The Alestle Vol. 71 No. 27

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The Windy City comes to Dunham Hall

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Men’s Basketball wins first home game page 7

vol. LXXI no. XVII

alton — east st. louis — edwardsville

thursday 11.08.18

Board of trustees to hold special meeting Friday RYAN BIERI editor-in-chief

Students line up outside the Meridian Ballroom at SIUE, waiting to vote on Tuesday Nov. 6. 384 ballots were cast on election day, with another 490 from early voting, as reported by the College Democrats of SIUE. This location was open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. | Tyler Pletsch / The Alestle

Democrats sweep state elections RYAN BIERI editor-in-chief

(D-Godfrey) — all of whom also retained their seats. Rachelle Aud Crowe beat out Edwardsville Mayor Hal Patton for a seat in the State Senate 56th district by a 16.6 percent, 12,905 vote margin. Earlier this year, Patton was lambasted when it was revealed he had dressed in blackface for Halloween. A total of 384 ballots were cast at SIUE on election day, and the College Democrats of SIUE posted on Facebook Tuesday that 490 people early voted at SIUE, as opposed to 90 in the last midterm election. SIUE students weren’t just voting on campus either, some of them were working on getting

While the “blue wave” might not have washed over the federal government, Illinois has turned decidedly Democrat. J.B Pritzker defeated incumbent Gov. Bruce Rauner, with Rauner’s concession coming before 8 p.m. Across the ballot, Democrats took every state-level position. Jessie White will return as secretary of state, Kwame Raoul will be our next attorney general, Susan Mendoza will be comptroller and Michael Frerichs will be treasurer. “Voting is an act of optimism that the levers of our Democracy still work. You embody that optimism. You light the beacon fire on the hill of history that signals from one generation to another that these are the things that we stand and fight for,” Pritzker said in his victory speech. Democrats also did J.B. Pritzker well locally. Illinois Governer-elect Incumbent Rep. Katie Stuart (D-Edwardsville) has once again defeated others to vote. Sophomore mass communiDwight Kay in a race for the 112th district by 9.8 percent of cations major Ben Wells, of Colthe vote. Stuart, who was previ- linsville, Illinois, said he spent his ously a mathematics instructor at afternoon canvassing for Crowe SIUE, originally unseated Kay in in Cougar Village, before waiting outside the SIUE polling area 2016. Stuart actively campaigned with other canvassers as the polls using her ties to SIUE, even closed. Incumbent Jerry Costello going so far as to have one of her signs say, “Fair funding for (D-Smithton) also won re-election. SIUE.” While most of the local State She was one of the four state representatives pushing for leg- Congress seats went to Demoislation earlier this year, along crats, Republican Jason Plummer with Jay Hoffman (D-Swansea), won a seat in the 56th Senate disLaToya Greenwood (D-East trict over Democrat Brian Stout. “It’s been a long campaign, St. Louis) and Monica Bristow

“Voting is an act

especially having a baby along the way. We have worked hard and I thank all of you for coming out. … We will continue to work hard to ensure we get what we deserve down here,” Plummer said at the Madison County Republican election results party Tuesday night. At the federal level, Republicans swept the Metro East house spots for Illinois, with Rodney Davis winning the 13th district, Mike Bost the 12th and John Shimkus the 15th. Bost’s race was highly contentious, and brought President Donald Trump to Carbondale, Illinois, Oct. 27, and Vice President Mike Pence to O’Fallon, Illinois, in July. Additionally, the proposition to make Madison County a “gun sanctuary city” passed with 67,351 voters approving of the measure and 33,160 voting no. In Missouri, Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill lost her seat to Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley. Additionally, medical marijuana was legalized in Missouri with the passing of Amendment 2, which allows patients to grow their own plants and includes a 4 percent tax on cannabis sales. In national races, Republicans increased their control of the Senate, while Democrats flipped control of the House. Republican Ted Cruz won his highly contested Senate race against Beto O’Rourke, but Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker was replaced by Democrat Tony Evers.

of optimism that the levers of our Democracy still work.

@thealestle

RYAN BIERI

650-3530 @ryan_alestle rbieri@alestlelive.com

@thealestle

The board of trustees will meet Friday in Carbondale to discuss the replacement process for SIUC’s chancellor as well as choose a firm to search for a permanent SIU System President. Despite the passing of former SIUC Chancellor Carlo Montemagno nearly a month ago, the board is not beginning the search for a permanent replacement until the system president position is filled with a permanent leader. In an email sent to the SIUC community upon the announcement of the Nov. 9 special meeting, Interim SIU System President J. Kevin Dorsey said the timeline for the chancellor search had to be directly linked to the search for the president. “It would be difficult to attract a chancellor without a permanent president in place, so the board’s first priority after the interim chancellor appointment must remain a presidential search,”

Dorsey said. The board will be discussing the interim chancellor selection process at the meeting, according to the meeting’s agenda, in addition to giving Dorsey the ability to fill some of the SIUC chancellor duties in the meantime. As a part of his message, Dorsey also touched on the reorganization plan Montemagno originally proposed and said the SIUC community “must go forward.” “As I’ve talked with so many of you over these last two weeks, I’ve heard your call to continue moving forward. I am confident that we can do so deliberately and collaboratively,” Dorsey said. The meeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. Friday in the large dining room of the Stone Center in Carbondale. The next regular meeting will be held Dec. 13 at Carbondale.

RYAN BIERI

650-3530 @ryan_alestle rbieri@alestlelive.com

A seventh year graduate student majoring in sustainability, Kevin Greer (middle, standing) reviews a handout detailing a proposed minor hike in student fees. | Jakob Ruffner / The Alestle

Student Government reviews fees and announces new clubs At the Student Government meeting in Student Success Center room 1203 on Nov. 5, Graduate senator Kevin Greer spoke on the fee review commission and the upcoming 2.9 percent raise of student fees. “The chancellor challenged us to stay under [a] 3 percent fee increase; we’re ninth-lowest student fees out of anybody, tuition included, out of all Illinois state universities. We want to keep [tuition] affordable. So, for the annual year 2018-19 we changed the way in which we calculate mandatory student fees. Fees are now set per credit hour, which is different from, maybe, say, seniors being different from freshman as far as credit hours … So, the current general fee is $100.30

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per credit hour, and now it’s going to be $103.20 [at a] 2.9 percent increase,” Greer said. Adam Aldabe, organization relations officer for Student Government, announced two new organizations coming to campus and the name change of the Couture Models on campus. “There are two new organizations: drone club — that’s with drones — and quiz bowl of SIUE, which is like a jeopardy team … There’s also a name change. There’s a modeling club called Couture Models and they have changed their name to Confident, Unique, Talented & Elegant,” Aldabe said. On Tuesday, The Alestle will have the full breakdown of the SG meeting.

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