4/4/2019

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Indiana Statesman

Thursday, April 4, 2019

Indiana Statesman

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National figure discusses the legacy of Jamal Khashoggi Payton Jarrett Reporter

Indiana State’s first annual address honoring Jamal Khashoggi, a slain journalist and alumnus of Indiana State University was held April 2 at 7 p.m. in the Tilson Auditorium. The event was free and open to the public featuring David Ignatius, a renowned columnist for the Washington Post. Ignatius’ speech on “How to fix the world: The future of foreign policy” examines further into the urgent issues related to journalism, the first amendment and freedom of the press. “Like Jamal, I believe in the cleansing and purifying power of the truth and I want to defend it when it is attacked,” Ignatius says, “We should fight, create and defend fact-based journalism. We should respect the truth and the people who try honorably to find and express it.” Ignatius accredits multiple honors and awards for his experiences as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, the steel industry, the Justice Department, the CIA, the Senate, the Middle East and the State Department and an

Taylor Keogler | Indiana Statesman

Washington Post columnist and author, David Ignatius, spoke to students and community members about Jamal Khashoggi and the freedom of press on April 2 in Tilson Auditorium.

author of eight spy novels. Currently, Ignatius writes a twice-weekly foreign affairs column for The Washington Post where he’s made a friendship with Khashoggi. Khashoggi was a Saudi Arabian dissident and observant Muslim. After graduating from Indiana State with a degree in business ad-

ministration in 1983, he became an author, government propagandist and columnist for The Washington Post, and editor for Al Watan, the Saudi Arabian newspaper. In December 2018, Khashoggi was named Time magazine’s Person of the Year, the only Indiana State alumnus to be thus recog-

nized and the first to ever do so posthumously. Khashoggi died soon after a kidnapping in October 2018 after visiting the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul. It is commonly believed that the Saudi government had ordered his execution for having been openly critical of Saudi Arabia’s crown

The future of longtime tradition, The Walk, and Homecoming 2019 Brady Cole Contributor

Increased law enforcement will be the focal point to make the 2019 Homecoming Walk safer. A fourth meeting, between Terre Haute’s mayor and Indiana State University’s president, is going to take place in April to decide what will be changed with The Walk. The meeting is set so that the message is clear to students before they return to school next Fall. These meetings consist of, the Board of Trustees for ISU along with President Curtis, Mayor Duke Bennett, and local business owners involved. In the past meetings they have gone over what could be done to prevent altercations from 14th street on and at Tent City. “Something’s gotta change,” Curtis said. “This has turned into a social event for those who don’t have a connection to Indiana State,” Bennett added. Indiana State students were not to blame for the crimes that took place last October. Instead, community leaders insist that outof-town visitors are the ones who came and caused the issues reported. Which were mainly

outside alcohol entering the stadium grounds and fights breaking out at Tent City as well as along Wabash Ave. “You cant just flip a switch, and see it flip overnight,” Curtis said. “We are going to send a clear message that this isn’t going to replicate what happened last year, this isn’t business as usual.” There will be a check point at the stadium entrance to ensure no outside alcohol will be permitted. Last year there were numerous glass bottles left on the stadium grounds, specifically around Tent City. “I’ve always said the buck stops there, well I’m there now,” Curtis said. “I can’t look away from the warning signs.” Students can expect more excise cops walking around and checking to make sure all of the pop up tents on the path of The Walk have adequate licenses to sell alcohol. “You’ll see a different approach from us, specifically from 14th St. to the stadium,” Bennett said. From 14th St. on, there is roughly a mile left and numerous stores that sell alcohol, and that is where issues are said to arise. CVS, Walgreens, Kroger and Big Red Liquors

are among the stores that sell the alcohol which generally ends up on the ground around the stadium. These buyers have been labeled the “second wave.” “In the past we didn’t necessarily have any crime that needed to be addressed but this past year with the we saw some really violent stuff,” Bennett said.

