“Talk Dirty”: From mutual respect to no respect

The Balkan Beat Box is a very unique and highly acclaimed band that takes elements, both traditional and modern, from many cultures to create their sound.  Their musical influences include Klezmer, Balkan, Gypsy Punk, Electronica and Middle Eastern Traditional music.

They collaborate with musicians from many places and backgrounds. While most of their music is fun dance-type music, it also includes commentary on society and political issues. They try to make everyone aware of how power works in the world, and the effects of money on politics. They work hard to promote peace and understanding in the Middle East and all around the world.

Sadly most people do not know The Balkan Beat Box exists. They do know some of their music however. Jason Derulo samples the Balkan Beat Box’s song “Hermetico” in the popular song “Talk Dirty”. To put it lightly, this song does not stand for the same things that The Balkan Beat Box does. The song is instead racist, misogynistic and promotes behavior that is highly questionable.

“Talk Dirty” is about how the singer has sex with multiple women while traveling abroad. Derulo does not act very respectfully towards these women.  For example in the song he says, “Sold out arenas, you can suck my penis… Got it saved in my phone under ‘Big Booty’.” These lyrics clearly show that he is not respecting the women that he is interacting with. He does not even call the girl “she”, instead calling her “it”.

The song also includes the line at the end “What? I don’t understand!” This line is said by an infantilized, stereotypically Asian sounding woman, and the racist way this line is presented is troubling. But this line and other lines like it in the song are troubling for another reason.  How can these women who don’t even understand what Derulo is saying be consenting to performing sexual acts with him?

Consent is vital to any sexual interaction and the most important thing when getting consent is verbal communication and a clear understanding of what each party is agreeing to. Without this understanding and verbal communication, consent cannot be given, which means that the interactions taking place in this song should be classified as rape.

I recently heard “Talk Dirty” being used at a Chatham event by a group of Chatham women and this saddened me deeply. I hope that in the future we will all take a moment to consider what kind of messages are in the songs that we choose to promote or even listen to.

Whether the songs are taking something from another culture and using it poorly or they are talking about women in a degrading manner it is important for us here at Chatham to choose our entertainment in a conscious manner. What we each do affects the world. Let’s make that effect a positive one.

Why “Divergent” and “The Hunger Games” are not the same

Since the movie adaptation of the book “Divergent” was released a couple of weeks ago it has gotten a lot of comparisons to “The Hunger Games”. Some critics even slammed the movie, saying that it was too similar to it’s sister franchise. However, there actually isn’t much similarity between the two books & films at all.

The only two similarities are that they are both dystopian novels with female protagonists. That is where the similarities begin and end. In “The Hunger Games”, other than the games themselves, the main focus is on the love triangle between Katniss, Peeta, and Gale. It’s all about whom she will choose in the end. “Divergent” does not have a love triangle. Tris’ love interest is Four, her instructor during her initiation to the Dauntless faction.

In “The Hunger Games”, the city of Panem is divided into 12 districts and the higher number district, the worse off those citizens are. While in “Divergent”, the backdrop is Chicago and factions divide the people based on an aptitude test that every citizen takes when they are 16. After the test, there is a choosing ceremony and you can choose to stay in the faction that you’re already in or go to another one. The five factions are Abnegation, Amity, Candor, Dauntless, and Erudite. These factions are based on personality traits and values.

Personally, I feel that the comparisons are too soon and ridiculous. I mean how many vampire movies have we had to endure since “Twilight” came out almost six years ago? Yes, I’ve heard some complaining about that, but not as much as now. I think that audiences should be able to enjoy both series without comparing them so harshly. Let’s just be happy that two strong and positive female characters are leading these successful movies.

 

Who cares about the Great Barrier Reef anyway?

The Great Barrier Reef is one of the Seven Wonders of the underwater world. It is home to over 3000 different species of marine life and over 400 different species of coral. It is the world’s largest coral reef system, and is an Australian national treasure. However, it seems to be missing something.

Thankfully, the Australia Pacific LNG Project–a joint venture between Origin Energy, ConocoPhillips, and China Petrochemical Corporation–knows that adding a natural gas facility to the Great Barrier Reef will make it better. The facility will utilize hydraulic fracturing (fracking) methods to drill ten thousand coal-seam gas wells in Queensland, dredging out seagrass beds in the Pacific Ocean to aid in the flow of maritime traffic as part of their business operation.

