Daily Egyptian

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Daily Egyptian DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM

MONDAY, APRIL 27, 2015

VOL. 99 ISSUE 52

SINCE 1916

Nepalese students seek help after quake hits home Austin Miller | @AMiller_DE Nepalese students here are reeling as tragedy struck their home more than 7,500 miles away. A 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck Nepal about noon local time Saturday. The epicenter was less than 50 miles west of the capital city of Kathmandu. More than 2,700 have died in Nepal, China and India — the two nations that sandwich the small country of more than 27 million people. Rumbles were felt on the slopes of Mount Everest on the border

of China and Nepal, causing an avalanche that killed 17 people. Ramesh Neupane, a member of the Nepalese Student Society of Carbondale, said the nearly 50 Nepalese SIU students have been notified of their families’ safety. Neupane, a doctoral candidate in higher education, said he has talked with his mother and uncle, but electricity has since gone out across the country. He said a friend of his was killed during the initial earthquake while the friend was donating blood. Even after the initial earthquake,

Flyover Infoshop grows communal relationships

Epicenter of magnitude 7.8 earthquake

Nepal Katmandu

B rAndA M itchell | @BrandaM_DE

aftershocks have worsened conditions. Neupane’s native city of Bhaktapur is some 8 miles away from the capital city. He said people

have been sleeping outside because the aftershocks make them afraid to go back inside. The situation has deteriorated with rainfall.

“It’s a very tough time for people in Nepal,” he said. “We all want to do something to help them and bring in the SIUC and Carbondale community.” He said the group has been in contact with International Student Council and Indian Student Association to set up a way for students to donate money to those in need, but is awaiting approval from the university’s administration on Monday. “Nepal needs help,” he said.” Everything counts — even a penny makes a difference.”

Memorial service sheds light on the battle against AIDS

sAM BeArd| @SamBeard_DE What was once bleak and concrete is now a space with a do-it-yourself feel. The Flyover Infoshop is a newly opened community center where people can explore the possibilities of life through networking, critical thought, good will and a little bit of elbow grease. Located at 214 N. Washington St., Flyover is a free-space where people can host small concerts, art shows, free schools, mutual aid workshops and seminars, according to its website. The Infoshop began its daily operations April 19 and will host a May Day poetry-slam, an open-mic for poets, the evening of May 1. The area once home to the Big Muddy Independent Media Center has served as a meeting ground for activist movements during the past several years, including Occupy Carbondale — the local manifestation of Occupy Wall Street in 2011. Since October, it has undergone a physical transformation to make the space more welcoming and useful, said Sarah Baumgarten, an Infoshop volunteer. Infoshops began emerging internationally in the wake of social movements and acted as a place where people could come together to secure their social, economic and political needs in a society where they are often ignored, she said. “We aim to see how we can transform the region, city or maybe just few blocks into something that doesn’t initiate exploitation, oppression, discrimination or marginalization of any and all people,” said Baumgarten, a senior from Chicago studying philosophy. Although it has only been fully open for about a week, it has attracted the eyes of many creative and intellectual people, she said. “It’s turning out to be a space that is going to harness a lot of musical, poetic, artistic and academic events that fall in line with our anti-oppression and anti-hierarchical ideologies,” Baumgarten said. Please see INFOSHOP | 3

h olidAy W Agner | @HolidayWagnerDE The Rev. Robert Flannery, priest at St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church, forms a candlelit circle Sunday evening along with other attendees of The Southern Illinois AIDS Candlelight Memorial Service at the Church of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ. “We’re here for two purposes: One to remember those who have passed and to celebrate those who are still living, and to encourage people to stay involved in the fight against HIV and AIDS,” said Wally Paynter, chairman of the Southern Illinois AIDS Walk and AIDS Holiday Project.

Engineering professor arrested on charges of battery BrAndA Mitchell | @BrandaM_DE A professor was arrested on charges of battery on Thursday after an altercation with a student in the Engineering Building. Alan Weston, associate professor in the mechanical engineering and energy processes

department, posted a $160 bond and was released, according to the Department of Public Safety’s daily crime log. Rae Goldsmith, chief marketing and communications officer for the university, could not comment on the incident because it is a personnel matter.

“We take the safety of students very seriously,” Goldsmith said in an interview Friday. The unidentified 22-year-old student involved did not need medical treatment, according to the crime log. Two calls to DPS were not returned. Weston could not be reached for comment.

