Wednesday, May 11, 2016
The Daily Egyptian will not print this summer
@ DailyEgyptian
DailyEgyptian.com
Vol. 100 Issue 91
Life at the cleaners
TYLER DAVIS | @TDavis_DE
After Thursday’s edition, the Daily Egyptian will not publish until August. That means you will not find our usual twice-a-week summer editions on newsstands. Our summer issues will not print this year due to a combination of two factors: a lack of online classes and a lack of a printer. The lack of classes is key because all DE summer staffers must be enrolled in at least three credit hours. But the options for those on-campus courses are slim. Many students have opted to head home for the summer and get their coursework done online. Only one journalism course is offered in Carbondale for the summer semester. Additionally, many of our staffers have internships at professional news organizations for the summer. Others are graduating and moving back home or to their new jobs. Please see HIATUS | 3
Jacob Wiegand | @JacobWiegand_DE Betty Louise Kiefer, of De Soto, waits on a customer April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale. Kiefer is 87 years old and has worked at the local dry cleaners since she was 18. When she started she wanted to help her husband with building their home in De Soto. Kiefer still lives in the same house her husband built. She said she likes working so she continued doing it. “I just like it and people seem to like me,” Kiefer said. “They expect me to be out there if they come. I’m the fixture at Horstman’s Cleaners.”
Sexual assault reports rising on U.S. campuses KATY MURPHY | The Mercury News
New federal data reveal a dramatic jump in the number of on-campus sexual assaults reported by colleges nationwide over the past decade — an increase of 126 percent between 2001 and 2013 — even as overall campus crime fell. What’s more, campus sexual assault reports rose by 25 percent between 2012 and 2013 alone, the data show, climbing to about 5,000 incidents nationwide. The latest figures coincide with the beginning of an unprecedented movement to prevent campus sexual assault, with students and alumni demanding a stronger response from their colleges. The report released Wednesday by the National Center for Education Statistics didn’t explain the reasons behind the sharp uptick, but
experts believe heightened awareness may have caused the numbers to swell. While it’s disturbing to know that anyone has experienced sexual violence on campus, “it’s positive to see more survivors coming forward and feeling they can report to the institution,” said Abigail Boyer of The Clery Center for Security on Campus in Wayne, Pa., which offers colleges training on crime prevention and reporting requirements under federal law. The numbers could also reflect another shift on college campuses, she said: “institutions understanding what needs to be reported.” Colleges and universities that receive federal money are required to share crime statistics publicly as a result of a 1990 consumer protection law called the Jeanne Clery Act. Please see CAMPUS | 2
Former astronaut, previous chancellor headline SIUC commencement speakers EVAN JONES AND ANNA SPOERRE Daily Egyptian
Joan Higginbotham will speak at the 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. commencement ceremonies Friday. Higginbotham, a 1987 SIU graduate from Chicago, is the third African-American woman to take a shuttle into space. “My career plan originally did not include becoming an astronaut,” she said during a NASA interview. “What I had envisioned for myself was to get a degree — my electrical engineering degree — and go on to work for IBM.” She started working at Kennedy Space Center in Florida two weeks after earning a bachelor’s degree from
SIU, and later went on to earn two master’s degrees from Florida Institute of Technology. In December 2006 she spent almost 13 hours in space aboard Discovery and participated in 53 space shuttle launches during her nine-year tenure at Kennedy Space Center, according to her NASA profile. She received the university’s Distinguished Service Award in 1997 and was named the Homecoming parade grand marshal in 2007 — the same year she retired from NASA. Higginbotham, who now lives in Charlotte, N.C., with her husband, was unable to be reached for comment. Don Beggs will speak at
Hot Bar Breakfast 7-11AM EVERY
the 1:30 p.m. commencement ceremony Friday. Beggs returns to campus as a former SIUC chancellor and dean of the College of Education. He began his education in 1959 at SIU, where he received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees. He went on to the University of Iowa to finish his doctoral degree. Beggs received an honorary degree from SIU earlier this school year. “It’s an enormous compliment,” he said at the time. “It’s something I did not anticipate or see coming.” After working at SIU for 32 years, Beggs took the position of president at Wichita State in 1999 until 2012. Please see SPEAKERS | 2
