Daily Egyptian

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Daily Egyptian WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015

DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM

SINCE 1916

Reunion at the rock

VOL. 99 ISSUE 58

Library to host budget cut rally Sam Beard | @SamBeard_DE

e llen B ooth | @EllenBooth_DE SIU alumna Maurine Pyle, left, gives her friend Pam Richards a personal tour of SIU on Tuesday in front of the Nicholas Vergette Sculptures near Morris Library. Richards is visiting from Cincinnati and met Pyle two years ago in Ohio while Pyle was on a missionary trip.

Proposed cuts threaten Career Services heather CaChola | @HeatherCachola The center on campus that strives to serve undergraduates and graduates preparing for their futures is also one being threatened by budget cuts. In response to Repbulcian Gov. Bruce Rauner’s proposed budget, President Randy Dunn asked the office of Career Services to present the effects of a 50 percent reduction in funding, amounting to a nearly $147,000 cut. The department’s budget is half-funded by state money and half-funded by revenue from career fairs, which can collectively cost students up to $400. Dunn has proposed this exercise because the department, which offers help with resumé building, choosing a major and job interviewing, was deemed a non-academic

service. The cut represents the entirety of state funding that makes up the center’s budget. The majority of money from the state is used to fund employees’ salaries within the department, said Doug Reichenberger, director of Career Services. “If we had to cut staff, it would mean cutting all of our graduate assistants and we would also be losing at least one of our civil service staff and the undergraduate assistant position as well,” Reichenberger said. “It would mean a 50 percent reduction in our staff here.” He said undergraduate assistants collect employer data and graduation data to help with annual reports. The center employs four professional staff, two civil service staff, four graduate student staff, one undergraduate assistant, one worker in the undergraduate and graduate assistantship office and four work-study students.

Casey McFadden, a graduate student from Hoopeston in the College Student Personnel program, is one of the four graduate assistants that will lose her job if the budget proposal is approved. “The GAs provide a key service for the students. We meet with approximately half of the students that come through our office,” McFadden said. “We do a majority of the work with the undergraduate students, so it would make a major cut if all the GA positions were eliminated from our office.” Reichenberger said the center helped 1,700 students in 2014, but it has not always tracked its clientele. As of March, the office has seen about 600 students individually and has made contact with 1,800 students for presentations, résumé workshops and tabling at events, according to a report by the office of Career Services. Please see CAREER | 4

Nepal fundraiser to be held in Gaia house evan JoneS | @EvanJones_DE The Nepalese Student Society of Carbondale is hosting a dinner fundraiser at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Gaia house. The death toll in Nepal has exceeded 7,500 and continues to rise after a 7.8 magnitude earthquake on April 25. Ramesh Neupane, a doctoral candidate in higher

education from Nepal, said authentic Nepalese cuisine will be served, and the group is accepting a minimum donation of $10 to attend. “Rotary club of Carbondale Breakfast and the Saluki Rotaract group came to us about this idea,” Neupane said. “They usually have it every month and they want to do it this time for Nepal and Nepalese people.” The Nepalese Student Society will also host

a yoga class on Friday at 101 S. Graham Ave. in Carbondale from 5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m., again with a minimum donation of $10. The money will be deposited into the Nepal earthquake relief fund. A GoFundMe.com page was created by the students to send back home, and has raised nearly $2,500. Other organizations involved with tomorrow night’s dinner are the Rotary Club of Carbondale, Advanced Energy Solutions and the Gaia house.

A rally against Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s budget cuts is scheduled from noon to 2 p.m. Wednesday in front of Morris Library. It has been organized by the four unions on campus, with cooperation from student government and others throughout the university. The protest comes in the wake of the governor’s proposed cuts to social services, which would slash $62 million from the SIU system — including $44 million from the Carbondale campus. “The point of this rally isn’t to blame anyone,” organizer Johnathan Flowers said. “The point of this rally is to say: ‘If this happens, then all of these people will suffer.’” If passed, these cuts would create a domino effect across the university and Carbondale in general, said Flowers, a doctoral candidate in philosophy from Oak Park. Newly elected Carbondale Mayor Mike Henry said he will be speaking at the event shortly after it begins. The proposed reduction in state appropriations, if passed, would return state funding to a level last seen in the mid-1980s, University Spokeswoman Rae Goldsmith said. “My big issue with the budget cuts is the way that it is forcing the erosion of the university’s educational mission and the support structures that enable that mission to continue successfully,” Flowers said. In addition to impeding the university’s academic and research missions, student affordability and SIU’s service to the region would be drastically affected if the governor’s budget gets passed, Goldsmith said. “We support the rights of faculty, staff, students and others to express their opinions as individuals in multiple formats and ways, as long as they are civil and respectful,” she said. “By its nature, the university is a place where all voices should have the opportunity to be heard.” The aim of the event is to demonstrate the SIU community’s opposition to the proposed cuts and how they would be a serious blow to the university and the southern Illinois community, Flowers said. “It’s your lives on the line, it’s your education,” Flowers said. “If students are concerned about this, we need to speak up.”

