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Loan reform to save students $68 billion JEFF ENGELHARDT Daily Egyptian What started with t he late Sen. Paul Simon more than 15 years ago finally came to an end in Washington, D.C., with President Barack Obama. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), during his campus visit Wednesday, said Simon was
one of the most instrumental people in fighting for student loan reform. Obama signed a bill removing banks and private institutions from the student loan process when the health care bill passed March 22. In a forum with college students Monday, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said by no longer subsidizing banks, more than $68 billion would be saved in the
next 10 years with $13.5 billion of those savings going to Pell grants. Durbin said the idea for reform started with Simon and he would be happy to see the changes on the way for college students across the nation. Please see LOAN | 2
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A legacy continued
Durbin presents $500,000 to SIUC nursing program Touts health care reform JEFF ENGELHARDT Daily Egyptian
“And to us, that’s a really romantic thing,� said Simon, chuckling as she sat at her kitchen table Tuesday in her Carbondale home.
The nursing program is officially in at SIUC, and now Christina Meo wants to be one of the first students officially in it. Meo, a sophomore from Chicago studying pre-nursing, was one of almost 50 people at the Student Health Center Lobby Wednesday to listen to Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) announce a $500,000 grant to start the SIU Regional Nursing Program on the Carbondale campus. Susan Winters, director of the regional nursing program at SIUC and first hire with the $500,000, said Wednesday was an exciting first step to the first nursing classes scheduled for fall 2010 at SIUC. Meo said she has completed the pre-nursing program at SIUC and will find out if she will be one of the roughly 40 students accepted into the inaugural class in a week or two. “I’ve always wanted to be a nurse ever since I could remember, so it wasn’t an option, it was a necessity for me to apply to this school,� she said. “I wanted to be part of something different and something that was a first, and I can do that here.� The program, which is housed at the Student Health Center, will feature teleconferencing with the Edwardsville campus, some work with local hospitals and state-of-the-art simulation labs, including one that “gives birth,� Winters said. “This money was absolutely crucial to the program,� she said. “And there is a very profound shortage of nurses not only nationwide, but in the state and particularly down here.� Durbin said it was the shortage of nurses coupled with the passing of the health care reform bill that made this program so critical to the southern Illinois region.
Please see SIMON | 3
Please see DURBIN | 3
JESS VERMEULEN | DAILY EGYPTIAN
Sheila Simon, Gov. Pat Quinn’s choice for lieutenant governor, sits at her dining room table Wednesday while NICK JOHNSON Daily Egyptian Not every child gets to have the Watergate scandal fully explained to her by a one-time presidential candidate when she’s only in junior high. For Sheila Simon, though, talks like the one she had in the late ‘70s at a Washington, D.C., backyard party with George McGovern who lost to former Pres. Ronald Reagan, were routine at that age. Simon, now the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor, spent her youth moving around the state of Illinois and the country on the various campaign trails of her father, the late U.S. Sen. Paul Simon. Paul Simon was also once lieutenant
her daughter Brennan hangs out in the kitchen at their home in Carbondale.
Sheila Simon takes Dad’s beliefs to Democratic ticket
governor of Illinois in addition to a state representative and senator. He was also a U.S. congressman in both houses from 1975 to 1997 and sought the 1988 Democratic nomination for president. Sheila Simon and husband Perry Knop were married in 1987 in the midst of the campaign, she said. “That was pretty much our honeymoon,� she said. But it didn’t bother her or Knop, now a political science teacher at John A. Logan College. In fact, they met at a Democratic picnic in Murphysboro, Simon said.
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or more memories of the Simon legacy see the video at dailyegyptian.com. — Gus Bode
Mendoza screens films at SIUC DEREK ROBBINS Daily Egyptian Making films is what RubĂŠn Mendoza said he was born to do. The committee at the Cannes Film Festival, a prestigious international independent film festival held yearly in Cannes, France, agrees. Mendoza showed four of his short films Wednesday in the Communications Building, including “The Fence,â€? a 2005 Cannes entry, and the trailer for his first feature film “La Sociedad del SemĂĄforo,â€? which means “The Stoplight Societyâ€? and will debut at this year’s Cannes Film Festival.
