parsons has sat on the Campus Sustainability Subcommittee and would like use her inclination towards policies to open a larger discussion of where power should lie in the SGA. In response to a question about attracting more students to the town hall meetings, Parsons stated that she would ask groups such as Res Life to attend the meetings to answer student concerns.

"I would like to address collaboration between groups such as Res Life, Athletics and Dining services and include them in our town hall meetings," Parsons said, adding that she would like to add another event similar to Wafflefest during the second semester to draw people into the dining hall, involve Athletics in the club fair and address the lack of diversity within many clubs.

Megan Schachter '17, the candidate for Vice President for Club Affairs, joined the Senate last September and has sat on the Club Affairs Committee. She said she would like to establish a better relationship between the clubs and the SGA, and one of her first actions would be to elongate the trial period for new clubs and to prove them with a small budget allotted from some of the SGA's unused funds, allowing them to show how they may evolve and organize events before becoming an official club.

"These opportunities have made me realize that I want to take on more responsibilities in the SGA," Schachter said. "Clubs are an integral aspect of the Skidmore community and I would love the opportunity to help them thrive."

Soraya Attia '15, who is currently studying abroad in Florence, stated her campaign for Senior Class President through proxy Hannah DeGraaf '15. Attia has previously served as president for her class and said that she looks forward to coordinating events such as Oktoberfest, the 100 Days Dance and Senior Week.

Carmen Lin '16 is running for Junior Class Vice President. She stated that she would like to sit on the committee for Diversity Affairs and wants to use the Senate as an opportunity to become more involved on campus.

"The Inter-Class Council is about unifying a class and building a community as a whole," Lin said.

Kengthsagn Louis '17, who is the candidate for Sophomore Class Vice President, said she would like to get as close as possible to the rest of the student body and have the council get to know students personally so that they would feel at home.

"I have big dreams," Louis said. "I want to go out and change the world. And why not start here, with my community?"

Julia Elstein '17 is running for Sophomore Class Treasurer, and would like to help students understand where their money is allocated.

Noam Yossefy '15, who is running for Senior Class Vice President but currently abroad, Prince Tsabedze '16, running for Junior Class President and Bernice Langyintuo '17, running for Sophomore Social Chair, did not attend Speech Night.

Candidates' for the Inter-Class Council videos explaining their platforms are available for viewing on the Skids Scribner Facebook page. Students may vote either online or at voting booths in Case Center and in the Atrium of the Murray-Aikins Dining Hall.The results of the elections will be announced midday on Friday, March 21.

Activist for Agricultural Workers to Present Film at Skidmore

Jason Glaser, founder and president of La Isa Foundation, an organization that works to improve conditions for agricultural workers in Central America, will present his documentary film "Bananaland: Blood, Bullets and Poison", at Skidmore College on Tuesday March 25, at 7 p.m. in Gannett Auditorium.

The film covers over 120 years of history of American fruit companies in Central and South America, from the infamous Santa Marta Massacre in 1928, in which the Colombian army opened fire on striking workers of the United Fruit Company, to the intimidation and killings of labor organizers and workers in our own times.

"Bananaland highlights the disconnect between the image we have of bananas as a delicious and nutritious start to our day, a healthy snack and a fixture in our fruit bowls, and the social upheaval, violence and pesticide poisoning that affect millions of residents in the banana-producing regions," said Professor Pushkala Prasad.

The recently completed film has been screened internationally at a number of colleges and universities, including Georgetown University, Goldsmiths College at the University of London, the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard and the University of Salzburg in Austria.

"Clearly there are concerns about industrially produced food consumed in the United States, but that issue is secondary compared to the barbaric treatment many communities face while producing food and biofuel for export to the U.S., the European Union and beyond," said Glaser in an interview with In These Times magazine.

At the event, Glaser will discuss the challenges of making such a politically charged movie as well as the La Isla Foundation's work to assist communities in Nicaragua that have been devastated by chronic kidney disease related to the use of pesticides at banana plantations and sugar cane fields.

"The fact that up to 32 percent of men in certain communities have terminal renal disease and no access to adequate treatment is completely hidden from the local press and obscured by the national government," said Glaser.

La Isla's work to combat kidney disease in Meso-America is being supported by a recent grant to the foundation's partner organization, Solidaridad, which has been awarded $4 million by the Dutch National Postcode Lottery.