@dailyegyptian Meet with different groups on campus from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Student Services Building for “Let’s Make a Quad.”


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Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Instagram Photo of the Day

ellen_elizabeth_angela

3 likes Jasmine Cordoba, a freshman studying biological science, and Cynthia Ortega, an undeclared freshman, study outside of Shyrock Auditorium. #SalukisInSpring 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 Campus Editor: Tyler Davis, ext. 254 tdavis@dailyegyptian.com Sports Editor: Aaron Graff, ext. 256 agraff@dailyegyptian.com Pulse Editor: Marissa Novel, ext. 273 mnovel@dailyegyptian.com Design Chief: Branda Mitchell bmitchell@dailyegyptian.com Photo Editor: Steve Matzker smatzker@dailyegyptian.com Web Desk: Alex Merchant, ext. 257 amerchant@dailyegyptian.com

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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 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.

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. 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.

Mission Statement

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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Š 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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Wednesday, May 6, 2015

SIUE student from Madison County reported missing st. Louis Post-disPatch Authorities are asking for help finding a college student from St. Jacob who was reported missing Monday night by his relatives. Sheriff ’s deputies are looking for Taylor S. Clark, 19, of the 400 block of West

Fifth Street in St. Jacob. Police said Clark was last seen by his girlfriend in Glen Carbon about 10:30 a.m. Monday after he finished taking exams at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville. His car was found Tuesday evening in Hazelwood, Mo. Authorities said Clark was driving the

red 2007 Nissan 350ZX with Illinois plate P845960. His family told investigators Clark had listed the car for sale on Craigslist, and spoken to someone Monday morning about the ad. Authorities aren’t sure if Clark met anyone to discuss selling the car. Cellphone records indicate Clark’s phone was near the St. Louis Mills outlet

Clinton vows to do more than Obama to protect immigrants anita KuMar | McClatchy Washington Bureau WAS H I N G TO N — Eager to lock up the Latino vote against possibly strong Republican challengers, Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday that she would do more than President Barack Obama to halt the deportation of immigrants who are in the United States illegally. “I would do everything possible under the law to go even further,” Clinton said at a campaign event in the early nominating state of Nevada. Specifically, Clinton said she would stop the deportation of parents of so-called DREAMers, children brought into the country illegally. They are not protected now. “We have gained so much from... your families who have come here and worked hard and made a contribution,” she said at a Las Vegas high school that has a roughly 70 percent Latino student body. Clinton, the overwhelming favorite for the Democratic nomination, spoke about the need for a rewrite of the nation’s immigration laws in her first trip to the battleground state as a 2016 candidate as she made an appeal to crucial Latino voters. “The quicker we can legalize the people that are here, the better the job market will be for everybody,” she said. Clinton said she supported a Senate bill that called for a pathway to citizenship for immigrants in the country illegally as well as additional border enforcement. After Congress failed to pass the bill, she said Obama was correct to act on his own to block the deportation of millions of immigrants. “I support the president’s action in the face of inaction,” she said. She said it’s “foolish” to think the United States is going to deport 11 million people. “We must accept that we are a nation of immigrants,” she said. Some immigration advocates had said Tuesday they would keep a close eye on Clinton’s Nevada event after having seen her make some controversial remarks on the issue in the past. When she ran in 2008, for example, she was criticized after she opposed allowing immigrants living in the U.S. illegally to obtain driver’s licenses. Her campaign said she now supports allowing licenses. “Advocates were concerned about Hillary Clinton, and for good reason,” said Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, an immigration advocacy

