2-20-17

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NEWS

ARTS & CULTURE

SPORTS

Onward coalition plans to focus on alcohol, parking

YouTube vlogger to speak on campus tomorrow

KU closer to 13th-straight Big 12 title after win over Baylor

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MONDAY, FEB. 20, 2017 | VOLUME 133 ISSUE 11

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT VOICE SINCE 1904

Second Title IX suit partially dismissed CHANDLER BOESE @Chandler_Boese

Miranda Anaya/KANSAN Mady Womack, junior from Leawood, gives a speech to the OneKU coalition after accepting her nomination as candidate for student body presdent.

Miranda Anaya/KANSAN Mattie Carter, a junior from Kansas City, Missouri, gives her acceptance speech to the OneKU coalition after accepting her nomination as candidate for student body vice president.

OneKU selects candidates, platforms and name NOLAN BREY @NolanBrey

M

ady Womack and Mattie Carter were chosen as the president and vice presidential candidates of OneKU at a coalition meeting Sunday night, after running unopposed for their respective positions. About 40 people attended the coalition meeting in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union, where the coalition selected its name, president, and vice president. The name OneKU was unanimously selected over the name “Hype.” The coalition launched its campaign

on Feb. 7. Womack is a junior from Leawood who currently serves as the Student Senate government relations director, while Carter is a junior from Kansas City, Missouri, who currently serves as the chair of the Student Rights Committee. Three platform ideas were also presented at the coalition meeting. Womack presented the first platform idea, introducing an online sexual assault reporting system known as Project Callisto, which would allow sexual assault victims to record the details of their assault without having to report them

right away. Victims can also submit their reports electronically or only report their sexual assault if another survivor names the same perpetrator. The reporting system is already being used by universities in California and Iowa. The reporting system would allow victims to not have to "sit in an office with an administrator who might not even believe them,” Womack said. The second platform was ROTC-priority enrollment, which was presented by Jack Stevens, a junior from Fairway. It would give ROTC students the oppor-

tunity to enroll earlier, because starting their junior year these students’ classes must be approved by their commanding officer, which can be a timely bureaucratic process, Stevens said. The third platform was a freshman internship program within the Student Senate, proposed by Martin Doherty, a freshman from Chicago. Since there are only five freshman seats in Student Senate, the program is designed to get more freshman students involved. Freshman interns would not be given voting rights, Doherty said, but they would be able to attend

meetings and learn the ins and outs of the Student Senate. Womack said that more platforms will come in the future. In her acceptance speech, Womack said that she is excited for the things the OneKU will accomplish. Womack also said that her role as president is “to advocate for all Jayhawks.” Carter said in her acceptance speech that her experience on the Student Rights Committee has prepared her for leadership, and that she is confident that OneKU is the “most qualified coalition to improve the lives of all students.”

KU offers most scholarship funds in Kansas NOLAN BREY @NolanBrey

University students receive more scholarship money than students from any other university in Kansas. In the 2016 fiscal year, the University awarded $204,010,422 in scholarships and fellows, according to Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations for the University. In 2016, the University had an enrollment headcount of 27,098 students, according to the Board of Regents’ University Data Book. This means that there is $7,529 in scholarship funds for every student that attends the University, though this does not mean that every student will receive such an amount or will have access to the same funds. For example, the more than $200 million dollars in awards does not include just scholarships. It also includes fellowships. Fellowships can include

programs only available to the University’s 6,932 graduate students—about 25 percent of the Lawrence and Edwards campuses, Barcomb-Peterson said. Additionally, the University of Kansas Medical Center awarded $9,229,928 to its 3,891 students in 2016 or about $2,372 per student. In terms of the scholarship awards, the University is significantly ahead of other state institutions. Barcomb-Peterson said that Kansas State University offers $63,997,487 to its students. The student population of Kansas State is 26,455. This equates to $2,419 in scholarship funds per student. Additionally, Wichita State University awards its 17,096 students $31,059,758 ($1,816 per student), while Fort Hays State University awards its 17,322 students $20,677,149 ($1,194 per student). While the University awards more than $200 million to its students, it is

INDEX NEWS............................................2 OPINION........................................4 ARTS & CULTURE..........................................5 SPORTS.........................................14

How the University’s scholarship funding compares to other Kansas universities

Illustration by Roxy Townsend

difficult to ascertain who actually gets the money. “Scholarships are awarded based on merit, need, special talents, donor requirements, etc.,” said Matt Melvin, vice provost of enrollment management for the University, in an email. “The criteria, eligibility guidelines, restriction, etc. are all over the place and represent the unique interests of donors.”

A majority of the scholarship dollars at the University come from the University Endowment Association, which provides over 6,500 privately funded scholarships to students every year, according to the association’s website. “We raise money for scholarships, but we don’t award them. The University decides who gets them,” said Rosita Elizalde-McCoy, senior vice president

KANSAN.COM VIDEO: Check out five things you need to know about campus carry on Kansan.com

of communications and marketing for University Endowment. “Donors who they work with often provide support for specific scholarships based on their experiences at KU, like study abroad, debate, a particular program of study or for particular student populations, such as low-income, first-generation, etc.,” Melvin said.

Sarah McClure, one of the former Kansas rowers who is suing the University for alleged Title IX violations had part of her lawsuit dismissed Thursday. A federal judge ruled against the allegations that the University created a hostile environment that contributed to the plaintiff’s alleged rape in Jayhawker Towers by a Kansas football player. McClure’s accusations that the University was indifferent and negligent toward her after the alleged incident will move forward. Daisy Tackett, the other former rower who is also suing the University, received a similar ruling in her case last Friday. J. Thomas Marten, the U.S. district judge who ruled in both cases, referred to Tackett’s case multiple times throughout his ruling on McClure’s case. “The court recognizes that the alleged facts in these cases differ with respect to the circumstances surrounding the sexual assault, post-assault contact with [the football player who allegedly assaulted her], and the experience with the head coach,” Marten wrote in the ruling, obtained by the Kansan. “Nonetheless, the allegations supporting the Title IX claims are sufficiently similar to warrant the same treatment.” McClure’s original complaint against the University alleged that it created the circumstances that led to her alleged assault. The complaint said that the University’s policy of placing football players in Jayhawker Towers, despite the high rate of assault in the complex, was one of these contributors. The judge ruled that this was not substantial enough to go to court and dismissed this part of the complaint. However, McClure’s allegations that the University mishandled the investigation of the assault and that her rowing coach made sexbased comments about her will move forward. Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, the director of news and media relations for the University, said the University is happy that the court decided to dismiss part of the lawsuit. “Moving forward, we are confident the court will agree we’ve fulfilled our obligations to Ms. McClure,” Barcomb-Peterson said in an email. On Friday, the Kansan reached out to Dan Curry, the Kansas City attorney representing both McClure and Tackett. “The McClure family is pleased with the Court's ruling and they look forward to prosecuting their case against KU,” Curry said via email.

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