2 P35H Mark Dor6, Editor in Chief THE BATTALION is published daily, Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer session (except University holidays and exam periods) atTexasA&M University. College Station, TX 77843. Offices are in Suite 1400 of the Memorial Student Center. News: The Battalion news depart ment is managed by students at Texas A&M University in Student Media, a unit of the Division of Student Affairs. News room phone: 979-845-3315; E-mail: edi- tor@thebatt.com; website: http://www. thebatt.com. Advertising: Publication of advertising does not imply sponsorship or endorse ment by The Battalion. For campus, local, and national display advertising, call 979-845-2687. For classified advertising, call 979-845-0569. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Email: battads@thebatt.com. Subscriptions: A part of the Univer sity Advancement Fee entitles each Texas A&M student to pick up a single copy of The Battalion. First copy free, addi tional copies $1. ANSWERS to todays puzzles SCALP TONAL UN T 1 E ■ A t m s ■ c HAT ■ h a 1 R CATS AFRO NAIL » •r 'll 3 1 5 P 1 S I R S 1 1 Uo iuHe m 3 D E S e|d [E N Tjf I A N E w AN C 1 HO m A J3J = T N O M M \sT r! ;>■ P o IS 1 M ! tl 1 IjU E E I D B A 1 1 T ■ l E L IVI X 1 I E 1 3 D o G E i 1 p i A 1 R N 1 F si IMP E jl i T R A iff |N~E Tili hMsI J o\ yfl 1] A Tu s a nr T 7 1 T 5 6 T 9 4 6 5 7 2 9 1 8 3 9 3 _1_ 4 6 8 2_ 5 7 6 7 2 3 4 1 5’ 9 8 1 5 9 2 8 7 3 6 4 J_ _8_ 4 _9_ 5 6 7 _2_ 1 7 4 V 5 9 3 “8 1 2 5 9 3 8 1 2 4 7 6 (T 1 8 6 7 4 9 3 5 TITLE IX CONTINUED Meg Penrose, professor at the Texas A&M School of Law, has a specialty in Title IX procedure. She stressed that Ti tle IX, established as part of the United States Education Amendments of 1972, protects all genders and covers students, staff and faculty. “Tide IX requires any school re ceiving federal funding makes sure that someone’s gender not be a basis for their inability to access educational opportu nities,” Penrose said. In 2014, President Barack Obama’s administration created a task force to monitor Title IX compliance. Penrose said A&M and other universities have taken the advice seriously. “They take them very seriously, and her committee, along with others like the Women’s Resource Center and Stu dent Conduct Office, hold lectures and distribute information about resources available to survivors and those who seek to help survivors. Penrose said these programs don’t just communicate information, but also bring an enhanced sense of awareness on college campuses. “When we have open dialogue and discussion about certain items that ex ist, it brings a heightened level of aware ness,” Penrose said. “It’s not just institu tionally speaking that schools say, ‘We support this program and that’s what the law requires,’ but also to remind students that if you find yourself in a vulnerable position, either the school has programs to aid you or they’re providing training.” Another component of Title IX in- “We let them make that decision,” Winkler said. “But even things that I’ve heard when survivors come to me and are trying to decide if they’re going to report, it’s this thing of, ‘I’m going to have to talk about it to strangers.’ ... I don’t ask for details. If a student wants to share that with me, I’m here to listen. If they don’t want to, that is okay.” While Harrell said students may view an adult talking about consent and pre vention as a “talking head” at times, she said the university is working on pro grams that encourage more peer-to-peer interaction. “Peer-on-peer communication is re ceived much better by students,” Harrell said. “They feel safer speaking to other students. They’re more familiar with the language of the generation and the cul tured context.” DONATE PLASMA TODAY! NEW DONORS EARN IN YOUR FIRST 2 DONATIONS TWO LOCATIONS TO DONATE AT! (979) 315-4101 | (979) 314-3672 4223 Wellborn Rd 700 University Dr E., Ste It 1 Bryan, TX 77801 | College Station, TX 77840 “In a college setting, for example, it’s very seldom, if ever, the person with a ski mask who jumps from behind a hedge. ” we know that sexual harassment in schools is far too common,” Penrose said. “There are some statistics that eight in 10 students say they experience some form of sexual harassment, and that’s not necessarily college and it’s not just girls.” Kristen Harrell, associate director in the office of the Dean of Student Life and chair of the Sexual Assault Survival Services Committee, said the mission of the organization is to provide education for students and