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K A N S A S

S TAT E vol. 125, issue 31

wednesday, nov. 6, 2019

kstatecollegian.com

SENIOR STAR ADAM MEYER

THE COLLEGIAN

It was the end of May, and the NBA Draft process was nearing an end. It was almost deadline for players testing the waters to withdraw their name, and it appeared that senior forward Xavier Sneed might end up declaring himself to the draft, but he gave the Kansas State fan base an exhale as he announced the evening of May 29, 2019 that he would return for his senior season. The 6-foot-5, 215-pound forward comes into the 2019-2020 season as one of the main leaders of the team with senior forward Makol Mawien. “I have a bigger role now with Wade, Brown and Stokes gone,” Sneed said. “My focus is to do whatever I need to do to help us win.” Sneed comes into the season with 2018, 2019 Academic All-Big 12 Second Team and 2018 NCAA South Regional All-Tournament Team honors and a 2019 AllBig 12 Honorable mention (league coaches). He was left off the AllBig 12 First team, which Sneed tweeted his frustration about on Oct. 16 with the caption, “Y’all done

really woke up a savage it’s up for y’all.” Sneed got off to a good start in his senior campaign, as he had a major impact in the first two implications. In the first exhibition game of this season against Emporia State on Oct. 25, Sneed excelled and scored 18 points in a dominating 86-49 win. In the second exhibition game on Oct. 30, Sneed followed with another double-digit scoring game as he dropped 10 points in a 66-56 win over Washburn. “He played so hard [against Washburn],” head coach Bruce Weber said. “He busted his butt. Fourteen on the play hard chart. Recording a double-double.” Sneed showed promise when he arrived at K-State in the 2016-2017 season as a true freshman from St. Louis, Missouri. In his career, he has come from being in the role of the sixth man his freshman year to becoming the prominent figure of the team his senior year. He has played in 105 of 106 games in his career, including starts in 72 of the last 73 games. Sneed ranks 29th on K-State’s all-time scoring list with 1,003 points. He

Xavier Sneed has chance to leave lasting legacy in men’s basketball

BUDGET CUTS

Privilege Fee Committee recomments 7 percent decrease for 10 entities in Fine Ar ts allocation

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Third KSUnite happening today in Student Union Pages 4-5

Sabrina Cline | COLLEGIAN MEDIA GROUP

Then-junior forward Xavier Sneed looks to the court during the game against Baylor in Bramlage Coliseum on March 2, 2019. The Wildcats took the Bears 66-60. became the 31st player in school history to post 1,000 career points as a junior and he needs just 40 rebounds to eclipse 500. He could become the 15th Wildcat with 1,000 points and 500 rebounds in a career. He’s “among the best 3-point shooters in school history,” ranking eighth with 457 attempts and

ninth with 157 makes. He ranks fourth with 137 career steals. Weber has high praise for Sneed and said he has much more to show this season. “He is an outstanding young man,” Weber said. “He will have his school degree in business — which is a mouthful. His legacy will

be told what he does now. He has been part of really special things, but now it is his turn. He doesn’t have to be a superstar, but he has to help us win and he has to be a great leader. I just want him to have an efficient year. I think he can be one of the better players in the [Big 12].”

Two students share their perspectives on presidential impeachment inquiry Page 6

How does the K-State v OU field storming fine affect Athletics’ budget? Page 8


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EDITORIAL BOARD Kaylie McLaughlin Editor-in-Chief Molly Hackett Managing Editor Sports Editor

Julie Freijat Culture Editor Nathan Enserro Assistant Sports Editor

Rachel Hogan Copy Chief

Julia Jorns Assistant Sports Editor

Peter Loganbill News Editor

Abigail Compton Multimedia Editor

Bailey Britton Assistant News Editor

Dalton Wainscott Deputy Multimedia Editor

Wednesday

Leah Zimmerli Olivia Rogers Community Editors Gabby Farris Colton Seamans Design Chiefs Monica Diaz Social Media Editor Katelin Woods Audience Engagement Manager

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The Mission of the Collegian Media Group is to use best practices of journalism to cover and document life at Kansas State University from a diverse set of voices to inform and engage the K-State community. The Collegian welcomes your letters. We reserve the right to edit submitted letters for length and style. A letter intended for publication should be no longer than 600 words and must be relevant to the student body of K-State. It must include the author’s first and last name, year in school and major. If you are a graduate of K-State, the letter should include your year(s) of graduation and must include the city and state where you live. For a letter to be considered, it must include a phone number where you can be contacted. The number will not be published. Letters can be sent to letters@ kstatecollegian.com or submitted through an online form at kstatecollegian.com. Letters may be rejected if they contain abusive content, lack timeliness, contain vulgarity, profanity or falsehood, promote personal and commercial announcements, repeat comments of letters printed in other issues or contain attachments. The Collegian does not publish open letters, third-party letters or letters that have been sent to other publications or people.

