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Commentary: Truth And The Lessons It Teaches

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Commentary: Truth And The Lessons It Teaches

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

FRANKLIN, Indiana – By coincidence, just a few hours after the president of the United States showered praise at a rally on a congressman who assaulted a reporter, I spoke before a gathering of high school journalists.

My event was the annual convention of the Indiana High School Press Association, which is held on the campus of Franklin College, where I teach. More than 250 of the best, most dedicated and hardest-working Hoosier high school students surrendered days of their fall break to attend.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

I delivered a greeting. As I spoke, vertical banners stood behind me proclaiming IHSPA’s values, among them “truth,” “integrity,” “courage” and “freedom.”

I told the students they inspired me. I said journalism always had been a tough profession that called out for tough-minded people, but that was true now more than ever. It was heartening, I said, to see many young people eager to answer a call for service.

The president’s message was different.

President Trump complimented U.S. Rep. Greg Gianforte, R-Montana, for “body-slamming” a reporter who tried to ask him about health care.

Then, afterward, Gianforte lied about the assault. He said the reporter initiated the attack and that he was just defending himself. A recording of the incident and eyewitness accounts showed that wasn’t true.

Without provocation, Gianforte grabbed the reporter around the throat, slammed him to the ground and then began punching him repeatedly.

Confronted by the facts and the law, Gianforte pled guilty and was sentenced to community service and anger management training. To avoid a civil suit, he agreed to a settlement with the reporter, including at least one term – an on-the-record interview with the reporter – Gianforte has refused to honor.

The president of the United States paid tribute to a guy who took a cheap shot at another guy, and who then lied about it.

And he disparaged the guy who told the truth.

Just another day in this president’s America.

The high school students before whom I spoke know a bit about that.

For the past two years, IHSPA has tried to get the Indiana General Assembly to adopt a student press freedom bill. The bill isn’t complicated. It just asserts student journalists should have the same rights as other Americans do – that their right, to tell the truth, shouldn’t be suppressed and that they shouldn’t be punished for telling the truth.

School administrators apparently don’t like that.

As the bill was in its final stages before the Indiana legislature two years ago, a story broke out of Kansas.

Some dedicated and diligent high school journalists at Pittsburgh High School realized many students in their school didn’t know much about their new principal. So, they decided to do a story on her.

In their reporting, they found she had said she received a graduate degree in 2010 from a program that had shut down in 1984. There were other significant distortions or misrepresentations on her resume, as well.

They reported this and made national news. The principal resigned.

Here in Indiana, school administrators opposed to the student press freedom bill pointed to the Kansas story as an example of just how dangerous it could be to treat young people as if they were citizens.

See, they argued to legislators, this is what happens if you don’t let us control what student journalists think, say or publish. They cost this poor woman her job.

In other words, they sided with the principal who lied, rather than the kids who reported the truth.

Notice a pattern here?

My own career as a journalist began several decades ago when I was about the age of the students gathered at the IHSPA convention.

In that time, I’ve learned something. People in the position of power may grow irritated with incorrect information in a story, but a correction and an apology most often mollify them.

The truth, though, can engage them.

Mistakes can be fixed, but the truth can’t be fixed.

It is what it is, and it will never go away.

That’s why the students at the IHSPA convention inspire me.

They understand something the president and many other people in positions of power do not.

The enduring value of truth.

FOOTNOTES: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

The City-County posted this article without bias, opinion, or editing.

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Bearded Villains Give Back To The Community

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A group of bearded men is using their facial hair to raise money for organizations and charities.

The Bearded Villains of Indiana, Evansville Chapter hosted “Battle Of The Beards”, Evansville’s first beard competition. The event was held to raise awareness and money for “Soldiers Dogs for Independence”, an organization that pairs Tri-State veterans with local rescue dogs for companionship and assistance. The Bearded Villain members say helping other is what the group is all about.

James Decker, a member of the Bearded Villains explained “Do your best every day to give to somebody who needs it. I mean that’s pretty much what this is. I mean Soldier Dogs is a cause, it’s an actual cause, but there are people that you run into every day that needs something.”

A little over $1,000 was raised through competition entry’s alone. The Bearded Villains say they hope to hold the event again next year.

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Supreme Court Accepts Resignation, Imposes Suspension

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Katie Stancombe for www.theindianalwyer.com

The Indiana Supreme Court has accepted the resignation of a Hoosier attorney who faced multiple felony drunken-driving counts. Justices also ordered reciprocal discipline for another lawyer who was removed from the practice of law by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

On Thursday, the high court accepted the resignation of Fort Wayne attorney Thomas W. Belleperche effective immediately. The order accepting Belleperche’s resignation said he acknowledged there was a pending investigation or proceeding involving alleged misconduct that he could not defend himself against.

While the order doesn’t specify the nature of the investigation, court records show Belleperche faced multiple felony counts of operating a vehicle while intoxicated filed in Allen County courts this year.

Belleperche’s entry on the Indiana Roll of Attorneys shows his resignation follows a reinstatement to the Indiana bar in October 2010, subject to a successful probation and completion of at least three years on terms determined by JLAP. Before that, Belleperche was suspended for six months in September 2005, all stayed, subject to probation of at least 24 months. That probation was revoked for violations by order dated May 2006, and the Supreme Court suspended him for six months without automatic reinstatement in June 2006.

Belleperche can petition for reinstatement after five years, and any allegations of misconduct may be considered in the reinstatement process. In order to be reinstated, he must prove his remorse, rehabilitation and fitness to practice law. The costs of the proceedings were assessed against him.