consult with them on issues involving sexual violence. Harrell said compliance with Title IX is very broad. Ranging from train ing and education for students to inci dent response, A&M works to increase awareness of sexual violence issues. Harrell said effective education can be a challenge. Students may not take the discussions to heart, and those who have been victims of sexual harassment or vio lence do not report to the university. On the education tract, Harrell said volves investigating reported acts of sex ual harassment or violence. While each case is handled by the Student Conduct Office if it involves students, Harrell said staff and faculty across campus are edu cated to work with students. With more people educated on han dling cases, Carol Binzer, director of Administrative and Support Services for the Department of Residence Life, said issues can be addressed more efficiently. An example she gave included a student going to the Women’s Clinic for sup port, but who still had other concerns or issues. If the student needed to be moved into different housing, for ex ample, a practitioner at the Women’s Clinic would know a contact within Residential Life. Angela Winkler, assistant director of Student Assistance Services, said students do not have to file a formal complaint with the conduct office to receive the care and resource information they need. Harrell said an ultimate goal is to give students and staff the feeling of empow erment to say something and bring up issues for discussion. A&M, she said, has values that encourage this type of discus sion, creating a culture of respect. Sexual violence does still exist on campus, and Harrell said some traditions may be inhibitors to effective education. “There are road bumps,” Harrell said. “Mugging down at yell practice can be fine as mutual consent, but there is social pressure to act in tradition.” Penrose said one misconception about Title IX is that it only applies to students and specifically to females, but nothing in the act that states female. Any gender is protected under the law. “The good thing about Title IX is that it’s motivation is that no one’s gender, male or female, should prevent or pre clude them from gaining access to edu cational programs,” Penrose said. THE TEXAS A&M STUDENT MEDIA BOARD INVITES APPLICATIONS FOR Editor Aggieland 2016 Qualifications for editor-in-chief of the Aggieland yearbook are: REQUIRED Be a Texas A&M student in good standing with the University and enrolled in %t least six credit hours (4 if a graduate student) during the term bToffice (unless fewer credits are required to graduate); Have at least a 2.25 cumulative grade point ratio (3.25 if a graduate student) and at least a 2.25 grade point ratio (3.25 if a graduate student) in the semester immediately prior to the appointment, the semester of appointment and semester during the term of office. In order for this provision to be met, at least six hours (4 if a graduate student) must have been taken for that semester; PREFERRED • Have completed JOUR 301 or COMM 307 (Mass Communication, Law, and Society); • Have demonstrated ability in writing, editing and graphic design through university coursework or equivalent experience; • Have at least one year experience in a responsible position on the Aggieland or comparable college yearbook. Application forms should be picked up and returned to Sandi Jones, Student Media business coordinator, in Suite L406 of the MSC. Deadline for submitting application: 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 7, 2015. A letter to the sexual assault task force Change involves more than just another awareness campaign Sam King @Sam_King372 I t’s uncomfortable to acknowledge that I sexual assault is a national problem — and I perhaps even more so to admit that it is I caused by Aggies on campus. But for all the uneasiness, it’s nothing compared to the consequences of ignoring it. The Challenge According to the Division of Student Affairs, there have been 32 cases of reported sexual assault, including rape and sexual abuse, since the summer of 2012. The key word here is “reported.” According to the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network, the nation’s largest anti-sexual assault organization, “just over half of rape victims do not report the crime.” To A&M’s newly established sexual assault task force, you have a difficult job ahead of you. It’s not enough anymore to just say, “This is a problem.” If you, the task force, want your campaign to be successful, you need