Mendoza said he has had an interest in directing movies since he was 10 years old. “I liked to see what things looked like through the frame,� Mendoza said. His feature film is about a man who is obsessed with the idea of increasing the time for red lights — a concept that the Cannes Film Festival will make easier for people to experience, Mendoza said. “It makes the whole process a lot easier for me,� Mendoza said. “Cannes is a place where some of the brains I like the most in filmmaking have been — but I never walk in there thinking about that.� The cinema and photography department, with the help of associate professor
Susan Felleman, invited Mendoza based on student proposals. A committee of three students and three professors then approved the selection, Felleman said. Students look forward to visitors like Mendoza because they give insight on what independent filmmaking can really be like, Felleman said. “Our production students are generally very, very eager for exposure to what professional narrative filmmaking is like,� Felleman said. “I have no doubt that it will be very illuminating.� Please see MENDOZA | 2
PAT SUTPHIN | DAILY EGYPTIAN
Colombian director RubĂŠn Mendoza works the projector during the first night of his film screenings Wednesday in the Communications Building. Mendoza was featured in the Cannes Film Festival for his film, “The Fence,â€? and will be showing his films and offering workshops throughout the rest of the week.
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News MENDOZA CONTINUED FROM
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Mendoza, perhaps true to form of some indie directors, was modest of his participation in Cannes. Being a part of the festival “doesn’t mean a lot” to him, he said. He said he still gets nervous about showcasing his film to others, but it’s also his favorite part of being a director. “I can do something I really like to, and I can share with people,” Mendoza said. “If something is really big or important, I like to share with people.”
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“When Paul Simon was United State Senator he asked a very basic question … ‘Why don’t we provide more loans at lower cost for students by taking out the middleman?’” Durbin said. “(He) didn’t get the right answer for a long time, but Obama’s reform … helps students from low-income families get a good education.” Durbin said the reform would extend Pell grants to more than 26,000 students in Illinois. John Jackson, a visiting professor at the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute and former colleague of Simon, said there was never a need for banks to serve as a middleman and is glad to see the reality of reform. Jackson said it is evident from the
Thursday, April 8, 2010 Of his visit to SIUC, he said he was especially excited to put his work on display for an audience that may not be familiar with what he has to offer. The cinema and photography department used students’ fine arts activity fees to pay for Mendoza’s trip and others, Felleman said. The next visiting artist the cinema and photography department will bring in is Milcho Manchevski, an international director who will be in Carbondale April 27. Meanwhile, Mendoza will host a roundtable on prospects for Latin
America Cinema at 1 p.m. Thursday in the Communications Building Room 1032 and a production workshop at 10 a.m. Friday in the Communications Building Room 1116, or the cinema soundstage. He’s ready to get his message out to a new audience, he said. “What I really want to do is show something that has a different spirit than what you can typically see in America,” he said.
massive savings that Simon was right when he said the student loan structure was charity for the banks. “The money was all guaranteed by the government so there was no possibility the banks could lose any money on it, and they got a finder’s fee,” Jackson said. “The banks were making out like bandits; it was socialism for the rich.” Durbin said the reform gives the money back to the students, especially those entering public service. Students in the medical field, education or serving in the military will have any outstanding loan payments after 10 years canceled as long as they make their monthly payments. Students not in public service fields will have any unpaid debt canceled after 20 years. “For students across America, this
translates into lower-cost loans, more Pell grants and better interest rates on loans,” Durbin said. Duncan said to make payments easier, the cap would be lowered. Under the former loan regulations, students paid 15 percent of their income. The new regulations lower it to 10 percent, Duncan said. Jackson said while the reform never happened in Simon’s lifetime, it is still a part of his legacy as a senator for the working class. “This will be a big help to Illinois; just look at SIU where lots of people need some help,” Jackson said. “It’s a terrific story and it’s a Paul Simonrooted story.”
