Daily Egyptian

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de APRIL 4, 2018

sInce 1916

DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM

Vol.101 Issue 50 @daIlyegyptIan

Senior fashion show Pg. 10

INSIDE:

Tim Beaty pg. 6 | Little Muddy Festival pg. 8 | Dawg talk with Dodd pg. 19


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Contact Us

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About Us

The Daily Egyptian is published by the students of Southern Illinois University Carbondale 43 weeks per year, with an average daily circulation of 11,000. Fall and spring semester editions run every Wednesday. Free copies are distributed in the Carbondale and Carterville communities. The Daily Egyptian can be found daily at www.dailyegyptian.com.

Southern Illinois University School of Law

GENE AND KATY

SIMONDS LECTURE EILEEN NORCROSS

Illinois’ Fiscal Breaking Points: Causes and Consequences of a State in Distress

APRIL 5, 2018 • 5 P.M.

Lesar Law Building Auditorium 1150 Douglas Drive, Carbondale, IL 62901

Mission Statement

The Daily Egyptian, the student-run news organization of Southern Illinois University Carbondale, is committed to being a trusted source of news, information, commentary and public discourse, while helping readers understand the issues affecting their lives.

Publishing Information The Daily Egyptian is published by the students of Southern Illinois University Carbondale and functions as a laboratory for the School of Journalism in exchange for the room and utilities in the Communications Building. The Daily Egyptian is a non-profit organization that survives primarily off of its advertising revenue. Offices are in the Communications Building, Room 1259, at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, Ill., 62901.

Copyright Information © 2018 Daily Egyptian. All rights reserved. All content is property of the Daily Egyptian and may not be reproduced or transmitted without consent. The Daily Egyptian is a member of the Illinois College Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press and College Media Advisers Inc. and the College Business and Advertising Managers Inc.

Reception immediately following

EILEEN NORCROSS is a Senior Research Fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. As director for the Mercatus Center’s State and Local Policy Project, she focuses on questions of public finance and how economic institutions support or hamper economic resiliency and civil society. She specializes in fiscal federalism and institutions, state and local government finance, public sector pensions, public administration, and economic development. She is the lead author of Ranking the States by Fiscal Condition. Individuals with disabilities are welcomed. Call 618/453-5738 to request accommodations.

Submissions

Letters and guest columns must be submitted with author’s contact information, preferably via email. Phone numbers are required to verify authorship, but will not be published. Students must include year and major. Faculty must include rank and department. Others include hometown. Submissions should be sent to editor@dailyegyptian.com.

Photo credit for the front cover:

Brian Munoz | @BrianMMunoz Kyndell Cole, a senior studying fashion design and merchandising from Chatham, holds up a piece of fabric while working on runway pieces Monday in the fashion merchandising studio in Quigley Hall.


Wednesday, april 4, 2018

Bagpipes at sunrise

Reagan Gavin | @RGavin_DE Paul Thompson, known as “the Town Piper,” plays the bagpipes on Sunday during the 82nd annual Easter sunrise service at the Bald Knob Cross of Peace in Alto Pass. “This is a way to honor the Lord,” Thompson said. “The resurrection is the keystone to Christianity and there are historical facts that support that.”

COLA dean nominated for Interim Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs CAMPUS DESK

If approved by the university's Board of Trustees on April 13, Meera Komarraju will become the university's Interim Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, according to a university press release. “If approved by the Board of Trustees, I would be deeply honored to serve SIU Carbondale and advance it in partnership with our students, staff, faculty, campus administrators, alumni and community members” Komarraju said in the release. Currently, Komarraju is the dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Chancellor Carlo Montemagno said in the press release Komarraju will fill an important gap in university leadership. The provost's duties have been divided among other provosts since the retirement of the previous interim provost, Susan Ford in June 2017. “Dr. Komarraju is well qualified to move the revitalization of our academic programs forward,” Montemagno said

in the release. “She is highly respected across campus as an administrator, teacher and researcher who has displayed a strong commitment to SIU throughout her career. She possesses the experience and skills needed to succeed as interim provost.” Komarraju will be responsible for the academic colleges, library affairs, the graduate school, off-campus programs, the honors program, information technology and centers for international education and teaching excellence. She came to the university in 1986 as a lecturer and has served as the director of the Department of Psychology's undergraduate program, chair of the department, and associate dean for student and curricular affairs in COLA. Komarraju was appointed as the dean of the College of Liberal Arts in 2015, according to the release. She is widely published in the field of Psychology, a fellow of the American Psychological Association and a past recipient of university's Outstanding Teacher of the Year award the press release said.

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Asian American, Pacific Islander heritage month emphasizes culture CLAIR COWLEY | DAILY EGYPTIAN

April marks Asian American and Pacific Islander heritage month, featuring events that showcase international opportunity and campus diversity. There are games, workshops, activities, and presentations planned by the SIU multicultural resources center and center for international education for public participation. The kick-off began April 2 at the John C. Guyon auditorium and first floor rotunda lounge at Morris library. Professor and Executive Director of International Affairs Andrew Carver said he is looking forward to taking every opportunity to learn more about Asian American and Pacific Islander culture, from faculty, students, staff and community members who are particpating in this month’s events. “Chancellor Montemagno and Interim Provost Komarraju will speak at the kickoff event," Carver said." The kickoff will also feature refreshments and a calligraphy demonstration and workshop.” Carver said since Congress passed a joint Congressional Resolution in 1978, Asian American and Pacific Islander heritage month has been a celebration of the culture, traditions, and history of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States. “Importantly, we celebrate these diverse cultures and traditions because they are woven into the fabric of our very own campus and Carbondale community and are part of the global Saluki experience,” Carver said. He outlined a wide variety of sports play in the Asian American experience that have a important role from the