@dAilyegyptiAn Chicago rapper and producer Young Chop performed Friday at Hangar 9. For a photo gallery, see dailyegyptian.com


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Monday, april 27, 2015 maggiexplorer

Instagram Photo of the Day

17 likes #mystruggle #May2015 #graduation #salukisinspring #siu #carbondale

Corrections In the April 23 edition of the Daily Egyptian, the article “Excitement, frustration surrounds Springfest,” should have read: “Ushers and the Department of Safety will provide security for the event.” Two sources affiliated with the event referred to the ushers as bouncers in interviews with a reporter from the Daily Egyptian.

Contact Us

Phone: (618) 536-3311 Fax: (618) 453-3248 Email: editor@dailyegyptian.com Editor-in-Chief: Sarah Gardner, ext. 252 sgardner@dailyegyptian.com Managing Editor: Luke Nozicka, ext. 252 lnozicka@dailyegyptian.com

President Randy J. Dunn cordially invites you to a

RECOGNITION CEREMONY in honor of the recipients of our

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MONDAY, APRIL 27 MORRIS LIBRARY

HALL OF PRESIDENTS AND CHANCELLORS

3 P.M. Refreshments in the Morris Library first-floor rotunda immediately following the program.

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 7,800. Fall and spring semester editions run Monday through Thursday. Summer editions run Tuesday through Thursday. All intersession editions run on Wednesdays. Free copies are distributed in the Carbondale and Carterville communities. The Daily Egyptian online publication can be found at www. dailyegyptian.com.

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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. Letters are limited to 400 words and columns to 500 words. Students must include year and major. Faculty must include rank and department. Others include hometown. Submissions should be sent to opinion@dailyegyptian.com.

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The Daily Egyptian, the student-run newspaper 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.

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© 2015 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.

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. Uche Onyebadi, fiscal officer.


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INFOSHOP CONTINUED FROM

Monday, aPril 27, 2015 1

Such events include open jam sessions, educational seminars and art shows hosted by the Untitled Art Collective — a southern Illinois art group comprised of students and community members. It hosted a prison abolition workshop Friday, in which Kim Wilson, a former professor in the College of Education at Temple University, led an open-forum discussion on the relationship between mass incarceration and racism. Upon entering Flyover, one may take note of the unusual aesthetic. The floor was made by cutting up brown paper bags, dipping the strips in paper-mache paste, laying them on the concrete floor to dry and brushing them in a clear polyurethane coating. In addition to the homemade floor, the space houses up-cycled pallet furniture. Free and low-cost pallets were turned into tables, walls, a stage and a bar. The small kitchen is regularly staffed by freelance chef Ferris McEvoy and turns out dinners for anyone with an appetite. Flyover hosted a field trip on Saturday to the Urbana-Champaign Independent Media Center to see how those near the University of Illinois campus have run one of the most successful independent media centers for so many years, said James Anderson, a doctoral candidate in mass communications and media arts from Greenville. “One of the things that I am most adamant about seeing the Infoshop prioritize is helping people recover a sense of agency,” Anderson said. “So they can have some control or say over their lives.” Anderson said those at the UrbanaChampaign location introduced something called a “makerspace,” where people teach each other the necessary

P eter r ogalla | @PRogalla_DE Shown here on Sunday are some of the recent renovations to the Flyover Infoshop at 214 N. Washington St. The bookshelves along the wall, bar on the right, and the coffee table were all constructed from donated pallets in order to conserve the shop’s funds. The flooring was made from brown paper bags then coated with a floor sealant, an equally cost efficient project that volunteers completed in the past few weeks. Though there is no set schedule yet, the Infoshop is open to the public most days and often has coffee and tea to anyone stopping by.

skills to build infrastructure and provide the types of services needed to survive, play and thrive — including sewing, carpentry, glass blowing and 3-D printing. Additionally, they have spread their message on the airwaves. The CounterPower Radio Hour is the one air space for the Infoshop, airing on 91.1 FM WDBX from midnight to 2 a.m. Sunday, Anderson said. Aside from free workshops and cultural events, some people at the Infoshop have taken to fields with the intent to grow produce for lowincome families and teach the youth the simple secrets of food independence, Baumgarten said.

“Flyover is also home to the Subsistence Research Center, which is dedicated to investigating the questions and practices that would be necessary to create a self-sufficient regional economy,” said subsistence researcher Nick Smaligo. A few of the center’s members have created a project called Full Moon Gardenscaping, which offers clients an opportunity for people to turn their lawns into a low-maintenance garden. Clients harvest as much produce as they would like from their lawns and the rest will be distributed to those who normally can not afford local produce, said Smaligo, a doctoral candidate in philosophy from Carbondale.