Derek Robbins can be reached at drobbins@dailyegyptian.com or 536-3311 ext. 273.
Jeff Engelhardt can be reached at jengelhardt@dailyegyptian.com or 536-3311 ext. 254.
Correction In the Wednesday edition of the Daily Egyptian, the story “Protesters, students meet with Goldman” should have said the university offers $262,681,562 in financial aid. The Daily Egyptian regrets this error.
About Us
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The Daily Egyptian is published by the students of Southern Illinois University Carbondale 50 weeks per year, with an average daily circulation of 20,000. Fall and spring semester editions run Monday through Friday. Summer editions run Tuesday through Thursday. All intersession editions will run on Wednesdays. Spring break and Thanksgiving editions are distributed on Mondays of the pertaining weeks. Free copies are distributed in the Carbondale, Murphysboro and Carterville communities. The Daily Egyptian online publication can be found at www.dailyegyptian.com.
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ideo: See how SIU Black American Studies director Dr. Joseph Brown reacts to the Tim Wise presentation of ‘Racism and Color Blind Ideologies in America’ on dailyegyptian.com. — Gus Bode
News
Thursday, April 8, 2010
DURBIN CONTINUED FROM
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He said the health care reform would increase the number of community health care providers, opening jobs for more nurses. He said $10 billion will be invested in creating new community health care clinics nationwide and the number of primary clinics will more than double in Illinois. “If someone’s ill or someone needs a helping hand, it’s a nurse that will step forward and really help,” Durbin said. “The fact is that our reliance is going to grow with more and more baby boomers — and more and more people — in need of medical care.” Administrators from both SIU campuses said students like Meo would not have had the oppor-
SIMON CONTINUED FROM
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Simon’s early immersion in politics has helped her become the down-toearth politician she is today, said John Jackson, visiting professor at the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute. “She’s met a lot of famous people through her dad. She’s not awed by the rich and the famous — she deals with them just as she deals with people on the street,” Jackson said. Despite what most people might think, Simon said her campaign-trail lifestyle actually allowed her to spend more time with her family growing up, as she spent entire summers helping run the “family business.” “We spent a lot of time just driving all around the state as a family. That’s not everyone’s family vacation, but it was great,” she said. Simon graduated high school in 1979 in Potomac, Md., outside of Washington, D.C. After graduating with a bachelor’s degree in political science
Daily Egyptian
tunity to join a nursing program at SIUC had it not been for Durbin. Marcia Maurer, dean of the School of Nursing at SIU-Edwardsville, said Durbin has been one of the biggest supporters for the nursing field throughout his tenure as senator. Without his efforts, SIUE would not have one of the best programs in the nation, and SIUC would not have a program at all, she said. “If you’re not a nurse, you have no concept about his support of nursing that he has had ever since he has been in public office,” Maurer said. “I am very honored to see this dream of mine come true.”
Sen. Dick Durbin, (D-Ill.), greets Carbondale residents during an open house Wednesday at the Paul Simon Federal Building. The open house was held after a press conference at the Student Center where Durbin presented a $500,000 grant to the new nursing program at SIUC.
Jeff Engelhardt can be reached at jengelhardt@dailyegyptian.com or 536-3311 ext. 254.
