Friday, February 26, 2010

What Does "Connect 4" Stand For?

This is the question that we get a LOT, so I thought it would be great to answer it here.

Connect 4 is a merger from two previous WashU groups, Campus Week of Dialogue and the Student Diversity Initiative. Led by Cambrie Nelson/Hanna Beck and Fernando Cutz (SDI), the two groups merged in Spring 2008 and chose the name Connect 4 based upon the tenants on which each stands. These are:


The name itself, "Connect 4," has caused some confusion amongst students after the group was first instituted as a SU recognized Category 1 group.  Many conceive it as a game enthusiast group, others- who may know its general mission- lack clarity to what the "4" stands for. Still, others hear it and know not what to really think.

In its current year, changing the name has been discussed and considered amongst members. However, in efforts to not be conflicted with the potential Diversity Affairs Council and our separate focus on engagement, interaction, awareness, and programming, Connect 4 decided that we will keep the name. We hold the four principles at the core of our mission, initiatives, and events, and the name is unique. One consideration for future leaders, however, is indeed how we can possibly modify the original four tenants to for directly express the aforementioned new focuses. But this is a post for a later date.

Currently, many in our group, including freshmen Camille Young and Grace Chao have committed themselves to help the group engage ways to better share our mission, our purpose, and our activities, and this is definitely a great step in allowing our campus to know all of the many things that Connect 4 members connect for.

More will come throughout the semester for some of the publicity campaigns that Connect 4 members lead.

Please stay updated, follow us, and provide comments as desired!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Support NSBE Week and its Collaboration with Controversy N Coffee

Here's the description from Facebook:


Come hear from 5 panelists on their views regarding the state of diversity among WashU faculty.


The Coordinating Council for Diversity Initiatives:


The CCDI, chaired by the Special Assistant to the Chancellor, has been charged to assist the University in the development of a strategic plan for enhancing diversity, provide recommendations for institutional practices, policies, and programs that foster diversity and equity, and promote institutional diversity initiatives campus-wide.


Panelists:
Anne Marie Knott: B-School
Consuelo Wilkins: Medical School
Cindy Grimm: Engineering School
Leah A. Merrifield: Special Asst. to Chancellor for Diversity Initiatives.
Luis Zayas: Brown School of Social Work

From the Community Service Office, "That Uppity Theatre Company & The DisAbility Project Presents 'The Assorted Adventures of Tom, Huck and Becky' "



That Uppity Theatre Company & The DisAbility Project Presents “The Assorted Adventures of Tom, Huck and Becky” 

February 18 & 25

As part of the Big Read initiative, That Uppity Theatre Company & The DisAbility Project presents "The Assorted Short Adventures of Tom, Huck and Becky," a reinterpretation of Mark Twain's classic stories.  This free, community event will take place from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Thursday, February 18th and Thursday, February 25th at the Washington University Music Center (located in the Delmar Loop at 560 Trinity). 
 
The performance, perfect for children of all ages, will be told through a disability perspective and performed by a mixed cast of actors with disabilities. Your attendance and involvement in the Big Read program will help raise awareness on the importance of reading and literacy in our community.
 
 
Please RSVP to 
evlasaty@culturalfestivals.com or call 314-863-0278



Friday, February 19, 2010

Treasury Rejects DAC...StudLife Covers


Below is the StudLife article covering Treasury's decision. It is written by Alan Liu and can be seen at http://www.studlife.com/news/2010/02/19/treasury-rejects-diversity-council-irking-backers/


Please know that the supporters of this effort will be joining for a response next week. For more info on the DAC and this issue, please inquire with Connect 4 by emailing connect4.wustl@gmail.com.


Treasury rejects diversity council, irking backers


Senators passed same measure 22-2-1 last week.