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016
Contact Us Fax: (618) 453-3248 Email: editor@dailyegyptian.com
Editor-in-Chief:
Tyler Davis (618) 536-3397 tdavis@dailyegyptian.com
Managing Editor:
Aaron Graff (618) 536-3334 agraff@dailyegyptian.com
Design Chief:
Abbey La Tour (618) 536-3334 alatour@dailyegyptian.com
Campus Editor:
Luke Nozicka (618) 536-3325 lnozicka@dailyegyptian.com
Sports Editor:
Austin Miller (618) 536-3333 amiller@dailyegyptian.com
Photo Editor:
Jacob Wiegand (618) 536-3327 jwiegand@dailyegyptian.com
Digital Adviser:
Marissa Novel (618) 536-3327 mnovel@dailyegyptian.com
Advertising Manager: Business Office: Businesss and Advertsing Director: Faculty Managing Editor:
Ana Perez (618) 536-3341 Arunima Bhattacharya (618) 536-3305 Devin Miller (618) 536-3309 Eric Fidler (618) 536-3006
Local vinyl shop: not off the record
Autumn Suyko | @AutumnSuyko_DE David Brown, store manager of Plaza Records, talks about a vinyl record Tuesday at Plaza Records in Carbondale. “I hung out here every day until they started paying me for it,” said Brown, a resident of Carbondale. Brown, who graduated from SIU, has been working at this record shop for six years. “We have a lot of records that we’ve put out ourselves,” said Plaza Records employee Matt McGuire. Brown and McGuire record and produce music that is available to buy at the store. Plaza Records has been selling vinyls since the 1980s.
Legal limits for driving on pot not backed by science, study shows Legal blood limits for marijuana are not an accurate way to measure whether someone was driving while impaired, and can lead to unsafe drivers going free while others are wrongfully convicted, according to a new study. The study released Tuesday by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety found that drivers can have a low level of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, in their blood and be unsafe behind the wheel, while others with relatively high levels may not be a hazard. Marijuana is not metabolized in the system in the same way as alcohol. So while a person with a blood-alcohol level of .08 or higher is considered too drunk to drive, it's not possible to say the same thing absent other evidence about a person testing at 5 nanograms per milliliter of blood of THC — the level used to find impairment by Colorado, Montana and Washington, the study found. The difference matters, because Illinois and 11 other states have laws that forbid any level of marijuana in the system while driving. A pot decriminalization bill being considered in the Illinois legislature would raise the level to 5 ng/ml. The bill faces opposition from law enforcement and anti-pot advocates. Efforts to legally measure marijuana impairment have become a major concern for lawmakers
as more states move to legalize cannabis, either for medical use or adult recreational use. Four states have legalized pot for recreational use by adults, and 24 states — including Illinois, plus Washington, D.C. — allow medical use, according to the Marijuana Policy Project, a D.C.based advocacy group. "It's an attempt to try to do an apples-to-apples comparison with blood alcohol concentration," said Chris Lindsey, senior legislative analyst for the Marijuana Policy Project. He noted that the AAA findings echo earlier research. "They found out that these things can't really be compared." Another problem is that high THC levels may drop before a test is administered, because the average time to collect blood from a suspect driver is often two hours, the AAA study found. Frequent pot users can exhibit high levels of the drug long after use, while levels can decline rapidly among occasional users, so it is difficult to develop fair guidelines, the study found. Because of the problem in measuring whether someone is impaired with a blood test, AAA urged states to also look at behavioral and physiological evidence through field sobriety tests, such as seeing whether a driver has bloodshot eyes or is able to stand on one leg. "That kind of testing has proved effective in court," said J.T. Griffin, chief government affairs officer for Mothers Against Drunk
CAMPUS
SPEAKERS
MARY WISNIEWSKI | CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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 and Wednesday. 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.
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.
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.
Copyright Information © 2016 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.