group. “But tonight she threw down. She called immigration reform central to her campaign and took a series of positions that will make Republican heads explode and Republican candidates shudder.” “Clinton’s commitment to upholding and expanding President Obama’s executive actions on deportations is a smart move, and polling shows it can help turn out the Latino vote,” said the group Presente Action, which bills itself as the nation’s largest online Latino organizing group. Obama received strong support from Latino voters during his two presidential races. His Republican rival in 2012, Mitt Romney, struggled in battleground states such as Colorado, Florida and Nevada where Latinos are influential. Clinton’s remarks allow her to draw clear distinctions with potential Republican rivals on immigration. “This is where I differ with every candidate on the Republican side,” she said. Clinton said no Republican presidential candidate is “clearly and consistently supporting a path to citizenship. Not one.” Many Republicans oppose a path to citizenship, advocating instead for stronger border security. But both former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio have supported some pathway to citizenship in the past, and both are working to win away some Latino support from the Democrats. Last week, Bush said immigrants living in the U.S. illegally should have the chance to become legal under certain conditions. Rubio, who is Cuban-American, worked on the Senate bill that did not get a vote in the Republican-controlled House. Clinton said the bill “would have passed” if the House had taken it up. Several Republican presidential candidates have said they would overturn Obama’s orders, which protected immigrants from deportation if they were brought to the U.S. illegally as children. It also protects parents of U.S. citizens and permanent residents who have been in the country for several years. Twenty-six states, including Nevada, sued to stop the plan. Ruth Guerra, director of Hispanic Media for the Republican National Committee, accused Clinton of rolling out a new position to distract from a series of troubles plaguing her campaign, including millions of dollars in foreign donations to her family’s foundation.

mall in Hazelwood about 11:37 a.m. Monday. Investigators said Clark has no history of running off or medical conditions. The Madison County sheriff ’s office is asking anyone with information about Clark’s whereabouts to call investigators at 618-296-3000.

Baltimore unrest poll Views of Baltimore protests, police charges and prior cases in New York and Ferguson. Percent saying each was Wrong decision Right decision Decision to charge officers in Freddie Gray case (May 1-3)

Don’tknow

Black 7%

78

White

Decision not to charge officers in Eric Garner case (Dec. 2014)

Black

Decision not to charge officer in Michael Brown case (Dec. 2014)

Black

21

60

White

47

16

19 2 90 8

28

25

80 10 10 23

White

64

13

Percent saying each contributed ____ to violence and unrest in Baltimore Great deal

Fair amount

Not too much

Not at all

People taking advantage to engage in criminal behavior

61

Tensions between the black community and police

21 8 5 5

56

Anger over the death of Freddie Gray

24

50

Poverty, lack of opportunities in some neighborhoods

D.K.

8 5 7

27

40

28

13 5 6

13

12 7

Source: Pew Research Graphic: Tribune News Service

A widening embrace of marijuana Medical use WA

Medical and recreational use

ME

MT

OR

MN

NY

MI NV CO

CA AZ

IL

NM

AK

FL HI

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures

VT NH MA CT RI NJ DE MD DC

Graphic: Los Angeles Times/TNS


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Spring weather inspires music from the heart

C arrington S PireS | @cspires77 Taha Kahn, a sophomore from Saudi Arabia studying marketing, sits atop of the Nicholas Vergette Sculptures on campus writing and playing music on his guitar. “The weather is inspiring, and makes writing music easier for me,” he said. Khan has spent his first year at SIU being widely known on campus as “Guitar Guy.” “It’s not about being Guitar Guy at this point, “ Kahn said. “It’s just about playing music.”

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

CAREER CONTINUED FROM

1

“The center helped me to land an internship with Boeing Information Technology at their Bellevue facility near Seattle for the summer of 2015,” said Christian Garcia, a freshman from Bartlett studying computer science. Garcia will take on a full-time position with Boeing after he graduates in 2018. The center is one of the few career service opportunities for students on campus, and this makes the center a valuable asset for students — unless students feel that the Career Services Center is too broad to help their major. Sarah Heitz, a senior from St. Charles, Mo., studying animal production, said the center does have room to improve. “They need to have more people that can relate to what industry you’re applying,” Heitz said. “Such as animal science, they don’t have any workers that are there to answer our specific questions or help us with a mock interviews pertaining to that major.” Even without the specificity to every college, the center attempts to cover the entirety of campus through their different opportunities. In addition to outreach efforts, the office offers learning experience for graduate student employees. The graduate assistants working at the center come from the educational psychology program, college student personnel program or through the center’s workforce development program. “It would have a huge impact on us... I don’t know where else we would refer them because there is no other office on campus that is either providing professional development or the counsel that we provide,” Reichenberger said. He said in an email Tuesday he has a plan in place to supplement the loss in state appropriations. He said he will try to keep the center fully staffed and provide the resources students and alumni count on for career exploration and professional.