standpoints of player and spectator. “Beyond baseball and basketball, take the sport of cricket for example, wildly popular in South Asian and arguably the world’s second most followed sport behind soccer,” Carver said. The student recreation center will host the International Games. The sports basketball, futsal (indoor soccer), badminton, volleyball, and cricket will be played. “How many other opportunities will the SIU community have to experience a competitive cricket match,” Carver said. The career development and resource clinic is sponsoring the International Career workshops. Community and educational programs coordinator of the center for international education Elaine Conrad said the workshops are designed for international students to get tips on writing a resume and cover letter for U.S. American employers. “The workshops will also cover the differences between resumes for other countries and the U.S.," Conrad said." The second part of the workshop will cover interviewing tips and practice.” The month also highlights a presentation on reverse innovation and how design in China has changed the world. Assisant professor in the school of Art and Design Tao Huang said since the late 1970s, the world has witnessed the extraordinary development of manufacturing and design in China. Huang was invited by the student multicultural resource center and the center for international education to participate. “I wanted to give this presentation because it is an excellent story about China, it is also about a little-known

fact,” Huang said. “A great number of new Chinese companies have been established and many of them have achieved international success." Huang said more and more, these companies begin to recognize the value of design and rely heavily on design to enhance their competitiveness in the global market. “Through the years, design in the region has progressed from basic imitations to creative and sophisticated solutions to satisfy local and international needs,” Huang said. She also said that we might be using these products daily, yet have no idea that they are designed in a very different cultural context. She said the lecture what lecture? can help improve the understanding of design and culture. “My presentation is about the story of design in China in the past 40 years and how it has changed the lives of millions around the world,” Huang said. She said these innovations created in the developing regions and trickle up to the developed world. Huang plans on capturing three main points during his presentation. She will answer what reverse innovation is, give examples from China, how they affect everyone and how you participate in the conversation. Her presentation “Reverse Innovation: How Design in China Changed the World” will be held April 27 from 2-3 p.m. in the center for international education lobby in Woody hall, wing D. For a complete schedule of events, visit www.smrc.siu.edu. Staff writer Clair Cowley can be reached at ccowley@dailyegyptian.com.


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Trump threatens to send military forces to guard US-Mexico border CHRIS SOMMERFELDT & DENIS SLATTERY | New York Daily News

President Donald Trump on Tuesday threatened to send military forces to secure the southern border on Tuesday as he continued to vent frustration over the lack of progress on his longpromised wall. "We are going to be guarding our border with the military," Trump said Tuesday during a White House lunch with Baltic leaders. He called the measure a "big step." The U.S. Border Patrol is currently tasked with protecting the U.S.Mexico border. Trump has railed in recent days against "weak" immigration laws in

the U.S. _ declaring protections for young immigrants "dead," accusing Democrats of allowing "open borders, drugs and crime," and warning Mexico to halt the passage of "caravans" of immigrants. Throughout the 2016 election, Trump campaigned on the promise of a "big, beautiful" wall that would be paid for by Mexico. After taking office he said that Congress should approve the use of taxpayer funds to cover the $25 billion his administration said would be needed to start work on the project. Trump has also privately floated the idea of funding the construction of border wall through the Pentagon, arguing it is a national security priority.

There are strict rules that prohibit such spending that's not authorized by Congress. "Until we can have a wall and proper security, we're going to be guarding our border with the military," Trump said Tuesday. "We really haven't done that before, or certainly not very much before." The call for troops along the border does recall a project started by former President George W. Bush. Bush's so-called Operation Jump Start, which spanned between 2006 and 2008, differed from Trump's proposal in that National Guard members were only called to support Border Patrol agents with administrative, observational and intelligence operations.

Due to the heated political nature of militarizing the border, Bush assured then-Mexican President Vicente Fox that the National Guard were not involved in any law enforcement activities. Trump, who last year ended the Obama-era program that allowed immigrants brought to the country as children to work legally here, vowed to pull the U.S. out of NAFTA should Mexico not show greater force in stopping people from crossing the border. He has also bristled at news coverage of Honduran migrants who have been marching through Mexico in recent days. The "Stations of the Cross" migrant caravans have been held in southern

Mexico for at least the last five years. Mexico started breaking up the group on Monday evening. Despite Trump's claims that the wall is necessary to prevent drugs and undocumented immigrants from entering the country, the Department of Homeland Security said in December that illegal crossings are at the lowest levels in nearly 50 years. Illegal border crossing arrests were down 25 percent in 2017, compared with a year earlier. "The Mexican border is very unprotected by our laws. We have horrible, horrible and very unsafe laws in the United States," Trump said. "We are going to be able to do something about that hopefully soon."

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For more information on Army ROTC opportunities at Southern Illinois University - Carbondale, call 618-453-4984 or visit goarmy.com/rotc/summer18

Š2017. Paid for by the United States Army. All rights reserved.


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Photo provided by Jessica Beaty Tim Beaty performing at Lost Cross house.

'He died helping others just as he had lived his whole life,' father and friends of Tim Beaty reflect on his life KITT FRESA | @kittfresa

Father of Tim Beaty said two years after his sons death, he has begun to feel closure and necessary justice served by the jury's verdict which found Travis Tyler guilty on March 27. “I feel that necessary justice was served by the jury verdict of guilty. After two years I have begun to feel a little closure. However, there are no feelings of victory or even a hint of elation,” Tim’s father, Don Beaty said. “All I see is, due to a senseless act of gun violence, my loving son is gone.” According to a press release from the Jackson County State's Attorney, Travis Tyler was found guilty of first-degree murder, aggravated battery with a firearm and aggravated discharge of a

firearm. “Due to this senseless act, a man will spend most of his adult life in prison causing suffering within his family and added financial burden on all of society," Don Beaty said. "There are no winners, only profound loss.” Tim Beaty died on March 27, 2016, when he was hit by a stray bullet after a house party for the Phi Beta Sigma graduate fraternity erupted in gunfire. A stampede pushed the party outside after a man identified as Nehemiah Greenlee was shot. Three of the five SIU student-athletes who last saw Tim Beaty alive said at the party they estimated at least 15 to 20 more shots were fired. As gunmen opened fire, two student-athletes frozen in fear were caught near the crossfire, the