to make sure you are tackling the issue with decorum and sensitivity while ensuring the correct in- and women how to not get attacked, though. It doesn’t mean sending the message that it’s up to people to hinder their chances of being assaulted. It does mean teaching people how to handle themselves if they are ever faced with the reality of an assault. Interference Interference is the next component of the ideal campaign. Many national campaigns feature messages like, “If you see something, say something.” This is a great catch phrase, but you need to look at defining what both of those “somethings” mean. What should people at a party look for in a potentially dan gerous setting? What kind of interactions could become harmful? Along with recognizing the signs of sexual assault and harassment, students need to know how to step in. Your campaign should show how to stand up and protect our fellow Aggies, even when they may not be capable of protecting them selves. The Aggie Honor Code applies outside the classroom and can easily be expanded to apply to this campaign. An Aggie does not lie, cheat, steal (or harm another person) or toler ate those who do. As you might expect, the people evaluate a new investigational involved in developing new medication at PPD. So when medicines wear lots of different you volunteer to help create new hats. What you might not expect medications at PPD, everybody wins. Is that one of those hats could be one like you might wear. The Learn how you can benefit professionals at PPD have been while helping to improve life for working with healthy volunteers - al1 of us b Y volunteering at PPD. people like you - for almost Go online or give us a call today thirty years. for more Information. You’ll find studies to fit most any schedule You can be compensated when llsted here weekly - you participate in a medically be a part of the WMWMWM* supervised research study to help FUTURE OF MEDICINE X formation is communicated. In order for the campaign to be successful, you should tackle four issues: awareness, pre vention, interference and reaction. Awareness Awareness has been a huge focus of many national campaigns. Obama’s “It’s On Us” campaign was huge in raising national aware ness. Awareness includes defining sexual as sault. Part of the reason so many sexual assault cases go unreported is that the victim may be unaware that their experience is even consid ered sexual assault. Clear definitions — and the simple understanding that sexual assault is a problem at A&M — should be cornerstones of your campaign. Prevention Prevention is a topic you need to handle sensitively. You cannot approach it from the perspective of teaching people of all genders how to “not get raped.” Rather, you need to view it from the angle of programs like Sexual Harassment and Rape Prevention, SHARP, a self-defense course hosted by the University Police Department (even though that class is specifically for women). “Prevention,” doesn’t mean teaching men Reaction Last but not least is reaction. This goes back to the lack of sexual assault cases that are re ported. Many students are unaware of the steps that should be taken following an attack. You need to make information easily avail able if something should happen. This is per haps the least comfortable part to discuss, be cause to talk about it means to accept that it happened. Even beyond reporting the crime to the UPD, there are resources available to victims, including counseling. Sexual assault trials, es pecially those found on college campuses, have garnered a reputation of being incredibly try ing and often fruitless. Your campaign needs to reassure students that if something happens to them, proper steps will be taken to ensure that A&M will do everything it can to support the victims. And that needs to be a truthful statement. I think that a public message and campaign is incredibly important. But it can’t stop there. If the Division of Student Affairs doesn’t fol low the message it is trying to send and follows in the unfortunate footsteps of universities like those we’ve heard in the news, then the efforts of your task force won’t mean anything. Freshmen, sophomores, juniors, seniors, grad students 2 MORE DAYS to have your picture taken ^ for Texas A&M's 2015 Aggieland yearbook, if you didn't last fall. Your portrait sitting is free. 4 jf|K ij,: |— Just walk in 9 a.m.-5 p.m. today through Thursday in the Student Media office. Suite L400 of the MSC. March 12 will be your last chance. It's your yearbook. Be in it.