Pulse

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Wednesday, May 6, 2015

‘Little Boy’ is overly emotional, sickening and offensive Jacob Pierce | @JacobPierce1_DE There are movies where the moment you walk out of them, you feel gallons of disgust pour over you. It is so offensive, so ignorant and terrible, you feel like you should call your grandmother and apologize for what just transpired. “Little Boy” (Rated PG-13;106 min) directed by Alejandro Monteverde, is so bad, you will have to cleanse your moviegoing palate immediately with anything remotely watchable. World War II affected everyone in the United States, even a small child living in a town of 60 people. Pepper, played by Jakob Salvati, is a 7-year-old boy who is short for his age. The local doctor thinks he may have dwarfism. Because of this, Pepper’s only friend is his father, James, played by Michael Rapaport. Michael is soon drafted to war and the boy is left with his alcoholic brother, played by David Henrie, and depressed mother, played by Emily Watson. Looking for guidance, Pepper goes to the local priest to find out how to use his faith to get his Dad back. He gives the child a list of good deeds to do to raise his faith, and with help from an unlikely

source, Pepper looks to get his Dad back. How many ways can I say this movie sucked? It was awful, grotesque and vomit-inducing; just all around terrible. “50 Shades of Grey” has been my rusted standard for bad movies of 2015. While “Little Boy” is not as bad as that movie, it really is close. The movie wastes any good faith it has trying to be like “God’s Not Dead” or “Do You Believe?” propaganda. Overly emotional, thematically confused and utilizing an ending that forces anyone to question their place in life, the film reeks of failure and disappointment. Anything fictional is bound to have at least one good idea. Even the worst films of all time have a nugget of brilliance hidden deep down. “Little Boy” is no different. The film has essentially three good ideas, two being themes. The first is the idea of faith. The movie touches on the importance of faith, not only in religion, but in anything. Pepper and a Japanese man named Hashimoto, played Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, represent the contrasting ideas. Pepper of course, fights for religion and Hashimoto fights for having faith in yourself. This pairing also forms the second

P rovided P hoto | Open Road Films/TNS Jakob Salvati as Pepper Flynt Busbee in “Little Boy.”

good feature of the movie, also the only aspect the film gets right. Hashimoto and Pepper form a relationship after the boy’s dad goes to war. This relationship is looked down upon because racism against Asian Americans formed around World War II. This is all touched on perfectly. The film also portrays broken family life after a member goes to war. A brother with a drinking problem, a mother suffering from depression, a young child missing his father; there are a plethora of ideas to work with. But like any bad movie, “Little Boy”

quickly shows its true colors. The faith idea is quickly abandoned for a “Christianity is the only right way” theme. Hashimoto never falters away from his opinion, which is noteworthy. But the film literally bombs Hiroshima because the boy has so much faith in God. This is not a mistype, the boy believes in God so much, the United States bombs Japan and Pepper’s dad gets to come home. Everyone has a right to be disgusted by this notion. Nothing comes from the family drama element. The movie starts off with

so many good moving pieces, but has nothing to show for it. The brother just conveniently, and with no explanation, stops being an alcoholic. The mother stops being depressed about her husband, who was recently pronounced “dead,” again following no build up, after she sees her son’s relationship with the elderly Japanese man. And after a funeral where every actor pulls off the worst false crying in the history of acting, the dad comes home, all fine and well. His death being nothing but a mistake. Everyone lives happily ever after in the worst way possible.

Action game ‘Titan Souls’ shoots to thrill Fun

&

Games With Austin Miller

At least several stones to take To seeDavid Austin’brought s top 10 anticipated games of out Goliath withhead hisover slingshot. The nameless hero of 2015, to www.dailyegyptian.com “Titan Souls” carries only a single arrow. “Titan Souls” is a ghost of video games past. The top-down, 2-D game looks similar to games in the “Pokémon” or “Zelda” series and emphasizes the boss battles of previous generations. But instead of fighting multiple animals on the way to a boss, “Titan Souls” only features boss battles. A nameless hero, whom I liked to call David, walks into rooms where a giant, deformed creature is sleeping. David, whose sole arsenal is a bow and one arrow, must defeat these goliaths. The premise certainly makes David look like a sociopath, just walking into a building and murdering some creature because it is huge and terrifying. A giant ball of green goop is the first monster to meet its demise at the hands of David. Shooting the blob makes it divide into smaller balls, which