CORRECTIONS If you see something that should be corrected, call editor-in-chief Kaylie McLaughlin at 785-370-6356 or email news@kstatecollegian.com

The Collegian, a student newspaper at Kansas State University, is published by Collegian Media Group. It is published Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays during the school year and on Wednesdays during the summer. Periodical postage is paid at Manhattan, KS. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to 828 Mid-Campus Drive South, Kedzie 103, Manhattan, KS 66506-7167. First copy free, additional copies 25 cents. [USPS 291 020] © Collegian Media Group, 2019

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BUDGET CUTS

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wednesday, november 6, 2019

Privilege Fee Committee recommends decrease for Fine Arts

BAILEY BRITTON

mine an increase or decrease to their funds. The committee decreased Architecture, Planning and Design by 10 percent; McCain Auditorium by 20 percent, the Department of Art by 20 percent, and fine art student organizations by 28.57 percent. When McCain’s director Todd Holmberg presented to the committee on Oct. 7, he voluntarily offered a five percent decrease of McCain’s allocation. “We should be cautious about placing priority on things especially that we don’t enjoy or appreciate,” said Michael Dowd, committee member and sophomore in animal

THE COLLEGIAN

The Privilege Fee Committee recommended a 7.29 percent decrease of the Fine Arts allocation for the next fiscal year on Monday. This amounts to $23,000. The allocations to each entity are decided by the “merit as a service to students,” Donald Riffel, committee chair and senior in computer science, said. The Fine Arts allocation is divided among 10 entities and the committee looked at each entity to deter-

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sciences. “We don’t want to be aggressive and I caution punishing other departments just because they are specific departments.” Dowd suggested the use of reserve funds to supplement the budget. The committee voted to increase the department of band and orchestra, choral and opera, communication studies, theatre and dance by $2,500 each. The committee recommends these funds be used for McCain usage fees. “Students who perform in band, choir and orchestra must pay to use the stage in McCain,” Allegra Fisher,

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graduate student in music and band teaching assistant, told the committee. Fisher said the fees vary depending on the length and type of the performance. No changes were made to Ebony Theater, the Department of English or the International Student Center allocations. In addition, $30,000 of the total fine arts allocation will be taken from reserve accounts.


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wednesday, november 6, 2019

Breaking Barriers

KSUnite Breakout Schedule

1st Period 2 - 2:40 p.m.

Increasing Social Awareness Through Storytelling Work Bluemont Room Student Stories: Opportunities and Challenges of U.S. Immigration Big 12 Room

Collegiality and Inclusivity: Tips for and Practice Being an Ally Union 209 Conversation on Religious, Spiritual, and Meaning-Making Climate on Campus Union 226 Increasing Our Intercultural Competency: Practical, Personal Steps for Becoming More Inclusive Cottonwood Room Listening to Others: Leading Courageously to Promote Diversity and Inclusion Union 206 The Trauma of Racism and Its Impact on Productivity Flint Hills Room Intentionally Inclusive Innovation Cottonwood Room

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#MeToo @ K-State Union 207

How Can I Help You?: Improving Awareness and Maintaining an Inclusive Community for People with Disabilities Union 227 Challenging Gender Expectations: Understanding the Intersections of Gender, Race, Sexuality, Ability and Colonialism at K-State Wildcat Chamber

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Yesterday and Today Flint Hills Room

2nd Period 2:50 - 3:30 p.m.

Essentials for Diversity Programming and Recruitment Success Union 227 KSU Says No More Union 206

Student Stories: Opportunities and Challenges of U.S. Immigration Big 12 Room

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Leading Across Differences Bluemont Room Intentionally Inclusive Innovation Cottonwood Room Situation Critical: Responding to Difficult Situations Through Role-Play Union 209 Social Justice in Turbulent Times Union 207 Poetry is Not a Luxury: Authors as Activists, Writing as Resistance Union 226 Unite to Promote Digital Accessibility as We Move Forward Together Wildcat Chamber

Illustration by Bailey Britton

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wednesday, november 6, 2019

Street Talk

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ABOUT KSUNITE?

by Dylan Connell & Abigail Compton

“The whole unity idea is really important. But I hope this year we talk about the suicides that have happened on campus.”