Wednesday, april 4, 2018 article said. Beaty pulled the students into his home to protect them. “He’s the one who actually pushed us into the house,” One of the students who chose to stay anonymous said of Beaty in a previous Daily Egyptian article. “The whole time he just kept tell us ‘stay down, stay down, stay down,’ and then all the sudden, we didn’t hear anything anymore.” She said when the nearly two dozen gunshots stopped popping, the two women checked on Beaty who had collapsed to the floor and was breathing but unresponsive. An ambulance was called for Beaty but he was pronounced dead at Memorial Hospital of Carbondale at 4:20 a.m. Sunday March 27. “He died helping others just as he had lived his whole life,” Don Beaty said. One of Tim’s friends, Amy Graziano said she thought everybody was satisfied with the verdict. “I don’t think anyone is celebrating or gloating in any way, it doesn’t change the fact that a terribly senseless, sad and horrifying thing happened to our friend,” Graziano said. “It’s not going to bring him back.” Graziano met Beaty in the summer of 1999 at The Cellar, in Carbondale. “He knew everyone and was super friendly and would go around," Graziano said. "whether he knew you or not really and would sort of include you in the conversation.” Another friend of Tim Dayna Hartley said she met him through taking pictures for the band. The Bourbon Knights. “There were so many guys in the band, there was just two of us girls and a lot of times I feel like they didn’t really hear girl voices,” Hartley said. “I would say something I thought was funny and if I looked around usually Tim was the only one paying

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Photo provded by Jessica Beaty

Tim Beaty with his son, Jacob.

attention to me.” Christina Deleonardis said she met Tim and became friends with him after they met in Carbondale’s music scene. “Everyone gravitated towards him because he was so funny and so friendly," Deleonardis said. "He would make fun of everyone and himself.”

Graziano said when Tim died many people said it was Tim’s openness that made them feel welcome, whether they were new to Carbondale or just to Tim’s group of friends. “They said ‘Tim was the only person who made me feel welcome when I first started hanging out with this group of people’ or ‘I

came to a show feeling a little bit weird because I just moved here and I didn’t know anyone and then Tim came up and handed me a beer, introduced himself and it was like I was apart of something,’” Graziano said. She said Tim had friends that were 18 and friends that were in their 70’s and that was the kind of

person Tim was. “Every single person who knew him has a huge hole in their lives, because he was the type of person you couldn’t not notice him being gone,” Graziano said. Features Editor Kitt Fresa can be reached at kfresa@dailyegyptian. com or on Twitter at @kittfresa.

“Everyone gravitated towards him because he was so funny and so friendly. He would make fun of everyone and himself. ” - Christina Deleonardis friend of Tim


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A showcase for students to enjoy each other's art: The Little Muddy Film and Media Festival KITT FRESA | @kittfresa

The Little Muddy Film and Media Festival will be showcasing various media forms for the fourth year on April 13th from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in Guyon Auditorium. The event is free to the campus and local community. While the Big Muddy Film Festival showcases films from around the world, one of their few rules are that Students at Southern Illinois University cannot submit. This is where the Little Muddy comes in, the Little Muddy Film and Media Festival is exclusive to SIU students. “The Little Muddy is basically an annual extension of the Big Muddy. So where the Big Muddy is the external, emerging and accomplished filmmakers, the Little Muddy is kind of our celebration of the artistry and skill that our students here at SIU are learning and a chance for them to showcase all of that,” Next year’s Big Muddy Film Festival President, Aster Arseneau said. The festival is open to several different forms of media and art giving students an opportunity to showcase their work. Students can still submit their work until April 10th at https://filmfreeway.com/ TheLittleMuddyFestival. Films should be 10 minutes or under. “We’re expecting all sorts of media, films, videos, animation, photography, GIFs, digital art, honestly the whole spectrum of what you would typically see on social media,” Current Big Muddy

Film Festival President, Kelechi Agwuncha said. Agwuncha said the festival is accepting forms media ranging from short films, GIFs and digital art. The Little Muddy is encouraging all forms of art to enter the realm of competition. The festival is less of a competition and more of an opportunity for students to enjoy each other’s work Agwuncha said. “It brings many of the RSOs of mass comm together to just present their work, despite the fact that it seems like a competition it’s honestly a showcase of student work because we never had that space to see everyone’s work collectively and without tension,” Agwuncha said. “That’s what we’re trying to do with little muddy, just to provide a neutral, unified platform for people to show their work to others.” Awards will be given out to

artists who submit along with first, second, and third place prizes. Some of those prizes include Big Muddy merch from past festivals, gift cards, and even a possible recognition on the mass communication website. Little Muddy is changing things up a bit this year as well going from three to four jurors. These jurors will be the ones deciding the winners along with giving critique to artist’s works. This year’s jurors are MFA student Lindsey Washington, Film Critic and Professor Walter Metz, Art History Lecturer Angela Reinoehl and Honorary Juror Rhonda Rothrock. The Little Muddy Film and Media Festival is free to all and free pizza will be offered at the festival as well. Staff writer Kitt Fresa can be reached at kfresa@dailyegyptian.com

“It brings many of the RSOs of mass comm together to just present their work, despite the fact that it seems like a competition, it's honestly a showcase of student work because we never had that space to see everyones work collectivelly and without tension.” - Kelechi Agwuncha President, Big Muddy Film Festival


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87-year-old Trigg Ozark Tour to visit ancient stone forts in the region TYLER MALONE | Daily Egyptian