from Wittenberg University in Ohio, Simon studied law at Georgetown University and finished that degree at SIUC in 1987, she said. “This is just where I always felt at home,” Simon said. “It’s where I like to be. I think there’s a better balance of barbecue and your mission in life, whereas in Washington it was more about your mission in life.” She practiced law first at the Carbondale-based Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance, where she represented people who couldn’t afford attorneys, then at another local practice before moving to the State’s Attorney’s Office in 1994, Simon said. She spent her last two years there prosecuting in domestic battery cases, which opened the door for her current position at the SIU School of Law. The school asked Simon to start a domestic violence clinic after receiving grant money, she said. Simon’s experience teaching law has given her another opportunity to encourage people to get involved in government, said Matt Baughman, as-
sociate director for the institute. “She cares about government, and she cares about how government can have a positive impact on people’s lives,” Baughman said. “She really values the involvement at the local level.” Simon continues her father’s legacy of caring for international events through her daughters, Jackson said. Simon and Knop’s oldest daughter, Reilly, 20, went to Brazil on a scholarship for two years and speaks fluent Portuguese, Simon said. Her other daughter, Brennan, 15, will spend her junior year of high school in Italy while the couple hosts a foreign exchange student from Peru, 18-year-old Carla Paucar, she said. “They’ve got their family on the line in international relations, so they’re certainly continuing that,” Jackson said. The Paul Simon Public Policy Institute actively supports the interests of the late senator, interests Jackson said Sheila Simon helps carry on as well. Sheila Simon recently worked on the Illinois Reform Commission, which worked to examine government
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PAT SUTPHIN DAILY EGYPTIAN
practices and ethics, and made recommendations for cleaning up state government, Jackson said. “That certainly fits Paul’s legacy. He would have approved all those recommendations,” he said. Like her father, Simon has made several campaigns for public office. She was elected to the Carbondale City Council and served from 2003 until 2007, when she lost a bid for mayor to Brad Cole. Simon said she learned more from her loss in the mayoral campaign than her successful council campaign. “I needed to be able to respond to information and gossip quickly, and I didn’t think I did that as effective as I could have,” she said. Overall, Simon is extremely comfortable around people of all kinds, Baughman said. “She is someone who is easy to get along with and work with, and someone that I think enjoys meeting people,” Baughman said. Simon said she keeps a journal about the people she meets every day
on the campaign trail who have stories and suggestions. One was a man she met on the Amtrak on the way to Chicago last week who had budget suggestions for her. “Even taking the train, you can have democracy work,” Simon said. Should her and Gov. Pat Quinn be sent to Springfield in November, Simon said she would be honored to take up a position her father once held, as well as represent southern Illinois. “I think one of the things it means to the Carbondale community and southern Illinois in general is that people are really happy about it,” Simon said. “It’s not that they’re happy (the state Democratic Party) picked me … it’s sort of like it’s a team thing. It’s a recognition that Carbondale counts, that southern Illinois counts — that downstate is an important part of the state of Illinois, rather than an afterthought.”
Nick Johnson can be reached at njohnson@dailyegyptian.com or 536-3311 ext. 263.
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Daily Egyptian
Thursday, April 8, 2010
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Editorial Policy Our Word is the consensus of the Daily Egyptian Editorial Board on local, national and global issues affecting the Southern Illinois University community. Viewpoints expressed in columns and letters to the editor do not necessarily reflect those of the Daily Egyptian.
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Gus Bode says: Send us more letters! If you can write coherently and would like to share your perspective with the world, please consider lending your voices to our pages. To submit a letter, please go to www.dailyegyptian.com and click “Submit a Letter� or send it to voices@dailyegyptian.com. Please make your submissions between 300 to 400 words. If you have questions, give us a call at 536-3311 ext. 281.
WHAT THE HEALTH IS GOING ON?
Show support for survivor trauma CHRISTY HAMILTON ABIGAIL GAFFEY Wellness Center Post traumatic stress disorder is a term that is gaining familiarity, yet the term is often misunderstood. PTSD is a psychological disorder that may develop after exposure to trauma. One misconception is that every person who experiences trauma will have PTSD, yet this is untrue. The definition of trauma and a person’s response are both unique and dependent upon individual life experiences. Trauma describes both physical and psychological experiences. A traumatic reaction may stem from a natural event, but it may also be deliberate, accidental or man-made. The purpose of this article is to discuss individuals’ reactions to traumatic experiences, particularly focusing on sexual assault; however,
the information can be useful when trying to understand or offer caring support for any survivor of trauma. Individuals’ reactions to sexual assault will always be unique. Preconceived notions of how people “should� react to traumatic experiences, particularly sexual assault, are damaging to the sexual assault survivor and his or her support group. It is important to remember there is no “right� or “wrong� way to react or feel following a sexual assault, but there are ways to care for yourself and others. Caring for oneself following a sexual assault is very important. Basic needs such as eating and sleeping can be disrupted, but nutrients and rest are still needed by your body. One may be experiencing a wide range of emotions, and it is important to allow yourself to feel and discuss these emotions with people that you feel safe talking to.