Smaligo, an Infoshop volunteer, said the advantages of gardenscaping are threefold. “[It] will create more local produce, get it in the hands of people who otherwise would not have access to it and build new connections throughout the community,” he wrote in a Full Moon flyer. Aside from the blood, sweat and tears of several volunteers, a grant awarded this month will help further the group’s mission, Smaligo said. Baumgarten received a $1,000 grant from The Awesome Foundation, an international organization that gives grants to “initiatives which solve a problem, cultivate community, and

spread joy,” according to its website. The grant will help fund a compost bank called Growing Ground, where compostable materials are deposited and fertile soil is withdrawn. The money will go to homemade wagons that will hitch to bicycles and transport organic matter to and from various sites, Baumgarten said. Volunteers collect food scraps from commercial and residential locations and shuttle them to one of the compost banks. Once the compost is ready, it can be picked up or delivered to those who need it, free of charge. A fundamental part of Flyover’s mission is educating people to become more self-sufficient, Baumgarten said. She is starting a programming in which children can visit Growing Ground and leave with useful skills. “These are kids who have grown up with virtually no recreational or educational resources,” she said. “The idea is to teach these kids gardening skills to the point where when others visit the compost bank, the kids are the ones teaching them about it.” Baumgarten will also lead workshops for the kids including nature journaling, team-building and problem solving activities. She plans to offer outdoor therapy sessions once summer starts, in which participants can engage in breathing and yoga techniques. Volunteers have thus far footed the costs of keeping the space up-andrunning. In an effort to install Internet and keep the water running, the group has started a Flyover Infoshop donation page on kickstarter.com, which has raised $1,295 from 24 donors. The space is operating, but will have its grand opening the weekend after finals because many of the people involved are students and faculty, Baumgarten said.

‘We will never sink’ 42nd Cardboard Boat Regatta draws community to campus lake Quincy Perry paddles aggresively to keep Boat 36, the Mad Shark, from sinking while his teamamte Jordi Loman paddles and holds the boat together to keep it afloat at Campus Lake during the 42nd Cardboard Boat Regatta competiton on Saturday. The Mad Shark made it to the finish line despite the boat almost coming apart and bombardment from water balloons from bystanders. Perry started to scream toward the end “We will never sink!” There were 32 cardboard boats on the lake this year with some participants from the Student Veterans Organization, Carbondale Community High School and SIU. a bbie i yun D aily e gyPtian


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Pulse

Monday, april 27, 2015

‘True Story’ aka Franco and Hill’s Oscarbait Jacob pierce | @JacobPierce1_DE Neither Jonah Hill nor James Franco are foreign to dramatic material. Both transcend the stereotype of comedic actors having an inability to do serious work and possess the skill to elevate any film they are in. "True Story" (Rated R; 99 min) directed by Rupert Goold, is saved by the performance of Franco and the hair raising tension throughout the film. For a reporter, a job at the New York Times is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The pressure could bring even the strongest person down, something writer Michael Finkel, played by Hill, succumbs to. After lying about details in a story, Finkel goes from the top of the world, to being unemployed. Stuck at home in Montana, the reporter starts to soul search and learns of a prisoned serial killer named Christian Longo, played by Franco, who used his name as an alias. Never meeting the man, Finkel visits him and Longo agrees to write a book about him. As the two talk, the previous reporter

starts to realize there is more to this case than meets the eye. “True Story” skirts the murky waters between a good and bad movie. At times the movie is an anxiety-inducing thrill ride where it is never clear what is what. Other times it shows a script barely worthy of a bad “Law and Order: SVU” episode, laughable and embarrassing at the same time. Hill surprises throughout the film, just not in a good way. Between the two main actors, Hill is the better actor every time. Roles like Peter Brand and Donnie Azoff show a performer of a higher caliber. A thespian who personally develops even the most ridiculous of roles. Finkel does not even reach the level of Hill’s middle ground roles. The biggest problem the actor has throughout the film comes from his overall portrayal of the character. It is awkward and stiff and his method seems to be copying and pasting the manner of speech from his role in “Superbad.” Instead of coming off as a person severely damaged by the events of the film, it feels like he should be talking about McLovin

and having sexual relations with Emma Stone. In comparison, Franco is the weaker actor overall. For every great role like the ones in “127 Hours” and “Spring Breakers,” there are flops like “Spider-Man 3” or “Flyboys.” He is a leading man who tends to fall flat on his face frequently. In “True Story,” he portrays possibly his most frightening role to date. If it was not for a script at the level of an after school special, Franco could be playing a Norman Bates, Hannibal Lector caliber character. A particular monologue in the courtroom captivates you one minute, just to send chills right down your spine the next. This is all from the actor’s magnificent delivery. The biggest thrills in this movie comes from the straight faces characters have after doing the most deprived acts. Without spoiling anything, characters tell lies to each other with no remorse. They put on stone cold faces, telling falsehoods for their own entertainment. The extremity of a character's sociopathic nature terrifies more than any mutilated body could.


