Thursday, March 15, 2007
The online edition of UMass Dartmouth's weekly newspaper
Issue 21, Volume 53
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HOUSING SELECTION

Taking a different turn

As the highly anticipated housing selection approaches for the 2007-2008 academic year, prospective residents will find that 
there will be a number of significant changes in the way university housing is going about its registration process this time around. 
For example, the lengthy lines in the Campus Center that traditionally occur every year will become a thing of the past as one of the most notable changes will have residents registering for their living arrangements online.

In past years, students involved in room selection would be assigned specific times where they could go to an assigned location in order to determine where they were going to live for the next year. This year, the office of housing and residential life(OHRL) is going to be implementing a new system that will attempt to make the housing selection process easier for everyone. The online system will allow students to register for their housing from anywhere they can access the internet, including the comfort of their room.

As has been done in previous years, students will receive an e-mail from their UMass e-mail account telling them the day and time when they are allowed to sign up for housing. These times will be grouped by order of graduating semester. Students graduating soonest will be given the earliest registration times, and students graduating last will be given the latest times. Student’s official registration time will then be decided by lottery with the help of the randomization.com.

Similar to how COIN’s class registration works, students aren’t required to sign up at the exact time that they are assigned, but it is to their benefit as they are more likely to get their first choice. Once their registration time has come, students will be allowed to go through the registration process on the website.

How the system works

Students first enter their username and password to enter the main site. User names and default passwords will be the same as in COIN. Upon initial login students have the option of changing their password for the OHRL website.

After logging on, students are directed to a page where they have three options. The first option is to select a new room. The second option is to hold the room that they currently are living in. The third option allows students to pull in a roommate to the room that they have reserved for next year. (Both roommates are first given the option to hold the room that they currently reside in.)

When looking for a room, students are given links to all of the dormitories. After clicking on any of these links students can look at photos, floor plans, and a description of the building.

There is a very specific search tool which can narrow the search for available rooms to a specific hall, and floor. One thing to note is that the system knows every student’s birthday, and therefore will not give students who will be under 21 by first semester the option of signing up for 21+ apartments.

After seeing available rooms students can pick an open room, and reserve their spot by checking off a box. The room will then be held for the next five minutes. Students can also pull in friends to the room by entering their future roommate’s user ID, and password.

Finally, students can choose a meal plan to be added onto their contract. Students who pull in friends will also have to choose meal plans for anyone they are pulling into the room with them.

Additional information

One major change that students should be aware of is the allowance of co-ed housing in the Woodland apartments. It was announced by Director of Housing Victor Culatta that the new online system could not handle the ability to give the option of co-ed housing. Culatta stated that he wants to “meet the needs of the students.” And as a result, he and his staff found a way to make co-ed housing available to those who wanted it. Instead of using the new online system to register for housing, students who want to live in a mixed gender apartment will have to sign up at the housing office at their assigned registration time.

Rules for co-ed apartments are the same as they were in previous years, and students need to fill the entire apartment. At least one student needs to be at the housing office to sign up for the apartment, and need to have a proxy form for anyone who is not able to sign up in person at that time.

As the actual registration dates draw closer, OHRL will be continually updating their website with information. Also, they will be holding information sessions on how to navigate the new website, dates soon to be released.

On the days that the housing selection process will actually take place, the OHRL staff will be available until 8pm in order to assist students in any problems they may encounter while dealing with the website.

The websites that students will use is currently still under construction, and therefore not yet up for students to use. Upon completion, there will be a link to the website on the UMass Dartmouth homepage.


WRC encourages a safe Spring Break

In just a few days, it will be time to head off to spring break! This long awaited vacation is one that we’ve all been planning for a while, and although some of us are just going home, many of us are off to sunnier, wetter, and wilder places. Although it may be easier said than done, it’s important to remember our sexual health while we’re at the beaches and bars.

An important concern while partying is the large groups of people and alcoholic beverages. These days, it is so easy for drugs to be placed in a person’s drink. Taking advantage of women using “date rape” drugs has become quite common. These drugs include Rohypnol (roofies) and GHB. They can quickly be mixed into any kind of beverage and are colorless and odorless. They usually make the victim drowsy, sick, and sleepy. She usually quickly feels drunk and this can lead to the young woman passing out and never recalling the events of the blackout period. This almost always leads to rape and unprotected sex, which will be followed by many of the emotional and psychological effects of such an incident.

To protect yourself and your friends from being a victim to these drugs, some measures should be taken. Always watch as your drink is being prepared and never leave it unattended. Try to stay within your group of friends, and check on each other periodically to make sure that no one is feeling faint, sick, or needs to go to the hospital. If a you or a friend does get raped, head to the nearest hospital in order to receive the proper medical attention to help prevent pregnancy.

For those of us who choose to have sex throughout the break, it’s important to remember to use a condom, which is 99% effective in preventing pregnancy and the transfer of STDs, such as genital warts, herpes, Chlamydia, and HIV/AIDS, to name a few. The use of condoms is one of the most effective and probably the cheapest way to inhibit the spread of diseases and the possibility of pregnancy. Facilities on campus, such as the Women’s Resource Center and the Health Center provide free condoms for students. It’s important to note that abstinence is 100% effective and the idea of going on spring break should not make you feel the pressure to have sex just because everyone else is doing it.

All in all, don’t forget to be safe and watch out for your friends, as well as for yourself. If you are in a new country, educate yourself about how to stay safe. Women can be easy targets when they are under the influence of alcohol. Very few of us would like to come back from our vacations possibly with some terrible disease or pregnant. The Peer Health Educators are handing out safe sex kits in the Campus Center throughout this week, so drop by to become learn more about the risks and ways to stay safe.