If despite having a strong support network you find yourself having difficulty maintaining a healthy lifestyle, including persistent sleep difficulties, changes in your eating, moods or inability to function for your daily demands of school or work, then it is important to seek professional help. Caring and supporting others is vitally important. If someone feels safe and trusting enough to disclose a sexual assault, don’t make a quick assumption or suggestion about what they “must� or “should� do. Rather, control your knee-jerk reaction and provide support by saying things such as, “I care, I believe you and I want to help.� Ask if it would be alright to call a completely confidential advocate to offer caring support. An option for women, men, adolescents and children is The Women’s Center. The Women’s Center offers free,
The Women’s Center 24 hour Hotline
(800) 334-2094
Southern Illinois Regional Social Services
(618) 457-6703
SIUC Wellness Center
(618) 536-4441
SIUC Counseling Center
(618) 453-5371
SIUC Clinical Center
(618) 453-2361
National Sexual Assault Hotline
(800) 656-4673
confidential services for survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence trauma. Services are available in several southern Illinois counties 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Disclosure is a privilege, it means that there is trust, and with that trust you have the responsibility to be careful and mindful, not reactionary. Not everyone is trained
to react to traumatic experiences, but everyone can be better prepared by knowing how to contact advocacy and counseling resources.
Hamilton is Program Coordinator at the Wellness Center and Gaffey is a Doctoral Student Graduate Assistant. They can be reached at wellness@siu.edu.
GUEST COLUMN
SIUC’s sexual harassment policies badly need revision AZHAR MAJEED Foundation for Individual Rights in Education The mistakes in Southern Illinois University Carbondale’s sexual harassment policy are much worse than what could be attributed to minor oversight or simple misunderstanding. In fact, SIUC’s policy severely misapplies sexual harassment law, violating the First Amendment rights of students and faculty. Not only that, but its procedures for adjudicating sexual harassment accusations deny basic due process to those accused. The university’s policy impermissibly applies the legal standard for harassment in the workplace to all cases on campus, even though to most SIUC students, the university
is not their employer. The workplace harassment standard has been repeatedly struck down by courts when applied in the university setting because that standard fails to adequately protect speech rights on campus. SIUC instead ought to follow the legal standard specifically governing harassment in the educational context. The Supreme Court more than a decade ago established that peer-on-peer harassment in education requires conduct that is “so severe, pervasive and objectively offensive� that victims are “effectively denied equal access to an institution’s resources and opportunities.� This stringent and speech-protective standard reflects the fact that our nation’s public university campuses have long been held to be peculiarly the marketplace of ideas,
places where students and faculty can discuss, debate and learn from one another in an ongoing dialogue. By contrast, SIUC’s policy fails to recognize that speech on a public campus is entitled to robust First Amendment protection. SIUC’s proposed procedures for sexual harassment complaints are equally indefensible. The procedures contain no specific requirements regarding a hearing or even notice to the accused about the nature of the charges and basis of the allegations. That’s the basic due process that everyone deserves. Instead, the draft procedures vest entirely too much discretion in the hands of the associate chancellor: discretion to decide whether the complaint warrants an investigation, who the investigators shall be and, ultimately, whether a vio-
lation has occurred. Additionally, upon appeal, the associate chancellor determines the composition of the five-person appellate panel. Needless to say, allowing the person whose decision will be reviewed to have such authority over the reviewing body is unwise. These shortcomings serve as a reminder that the sad cases of professors John Simon and Cal Meyers are still disturbingly recent. Without major changes, the same issues could be revisited in another case. The university needs to do more than define sexual harassment in accordance with the case law. It must restore fundamental fairness and due process to its adjudicatory process for sexual harassment. SIUC must clearly delineate the rights of the accused, starting with the basic rights to notice and a hearing.