The venture currently has permits to dump dredge spoil (waste run-off from mines and mining operations, including fracking waste) in the waters off the Great Barrier Reef, to the tune of three million cubic meters. But it’s not like anything important lives in the Reef, of course–or at least nothing that will be affected when the dumping starts in 2015. There is a habitat for an endangered species of finch, and a turtle nesting ground on the proposed route, not to mention Holbourne Island National Park is in the way of a proposed rail line to transport coal to the coast. Nothing important–it’s only a few hundred different species of animals, some of which are endangered.

Also standing in the way of progress are the pesky little details where the Australia Pacific LNG Project somehow forgot to finance and conduct the mandatory World Heritage biological assessments and environmental impact surveys before starting business and applying for loans (the Export-Import Bank has already financed one loan, worth almost $3 billion). Despite not having legal permission to apply for loans due to the lack of compliance with World Heritage Foundation rules and regulations, the future looks bright for the APLNG Project.

Despite having everything they need to start working–except for those permits from the World Heritage Foundation–people in Australia don’t seem to be happy with the idea that their country will soon be supplying 40 megatons of coal a year for the next 60 years, making it Australia’s largest export. The Australian branch of Greenpeace is the most vocal in their opposition of the mining operation. Greenpeace has produced a charming little video short called “Thrills and Spills” detailing the potential disasters that come with a mining operation on this scale.

Among the potential disasters is the possibility for loss of over 6,000 different species of marine life, 400 or more species of coral, and many other unique species that make their home on the reef. Three of the 2,195 plant species that make their home on the reef are endemic–meaning they can only be found there–or are very rarely sighted outside of the Great Barrier Reef area. A number of the animal species living on the reef are also believed to be endemic to the area.

Of course, losing a few dozen species of plants and animals only found in one place isn’t such a big deal. Neither is losing breeding grounds for six of the seven species of sea turtles in the world.

The Australian government and the Export-Import Bank would never have approved anything if losing anything from the Great Barrier Reef was a bad thing.

Right? Right.

 

Open letter to the Chatham community

Ladies and Gentlemen:

All of the Chatham community is concerned for its future and want it to remain a viable, thriving, relevant university.  President Ronald Reagan quoted an old Russian proverb when he signed the INF Treaty in January, 1987; “trust but verify”.  I believe it is time for us to verify the information obtained by the Board of Trustees that has led to its apparent “leanings” toward changing the College for Women from a single-sex institution.

Noel-Levitz, Inc. issued a report1 based upon university self-reported data in October, 2011.  Chatham University participated in this survey that generated a report titled “2011 Cost of Recruiting an Undergraduate Student Benchmarks for Four-Year and Two-Year Institutions”.  According to the report, of the 236 colleges and universities (including Chatham) that responded between 10/12/11 and 10/28/11, 165 were four-year private, 49 were four-year public, and 22 were two-year public institutions.

Summarizing Noel-Levitz:

  • The median cost to recruit a single student was steady between 2011 and 2009
  • Four-year private colleges and universities spent an average of $2,185 per new student at the median.  They used the most staff per new student, with a ratio of 1 Full Time Equivalent for every 33 new students.

The survey respondents self-reported:

  • Staff salaries, including benefits, for full and part-time employees working in recruitment and admissions positions, including temporary and work-study employees and supervisors with additional responsibilities outside of recruitment and admissions
  • Capital costs and equipment
  • Supplies
  • Travel
  • Publications and advertising
  • Consulting services
  • Vendor/outsourced services and
  • Additional expenses not named, such as costs incurred with recruiting and admissions that might be covered by departments, excluding grants and scholarships.

Noel-Levitz reported a steady median expenditure per 4-year Private Institution student from the period 2005 – 2011.

2005

2007

2009

2011

$ 2,073

$ 1,941

$ 2,143

$ 2,185

Question 1:

  1. What were the comparable expenditures for Chatham for each of the cited years – 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011?
  2. What was the expenditure for fiscal 2013?
  3. What is the budget for fiscal 2014?
  4. What is the anticipated budget for fiscal 2015?