Glaser's talk is co-sponsored by the following programs at Skidmore College: International Affairs Program, Latin American Studies, Environmental Studies, Skidmarket, the Zankel Chair in Management and the Management and Business Department.   

Students to campaign for the SGA spring elections at tonight's Speech Night: Candidates vying for positions on the SGA Ex-Comm and the ICC will explain their ideas and platforms

Posted by Julia Leef

In anticipation of the Student Government Association's Spring Round I elections this Thursday, student candidates will have the opportunity to campaign for themselves during Speech Night at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, March 19, in the Emerson Auditorium. All SGA positions are open for the upcoming fall semester on both the SGA Executive Committee and the Inter-Class Council.

While there are sixteen candidates running in this week's elections, only the positions of SGA President, Vice President for Financial Affairs and Sophomore Class President are contested. The candidates will provide short speeches and will answer questions from the student audience. Candidates will also have videos available on the Skids Scribner Facebook page in which they describe their campaign platforms.

"Speech night is a way for the community to get an honest look at the candidates and be well-informed votes," Elizabeth Reisen '16, one of the coordinators for the elections in addition to Miles Calzini '16, said. "They get to know more about the inner workings of SGA and play active roles in the community."

The following students will run in this week's elections:

  • Addison Bennett '16-SGA President
  • Madeleine Kanazawa '15-SGA President
  • Charles Tetelman '16-Vice President for Academic Affairs
  • Sam Harris '15-Vice President for Financial Affairs
  • Anya Hein '15-Vice President for Financial Affairs
  • Dorothy Parsons '17-Vice President for Student Life
  • Megan Schachter '17-Vice President for Club Affairs
  • Soraya Attia '15-Senior Class President
  • Noam Yossefy '15-Senior Class Vice President
  • Prince Tsabedze '16-Junior Class President
  • Carmen Lin '16-Junior Class Vice President
  • Madison Plummer '17-Sophomore Class President
  • Thabang Maphothoane '17-Sophomore Class President
  • Kengthsagn Louis '17-Sophomore Vice President
  • Julia Elstein '17-Sophomore Class Treasurer
  • Bernice Langyintuo '17-Sophomore Social Chair

Following Speech Night, the elections will begin at midnight on Thursday, March 20 and run until midnight on Friday, March 21. Students may vote either online or at voting booths in Case Center and in the Atrium of the Murray-Aikins Dining Hall. The second round of spring elections will take place on April 9.

Campus Safety Reports: Feb. 28 to March 6

Incidents of Note:

  • Friday, Feb. 28-Sex Offense: A sexual assault reported at 11:41 p.m. that occurred on campus in McClellan Hall. Report issued.
  • Sunday, March 2-The Saratoga Springs Police Department reported at 1:05 a.m. a 911 call reporting an intoxicated male subject in a Case Center bathroom. Officers located the subject. The Skidmore College Emergency Medical Service and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department dispatched. The male subject was transported to the Emergency Room for medical assistance. Report issued.
  • Monday, March 3-Drug Law Violation: The Saratoga Springs Police Department reported at 11:17 a.m. the arrest of two students on drug charges in the city of Saratoga. Report issued.

Further incidents:

Friday, Feb. 28:

  • College Violation: A loud noise reported at 12:13 a.m. in the hallway outside of a room in Penfield Hall. Officers dispatched reported that there was no noise detected. Subject vacated the area.
  • Fire Alarm: A fire alarm reported at 1:38 a.m. in Palamountain Hall. Officers, the Saratoga Springs Fire Department and Unit-10 dispatched. Alarm activation was due to a faulty smoke detector in the chemistry lab. Report issued.
  • College Violation: A loud noise reported at 3:03 a.m. in McClellan Hall. Officers checked the entire building, met with the reporting person and reported finding no disturbances.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 11:38 a.m. for Whitman Way. Officers, Unit-10 and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Officer reported that the resident was rinsing out a very hot pan, thus causing a large amount of steam, which triggered the fire alarm. Report issued.
  • Emergency Phone: Two males reported at 12:20 p.m. stuck in the elevator in Case Center. Officers and Unit-10 dispatched. Subjects were released without injury. Report issued.
  • Criminal Mischief: Property damage observed at 4:30 p.m. in McClellan Hall. A hole in the hallway wall was located and recorded, and a report was issued.
  • College Violation: Officer reported excessive noise at 9:03 p.m. in a room in McClellan Hall. Officer reported that the resident complied with the request to lower the volume.