can crush David in one bounce. After years of jumping around on creatures in “Super Mario,” I can see the other viewpoint, and being sat on to death is terrifying. As the glob continues to divide like an evil cell, a heart becomes exposed, becoming the new target for David’s arrow. All of the boss fights are as formulaic as the first. Players will sit around and learn the patterns of each titan and find its weak spot before timing the perfect shot. They will certainly die many times before they find the correct technique. “Titan Souls” is full of trial and error. This is not a bad thing because games have done this as long they have existed. There is not really another way to do boss battles. But “Titan Souls” finds a way to make the tired tactic fresh. When the arrow is fired, players can either walk to it and grab it, or hold the shoot button to summon it back. This makes timing so important. If a player shoots too far and misses, they have a long way to go to retrieve their weapon. David cannot move when calling back his arrow, so missing makes him vulnerable. In reality, this

little child should be no match for these beasts. It brought to light something said by Hawkeye in “Avengers: Age of Ultron.” These are monsters and aliens, and all he has is a bow and arrow. He should have no chance. Conquering the titans is fun, but it is all there really is to do in the game. The environments look cool, but show nothing besides David and the monster. It is just a bland canvas players have to paint themselves. Besides, there is no story. The character’s name is not David, I just called him that to create some kind of connection with him. Players have no idea why he is here, why he must kill the titans and why

he could not grab more than just one arrow. That was a rookie mistake, David. A small bit of text comes on-screen before each fight, but it is some kind of unreadable hieroglyphic gibberish. Not every game needs a fantastic story, and fun gameplay leads “Titan Souls” to a fun experience. I would have preferred some backstory, so I did not feel as much like a sociopath for conquering these goliaths in their own homes. Maybe these creatures killed David’s family? Maybe they have taken over his home land? Maybe they make too much noise when David is sleeping? I do not know but wish I did. “Titan Souls” reminds me of driving to a water park. The ride will take around four hours, and when you get there, it is magical. But the ride would have been more enjoyable if you could take a Camaro instead of a Taurus. It does not make the experience any worse, it would only elevate it.


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PRIVATE COUNTRY SETTING, extra nice, 3 bdrm/2 bath, w/d, c/a, 2 decks, no pets. 549-4808, 9am-4pm 3 BDRM 2 BATH availiable June 1ST 1315 W Sycamore Carbondale,Illinois, no pets. $825/mo 618-534-0554

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

Graphic design experience and/or communication design major preferred. Must have knowledge in Adobe Creative Suite. --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 -

NOW HIRING COMPANY EXPANDING STAFF! if you are 18 or older and cane work in a fast paced high energy environment, then this could be for you. $450/week, no experience nes, rapid advancement, start immediately, weekly pay, call 6189882256

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING 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.

3 Bdrm: 401A W. Elm, 2 bath 401B W. Elm

DUPLEX NEAR CRAB ORCHARD lake, 2 bdrm $550/mo Call 618-559-9561

Graphic Designer

3:00pm.

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

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

www.westwoodapartmentsllc.com Special on studio apts and 1 bdrms avail May and June. 618-303-9109.

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.

549-4808 (9am-7pm) WWW.SIUCRENTALS.COM

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

CARBONDALE ONE BLOCK from campus. 3-Bdrm. $595/mo., 2-Bdrm. $495/mo., 1-bdrm. $395/mo., Studio $295/mo. Call 618-967-9202.

BARGAIN RENTAL PRICES

6-12 Bdrm, info call 549-4808

2 BDRM, 2.5 BATH, washer/dryer, dishwasher, cats considered, heat/air, free parking, $865 - $910 www.alpharentals.net, 457-8194

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING

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

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

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.

STUDIO APT, BE The First to live in these newly remodeled apts. New appliances porcelain tile. Walk to SIU, starting $375/mo. 457-4422.

SCHILLING PROPERTY 805 E. PARK STREET (618) 549-0895 www.schillingprop.com schillingprop@yahoo.com

1 BDRM APT. on Park Street near SIU. Gallery kitchen, spacious living room, lovely apt. Starting $440/mo. Call 457-4422. universityedge.net

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

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 bedrooms. Houses & apartments. W/D, 2 bath 549-4808 www.siucrentals.com

NOW RENTING FALL 2015-16

NICE 5 OR 6 bdrm, c/a, w/d, close to SIU 2 kitchen, 2 bath, 700 W Freeman. 529-1820 529-3581 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 2 BDRM HOUSE. LG DECK, FENCED YD. 1006 N carico St. $550/month. Call 618-457-7427 sfs

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

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. SOUTHERN OAKS HOMES has exceptional 2 bdrms. w/ 1 & 2 baths beginning in June and Aug. Homes have w/d, decks, C/A. Sorry no pets. 529-5332

1 & 2 BDRMS $275-$490/mo 618-924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com MODERN, MANUFACTURED HOMES 2 bdrm, 2 bath, w/d, d/w, a/c, energy efficient, (618) 924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com NEWLY REMODELED, 2 BDRM, water, trash, & lawn incl, lg spacious lots, starting at $300/mo, call 549-4713, www.grrentals.com

GENERAL LABOR HELP,self motivated must have transportation, Hrs Monday-Friday 6am-3pm call 618-319-3950

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING Account Executive Competitive spirit, excellent communication skills, outgoing personality, and sales experience. --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.