People participating in the 2018 Trigg Ozark tour on April 7 will visit the mysterious and ancient stone forts found throughout the Shawnee National Forest. During this year's tour, Native American stonefort sites will be visited this year which are hundreds of years old; some recently discovered by the university said Mark Wagner an Associate Professor and Director for the Center for Archeological Investigations. Several professionals, including Wagner, will be with the touring group to provide interpretations of the various sites that will be visited. The very first Trigg Ozark tour happened in 1931 an organizer of the Ozark tours said Todd Curr, an organizer of the tour. Lindolph Oscar Trigg started the Trigg Ozark tours long ago to boost tourism in southern Illinois area both Curr and Wagner said. During that time southern Illinois did not have any kind of forest preserve. In 1931, Curr said Trigg recommended having the Shawnee forest and Ozark areas as a national forest preserve. By 1933 a full petition for the Shawnee forest and Ozark Areas to be national forest preserves was sent to Washington by Trigg, Curr said. By 1939 the area became an official national forest thanks to Trigg’s hard work. Curr said Trigg guided tours until his death in 1949. After his death, the Trigg Ozark tours continued until 1970, but the tours of the area gradually became less popular after the death of Trigg, Curr said. It wasn’t until 2013 that a national forest preserve worker found old tour guide books and brought back the tradition of the

Trigg Ozark tours. Since then, the tours have been held semi-annually and have visited various sites in the southern Illinois forest preserve region from waterfalls to archeological locations Curr said. Native American stonefort sites that will be visited this year are hundreds-years-old; some recently discovered by the university, Wagner said. Wagner’s archaeological interests and specialties are in prehistory and the early history of both Native Americans and Europeans in Illinois and the lower Ohio River Valley. “This year’s tour is focused on visits to several Late Woodland stone forts from around 600 to 900 CE in the Shawnee Hills where local Late Woodland people constructed walls up to six feet high,” Wagner said. The two leading theories for why these mysterious stoneforts were constructed are that they were used for either ceremonial reasons or, as their name suggests, that the stoneforts were used as protection, Wagner said. “Also featured on the tour is a visit to a hominy hole site where Archaic people from 7,000 to 1000 BCE constructed mortar holes to grind seed and nut crops,” Wagner said. The spring tour will be visiting three of the eleven known stoneforts in the southern Illinois area. “The first recorded documentation of the stoneforts was in 1807 by general land officer surveyors,” said Shawnee forest preserve supervisor Mary McCorvie. “The pioneers also noticed them as “pounds” where they thought the Native American impounded deer behind the rock wall for later use.”

“The first recorded documentation of the stoneforts was in 1807 by general land officer surveyors. The pioneers also noticed them as 'pounds' where they thought the Native Americans impounded deer behind the rock wall for use later” - Mary McCorvie Supervisor, Shawnee forest preserve

McCorvie will be attending the Ozark tour and will guide participants through the area. “We will be visiting a number of prehistoric Native American sites that are located relatively near each other. Including the Stonefort Bluff stonefort, Murray Bluff stonefort and Millstone Bluff which has a stone fort as well as a village and cemetery with rock art.” McCorvie said. The total cost of the tour for people who interested in attending is $40, according to a press release. The admission will pay for the cost of transportation, lunch, a guidebook for the tour, a t-shirt, and the collect cost of having the professionals on the tour, Curr said. Staff writer Tyler Malone can be reached at tmalone@dailyegyptian.com.

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Brian Munoz | @BrianMMunoz Emily Hennenfent, a senior studying fashion design and merchandising from Wataga, reacts while altering her dress for the senior design runway show Monday in the fashion merchandising studio in Quigley Hall. Hennenfent's line is based on clothing from the Marie Antoinette era.

Joshua Gavel, a senior studying fashion design and merchandising from Champaign, fashion merchandising studio in Quigley Hall.

Fashion design students to showcase

KITT FRESA | @KITTFRESA

Students in the Fashion Design and Merchandising program have been working on handmade garments to present in the 2018 Student Showcase and Runway Fashion Show. Approximately 170 students across campus have contributed to the show including cosmetology students from John A. Logan Community College. The event is free and open to the public and will begin at 6:00 p.m. in the J.W. Corker Lounge on April 26. The runway fashion show will start at 7:00 p.m. in Student Center

Ballroom D. Laura Kidd, an associate professor of Architecture at SIU and organizer of the fashion show said the first half of the show will feature garments created by freshman, sophomore and junior students. The event will end with feature runway shows with garment collections from twelve senior fashion designers. Kidd has orchestrated the annual fashion show and supervised the senior designers as they create their final collections since 1997. Her duties as organizer include producing the show, writing the

narrations, and collaborating with others on lighting and sound cues. Kidd said fashion shows at the university have been going on since the 40s and 50s. Senior designers have been working on their collections all year in preparation for the fashion show with each designer has around eight garments in a collection, Kidd said. “In the fall we start by the line concept and they do their designs, then they get approved,” Kidd said. “Then they have to scout all their models. They have to source all their music, they have to do the

choreography for the show.” She said each designer is responsible for sourcing all of the fabric required for their garments. She said the senior designers prepare for a lot of the show, which showcases their collection that serves as their final. In the second semester each of the designers do the pattern drafting to create the patterns, Kidd said. Then, they concentrate mainly on the garment fittings and preparing them to be worn for showcase. “We usually have standing room only,” Kidd said. “I would say we have

got to be one of the biggest student events. I mean we pack them in, we absolutely pack them in every single year, kind of unbelievable.” Kidd said many people come from not only the university but the community as well. She said it’s nice to see it all come together because there’s so much work involved in it. One of the senior designers this year is Olivia Martinez, who said her trip abroad to France and Switzerland last summer inspired some of her work for the show. “I got most of my inspiration


Wednesday, april 4, 2018

Brian Munoz | @BrianMMunoz , puts together clothing for the senior design runway show Monday in the

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Brian Munoz | @BrianMMunoz Olivia Martinez, a senior studying fashion design and merchandising from Round Lake, works on sewing a garment Monday in the fashion merchandising studio in Quigley Hall.

e final works in runway fashion show from the architecture, the colors, the streetwear that’s over there," Martinez said. "A lot of my look this year is black, white with metallic and hints of color, mostly purple and pink.” Martinez’s garments include dresses, skirts, pants, tops and others. Martinez said designers start with a concept in mind, write it down and do a flat which is a drawing that selects what fabrics go where. After that designers move on to muslin fabric which is a prototype that’s tweaked until perfection. Once the prototype is finished designers move onto actual fashion

fabric which is the fabric that the outfit is going to be made out of and go on the runway, Martinez said. Martinez said she would like to keep designing garments just like the ones for the show but she said she’s open to where the job is. “It’s a really competitive industry so I’m looking at Nashville, Memphis, Kansas City, anywhere that I can get a job in the industry,” Martinez said. “I would ultimately like to design under a designer or be under somebody, I don’t really care to be famous at all.” Senior Designer Emily Hennenfent said the fashion show is the biggest

thing fashion students do in the major. “It’s the biggest thing we do in our four years here so there’s a lot of work that goes into it,” Hennenfent said. She said the fashion program slowly escalates it’s students requiring sophomores and juniors do mini-lines in anticipation for their senior year. Hennenfent said for the fashion show sophomores create a collection of three garments, juniors create five, and seniors create eight at the minimum. Hennenfent is going to graduate school in costume design and said she wants to do more theatrical and historically inspired costumes.