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Monday, april 27, 2015


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NICE 2 BDRM avail. May 15th all utilities included in the rent. Laundry, A/C 105 S Forest, walking distance to SIU $350/person/month 529-3581

LOOKING TO SUBLEASE a 3 bdrm apt at The Reserves for the summer. Move in date May 18. Electric in cluded. Free Internet and cable, movie theater and rentals. Free tanning and parking. Washer and dryer included. Study lounge with computers and free printing. Volleyball, basketball court, pool, fitness center, picnic and grilling area. Contact Bee at 773-818-1556 or rfajolu@siu.edu to schedule a tour. SUMMER SUBLEASER WANTED (June-July) 1 BEDROOM, across the street from campus, perfect size for 1 person or couple, small pets ok $400/mo utilities not included call 6187790464

AVAILABLE NOW, NICE, clean, 1 bdrm apt. at 509 S. Wall. $295/mo, no pets, 618-529-3581. GREAT LANDLORDS, 1 & 2 bdrm, duplex apts, avail fall, c/a, no pets. At 606 East Park St, 618-201-3732.

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MOUNTAIN VALLEY PROPERTIES www.mvprentals.com Includes w/d, electric, water, cable, internet, trash & parking. CREEKSIDE APTS- 711 S. Wall St., 3 bdrm/ 2 bath starting at $945/month GRAND PLACE APTS- 900 East Grand, Buildings 4 & 5 ONLY. 3 bdrm/ 2 bath starting at $945/month. 2 bdrm/ 2 bath starting at $790/month Call 618-527-1100 to view apts. C!DALE, NICE, LARGE 2 bdrm avail now, 400 N. Westridge, upscale neighborhood, laundry, Avail now, May or Aug. 529-3581, no pets. www.trailswestapts.com.

4 BDRM, 4 BATH, CLOSE TO campus, washer/dryer, dishwasher, cats considered, heat/air, free parking, $1560 ($390 each), www.alpharentals.net, 457-8794

www.westwoodapartmentsllc.com Special on studio apts and 1 bdrms avail May and June. 618-303-9109. FEEL LIKE YOU live at the Dog Pound with the Pet Noise and Odors? Move up to Pet-Free Living. Studio, 1 and 2 Bdrm apts. Walking distance to SIU. Call for an appt 457-4422.

2 BDRM, CLOSE to campus, w/d, d/w, refrigerator, glass-top stove, c/a and heat, walk-in closets, nice TV, $700-$800/mo 618-549-6355. TOWNE-SIDE WEST APARTMENTS AND HOUSES Cheryl Bryant Rentals 457-5664

MOUNTAIN VALLEY PROPERTIES www.mvprentals.com Includes w/d, electric, water, cable, internet, trash & parking. CREEKSIDE APTS- 711 S. Wall St., 3 bdrm/ 2 bath starting at $945/month GRAND PLACE APTS- 900 East Grand, Buildings 4 & 5 ONLY. 3 bdrm/ 2 bath starting at $945/month. 2 bdrm/ 2 bath starting at $790/month Call 618-527-1100 to view apts. NEW RENTAL LIST OUT, apts & houses. Pick up list at 508 W. Oak or call 529-3581 or 529-1820 G & R!S BEAUTIFUL NEW, 1 and 2 bdrm apts, no pets, call 618549-4713 or visit 851 E. Grand Ave or www.grrentals.com.

AVAIL NOW 1 bdrm, across from SIU. Hi-speed Internet, satellite TV, laundry, parking, water & trash. Call 618-529-4763. 1 BDRM APT. on Park Street near SIU. Gallery kitchen, spacious living room, lovely apt. Starting $440/mo. Call 457-4422. universityedge.net 1 BDRM, LOFT OR FLAT, close to campus, washer/dryer, dishwasher, pets considered, heat/air, free parking, $505-$635, www.alpharentals.net, 457-8194

SCHILLING PROPERTY 805 E. PARK CARBONDALE, IL 62901 (618) 549-0895 WWW.SCHILLINGPROP.COM SCHILLINGPROP@YAHOO.COM Available Now 1 Bdrm.

905 E. Park 403 West Freeman

3 Bdrm.

793 Crowell Road

G & R!S BEAUTIFUL NEW, 2 bdrm townhouses, no pets, call 549-4713 or visit 851 E. Grand Ave. or www.grrentals.com.