Noel-Levitz found “smaller schools continue to spend more per new student, larger schools continue to spend less”.  The four-year Private Institutions reported

Percentile

Overall

Smallest third in enrollment size

Middle third in enrollment size

Largest third in enrollment size

25th

$ 1,364

$ 1,761

$ 1,368

$ 1,234

Median

$ 2,351

$ 2,351

$ 2,304

$ 1,781

75th percentile

$ 3,519

$ 3,519

$ 2,975

$ 2,964

Question 2:

  1. What were the comparable expenditures for Chatham for each of the cited years – 2005, 2007,

2009, 2011?

b.   What was the expenditure for fiscal 2013?

c.   What is the budget for fiscal 2014?

d.   What is the anticipated budget for fiscal 2015?

Noel-Levitz reported four-year private institutions and smaller institutions use “more staff for each new undergraduate enrollee.  The smallest four-year institutions used the most staff per new student”.

Percentile

Overall

Smallest third in enrollment size

Middle third in enrollment size

Largest third in enrollment size

25th

24

19

27

31

Median

33

25

33

41

75th percentile

43

35

39

59

Question 3:

  1. Does Chatham’s admissions department meet or exceed the efficiency cited for (at least) the median?
  2. What were the acquisition numbers by years historically and for fiscal 2014?
  3. If Chatham does not meet or exceed the efficiency cited for the median, what institutional challenges should be addressed?
  4. Where is Chatham with respects to an anticipated action plan?

Noel-Levitz reported four-year private institutions and smaller institutions “use more outreach staff per student” including “high school visits, college fairs, (and) on-campus events/tours”.

Percentile

Overall

Smallest third in enrollment size

Middle third in enrollment size

Largest third in enrollment size

25th

39

30

47

55

Median

57

43

59

77

75th percentile

81

57

78

106

Question 4:

  1. Does Chatham’s admissions department (including all outreach opportunities) meet or exceed the efficiency cited for (at least) the median?
  2. What were the acquisition numbers by years historically and for fiscal 2014?
  3. If Chatham does not meet or exceed the efficiency cited for the Median, what institutional challenges should be addressed?
  4. Where is Chatham with respects to an anticipated action plan?

The Noel-Levitz website2 included a blog exchange regarding the differences between undergraduate and graduate level recruitment.  The below exchange is verbatim.

“January 13, 2012 at 2:41 p.m.  As always this is a helpful report.  Any thoughts on how this might differ at the graduate level?  Are institutions typically spending more or less per graduate student?  More or less staff dedicated to graduate student recruitment?”  Andy Woodall.

“January 17, 2012 at 4:54 p.m.  Mr. Woodall,

Unfortunately we do not have any normative data on graduate student recruitment costs but I suspect they would be considerably lower, at least in most disciplines.  To your point, we tend to see far fewer staff devoted to graduate recruitment (at least in proportion to desired in-take) so that is why I believe costs would generally be lower on a per student basis.”  Kevin Crockett.

Question 5:

  1. How has Chatham historically budgeted undergraduate vs. graduate admissions and recruitment (please respond by fiscal year)?
  2. What is the budget (undergraduate vs. graduate) for fiscal 2013?
  3. What is the anticipated budget (undergraduate vs. graduate) for fiscal 2014?

These are challenging times for individuals as well as non-profit organizations.  The shrinking middle-class coupled with decreased government funding has led all to re-examine their budgets and allocation of resources.  In her article3, Debra Erdley quoted Murray Rust, Chatham’s chair of the Board of Trustees when he justified Esther Barazzone’s $1.8 million salary for 2011.  Ms. Erdley wrote “Chatham officials said they gave Barazzone the deferred compensation package in 2006 because before 2004 the school did not have the money for competitive executive packages.  If she left before 2011, she would have forfeited the package”.

Ms. Erdley also wrote “Total compensation typically included a base salary, retirement or deferred compensation, bonuses, benefits and housing.  Chronicle (The Chronicle of Higher Education) researchers found the median total compensation for all the leaders the survey covered was $410,523 in 2011, or 3.2 percent more than in 2010”.

Dr. Barazzone’s historical compensation, as reported by The Chronicle of Higher Educationis below.  To reiterate, the median total compensation for all leaders was $410,523 for 2011.