KELLY LINSTRA

sophomore in bio systems engineering

“Coming together as a community and really sticking to that family and traditional values ... it’s super important.”

DALLAS GOSSELIN

sophomore in communication studies

EDITORIAL: KSUnite has noble goals, but we hope to see more from it In 2017, KSUnite was a desperate measure, something important and necessary that grew out of a time of racial tension and a series of — real and fake — racist actions. The university was on edge and this event was meant to reunify the campus. After the first KSUnite, the Kansas State community saw the university make good on some long-awaited promises, like the multicultural student center taking shape, and new initiatives set into motion, like the hiring of a chief diversity officer and an administrator to oversee the Division of Multicultural Student Affairs. The values and aspirations of KSUnite are noble, and the ongoing fight for diversity, multiculturalism and inclusion at K-State is critically important for our land grant mission and goals to prepare students for life in the real world. But this event is not about campus reunification anymore. It’s a weekly newsletter and an annual event planned behind closed doors. If we’ve decided KSUnite needs to be an annual event even when we aren’t in the midst of crisis and controversy, we have to make it worthwhile. It can’t just be a platform to applaud what we have done or make big announcements to temporarily appease the desires of students who are begging for change — it has to have the actual push to make real, systemic alterations to make K-State a truly inclusive campus. Last year, the Collegian Editorial Board expressed our support for

diversity and inclusion, but we also said KSUnite does not actually deal with the problems at hand because, in so many words, the event is a band-aid to a wound that goes deeper than public appearance. Furthermore, it does not reach the audiences who need to hear the message the most: the students who opt out of going because they don’t see a problem. In a Twitter poll launched early in October, the Collegian asked students if they thought KSUnite has made K-State a better place, and of the 178 respondents, 44 percent said ‘No’ and 16 percent said ‘Yes.’ The remaining 40 percent said they thought KSUnite is a work in progress. There is hope in that, and we’d like to believe that too, but for now, we will keep waiting for a plan for the future, not accolades for the past. This year, we hope to see and participate in a KSUnite truly dedicated to the future of diversity at K-State — one that does not look backwards at what we have done, but looks forward to what we still must do, one that reaches past the students who see the need for intercultural learning and reaches those who haven’t seen why it’s important. Emily Lenk COLLEGIAN MEDIA GROUP

The first KSUnite event took place on Nov. 14, 2017 on the lawn in front of Anderson Hall. The university canceled classes and closed campus offices for the event.

“I’ve never heard of KSUnite, but I heard a little bit about it today and I think people are getting [out of] classes.”

KATEY HINDS

senior in elementary education

“I think it’s a great thing for K-State to bring people together, and hopefully gain different perspectives for new ... students.”

CAL SHIMKUS

sophomore open option

“I have no idea what KSUnite is.” JONATHAN CASEY-MEANS junior in conservation biology


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‘Field Day’ in 1916 paved the way for KSUnite a century later RACHEL HOGAN THE COLLEGIAN

This article was originally published on Nov. 12, 2017. It has been updated to reflect the passage of time. Two years ago, Kanas State did something rare: administration canceled classes and closed campus offices for non-weather-related reasons for the first KSUnite. The trend has continued for three years. “I believe the only time the entire campus has been closed for a singular event excluding that rare winter storm or other weather-related issue was on Dec. 7, 1916,” Jed Dunham, history researcher, said. On that day, nicknamed “Field Day,” students and instructors worked together to overhaul the field in the World War I Memorial Stadium, which was known as the College Athletic Field at the time. Today, the Memorial Stadium's field runs north to south, covered in artificial turf. The College Athletic Field ran east to west and was in poor condition by the end of the 1916 football season. Dunham describes the state of the field in a book draft called “The Last New Thing in the World: A History of World War I Memorial Stadium:”

FROM THE ARCHIVE

“The College Athletic Field was marred by a surface of rough and pitted turf. Bare in many places, the limited grass eroded to a hard patch of dried dirt on sunny days or thick, oozing mud on those when it rained. It was surrounded by a creaking, leaning grandstand and a decaying fence. The track team, baseball team and football team all practiced and played on the field, and little funding was earmarked in the college budget to upgrade or maintain the field. Much of its upkeep was done by the students themselves under the direction of the Athletic Association.” “The inability of the field to hold a grass surface was also a blemish upon a school which boasted an agricultural identity,” Dunham wrote. In 1916, Kansas State was known as the Kansas State Agricultural College, and thus its students were called "the Aggies." During a pep rally prior to KSAC's football game against the University of Missouri (which KSAC won 7-6), then-university president Henry Jackson Waters announced that all classes would be canceled on Thursday, Dec. 7, freeing students' schedules to take part in the renovation of the athletic field. According to vol. 23, no. 17 of the Collegian, the renovations entailed a regrading of the field

