Vol. 127, no. 129

Page 1

Vol. 127, No. 129 Monday, April 23, 2018

OPINION

SPORTS

A&C

TONY FRANK MUST PRIORITIZE STUDENT ENGAGEMENT

DEFENSE TRIUMPHS IN SPRING FINALE

AFRICAN NIGHT SHOWCASES AFRICAN CULTURES

PAGE 7

PAGE 11

PAGE 14

Haley Ratcliff, Wout Bouckaert and Allie Holton hold a discussion about mental health and gun violence at the Columbine Shooting Memorial Rally and Vigil in the Clark A building on April 20. PHOTO BY FORREST CZARNECKI COLLEGIAN

Student activists honor Columbine victims, share experiences By Samantha Ye @samxye4

Editor’s Note: Wout Bouckaert currently works for Rocky Mountain Student Media Corporation as a variety show producer for Collegian TV. On the 19th anniversary of the Columbine High School shooting, Never Again Northern Colorado, a bipartisan group of student activists, hosted a community memorial and discussion. The event started with a reading of the names of the 15 Columbine victims, followed by a moment of silence. Due to lower turnout

than expected, the event then shifted to a mostly informal forum, where students shared their experiences and activism regarding gun violence in schools. CSU students Wout Bouckaert, undeclared freshman, and Haley Ratcliff, senior health and exercise science major, along with Allie Holton, a junior at Poudre High School, sat on the forum. Bouckaert emphasized the fact that gun violence is not limited to mass shootings which tend to get more attention. In 2016, the Center for Disease Control and

Prevention counted 38,658 deaths due to firearms, averaging nearly 106 deaths per day. Almost two-thirds of all firearm deaths are suicides, according to an analysis of CDC data by FiveThirtyEight. “This is something I feel should be brought out more, because I thought, we hear only about the big tragedies where multiple people are killed in the same instance, but this is an ongoing, continuing issue that leads to suicide, homicide and accidental gun deaths as well as mass shootings,” Bouckaert said. Holton relayed her experiences as a student,

for which the possibility of a shooting, never really goes away. Poudre School District schools go through multiple active shooter drills each year, where students practice hiding and blockading classroom doors. PHS went through one such surprise drill on the same day the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida happened, Holton said. “We were all huddled in the corner of the auditorium... and we all thought we were gonna die,” Holton said. “That was not one of the greatest

Valentine’s Days. And, half an hour later, I found out that it really happened in Florida.” Holton had been instrumental in organizing the Poudre School District student walkout. Due to her involvement, Holton’s classmates advised her to sit near closets or near exits in classrooms because they feared she would be targeted in the event of a shooting. Also invited to speak at the event were Rachelle Delich and Rachel Grohs, founder and co-founder of UTURN, a recently formed non-profit specializing in connecting see COLUMBINE on page 4 >>


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Vol. 127, no. 129 by The Rocky Mountain Collegian - Issuu