For more information, contact the Women’s Resource Center at ksylvia@umassd.edu or 508-910-4584.


Students react to ‘free speech zone’

The anniversary of the establishment of the Public Forum policy has come and gone. It hit the two year mark this January. According to the consensus of the students and faculty interviewed, the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth has experienced an infringement on their freedom of speech for the past two years. The Public Forum policy implemented a zone, which is the only area on campus where demonstrations, protests, and rallies are permitted.

The Public Forum Zone, or better known by students as the free speech zone, is located on “the grassy areas to the south and east, within 75 feet, of the campanile, bounded by the Group I campanile walkway and the Group IV campanile walkway” as stated in the 2005 UMass Dartmouth Campus Policy Statement. The size is roughly one half an acre and is considerably small when compared to the 710 acres UMass Dartmouth’s campus has to offer (UMD web-site).

The way in which the administration went about implementing the policy has been a controversial issue for students and faculty at UMass Dartmouth. The administration sent out an email only to Student Senate and Faculty Senate about a student comment period on the policy. Consequently, the email was sent on December 18 2004 when students were preoccupied with finals and the comment period ended December 31 while students and most of the campus community was away on break. Kim Wilson, the coordinator of UMD Labor Extension Program comments about the method that the administration used to implement this policy. Wilson said, “To put in an unpopular policy you do it when the students are not at school—summer, and in this case, winter intersession.”

The Public Forum policy was put in place on January 17 2005, on Martin Luther King Day. Over the course of the last two years the free speech zone has affected the rights of not only the students, but also the faculty, and staff. The policy has been greeted with several student organizations’ disapproval such as the UMD’s Progressive Alliance and Social Change Society. UMass Dartmouth’s Progressive Alliance was the first group that influenced students to get involved and pressured the administration about the unfairness of the free speech zone.

Adrianne Schaefer, the president of the Social Change Society commented on the free speech zone saying, “College campuses are where a lot of the huge campaigns get started, like Fair Trade and anti-sweat shop movements. And those wouldn’t have happened without free speech. If you confine free speech to an out of reach area it might not make a huge difference this year, but it will have an impact on college activism in the long run.”

Wilson in agreement says, “We feel this is counter productive to the educational process at the university.”

Brian Pastori, a former student of UMD who started the Progressive Alliance, had set up a series of general information meetings to inform students and talk about strategies that could be taken against the administration in February 2005. The student organization also started a campaign to educate the students and faculty about freedoms of speech. Pastori felt very passionate towards the policy. “Not being able to protest and demonstrate in an effective area, a lot of the time is worse, than what people are trying to protest for or against,” he said.

Flyers were posted all over campus promoting their ideas about the free speech zone. One of the flyer’s messages was “Do you know what a free speech zone is? According to our Federal Constitution, the United States is a free speech zone, not selective areas.”

Wilson, who also served as the advisor to the UMD’s Progressive Alliance, comments about the affects of the free speech zone on students saying, “It’s to intimidate students, but faculty and staff are not intimidated.” Under the Public Forum policy, students, faculty and staff who do not follow the rules of the policy will be held accountable. Wilson, whom works closely with many students said, “The students have interpreted this as a possibility of being expelled.”

Wilson has found the policy to be contradicting, as it has not forced all demonstrations to be held within the zone. During October 2006, there was a demonstration outside the zone and they faced no repercussions. The demonstration was a group of faculty and staff members who marched around the Charlton College of Business building to rally for secretaries.

In contrast, Anna Vust, a senior Psychology student who organized the housing rally last April, was forced to stay within the free speech zone. Vust says, “I was warned by Lisa Evaneski, Dean of Student Affairs, to make sure that the housing rally was kept within the free speech zone for my protection.” Vust explains that the rally was not just for the changing housing conditions, but also to show how ridiculous the location of the free speech zone is in relation to the campus.

Schaefer and the Social Change Society were also a part of the housing rally. Schaefer agrees with Vust saying “It was made clear to the students who participated, to the students who saw the rally and to the administration that came that the spot on campus is not an appropriate place to have a Public Forum zone.” As the main area people walk is by Group 1, the Public Forum Zone force the protesters to stand far away from the administration, the very people it’s attempting to reach.

Schaefer also expressed frustration on how the Public Forum Zone is not enforced with everyone. She recalls that on the same day of the housing rally the Campus Activities Board (CAB) was holding a large event outside the campus center. She believes it is unfair that one group had to perform an activity in a confined area, while another group was unrestricted.

Furthermore, this past November there was a Deval Patrick rally that was held outside of the free speech zone. Pam Herzog, a senior Political Science major and the Vice President of the College Democrats participated in the Deval Patrick rally. Herzog says, “It started on the back side of the auditorium, like on the stairs.” Herzog also confirmed that the rally did move down to the back of the Campus Center on the grassy area, and it was not in the free speech zone. However, she didn’t feel that she was breaking the free speech zone policy because she was confident that the sponsor of the rally, the Patrick Campaign, made sure that they could have it where they did.

The two years in review show that the Public Forum policy has disrupted the practices of freedom of speech. However, it seems that there are loopholes of getting around the free speech zone.

The Progressive Alliance has now dissolved, but the Social Change Society is continuing to handle this matter this semester. Schaefer plans to work with the administration to reach a compromise. If this doesn’t work Schaefer says, “We plan to take further steps like contacting the media and taking more active approaches like having a rally around the issue.”

When asked where this rally would be held Schaefer smiles and says, “We could have it in the Public Forum zone. Or we could have it outside the zone to defy the policy and to show we can have a peaceful and safe demonstration that is not confined to the campanile area.”

Chancellor McCormack was unable to be reached for comment.


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