Student Union Treasury on Tuesday barely voted down legislation to create the Diversity Affairs Council, leaving the future of the proposal in doubt.
The vote was 7-6-1. A two-thirds majority, or 10 votes, was needed to pass the legislation.
Earlier that evening, Treasury had gone through the legislation’s articles and approved each one individually. When Treasury voted on the entire legislation, however, it did not pass.
“From a legislative perspective, it’s nothing I’ve ever seen before,” said Senate Speaker Chase Sackett, a senior.
Treasury Representative Ehi Okoruwa, a sophomore, said part of the problem stemmed from representatives’ uncertainty about what they were voting on.
“A lot of people were confused on whether we were going to discuss the structure, whether we were going to discuss the value this brings to campus, etc.,” Okoruwa said. “Many people were just not on the same page.”
Among the concerns that representatives raised were that the council (DAC) added to the complexity of SU, that this council would allow other groups to unduly influence the executive branch of SU, and that there seemed to be no guarantee that the DAC would accomplish its goal.
SU Senate passed the same legislation last week 22-2-1.
According to the legislation, the DAC aims to “foster connections between members of the campus community, and address issues so as to bring diversity to the forefront of campus-wide and administrative concerns.”
Diversity refers to that of sex, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, religion, age, class and philosophy, among many other ways of judging people.
After the vote, DAC supporters left the room.
Diversity Affairs Council: From beginning to legislation
Senior DeAndrea Nichols, president of Connect 4, raised the question of diversity last summer to find groups beyond Connect 4 that addressed the issues of diversity. She said the conversation eventually reached senior Jeff Nelson, student body president.
“He said that there’s nothing in SU that focuses on diversity,” Nichols said. “This is despite the fact that our larger University constantly states that we care about it.”
Sackett, Senior Class Council President Fernando Cutz, Coordinator for Student Involvement and Multicultural Leadership Naomi Daradar Sigg and other student leaders on campus eventually took up the issue.
After drafting the legislation, SU held a Legislative Leadership Council meeting at the beginning of this semester to discuss the legislation.
“Treasury reps saw this very early in the semester and had the opportunity to give input,” Sackett said.
Cutz pointed out that the legislation went through 13 drafts before appearing at the Senate’s University Initiatives Committee, which approved the legislation 10-0 and moved it on to Senate and Treasury.
Reactions
“Quite frankly, I’m really upset right now,” Student Union Senator Betel Ezaz, a sophomore, said during the open forum portion of Treasury.
Cutz’s criticism of Treasury was much harsher.
“I think Treasury has shown a fundamental incompetence at representing the will of the student body,” Cutz said. “I think they were not voting according to their constituents’ wants.”
But Sackett was quick to point out that 50 percent of the body did support the legislation on Tuesday.
“We absolutely do commend the half of the body that did vote to support the legislation,” Sackett said. But he added, “I’m still unclear as to what the reasons were for voting against it [were].”
After the Treasury meeting, Treasury Representative Peter Glaser, a junior, said it was unfair to criticize Treasury for being insensitive to diversity when the body approves events promoting diversity on a weekly basis.
Jack Kider, a Treasury representative and Budget Committee co-chair, said the DAC legislation failed because its supporters failed to explain why its goals could not be met through school organizations that already exist.
“I believe that many Treasury representatives did not wish to pass legislation that creates more bureaucracy and another organization within Student Union, while there are many institutions within and outside of Student Union that already exist to address the same issues that the DAC would have addressed,” Kider wrote in an e-mail to Student Life.

Next steps
Now, supporters of the legislation are trying to obtain 900 signatures by Monday so that this issue can go before the whole student body in spring elections.
“We want to give the student body a chance to show they care that SU should make diversity a part of its intrinsic structure, and I think that students do believe that,” Sackett said. “And that’s why we’re so confident and that’s why we’ve been working on this for so long.”

Monday, February 15, 2010

Environmental Racism, an Event for Environmental Justice and Education

I was checking out this week's St. Louis Activist Hub, and found the following upcoming STL event about environmental racism really interesting.

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=250575542912


As it's description states,
Environmental racism is the disproportionate exposure of environmental hazards on minorities. 

Environmental justice is the civil rights movement's response to environmental racism. 
The environmental justice movement doesn't seek to simply redistribute environmental toxins, but to abolish them entirely.
Exposure to these toxins directly effect the physical and mental development of children.

Environmental Racism- East St. Louis Levees? Are we facing a local Katrina? The New Northside? Transformative or Negligent?


The event is Thursday at 5:30. I may attend.