It must allow the accused a legitimate opportunity to contest the charges and to confront the accuser. And it must provide an impartial tribunal, rather than vest so much power in the hands of one individual. Students and faculty at SIUC are most at risk under the current policy. I therefore urge them to speak out, raise awareness on campus and let their opinions be known to the administration. Those who have already engaged in these efforts should continue their activism. The entire campus will benefit from revisions that protect free speech and respect basic rights.
Azhar Majeed is the associate director of Legal & Public Advocacy at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).
Submissions
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Letters and guest columns must be submitted with author’s contact information. Phone numbers are required to verify authorship, but will not be published. Letters are limited to 300 words and columns to 500 words. Students must include year and major. Faculty must include rank and department. Others include hometown. Submissions can be sent by clicking “Submit a Letter� at www.dailyegyptian.com or to voices@dailyegyptian.com.
The Daily Egyptian is a “designated public forum.� Student editors have the authority to make all content decisions without censorship or advance approval. We reserve the right to not publish any letter or guest column.
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Thursday, April 8, 2010
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PAT SUTPHIN | DAILY EGYPTIAN EDYTA Bナ、SZCZYK | DAILY EGYPTIAN
I do not love you ... Pablo Neruda
I do not love you as if you were salt-rose, or topaz, or the arrow of carnations the fire shoots off. I love you as certain dark things are to be loved, in secret, between the shadow and the soul. I love you as the plant that never blooms but carries in itself the light of hidden flowers; thanks to your love a certain solid fragrance, risen from the earth, lives darkly in my body. I love you without knowing how, or when, or from where. I love you straightforwardly, without complexities or pride; so I love you because I know no other way than this: where I does not exist, nor you, so close that your hand on my chest is my hand, so close that your eyes close as I fall asleep.
DAN DWYER | DAILY EGYPTIAN
(Top left) Eighteen-month-old Harlan Whiteford eats the second ice cream cone of his life Tuesday outside Dairy Queen. His parents, Kristen and Tim Whiteford, said they wanted to take their son out and enjoy the nice weather. (Top right) Dogwoods blossom from a tree behind the engineering building Tuesday. (Center) A flowering cherry tree grows alongside Lincoln Drive near the Student Center. The flowering cherry is in the Prunus genus, which includes peaches, cherries, and almonds. According to SIU Plant and Service Operations, 45 additional cherry trees have been planted on campus since the May 8 storm. (Bottom) Sparrow eggs rest in their nest in a barn south of Carbondale.
JULIA RENDLEMAN | DAILY EGYPTIAN
RENTS
Thursday, April 8, 2010
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Three week-old foal Nutmeg suckles from her mother, Cinnamon, Tuesday in a pasture just outside of the Giant City Stables. JESS VERMEULEN DAILY EGYPTIAN
ISAAC SMITH | DAILY EGYPTIAN
The sun sets behind a patch of violets Sunday on Watt Hill Road in Murphysboro.
8 Daily Egyptian
Classifieds
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Classifieds
Daily Egyptian
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Study Break The Duplex
Thursday, April 8, 2010
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Across 1 Must 6 “Iron Chef America” chef Cat __ 10 Trails 14 Dickens’s mysterious Mr. Drood 15 Fidel’s successor 16 “__ Named Sue” 17 Israeli ambassador Moshe 18 Like some profs. 19 Web links 20 Uneasy about a farm team member? 23 Michael Phelps sponsor 24 “Dies __” 25 Humble 28 Play footsie, say 32 It may be up 35 Plus 36 Shoe part for Astaire 37 Uneasy about a long shot? 41 Maps
42 Fair-hiring abbr. 43 Hi or lo follower 44 “Flowers for Algernon” author Daniel 45 “Analyze That” star 48 Top-shelf 50 Where Caligula reputedly tried to seat his 67-Across 54 Uneasy about an aquarium fish? 59 Winery prefix 60 Casual top 61 Stock phrase 62 Exploit 63 Etonic competitor 64 Peachy 65 Wood shaper 66 Appear dramatically 67 Word to add to 20-, 37- and 54-Across to make sense of the answers
Down 1 Call before the game
Wednesday’s answers
2 __ in the bucket 3 Stockholm native 4 Colored a bit 5 Like some daring football kicks 6 Steep outcropping 7 Brewery feature 8 Act like fools? 9 Let out, say 10 Honored with a crown of foliage 11 Start of a spell 12 Go for a Masters? 13 CBS part: Abbr. 21 Roaming types 22 Green Goblin portrayer in Spider-Man films 26 Rock producer Brian 27 Newspaper revenue component 29 __-Tass: news agency 30 Red inside 31 I-90 in Mass. et al. 32 Magic harp thief
33 “__ hollers, ...” 34 __ matter 36 Believer 38 First three numbers, in some directories 39 “Not a problem!” 40 Cargo unit 45 Again, to Gaius 46 Talk out again 47 “Old” punches?
