PRESIDENTIAL VISITS TO DU OVER THE YEARS | Page 6 University of Denver student newspaper since 1899
Vol. 121, Issue 2
jan. 22, 2014
www.duclarion.com
Coombe to retire in June
his position at the end of the fiscal year, which falls on June 30. He has worked at DU for 33 years, serving as chancelIn an email sent Friday afternoon lor for nine of those years. to DU students, staff and faculty, Robert According to Will Jones, DU’s Coombe announced he will retire as external communications manager, chancellor of Board of the university Tr u s t e e s this year. member Doug “I’ve been Scrivner is Chancellor for heading the nine years now, formation of and it is time a search comfor me to step mittee to find aside and make candidates room for that to replace new leadership,” Coombe. Coombe said The comin the email. mittee will “Consequently, be comprised after many of university months of deep faculty and consideration, senior adminJulanna and I istration have decided members, and that this year will hold their will be our last first meeting at DU.” on Jan. 27. Coombe ryan lumpkin | clarion The comwill step down from Coombe speaks at a Presidential Debate event in 2012. mittee will
also hold town hall meetings in February to hear input on candidates from the rest of the university. “That way the entire university community can share its thoughts and be involved in the process,” said Jones. Additionally, a new chancellor search web page will be created later this month and will include a mailbox for community comments and input. According to Jones, the committee is hoping to have a new chancellor named by the end of the academic year. “Our plan and our goal and our hope is to have someone in place when Chancellor Coombe steps down,” said Jones. “That way there will be a sort of passing of the torch.” The new chancellor will be the 18th in DU’s 150-year history. Coombe has been an employee of the university since 1981, when he began his career here with the chemistry department. He has previously served as the chair of the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, dean of the Division of Natural Sciences, Mathematics and Engineering and as university provost before becoming chancellor in 2005.
Initial interest meeting to be held next Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Driscoll
and the need for people to be able to discuss them. “Throughout high school I was always a proponent of women’s rights and I was always made fun of and put down for it,” said Higgins. “Women’s Council at DU is designed to be safe for [people] to have their voices heard. While I think DU is a very inclusive community, I believe that there’s a lack of leadership opportunities for women on campus.” The DU Women’s Council is currently accepting anyone who wishes to be a member, with no limits on how many people can join. Any students interested in joining are encouraged to attend a meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 28, from 7-8 p.m. in the Driscoll Student Center. For more information, the council can be contacted via email at ugwc.du@gmail.com or at their Facebook group page.
by sarah ford Managing Editor
DU Women’s Council reformed Senior Reporter
After three years of inactivity due to former leaders’ graduation, several students have banded together to restart the DU Women’s Council as a student organization by the end of this week, according to Undergraduate Student Government Joseph Korbel School of International Studies (JKSIS) Senator Aly Higgins. The new council will be led by Higgins, USG Vice President Katrina Yoshida, and Director of Gender and Women’s Studies Hava Gordon. In addition, Gordon said the Women’s Council will work with the Gender Studies department on events and activities serving the goals of both organizations. With the time left in the school year, the major focus of the council will be planning events for Women’s History Month in March. These events would include International Women’s Day on Saturday, March 8 and a variation of
“Issues of race, class status, gender and sexuality are feminist issues.” -Aly Higgins, USG Senator
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Eve Ensler’s “The Vagina Monologues” tailored for DU students, according to Higgins. To carry out these events, the new council will draw upon funds from the old council, as well as acquiring a surplus of excess funds from USG’s Sustainability Committee. An additional goal of the council, according to Higgins and Gordon, will be to eliminate the stigma they believe surrounds feminist ideals. “I feel that some think the history around feminism is really extreme and ‘anti-men,’ and because of that men and women are scared to call themselves feminists. I want the council to change feminism from being the domination over men to bringing everyone to the same level,” said Higgins. “Issues of race, class status, gender and sexuality are feminist issues, so it belongs to everyone.” Higgins’ desire to restart the organization came from her personal views on the subject of women’s rights,
B.O.S.S. asks students to be accountable by carli hansen Assistant News Editor
Last week, the third of 11 “Be a B.O.S.S.” posters appeared on campus, advertising a new social marketing campaign emphasizing bystander intervention to prevent sexual assault and relationship violence. The campaign is sponsored by the Center for Advocacy, Prevention, and Empowerment (CAPE), which is part of the Health and Counseling Center (HCC). According to the website, “To be a DU B.O.S.S. is to: Be aware, Observe your situation, Size up your options, Speak up and act.” “We were looking at trying to get students engaged around these issues in a positive way,” said CAPE Program Director Gillian Kaag. “We believe that in order to effectively prevent any kind of violence on campus, the community needs to come together to take action.” Kaag said the campaign is something she has wanted to do since last spring, following CAPE’s Consent is Sexy campaign. Last quarter, CAPE started working on the Be a B.O.S.S. campaign, taking time to photograph posters and put everything together. One new poster will appear on campus every Wednesday during winter quarter, each featuring a student leader and a two-part saying. According to Kaag, the beginnings of the sayings are supposed to buy into some of the myths surrounding sexual assault and the ends are supposed to be a surprise. “We wanted something that would grab attention and rally people around these issues,” she said. The most recent poster features Katrina Yoshida, vice president of the Undergraduate Student Government (USG), and says, “We wanted to leave the party and some dude said he’d take care of her...but friends stick together and there was no way we were leaving without her. Better safe than sorry.” Other students featured on the posters include Jesse Daniels, Angela Ianniello, Kathryn Avedon, Ryan Cook, Nermina Mujkanovic, Vy Pham, Salvador Ramirez, Mike Schutte, Lori Scott and Alex Shefrin. The organizations they represent include Housing, USG, Greek Life, Queer Straight Alliance (QSA), Men as Allies and Women’s Council.
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4 number of
records broken in swimming and diving this weekend