Issue 19, Volume 84

Page 1

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Issue 19, Volume 84

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

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Grad students want protections CRIME ALYSSA LETTS

@ALYSSA_LETTS

After an incident at a financial stability panel last year sparked frustrations within the graduate student community, the Graduate and Professional Student Association took matters into their own hands. Modeled after the U.S. Bill of Rights, graduate students at UH have created their own Graduate Student Bill of Rights in a push for better treatment and more communication from faculty and the University. “They told a student getting paid $400 a month with a family of

four to budget better,” said GPSA Treasurer Jesus Cruz-Garza, who was president of the organization at the time. GPSA President Sydnee Spruiell Eldridge said this was the event that sparked the students into action. “It seemed a little tone-deaf,” Eldridge said. The Graduate Student Bill of Rights is designed to aid in situations when students feel they are subject to unreasonable treatment. If passed, it will lay out expectations students have of the University so they and faculty know how to proceed when problems arise. This is

LIFE & ARTS

What’s ethical fashion, anyway?

Here’s why you should care about where your clothing is really coming from. | PG. 6

done through the nine rights granted to all graduate students in the document. It addresses transparency about student scholarships as well as ways to solve issues students have with health insurance stipulations. “(It) will give graduate students something to lean back on if they feel they are being mistreated,” said Eldridge when she pitched the bill to SGA Jan. 23.

Request for clear communication Every year, international students flock to UH with hopes of getting a Tier One education. These students pack their bags

and leave their loved ones to live in Houston. One of GPSA’s goals with the proposed bill is to increase overall transparency and awareness to international students in an effort to give them some peace of mind during their time at UH. “Coming from a different country, I don’t know what type of rights we actually have,” said CruzGarza, a Mexico native. He said that uncertainty leads many international students to believe it’s the norm when they see their U.S.-born peers also receiving poor pay and being overworked. On top of that, most international students have

SPORTS

Taking aim

After going to regionals in 2018, the softball team is looking to take another step and make it to the super regionals. | PG. 9

to face uncertainty with their scholarships, which are only guaranteed for three years, said education, curriculum and instruction international graduate student Glenda Wui. International students come here on the notion that UH will pay for the first three years of their education, then if funding allows, they are granted money to finish their degree. “It’s terrifying to know that,” Wui said. “We are on our toes to make sure we make it to the fourth year.” The Graduate Student Bill of Rights proposes immediate

GRADUATE STUDENTS CONTINUES ON PAGE 2

OPINION

SGA election approaches

As we move toward electing a new governing body, student engagement is important. | PG. 10


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