NEWS: Vice Provost Announced as Next Dean of the College
APRIL 20, 2023 FIFTH WEEK VOL. 135, ISSUE 13
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Shirts, Frats, Pizza, and Lampposts: USG Election Cycle Punctuated by Three-Hour Complaint Hearing By KATHERINE WEAVER | Senior News Reporter The Golden Slate Warriors ticket are set to become the next leaders of Undergraduate Student Government (USG) at UChicago in an election cycle involving multiple protests and vote deductions for several candidates. Both during and after the voting period, several complaints were filed against each of the three executive tickets for campaign violations, resulting in vote deductions for both the upLIFT and Chicago tickets after a hearing on April 17. Golden Slate, comprising third-year Jefferson Lind as president and second-year Ariana Ukaonu as executive vice president (EVP), earned 421 of the 1164 bal-
lots cast in the 2023 USG elections. Lind is currently USG’s EVP, while Ukaonu serves as USG’s vice president of advocacy. Results became official on April 21 at 4 p.m., which marked the end of the one-week period in which appeals and complaints can be submitted to USG’s Elections and Rules (E&R) Committee. After a complaint of a rule violation is submitted, the E&R committee notifies the defendant via email and sets a date for a public hearing. Within these hearings, complainants are able to present evidence supporting the allegations and respondents’ evidence to the contrary.
Both parties are then able to speak in the rules’ interpretation discussion, which determines the basis for and severity of the infraction. After this, E&R enters private deliberations and creates a ruling to be publicized after the hearings conclude. The runner-up, upLIFT Slate, received 328 votes, though the total was reduced to 324.72 after the ticket incurred a 1 percent vote deduction for violating the University Posting Policy by placing a campaign poster on a lamppost. E&R conducted a hearing for the violation three hours after voting closed on April 14, but neither presidential candidate Julia Brestovitskiy nor EVP candidate Elijah Jenkins was present, nor were the complainants, the Chicago Ticket.
Commonly referred to as Chicago for U, the Chicago Ticket received 307 votes before complaint hearings held on April 17. The ticket was comprised of second-year presidential candidate Ben Vacher and third-year EVP candidate Alex Norton. The first complaint against the Chicago Ticket alleged that its members violated Article II.1 of E&R’s spring 2023 election policies by exceeding the $200 cap allotted for campaign spending. After voting concluded on Friday afternoon, the Chicago Ticket posted the email notification of the violation, sent by E&R chair R. E. Stern on Friday, to its Instagram story. The text “Stop the Steal” was overlaid on a screenCONTINUED ON PG. 7
Up to Half of Incoming Med School Students to Receive Full-Tuition Scholarships Starting Fall 2023 By ANUSHREE VASHIST | News Editor The University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine will offer full-tuition scholarships to up to half of all incoming students starting in fall 2023, according to an April 12 press release. Pritzker will also roll out its new Pritzker Phoenix curriculum at the same time. “The new scholarship funds will be granted based on need and a candidate’s potential to succeed,” the release read. “The new curriculum will focus on empowering students to serve as patient advocates and enhance small-group learning and community engagement, while continuing UChica-
go’s tradition of rigorous inquiry.” Per the release, more than 90 percent of current Pritzker students receive partial financial aid, and about 40 percent have been supported through full-tuition scholarships or grants. The news comes after Mark Anderson— the dean of Pritzker, executive vice president for Medical Affairs, and dean of the Biological Sciences Division—told The Maroon in fall 2022 about his goal of reducing medical school tuition and student debt ahead of the medical school’s centennial in 2027. “Diversity is an essential part of a mean-
NEWS: Library Fails to Notify Student Workers About Hazardous Materials in Books
VIEWPOINTS: Break Out of the Box
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ingful medical education and a vital focus of ours as we envision the future of healthcare,” Anderson said in the April 12 release. “While the changes being made represent another important step in the journey toward increased equity in medical education and in healthcare, we also have a goal to create a tuition or debt–free scenario for all Pritzker students in need.” A 2018 analysis by the Association for American Medical Colleges (AAMC) found that almost a quarter of medical students in the United States come from the top five percent of the country’s wealthiest households. “The high cost of medical education literally makes it a barrier to entry for all
but the wealthiest students. Increasing our tuition support allows us to recruit and support talented students who deserve to access medical education but simply cannot afford it. They are also the same students who are more likely to serve their communities,” Dean for Medical Education Vineet Arora told The Maroon in an email. Pritzker’s new Pritzker Phoenix curriculum will debut this fall, with the first cohort of students on the curriculum set to graduate in 2027. Per the release, the new curriculum will increase students’ access to clinical opportunities beginning their first year while also providing time for self-di-
ARTS: Chaos Inside of Order
SPORTS: UChicago Alum Sarah Langs Continues to Inspire Fans Around the Nation
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