Walk has been a draw to mainly people across the midwest. This is a time where alumni, students and staff all get together at 6 a.m. on game-day to make the two-mile trek down Wabash Avenue, to Memorial Stadium. All while stopping at each bar to get at least one drink and maybe some snacks along the way.

Bennett

Curtis

The second wave are the people that got kicked out of Tent City. They are also suspected to be caught on video doing crime acts during last years homecoming activities. Another angle that ISU leaders are willing to contribute is having an increase in busses to shuttle students back to campus. That and the designated walker crew’s are the two safety measures ISU has provided in the past. Since the 1970s, The

Curtis felt inclined to lead the charge of making The Walk a safe day for all involved and has made significant headway in those discussions. She has met with Bennett and will continue to seek change and to discuss the changes for next years Homecoming. Curtis’ main concern has been, and always will be, the safety of the students at Indiana State University.

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prince, Mohammad bin Salman, and king, Salman of Saudi Arabia. Khashoggi’s death provoked international mourning and the need to address the protection of journalists under the first amendment. The memorial address commemorated Khashoggi for his courage, curiosity and

advocacy for truthful journalism and the implementation of the American ideals of freedom of the press in his country, Saudi Arabia and the Muslim-Arab world. “There’s no greater honor for a journalist now than to be associated with the values that Jamal courageously represented,” Ignatius remarks. Ignatius’ speech was also reflective of democratic politics in America. He believes in finding solutions to the problems rooted in America and among relationships with other countries through productive debate. He further denounces Trump’s statement of journalists as “enemies of the people.” Ignatius says, “ [Journalists] have a responsibility not to engage in behavior that loses the public’s trust,” then adds, “Journalists are not in the opinion business or in the business of resisting one president or advancing another.” The obvious motif of Ignatius’ speech was power in the truth. Khashoggi will be annually recognized by Indiana State for his tremendous career and preservation of the truth in journalism.

Shakur Silas’s “Spill the Tea” makes a rise in the LGBTQ+ Community Lauren Rader Reporter

Shakur Silas, a senior at ISU, is shedding a light on the LGBTQ+ Community with his talk show. ‘Spill the Tea’ is on every Monday at 6 p.m. on Instagram Live. From there, it will be transferred to YouTube for students to watch again and again. Silas is a senior at ISU majoring in Public Administration. He is coming back to campus in August as a Graduate Student for the LGBTQ Resource Center. Spill the Tea is a talk show that he came up with to highlight the LGBTQIA community and students that identify within that community. The center on campus hosts a lot of events to keep students involved and know that this is a safe campus for them. “I’ll pick anyone from the LGBTQIA community, as well as allies, and we try to gear the conversation towards their identity and how they experience college or just their experience on campus,” Silas said. “For my first interviewee, I had a black, gay, male in higher education, so I wanted to know the more professional realm of being black and gay.” There are also conversations about very serious topics including discrimination and prejudice. This is a very real situation for many members of the community and in other communities around the world. Silas wants to get these injustices highlighted and give back to the community in the way he can: by informing students about how life is experienced and what steps we should take to understanding people that are different. Silas also talks to allies in the community, and things they’ve experienced or seen within the

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LGTBQ+ Community. “I try to take someone who fits in the community and give their experience while in the community,” said Silas. The name, “Spill the Tea,” came from the slang of the community that many people use when they are referencing ‘gossip’ or ‘telling the truth’. Silas wants to keep a lighthearted atmosphere on his shows, and the name helps to give this first impression. “I think talk shows like this are important, because while we have a lot of events here on campus, a lot of the students in the communities are afraid to be apart and share their voice,” Silas said. “Hopefully, it can help them gain a positive outlook on campus and encourage them to get involved with our activities.” Silas’s goal is to gain student involvement and encourage the community to get involved. He was very surprised to see that his following jumped from 50 to 400 in one week. “We try to keep everything lighthearted, because of the adversities the community faces. We don’t want to shine too much light on those,” Silas said. “We want the students to watch these and feel positive, and we want to see nothing but good come out of the community.”


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