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THE DAILY WILDCAT Printing the news, sounding the alarm, and raising hell since 1899

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

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VOLUME 108 • ISSUE 48

‘Hands up, don’t shoot!’ BY MAX RODRIGUEZ The Daily Wildcat

Members of the Black Student Union and their allies were asked to leave the Student Union Memorial Center twice for protesting on Wednesday despite positive responses from student witnesses. The protesters marched around and through the student union to bring attention to the ingrained discrimination that black men and women face in the U.S. As they marched around the student union, they were met with clapping from organizations on the UA Mall. Some people put their hands up after hearing the group shout, “Hands up, don’t shoot!” The protesters laid down in front of Gallagher Theater at one point to represent the black men and women killed by police brutality. After doing so, Glen Loftis, event services program coordinator in the event services office at Arizona Student Unions, and other staff members asked the protesters to leave

REBECCA NOBLE/THE DAILY WILDCAT

PHYSICS SOPHOMORE Elsa Gebreyohane wears make up and lies down on the floor in the Student Union Memorial Center on Wednesday in order to show what a gunshot victim looks like and represent lives lost to police brutality.

the union. Loftis said they did so because the student union is a place they try to keep “politically free.” “This is a place for students to come without being hassled,” Loftis said.

“This is a safe haven, so that’s why we politely asked them to go outside.” The student reaction was largely one of support for the protesters. “To see people speaking out and refusing to forget

what has happened is absolutely crucial because as soon as you forget, that’s when things happen again,” said Jordan Neubauer, a political science freshman. Mallory Corrus, a political science senior,

Students carry their mattress in solidarity

said it is important for the community to speak out against police brutality. “I think [the protest] was really powerful,” Corrus said. “I’m really proud of our community for embracing it

PROTEST, 2

FORCE requests conference funding

BY ARIELLA NOTH

The Daily Wildcat

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Students from SPEAC and FORCE carried and displayed pillows and a mattress on the UA Mall on Wednesday to stand in solidarity with a student at Columbia University who was sexually assaulted . S t u d e n t s P r o m o t i n g Empowerment and Consent and Feminists Organized to Resist, Create and Empower are student groups that combat sexual assault, domestic violence and stalking . Similar acts of solidarity are happening at campuses across the U.S. For the UA, FORCE requested students who wished to take part to carry a pillow with them rather than a mattress. The mattress and pillows displayed the hashtag #CarryThatWeight. Mallory Corrus, a political science

MATTRESS, 2

BY ARIELLA NOTH

The Daily Wildcat

REBECCA MARIE SASNETT/THE DAILY WILDCAT

SIMONE LA LONDE, a sophomore studying public health and Spanish, tapes a sign to a mattress during Feminists Organized to Resist, Create and Empower’s sexual assault booth on the UA Mall on Wednesday. FORCE included a mattress at its table to show solidarity with Emma Sulkowicz, a student at Columbia University who is carrying around the mattress upon which she was sexually assaulted until her rapist is expelled from the university or she graduates.

FORCE requested funding for two conferences at the ASUA meeting on Wednesday. Marisa Calegari, student director of the Women’s Resource Center’s Feminists Organized to Resist, Create and Empower, told the Associated Students of the University of Arizona Senate that FORCE is hoping to send two people to Feminist Camp in New York from Jan. 4-10, 2015. Calegari told the senate that the conference focuses specifically on educating college-aged individuals on feminism so they may bring their knowledge back to their campuses. Calegari also asked for funding to send two students to South by Southwest’s Celebrate Digital Creatvity conference from March 13-17, 2015. The students would have the opportunity to learn more about marketing and programming, in addition to networking with other creative, forward-thinking individuals. The senate was also informed that this marketing conference would allow FORCE to better reach the student body. Calegari told the senate the budget for both conferences is $9,512, and that the WRC only has $3,300 for conferences and FORCE only has $1,000 allocated for conferences. Based on these numbers, Calegari said $4,500 was still needed to send

ASUA, 2

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UA grad student wins research fellowship for palliative care BY CHASTITY LASKEY The Daily Wildcat

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A UA graduate student received a Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award, helping her work toward reducing health disparities in the U.S. Heather Coats, a registered nurse for 18 years and a nurse practitioner since 2006, is a nursing graduate student pursuing a doctorate of philosophy in nursing through the UA College of Nursing’s online PhD program. While Coats lives in Jackson, Miss., she is able to meet online with her mentor, Anne Rosenfeld, associate dean for research and a professor at the College of Nursing. Rosenfeld is chair of Coats’ dissertation committee and her sponsor for the National Research Service Award.

“She is a mentor extraordinaire,” Coats said. Though Rosenfeld wasn’t initially her adviser, she became so after finding out about Coats’ past experiences, similar research methods and similar content area research. Coats said she credits not only her mentor but the available resources at the UA as well for her achievements in the program. “Between her and the Office of Nursing Research, they guided me through every step of the way,” Coats said. “Without them, without her, this … would have been impossible.” Rosenfeld said not everyone who applies for the competitive fellowship receives it. “Only the top percent get funded,” Rosenfeld said. “It’s very rigorous.” Coats not only identified the gap in research concerning palliative

and end of life care in AfricanAmerican elders but was also innovative and successful in putting together a proposal, Rosenfeld said. According to the National Institutes of Health website, the fellowship is intended to provide predoctoral students with supervised research training in specified health-related areas leading toward the research degree. “NIH is very interested in funding research and also in preparing our next generation of researchers,” Rosenfeld said. “[Coats] is identified by them as someone who has very strong potential to be a successful research nurse scientist and conduct research over the next 2030 years.” Coats’ specific area of research is palliative care. She said palliative care is an all-encompassing type of care focusing on a holistic approach

COURTESY OF COLLEGE OF NURSING

HEATHER COATS, a nursing graduate student, recently won the Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award. Her research focuses on palliative care, which she said focuses on a holistic, patientcentered approach to take care of patients with serious illnesses.

and is also known as patientcentered care for someone who is experiencing a serious illness.

PROFILE, 2


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