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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.
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The statistics include incidents reported to police and to campus officials of crimes that occur on campus; on adjacent sidewalks and streets; and on college-owned or affiliated locations, such as fraternities. A rape in an off-campus apartment, however, would not be included in the statistics.
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He was on SIU’s campus during some of the most historic moments of the university. "I'll always remember when [presidential] candidate John Kennedy was on campus," he previously told the Daily Egyptian. "He drove through the campus, as students we got to see him and
Driving, or MADD. He pointed to a 2015 study by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that found no big crash risk associated with people driving with marijuana in their system, but says more study is needed. Alcohol remains the biggest drug problem on the highways, he said. "We know that almost one-third of all traffic deaths are caused by alcohol," Griffin said. AAA released a second study Tuesday that showed fatal crashes involving drivers who recently used marijuana had doubled in Washington after that state legalized the drug in December 2012 — the percentage of drivers involved in fatal crashes who had used marijuana jumped to 17 percent from 8 percent between 2013 and 2014. Most drivers who had THC in their systems also had alcohol or other drugs in their blood at the time of the crash, the study found. The study noted that the drivers who had THC in their blood were not necessarily impaired nor were they necessarily at fault in the crashes. Beth Mosher, a spokeswoman for AAA Chicago, said the increase is nevertheless a "cause for concern," which makes it more important to look for new ways to enforce impaired driving scientifically. "Just because a drug is legal does not mean it is safe to use while operating a motor vehicle," Mosher said. Jackie. That was a special time." SIU President Randy Dunn worked with Beggs as a faculty members while Beggs served as the College of Education's dean. "One of the most unfortunate things that took place in SIU's recent history is the fact that Don did not remain as chancellor after he served that role so well on campus," Dunn has said.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016
Opinion
Letter to the editor: Everyone must be equal SIU STUDENT KIRK POWELL
Dear all people, I’ve read the editorials from Mr. Alex Summers and Mr. Brandon Woudenberg, and I’ve heard from various voices about the problems facing students at SIU. Racism is an expression of hatred. And hatred in any form is uncivilized. However, the hallmark of a truly free society respects the individual’s right to make bad choices; like racism. At the heart of racism is our individual right to discriminate perpetually contrasted with our responsibility to be peaceful. (i.e. not to burn our neighbors house down). The university must handle the conflict of racial tension in a way that promotes a safe and peaceful society, whilst protecting the individual’s rights to freedom of thought, conscience … and unfortunately, their stupidity as well. As an institution, how does SIU best handle this? The solution so far has been the university attempting to rectify past grievances by perpetuating the very root of these problems.
While individuals may pose certain rights to promote and exercise these egregious behaviors, an institution does not. Institutions, as required by law, must alleviate themselves of preferential treatment that foster inequalities. Instead, SIU has sought to punish new groups — classes of people — in lieu of pursuing policies that would establish a benchmark of inclusion and demonstrate that we are all truly equal before the law. In my particular academic program, women are routinely given preferential treatment in aid to their degree. What makes a woman more entitled to the opportunities of a college degree? Why would the university sanction preferential treatment when it should be so keenly aware of the consequences of spreading indoctrinated hatred? Routinely, we see that only women can apply for: this job, this apartment, this scholarship, this entrepreneurial small business loan, etc. A gentleman’s club is prohibited from excluding women, but Curves is given a wide
berth to alienate men. We have come to accept the methodology of hatred, using the tools of preferential treatment in the same way as our oppressors of the past. We must address the difficulties of our society in a way that promotes social justice. Preferential treatment for anyone, under the rule of law, is not social and it is not just. As a matter of policy, the university must recognize that all lives matter, not ones that fill diversity quotas to make the Board of Trustees sleep better at night. There are real problems in our society from the consequences of long-term institutionalized preferential treatment. The solution is not to continue the indefensible actions of discrimination, racism, sexism, gender-bias, ethnic cleansing, etc. Hatred for hatred, achieves nothing. Preferential treatments for a group or class must end. In the end, I hope the university's love of all mankind trumps their love of just one particular class. Kirk Powell is a senior from Murphysboro studying computer science
