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Thursday, March 24, 2022 • Volume 75, Issue 24
Mask optional policy creates uncertainty Bailey Allen Beacon Staff
Illustration Lucia Thorne
For some Emerson professors, Women’s History Month showcases oppression, not accomplishment Vivi Smilgius Beacon Staff Women’s History Month seeks to acknowledge female accomplishment and success, but some activists believe it points to a larger systemic problem: the continued oppression of women in America and beyond. For Tulasi Srinivas, an anthropology professor at Emerson College, Women’s History Month highlights the structures that stand between women and success, particularly in the U.S. “The fact that we need a history month shows how marginalized people who are central to the culture and economy of the United States are,” Srinivas said. First recognized in New York by the Socialist Party of America, the United States’ first International Women’s Day happened on March 8, 1908, following a series of protests by New York female garment workers demanding equal pay. Former President Jimmy Carter deemed March to be Women’s History Month in 1980, dedicating the month to commemo-
rating the role of women in American history and society. While the U.S. is one of the only countries to dedicate a month to Women’s History, Srinivas said the nation’s lack of women in power negates its attempts at recognition. Srinivas pointed to America’s government bodies, noting that women make up roughly half of the U.S. population but hold just over a quarter of seats in the nation’s Congress. Women of color, she added, are even more severely underrepresented. For Srinivas, Women’s History Month points not to a history of success, but to a centuries-long struggle. “These cultural structures are embedded in our society,” she said. “The fact that we don’t think about them is not unusual—it’s not meant to be thought about because it is naturalized as a way things are done.” Srinivas said these “naturalized systems” of oppression are at the root of American politics Women’s History Month, Pg. 3
As announced in the Feb. 18 campus-wide email correspondence, the college eased its indoor mask policy everywhere except classrooms, the Center for Health and Wellness, and Counseling and Psychological Services, on Monday, to which students have expressed mixed feelings. Some students are reluctant to remove their masks, while others have taken the opportunity to roam campus mask-free. Heidi Garmise, a first-year visual and media arts major, does not plan on taking her mask off due to COVID fears. Garmise admitted to worrying that a lack of masking will result in a more rampant spread of the virus. “Besides when I’m eating, I usually always keep my mask on,” she said. “I don’t know if I’m the biggest fan of [the mandate] being lifted right now. I’m in [Emerson Dance Company] and we were talking about trying to keep masks on because we don’t want anything to happen before the dance concert.” The mask optional policy applies to all campus spaces except classrooms, which will likely keep them in place until at least the end of the academic year—something that first-year writing, literature and publishing major Megan Marshall believes is unproductive. “I don’t really see the point,” Marshall said. “It would have been beneficial just to keep masks [everywhere] for the rest of the school year and then start fresh without them next year.” Masks optional, Pg. 2
Masked students walking down Boylston Street. / Beacon Archives
Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ is not the ‘progressive’ remake ae hoped for Emerson men’s volleyball team at Saturday’s tournament. / Katie Redefer Beacon Staff
Men’s volleyball splits record in annual Pride-themed games Vivi Smilgius Beacon Staff The Emerson men’s volleyball team left Saturday’s “You Can Play” games with a split record, sweeping Colby-Sawyer College and losing to Regis College in a hard-fought five-set match. Played annually in the college’s Bobbi Brown and Steven Plofker Gym, the “You Can Play” games are part of a nationwide initiative honoring LGBTQ athletes and coaches. The project attempts to make sports safer and more inclusive for members of the LGBTQ community. Emerson head coach Ben Read said the “You Can Play” games are important for recognizing queer people in sports, especially at schools with high LGBTQ populations like Emerson, which ranked first on the Princeton Review’s ranking of LGBTQ-friendly colleges. “It doesn’t matter your gender, your race, your sexual orientation, or anything else—if you can play, you can play,” he said. “It’s nice to see in athletics at a school like Emerson, where we continually have one of, if not the top LGBTQ-friendly
schools in the country.” Sophomore middle blocker Neiko Pittman said the “You Can Play” games are consistently some of the Lions’ best matches, because LGBTQ pride means so much to the team and Emerson’s culture as a college. “Athletics, in the past, have not been a supportive place for queer people,” Pittman said. “Emerson has a large queer community and we have queer people on our team, so it’s just something we do to support each other.” Pittman recorded a team-high 31 kills between the two matches, exceeding his average 3.37 kills per set. The Lions’ day began at 10 a.m. against the Regis College Pride. Emerson entered the game 2-13 on the season and 0-6 in conference matchups, while Regis came in at 9-10 with a 5-4 conference record. The first set began with an Emerson service error, followed by kills from sophomore outside hitter Luke Roehm and first-year setter Bayden Slavik. The Lions exchanged points with the Pride but repeated missed serves kept them in a two- or Men’s volleyball, Pg. 8
Christina Horacio Beacon Correspondent With the release of this year’s Oscar nominations, Steven Spielberg’s 2021 film adaptation of West Side Story has returned to the spotlight. The remake received seven nominations, including Best Picture. However, the lack of significant criticism surrounding the film troubles me, as it has once again failed to cast a Puerto Rican Maria. Taking the racist history of the film into consideration, it is disheartening that Spielberg––another white director––would make the same mistake decades later. As a young Puerto Rican kid living in the Bronx, my father gleefully memorized much of the choreography of the original 1961 film adaptation of the broadway musical, West Side Story. He did so mostly because he saw himself reflected in the storyline, which follows two New York City-based gangs divided by race; “the Jets” being the white gang, and “the Sharks” being the Puerto Ricans. There is a long-held feud between the two that escalates after Tony, a former Jet, starts seeing Maria, the younger sister of the designated leader of the Sharks, Bernardo. Tony and Maria struggle to continue their romantic relationship in the midst of the violence between the aforementioned gangs. When my father shared the movie with me in his adulthood, he told me how much he wished the Sharks actually consisted of real Puerto Ricans. Since race is positioned at the forefront of the film, it is quite shocking to learn that the 1961 film adaptation almost exclusively cast white actors for the roles of the Sharks, effectively putting them in brown face. Rita Moreno, who played the role of Anita, West Side Story, Pg. 5
INSIDE THIS EDITION Book Campaign Pg. 2 COVID Update Pg. 3 Housing, course registration stress Pg. 3 Editorial: Tuition increase unsustainable for students Pg. 4 Opinion: Fashion is not synonymous with gender or sexuality Pg. 4 Student to hold sustainable clothing swap Pg. 6 ‘Freestyle Love Supreme’ review Pg. 7 Former volleyball player remembered Pg. 8
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*Accumulated from Spring 2022 Semester