2008

2009

2010

2011

$ 571,738

$ 666,097

$ 601,917

$ 1,812,132

Question 6:

  1. What was the amount of deferred compensation for each year?
  2. On what basis was that amount awarded?

The Chronicle of Higher Education’s website allows the user to create its own salary comparisons4.

Institution

President

Compensation Package

Chatham University

Esther L. Barazzone

$ 1,812,132

Bryn Mawr College

Jane Dammen McAuliffe

$ 543,529

Swarthmore College

Rebecca S. Chopp

$ 701,755

University of Pennsylvania

Amy Gutmann

$ 2,091,764

Lehigh University

Alice P. Gast

$ 1,162,598

Washington and Jefferson College

Tori Haring-Smith

$ 561,566

Carnegie Mellon University

Jared L. Cohon

$ 946,095

Question 7:

  1. Did the Board of Trustees benchmark the compensation package ultimately negotiated by Dr. Barazzone?
  2. What outside resources were considered?
  3. Since Dr. Barazzone’s contract is scheduled to expire at the end of 2015, has the Board begun to consider the package to be paid, should she wish to extend her contract?
  4. If an agreement is not reached, (or if Dr. Barazzone opts to leave) what will the Board budget for Dr. Barazzone’s replacement?  What parameters will be considered?

All boards of directors are charged with the legal duties of

  • Care
  • Loyalty and
  • Obedience (to the organization’s Mission).

An article published in the University Of Pennsylvania Journal Of Business Law5 included a footnote citing “compensation practices…recommended as stemming from the IRS changes to Form 990”.  The recommendations include:

“Adopt an executive compensation philosophy that outlines the process and procedures for reviewing and approving the total compensation paid to senior executives and ‘key employees’

“Appoint a compensation committee comprised of independent members of the board

“Adopt a compensation committee charter that sets out, among other things, the purpose, responsibility and authority of the compensation committee, including the following:

  • Adherence to the compensation philosophy
  • Compliance with the rebuttable presumption of reasonableness
  • Use of an independent compensation consultant to provide comparability data…”.

I respectfully ask the Board to affirm to the community that it is in full compliance with its legal duties, and to

  • Articulate, in writing, the steps that will be taken to demonstrate the consideration and review of the Women’s College status
  • Share that information with the Community 30 days before a final decision is reached, allowing public debate before that vote
  • Share the University’s full current balance sheet and proposed financial information for fiscal 2014
  • Outline the process to be undertaken in advance of Dr. Barazzone’s next contract negotiation.

Thank you for your consideration.

Sandy Kuritzky, Class of 1973

1  The report can be obtained from the internet.  See www.noellevitz.com/BenchmarkReports.  The information and statistics sited are from this Report.

2  http://blog.noellevitz.com/2012/01/05/spending-student-recruitment/

3  http://triblive.com/news/adminpage/5243305-74/university-compensation-2011. Debra Erdley, December 15, 2013.

4  http:chronicle.com/article/Executive-Compensation-at/143541/

 www.law.upen.edu/journals/jbl/articles/volume14/issue2.  “Punctilios and Nonprofit Corporate Governance – A Comprehensive Look at Non-Profit Directors’ Fiduciary Duties” by Thomas Lee Hazen and Lisa Hazen.

Footnote 238.  Yaffee & Co., The New Form 990 and Executive Compensation: “Best Practice”

Recommendations for Boards and Compensation Committees 4 – 5 (2009)

Footnote 239.  Above citation.

Open letter from Class of 2014 senior Senate members to Chatham Alumnae

Dear Alumnae,

In a few short months we as seniors will join you in the ranks of Chatham College for Women alumnae. The aim of this letter is to share our confusion, disappointment, and hurt over some reactions to the recent announcement regarding the Board of Trustees’ proposal towards considering a coeducational undergraduate program. This letter does not represent a specific stance on the announcement.

We are not here to say whether we support or are against a coeducational undergraduate program. The Class of 2014 Executive Board is speaking directly to the alumnae we are about to join. We are not here to accuse and berate you. We sympathize with you and your frustrations. We just want to say the way that some are reacting does not square with our view of world ready behavior.