“I took inspiration from the Rococo period, Marie Antoinette kind of the luxurious exuberance that they had and I kind of modernized it using more modern colors….lots of sequins and jacquards that they would have used back then but kind of deconstructing it,” Hennenfent said. For some of Hennenfent’s garments she took the cages that were typically worn underneath rococo period dresses and exposed them to the outside. “Historically they would’ve had cages and corsets underneath their gowns, but I’m kind of taking those things and pulling them out and making them

visible,” Hennenfent said. Kidd said it’s interesting to see how different the garments and collections all are. “I really never had many years if any, where everybody seemed to come up with the same stuff, it’s always a little different,” Kidd said. “I think that’s kind of nice and it’s very interesting to see it develop. It’s always interesting to see the light bulb finally go on their head where they finally get it.” Features Editor Kitt Fresa can be reached at kfresa@dailyegyptian.com or on Twitter at @kittfresa.


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Column: A researched response to the comments section for no cop academy SAM BEARD | Student Trustee

There will be no cop academy at SIU. To some, opposition to the proposed cop academy at SIU makes little sense, as evidenced by comments sections attached to the various articles surrounding the new, local movement against it. They think that the cops exist to fight crime and promote safety. This view of the cops, however, ignores their actual role in society, historically and today. Police scholar David Bayley writes, “The police do not prevent crime. This is one of the best kept secrets of modern life. Experts know it, the police know it, but the public does not know it. Yet the police pretend that they are society's best defense against crime and continually argue that if they are given more resources, especially personnel, they will be able to protect communities against crime. This is a myth.” The actual social role of the police is articulated by sociologist Alex Vitale in The End of Policing: “The reality is that the police exist primarily as a system for managing and even producing inequality by suppressing social movements and tightly managing the behaviors of poor and nonwhite people: those on the losing end of economic and political arrangements.” The police are always the violent defenders of the rules made by the powerful. There is no honest look at their history that can deny these facts. Many police don't think of their jobs in this way. Some enter the job with noble intentions of protecting people, keeping them safe. Of course, some of them are overt white supremacists, who find the job is consistent with

their genocidal worldview. But regardless of what they believe as individuals, their social function remains the same. They are trained to see the world through a lens of paranoia, they accept the laws they are given as legitimate, and accept their own use of violence as justified. To criticize the police is certainly not to say that they all have evil intentions. It is to say that, in many cases, they know not what they do. Cops pledge to violently enforce the conditions that create the crime and violence that they think they are fighting. Michelle Alexander notes in her indispensable book, The New Jim Crow, that in 1970 the U.S. Congress commissioned a study by the American Sociological Association on how to reduce crime. The answer was clear: reduce poverty. Most violent crimes, from domestic abuse to robbery and gang violence, are rooted in an economic caste system that keeps some people in a constant state of battling for scraps of money and dignity against others. Prisons and police do not reduce violent crime, just as a 40 year long war on drugs has not reduced drug use or sales. Rather than reducing poverty, however, the last 40 years have seen an explosion of inequality, and consequently, an explosion of police to manage the effects of it. The U.S. now locks up more of its population than any other country in the history of the world, including the Soviet Union at the height of the Gulag system. This is not an accident. The war on drugs, which has been the major justification for growing police departments around the country, was a cynical attempt to destroy the movements for

Brian Munoz | @BrianMMunoz Sam Beard, Southern Illinois University Carbondale student trustee poses for a portrait Feb. 26, outside of the communications building in Carbondale, Illinois.

liberation and equality of the 1960s and 1970s. This was clearly stated by Nixon's domestic policy advisor, John Erlichman, in a 1994 interview: “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of

course we did.” Today, there are growing social movements against police murder, inequality, and ecological catastrophe. Universities are one of the few places where people can have the time to reflect on and study the conditions of our society that the police use violence to defend. They are not a place for a training ground for the agents of that violence. The embattled Chancellor, like so many people in positions of power, does not see it this way. He is taking the cowardly side of a social struggle, one that seeks to align SIU with the Blue Lives Matter reaction to the protests of police murders, with Trump and the neofascists who worship police power. It is our job, as students and

members of this community, to make it clear that we see the police for what they are, and that we respect our learning about history and society enough to insist that a cop academy not be built at SIU. At the No Cop Academy demonstration in the student center last week, we said: “There will be no cop academy at SIU.” Say out loud, believe it, and let's do what it takes to make it true. #NoCopAcademy Student Trustee Sam Beard can be reached at samuelrobert@siu.edu or by phone at (618) 453-8418. His office is located in the Registered Student Organization Suite on the third floor of the Student Center and his office hours are Mondays and Thursdays: 12:30 pm – 2 pm or by appointment.