Saturday, March 1:

  • Intoxicated Subject: An intoxicated male reported at 3:02 a.m. in a bathroom suite of McClellan Hall. Officers and the Skidmore College Emergency Medical Service dispatched. Saratoga Springs Fire Department Emergency Medical Service transported the subject to the Emergency Room. Report issued.
  • College Violation: Excessive noise reported at 3:14 a.m. in the Sussman Village. Officers dispatched reported that the residents lowered the volume upon request.
  • College Violation: Excessive noise reported at 3:17 a.m. in the lobby of Wait Hall. Officers dispatched checked the area and found that the call was unfounded.
  • Drug Law Violation: Officer noted drug paraphernalia at 2:49 p.m. and a strong odor of marijuana in the area at Jonsson Tower. Report issued.
  • Harassment: Unwanted contact reported at 2 p.m. at an on-campus location. Complaint taken and report issued.
  • Intoxicated Subject: An intoxicated male reported at 11:23 p.m. in the Wait Hall basement. Dispatched officers and the Skidmore College Emergency Medical Service. Subject was transported to the Emergency Room via ambulance. Report issued.

Sunday, March 2:

  • Suspicious Odor: A gaseous odor reported at 12:35 a.m. near a dumpster in North Woods. Officers dispatched detected the odor faintly. Source unknown.
  • Intoxicated Subject: An intoxicated female student reported falling down and hitting her head at 1:24 a.m. in Wait Hall. Dispatched all officers and the Skidmore College Emergency Medical Service. The subject was transported to the Emergency Room. Report issued.
  • College Violation: Excessive noise reported at 2:15 a.m. by a band in Wiecking Hall. Officers dispatched reported detecting no noise from the band. Several rooms were requested to lower the volume of their voices.
  • Campus Safety Assist: Desk officer received a 911 call at 2:42 a.m. on the Emergency Phone displaying Ladd room 207. Officers dispatched determined the call to have been a false activation. The Saratoga Springs police Department advised.
  • Accident: An accident reported at 2:50 p.m. in West Lot. Dispatched all officers and the Saratoga Police. Report issued.
  • Suspicious Odor: The smell of suspected marijuana reported at 3:15 p.m. at Moore Way. Officer dispatched. Situation unfounded. No odor detected.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 7:23 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments. Officers, Unit-10 and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Activation caused by burned food. Report issued.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 11:20 p.m. on the first floor of Wiecking Hall. Officers dispatched. Odor present but the source could not be located.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 11:34 p.m. on the sixth floor of Jonsson Tower. Officer dispatched was unable to locate the source of the odor.

Monday, March 3:

  • Campus Safety Assist: A welfare check requested at 1:14 a.m. of a parent's daughter in Wiecking Hall. Officer located and delivered the message to the student.
  • Parking: An officer check requested at 11:53 a.m. on the vehicles in violation of the handicap zones at the Art Center. Officer ticketed the vehicles that were in violation. Report issued.
  • Suspicious Odor: A strong odor of marijuana reported at 2:26 p.m. in a hallway of Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officer reported checking the entire area but could not detect any odor. Report unfounded at the time.
  • False Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 4:55 p.m. in Case Center. Dispatched all officers, maintenance and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department. False activation of the pull station on the second floor. Report issued.
  • Campus Safety Assist: Report received at 10:19 p.m. that students were stuck in the south elevator of Jonsson Tower. Officers and Unit-10 dispatched. Students were released without harm. Report issued.
  • College Violation: Excessive noise reported at 10:22 p.m. in Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officers reported that residents lowered the volume upon request.

Tuesday, March 4:

  • Criminal Mischief: Food reported at 8:20 a.m. all over the stairwell in between Starbuck and Wilmarth Hall. The incident had occurred several times recently by unknown person(s). Report issued.

Wednesday, March 5:

  • Criminal Mischief: Food reported thrown on the walls and in the staircase at 7:24 a.m. in Starbuck Center. Officer was dispatched to investigate and issue a report.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 12:43 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments J. Officers, maintenance and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Activation was due to a cooking error. Report issued.
  • Suspicious Odor: Person(s) unknown reported at 5:03 p.m. smoking marijuana in Wiecking Hall. Dispatched officer reported that the subjects dispersed from the area upon his arrival.
  • Suspicious Odor: A suspicious odor reported at 5:05 p.m. on the third floor of Wiecking Hall. Dispatched officer reported that a resident was burning incense. Report issued.