Our frustration stems from a couple of sources. First, having a petition to withhold donations when only 22% of alumnae donate. We recognize that financially, times may be tough. As a board, we have a goal of increasing this when we graduate. This is abysmal because the Class of 2014 is striving to raise funds for the betterment of Chatham. This view is hurting the community you are vowing to save. If your target is the administration please note that the rest of the school is deeply affected as well. We are in the process of fundraising for a senior gift and it is disappointing to see that we have lost support in our efforts to renovate Rea Coffeehouse into a functional space for future students while still preserving its historical integrity. Be mindful that this has an impact on the Chatham community as a whole.

Secondly, the general tone of a significant number of alumnae that has been heard lacks that of acceptance, respect, and open mindedness. As World Ready Women we are taught to be respectful of diversity and to listen to varied opinions. As class leaders we were elected to represent all opinions and views. The general tone has made students uncomfortable and discouraged them from voicing their opinions.

We find it amazing that so many alumnae have come out of the woodwork to fight for what they believe is right. We are proud to join your ranks. We just hope that all of us can take all the passion and fervor that is out there and channel it towards positive solutions and respectful dialogue. Although our generations and classes may be different we should uphold the same core values that Chatham instilled in us: women’s education, diversity, sustainability, and global awareness. We are different but very much the same, which is why united we must stand. We look forward to building a better Chatham University with you.

We deeply appreciate and thank you for taking the time to listen to us.

Sincerely,

Class of 2014 senior Senate members

*Edited 2/27/14: From Class of 2014 senior Senate members rather than CSG

Open letter to the Board of Trustees at Chatham

To Whom It May Concern:

Initially, I did not attend Chatham University for the fact that it has an all-women’s college program- The academic and community opportunities offered within the visual arts and arts management departments attracted my attention and led me to apply for its undergraduate program. It wasn’t until I finished my last year this past May that I realized how beneficial the all-women’s experience has helped my friends and me become the leaders we are today.

After finishing my first-year experience at a private co-ed institution I transferred to Chatham to gain a new perspective on my educational experience through a small private college with a beautiful campus. During my first three years in Pittsburgh, I found lasting friendships that have allowed me to change my outlooks on relationships between women. Sally Ramirez and I founded the nationally award-winning Artist Collective and campus award-winning Bake Club in order to sustain a legacy of artists and passionate bakers on Chatham’s campus. We helped inspire, and were inspired by, students to make a difference on a campus based on sisterhood and leadership. These relationships are still with me today, and still help me find my strength while attending graduate school at Carnegie Mellon.

There is an important bond that happens among Chatham students-A bond that is strong across cultures tied to experiences of being women in a society that turns women against one-another in the workforce. These intellectuals form from the close-knit community of diverse women, especially from the Gateway Program. What makes the Gateway program accessible for returning students is the fact that the school is just for women. It is safe to assume that if Chatham does implement a coed undergrad program, there may be a significant drop in the Gateway program. This drop would return a large loss for many perspective students who deserve the opportunity to return to school.

Chatham University is one of 47 women’s universities and colleges, which offers opportunities to women who want to make the correct decision in accordance to their own path. If the plan for “diversifying” follows through this fall, the school may suffer from inability to position itself from other Universities in Western Pennsylvania.

I owe so much to the Chatham community for granting me the academic, emotional, and financial support I needed in order to gain an educated perspective on the world, which is why I am writing to you today, asking to reconsider the decision of making Chatham’s undergraduate program co-ed.

Even though student numbers are decreasing, there are women out there who want the all women’s experience-They just don’t understand the benefits. I came to Pittsburgh not knowing what Chatham had in store for me, and I can say with all honesty that I have no regrets in choosing Chatham. Thank you.

Paige Louise Hoffman

Chatham University Alumna, 2013

Open letter to Chatham’s Board of Trustees and President Barazzone

To Chatham’s Board of Trustees and President Barazzone,

First, I know that my letter is long, but I hope that you will accord me the same consideration I gave your e-mail and read it until its conclusion. I have agonized over the words I wish to write in response to the information that I received today and ultimately have decided to follow my heart and begin with an anecdote.

