The Sunflower v.123 i.31

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MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 2019 • VOL. 123, ISS. 31

THESUNFLOWER.COM

WICHITA STATE UNIVERSITY’S INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1896.

Wichita State: Avoiding the Plaza of Heroines is misogynistic BY ANDREW LINNABARY

SELENA FAVELA/THE SUNFLOWER

The Plaza of Heroines located on the Wichita State campus.

Some students are scared of walking through the Plaza of Heroines. The Plaza is the brick-andgranite circular monument with a bronze centerpiece in front of Ablah Library. Since its dedication in 1998 it has, officially, represented the lives and accomplishments of women. Unofficially, walking through the circle as a student has meant failing your exams and taking more than four years to graduate — or so the legend goes. The university says that legend is inappropriate and misogynistic. Nobody knows exactly how the legend came to be. But multiple students and WSU officials said it may have been started by

“IT IS PATRIARCHAL MISOGYNY. IT IS ALL AROUND THE WORLD, BUT WE DON’T WANT IT TO BE ON OUR CAMPUS.” ­—DR. CHINYERE OKAFOR, DIRECTOR OF THE CENTER FOR WOMEN’S STUDIES

university tour guides, who created the myth to spice up their tour talking points. Now, tour guides are trained to not talk about it. Still, the legend persists. Students willingly add extra steps to their class commute to avoid walking through the circle. Better to be late than fail. Students attend events at the Plaza. But some stay on its outskirts. “[A student] wanted to take our food and drink [from inside

the circle],” Dr. Chinyere Okafor said, describing a 2018 event at the Plaza. Okafor is director of the Center for Women’s Studies. “I tried to persuade her to come in. I told her, ‘This brick is [Provost Rick Muma’s] aunt. Don’t you think it’s a good thing for the provost’s aunt to be in here? She said yes, but said she still was worried about stepping in.” The myth lends to a culture of misogyny, Okafor said. “It is something that is not particular to WSU, not particular to Wichita, not particular to America,” Okafor said. “It is patriarchal misogyny. It is all around the world, but we don’t want it to be on our campus.”

SEE PLAZA PAGE 3

Flying High

John Tomblin made almost $800,000 in 2018 — more than twice as much as President John Bardo Communications Lou Heldman wrote in an email. “He has been an he Wichita State extraordinarily effective budget book puts champion for John Tomblin’s the university.” base salary at Heldman said that, $358,000, but under Tomblin’s leaderTOMBLIN records obtained by ship, overall research grants The Sunflower show that the awarded to the university WSU vice president for technology have gone from $50.5 million to transfer, who also serves as executive $104.5 million in five years. director of the National Institute for From 2017 to 2018, Tomblin’s Aviation Research (NIAR) and presi- compensation from the Sponsored dent of the Wichita State Innovation Research Overhead Fund jumped Alliance, was paid $797,869 in 2018. from $4,641 to $152,508. WSU The next highest-paid state Budget Director David Miller said employee at WSU was President compensation from the Sponsored John Bardo, who made $364,322 — Research Overhead Fund is an less than half of Tomblin’s pay. incentive for bringing research into The records, obtained through the university. the Kansas Open Records Act, “Whenever we do any type of show that Tomblin’s actual general research, whether it’s with compensation increased by more the federal government or a private than $200,000 from 2017, when he company, there’s an overhead received $576,800. charge that’s incorporated into the “Dr. Tomblin’s compensation cost to that company for doing that is aligned with people at his level, research,” Miller said. with his impact, across the nation,” Vice President for Strategic SEE TOMBLIN PAGE 3 BY MATTHEW KELLY AND ANDREW LINNABARY

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$797,869

$800,000 $700,000

$576,800

$600,000 $500,000

$518,290 $585,394

$403,784

$400,000 $426,550

$300,000 $200,000

tomblin’s total compensation

$100,000 $0 2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Kirsten Johnson, Jill of all trades BY AUDREY KORTE

Kirsten Johnson doesn’t want to fit in only one box. She doesn’t feel she should have to be just a designer or illustrator, teacher, or working artist, she said. Her work reflects her broad range of skills and interests. Bookmaking is one of her specialties. Though it’s a practical skill, she said she does it because she loves it. “I consider myself an artist. I’m a jack-of-all-trades,” Johnson said. Now in her 35th year of teaching at Wichita State, Johnson has taught just about everything. Still teaching illustration, she also leads a class on book making this spring. She enjoys sharing her skills and knowledge with the next generation of designers. Johnson wanted to learn more about design and other visual processes as a young woman. A recent M.F.A. graduate from

Indiana University, her background is mostly in illustration. “When I was a kid, I remember taking all these sheets of Manila paper, and my parents had gotten a catalog for buying art books in a series, and I cut out all the pictures and put them in there, and wrote who the artist was and ran it through my sewing machine. So that was my first book,” Johnson said. She said she feels like bookmaking gives her students an edge later on. “They’re learning the craft, learning the skill. They can always repair books.” THE STARVING ARTIST

Both of Johnson’s parents are from Kansas. She used to make trips here a couple times a year from Minnesota to visit her grandparents. So Johnson applied at WSU. “The reason I got into illustration really is my brother would read all of these comic books,

Conan the Barbarian, and the illustrator for those books is the guy named Frank Frazetta. Back in that day, anything unusual you had to imagine. So an illustrator could bring this stuff to life.” Johnson said fine art in general has a reputation of being a poorly paying field. She said it’s important to show students some of her successes and talk about what didn’t work as well. She wants students to realize they do have options. “I show students what I’m working on and tell them about the things that get discussed. — you know, this didn’t go right, or this client didn’t like this,” Johnson said. “And that’s a way for them to learn.” “Finding work is always about the same process. You get your name out there or you get associated with an agency or studio. “Consistency and hard work — that’s what gets people places.” SEE JOHNSON PAGE 3

SELENA FAVELA/THE SUNFLOWER

Above, Kirsten Johnson shows a book she put together. Johnson teaches a bookmaking class at Wichita State. Left, books Johnson has created over the years.

COURTESY OF KIRSTEN JOHNSON

INSIDE

active shooter response A M E N D M E N T

run • Evacuate the area • Have an escape route(s) in mind • Don’t worry about going into restricted areas, any exit will do • If you can safely escape, do so quickly • If you can help others escape, do so quickly • Do not try to escape through the area where the active shooter may cross your path • Leave your belongings behind • Keep your hands visible • Don’t give aid to wounded • Follow police instructions

hide • Get out of shooter’s view • Provide coverage or protection if possible • Do not trap or restrict your movement • Lock the door • Barricade the door (most doors open inward) • Take a quick inventory to see what you can use to jam the door if barricading is not possible • Turn off cell phone ringers • Stay quiet

fight • When your options of running or hiding are gone, attacking the shooter becomes a reality • Throw things at the shooter or use objects to disrupt or incapacitate the shooter when practical • Pre-plan if there is more than one of you and commit to your actions • Fight for your life - it could well come down to you or the shooter

EDITORIAL

FACES IN FOCUS

BIG MAN DOWN

What would you do if there was an active shooter on campus?

Paying millions of dollars to lease The Flats from Republican operatives is unethical.

Horizontes photo project showcases the faces of North Wichita.

Jaime Echenique has been underperforming since a foot injury.

NEWS • PAGE 2

OPINION• PAGE 4

CULTURE • PAGE 5

SPORTS • PAGE 6

RUN, HIDE, FIGHT


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