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THURSDAY • DECEMBER 10 • 2015
Abortion case tests Kansas STUDENTS INTERRUPT CLASSES, CONFRONT INTERIM PROVOST constitution
CAMPUS PROTESTS CONTINUE
‘Due process’ question has broad implications By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
INTERIM KANSAS UNIVERSITY PROVOST SARA ROSEN, center, speaks to a group of student protesters gathered inside Kansas University’s administration offices Wednesday at Strong Hall. The students wanted to speak to KU officials about issues of diversity, inclusion and alleged racism at the university. Many of the students walked into the offices after a demonstration across the street on the steps of Wescoe Hall. About 100 students were present for that event, which was organized by the group identifying itself as Rock Chalk Invisible Hawk. Social Welfare dean’s office, and after amassing a group at Wescoe marched across bout 100 student proJayhawk Boulevard and into testers marched into the Strong Hall. Kansas University Inside, students chancellor’s office spent about an hour Wednesday, demanding and a half speaking more and faster action with incoming interim on diversity issues. provost Sara Rosen and A student group several other admincalled Rock Chalk istrators. The group KANSAS UNIVERSITY dispersed after securInvisible Hawk organized a protest at noon on ing a sit-down meeting with Wescoe Beach. En route to Rosen and a promise that Wescoe, group members her office would release a barged into several classPlease see PROTESTS, page 8A rooms and the School of
By Sara Shepherd
Topeka — Abortion rights advocates on Wednesday asked all 14 members of the Kansas Court of Appeals to find, for the first time, that the Kansas Constitution provides the same guarantee to privacy rights, including the right to an abortion, that the U.S. Supreme Court has found in the federal Constitution. But attorneys for the state, as well as anti-abortion lobbyists, argued the state constitution is much different, and that no such right can be found there. Those arguments played out during a historic hearCOURTS ing before the appellate court, which has not sat all together, or “en banc,” since the 1980s. And it’s a case that will likely have political fallout, not only in the Kansas Legislature, but also for the judges themselves, six of whom must stand for retention in the 2016 elections. The case involves a bill enacted this year, Senate Bill 95, that bans the most commonly used procedure for second trimester abortions, a procedure known as “dilation and evacuation,” or D and E, but which abortion opponents refer to as “dismemberment abortion.”
Twitter: @saramarieshep
Please see ABORTION, page 2A
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Actions may violate KU policies organized the protest, and the Twitter: @RochelleVerde group re-tweeted or quoted tweets that said protesters A group of student protest- were going into classrooms in ers reportedly entered class- Twente, Blake and Fraser halls rooms in several buildings calling for “allyship, right now.” on the Kansas University The students’ concerns campus Wednesday morninclude issues of diversity, ing, according to several inclusion and instances of alposts made to social media. leged racism at the university. The student group calling itPlease see POLICIES, page 8A self Rock Chalk Invisible Hawk
By Rochelle Valverde
John Young/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS UNIVERSITY STUDENT SENATE Chief of Staff Adam Moon speaks with Student Body President Jessie Pringle before the start of Wednesday's senate meeting at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @NikkiWentling
Impeachment talk delayed By Mackenzie Clark Twitter: @mclark_ljw
The Kansas University Student Senate did not discuss impeachment proceedings for any of its top leaders at its meeting Wednesday evening, but it did pass some legislation
Greyhound bus change irks nonprofit
with the intent of improving inclusion on campus. According to Student Senator Harrison Baker, discussion of impeachment for Student Body President Jessie Pringle, Vice President Zach Please see DELAYED, page 8A
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A few weeks ago, We’ve people started showing up every day at social become a de service agency Van Go facto bus stop asking to take shelter while they waited for here.” their Greyhound bus. The riders were unsure — Lynne Green, Van of where it would stop Go executive director — the Greyhound website listed the Lawrence pickup and drop-off spot as the intersection of Seventh and New Jersey streets — and they were looking for a place to use a telephone, the restrooms and to get out of the cold, said Van Go’s executive director, Lynne Green. Please see BUS, page 2A
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A Lawrence woman was in court Wednesday on federal charges of fleeing to Europe to avoid losing custody of her two daughters. Page 3A
Vol.157/No.344 26 pages