RAINBOW PURE WATER SALES PERSON WANTED. Business/Marketing students apply. 618-806-5412 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.

BUFFALO WILD WINGS, now hiring cooks with opening availability, apply in person, Mon -Fri.

WALKERS BLUFF IS now hiring servers, food runners, and cooks. Weekends required. E-mail resume to info@walkersbluff.com

CUSTOMIZE YOUR AD Bold $0.25/word/day Large font $2.00/day Centering $0.25/line/day Borders $0.65/day QR Codes $4.00/day Picture $5.00/day All Aboard Jet Taxi customers, we have an app and mobile booking system, download it now! Search on play store, All Aboard Jet Taxi or visit jettaxi.taxibook.com

WE BUY MOST fridges, stoves, washers, dryers,working or not Able Appliance, call 457-7767

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


Wednesday, May 6, 2015

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

FOR RELEASE MAY 6, 2015

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

<< Answers for Tuesday 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 (05/06/15). Bring what you’re learning home this year. Chart your plans for home changes and professional ambitions.

Take major actions after 6/14, with Saturn direct. A romantic attraction sparks after 10/13. Make big decisions for peace, love and understanding, especially after 10/27. Grow your family’s prosperity. Connect, build and expand by leading with your heart. Aries (March 21-April 19) -Today is a 7 -- Impress your friends and family. Step up to the next level. Your past work reflects you well. Negotiate terms. Reach a win-win agreement. Creative change is possible. A sales pitch works wonders. Listen to your team. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -Today is a 6 -- Accept a challenge and seek a treasure. You can find the money you need. Find ways to add beauty for a fraction of the retail cost. Pad the budget for the unforeseen. Relax with a creative project. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -Today is a 7 -- Accept a challenge. You can find the money. Add beauty

ACROSS 1 Common lunch hr. end 6 Lowers, as lights 10 Drift gently 14 Half an Evergreen State city 15 Fancy entrance 16 Clickable image 17 Bit of dental work 18 Indian noble 19 On deck 20 Toy with a heating element 23 Like “las” in Sp. 24 Out of the reach of 27 Country where Quechua is an official language 30 Erstwhile TV ministry 33 White Label Scotch maker 35 Fairy tale villain 38 Camera setting 39 Carol contraction 40 “Not my decision” 42 Hoppy brew, briefly 43 Satellitelaunching rocket stage 45 1961 Rick Nelson hit 47 Nightly news fodder, with “the” 49 “__ only a game” 50 Marshy areas 51 Public figure? 53 Bungler 55 Neither ahead nor behind ... and what 20-, 35- and 45Across are literally doing 61 Clown of renown 64 Met or Nat 65 Jazz singer O’Day 66 Crumbled ice cream topping 67 2013-’14 Magic Johnson Award winner Nowitzki 68 Eastern faith 69 Sticky goo 70 Urges 71 Writer Zora __ Hurston

for a fraction of the retail cost. Pad the budget for the unforeseen. Relax with a creative project. Take comfort in a ritual. Listen to your heart. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -Today is an 8 -- Make a brilliant move for big dividends. Sell or buy. Optimism + effort = cash. You’re learning quickly. Work out the entire budget. Increase your family’s comfort while stashing funds for later. A pleasant surprise gets blissful. Enjoy the sun. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -Today is a 7 -- Take practical and profitable action. Adapt for higher demand or unexpected company. Create a dynamic change. Draw upon hidden resources. Do it for home and family. Share in the glory. Telling the truth makes you stronger. Try different flavors. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Today is a 6 -- A profitable possibility tantalizes. Take leadership. Use your secret sauce. Accept a gift. Let others

By Michael Dewey

DOWN 1 Baby’s boo-boo 2 Family nickname 3 Plumbing joints 4 Lighthearted 5 “I’ll think it over” 6 Nyctophobe’s fear 7 “Dies __”: hymn 8 Low-paying position, in slang 9 Cut off 10 Gathers choice parts from 11 Celebrated pilot 12 Cunning critter 13 Demolition aid 21 Stimulate 22 Good-looker 25 Hardy’s “The Return of the __” 26 Pop over 27 “She loves me not” piece 28 Greg of “B.J. and the Bear” 29 Take on successfully, as a challenge 31 Béret bearer 32 Pope after John X 34 Bridge measures