Royal Purple archive photo

Dean J. T. Willard, carries a distinctive red handkerchief, supervises and helps students working on the field on Dec. 7. 1916. The university had cancelled classes that day to allow students to work on realigning the football field over what is now the K-State Alumni Center. to facilitate better water drainage, a relocation of the baseball field and a reconstruction of the bleachers. “Only service on the field will be an acceptable excuse for absence from regular college duties,” read the Dec. 5 issue of the

Collegian. Insights from H.B. Walker, then-associate professor of irrigation and drainage engineering, guided preparations for the renovation. According to the Collegian, all able-bodied male students and

faculty were expected to partake in the labor, while female students were to help prepare food for the laboring men. The squads of students were organized by the deans of agriculture, engineering, general science and domestic science. In total, there were approximately 40 squads, each with 25 to 30 student workers. On the morning of Dec. 7, 1916, approximately 1,200 male students and faculty members armed with donated spades, shovels and picks assembled on the College Athletic Field at 8 a.m. This was approximately half of KSAC's total enrollment for the fall 1916 semester, which stood at 2,251. The 1917 Royal Purple yearbook set the scene: “At eight o'clock on the morning appointed, an industrial army of twelve hundred students, faculty members and townspeople, uniformed in old clothes and armed with picks and shovels, stood ready for the signal to dig. Up in the domestic science building, another, this one of women students and faculty members, responded to the command of housewife's duties. As the morning advanced, reinforcements arrived to swell the ranks of each. Picks, shovels, spades, twenty teams, four tractors and an army of Aggie men, the combination of which worked wonders.”

DIVIDING LINES: GRACE WYATT

THE COLLEGIAN

On Sept. 24, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi announced a formal impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump following a phone call with the Ukrainian president. The impeachment inquiry has created a number of controversies between America’s two parties. The impeachment inquiry began following a whistleblower

complaint, in which President Trump is accused of forming a quid pro quo agreement with Ukraine. “My knowledge of it is that they’ve opened an impeachment inquiry after they heard about a phone call the president had with Ukraine in July,” Joshua Willis, College Republicans president and junior in political science. “Basically, they’re trying to prove an allegation that he withheld military aid from Ukraine on the purpose that

they didn’t investigate Joe Biden. ... I’ve heard the phone call, I’ve read the transcript, I don’t see enough evidence that he personally withheld that aid. “But there’s a lot of reasons the Trump administration is hesitant to give aid,” Willis continued. “Ever since President Trump has been elected, he’s said he’s hesitant to give foreign aid because he wants to focus on America first and America’s priorities. ... There’s multiple reasons why he’s hesitant to give

military aid.” Samuel Harper, junior in psychology and political science, is a self-described leftist who holds a very different opinion. “The dirt was pretty bad; it’s obviously an abuse of power,” Harper said. “It’s definitely enough to impeach and convict a president, not to mention the 10 times he obstructed justice in the Mueller report, but those aren’t part of this, sadly.” Three committees in the House began holding closed-

On the field, the men dug trenches marked by stakes prepared by L.E. Conrad, then-professor in engineering. Meanwhile, the women prepared a meal of “wienie sandwiches” with over 350 pies, 100 gallons of coffee and 200 dozen donuts. The meal was served at noon. The band played while the laborers ate and rested. The work resumed at 1 p.m. and extended into the evening. At one point, Waters joined in on the work after seeing a student resting. J.T. Willard, then-head of the general science department, also participated in the work day. That evening saw the completion of the field's regrading. The construction of a new baseball field was well underway. “It is a fine sight,” Waters said after the day's completion, according to the Collegian. “Never before was such enthusiasm shown at an educational institution in the country.” Waters called the new field “a new link forged into the chain of college unity,” according to Dunham. Nearly 101 years later, the university has canceled classes for non-weather-reasons again to to promote the first KSUnite event, encouraging staff and students “to unite together to reaffirm who we are, what we value and what we stand for as the K-State family.”