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WWW.COMPTONRENTALS.COM 2-Bdrm, w/d 1315 S. Wall, Dog ok **618-924-0535**

ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bdrm, bonus room, c/a, w/d, range stove, fridge, fenced yard, shed, patio, quiet $675/mo 618-201-6202

NICE LARGE 5 bdrm, 2 bath, c/a, w/d, available now, May or Aug, $250 per person. 300 N. Springer, 529-3581.

4 BDRM EXECELLENTcond., near campus, w/d, d/w, a/c, lawn care incl, pets ok, avail Aug 618-719-1386.

6-12 Bdrm, info call 549-4808 4 bdrm - 511, 505 S. Ash, 802,406, 319, 321, W Walnut, 305 W College, 103 S Forest, 501 S. Hays

2 bdrm- 319, 324, 406 W Walnut, 305 W College, 503 S. Ash

See our entire lisit of rentals at bit.ly/PaperRentals

1 BDRM, CLOSE to campus, all appl incl, $550/month, avail in the fall, Alleman Properties, 618-549-6355. AVAILABLE NOW. 2, or 3 Bedroom, various locations, washer/dryer, dishwasher, pets considered, heat/air, free parking, www.alpharentals.net, 618-457-8194

C!DALE, 2 BDRM, Cedar Lake area, very clean, quiet, w/d, d/w, patio, lament. $585-635/mo, 201-2726, www.jandmrentals.com

VERY NICE SELECTION of clean 2 and 3 bdrm single and double wide homes. 1 mile from campus. Available June or August. No pets. (618) 549-0491 or (618) 925-0491.

PART-TIME AFTERNOON student help, flexible hours top wages Able Appliance 618-457-7767

HELP WANTED, DISHWASHER/PREPCOOK, cooks exp.Days, Nights & Weekends apply at Midland Inn at 7570 Old Highway 13 and Country Club Road. AUTO MECHANIC WANTED, PT/ FT, apply in person at Auto Bestbuy, 214 Health Dept Rd, M!boro.

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Mac Tech --OX X proficiency --Adobe Photoshop, and InDesign experience helpful --Available evenings ___________________________ __ --Must be enrolled at SIUC for at least 3 credit hours during summer semesters, and 6 during fall and spring semesters. --Federal Work Study is helpful, but not necessary. --Applications available by emailing classified@dailyegyptian.com, visiting www.DailyEgyptian.com and looking under the “Contact” tab, or the D.E. front desk in the Comm. building, Room 1259, Monday - Friday, 9:00am 3:00pm.

CUSTOMER SERVICE 12-17 people needed. Entry level position in all departments. no experience necessary. $400-500/week. Call 618-988-2256

MODERN, MANUFACTURED HOMES 2 bdrm, 2 bath, w/d, d/w, a/c, energy efficient, (618) 924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com

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NEAR CAMPUS: 2, 3, & 4 Bdrm Houses, W/D, Most C/A, Free Mow. Also, Geodesic Dome 7-10 Minutes from SIU-C (no zoning): SPACIOUS 2 & 3 Bdrm Houses, W/D, Most C/A, 1 3/4 Baths, Carport, Patio or Huge Deck, Free Mow. NO PETS. Call 684-4145.

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING

HARBAUGH!S CAFE HIRING part time cook and servers. Must be available 9am - 3pm, 2 times a week. And semester breaks. Exp preferred, no slackers! 901 S Illinois Ave.

BARGAIN RENTAL PRICES

3 Bdrm: 401A W. Elm, 2 bath 401B W. Elm C!DALE 2 BDRM, EXTRA NICE, w/d hook up, private fenced, storage w/ closet, grad.student or prof. preferred. Avail June 5, $600/mo. 211 S. Gray Dr. 618-924-4753

NEWLY REMODELED, 2 BDRM, water, trash, & lawn incl, lg spacious lots, starting at $300/mo, call 549-4713, www.grrentals.com

1 & 2 BDRMS $275-$490/mo 618-924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com

MARTIN PROPERTIES 618-534-1550 Avail Fall !15 2 Bdrm: 402 S. Ash

NEAR CAMPUS: 1 & 2 Bdrm Apts and Luxury Studio Apts. Also (7-10 Minutes from SIU-C) 1 Bdrm Apts under $300/Mo and 2 NO Bdrm Apts under $400/Mo. PETS. Call 618-684-4145.

