KAPPA DELTA WINS TOP NATIONAL AWARD FEATURES, PAGE B1
KILLING IT: RACHEL ANDERSON HAS EMERGED FOR WKU SPORTS, PAGE B4
TTUESDAY, UESDAY, SSEPTEMBER EPTEMBER 226, 6, 22017 017 > W WESTERN ESTERN KKENTUCKY ENTUCKY UUNIVERSITY NIVERSITY > VVOLUME OLUME 993, 3, IISSUE SSUE 1111
Interim Title IX guidelines annouced BY MONICA KAST HERALD.NEWS@WKU.EDU
Nashville resident Nick Scholten watches as the baby goats are released from their pin into the yoga area during the Be Happy Baby Goat Yoga class on Sunday at Buck Creek Stables in Smiths Grove, Ky. Scholten attended the class with his girlfriend Emily Monroe, a Bowling Green resident, after he heard about it on Facebook. KATHRYN ZIESIG /HERALD
Kidding around Local yoga studio partners with farm to offer baby goat yoga BY OLIVIA MOHR HERALD.FEATURES@WKU.EDU
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s warm sun poured into the barn, baby goats wandered around, nibbling on people’s clothes and hair, jumping onto people’s backs and stomachs and gnawing on yoga mats as students in a yoga session moved from pose to pose on Sunday afternoon. Students giggled as one baby goat leaped onto a student’s back and nibbled on her hair, which was up in a bun, and three goats climbed on top of another as she held a yoga pose. Students smiled and petted the goats as they did yoga, and after the class was over they scooped goats into their arms to hold them. Baby goat yoga is a craze all over the country. Bowling Green yoga studio Be Happy Yoga and Salt Cave partnered with Buck Creek Stables in Smiths Grove in May to offer Be Happy Baby Goat Yoga. Dee Daniels and her husband own Buck Creek Stables. She said 33 baby goats have been born at Buck Creek Stables since Aug. 30, and doing yoga with baby goats and other animals has benefits and “everybody loves baby goats.”
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People participate in the Be Happy Baby Goat Yoga class hosted by Buck Creek Stables and Be Happy Yoga & Salt Cave on Sunday at the Buck Creek Stables. Be Happy Baby Goat Yoga is in its second season and will host a few more classes this upcoming month while the goats are still babies. KATHRYN ZIESIG /HERALD
The Department of Education has released new, interim guidelines for colleges and universities to use when investigating sexual assault, including rescinding the Obama administration’s guidelines and giving colleges and universities the option to use a higher standard of evidence. On Sept. 7, Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, in a speech at George Mason University in Arlington, Virginia, called Title IX’s guidelines on sexual assault “a failed system” and signaled that adjustments would be coming to the current Title IX regulations. Last Friday, Sept. 22, those adjustments were announced by the DOE. The DOE released new interim guidelines for colleges and universities, which outline the changes. “This interim guidance will help schools as they work to combat sexual misconduct and will treat all students fairly,” DeVos said in a statement. “Schools must continue to confront these horrific crimes and behaviors head-on. There will be no more sweeping them under the rug. But the process also must be fair and impartial, giving everyone more confidence in its outcomes.” The new guidelines explain the DOE’s “current expectations of schools,” saying that permanent guidelines will be developed over the coming months. With the release of new guidance, the DOE also rescinded 2011 and 2014 guidance for campus sexual assault. The 2011 “Dear Colleague” letter from the DOE said under Title IX, the federal government could set the specific procedures that colleges and universities must use when investigating sexual assault allegations. According to a statement from the DOE, those guidelines were rescinded because “the withdrawn documents ignored notice and comment requirements, created a system that lacked basic elements of due process and failed to ensure fundamental fairness.” Under the Obama administration, campuses could use “preponderance of evidence,” a legal standard
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Protestors gather against proposed health care bill BY EMILY DELETTER HERALD.NEWS@WKU.EDU Protestors gathered Friday evening across the street from the Natcher Federal Building in downtown Bowling Green to protest the latest health care bill aiming to replace the Affordable Care Act. Demonstrators brought signs and spoke out in opposition to the latest proposed health care bill across the street from Republican Senator Mitch McConnell’s Bowling Green office. The most recent version of the Affordable Care Act replacement bill, drafted by Senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, would allow states to opt out of many Affordable Care Act regulations. The effective deadline for lawmakers to pass a replacement health care bill is Saturday, Sept. 30, the last day the special budget procedure allows the legislation to advance without any Democratic votes, according to Politico. Many notable Republican congressmen recently came out against the latest version of the bill, including Senators John McCain from Arizona and Rand Paul from Kentucky. “We all got a boost today when we heard McCain came out as a ‘no’ on the Graham/Cassidy bill,” rally or-
Maureen Davis, the rally organizer, speaks to the group of protestors outside of Mitch McConnell’s office on Friday in downtown Bowling Green. The group was protesting the GOP’s latest healthcare bill. Davis’s sign read “Honk if you wanna ditch Mitch”. KATHRYN ZIESIG /HERALD ganizer Maureen Davis said. “But we know they won’t stop, so we won’t stop raising our voices.” Davis organized the rally and is associated with BGKY: Social Justice Clearinghouse, a Facebook group that began after President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January. The organization has held previous
rallies in Bowling Green, including a demonstration against Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. The group is also affiliated with the larger organization Indivisible Kentucky, an organization who, according to its website, holds “members of Congress accountable to the principles of democracy and the values of
respect.” Davis began the rally by speaking to the group about the importance of health care for Americans. Davis said she believes a country as rich as the United States should have affordable, quality health care for all people, and there should be a bi-partisan effort in Congress to work towards such a goal. “We have to pressure them [Kentucky congressmen] time and time again, and show them that the power of the people is greater than the people in power,” Davis said. Many protestors brought signs voicing their opinion, which included “Honk if You Wanna Ditch Mitch,” and “Remember the Bowling Green Massacre”. Other rally attendees voiced their concern for the bill, saying Americans should be more focused on providing health care and education over military spending and funding construction of a wall bordering Mexico. The group conversation started on health care, but also addressed other issues such as the economy, the coal industry and Kentucky senator and Bowling Green resident Rand Paul. Bowling Green resident Natalie Embry-Cardwell was one of the people protesting the proposed health care bill. Embry-Cardwell said she
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