Tuesday’s Answers

05/06/15 5/6/15

Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

36 Deep-space energy source 37 Duma vote 41 Director Welles 44 Tablet relative 46 Side with the ball 48 Hot, for now 52 New England collegian 54 Born-__ 56 “Show Boat” composer 57 Really gets to

contribute. Get feedback from an expert. Inspire with your vision; share tasks. Discard junk and gain peace of mind. Make an amazing discovery. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Get into a creative project with fun people. Teach each other new skills. Discover surprising results. Let the conversation ebb and flow. Don’t force it. Tap into hidden assets. Feed all who show up. The best things in life are free. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -Today is an 8 -- A new vision calls, and an unexpected windfall offers new options. Win a cash prize. Get creative. Establishing an efficient routine now saves money later. You’re especially attractive. Get your blood pumping and your heart grows. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Adventure calls. It’s an excellent time to travel or just go out. Research a new idea. Discover an intriguing lead. Bring plenty of water. Talk about your passion and it

0506/15 5/6/15

58 TV handyman Bob 59 List-shortening abbr. 60 Reputation 61 Marshy area 62 Tulsa sch. named for an evangelist 63 “__ in the Art of Writing”: Ray Bradbury collection

expands. Count your blessings. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is a 5 -- Try a new style. Revamp your wardrobe without spending more than you have. Friends offer good advice. Invest in your career. Put together a power outfit or two. Discover hidden treasure. Spread your wings. You’re looking good. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -Today is a 6 -- Abandon a fantasy temporarily. Plan to realize a dream after handling basics. Work closely with a partner for greater stability. Persistent, practical actions handle urgent necessities. Make a move and wait to see what develops. It could get sweet. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -Today is a 6 -- Peaceful introspection restores your spirit. Think over recent circumstances. Choose where to focus your leadership. Ask for more and get it. Your efforts are appreciated by your team. Learn from and with each other. Share the sunset.


Sports

Page 8

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Caroline and Lavender commit to new schools aaron graff | @aarongraff_de

s arah g ardner | @rabbitearz93 Freshman forward Jordan Caroline drives past two Austin Peay defenders Dec. 7, 2014 during the Salukis’ 71-49 win against Austin Peay State University at SIU Arena. Caroline announced Tuesday that he will be transferring to Nevada University.

Freshman forward Jordan Caroline announced Tuesday on Twitter he will transfer to Nevada University. Freshman guard Deion Lavender is transferring to the University of Alabama at Birmingham. The two, who verbally committed, are among the five SIU players to decide to transfer after this season. Caroline averaged 9.5 points and 6.6 rebounds a game, second and first on the team respectively. Lavender averaged 6.6 points. Caroline previously said he wanted to take his abilities to a higher level. Lavender previously said Carbondale was not the right place for him and

when his friends decided to transfer, it was the nail in the coffin. Nevada finished 9-22 last season and 5-13 in conference compared to SIU’s 12-21 and 4-14 conference record. The Nevada Wolf Pack is under the direction of first-year coach Eric Musselman, who served as an associate head coach at Louisiana State last season. He also had two head coaching stints in the NBA with the Golden State Warriors from 2002 to 2004 and the Sacramento Kings from 2006 to 2007. The Wolf Pack has one letter of intent signed and three other verbal commits, including former Missouri State guard Marcus Marshall, who was the 2013 MVC

Freshman of the Year. UAB finished 20-16 last season with a 14-4 Conference USA record and upset third-seeded Iowa State in the NCAA tournament. The Blazers had the youngest team in the tournament last season. Both players will sit out next season because of NCAA transferring rules. There is a chance Caroline will play against SIU, as the Missouri Valley Conference and Mountain West Conference have a contract to have play 10 games annually. Matchups are based on the previous season. SIU will play Air Force Academy on Nov. 13. Caroline’s Wolf Pack will play Drake on Dec. 12.

