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CATALYST
CUBAN WRITER IMPEACHMENT pg.
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NOVEMBER 27, 2019 VOLUME XXXIX ISSUE XI
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FOOD INSECURITY pg.
New College of Florida's student-run newspaper
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Transgender Day of Remembrance:
Students honor trans individuals who lost their lives BY SERGIO SALINAS On Wednesday Nov. 20, students on campus honored Transgender Day of Remembrance. Third-year resident advisor Jas Marie organized the event, distributing transgender flags and stickers for students to show their support. Along with members of the faculty and administration, students walked to the bayfront, where a vigil was held to remember those who lost their lives in 2019 as a result of violence against trans people. “Trans Day of Remembrance recognizes that there's still a lot of hate toward people who don't conform to gender norms,” Marie said. “We have to live with the constant fear that people won't accept us or worse yet, that people will kill us. Trans Day of Remembrance honors that fear and those losses.” Trans Day of Remembrance began in 1999. Gwendolyn Ann Smith
Sergio Salinas/Catalyst (Left to right) Thesis student Cabrini Austin, third-year Resident Advisor Jas Marie, and second-year Gwen Roberts hold up a flag to show their support.
a trans activist in San Francisco created the Remembering Our Dead project in 1998, to record the deaths of trans people in the U.S. The first Trans Day of Remembrance was celebrated in San Francisco and Boston in 1999 to honor those who lost their lives. Now, 20 years since the first Trans Day of Remembrance and
trans people are still being killed. The Remembering Our Dead projects lists 37 reported trans deaths in the period between Oct. 1, 2018 and Sept. 30, 2019. In 2019, there have been over 250 trans deaths across the world. In the U.S., the Human Rights Campaign has found that regionally the South has accounted for 58
percent of transgender killings since 2013. In 2019, there have been 22 reported trans killings. Ninety-one percent of these killings were Black women, 68 percent occurred in the South. Since 2013, 82 percent of trans violence has occurred in states with no hate crime laws protecting sexual orientation and gender identity. One such killing was that of Bee Love Slater, a Black trans woman in Clewiston, Fla. Slater was the 18th trans person killed in 2019. Given that Slater lived only 133 miles from New College, it can be hard to think about the dangerous reality LGBTQ+ people face in places where the expression of identity is not socially acceptable. Celebrating Trans Day of Remembrance on campus serves as a reminder that while progress has been and continues to be made, there is still a long way to go in atcontinued on p. 10
Cultivating queer community on campus through literature, art and performance at unCoverstories Hayley Vanstrum/Catalyst
BY HAYLEY VANSTRUM
https://doc-0k-18-docs. googleusercontent.com/ docs/securesc/s7jurnmk912se8sp3mgg3hd8llrh0uos/obdpo7fpcdn719 co01n4qb7t57rv346b/1 506448800000/0533393 9401667025082/025783 83506865688437/0B4ze ECbsUTILVjVXY25YUU 52ZUk?e=download
Saturday morning, Nov. 23, was bright, breezy and beautiful, the perfect fall weather for flipping through sketchbooks, chatting with friends and picking up some exciting new reading material at New College’s first ever LGBTQ+ book fair, unCoverstories. This ambitious event, which featured a wide variety of literature, poetry, art, zines, crafts and live performances by students and local artists, started out as a point of casual conversation regarding queer literature on campus between Queery Co-Presidents Freddie O’Brion and Emily Garcia and Pride Hall RA Sarah Lane during the Spring 2019 semester. “Sarah was always interested in
WHAT’S INSIDE
Event-planners covered the Nook in book pages, giving the space a cute, crafty feel.
the concept of a book swap activity and I was especially passionate about bringing authors and artists to campus,” O’Brion said. “As we started planning the event formally, Sarah had the idea of reaching out to Jamie
because including a writing component seemed like a natural fit for the event.” Writing LLC RA Jamie Christos was happy to help the trio plan the event, knowing that unCoverstories
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Hometown Reflections
Holly Binns
would be a great opportunity to encourage students to actively participate in the world of queer literature while also making more intentional connections with their peers. “I think that ‘community’ goes far deeper than sharing a commonality with others,” Christos said. “Community arises out of a shared need, and a mutualistic ability to meet that need. So I think that the book fair, in centering and promoting queer art and experience, plays an important part in cultivating and strengthening the queer community on campus.” Lane echoed similar sentiments, affirming that unCoverstories was less about queer visibility on campus and more about encouraging continued on p. 6
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