902 W. MILL duplex, 716 S. James House. Updated 5 bdrms, 2 bath, W/D, AC, DW, New tile or wood floors. Low utilities 559-5245. campuscolonial.com

NICE 5 OR 6 bdrm, c/a, w/d, close to SIU 2 kitchen, 2 bath, 700 W Freeman. 529-1820 529-3581

5 & 6 Bedroom Houses for Rent. Great locations on Mill Street!! Available August 2015. These locations always go fast. Call or Text Chris for more info or to schedule a showing. (618) 924-4942

1 AND 2 BDRM, Duplexes, on the lake, with fireplace, one car garage, fully loaded, avail now & Aug, 549-8000, universityheightsrentals.com

3 BDRMS, CLOSE to campus, all appl incl, avail in the fall, Alleman Properties 618-549-6355.

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2 BDRM TOWNHOUSES available now & August. Fully loaded. www.universityheights.com

BARGAIN RENTAL PRICES

See our entire list of rentals at bit.ly/PaperRentals

2 BDRM HOUSE NEAR SIU. Newly remolded. Hardwood laminate and tile floors. d/w, w/d and elect fireplace, simply a stunning home for 2 students $375p/p 4574422

SUPER NICE FOUR bedroom house for rent. $375 per person. Call 618-525-2440

No application fee, pet friendly, laundry on-site, across from SIU.

612 E. CAMPUS, 3 bdrm,1.5 bath, new appilances, close to campus, no pets, $700/mo, pics & app @ maddenproperties.com, 314-568-5665.

NICE HOUSE, QUIET AREA, Approx. 5 minutes from campus.6 bdrm, 2 bath all appl incuding w/d avail Aug., 2015 $330-$245/student, for 4-6 students. 806-1799.

WWW.SIUCRENTALS.COM

3BDRM, 306 W College, like new c/a, w/d, d/w, private yard, 549-4808 www.siucrentals.com

2 BDRM HOUSE. LG DECK, FENCED YD. 1006 N carico St. $550/month. Call 618-457-7427 sfs 3 BDRM 2 BATH availiable June 1ST 1315 W Sycamore Carbondale,Illinois, no pets. $825/mo 618-534-0554

549-4808 (9am-7pm)

4 BDRM, 2 bath. Close to SIU, central heat & a/c, large yard. Ph.618-924-1965.

1,2,3,4,5,6 BDRM HOUSES & apts. Pick up list at 508 W. Oak. Call Bryant Rentals at 529-1820 or 529-3581

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WALKERS BLUFF IS now hiring servers, food runners, and cooks. Weekends required. E-mail resume to info@walkersbluff.com RAINBOW PURE WATER Inc, Sales. Hourly rate + commission. Looking for outgoing & honest person, for outside sales throughout the Southern Illinois area. Sales person wanted. Apply at 610 Sneed Rd, Carbondale, 62902. Call Bob for info 618-806-5412 FRONT DESK PT Help. Great opportunity for student seeking to stay in C!Dale for the Summer. Light maintenance and computer skills needed in exchange for furn apt on premises. Heritage Motel and Apts 1209 W Main. Apply in person 3-7 pm only. ULTIMATE GYMNASTCS AND cheerleading of C-Dale is looking for a part time pre-school gymnastics instructor. Enthusiastic, welcoming, and loves working with ages 1-6. Great opportunity for edu majors. Required hours some evenings and possible Sat mornings. Beg May 15th. Contact 618-351-6296 or e-mail ultimategymnastics@hotmail.com for further information.

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NEED A CLASSIFIED AD? Business online ads $25/30 days Individual online ads $5/30days


page 7

Monday, april 27, 2015

207 West Main Street Carbondale, IL 62901 Ph. 1-800-297-2160

FOR RELEASE APRIL 20, 2015

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

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

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Today’s Birthday (04/27/15). Domestic bliss pulls magnetically this year. Pour energy into home projects. A profitable new phase in your work

flowers. Balance health and happiness with rigorous attention to budget and schedule. Obstacles dissipate after 6/14. Begin or renew a romance after 10/13. Play together for goodness and beauty. A peaceful escape refreshes after 10/27. Bring love home. Aries (March 21-April 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Infuse your work with love and spontaneous fun. Include secret touches. Use the best ingredients you can find. Win over critics with your attention to detail. Creative artistry produces wonderful results. Share early tastes with your inner circle. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 6 -- Discover an unexpected gift at home. Someone is thrilled to help you celebrate. Communications don’t go far ... keep it to a family gathering. Walk together. There’s no need to say much. Physical exercise energizes. Find some magic. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today isa7--Good news sparks a buying streak.