Wednesday, aPril 4, 2018

Page 13

Letter to the Editor: Complacency will wrap white supremacy into fiscal responsibility BEAU A. HENSON | PHD STUDENT

As the university attempts to restructure into a more efficient regional entity, we are again experiencing the confluence of our darkest historic forces within race relations, state violence, and economics. The chancellor has put forth a devastating combination: the creation of a Homeland Security school and the weakening or elimination of the humanities. The most noteworthy being the delayed elimination of Africana Studies. Students, faculty, administration, and community have a duty to join in the call for #NoCopAcademySIU. Our university has fallen prey to the dismantling of higher education commonplace in the American Midwest. During twenty years of draconian funding cuts and a decade-plus drop in enrollment, SIU strategized aggressive recruiting in Chicagoland. The concurrent struggles of the Great Recession created a heightened sense of crime in the surrounding local community, crime rooted in the stresses of poverty. Unsurprisingly, we as a community were eager to blame crime of economics on those of nonwhite racial heritage. The racial and class hierarchy of the U.S. has never been eliminated but has preserved itself through transforming in different historical contexts. The creation of a Homeland Security school is an example of such a transformation and it’s wrapped in the guise of fiscal responsibility. SIU has identified state control and police

violence as a growth market. #NoCopAcademySIU adeptly identifies the problem. SIU is rebranding itself as a white university.

“The concurrent struggles of the Great Recession created a heightened sense of crime in the surrounding local community, crime rooted in the stresses of poverty.� - Beau Henson PhD student

When we demand the death of one form of exploitation, it is cleverly replaced by another system. The grotesque institution of chattel slavery gave way to concerted efforts of public racial terrorism. Segregation was codified into Jim Crow until people could no longer stomach the resulting violence they experienced through their newspapers and televisions. After the First Civil Rights Era, similar codes were introduced in smaller doses until we find a generation disenfranchised, hidden away by Mass Incarceration. Throughout the centuries, the police and other security forces have always been the protectors of this paradigm. We cannot afford to

ignore our history when race, money, and violence intersect. While introducing paramilitary training facilities is an unwanted addition, this is not the university’s only whitewashing effort; as it has refused to extend formal protections to our immigrant population. If we stay silent, our African-American friends and those of Hispanic and Middle Eastern descent are being told to go away. In return, we will produce police officers and security forces groomed from the immediate, overwhelmingly white demographic area. The restructuring is a generational plan. There will not be a second chance. Let us lend our collective voices to the brave students and faculty of #NoCopAcademySIU. We are in an exciting time to be alive. Perhaps, during conversations with parents and grandparents, you dreamed of how you would have reacted if faced with all arms of the State coming to bear on dissent. No longer are we forced to deal in hypothetical wonder. Not since the Civil Rights and AntiWar Eras of the 1950-1970’s has the youth of our communities faced such struggle. The Board of Trustees meet on April 12th. Sincerely, Beau A. Henson PhD Student, Political Science and Sustainable Development Community Economic Developer Delta Leadership Fellow City of Carbondale Planning and Zoning Commissioner Disabled US Veteran Son of a Police Officer

GREEN DAWGS DAY | Sunday April 8, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. t -FBSO BCPVU FOWJSPONFOUBM BOE SFDSFBUJPOBM PQQPSUVOJUJFT t .FFU BOE OFUXPSL XJUI QSPGFTTJPOBMT JO UIFTF mFMET t '3&& [JQ MJOJOH SPDL DMJNCJOH DBOPFJOH IJLJOH BOE NVDI NPSF t Project Wild XPSLTIPQ B N Q N

Visit ton.siu.edu for more details. Individuals with disabilities are welcomed. Call 618/453-5738 to request accommodations.

618/453-1121 | tonec@siu.edu | ton.siu.edu

STUDENT GREEN FEE


Wednesday, aPril 4, 2018

Page 14

Answers for Wednesday >> Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www. sudoku.org.uk


Wednesday, april 4, 2018

page 15

FOR RELEASE APRIL 4, 2018

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

ACROSS 1 Whirlpool brand 6 “M*A*S*H” actor Jamie 10 Italian smoker 14 Saint Kitts neighbor 15 Drink with a polar bear mascot 16 Overflow (with) 17 Civil rights org. 18 Alum 19 End of a Basque ball game? 20 She walked into Rick’s gin joint 21 Tournament that awards a green jacket 23 Springsteen’s __ Band 25 Speech therapy subject 26 Museum collection 27 Show of strength? 29 Montreal Canadien, to hockey fans 32 Wolfgang Puck restaurant chain 35 Litigant 36 Golfer’s target 37 Home of 21-Across 40 Real estate measure 41 Quizzes 42 Colgate rival 43 “Full Frontal” host Samantha 44 Website with a “Craft Supplies & Tools” section 45 Fenway team: Abbr. 46 Totally at sea 48 Actress Redgrave 52 Exciting section of 37-Across, familiarly ... and a configuration found in four apt places in this puzzle 56 Rating unit 57 Tennis score 58 Granola grain 59 Skinny South American country 60 Swimming event 61 Formerly, formerly

4/4/18

By David Poole

62 Songwriter Leonard 63 __ Domini 64 Ball belles 65 2014 film set in Alabama DOWN 1 Miss Hannigan’s charge 2 Board, in “room and board” 3 Sailor’s “Halt!” 4 Central American nation 5 Egyptian viper 6 Argue 7 Farm field unit 8 Paper order 9 Emergency status 10 Les __-Unis 11 Whispering party game 12 Warm, in a game 13 French friends 21 Asian New Year 22 Joe Torre’s retired Yankee uniform number 24 God with a bow 27 Musty-smelling 28 Grazing grounds 30 “What a shame!” 31 Karate skill award 32 Swedish auto

Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

33 Unadulterated 34 Anna Paquin won her Oscar for “The Piano” at it 35 Insolence 36 Good luck symbol 38 Drew on? 39 Tapped symbol 44 PC bailout key 45 “Cheers” setting 47 “You’re __ talk!” 48 Three-piece pieces

4/4/18 3/21/2018

49 Chain saw brand 50 Western state capital 51 Toronto’s Rogers Centre, for one 52 __ mater 53 Faucet brand 54 Few and far between 55 Accident investigation agcy. 59 Dosage amts.