Minutes from the DAC Senate Meeting


Question and answer session

Why is the VP of programming, not vote
Apart of the structure of that was agreed upon

Why do we need this ?
We have groups like "senate"
In what capacity can you do more than senate
Senators graduate and loose interest in what they do
Need something more consistent
Need some thing to be sustained
Senate deals with more with various projects
Not trying to do "more" with senate
Working more with senate to work on what ever will fall in the realm of diverslity on campus
Student groups cannot really sustain excitement for diversity on campus
Student groups doing other thing

For this racial profiling example, how would the DAC react?
Ther is no single committee that works specifically with diversity
People want to do something in the community, but don't know the resources
Can direct students to other resources on campus
About the relationships
Senate is more policy oriented, the DAC
Hard for senate because it is individually project based

Clarify, how is the DAC different than Connect 4?
  • Take a look at the spare slide!
  • Dac is more policy oriented than programming
  • Dac is student union body, pres and treas. Training
  • Helps with overprogramming
  • C4 is events focus,a nd programming focused
  • DAC is more policy recommendation oriented
  • Connect 4 is still anew organization
    • Project based with individual members

Opinion of Roundtable
  • Very successful
  • Talking about how to further relay our end ideas/mission
  • Really helpful perspectives

Thoughts on how Diversity training is not  a programming body?
Dac members would go to another members event
We would Privide the training, not plan the "event" (that will be planned by the student group)

Jill Carneghi
  1. Great thing- institutionalizes ideals of what
  2. 2
  3. Why restrict yourself to no budget?
    1. Might need that one day
    2. Put your money where your mouth is and where your
    3. Look at the OTHER spare slide
    4. If a budget is needed, we could appeal under the executive budget/appeal
    5. Annual operating budget would be 0 for the
    6. In theory: why not have a line item budget

Could Connect 4 be considered a subsidiary comitte?
-dac coprogramming with other individual groups

Senate Discussion
  • Very well presented
  • Having a body which is able to communicate wtievery body on campus
  • Concerns
    • Is there conflictt with DAC providing resources.  Isn't that a VP Programming job
    • Is it more than an advising body
    • Vp programming- is for coordinating non overprogramming
    • Vp programming will advise in the overprogrammming sense
    • Dac is ultimately trying to facilitate programming amongst student groups
  • Just because this isnt a programming boad doesn’t mean that they cannot do anything
  • Can work with student groups
  • Putting on non-budgetary programms
  • Who will continue monitoring the email address for racial profiling incidences
  • Does this legislation reflect what is presented  in the legislation
    • Encourage more programming by other student groups
    • Collaboration
    • That’s why it is in student union

Advertising to the ENTIRE Wash U community

Concerns:
Downside: add more complexity to SU's complex organizational structure
Don’t see what the DAC will be doing  on a week to week basis
A lot of overlap with other organizations
Are there other ways of creating these goals OUTSIDE of the DAC
Purpose slide freaked her out, reads like programming group; should focus mission statement on policy
Ammendment proposed-committee that will address issues and coprogramming
Vote of the ammendment: raising of placards:
See NEW legislation: ammendment has been made

DAC gives a positie vibe

Motion to vote now:7 for voting, opposed:
Vailed
Back in discussion

Why isn't VP Programming doing this?
Diversity in unclear
This is NOT just about PROGRAMMING
Dac is there for students who will want to start initiatives

More hesitant because it is so simiilar to connect 4
It should be better thought out and do more

Point of clarification
Senate can amend the legislation at any ppoint
There is a lot of oversight between the legislative bodies

How can we (international grad students) program with undergraduates?
Great to have an authority figure to go to
Programming takes a lot of energy
Not having that as a priority will allow that council to focus on reaching out to other graduate students
STL community wants to reach out to Washington University studsents
Will  be able to connect the STL entities, as well as Wash U community

Having a roll call vote on the vote to vote (confusing right)- failed
Actual vote to vote- 13 for, 10 opposed
Abstain 2
Failed

MOVE BACK TO DISCUSSION

Opinions  on dac making its own constitution
Not important to have weekly meetings
Interest in other groups
Cs 40 supports this and want too use this a s a resource (Pat)

Membership question: point of clarification: must have attended one previous meeting
Motion to ammend: change f.1- voting members present instead of entire voting membership (friendly ammendment)

Alex: Concern: too large to have a budget
Rather see the vp  programming appoint a diversity initiatives chair before establishing the DAC
Alof of change

Analogous to the green commitees
Takes time to have this organization to grow
Not hard to twak along the way
Should really pass this,and make sure it passes in tresury
We can tweak this and make this better

DAC is not a passive resource

Question: not enough for the DAC to do
e.g. WU/fused does constant things, even though there is nothing required for big programming each week
Is the dac active or passive?
Interesting point
Argument: fema: only really need for natural disaster and catastrophe, only needed when a catastrophe to happen
Important to have an established structure to step
Have to be planning and working with everyone

Point of clarification c.1-  cabinet can be defined by the constitution (size can change)
Senate was once apart of treasury, and it was brought up (would  senate have anything to do

Need is there!
Don't have a body
Need a figure head
Merits its own organization and inititiave
Vp of programming wouldn't relally focus on diversity and these needs ona daily basis
Helpful to have another group focused solely on this issue

Mike Saksvick
Paralysis by analysis
Need to stop talking about the braod stuff
Constitution wil l work out the details

Vote on the motion: legislation to create diversity affairs council:
Roll call vote 22:2:1
Non-voters: Alex Cooper and Pat Kelley

Treasury will be seeing this next week 

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Call to Action Event


I received this email from my RA and friend who is the chairman for this event that will be hosted Friday, March 19th at 6:30pm!