Horoscopes
By Nancy Black and Stephanie Clement
Today’s birthday — Your challenge this year is to build self-esteem for yourself and for any children in your life. Independence comes first. Find ways to generate enthusiasm for activities that don’t require anyone’s help. Then, cultivate your powers of observation and imagination. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Although money isn’t the real issue, that may be how you’ve been keeping track of who loves whom more. A better way is to see who can be most creativein expressing their caring. 1
2
3
4
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold boarders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk.
Wednesday’s answers
Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6 — You may want to run away from home, but you need to focus on household matters. Handle practical issues early, then escape to a movie.
49 High country 51 According to 52 Dabbling ducks 53 Bogart’s “High Sierra” role 54 Musical ending 55 Follow 56 Don Juan’s mother 57 Random collection 58 Fire suppressant
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 5 — Your desire for independence takes you out of your normal work routine. You don’t have to leave the country, though. Just let your imagination wander. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 6 — The challenge now is to love what you’re doing for as long as you’re doing it, and to let go as soon as it’s finished. Release any negativity. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) —Today is a 7 — Use your talents to resolve disagreements about the basics. Be prepared to restate your arguments for the sake of clarity. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 6 — The only way to get anywhere today is through team effort.Focus on the most practical means you can find.Then, throw yourself fully into it.
Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 6 — Although you want to get your ideas out, now’s the time to carefully consider all the ramifications and modify your message.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 6 — To get the most out of a relaxing time, display enthusiasm for someone else’s suggestion. Spend money judiciously, but don’t pinch pennies.
Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 5 — Everyone digs in, entrenched and stubborn. This would be a good day to pursue personal matters and save your enthusiasm for later. It will work out.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 5 — Keep the home fires burning today. You need spacetopursueindependentaction.Asksomeone else to manage plans for this evening.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 6 — Today is all about appearances. Hair and accessories do matter. Achieve a unique look using materials already in your possession. You find yourself on stage.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 5 — Consider ways to keep everyone focused. Creative minds (including yours) have a way of wandering off. Reiterate the purpose.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
VINEA
Score
to
©2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
VOYEC VIEWLS AREPPA Ans:
“
NEW BIBLE Jumble Books Go To: http://www.tyndale.com/jumble/
by Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
” (Answers tomorrow)
Wednesday’s answers
CRANK BUOYED DEMURE Jumbles: NEWLY Answer: When the mobster had surgery, he was in the — “UNDER” WORLD
Sports
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Saluki Insider Five Kentucky players, including the projected No. 1 overall pick John Wall, announced Wednesday they would enter the NBA Draft. What’s your take on this?
Nothing surprising here. Head coach John Calipari is the master of getting one-and-done players. He will probably get a few more next year, then the next year, then before you know it he’ll be leaving the university right when the NCAA brings sanctions against it for recruiting violations. It’s happened everywhere else he’s coached.
STILE T. SMITH
ssmith@dailyegyptian.com
Well there are two NBA-ready players on the squad right now, John Wall and Patrick Patterson. Wall will be a superstar and Patterson will be a solid bench contributor. Cousins will go the way of Tyrus Thomas — someone with great potential but will take time to develop because he left college too soon. Eric Bledsoe will go the way of Sebastian Telfair — a bust because he left way, way too soon.