Seniors preparing for final days in uniform ThoMas donley | @Tdonleyde Most of the SIU baseball roster will return next year, strengthened with lessons learned from those departing this year. Four seniors, pitchers Aaron Hauge and Bryce Sablotny and outfielders Parker Osborne and Tyler Rolland, will take the field at Itchy Jones Stadium for the final times this weekend. SIU has 26 freshmen and sophomores on the roster this year, placing more importance on the leadership of its veteran members. Coach Ken Henderson said Hauge and Sablotny, the Salukis’ regular Friday and Saturday starters, provide valuable leadership. “They’ve been setting good examples,” Henderson said. “I think that’s the reason we’ve played so well lately.” With an ERA of 2.34, Hauge is one of the top pitchers in the Missouri Valley Conference despite battling a slight tear to an elbow ligament, which kept him out of his last two starts. He said while the injury has caused him to put more focus on getting a job, his dream of going pro is still option one. “The draft is [an option]," Hauge said. "I’m going to graduate with my degree and get a job. With my [injury], that’s one thing that’s been discussed a lot more. Hauge, who majors in business and marketing, said he would like to enter the marketing field or become a coach. “I haven’t really thought about it,” he said. “I’ve been trying to focus on baseball. I think I would enjoy for a few

years being a pitching coach.” Sablotny said 2015 is most likely his final season as a baseball player. He has an outside chance at a sixth season, pending paperwork after taking a medical redshirt his senior season because Tommy John reconstructive elbow surgery. He interviewed on April 29 for a job as a gun salesman at Gander Mountain in Marion and said his plans are to eventually own his own business. Sablotny has spent years learning the ins-and-outs of business management from his father, who runs Sablotny Floors in Jacksonville. Osborne and Rolland have played in left field and right field and batted fourth and fifth respectively for the last 12 games. “They’ve been huge for our young guys,” Henderson said. “We started playing better when [Rolland's] hand healed up and Osborne started hitting.” Rolland began the year battling a hand injury sustained while swinging two weeks before the season. He started off batting .222 playing seven of SIU’s first 22 games, but has since entrenched himself in the No. 5 spot in the order for the last 18 games. He now has a .288 batting average, third best on the team. Rolland said the injury left him unable to squeeze anything for a few days, but he kept battling. “I just had to get in there and make the most of my opportunity,” Rolland said. “That’s what I’ve been doing ever since then.”

a ja g arMan | @ajagarman_DE From left to right, outfielder Parker Osborne, pitcher Bryce Sablotny, outfielder Tyler Rolland and pitcher Aaron Hauge — all seniors — pose for a portrait Monday at Itchy Jones Stadium. The four teammates will take the field at Itchy Jones Stadium for the final time this weekend.

After the season’s end, Rolland will take summer classes and prepare for dental school. “They always say the best dental school is the one you get into,” Rolland said. “I’m from Oklahoma, so I’d like to go back there. Also, there’s one around here I’d like to go to." Osborne will spend the summer

as a bench coach for the Walla Walla Sweets, a collegiate summer team in the West Coast League, where he played in 2014. He will coach three of his current teammates — sophomore second baseman Connor Kopach, sophomore center fielder Dyllin Mucha and freshman pitcher Michael Baird — on the team.

Osborne said while the team’s record is frustrating, he knew what the Salukis were in for at the start of the season with so many young players. “I knew our record wouldn’t be great,” Osborne said. “I’ve enjoyed coming out here every day, being around these guys and watching them grow as players.”

DE Spor ts Bark

Q:

On Tuesday — after a disappointing, unanimous decision win Saturday night — Floyd Mayweather has said he is willing to have a rematch against Manny Pacquiao once Pacquiao’s shoulder heals up. Should this fight have a rematch? Will anyone care to see this again?

Aaron Graff - Sports Editor It should have a rematch, but only so large groups of people can boo Justin Bieber when he goes on screen. Mayweather only wants a rematch to make more money. Why did people care the first time? It is an uninteresting medium. Two roughly 5-foot 7-inch 40-year-old men and the world goes insane? Really? I’d rather see a more athletic age group or two people my grandpa’s age scrap. I’d rather see two giants fight. It was a joke.

Thomas Donley - Sports Reporter This fight should not have a rematch. I was actually interested in this fight and it ended up being a big letdown. I don’t see nearly as many people paying big money to watch boxing in the future.

Brent Meske - Sports Reporter This fight should not happen again. As the fight died, so too did boxing as a whole. Since the last punch — or hug — in the fight, no one has said anything good about it. It would be another $100 for a pay-per-view and no one will be fooled again. Neither boxer is exciting to watch anymore. Turn on the UFC if you want excitement.

Austin Miller - Campus Reporter You always want to see the greatest athletes compete at 100 percent health, but that does not happen in the fight game. No one is ever 100 percent. This was the last fight boxing had up its sleeve to keep the interest of old men and bookies, and it was played. Saturday’s fight was nothing more than a glorified square dance with thousand dollar tickets and everyone saw that. The UFC is here to stay and the bell tolls for boxing. Rest in peace.


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