OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING SEES FEWER COVID-19 RESTRICTIONS page 3
thursday, 10.01.20
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THE ALESTLE WILL NOT PUBLISH NEXT WEEK vol. 74 no. 6
The Student Voice Since 1960
Skywalk Diner now closed, along with Auntie Anne’s GABRIEL BRADY reporter
figuring out if the system could provide the money to families after the rest of the available financial aid money had been accounted for. “We started thinking about the idea of: ‘What if we bundled Pell, MAP, AIM HIGH and SIUE scholarships?’ and asked the question ‘What kind of gaps are we looking at for households of [$63,575] income or less?’ and for us, that gap was fairly small,” Pembrook said. “So what we did was propose the idea of closing that gap.” Pembrook said the decision boiled down to the importance of accessibility to all students. “Our commitment to access is partic-
The pandemic continues to change certain aspects of Dining Services. Most recently, Skywalk Cafe closed, joining Auntie Anne’s as a quick option no longer available to students. Skywalk Cafe, located in the bridge between Founders Hall and Alumni Hall, is one of a few Dining Services locations that has been shut down this semester — although it was open for a short period at the beginning of the semester. Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Jeffrey Waple said its closure was because of low sales, but there are other new dining options to come in the future. One of those new options is a replacement for Eddie’s Kitchen, a dining option in the Cougar Village Commons. “We had [Skywalk Cafe] open at the beginning of the year. But with classes being online, there [weren’t] a lot of people in that area of SIUE, and it wasn’t making much money, so we closed it and repurposed its staff to other areas,” Waple said. “We’re … looking to do some grab and go type of place in Cougar Village in what used to be Eddie’s Kitchen.” Skywalk Cafe was also closed last year due to pre-pandemic construction, so some students who had classes last semester — like freshman marketing major Dylan Perkins, of Havana, Illinois — have never eaten there. “I’d never tried Skywalk, and I guess I have to wait even longer to do that,” Perkins said. “I even had a few classes over there last year, but I never got the chance because it was shut down then. Then, when they opened it this year, I wasn’t even on campus.” According to Waple, Auntie Anne’s did not open back up this semester due to guidelines for the COVID-19 pandemic. Waple said a big problem was working around Starbucks, which is located right across from Auntie Anne’s in the Morris University Center, because Starbucks usually has a sizable line. “One of the things we had to think about was we had to decongest the main thoroughfare of the MUC. We tried to think about how to get people lined up, six feet apart, but still not congest it. It’s a
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Leading by example
I Mackenzie Smith / The Alestle
Upperclassmen athletes are often encouraged to take on leadership roles within their respective sports, but senior guard Mike Adewunmi of SIUE men’s basketball leads in another aspect: activism. Here, Adewunmi directs chants during the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee’s March for Racial Justice on Saturday. SEE MORE ON PAGE 7.
After years of discussion, SIU scholarship to become reality for low-income freshmen JOHN MCGOWAN reporter
The system is joining other schools in Fall 2021 with the SIU System Commitment Scholarship, offering fully paid tuition for incoming students with household incomes of $63,575 or less. SIU System President Dan Mahony said the plan had been in the works since before he started his position in early March of this year. “This was something we started talking about before I arrived officially as president, but after I was named as president … We started talking about it in the spring semester a little bit, and we picked up those conversations over the summer
to try to figure out how we would do it,” Mahony said. Programs like this have been adopted by other schools over recent years. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has a commitment that provides free tuition to freshmen with household incomes of $67,100 or less. “I expect that more institutions will be doing something like this in the future,” Chancellor Randy Pembrook said. The scholarship is being made possible by the combination of multiple sources of financial aid, including Pell Grants, the Illinois Monetary Award Program, the AIM HIGH Grant Pilot Program and SIU system scholarships. Pembrook said the process involved
Anti-racism book collection coming to SIUE, thanks to librarian LILY SCHNEIDERS reporter
After seeing a lack of collections pertaining to anti-racism at SIUE, the new diversity and engagement librarian is taking matters into her own hands. Simone Williams, who is the university’s new diversity and engagement librarian and a member of the Anti-Racism Task Force, has made it her mission to create an anti-racism book collection for students and faculty to use to educate themselves on anti-racism and social justice issues. Her collection of texts will cover a wide range of topics, including how to be an anti-racist,
the inner workings of the criminal justice system and other issues affecting minority communities. This new collection will not only allow individuals to educate themselves on these topics, but also provides materials that can be incorporated into course curricula. “SIUE does not have anti-racism resources in place as of now,” Williams said. “The university is going to start putting things in their curriculum about anti-racism for the future.” Williams said she thinks all universities need to do research and have resources available for students and faculty alike to become more educated on these is-
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sues. She also said these types of resources should be available to people of all ages. “I don’t think K-12 amplifies anti-racism enough,” Williams said. “[Providing these resources is] a way for higher education institutions to actually buy into the equitable society for everybody.” This project is not Williams’ effort alone. She sought help from two fellow members of the Anti-Racism Task Force: Jessica Harris, interim assistant provost, and Sandra Weissinger, an associate professor in the Department of Sociology. Both are helping Williams by contributing ideas for the collection. Weissinger said she saw one
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purpose of the collection as limiting the ability for people to use historical ignorance as an excuse for racist or discriminatory behaviors. “What we really wanted to make sure was that everyone — staff or even community members — could access the same educational resources as they made the anti-racism conclusion,” Weissinger said. “It was so important to us that folks were no longer able to say ‘I didn’t know, I didn’t know about the history, I didn’t know that was an act of racism,’ a lot of ‘I didn’t know.’ The one way to fix that was to put it in the library.” Lindy Wagner, the director of
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the Center for Student Diversity and Inclusion, said she thinks the collection will be beneficial because it will educate more people on these issues and promote understanding across the university. “I definitely think it will be useful, mainly because as our anti-racism resources grow, the more information is available to people on campus. And if SIUE wants to continue on the journey of working towards anti-racism and getting more people on campus knowledgeable about that topic, then the more resources we have the better,” Wagner said. For more information on this collection, visit the Anti-Racism Task Force website.
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