The Call to Action is a campus wide social justice based event that seeks to bring together Washington University students, faculty and community members to educate one another and spread the word about pressing issues of social justice.

There are two major components of this event and the first is a speaking competition in Graham Chapel for Washington University undergraduate students followed by a keynote speech from Bob Hansman! 

The students will be delivering speeches on various social justice topics of their choosing. The speeches will be judged by Risa WrightonDr. Sharron Cannon and other notable faculty and community members. The winner of the competition will be granted the title “Orator of the Year” and will be granted in addition a $100 cash prize. I hope you will encourage your members to apply to compete in the speech competition or consider participating yourself! If you or any of your members are interested, I have attached the application to this e-mail, and they can send questions or applications to washucalltoaction@gmail.com and the sooner the better!

Here’s where Connect 4 comes in! 

A major component of the event will be a social justice fair that will take place in the Danforth University Center immediately after the speaking component of the event.  We are trying asking any groups interested in participating to choose any social justice issue, cause or charity that they find important and create a booth display to inform others about their issue, cause or charity and let them know how they too can get involved. This could mean creating a display board, handing out informative material, advertising upcoming events on campus relating to social justice etc. We encourage groups to be creative! If this sounds like something Connect 4 would be interested in, please respond to this e-mail and let us know and then we can tell you what the next steps are and how we can help you out!

You can also check out the event on Facebook!

I hope to see you there on March 19th!

Thanks so much

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

An Opportunity to Collaborate with GlobeMed


Another cool opp that has come our way. We may discuss Thursday (pending results of tomorrow's legislation!) :D

My name is _____ and I am the current president of GlobeMed Wash U. A few years ago, the UN named February 20th the “World Day of Social Justice”. In designating this day the World Day, the UN aimed to recognize the need to bring together the efforts of all members of the community in promoting access to social well-being and justice for all, no matter in what capacity. 

This year, GlobeMed Wash U is trying to bring World Day of Social Justice to the forefront of students’ minds here on campus. 

On Friday, February 19th, we will host an on-going awareness event during the day and a slam/mixer event for all interested Social Action groups in the evening. The primary goal of these events will be to bring attention to World Social Justice Day on main campus. On Saturday, February 20th, we will host a webinar, “Health and Social Justice” featuring Laura Turiano, a physician who currently serves on the global coordination group of People’s Health Movement (PHM) Right to Health and Health Care Campaign.

I wanted to invite Connect 4 to collaborate with us on this event. While GlobeMed primarily fights for global health equity, we recognize that health issues cannot be solved without solving many other social justice issues. This is a unique opportunity for various groups with different goals to band together and share our experiences with one another.

Please let me know if you would be interested in collaborating/participating. If you are interested, I will send more details and we can work together to make this an amazing event.

Thanks!
GlobeMed Wash U President

It Affects YOU


The DAC affects you.

It affects your student government.

It affects you student group. 



If passed in SU Senate and Treasury, the Diversity Affairs Council (DAC) will serve as a crucial landmark within the student body and greater WashU community. It will ground a larger, stronger, more concerted commitment to student diversity affairs on campus, and as a body within SU, it will provide 
centralized communication and coordination for involved student groups,
cohesive and streamlined training and workshops for leaders and individuals,
advocacy for the address and resolution of pertinent policy-based issues within the community,
... and a lot more.
The legislation for the implementation of the DAC within Student Union will occur tomorrow at 9pm in Simon 112. 

It is of crucial importance that a representative from your student group attends this meeting, for IT WILL INDEED AFFECT YOUR GROUP.

So come. Learn about the DAC. Voice your support. MAKE THIS HAPPEN.

and view our video survey of students at WU http://thecatalysts.ning.com/video/what-does-it-mean



Thank you.

Leaders of Connect 4, WUFUSED, and Student Union