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Wednesday, aPril 4, 2018

NEIGHBORHOOD CO-OP

FEED YOUR NEIGHBOR RUN/WALK

5K

2018

Friday, April 6 • Turley Park • Carbondale

Neighborhood Co-op Grocery hosts an annual Feed Your Neighbor 5K. Monies raised will be donated to the Good Samaritan House of Carbondale. In addition, we are asking for donations of non-perishable goods for the SIU Food Pantry. • Registration opens at 4:00 pm for preregistered and day of sign-ups • Race starts at 6:00 pm • Professionally timed

• Certified course • Great door prizes • Live music by The Anns • Snacks and refreshments

Event is listed on Facebook

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS!

Daily Egyptian • Southern Illinois Healthcare (SIH) Silkworm, Inc. • River Radio AES Solar • Banterra Bank • Hudgins Orthodontics • The UPS Store - Murdale Little Grassy Lake Campground & Marina • Lezlie Terry - Intuitive Massage Pediatrics Group LLC • SINC • The Southern Illinoisan Shawnee Bluffs Canopy Tour • Carbondale Park District • City of Carbondale • Judge Carey Gill Dr. Neisha Bhattacharya • First Southern Bank • Old Town Liquors • Amanda Byassee Gott Arthur Agency • Navreet Kang - State Farm • Walker’s Bluff • IKE Honda • 710 Custom

Sign-up online at

www.neighborhood.coop Murdale Shopping Center 1815 W. Main St., Carbondale IL • 618-529-3533

Brian Munoz | @BrianMMunoz Northern Illinois catcher Joe Jumonville waits for the pitch March 10, during the Salukis' 7-2 victory against the Northern Illinois University Huskies at Itchy Jones Stadium.

Saluki baseball gears up for conference schedule DILLON GILLILAND | @DillonGilliland

With conference play underway for Saluki baseball, the team will look to continue its recent success following a slow start to the season. Just 11 games into the season, SIU was looking at a sub .500 season as they kicked things off with a 3-8 record, suffering sweeps to Jacksonville State and Louisiana Monroe. Since then, however, the Salukis have turned things around with an 11-5 record following the final game against Louisiana Monroe on March 4. SIU's five losses since then were nothing to laugh about, as two losses went to extra innings and two came at the hands of No. 24 Illinois. With that being said, the Salukis claimed one victory from the Fighting Illini and a series win against UC Irvine, three solid wins for the team's résumé. The main reason for the team's success could be attributed to a variety of factors, as the Salukis have improved their game in a number of areas including starting pitching.

Prior to the season, senior starting pitcher Michael Baird was selected to Preseason All-MVC Team, however, he struggled early in the year with a 7.71 earned run average. Since then, Baird has chipped away at the high ERA with a string of solid outings, including an eight-inning shutout against Northern Illinois, bringing his ERA to 4.08 at the time of writing. "I just try and do the best I can each and every day," Baird said after his win against Northern Illinois. "I try to give my team a chance to win every single outing." Southern also found its hidden gem in the rotation in the form of sophomore pitcher Brad Harrison. Harrison has made a name for himself in the Saluki lineup as he is currently 3-1 with a 3.29 ERA at the time of writing. Coming off a 0-3 season with a 7.09 ERA, the sophomore said that he has learned a lot since his debut at Southern. "Every freshman has a little hump to get over at some point, you just


Wednesday, aPril 4, 2018 have to be a little more perfect with your pitches," Harrison said. "In high school, you could get away with being heavy on the fastball, but in college, you have to be able to get your offspeed over and be able to attack guys in different ways." Head coach Ken Henderson said that he believes one of the reasons for his team's slow start was the fact that the team had several new faces coming into the season. "We had so many new people who were new to Division I baseball," Henderson said. "We just got off to a slow start, but we have gotten better every day." Aside from the lack of experience on the roster, the offense struggled outside of the batters at the top of the lineup. However, in recent games, the bottom of the lineup has featured SIU's most production on offense. The most notable is freshman third baseman Grey Epps, who is arguably the team's most improved offensive player. "You throw a freshman into Division I games, it can take a while, but he is making huge strides," Henderson said. Epps entered the season in a battle for a starting position at third base but has proved to be one of SIU's best infielders, as he has only one error is 22 appearances. However, when it came to batting, Epps did not find his first hit until his sixth game of the season. An owner of a .169 batting average at the time of writing, Epps looks like a new hitter, raising the average all the way from .057. On March 20, Epps turned in a three-hit effort at SIUE and cranked his first career home run on March 30 against Illinois State. "I've changed some things with my swing," Epps said. "I'm starting to see the ball better and I'm finally getting some results." Players in the top of the lineup have said that with the bottom of the lineup now producing, it is providing more opportunities for them. "They've been hitting really well," junior second baseman Nikola Vasic said. "It gives us more opportunities

Page 17

Brian Munoz | @BrianMMunoz Southern Illinois junior pitcher Mason Hiser launches the ball March 10, during the Salukis' 7-2 victory against the Northern Illinois University Huskies at Itchy Jones Stadium.

with them getting into scoring position. Now we get more fastballs in the top of the order and it just makes our lives a lot easier." Southern kicked off conference play on March 30 with a three-game series against Illinois State, who was picked to finish fifth in the MVC in the preseason poll. In that series, SIU took two of the three games to open MVC play with a 2-1 record.

Although the games have more importance now, Southern's approach has not changed. "You can't change your mindset at all," Vasic said. "You have to keep it simple. It's just another game and you have to play it that way." As the conference schedule continues to unfold, the players look forward to playing the top teams in the conference.

"DBU [Dallas Baptist University] and Missouri State, they're usually at the top every year," Vasic said. "I look forward to trying to knock them out and take a series against them." With the improvements the team has made, Henderson said that the team has not reached its full potential. "We're still not as good as we're going to be," Henderson said. "But I

do like where we are at heading into league play." The Salukis will be back in action on April 4 with a home game against Austin Peay and will continue conference play on April 6 with a threegame series against Valparaiso. Sports reporter Dillon Gilliland can be reached at dgilliland@dailyegyptian. com or on Twitter at @DillonGilliland.


