The Rice Thresher | Wednesday, February 22, 2017

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VOLUME 101, ISSUE NO. 19 | STUDENT-RUN SINCE 1916 | RICETHRESHER.ORG | WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2017

OFF TO THE RACES

CAMPAIGNS BEGIN

Take a look at this year’s candidates for Student Association positions inside and online. see SA Election Guide p. 2

SA positions vacant in first election round Emily Abdow & Drew Keller News Editors

While five candidates will be contesting the Student Association presidency and external vice presidency, no undergraduates submitted a petition to run for SA internal vice president or treasurer in next week’s first round general election. The positions will be open in a second round election which will take place after Spring Break. Current deputy treasurer Ameesh Shah said he will run for treasurer in the second round; no candidates have yet come forward for internal vice president.

Basketball having best conference season of decade Andrew Grottkau Sports Editor

Rice’s men’s basketball team is currently in the midst of one of its strongest seasons. If the Owls can win one of their final four regular season games, they will have their most conference

wins since joining Conference USA in 2005. Despite the success, the team still has work to do in the final weeks of the season. If Rice can finish in the top four of the regular season standings, it will earn a bye to the quarterfinals in the conference tournament. This past weekend, Rice split its two home contests, defeating the University

of Texas, San Antonio and falling to the University of Texas, El Paso. Rice entered its game on Thursday against the University of Texas, San Antonio with a record of 7-5 in C-USA. Riding a four-game winning streak, the Owls had a chance to move into 0see BASKETBALL, page 9

Internal vice president According to SA President Griffin Thomas, a candidate had submitted a petition for IVP but withdrew to run for a position at the college level. This is not the first time the position has not had any candidates. According to Thomas, there was no IVP candidate in the 2014 SA election. Thomas said the position could be unappealing due to its many responsibilities, including supervising 60 executive branch members and coordinating internal SA communications. He said these demands leave less time for the IVP to pursue other projects while in office. “To be frank, the position is incredibly demanding and relatively thankless,” Thomas, a Lovett College senior, said. “The position is important and requires a very particular person who is capable of leading and managing large numbers of people, so not everyone has the requisite skill-set to be effective.” Thomas also said students may perceive IVP to be a more competitive position and instead run for positions including senator or secretary they believe are safer. Komal Luthra, the current IVP, said she did not have an explanation for the lack of an IVP candidate. 0see VACANCY, page 4

sean chu/thresher

Princeton Review race/class ranking at odds with mobility metrics Alice Liu

Thresher Staff

Following Rice University’s No. 1 ranking for race and class interaction by the Princeton Review in August 2016, a recent study reported by the New York Times of 2,137 universities revealed that Rice is approximately average in terms of class financial composition and mobility when compared to other elite institutions. The study, conducted by the Equality of Opportunity Project, used administrative data for college students from 1999 to 2013 to create mobility report cards that compared students’ earnings to their parents’ incomes. The study compared Rice compared with other colleges classified as “elite schools.” According to the article, 9.8 percent of Rice students come from the top 1 percent of median family income, which is $630,000 or above per year, and 35 percent come from the top 5 percent, earning $110,000 or more per year. Rice has

a relatively high percentage of students from the bottom fifth of income, coming in 11th among other elite colleges at 4.9 percent of the student body. Compared to peer institutions such as Vanderbilt University and Duke University, Rice has a lower percentage of the student body from the top 1 and top 5 percents of median family income. 23 percent of Vanderbilt students came from the top 1 percent and 47 percent came from the top five percent. 19 percent of Duke students are from the top 1 percent and 44 percent from the top 5 percent. Overall, Rice ranks 45th of the 65 “elite colleges,” as defined by the Equality of Opportunity project, for both share of students in the top 1 percent and top 5 percent. Rice ranked 40th out of 64 elite colleges for percentage of students moving from the bottom to the top income quintile, with 1.6 percent making this move. The study showed 14 percent of Rice students move up two more more quintiles 0see CLASS, page 4

Family wealth: How Rice compares to its peers RICE

STANFORD

VANDERBILT

EMORY

UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON

Median family income

Average income percentile 79th

80th

84th

$160,800

$160,500

$204,500

$139,000

$58,000

Percent students from top 1% $204,500

75th 55th

9.8%

20.5%

26.8%

16.7% $58,000

<1%

infographic by Christina Tan with statistics taken from the New York Times


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