VOLUME 104, ISSUE NO. 16 | STUDENT-RUN SINCE 1916 | RICETHRESHER.ORG | WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 2020
Moody Center’s ‘Radical Revisionists’ confronts colonial narratives
In Yinka Shonibare’s “Girl on Globe,” a headless child lurches backwards on a globe that depicts the areas most affected by climate change. channing wang / THRESHER
SANVITTI SAHDEV SENIOR WRITER
Last Friday, the Moody Center for the Arts came alive with visitors for the opening reception of “Radical Revisionists: Contemporary African Artists Confronting Past and Present.” The new exhibit, on display from Jan. 24 to May 16, features artists from Africa and its diaspora who challenge Eurocentric
narratives of colonialism, migration and identity. According to Moody Executive Director Alison Weaver, “Radical Revisionists” was inspired by the October opening of Rice’s new Center for African and African American Studies as well as the theme of this year’s FotoFest Biennial, an international photographic arts festival based in Houston: “African Cosmologies — Photography, Time and the Other.”
“We focused on contemporary artists addressing the colonial past and post-colonial present and found artists interested in these issues from across the continent including South Africa, Senegal, Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria and Cameroon,” Weaver said. “Softening the Borders,” an interactive installation by Ghanaian artist Serge Attukwei Clottey, occupies the central gallery. SEE RADICAL PAGE 8
NEWS
Wickerson to appoint interim parliamentarian SAMMI JOHNSON SENIOR WRITER
After the resignation of both the Student Association Parliamentarian Freddy Cavallaro and Deputy Parliamentarian Emma Donnelly and with elections around the corner, SA president Grace Wickerson has yet to appoint an interim parliamentarian for the remaining few weeks of the term. The SA parliamentarian is appointed by the president and is expected to uphold the rules of the constitution and bylaws to make sure that SA members don’t commit any potential violations that could become University Court cases, Wickerson said. “We’re focusing on a quick appointment, especially since our elections process begins Feb. 5,” Wickerson said. “That’s when
we start having to be aware of rules and regulations around campus, and that is enforced by the director of elections and the parliamentarian.” According to Wickerson, a Brown College senior, Cavallaro stepped down from his position due to scheduling conflicts and personal reasons. Usually, the deputy parliamentarian would step in to fill the role for the remainder of the term. However, Wickerson said that Donnelly turned down the opportunity to become parliamentarian and stepped down from her deputy position as well due to scheduling conflicts, leaving both roles vacant. Both Donnelly, a Duncan College sophomore, and Cavallaro, a Will Rice College senior, declined to comment for the Thresher.
Wickerson said that the appointment process for the parliamentarian is not described in the constitution, but the SA president typically appoints the position based on an application or interview process. To choose an interim parliamentarian, Wickerson said they will not conduct interviews or require applications, but will instead look at past SA members who might be interested and already have an awareness of the SA’s documentation. Wickerson said the parliamentarian is essential to run the SA elections held in the spring semester, as they serve on the election committee along with the director of elections. With election petitions due Feb. 5, Wickerson will need to appoint an interim parliamentarian by next week at the latest.
NEWS
Rice Management Company defends Ion
RYND MORGAN NEWS EDITOR
Allison Thacker (Baker College ’96) and Ryan LeVasseur (Wiess College ’01, School of Architecture ’03) of the Rice Management Company gave a presentation to dissuade Student Association members from supporting Senate Resolution No. 8, a resolution advising that Rice and the Board of Trustees enter into a Community Benefits Agreement with the Houston Coalition for Equitable Development without Displacement at the SA Senate meeting Jan. 27. Afterward, the sponsors of Senate Resolution No. 8 gave a presentation on the resolution. The sponsors decided against passing the resolution until after Feb. 4, which is when the HCEDD, a coalition of community groups in Houston, will meet to officially draft the CBA. A CBA is a legally binding, enforceable agreement that calls for a range of benefits to be produced by the development project. The presentation from Rice Management Company outlined the plan for the Ion and the South Main Innovation District. According to the timeline given in the presentation, the Ion will finish construction by January 2021, and construction of the South Main Innovation District will be completed by 2030. LeVasseur, managing director of direct real estate and director of the Ion project, said that not only did the HCEDD not have the authority to enter into a legally binding contract such as a CBA, but that the group, while representing a legitimate portion of the community, did not represent the entire community. After the presentation, Nia Prince, one of the sponsors of the resolution, said she did not understand why LeVasseur said that the HCEDD did not have the authority to be a counter-party in a legally binding contract. “Honestly, that really confused me. I did not understand why they said that because we have the research, literally cited right here in our resolution, to show that it’s possible to sign into a CBA with a coalition. It’s a community benefits agreement, not a city benefits agreement. It can be done with coalitions,” Prince, a Sid Richardson College junior, said. Mary Claire Neal, another sponsor of the resolution, added that the HCEDD has legal representation. “The coalition currently has a legal team, Texas Appleseed from Austin. So there are lawyers working with us, and I think they know what’s possible in terms of enforceability,” Neal, a Jones College junior, said. Thacker, the president and chief investment officer of Rice Management Company, said a lack of affordable housing and resulting displacement in the Third Ward is not a direct or immediate consequence of the Ion. “Displacement is happening right now, before the Ion,” Thacker said. “And so, this is a major issue that our city needs to grapple with, starting right now, starting 10 years ago. The Ion itself is not going to cause specific displacement this year.” LeVasseur said that the issues the HCEDD represents do not encompass all of the issues that concern the community. “In the very simple sense, this could be boiled down to: ‘Hey, did you hear Rice is displacing poor people?’ ‘No, I didn’t hear that.’ ‘Sign this. This will stop it.’ And it’s a broader issue, right? There are multiple issues at play here [and] right now, what is in this specific proposal with this specific language, does not address all of those issues properly,” LeVasseur said. This story has been condensed for print. Read the full story at ricethresher.org.