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Thursday, April. 25, 2019
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Leak causes temperatures to rise on ISU’s campus Payton Jarrett Reporter
This week, several buildings on campus faced rising temperatures due to complications with the chilled water system that ISU’s campus uses. The issues arose following a major leak underground in the chilled water line between Fifth and Spruce Street. Consequently, Fifth Street will be closed from Spruce to the entry of Parking Lot 24. To facilitate the repairs, ISU’s maintenance has had to shut down the Air-Conditioning systems in more than 30 buildings across campus. Some temperatures have reached 80 degrees or more. “It definitely made me appreciate the weather outside,” said freshman Annie Drappos. Many students worry about how the heat will affect their preparation for the end of the semester and studying for finals. “It is hard to concentrate on anything but the heat,” Martha Alsip, a freshman who lives in Rhoads Hall, said. “It has even kept me up all night.” Residential Life encouraged students to contact their hall staff if they felt that their living space is unsafe due to the heat. Jim Jensen, Director of Facilities Operations and Maintenance, reassured students that the issues are only temporary. “We expect the repairs to be completed and all A/C to be back online by the end of this week” Jensen said. Samantha Layug | Indiana Statesman “I can’t imagine going from sweating due to heat Fifth Street is closed from Spruce to the entrance of Parking Lot 24 for repairs on the cool water line that gives campus to sweating for finals, hopefully it gets fixed before it’s air conditioning. then,” freshman Thomas Stucker said.
Students enjoy a Tropical Terredise Brea Haller Reporter
Over 250 students attended “Tropical Terridise,” an end of the year party put on by the Indiana State University Student Government Association on April 22. This event began at 6 p.m. and ended around 9 p.m. and was located at Wolf Field next to the towers on campus. Students were required to swipe in upon arrival. The first 100 students were given shirts to tie
dye, and others were given leis due to the shirt sup- ply running out. Along with signing in, students were given a ticket to turn in to receive pizza, a cook- ie and drinks. Little Caesars was the food provider for this event. There was plenty of pizza for everyone to have as much as they desired. Some
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Georgetown students vote on proposal to pay reparations to slave descendants Nelson Oliveria
New York Daily News (TNS)
Paul Marotta | Getty Images | TNS
Lori Loughlin exits the John Joseph Moakley U.S. Courthouse after appearing in Federal Court to answer charges stemming from college admissions scandal on April 3, 2019 in Boston, Mass.
Videos of Loughlin and Huffman in college scandal become legal flashpoint Matthew Ormseth
Georgetown University could become the first U.S. institution to offer reparation funds for descendants of slaves as students voted on the controversial proposal Thursday. The plan is to charge undergraduate students a mandatory $27.20 fee per semester to benefit the families of 272 slaves sold by the university in 1838. The referendum was called by the Georgetown University Student Association, but the school is not required to take up the fee even if the majority of students votes for it. Officials said the Washington, D.C., university would review the results of the vote and decide what to do with them. The vote comes at a time of increasing public debate over proposals to offer reparations to descendants of enslaved people. A new bill was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives in January calling for the creation of a commission to study reparation proposals. Several Democratic presidential hopefuls, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren and former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke, have expressed support for the idea.
Los Angeles Times (TNS)
Daniel Slim | AFP | Getty Images | TNS
A view of the Georgetown University campus in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. on Aug. 19, 2018.
The student association said the university’s “horrific” trade of slaves in the early 19th century saved Georgetown from collapsing into bankruptcy. “This issue affects Descendants, both on campus and across the country,” the group said in a recent statement. “The (association) is in support of comprehensive implementation of genuine and meaningful engagement and reconciliation of our history of slavery and with the Descendant community.” The association recommends the fund be enacted in fall 2020, with annual adjustments for inflation. The money would be con-
trolled by a new committee comprised of five descendants of those 272 slaves and five undergraduate students. Critics say the proposal is flawed because it penalizes students for something the university should be accountable for. One descendant, Jessica Tilson, told a campus news outlet that the mandatory nature of the fee is not the right approach. “The Jesuits forced my ancestors to come here, and how can I say that forcing someone to do something is wrong, but then I turn around and agree with forcing you all to pay us,” she said.
Video footage of Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin has become part of a legal battle in the college admissions scandal, with prosecutors asking a judge to restrict access to evidence it will begin turning over to defense attorneys. Over the past year, federal investigators in Massachusetts have amassed a trove of emails, wiretapped phone calls, surveillance photographs and video and financial records that they used to build a case, unsealed last month, implicating 50 people in a vast conspiracy to subvert the admissions process at some of the country’s most selective universities. Huffman and Loughlin, two of 33 parents charged with fraud, conspiracy and other crimes, headlined a list of defendants including well-known names from Hollywood, Silicon Valley and Newport Coast. Huffman has agreed to plead guilty to a single charge of fraud conspiracy. Loughlin has pleaded not guilty to charges of fraud conspiracy and money laundering. Prosecutors must begin turning over evidence to defense attorneys next week. The first tranche of digitized records comprises 130 gigabytes, according to an attorney for Donna Heinel, a former athletics
official at the University of Southern California who is accused of conspiring with the scheme’s admitted mastermind, Newport Beach college admissions consultant William “Rick” Singer. Prosecutors have asked a judge to curtail by whom and where the evidence can be viewed because it contains sensitive personal information and the names of people who are targets of the investigation but have yet to be charged. Defense attorneys strongly oppose such an order, calling the request “draconian,” “unfounded” and a “strong-arm” tactic. In a meeting Monday, prosecutors told Heinel’s lawyers that they were asking the judge to restrict access to the evidence because they were concerned that a defendant might leak video from Huffman’s or Loughlin’s home to the press, an attorney for Heinel wrote in a motion. “This laughably cannot qualify as a reason to deny Ms. Heinel, a 58-year-old woman with no criminal history who stands accused of a nonviolent, white-collar offense, her rightful access to discovery,” said the attorney, Nina Marino. It’s unclear what the videos show. Heinel, a longtime fixture of USC’s athletic department, was indicted last month on a charge of
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