Two student opinions on presidential impeachment inquiry

door hearings from witnesses in early October. About two dozen Republican congresspeople delayed these hearings Oct. 23 by entering the Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility in the U.S. Capitol. “I definitely see the perspective of the other side. To my knowledge, there are some Republicans in the room, but I think there’s hypocrisy on both sides,” Willis said. “To some extent, we want things to be transparent. ... From the start,

this impeachment thing has been unfair to the president. Republicans are finally deciding to stand up and say that enough is enough. Because of the context, I agree with what they did. We should keep national security in mind, the rules, but like I said, [Democrats] have been violating rules this whole time.”

To read more, visit kstatecollegian.com


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wednesday, november 6, 2019

NSF grant fuels cancer treatment research across disciplines JULIE FREIJAT

THE COLLEGIAN

Simply defined, cancer is a disease caused by an uncontrollable division of abnormal cells. However, the effect and complexity of this affliction go beyond those few words; cancer is not confined to one portion of the body or one type of tissue — there are over 100 different kinds of cancer. Its effects cast a shadow across the United States — 439.2 new cases of cancer occur for every 100,000 men and women each year. And each year, there are 163.5 cancer deaths per 100,000 men and women. Despite the harrowing statistics, a team of researchers at Kansas State is studying new treatments for some forms of cancer like glioblastoma, a common but aggressive brain cancer. This team, led by Stefan Bossmann, professor of chemistry, received a $2 million four-year-grant from the National Science Foundation. “This particular [grant] deals mostly with looking at how cancers develop and how external mechanical perturbations can affect that development or actually reprogram the cell to actually die and therefore stop the cancer,” said Chris Culbertson, College of Arts and Sciences associate dean and professor of chemistry. Bossmann said this grant funds research to look for a link between cancer metabolism, mechanobiology and epigenetic modifications to cancer cells’ DNA. “What’s really important here is to see that cells communicate with each other, by

means of mechanobiology — that means they’re able to build tactile sensors — the sensors form within minutes, they live a couple of minutes, they sense the rigidity of the environment, and they sense whether [there are] healthy cells around them or not,” Bossmann said. Cancer cells are dangerous because they have the ability to do more than regular cells, Bossmann. A regular cell will undergo cell death if it realizes it is out of place, but a cancer cell has deactivated this mechanism. “However, by mechanical stimuli and metabolic factors, we are able to recreate this ability to undergo programmed cell deaths,” Bossman said. “So, you need a metabolic component and you need a mechanical component. And then basically, if you do this right, cancer cells will just sign off and die.” To receive the grant, the team conducted convincing preliminary research. Bossmann said with help from Culberston and Bala Natarajan, professor of electrical and computer engineering, among other individuals, they studied CpG islands, a section of a genome, which will be helpful in the next steps of their research. “We have developed a method [of] how to image methylated or not methylated CpG islands throughout the nucleus,” Bossmann said. “And this methylation state is basically how you switch them on or off. So, by looking at the state of switches, we can clearly see what global changes to the epigenome we are introducing, and that then take us down to local changes, meaning formation of the

sensors. Once the cells sense that they are somewhere we they are not supposed to be, the cells just sign off.” Bossmann said research is something that takes time, energy and collaboration. The group works with researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. “So, what you basically do is, you have to create a group of experts and you have to discuss possibilities and develop this kind of vision for about one to two years before you’re at a point where this is competitive,” Bossmann said. “It’s not that you have suddenly this idea — it’s 80 percent communication and 10 percent literature and 10 percent preliminary work, but being in constant exchange with other minds is a key of coming up with new ideas.” Culberston said the big part of the project is that it is interdisciplinary. “We have medical doctors, biophotonics experts, organic chemists and electrical chemists working together to understand how really a bad disease develops and then identifying potential ways of treating the disease,” Culberston said. Bossmann said K-State is strong in this type of research. “Coming from a European background, where each professor lives in his or her ivory tower, there’s nothing in between — there’s void,” Bossmann said. “Here, the barriers to collaboration are very, very low, and that means that it’s much easier in a setting like [this] to do collaborative work, than it will be in other institutions. That’s a strength that we have, and, in my opinion, we have to cultivate that strength.”

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wednesday, november 6, 2019

K-State Athletics was recently fined $25,000 for how they handled a field storming incident at the K-State v. Oklahoma football game. How does it affect K-State Athletics?

FIELD STORMING FINES

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“Our institutions have a duty to provide a safe game environment,” Big 12 Conference Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said in a press release. “Although the Big 12 does not currently have a policy prohibiting spectators from entering playing areas for post-game celebrations, it is of utmost importance that home game management provide adequate security measures for our student-athletes, coaches, game officials and spectators. That expectation includes providing safe passage from the playing field to the locker room, and protection of the visiting team bench area.”

Graphic designed by Julie Friejat


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