ACROSS 1 Hackneyed 6 Work out ahead of time 10 Lily of France garment 13 Prepared potatoes, as for hash browns 14 Boxcar hopper 15 Campus courtyard 16 Unnamed news supplier 19 ID theft target 20 Used a bench 21 Injector for severe allergic reactions 22 Slice opposite, in golf 24 Snappy dresser 26 Actress Aniston, in tabloids 27 Automatic setting for highway driving 33 Nabokov nymphet 35 Cold draft server 36 Weed whacker 37 Wipe off the board 38 Tidal retreat 39 Take control of 41 Rm. coolers 42 Lao Tzu’s “path” 43 Puts a gloss on, as shoes 44 Christmas display 48 Country singer McGraw 49 Jamaican music 50 Annual spelling bee airer 53 Understood by only a few 56 Portfolio part, briefly 58 Exceedingly 59 Conforms, or what each last word of 16-, 27and 44-Across literally does 63 Seatback airline feature 64 Otherworldly glow 65 Actress Zellweger 66 “The Fountainhead” author Rand 67 Blue books? 68 Pretty pitchers

Planning benefits more than action. Discuss love and other mysteries. Ignore gossip. Communication breakdowns resolve from a compassionate view. It’s easy to be kind. Weave emotion and feeling into your work. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Unexpected money comes in. Finish the paperwork. Replenish reserves and pay bills. Start making travel plans. Keep to a small bag. Use your new skills. Your friends are there for you. Celebrate the extra love. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Others admire your good attitude. You’re especially confident today and tomorrow. Unexpected beauty rains down. Extra income sets you flush. Costs could be higher, too ... weigh the benefits. As always, your friend stands by you. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 6 -- Discover deep beauty in silence. Find exquisite peace in music. You’re especially intuitive and sensitive today. Depend on your teammates. Experience

04/27/15 Thursday’s Answers 4/20/15

By C.C. Burnikel

DOWN 1 Dumpster fill 2 Classic Unilever laundry soap 3 Religious rebel 4 Bowling pin count 5 Frozen custard brand 6 Instagram uploads 7 Soul singer Rawls 8 Crunched muscles 9 Bit of cosmetic surgery 10 Dinner table faux pas 11 Kentucky Derby, e.g. 12 Yemen’s Gulf of __ 15 One of five in a maternity ward delivery 17 Criminal group 18 Ready for business 23 Singer Kristofferson 25 Auto parts chain 28 Sport-__: off-road vehicle 29 Chicago ballplayer 30 Fake diamond 31 Move like honey

Saturday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

32 Dregs 33 Low in fat 34 Aquatic predator 38 Grab a bite 39 “__ Loves You”: Beatles 40 One, in Dresden 42 “Used to be ... ” 43 Frighten 45 Sicily’s country 46 Sicily’s wine 47 Headgear on the slopes

pays. Your friends make an important connection. Review the past for insights on the current situation. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Unexpected benefits arrive for your community. It’s okay to upgrade equipment. Share the largess generously. Word doesn’t travel far today, or gets garbled in transmission. Allow extra time for invitations. Celebrate love with friends. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- A professional risk could pay off big. Take on a leadership role. It’s okay if you don’t know how. Listen and learn through your heart. Don’t believe everything you hear. Get physical exercise. Feel the love. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -Today is a 7 -- Discover an unexpected treasure along the road. Consider a breakdown as a challenge. Stop to savor what you’ve found and avoid travel delays. Set down your studies for an impromptu love fest. You can catch up later.

04/27/15 4/20/15

51 Strength 52 Botanical connecting points 53 Mennen lotion 54 One of the Gilmore girls 55 Kilted family 57 Land measure 60 Total amount 61 Capote nickname 62 Opposite of fast fwd.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Today is a 6 -- Consider a friend’s suggestion carefully. Be willing to learn a new method to minimize financial risks. An increase in account balances is possible. An amazing discovery sparks a happy ending, if you play your cards right. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -Today is a 7 -- A new opportunity tempts. Don’t say much until you’re sure. Collaboration could lead to an increase in income. Exercise restraint with the urge to impulsively spend money. Accept an unusual gift. Express your affection without holding back. Share the love. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -Today is an 8 -- Postpone a financial discussion. Pay attention to providing excellent service. Passion moves mountains. Devise a plan. Stay cool. The people you care about think you’re brilliant. Relax in the comfort of your own home.


To read about SIU softball’s split with Indiana State, see dailyegyptian.com

page 8

Sports

To read about SIU baseball’s loss to Dallas Baptist, see dailyegyptian.com

Monday, april 27, 2015

ace SIU women’s tennis Saluki sidelined by swept in semifinals ligament tear thoMas donley | @tdonleyDE

a idan o sBorne | @aidanosborne_DE Hannah Wich, a freshmen from Hainburg, Germany, focuses on the ball during practice Wednesday at University Courts. The women’s tennis team was defeated by Wichita State 4-0 on Sunday, and finished the season with an overall record of 16-10. To read about the team’s performance in the conference finals, see dailyegyptian.com.