I was a student who wrote that I would never consider a woman’s college when I filled out the questionnaire before the PSAT. I said that because I did not truly understand what a woman’s college was or how it could benefit me. Then I saw Chatham on Fastweb and clicked for information only because I thought the name sounded interesting. Needless to say, I was a bit shocked when the brochure arrived and I realized that Chatham was a woman’s college. Admittedly, my first instinct was to discard the materials, but then something in the countenance of the young woman on the front cover stopped me and I began to read.

Chatham promised the opportunity for young women to discover their voices and passions and to exist in a place, for a few years at least, unlike most other places in this country. Chatham offered, without stating it blatantly, a place where a high-school kid could discover her identity and grow strong in it away from the ever-oppressive influence of patriarchy—so that when she re-entered that society, she would do so transformed—she would do so world-ready. It is a place where girls enter and, at its very best, women emerge. I was so intrigued that I traveled nearly 1400 miles to visit and upon setting foot on the campus, my decision was made.

The years that followed changed me in a way that no coed institution could have managed. I was forced to speak in class and discovered that my thoughts had value. While I had participated readily in elementary school, I had grown silent as I matured (a fate that statistically befalls most girls as they become increasingly self-conscious adolescents), but I found that silence was not an option at Chatham—in fact, it even hurts your average. I had the privilege of participating on Chatham’s soccer team where I formed lifelong friendships and memories. Also I held my first high-level leadership positions, including a stint as VP of Chatham’s student government—something I never would have attempted at a coed school. I became increasingly certain of my scientific aptitude even in the face of subjects that challenged me beyond what I had been prepared for in high school. Succinctly, I had the opportunity to experience and benefit from everything that Chatham College had promised to offer and it altered my life trajectory in a way unlike the way coed institutions altered the lives of friends I’ve made in my time after Chatham. But enough of the sentimentality, let’s talk stats.

First, I applaud your desire to study the effect that introducing co-education might have on the Chatham community. Your desire demonstrates a thoughtfulness and thoroughness that most governing boards lack. I too agree that there has been a great deal of growth and evolution at Chatham recently. The name of the school and its designation changed, buildings were acquired, and the endowment grew. These are all admirable and worthy achievements—they are things of which the Chatham community can be proud. I can even understand your concern, that the undergraduate population seems stagnant, and I too wish to find a solution to this issue. But here is where our visions diverge. I recognize Chatham as being something unique in the greater Pittsburgh area, an area that boasts more than twenty-five four-year public and private institutions. It is the only remaining woman’s college in the area and so it inhabits a unique niche in the city. A statistic shared in the e-mail I read this evening stated the following: “80% of first-year college students attend a school within 200 miles of their home.” This statement underpins Chatham’s need to maintain its unique status as it allows it to easily stand out against the backdrop of the many other “moderately selective” colleges and universities in the greater Pittsburgh area. The decision to go coed would rob it of this designation and thereby increase the likelihood that it could be out-competed by similarly sized, structured, and funded institutions.

The appeal of opening up the undergraduate population to potential male students is understandable. One could view this act as potentially doubling the applicant pool since males make up approximately 50% of the global population. However, I find that outcome unlikely and my reasoning will point you towards Carlow University. Chatham seems to be following a very similar trajectory to Carlow—although, admittedly, it will have held onto its single-ed designation quite a bit longer. At Carlow 7% of the students are male, despite the fact that Carlow was only a woman’s college for sixteen years and a coed institution for nearly sixty-nine. This statistic leads me to conclude that Chatham’s undergraduate population growth would be minimal and might even be nil. I would challenge the board to ask the current undergraduate population, how many of them would have still chosen Chatham had it been coed at the beginning of their college careers. If only 10% of the current student populations says they would have chosen differently, then Chatham can conclude, quite reasonably, that being coed would actually be detrimental to undergraduate population growth.

In order to address the concern that Chatham’s undergraduate population is not keeping pace with that of the graduate population, I would state that a little more than a decade ago, when I began Chatham, the undergraduate student population was a little more than 400 (436, if I remember correctly); whereas now, according to the 2013 statistics on your website, the undergraduate enrollment is 973. Even allowing for the February 18, 2014 statistic in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette that sets the undergraduate population at 588, one would consider this change to have a positive trajectory. There are fluctuations in growth in any organization and while there is always room for improvement, it makes little sense to me to abandon a growing population simply because it is growing slowly. In my experience, sustainable change happens slowly and over great lengths of time.

