Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2016 | Indiana Daily Student | idsnews.com
ELECTION 2016
“She spent hundreds of millions of dollars on an advertising, you know, they get Madison Avenue into a room. Temperament, let’s go after. I think my strongest asset, maybe by far, is my temperament. I have a winning temperament. I know how to win. She does not.”
“As soon as he travels to 112 countries and negotiates a peace deal, a cease-fire, a release of dissidents, an opening of new opportunities in nations around the world or even spends 11 hours testifying in front of a congressional committee, he can talk to me about stamina.”
DONALD TRUMP
HILLARY CLINTON
IDS
PHOTOS COURTESY OF TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ANNA BOONE | IDS
ONE DOWN. Trump’s economic plan is “Trump’ed up,” according to Clinton.
5 highlights from the first presidential debate By Katelyn Haas haask@indiana.edu | @khaas96
Last night, the sides of the aisle switched colors onstage, with Hillary Clinton donned in bright red and Donald Trump in a blue tie. The differences continued from there.
Trump said overseas industries are taking the United States’ jobs. He said special interest groups own these companies and in order to bring back jobs, companies must stop them from leaving. He questioned why Clinton has not made the economy better in her 30 years in politics. Clinton said Trump’s plan would lose three and a half million jobs. She said clean energy will be the next step in revamping our economy and becoming the clean energy superpower of the 21st century. Security in America is an issue on and off the internet.
How IU GOP reacted, page 7 College Republicans at IU watched together and came away with differing opinions about Trump. Local Dems respond, page 7 IU Democrats gathered at Nick’s English Hut to watch Clinton’s debate performance.
Trump said fixing the cyber security problem is hardly doable and related it back to the overall state of the country. He said the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria would not have been formed if Clinton and the Obama administration had kept troops in the Middle East. Clinton said in her response to Trump the only way to stop ISIS was to disarm their leaders. She said NATO has an important role in doing this. “We’ve got to do everything we can to vacuum up intelligence from Europe, the Middle East,” Clinton said. “We have to work more closely with our allies.
Clinton said she made a mistake using a private email account for government use. “If I could do it over again, I would obviously do it differently,” Clinton said.
Hoosier debate team unimpressed with Clinton, Trump performances By Lydia Gerike lgerike@umail.iu.edu | @lydi_yeah
Investing in people will bring back the country’s economy. Trump said regulations are too strict and new companies cannot form. “You are going to raise taxes big leagues, and you have plans to make them even worse,” Trump said to Clinton. Clinton said broad-based inclusive growth is needed in America, and advantages for people at the top need to be limited. She said she does not believe top-down economics will work to stimulate the country’s economy. Criminal justice reform is more relevant than ever. Clinton said she’s called for criminal justice reform since the beginning of her campaign. She said there are police officers who equally want reform. “We have to bring communities together in order to work on that as a mutual goal,” Clinton said. “Secretary Clinton doesn’t want to use a couple of words: and that’s law and order,” Trump said in response. He said the country should use the “stop and frisk” tactic. He agreed with Clinton that better relationships between the community and police are needed.
Much to the Hoosier Debate Team’s frustration, they have no idea who won the first general presidential debate. “Trump was too aggressive, but Hillary followed him down the rabbit hole,” sophomore debate team member Harry Aaronson said. The team held a watch party Monday night in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs for the first general debate. Instead of focusing on partisan participation, the purpose of the event was to help students form their own opinions about the debate before seeing the analysis from other people or the media, debate director Brian DeLong said. Before the debate, Aaronson said he thought Clinton needed to do more than just not look bad. She also needed to look much better than Trump. But by the end, she had not done this. Aaronson expects to wait for the media’s take on the debate before making a final decision, he said. In the opinion of sophomore debater Stanley Njuguna, Clinton won, although he said she “failed to get enough zingers.” Senior debate captain Bee Smale said they think both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump lost. Neither performance energized them, and most of what they saw seemed to be focused on tearing the other candidate down SEE DEBATE, PAGE 5
The Venue hosts second Four-star forward commits to IU collage event tonight MEN’S BASKETBALL
From IDS reports
Justin Smith committed to IU on Monday night. The four-star small forward, per 247Sports Composite rankings, out of Lincolnshire, Illinois, becomes
the second commit for IU in the class of 2017. He joins three-star point guard Aljami Durham from Lilburn, Georgia. Smith took an official visit to Bloomington on Sept. 10 and an official visit to Villanova on Sept. 16.
The two schools led in the battle for his services. That battle also included the likes of Stanford and Xavier. According to 247Sports, Rob Judson was his main recruiter.
Jordan Guskey
MEN’S GOLF
Final-round woes cost IU tournament By Reese Anderson reelande@iu.edu | @Reese_Anderson
The Hoosiers failed to put in a quality team performance for the third consecutive week, and finished 32 strokes over par. IU Coach Mike Mayer said their performance this weekend was noth-
ing more than sub-par. The Hoosiers finished 11th in the 14-team field, their second consecutive finish in the bottom third of a tournament. Against Big Ten competition, they finished ahead of only Rutgers, who posted a 54-over final score. Mayer said he finally received
the production he was looking for from senior Keegan Vea in the five spot. Vea led the team in scoring. He shot a two-under first round and finished five strokes over for the tournament. This tournament marks his eighth career top-25 SEE GOLF, PAGE 5
By Mallory Haag mjhaag@indiana.edu | @MalloryHaag
Art and mental health will join forces at 5:30 tonight at the Venue Fine Arts & Gifts where attendees will be encouraged to create art in order to support mental health and open discussion. Michelle Martin-Colman, one of the principles at the Venue, will lead the collage activity, an art form that includes the cutting of images from other art and media sources and pasting them into a unique creation that incorporates a unique message. “What a collage does is it allows a person to look over a vast variety of images and pictures and out of that, to the person looking, certain things jump out,” Martin-
Colman said. “The order in which someone puts those images on a page actually reveals a lot about them.” Martin-Colman said the event aims to encourage those who join to express themselves through art and engage in dialogue as a result. “We’re creating an opportunity for people to start something that they can finish stress free and it’s totally about themselves,” MartinColman said. “It says something when there done.” The Venue, a contemporary art gallery and store in downtown Bloomington, has organized the event for two years in a row in combination with a variety of other mental health presentations SEE VENUE, PAGE 5