SIU redshirt senior ace Aaron Hauge will miss at least the next weekend with a slight tear in the ulnar collateral ligament in his pitching elbow. Hauge first felt discomfort in his left elbow in an April 10 start at Indiana State. He exited his last start, SIU’s game against Illinois State on April 17 in the third inning. “It felt pretty good up until about the third inning,” Hauge said. “Then I had a shooting pain through my elbow. That’s when [pitching coach P.J. Finigan] and the trainer came out.” An MRA [Magnetic Resonance Angiogram] found the tear Thursday. Saluki coach Ken Henderson said with four weeks left in his senior season Hauge would rehab as though he was returning. “The alternative is surgery,” Henderson said. “And what’s the point of having surgery? He can do that in a month.” Sophomore Kyle Pauly pitched five innings of one-run baseball at Illinois with an injury similar to Hauge’s before being shut down for the season. Pauly had Tommy John reconstructive elbow surgery last week. Hauge will throw a bullpen session Monday and see a doctor again Tuesday. He said he is taking the recovery process day by day and has not ruled out a Friday return. Henderson said the soonest Hauge would return would be May 8 against Missouri State. Henderson said the decision to return lies with Hauge. “We’re going to support him whatever he does,” Henderson said. Hauge is 3-3 in 10 starts this season with a 2.34 ERA. Sophomore Chad Whitmer took Hauge’s spot in the rotation last Friday against Dallas Baptist, allowing 5 runs in 5 1/3 innings.

Seniors pitch different game plans for future Brent Meske | @brentmeskeDE Four years, a combined 3,000-plus batters faced, 350-plus strikeouts, 200plus appearances and nearly 800 innings pitched. This is the legacy Saluki senior pitchers Katie Bertelsen and Alyssa Wunderlich will leave behind after graduation. When their softball careers fade away, the game will live on with one of them, while the other will move on to a different path. Bertelsen, a leisure sports and recreation major, will continue with softball. She said becoming a collegiate softball coach is the goal, but she would be happy coaching at any level. She will come back to SIU in the fall as part of her internship to help coach Kerri Blaylock, who she called a mom. “I’ll be doing it for the rest of my life,” she said. “It’s something I’ll always want to do and keep going with it.” Stepping off the field for the final time will open new opportunities for Bertelsen, but she said it will not be easy to do. “It’s going to suck,” she said. “I am looking forward to doing something else, but I sure am going to miss it.” To date, Bertelsen is top-10 all-time at SIU for innings pitched, appearances, wins and complete games. Wunderlich, who will start graduate school at Northern Illinois University in

n athan h oefert | @nathanhoefertDE Senior Katie Bertelsen pitches the ball April 6 during the team’s 6-7 loss against St. Louis University at Charlotte West Stadium. Bertelsen ranks in the top 10 all-time at SIU for innings pitched, appearances, wins and complete games.

s arah g ardner | @rabbitearz93 In this 2013 photo, then-sophomore pitcher Alyssa Wunderlich delivers a pitch April 6 during the 4-6 loss against SIU-Edwardsville at Charlotte West Stadium. Wunderlich averages a 4.32 ERA for her career with the Salukis.

the summer studying speech language pathology, said she would like to work in a medical setting with children and babies. She said junior short stop Kelsey Gonzalez will be among the hardest goodbyes to say. “We go way back to when we were 10 years old,” she said. “It will be weird. I’m

glad we got to experience high school and college ball together.” Wunderlich and Gonzalez both attended Naperville Central High School, but parting ways at the end of this season will not last long. Wunderlich said their families, who live five minutes from each

other, will keep in touch. She said she has not thought about her final game at SIU. “I don’t think there is any way to prepare for it,” she said. “I’ve been playing softball my whole life. It will definitely be a weird feeling but I know you have to move on at some point.” With the absence of Bertelsen and Wunderlich next season, freshman Savanna Dover and sophomore Shaye Harre have the opportunity to develop into the team’s top pitchers. Blaylock said SIU also has two pitching recruits coming next season. Assistant coach Buddy Foster said Bertelsen and Wunderlich have taught the younger pitchers phenomenal work ethic. “They come to work every day,” he said. “They have set a tone for the two younger ones with how to approach practice every day.” Foster said Harre has come on strong after a bad start to the year and Dover is experiencing the highs and the lows of being a freshman pitcher. Bertelsen said pitchers having separate workouts has brought the two closer. For this year, Bertelsen and Wunderlich said the goal is to win the Missouri Valley Conference championship, and they have four games remaining before the tournament begins May 7.


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