When I first began teaching, it was at a school that had not had success on any AP science test in the school’s recent memory.  The first year I taught an AP science course, we earned a passing rate of 0%, the second year 16%, and the third 36%. The growth my students and I earned was small, and some might even argue insignificant; but, it was growth and that growth was, for some, transformative—encouraging several students to tackle college majors (environmental engineering) they’d never before considered. Chatham is such a place for its students and to change it would be akin to me no longer teaching AP science courses because my students fail to keep pace with the national passing rate. Such an action, I am certain, we would both consider misguided at best.

 I am most concerned though that Chatham believes that gender equity issues still found in our society (pay disparities, ongoing issues concerning a woman’s right to her body, and a barrage of disparaging stereotypes to name a few) can be best solved by abandoning its mission. Chatham’s motto espouses the intent to create women who are so strong and who shine so brilliantly that they might function as cornerstones in our society. Such women are leaders. Such women must necessarily understand the role of diversity and gender in the workplace. So, I would contend that so long as Chatham stays true to its motto, it will invariably achieve these ends. What’s more, I sincerely believe that if it chooses to go coed, it will have begun a path to undermine them.

According to USNWR, less than a third of the top 50 colleges had a woman as president of the student body despite the fact women make up the majority of college students in this nation. At Chatham, women fill 100% of the leadership roles on campus; such a statistic would only decline if Chatham were to go coed. Chatham would actually begin to train fewer female leaders because some of its male students would, rightly, seek out leadership roles on campus. Such a reality would be counter-productive to Chatham’s stated mission.

 I agree though that women will only learn to understand the role of diversity and gender in the workplace if they experience a workplace that is both diverse and inclusive of all genders. Thus, I would encourage the board to consider creating a mandate that all students engage in an off-campus internship before graduating. Not only will this raise Chatham’s profile in and effect on the Pittsburgh community at large, but students will also be able to exercise the leadership skills they have developed at Chatham. I would then recommend that the students return to campus in order to participate in a series of reflective discussions with their classmates in order to determine the impact that women leaders might have in their workplaces. Such a discussion would be occurring in a safe space, one where women are statistically more likely to speak out and take risks in their thinking, and so change in our society would be much more likely to occur.  The studies completed by the Women’s College Coalition (WCC) already affirm this reality.

The WCC has found that women attending single-sex institutions are more satisfied with their college experience, more likely to choose a traditionally male discipline as their major, have higher self-esteem (women in coed institutions actually experience a drop in self-esteem after their first two years of college), are more likely to further their education, go to medical school, earn more money, and report a higher level of happiness in their lives. Given this data, if Chatham’s leadership truly wishes to continue to advance the position of women in our society, it will choose to remain a women’s college.

The role of higher education is changing in our society and Chatham is in the midst of weathering that storm as it has done many times in the past. Chatham initially taught women how to maintain a home and now it teaches them how to build one. It once encouraged women to aspire to become a Mrs. and now it challenges them to tackle master’s degrees. Could it do all these things as a coed institution? That depends, are all schools the creators of world ready women? Or is Chatham something special? Does it, as it exists at this moment, warrant all the energies once offered to the struggling graduate school that is now thriving? I think so. Chatham’s graduate growth proves that it has leaders who are capable of such innovation and creativity. I encourage you to draw on those attributes now and ensure that Chatham’s undergraduate college remains a college for women. In whatever way you require and I am able, I will certainly do the same.

One day, when I visit Chatham with my own daughter, I will rouse her imagination with stories of a campus where previously silenced voices learn to speak and previously tentative spirits learn boldness. I will ask her if she too feels that the air here settles a little more lightly in the lungs, if her step has become a bit more emboldened, and if she just got the funniest sense that impossible has been saddled with two extra letters.  When she quirks a brow (for she will already be significantly louder and bolder than me) and asks: “Is that what this place was?” My greatest hope is that I will be able to say: “Oh, no, that’s what this place is.”