JEFF ENGERLHARDT
jengerlhardt@dailyegyptian.com
RAY MCGILLIS
Well I was shocked for about as long as a Charlie Sheen relationship. It’s really a shame that college players are allowed to go one-and-done because a team like this year’s Kentucky really has no ceiling to it’s potential. If anything, this year proved one-year college players don’t equal a championship.
rmcgillis@dailyegyptian.com
SOFTBALL
42 years of Saluki softball converge
STILE T. SMITH Daily Egyptian Approximately 80 former players and 42 years of softball history will be reunited Saturday at Southern Illinois University. The SIU softball team will hold a reunion this weekend, welcoming back alumnae from the program’s inception in 1968 through the 2000s. Kerri Blaylock said this is the first reunion of former players since she became head coach in 2000. “I’m just excited to see all the kids that I’ve coached over the last 20 years come back, along with just some of the history of the program,” Blaylock said. “And I really feel like those early alums are the building blocks of why
we’re here and what we have today.” Blaylock said the alumnae would be honored between games in the Salukis’ doubleheader Saturday against Indiana State. Along with approximately 80 former players, Kay Brechtelsbauer, who was the head coach in 1968, when the program was formed, until she retired in 1999, will also be in attendance. Blaylock, who became an assistant under Brechtelsbauer in 1990, said she hopes Brechtelsbauer is happy with the job Blaylock has done since taking over as head coach. “I hope she’s proud of what we’ve accomplished and kind of carried on around here,” Blaylock said. “That’s my biggest thing, is that I hope she feels very, very proud of what we’ve
done.” Brechtelsbauer said she has been pleased with the success Blaylock has led the team. “That’s what you always hope for when you retire, to leave it in good hands,” Brechtelsbauer said. Athletic Director Mario Moccia said bringing alumni back to SIU is always a major focus of the athletic department. “At least in the modern era, we’ve had highly successful coaches and very successful teams and with a new facility as host, it’s going to be a great weekend,” Moccia said.
Stile T. Smith can be reached at ssmith@dailyegyptian.com or 536-3311 ext. 256.
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Daily Egyptian
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Long gives SIU first 2010 verbal
STILE T. SMITH Daily Egyptian
The SIU men’s basketball team may have just filled two needs for next season with one player. Southeastern Illinois College’s 6-foot, 165-pound guard Troy Long verbally committed to SIU Tuesday, becoming the first 2010-11 recruit. Long, who will be a junior, said he could be a vocal leader for the Salukis and provide them with the outside threat they need. “What I bring to the table is exactly what they need this year,” Long said. “They need leadership. They have a few young guys that are very talented
and I think I can bring leadership to the table. They need shooters. I’m a pretty good shooter.” Long helped the Falcons, who were unranked heading into the regional playoffs, finish 24-10 last season. SIC lost to eventual NJCAA national tournament champion Howard (Texas) in the opening round. SIC head coach Todd Franklin said Long’s quickness would also be an asset to the Salukis. “I think he can defend the ball better than maybe they’ve had in the last couple years,” Franklin said. Long averaged 11.9 points and 2.3 assists per game last season in 29 games with the Falcons, and his 60
3-pointers led the team. Long said he has the ability to play either point guard or shooting guard, although he prefers to play the shooting guard position. Long said he decided to play for SIU next season because the team shows of traits similar to that of SIC. “It just seemed like it was a family thing (at SIU),” Long said. “That’s what I want to be around. I want to be around a good family, because without a family you won’t be a team, and that’s what you need to win.”
Stile T. Smith can be reached at ssmith@dailyegyptian.com or 536-3311 ext. 256.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
BILLIKENS BEAT SALUKIS
GENNA ORD | DAILY EGYPTIAN
Doubles partners Jessica Flannery and Jennifer Dien lost in doubles Wednesday when the Salukis lost 5-2 to the Saint Louis Billikens at Sports Blast. For the recap of the match, visit dailyegyptian.com.