Page 18

Wednesday, aPril 4, 2018

John J. Kim | Chicago Tribune Loyola head coach Porter Moser addresses fans as the team celebrates after a 78-62 win against Kansas State in an NCAA Tournament regional final at Philips Arena in Atlanta on March 24.

Expectations rise for Loyola next season SHANNON RYAN | Chicago Tribune

As Loyola left the Final Four court Saturday night in disappointment, coach Porter Moser hugged Christian Negron, a freshman forward who played sporadically in 17 games. He told Negron, "Your offseason starts when we get back." Moser told freshman Lucas Williamson he'll be following in senior Ben Richardson's footsteps. He indicated the leadership he will expect from freshman center Cameron Krutwig. "I just said, 'You guys are the keepers of the culture now,' " Moser said. "You want it to sustain with the guys." Loyola tasted success it hadn't enjoyed in 55 years, slaying giants as a No. 11 seed all the way to the national semifinals with a 69-57 loss to No. 3 seed Michigan. The bar has risen in Chicago, where expectations will be great after the Ramblers put together a 32-6 season that included their first Missouri Valley Conference

championship, league tournament title and first Gentile Arena sellout since 2003. MVC defensive player of the year Richardson (6.9 points per game), Aundre Jackson (11 points per game) and Donte Ingram (11 points, 6.4 rebounds per game), the seniors, will be gone. The Ramblers still feature a strong core. Williamson and Krutwig gained valuable experience this season. Point guard Clayton Custer, the MVC player of the year, returns. Marques Townes offers another key piece. That's three returning starters and four players who averaged at least 20 minutes and four points per game. Sophomore guards Cameron Satterwhite and Bruno Skokna should take another step and see more time. Negron, a 6-foot-7 forward, should have an impact. Loyola's recruits for next season are ranked as three-star players: 6-9 center Franklin Agunanne from La Lumiere in Indiana, 6-3 shooting guard Cooper Kaifes from Kansas and 6-2 point guard Isaiah Bujdoso from Washington.

"I've talked a lot about culture and trying to develop a culture of the way we do things," Moser said. "The guys who didn't get as many minutes, the guys that did, the Marques Townes, the Claytons, the Lucases and Krutwigs, those guys have to be the keepers of the culture. And do things a certain way. And that's the way we're going to do them." There also will be some decisions for Moser and Loyola. Midmajor coaches who make a NCAA Tournament run typically receive offers from high-major schools. Loyola officials have said they've had internal talks about renegotiating Moser's contract. After being picked in the preseason to finish third in the MVC, Loyola's mounting victories eventually made them a front-runner for much of this season. Next season, the Ramblers will be the team to beat from the start of the season. High expectations will be new to the Ramblers. "There's going to be a target on our backs," Krutwig said.


Wednesday, aPril 4, 2018

Page 19

SIU mens baskebtall head coach Barry Hinson reacts after looking at the score board Nov. 18, 2017, during the Salukis' 69-64 win against the University of Illinois Springfield Prairie Stars at SIU Arena. BRIAN MUNOZ | @BRIANMMUNOZ

Dawg talk with Dodd: Bell not satisfied with 2017-18 basketball season NATHAN DODD | @NATHANMDODD

Tommy Bell, SIU's Director of Athletics, appears to be at the end of his rope when it comes to the current state of the men's basketball program. In his monthly newsletter released on March 31, Bell addressed his pleasure with the Salukis' best finish in the MVC since the 2006-07 campaign. However, he expressed his displeasure with the lack of postseason appearances in the past decade. Bell pointed out that only SIU, Bradley and Evansville remain as the lone MVC programs without an appearance in the NIT or NCAA Tournaments in the last 10 years. Despite a second-place finish in the MVC behind Loyola, who recently advanced to the Final Four of March Madness, the Salukis stayed home in Carbondale this March. In recent seasons, the Salukis declined invites to less prestigious tournaments such as the CIT and/or CBI. With those respective tourneys requiring payment to play and a guarantee on ticket sales — and with Saluki Athletics running on a deficit of millions of dollars — the opportunities were not feasible. Personally, I would have loved to see the Salukis accept a bid

into a lesser tournament as a means to gain some sort of national recognition and a stepping stone toward fiercer competition. This past season gave me the most excitement and most hope that any SIU team has done since the NCAA teams of the mid-2000's, mostly because there was a true chance to win the MVC. Now, people of Southern Illinois are teeing off on Saluki basketball and calling for the head of coach Barry Hinson following his second 20-win season in the past three years. Amongst them, subtly, might be Hinson's employer, Tommy Bell. "Therefore, after much deliberation and consultation, I make the following statement about the future of Saluki Basketball - our sole objective in 2019 is to win a conference championship and advance to the NCAA Tournament," Bell said in bold font in the March 31 newsletter. Bell said that the current coaching staff has all of the resources necessary to make the dream of an NCAA Tournament appearance a reality in 2019. When I read Bell's letter, it seemed almost too simple to read between the lines. Bell received an influx of negative mail from SIU fans calling for the firing of Hinson.

Now it seems that the athletic department is giving Hinson an ultimatum: reach the postseason or find a new job. With starters such as Armon Fletcher, Kavion Pippen and Sean Lloyd returning, the Salukis should have high expectations for next season. However, Loyola who will return multiple starters that will be on a mission to defend the title. In order to take the next step forward, the Salukis will embark on a foreign trip that will allow for extra weeks of practice and competition in the summer. Bell said that he is personally going to assist the coaching staff with the 2018-19 schedule in an effort to secure more games against teams in the nation's Top 100. Scheduling that caliber of opponent will be the easy part, however, execution will be key to build a respectable RPI. The Salukis have the talent to make a strong run in 2019 with its core of upperclassmen and exciting talent on the way in. This will be the last run that most of Hinson's lineup gets to make and if they leave SIU without a postseason appearance, it appears that Hinson may be on the way out with them. Sports editor Nathan Dodd can be reached at ndodd@dailyegyptian.com or on Twitter at @NathanMDodd.


Page 20

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