The Student Printz September 10, 2015

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Thursday, September 10, 2015

Volume 100 Issue 6

www.studentprintz.com PAGE THREE

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NEWS

Puppy Day

Southern Pines shares puppies with stressed Honors students.

ON CAMPUS SMAC to host fashion show Nan Buti

Printz Reporter Southern Miss Student Activities Council (SMAC) will have its annual fashion show Sept. 10 at 7 p.m. in the Thad Cochran Ballrooms. The fashion show, one of SMAC’s major traditional events, has shown a large increase in popularity in recent years. This year, SMAC reached out to local stores in the Hattiesburg community in an attempt to increase community business as well as gain attendance for the event. “Our goal for this event is to educate students on their many shopping options in our area and to give back to our local establishments by providing this promotional opportunity,” SMAC president Jessica Thompson said. The fashion show will showcase styles of attire for class, work, dates and parties. Exhibits of clothes will be featured from six participating stores, including Men’s Warehouse and Fetiche Shoe Boutique. A dance performance by High Def will open the show. Former Mr. USM Wilton Jackson and SGA election commissioner Phoenix Pope will host the show. “I am thrilled to be hosting such a fun SMAC event,” Pope said. “I think students will enjoy seeing all of the latest fashion trends, and I also think attending the fashion show is a great way to meet new people and learn more about what SMAC does for students all year long. Some of my favorite Southern Miss memories are from SMAC events.” Students will receive coupons from all the participating stores along with treat bags, and there will also be opportunities to win door prizes at the event. Last year, SMAC brought dance groups Rhythm Rush and High Def to the show, which ended with a dance after-party. This year, SMAC will surprise students who attend, and SMAC hopes to provide men and women with feelings of empowerment and self-confidence.

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F E AT U R E

OPINION

S P O RT S

ELI student from war-torn region tells his family’s story.

USM-MSU game patrons left campus in disarray.

Golden Eagles look to win big against Austin Peay.

Gaza Strip

Tailgaters

Football

Echosmith to headline Eaglepalooza Alexis Ware Printz Reporter

The Student Government Association announced that the band Echosmith will be the headliner for the Eaglepalooza concert. This is a free concert for students and the Hattiesburg community. In the past, Eaglpalooza included performances by Phillip Phillips, Need to Breathe and Icona Pop. “We wanted to give the students something fresh and new and exciting, and kind of our mindset with choosing Echosmith is they’re up-and-coming, and you know everybody is going to know their

ON CAMPUS

music,” said Eaglepalooza director Miranda Mixon. Students waited in the Thad Cochran Center to learn who would

Courtesy Photo

be performing at the concert this year. “I was excited. It was kind of weird hearing their song on the radio, then realizing they’re going to

be here,” said senior communication studies major Justin Cunningham. In addition to the headliner, Eaglepalooza will include other performers. This year SGA is giving students and people within the community the chance to perform in the concert as opening acts. Solo artists and bands can submit videos online, and students will have the option to vote for whom they want as part of the concert. The applications are available now and can be found on the SGA website or the Eaglepalooza Facebook page. Eaglepalooza will be Nov. 21 in downtown Hattiesburg.

Former CNN anchor speaks at USM

Jillian Rodriguez/Printz Soledad O’Brien speaks at the 50th Celebration of Desegregation at The University of Southern Mississippi Aug. 4. O’Brien is a well known CNN anchor and avid philanthropist.

Nan Buti

Printz Reporter As a part of The University of Southern Mississippi’s 50th anniversary celebration of desegregation, Soledad O’Brien, former CNN anchor and reporter, presented the keynote address last Friday at USM. Nearly 500 people attended the event in Bennett Auditorium to honor the university’s first African-American students, Raylawni Branch and Gwendolyn Armstrong-Chamberlain. President Rodney Bennett opened the event with recognition of the importance of the university’s desegregation in 1965. Tena Clark, CEO of DMI Music & Media Solutions and Southern Miss alumnus, is also a close friend of Soledad O’Brien. She introduced O’Brien with a speech. “She loves connecting history

to the present day struggles we have today and telling those stories through the voices of real people,” Clark said. “I am so pleased she has joined us today–a woman who, in her own right, is a pioneer and a woman I know that will continue the fight for those that cannot fight.” O’Brien encouraged engaging in conversations that people tend to shy from or be shunned by, such as those regarding desegregation 50 years ago. She spoke about how people’s stories intersect and are similar, using her own as an example. O’Brien’s mother is Cuban and African-American, and her father is Australian. In the 1950s, interracial marriage was reviled and illegal across much of the U.S. “(The diversity issue we struggle with today) is directly correlated to this nation not having frank and uncomfortable conversations about race. What you see in Missouri, Ferguson and Baltimore (are hot

spots where you see different viewpoints) and what it means to be a minority today” O’Brien said. “Those are not civil conversations. They are angry conversations. We have to hear both viewpoints. We have to listen to each other.” O’Brien covered the news for 30 years, covering events such as the 2004 tsunami and Hurricane Katrina. She is an award-winning journalist, philanthropist, author, executive producer and mother. Her career as a journalist began after her time at Harvard University. She said her biggest learning experiences came while doing documentaries with CNN. “As a journalist, it offered the chance to have a conversation that we as a country often don’t want to have about race,” O’Brien said. “How could you tell an in-depth story about America without discussing the details of people in that story?” She said that documentaries

helped her explore the hearts of people’s individual experiences and discover that all people are the same. O’Brien said that her parents taught her that if one is willing to struggle and go against the grain, then there is potential to succeed and make a lasting difference. “I asked my mother what the reaction was like (when she was out with my bi-racial sisters), and she said, ‘People used to spit on us,’” O’Brien said. “I asked her what she did, and she told me, ‘Oh, Lovie, we knew America was better than that.’” The family kept growing. O’Brien was the fifth of six children. In 1967, interracial marriage was made legal across the United States. The family then moved to Long Island. “There’s a special bravery in sitting on the right side of history,” she said. “But progress is hard.” O’Brien said the reason she accepted the invitation as keynote speaker for the event was her interest in historical societal changes involving race in America. O’Brien had dinner with Branch and Chamberlain on Friday. Both were present during O’Brien’s speech. “Fifty years later, we celebrate their bravery,” O’Brien said. “And we need to do more than just celebrate their bravery. We need to try to be them and take that leap of faith to change the world the way we want it to be.” The keynote address was followed by a question-andanswer session asked by USM student affiliates from the National Association of Black Journalists.


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