VOL. CLXXIV NO.34
CLOUDY
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2017
HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE
OVIS discusses travel ban
IT TAKES TWO TO TANGO
HIGH 43 LOW 30
By ALEX FREDMAN
The Dartmouth Staff
LAUREN KIM/THE DARTMOUTH STAFF
People gather in Sarner Underground on Monday night to learn to tango.
OPINION
ZHU: A LETTER TO CONSERVATIVES PAGE 4
SCHWARTZ: THE DARTMOUTH ‘WAY OF LIFE’ PAGE 4
ARTS
STUDENT SPOTLIGHT: ALEX LOPEZ ’15 PAGE 7
MOVIE REVIEW: ‘LEGO BATMAN MOVIE’ PAGE 7
Q&A: ACTRESS CHRISTINA RITTER ’99 PAGE 8
FOLLOW US ON
TWITTER @thedartmouth COPYRIGHT © 2017 THE DARTMOUTH, INC.
Petition calls for eliminating app fees By NOAH GOLDSTEIN and ZACHARY BENJAMIN
The Dartmouth Senior Staff
On Wednesday, 1vyG, an advocacy group for firstgeneration students, sent out a press release announcing its “No Apologies Initiative,” which calls for universities to eliminate application fees
for low-income and firstgeneration college students by the 2017-18 application cycle. Student Assembly president Nick Harrington ’17 signed the press release, alongside student government representatives from the seven other Ivy League institutions, Northwestern University,
V-Feb hosts sexpositive events
By JOYCE LEE
The Dartmouth Staff
Dialogues about gender equity and combating gender-based violence through exploration of sexuality and relationships were publicized this month through events associated with V-February. V-Feb is Dartmouth’s take on V-Day, a global movement against violence towards girls and women. Events held this month as part
of V-Feb included Sexpo: A Sex Positive Fair, “The Vagina Monologues” and a workshop and lunch with Jan Lloyd and Kelly Arbor of Rocket Erotic, who offer performance-based education about sexuality. Member of the V-Feb programming team Alice Hsu ’19 said that part of her work with Sexpo and Rocket Erotic included relating events back to the mission of SEE V-FEB PAGE 2
Stanford University and the University of Chicago, as well as representatives for first-generation, low-income student groups from all members of the Ivy League. The press release, written by 1vyG executive director and Brown University SEE PETITION PAGE 3
On Monday, the Office of Visa and Immigration Services hosted an information session to address President Donald Trump’s recent executive order restricting entry to the U.S. from seven Muslim-majority countries. The executive order, signed by the president on Jan. 27, initiated a 90-day ban on the admission of non-U.S. citizens from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. The act is currently subject to a temporary restraining order pending review of its constitutionality by the court system. Around 50 students, staff and community members gathered in Kellogg Auditorium at the Geisel School of Medicine for the hour-long information session, which was co-sponsored by Geisel and the Office of the Provost. The session began with a statement by geog raphy professor Richard Wright ,
whose research focuses on immigration. Wright spoke about the prohibition of refugees, especially those from Syria. Wright said that while the U.S. admits around one million immigrants per year, only five to 10 percent of those are refugees. He added that in contrast, Canada, a country whose population is about one-tenth the size of the U.S., has taken 40,000 refugees from Syria alone since November 2015. “We live in a globalized, mobilized world, but this is a serious problem we face as human beings,” Wright said. “Rather than retreat from this, we should move forward and realize our responsibilities in this particular moment.” Wright added that there is currently no Dartmouth course that specifically studies refugees, though he is in the process of creating a course addressing refugees, migrants and diasporas. SEE OVIS PAGE 2
Q&A with professor Lisa Marsch
By VIGNESH CHOCKALINGAM The Dartmouth
Geisel School of Medicine psychiatry professor and director of the Dartmouth Center for Technology and Behavioral Health Lisa Marsch recently testified before Congress’ Bipartisan Task Force to Combat the Heroin Epidemic about her research on the nation’s opioid crisis. The task force was formed in 2015 by Rep. Ann Kuster ’88 and former Rep. Frank Guinta, both of New Hampshire. The state has the country’s highest rate of opioid overdoses per
capita . Marsch’s research focuses on understanding the roots of the opioid crisis and researching effective methods of addressing it, such as treatments and improving access to care.
How did you end up at Dartmouth? LM: I came to Dartmouth about five and a half, almost six years ago now. Actually, I was running a research center in New York City. It’s very different to live in Manhattan versus living in Hanover, but I came here because I was really attracted to the community of
creative and talented people who are also cooperative. It was nice to see that community around campus — it seemed like a great place to make connections across the schools. So we sit in the medical school, but get to reach out to folks in computer science and The Dartmouth Institute [for Health Policy and Clinical Practice] and [the] Thayer [School of Engineering] and elsewhere around campus to really engage in a broad interdisciplinary community and some collaboration. SEE Q&A PAGE 5