With faith that Chatham will remain a women’s college,

Stephanie Morris

Class of 2007

*Edited 2/19/14 – misspelling

Open letter to Chatham about going coed

It saddens me that Chatham will more than likely no longer have a women’s college starting in the Fall of 2015. I feel as though we are allowing trends to determine the type of university that we should be and that perhaps we are normalizing just to stay afloat. YES women do now have equal access to education, YES women now have equal rights, YES we do not NEED to have a separate college for women. However, I will 100% support the tradition that Chatham embodies until all women can safely say that they feel just as empowered, respected, and capable in all other university settings and classrooms. We represent a history of women’s education that should not be given up on but that should remain and furthermore serve as an example of a gender safe environment for the entirety of the higher education system. I do, however, understand the societal and financial circumstances that are pushing Chatham to make this difficult decision. I have hope that this change will allow Chatham to become an equal and safe place for people of all genders and to continue to, as a University, fight against the issues of gender that exist today.

The internet is dead… and Verizon killed it

The title is not a joke.

If Verizon has its way, a recent ruling by the United States Court of Appeals could give Verizon – and other internet providers like Comcast and AT&T – the power to shut down or restrict access to the internet.  The internet is dead and Verizon killed it.

Just a few weeks ago, on January 14, the federal Court of Appeals struck down a prior ruling by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that had, in the past, been used to protect the neutrality of the internet and the rights of users to freely access any information therein.  The case in question – Verizon Communications Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission – ended with the court striking down the FCC’s protections on the internet.  The FCC had previously ruled that the internet was protected under a “common carrier” rule (a ruling that forces phone companies like Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile to treat all calls equally without preference) that prevented internet service providers (ISPs) from slowing down data.

If the ruling stands, ISPs will be able to pick and choose what traffic can travel over their servers, and what their customers’ speeds will be during internet usage.  If a customer wants faster speeds for certain services, it is very likely that they will be forced to pay extra or simply go without.  This ruling destroys what was once a level playing field where a single consumer would get the same treatment as a major corporation.

What will this mean for those affected?

In the beginning, it probably won’t mean much.  Comcast has publically, and rather grudgingly, stated that it will maintain net neutrality until 2018.  They are only upholding net neutrality for another four years due to FCC guidelines that they agreed to during their acquisition of NBC two years ago in 2012.  Other companies not bound by similar guidelines and contracts, such as Verizon and AT&T, may start using the newfound lack of restrictions and adequate guidelines to strip internet services from paying customers as soon as possible.

Services once freely enjoyed on the open internet could, in the near future, disappear include Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and even the Chatham e-mail service, which is a part of Microsoft Online.   If these services don’t disappear from the ‘net for good, it is also very likely that they will be rolled into packages that ISPs can charge their customers for on top of monthly internet access fees.

Despite the rather bleak outlook for everything but library card catalogues, there is growing resistance to the idea of losing fair access to the internet.  While there is skepticism that online petitions work, there are numerous iterations of petitions currently available, urging the FCC to challenge the decision of the appeals court.  The petition with the current largest number of signatures is hosted on whitehouse.gov, urging President Obama to take a stance on the issue in favor of the consumer instead of the corporations.  At the time of this writing, the article has over 104000 signatures and is still open for responses from more interested parties.

The internet is dead. Long live the internet.

Open letter to the Department of Public Works: keep our streets clean

On Tuesday, January 21, the most recent amount of snowfall hit Pittsburgh and caused a lot of problems on the streets. Like always, Public Works claimed–before the snow arrived–that they were prepared for the impending snow and that the streets would be taken care of. However, when I woke up on that Tuesday morning the streets were not even touched. They were terrible and very dangerous.

The reason why I think this happened was because Pittsburgh Public Schools and most of the other schools around the city were closed due to the weather. Public Works must have felt that since the children were not going to be in school, it was ok to not take care of the roads. This mindset is unfair to all of the people who still had to go to work and to all of the college students who still had school.  For students who commute, like myself, it was rough getting to school that day. Traffic was backed up for miles and it took a lot longer to get to Chatham than it usually does.

I saw later on the news that there was an accident on a street that I had been on just a few hours earlier. This is scary to think about because it all could have been prevented if the roads were treated properly. Public Works should take care of the streets regardless of whether Pittsburgh Public Schools are in session or not. The fact that winter is far from over means that Public Works should take responsibility for their actions and make sure that they truly are prepared for what’s to come. They should do less talking and more doing.

*Edited 2/18/14: Penndot changed to the Department of Public Works