2014 4 17

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THE

S TUDENT PRINTZ SERVING SOUTHERN MISS SINCE 1927

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Volume 98 Issue 51

INTERNATIONAL

Ukraine on brink of civil war Personal accounts of conflict shared

Allison Edwards Printz Reporter

After facing violent protests in Kiev last February, Ukraine’s acting president, Oleksandr Turchynov, focused his attention on pro-Russian separatists in the East by issuing a 24-hour ultimatum on Sunday, April 13 for protesters to lay down their arms or face the wrath of Ukrainian troops and police. According to The Los Angeles Times, the separatist groups did not comply and instead seized additional buildings in the town of Slavyansk, 90 miles from the Russian border, while facing no opposition from Kiev as threatened. Turchynov promises that the “anti-terrorist operation”

is under way but that it will take time. “It will take place in stages, responsibly, in a considered way. I once again stress: the aim of these operations is to defend the citizens of Ukraine,” Turchynov told parliament. Indeed, according to Newsweek, witnesses said armored trucks and military personnel were seen making their way north of Slavyansk on Monday, April 14 surrounding the city to reclaim it under their control. Russian President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that this counter move by the Ukrainian government “essentially puts the nation on the brink of civil war.” Turchynov said he is not

Photo by David Bundy

David Bundy and his family stand in front of the burned__- Trade Union in Independence Square in Kiev.

against the possibility of holding a national referendum on May 25, alongside the presidential elections, to elicit a consensus on where Ukraine should stand politically. Ukrainian Catholic University student Dasha Korin, 21, was born in Kiev and has lived in the Western town of Lviv for the past seven months to study journalism. She said one of the things the conflict has brought is the fear of being separated from family and friends in the Russianoccupied Crimea. A civil war could make this separation more definitive. “I know people from Crimea,” Korin said. “My godmother and my first cousin live there. We have very nice relations in spite of (the fact that) they want Crimea (to belong to) Russia.” “(The) separation of Crimea upsets me so much. I love this place. I go there (each) summer, but now I don’t know if I want to go there this summer, if it’s safe to go there and if it’s possible to go there.” Korin’s academic peers are among those who started the initial protests in Lviv. “My university supported students in their actions, and it was first Ukrainian university which expressed its position

Photo by David Bundy

An anti-government protester positions himself on a monument of the city founders in Kiev, Dec. 5, 2013.

about what is happening,” Korin said. “They put a statement on the university web site. It (said that)

they are against the government and support students.”

See UKRAINE, 3

ON CAMPUS

Memorial service honors fallen eagles Kirstie Lowery Printz Reporter

On Tuesday, April 15 The University of Southern Mississippi held the Golden Eagle Memorial Service

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to honor faculty, staff and students who have died during the 2013-14 academic year. According to a press release, the Golden Eagle Memorial Service is an annual event that was initiated by the Student Government Association in 2003.

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The service began with a brief introduction by newly elected SGA President Jeffrey George. He thanked guests for attending before he began explaining the history and significance of the memorial service. “Today, we carry on this tradition as we

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honor those fallen members of the Southern Miss family,” George said. Before leaving the podium, George led the guests in prayer. Afterward, Dean of Students Eddie Holloway also spoke about the history of the Golden

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Eagle Memorial Service. Holloway told guests of the purpose behind the event. “We thought it appropriate to recognize each year, as a USM tradition, all of those men and

See MEMORIAL, 3

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SPORTS Football Eagles take first step in rebuilding.


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