Print Edition of The Observer for Thursday, November 17, 2016

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Volume 51, Issue 55 | thursday, november 17, 2016 | ndsmcobserver.com

Students push for sanctuary campus ND, SMC students, faculty demonstrate, create petition in support of undocumented immigrants By EMILY McCONVILLE

By NICOLE CARATAS AND MARTHA REILLY

News Writer

Saint Mary’s Editor and Associate Saint

At 1:35 p.m. Wednesday, senior Jessica Pedroza and sophomore Gargi Purohit stood up in South Dining Hall and announced they were walking out in solidarity with Notre Dame’s and the country’s undocumented students. “As Notre Dame students, we appreciate the solidarity and support that our President and administration have shown towards our DACA community, and we call on our President to publicly acknowledge Notre Dame’s status as a Sanctuary Campus,” they read from a statement. “We call on universities everywhere to follow see ND PROTEST PAGE 4

Mary’s Editor

CHRIS COLLINS | The Observer

Students sit in front of Main Building on Wednesday afternoon in a show of support for undocumented immigrants. Students hoped to push administration to make Notre Dame a sanctuary campus.

“Can I have an extra one for my car?” College President Jan Cervelli asked a group of students who congregated in Le Mans Hall on Wednesday to hand out signs demonstrating support for undocumented students, as well as support for Saint Mary’s becoming a sanctuary campus. The demonstration arose as part of a national movement to make all college campuses a sanctuary campus, protecting students with Deferred Action see SMC PROTEST PAGE 4

Panelists discuss Court rules in Notre election results Dame’s favor in ESPN case By LUCAS MASIN-MOYER News Writer

Since the election of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States last week, the Notre Dame campus and the country at large have reacted strongly, with widespread protests. In order to make sense of the 2016 election, ND Votes hosted a panel titled, “What Just Happened?” with associate professor of political science Christina Wolbrecht, Latino Institute director Luis Ricardo Fraga and political science chair

David Campbell. The panelists opened the conversation by discussing what they saw as the biggest surprises of the 2016 election. Fraga said the ability of certain ideologies to coexist surprised him most. “Strong feelings of economic displacement, a sense of dispossession, a desire for change and anti-establishment positions ... easily coexist, and perhaps even support, some of the most anti-immigrant and anti-Latino views see ELECTION PAGE 3

Observer Staff Report

The Notre Dame Security Police (NDSP), along with other private Indiana universities with private police forces, have no obligation to disclose police records or investigations, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled Wednesday. The ruling comes after a long legal battle between the University and ESPN, which sued Notre Dame for access to police records involving athletes. The decision ruled that NDSP is “not a public agency for the

purposes of APRA [Access to Public Records Act]” — a ruling which affirmed a previous trial court decision. Public police forces, such as the Indiana State Police Department and the South Bend Police Department, are obligated to release their respective records under APRA. According to the decision, private educational institutions “have been granted statutory authority to appoint police officers to protect their campuses,” and while these officers do have the power to arrest, they are also obligated to enforce

the rules and regulations of the educational institution. “We are pleased but not surprised by the decision,” Notre Dame spokesman Paul J. Browne said in an interview with the South Bend Tribune. “The Court took a careful look at APRA and unanimously concluded that the statute’s plain language made clear that it did not apply to private university police departments.” “We are extremely disappointed by the ruling and what it represents for public transparency,” ESPN said in a statement.

GreeND, faculty consider sustainability practices On Wednesday night, Notre Dame faculty and GreeND gathered with students in Geddes Hall to discuss sustainability efforts on Notre Dame’s campus. Paul Kempf, senior director of utilities and maintenance; John Sitter, Mary Lee Duda

Professor of Literature; senior Tessa Clarizio, president of GreeND and Fossil Free ND core member; and Margaret Pfeil, professor of theology, aimed to provide perspectives on sustainability and the University’s engagement with it. Kempf said the University has benefited from having a combined power plant, installed

more than 50 years ago . “The reason they did it was that it was efficient, and it was cost effective. It kept us from putting boilers and chillers and all kind of equipment in [different buildings]. … At the same time, they let us produce electricity while we were heating other buildings or cooling. … What people didn’t think about in the ’50s was that it

really was an emissions-reduction strategy. You’re getting twice as much work or energy out of the same amount of fuel you run.” Kempf said the University is working to reduce carbon emissions, an effort that dates back to 2008 and includes temperature set points in lead buildings and moving away from coal. Kempf said he has

several sustainability goals as the campus continues to grow. “We’re going to have to expand over the next few years,” he said. “So what’s happening over the next few years is we want to do things that are lower carbon-intensive. The University has announced that, by 2020, we’re going to

News PAGE 2

Scene PAGE 5

Viewpoint PAGE 7

Men’s Basketball PAGE 12

Baraka Bouts PAGE 12

By JACKIE NAVARRO News Writer

see CLIMATE PAGE 3


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