Thursday, March 6:

  • Criminal Mischief: Damage reported at 7:59 a.m. to the wall on the second floor of Penfield Hall near a study room. Photos of the damage were taken. Report issued.
  • Accident: A Property Damage Auto Accident reported at 8:54 a.m. in the Case Center parking lot. Report issued.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 7:25 p.m. in the Hillside B Apartments. Officers, Unit-10 and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Activation was due to a cooking error. Report issued.

At Institution of Higher Learning, Student Wages Low

Posted by Alex Hodor-Lee

An online petition is circulating among students, demanding that the College raise its minimum wage standard commensurate with New York State's newly passed minimum wage laws.

Amanda Seres '14, the SGA Senate secretary posted the petition on Change.com and it has since been disseminated through Facebook.

In her petition Seres writes, "Although nonprofitmaking institutions may elect to abide by the New York State minimum wage standards, Skidmore College is a 501(c)(3) nonprofitmaking institution and has elected exemption from coverage under the minimum wage order," continuing "Skidmore College work study students are therefore exempt from the state minimum wage order and may be paid less than the new state minimum wage."

Seres called the College's choice not to pay work-study in line with the newly designed minimum wage legislation "deplorable."

In March 2013, the New York State legislature and Governor Cuomo struck a deal that will see the state's minimum wage increase to $9 by the end of 2015. Seres cites the new legislation as rationale for increasing student work-study wages.

Approximately 18 percent of the Skidmore population is currently earning federal work-study dollars, says Lisa Lessard, who is assistant director of the office of Financial Aid. The Federal Work-Study Program is a mechanism of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) and, as such, requires that Colleges pay students in accordance with the federal, not state, minimum wage.

Concomitant with state efforts, a national debate is ensuing with Democratic politicians and the White House in an ongoing attempt to raise the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 an hour. However, their initiative is impeded by Republican leaders, who contend such a move would result in large-scale job loss. If the federal minimum wage were raised, it would require Skidmore College and nonprofit institutions across the country to meet the new standard.

Aside from students enrolled in Federal Work-Study, approximately 31 percent of the student population recieve Skidmore work-study dollars-the distinction is that these students (often writing center tutors or professors' or department assistants) are not tied to need-based programs.

"Each year approximately 1,300 students are employed through the Student Employment Program." Lessard says. "Skidmore offers 10 Hourly Pay Levels for students ranging from $7.25, the Federal minimum wage and going up to $10.50."

Nick Masiero, a freshman, buses tables in the dining hall. An entry-level position, not uncommon for freshmen, Masiero makes $8.25-one dollar more than the federal minimum wage.

While that figure seems generous, it doesn't reveal how many students are paid below the current State minimum wage, "Approximately 24% of students earning federal and Skidmore work study dollars are currently at a pay rate less than $8.00 per hour."

"So if you are tutor making $9.00 per hour right now, that may seem like a lot of money because it is significantly higher than [federal minimum wage]." Seres observes. "But in reality, you are making $9 per hour because the college deemed that the skill level required for your job merits pay of $1.75 per hour above the minimum wage, so with the minimum wage raised, all other students deserve raises accordingly."

Though Seres wrote the petition, she has had support from her colleagues in the SGA and issue will likely come to the Senate floor next Monday.

"We on senate started thinking about the issue of minimum wage. I wrote a resolution for support to increase minimum wages. We believed Change.org was the best medium to get students involved and noticed," Senator Britt Dorfman '14, told The Skidmore News.

Seres calls support like Dorfman's "invaluable" because "administrators are much more regularly accessible to [The SGA's Executive Committee] members than with regular students."

Other colleges, similar to Skidmore, have similar student wage structures. Vassar College does not meet New York State's minimum wage standard, minimum wage is $8 per hour (though students cannot earn more beyond the $10 an hour ceiling). Middlebury's minimum wage--effective Jan. 1--is $8.75; their wage ceiling is $10.55. At Swarthmore College, students minimum hourly wage is $8.80, though their student-earning ceiling is $9.44 per hour. At these Colleges the wage ceiling is lower, but the floor is higher.

Since being published on Friday, the petition garnered close to 300 signatures; the end goal is 2,000. (On Wednesday night someone in the Washington, D.C. area anonymously paid to promote the page, boosting it to the front-page Change.com users who have signed a petition related to income inequality or labor/wage issues.)

Many students are dependent on work-study programs and Seres' petition reveals a human element not captured in the very technical debate over raising the College's minimum wage.