The high court also imposed a 30-day active suspension Thursday against Crown Point attorney John H. Davis after his removal from the roll of attorneys admitted to practice law in the Seventh Circuit for failure to comply with court rules and for unprofessional conduct.

Justices accepted the disciplinary commission’s request that reciprocal discipline be imposed on Davis in the state of Indiana following his May 2018 removal from the practice of law in the 7thCircuit Court. The high court found no showing pursuant to Rule 23(20)(e)(1)-(3) of any reason why reciprocal discipline should not be issued in Indiana. However, it found that pursuant to Rule 23(20)(e)(4), the misconduct established warranted substantially different discipline in the Hoosier state.

Davis has been ordered to fulfill all the duties of a suspended attorney under Admission and Discipline Rule 23(26) and shall be automatically reinstated to the practice of law in Indiana. Davis’ suspension will go into effect immediately and the costs of the proceedings were assessed against him.

 

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Women’s Basketball opens 2018-19 campaign with Sunday exhbition

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With October soon to draw to a close, its basketball time as the University of Evansville women’s basketball team opens a new season with an exhibition with Kentucky Wesleyan on Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m. inside Meeks Family Fieldhouse.

The Purple Aces will feature six returning student-athletes and seven newcomers for the 2018-19 season. Returning for Evansville is 55% of its offense from a year ago, including its top-scorer in senior Kerri Gasper who led the Aces in five statistical categories last year; points per game (13.1), rebounds per game (5.7), assists per game (3.1), steals per game (1.1), and free-throw percentage (92.3%). As a team, Evansville earned the NCAA statistical championship for team free-throw shooting percentage, hitting 82.0% (347-423) of its attempts at the charity stripe last season
Back for the Aces in 2018-19 is redshirt senior guard Brooke Bishop, who missed 21 games last season. The Warsaw, Ky. native was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis just past the midway point of the 2017-18 season, but has worked her way back and joins a senior class of three for Evansville that includes Gasper and Tattenai Hall. To begin the season, Bishop was the team’s best three-point shooter, hitting 40.0% from beyond the arc. Bishop’s return will also add scoring pop to the Aces’ lineup as Bishop averaged 11.8 points per contest a season ago. The returners are joined by a talented group of newcomers to this Purple Aces’ squad. Three newcomers earned all-state honors in their respective states last season as seniors as Anna Newman and Sydney Tucker both earned the honor in Indiana, while Tayzha Buck was named all-state in Minnesota.

Aces drop hard-fought match against Illinois State

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Aces go five sets against Redbirds

 

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – In another exciting contest, the University of Evansville volleyball team fell by a 3-2 final to Missouri Valley Conference rival Illinois State inside Meeks Family Fieldhouse on Saturday.

 

For the second time in her career, freshman Alondra Vazquez reached the 20-kill mark, notching 20 to lead all players.  Mildrelis Rodriguez had 17 for the Purple Aces (8-18, 2-11 MVC) while Kerra Cornist had 12 and Rocio Fortuny finished the night with 10.  Allana McInnis had a game-high 55 assists while four players reached 10+ digs, led by Rodriguez with 15.  Olivia Goldstein had 13 while Vazquez notched 12.

 

Cecilia Thon and Rodriguez both had three service aces on the night.

 

Illinois State (20-5, 12-1 MVC) saw Ali Line post 19 kills with Kaylee Martin finishing with 16.

 

After Illinois State scored the first two points of the night, UE got back within one at 4-3 on a kill by Alondra Vazquez.  The Redbirds got back on track, pushing their lead to 15-8 on their second service ace of the frame.  The Aces chipped away at the deficit as a pair of Alondra Vazquez kills and a service ace by Cecilia Thon made it a 16-12 game before Vazquez added an ace to get the Aces within just three at 17-14.  ISU fended off the challenge, scoring the final eight points to close out a 25-14 win.

 

Vazquez had the hot hand to begin game two, recording a pair of kills to give UE a 4-0 lead.  Her third kill of the frame added to the lead, making it a 6-1 game.  The Redbirds battled back, tying it up for the first time at 9-9 before a Mildrelis Rodriguez kill put the lead back in the Aces hands and an ace by her put UE up by a 13-11 tally.  The Aces extended their lead to six points at 22-16 on Rodriguez’ 7th kill.  Olivia Goldstein put the finishing touches on the 25-18 win with a service ace.

 

ISU regained momentum to start the third set, jumping out to an 8-2 lead.  Vazquez helped UE get back in it once again as three kills, coupled with another Thon service ace, got the Aces within two at 8-6.  The Redbirds were able to extend their lead out once again, taking a 17-10 advantage.  They continued their run, winning by a 25-16 final.

 

Elena Redmond had an early service ace as UE took a 3-1 lead in game four before the Redbirds registered four in a row.  Evansville took the lead back at 7-6 before extending it to 15-12 on a block assist by Kerra Cornist and Rocio Fortuny.  After ISU scored three straight to tie it up, the Aces came back with two of their own to go back in front.  UE continued to hold the lead until ISU rallied back to knot the score at 21-21.  Evansville went back in front at 24-22, but ISU had the answer once again, posting three in a row to have set point.  Evansville fought back once again as a Fortuny and Joselyn Coronel capped off a 28-26 win to force a game five.

 

Evansville fell behind by a 4-0 score before a Rodriguez kill got UE on the board.  ISU kept the pressure on, going up 10-2 before clinching the match with a 15-5 win.

 

UE returns to the road for the next two weekends, traveling to Missouri State and Southern Illinois next weekend before going to Terre Haute to play Indiana State on Nov. 9.  The final weekend of the season will take place at home as UE welcomes UNI and Drake.