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Daily Egyptian WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2015 VOLUME 99 ISSUE 1

SIU student fatally shot while home for break Chicago Tribune A man found shot to death Friday night in County Club Hills was home from college on winter break, family members told the Chicago Tribune Media Group’s SouthTown Star. Justin Haney, 18, was found on West 186th Street and pronounced dead at the scene at 8:30 p.m. Friday, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Following an autopsy Saturday, the office determined Haney died from a gunshot wound in a homicide. Family told the SouthTown Star that Haney was home from Southern Illinois University for winter break. Police were called to the 4500 block of Provincetown Drive in the south suburban city about 7:20 p.m. Friday because someone heard shots fired in the area, according to a release from Country Club

Hills police. While officers were in the area, a neighborhood resident told one of them there was someone down in the snow in the 4400 block of 186th Street, police said. Police went to 186th Street and found a man lying face down in the snow, and paramedics who responded to the scene determined he was dead. The medical examiner’s office said Haney was found dead in the 4100 block of West 186th Street.

Playing for a laugh

Rauner removes Joel Sambursky from SIU Board of Trustees Sarah Gardner

@rabbitearz93 | Daily Egyptian

Gov. Bruce Rauner’s two-day purge of former Gov. Pat Quinn’s appointees across the state hit home for the SIU Board of Trustees. Joel Sambursky, who was appointed to the board in September 2013, was one of more than 100 people ousted Tuesday. Sambursky said in an email he understands Rauner’s desire to present his own recommendations. “I understand this action to be procedural given Governor Rauner’s efforts to combat last-minute appointments which I was not a part of. While disappointed in the news, it is an honor to be able to give back to my alma mater in this way,” Sambursky said in the email. Sambursky served as a member of the board’s architecture and design and audit committees. Student trustee Adrian Miller said there were nearly 200 appointments yet to be confirmed by the senate when Rauner took office. He said there is still a chance Rauner would reappoint Sambursky to his position, and Sambursky being a Republican may help. “Joel has been a phenomenal asset to the board,” Miller said. “I’m disappointed he won’t be with us for the next meeting.” He said having to re-educate a potential new appointee before the next meeting would be unhealthy for the board and the university, and hopes Sambursky will be reappointed before the next meeting. In addition to the challenge of bringing a new appointee up to speed, Miller said if no student trustee is appointed to vote and just one member of the board is absent from the March 19 meeting, there would be an issue of the board meeting quorum. “I would hope that Gov. Rauner will step up and make sure that the vote is appointed for the student vote. … And I hope he does it before the next meeting,” Miller said, “It’s a similar situation to Joel.” The list of people in state positions Rauner has ousted has grown quickly after his inauguration on Monday. In a press conference, Rauner said he was aiming to undo some of Quinn’s appointments made shortly before he left office, according to the Chicago Tribune. “What we’re going to do is across the board cancel all appointments, we are going to cancel all hires, cancel all, rescind all, the actions that the governor has taken since Nov. 1,” Rauner said Monday. He said his office wanted to rescind decisions Quinn made and give all positions a hard look over time. “Rauner’s definitely sent the message statewide that the status quo is coming to a little bit of a change,” Miller said. Sambursky said he was honored to serve his alma mater, and would gladly aid Rauner in the future. “I stand ready and willing to assist [Rauner] in any way possible as we work to support Southern Illinois University,” he said.

H oliday W agner d aily e gyptian “Doc” Dubois plays the trumpet for a laugh in PB&J resale shop on Tuesday in Makanda, Ill. The 84-year-old Korean War veteran visits the store often, bringing one of the owners, Pam Baker, apples and good conversation. “They make these long, cold days entertaining,” Baker said. “I just enjoy coming up here and looking at things,” Dubois said.

Rauner sworn in, says business as usual would be ‘morally corrupt’ Rick Pearson Monique Garcia Kim Geiger Chicago Tribune

Bruce Rauner took over as Illinois governor Monday and asked for shared sacrifice to help him restore a state he described as in decline, beset by financial, moral and ethical crises. The first Republican chief executive in a dozen years laid out what he views as the state’s problems -- shaky finances, lack of competitiveness with other states and a slow-to-grow economy -- and sought to blame them on the lack of pro-business initiatives and mindset. Also assigned responsibility were some of those in the audience there to listen to his inaugural speech, served notice by the new governor that the messy financial condition was the result of decades of bad decisions by politicians of both parties. Rauner vowed to seek bipartisan solutions with a Democratic-dominated General Assembly. Continuing to conduct “business as

we’ve been doing it would be morally corrupt,” Rauner said in pledging to replenish citizen confidence in government that he maintained has been drained away. “I’m nobody that nobody sent,” he said. “And I’ve come to work for you.” The inauguration of Rauner as the state’s 42nd governor marks a new era for Illinois -- a first-time officeholder who has demonstrated he will use his extensive personal wealth and that of his allies to try to leverage political and public support for his initiatives. While successful as an equity investor, questions remain as to how quickly Rauner will grasp the levers of governing after a lengthy campaign filled with heated anti-government, anti-tax rhetoric but lacking specific solutions. Standing before a few thousand people on stage at a less-than-filled Prairie Capital Convention Center and surrounded by his family, Rauner took the oath of office shortly after noon. His 20-minute inaugural address, punctuated often by applause, offered a critical

if not downcast look at state government and its practitioners, from its past financial policies to its politics and ethics. It was a speech that echoed many of the themes and phrases he used in defeating Democrat Pat Quinn in November. The remarks followed a post-election pattern of delivering a litany of the state’s financial problems in an effort to reinforce to voters and taxpayers the need for a difficult -- but still unstated -- agenda that could contrast with his anti-tax positions during the campaign. Underscoring the state’s precarious finances, which include agencies that could run out of money in the short term and a ballooning deficit for the long term, Rauner issued his first executive order aimed at sharply curbing state spending for at least the next six months. Rauner’s order halts all new contracts and grant awards except those deemed to be an emergency or less than $50,000. It also puts a block on any new interstate transportation construction projects. Please see RAUNER · 2


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