The Western Courier | September 8, 2017

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Page 4: Defibaugh — Examining the gender equality movement

Page 7: Looking to the future of the Chicago Bears

Back Page: Football prepares for Northern Arizona University

Friday, September 8, 2017 - Vol. 118 Issue 8

Macomb Balloon Rally prepares for takeoff NICHOLAS EBELHACK/EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Macomb Balloon Rally participants arrive in Macomb today preparing for this weekend’s festivites. Balloons will fly in to Western Illinois University’s Vince Grady Field today at 6 p.m., followed by Saturday’s balloon glow.

JESSIE MATIAS/PRODUCTION MANAGER

By Tabi Jozwick courier staff JESSIE MATIAS/PRODUCTION MANAGER

By Isaiah Herard assistant news editor

On Monday, Sept. 11 Western Illinois University’s Inter Hall Council (IHC) will release their long anticipated Rocky Cups.  The Rocky Cups will sell at ten dollars per cup and allow students to receive a 40-50 percent discount off refills in the dining halls.  According to IHC president Killian Tracey, the goal of the cups is to advertise the brand of the IHC, help students budget their meal plan, and raise money for the Rocky Memorial project, a memorial to all the people who served as Rocky mascots.

“For one thing, the cups get our (IHC) logo out there,” Tracey said. “It also allows us to raise money for the Rocky Memorial project over by Hanson Field. Also, we want to help as a meal plan saver because we know a lot of people like to run through their meal plans too quickly in the semester especially first year students.”  Tracey reiterated the amount of money students would save in correlation with the mobility the cup allocates.  “My pitch to students inquiring about the rocky cup is that it’s a cup you can put in your backpack as opposed to the current to go

cups with lids that easily pop off,” Tracey said. “You can take this cup with you and the dollars it saves you will add up; that 50 cents that you spend for two meals a day equates to one dollar a day, seven dollars a week, twenty-eight dollars in a month, it will add up.”  Although the cups would save students money at various dining halls like CorbinOlson, Thompson, Bayliss and Henninger Halls, the cups use is prohibited at the various restaurants that in the University Union.

Cups

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On Wednesday, attendees sampled Indian tea and food while they learned about India during the Center for International Studies’ international coffee and tea hour in Horrabin Hall.  “We wanted to try a new event,” said Dana Sistko, CIS assistant director. “I think that a lot of other schools have done something like an international coffee hour and I think it is a topic that many people are interested in and we have a great deal of students who can showcase their culture, so we’re going to do this one on India.”  Shital Joshi, CIS graduate assistant from India, talked about the Indian tea culture and consumption as well as the production of tea in India.  “Indians drink tea all the

time,” Joshi said. “The frequency of drinking tea is like four to five times a day. India is the second largest country in the world that grows tea and exports tea throughout the world. There are tea vendors throughout the country that runs their businesses out of tea. Also, we have states named Assam and Darjeeling, that is where we grow ourtea with all the crops there and the women would go and pluck the tea leaves, then goes through the process and sell it throughout the world and the nation.”  Joshi said that tea is consumed all over India and it’s a way of life in India, especially in books, movies and even politics where Narendra Modi went from being a tea vendor to prime minister of India.

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