"Skidmore's diverse socioeconomic environment includes students who require federal work study as part of their financial aid packages and whose on-campus employment is their primary source of income," continuing, "Some students go days without substantial meals while they wait for their biweekly work study paychecks to arrive."

Those who signed the virtual petition were allowed a space to publicly post their reasons for signing. Many students blasted the College. Some cited their financial hardships, while others invoked legal rationale.

But in signing, one person wrote simply, "The right thing to do."

Campus Safety Reports: Feb. 21 to 27

Incidents of Note:

  • Friday, Feb. 21-Campus Safety Assist: The Saratoga Springs Police Department reported at 8 p.m. that a student had been arrested at an off-campus location.
  • Monday, Feb. 24-Sex Offense: A sexual assault reported at 10:30 a.m. that had occurred at an off-campus location. Investigation is on-going.
  • Monday, Feb. 24-Sex Offense: Report received at 3:50 p.m. of a confidential complaint of a sexual assault that occurred at an on-campus location. No other information was provided.

Further Incidents:

Friday, Feb. 21:

  • College Violation: Noise complaint reported at 12:22 a.m. for the Hillside Apartments B. Officers reported hearing loud music, which the students agreed to lower.
  • College Violation: Noise complaint reported at 12:31 a.m. for the first floor of Wiecking Hall. Officers reported loud talking and that the students quieted down.
  • Suspicious Odor: A cigarette odor reported at 4:08 a.m. in the hallway and lobby of Jonsson Tower. Officer reported detecting an odor but being unable to determine a source.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 10:52 a.m. from the Sussman Apartments K. All units dispatched. Alarm was due to cooking and was reset.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 1:24 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments H. Officers reported the alarm was due to cooking. Alarm reset.
  • College Violation: Noise complaint reported at 11:28 p.m. at the Sussman Apartments J. Students agreed to lower the music.

Saturday, Feb. 22:

  • Criminal Mischief: Fire alarm activation received at 2:21 a.m. at Wiecking Hall. Alarm due to a discharged fire extinguisher. Alarm reset.
  • Disorderly Conduct: An unruly spectator was escorted from the Mens' Basketball game at 5:15 p.m. at the Williamson Sports Center.
  • Criminal Mischief: Officer reported finding a hole at 9:35 p.m. in the east entranceway wall of McClellan Hall. Report taken.
  • Suspicious Activity: Suspicious activity reported at 9:51 p.m. in McClellan Hall. Officers dispatched.

Sunday, Feb. 23:

  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm activation received at 7:05 a.m. at 1 Moore Way. Alarm was due to a humidifier and was restored.
  • Suspicious Activity: An unknown male was reported at 7:22 a.m. laying on the floor of his room in McClellan Hall. Officers spoke with the male who said he had fallen asleep in the wrong room. Report taken.

Monday, Feb. 24:

  • Accident: Reporting person stated at 10:10 a.m. falling on some ice on the walkway between Starbuck Center and McClellan Hall. Reporting person advised of the injury. Accident report completed.
  • Accident: A person reported at 3:45 p.m. slipping and falling on the ice while walking down the Cane Crossing Roadway. Accident report completed. Medical attention provided by Health Services.
  • Campus Safety Assist: Concern reported at 4:15 p.m. for an unwanted person possibly visiting the reporting person on campus. Report issued. Appropriate contacts were made and procedures put in place.

Tuesday, Feb. 25:

  • Campus Safety Assist: A cigarette receptacle reported smoldering at 5:32 p.m. outside of Case Center. Officer requested that the reporting person place snow inside to extinguish the items. Officer arrived on the scene and reported that no smoke or fire was detected. Facilities asked to empty the receptacle.
  • Fire Alarm: Fire alarm received at 9:16 p.m. at the Sussman Village. Dispatched officers and Unit-10 and the Saratoga Springs Fire Department advised. Activation due to a cooking error. Report issued.

Wednesday, Feb. 26:

  • Criminal Mischief: Report received at 7:19 a.m. that the candy machine was tipped over on its face in the lobby area of McClellan Hall. Officers dispatched.

Thursday, Feb. 27:

  • Accident: Reporting person in the Campus Safety office at 11:50 a.m. to fill out an accident report as she had slipped on ice and fell on Tuesday, Feb. 25, near the Murray-Aikins Dining Hall.
  • College Violation: A noise complaint reported at 11:14 p.m. at Jonsson Tower. Dispatched officer.