Written by 10:19 am Letters • 11 Comments

Former Editor in Chief Jazmine Hughes ’12 on Cancellation of Fishbowl

By Jazmine Hughes, former Editor in Chief ’12

In the spring of my senior year, I, along with other former Voice editors Ipek Bakir, Ethan Harfenist, and David Liakos, wrote an editorial about how senior privileges have receded. We were bitter: senior parking had just been eliminated, housefellow positions were being opened up to juniors. A year prior, the class of 2011 had a graduation scare when the administration tried to stop the additional student speaker in the wake of the Peter St. John scandal.

But the classes of yore never realized how good we actually had it: last week’s cancellation of Fishbowl made it the least productive work day I’ve had in a very long time. Seniors, underclassmen, and alumni alike were outraged at the termination of one of the most memorable, awaited days of our Conn Coll experience.
To be fair, in the aforementioned editorial, the group disparaged turning senior activities into a booze-fueled and -focused events. To deny or even ignore that alcohol plays a large part in Fishbowl would be foolish and dishonest; but Fishbowl isn’t about drinking. It’s about taking control of a campus that has been your home for the past four years, alongside people you’ve met and loved and hated and barely knew and saw one time and haven’t seen in two years. It’s about letting the stress of the past four years out, embracing the stress of impending graduation. It isn’t simply a booze-filled night of danger, which is the excuse that the college and the student decision makers are hiding behind. The Fishbowl killers seem to forget that the activity is a choice: in no way are students obligated to attend Fishbowl, to run to Castle Court, to get inebriated, to remove any clothing. It is left up to each individual to take responsibility for their own actions– if we learn one thing after four years, this should be it. Want to make students’ partying safer? Bring kegs back onto campus, get reliable transportation to and from bars, make Cro Bar a homier place. We’ve been saying this for years; is anyone listening? How is keeping students from a run going to change anything?
I think the majority of the upset lies in the removal of yet another tradition, out of seemingly few, particularly amidst discussions that Conn is “just another nescac school”, a nameless, homogenuous liberal arts college with a pretty campus and smiling faces. We need to embrace the traditions that keep Conn what it is– our school isn’t just special because of the small classroom sizes or the impressive financial aid statistics, but because we have cool stuff like shared governance and chicken tenders day and naked runs.
Almost every Conn student arrives onto campus their first day looking to create a new home; almost every student, I truly hope, leaves knowing they have. What’s a home if you can’t run around naked?
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