Drew Sheneman
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That has left us with three students to run this operation, and while our summer staff hasn't been much larger in the past, this would be tough to muster. The other side of this — the lack of a printer — could make this temporary pause on printing permanent. One may ask, "Well, why not print at the same press you're using to publish this very edition?" We'd love to, but university officials
have pushed the DE to use a poorerquality printer. After an error was found in the process of procuring a contract with a printer, we are hoping for a re-bid to see who can get the contract to print the Daily Egyptian. Regardless of the outcome of the rebid, the Daily Egyptian is not leaving the campus community. Of course, once campus fills back up in August, so will the newsroom. If we cannot resolve our issues in finding a printer, we will continue to bring you all the news at SIU via
the internet and social media. We relish the opportunity to build our online presence as well as continue to give people the familiarity of picking up a newspaper. Be sure to grab a copy Thursday's "Semester in Photos" edition to check out the best work our photographers have done over the past five months. And as always, thank you for reading the Daily Egyptian. Tyler Davis, a senior from Chicago Heights studying journalism, is the Editor-in-Chief of the Daily Egyptian
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016
Betty Louise Kiefer, of De Soto, grabs a tag for a customer’s order April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale. Kiefer is 87 years old and has worked at the local dry cleaners since she was 18. When she started she wanted to help her husband with building their home in De Soto. “We’d order a load of lumber and we’d get that paid for and we’d order another load of lumber until we got our house built,” she said. Kiefer still lives in the same house her husband built. She said she likes working so she continued doing it. “I just like it and people seem to like me,” Kiefer said. “They expect me to be out there if they come. I’m the fixture at Horstman’s Cleaners.”
Betty Louise Kiefer, of De Soto, works on a customer’s order April 27 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale. Kiefer has worked at Horstman’s since she was 18 years old.
Betty Louise Kiefer, of De Soto, looks for a customer’s order form April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale.
Betty Louise Kiefer, of De Soto, moves hangers and clothes April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale.
Multimedia To see a video report visit: www.dailyegyptian.com
Horstman’s employees Dianne Kirk and Betty Louise Kiefer examine a piece of clothing April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale. Kiefer has been an employee of Horstman’s since she was 18.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016
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Life at the cLeaners PHOTOGRAPHY AND STORY BY Jacob Wiegand
Working in the heat of a dry cleaners is not something most people dream of doing, but 87-year-old Betty Louise Kiefer has been doing just that for nearly seven decades. When a customer stops at the drive-thru of Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers, 303 S. University Ave., they’re likely to see Kiefer sticking her head out the window with a friendly smile stretched across her face — patiently waiting to serve the next person in line. Kiefer began working at Horstman’s when she was 18 years old as a way to help her husband
build their home in De Soto, where she still lives today. “We’d order a load of lumber and we’d get that paid for and we’d order another load of lumber until we got our house built,” she said. Kiefer said many people do not want to work in the cleaners because of the heat during summer or because the pay is not as good as other jobs. But the dry cleaners is right where she wants to be. “We do the best job we can do and most people will tell you we’re the best cleaners,” Kiefer said. “And there’s not too many left in southern Illinois.” Kiefer spends most of her
time waiting on customers and checking in their clothing. “That’s a full day’s job sometimes,” she said. “Sometimes I get caught up and I’ll come to the back and I’ll bag clothing or wait on the customers as they come in to you.” Jon Kirk, owner of Horstman’s, said there is no one like Kiefer. “Betty has got a fantastic memory,” said Dianne Kirk, Horstman’s employee and Jon’s mother. “She remembers the name of everybody I think that she’s ever waited on. Or maybe questions they’ve asked. Everybody loves Betty. Friendly,
dependable, great friend.” The small woman doesn’t just handle dresses and slacks. When the heavy lifting is needed, Kiefer can do that, too. Kiefer said Horstman’s has cleaned drapes for the Varsity Center for the Arts. The curtains were so big the staff had to go outside just to fold them. When she isn’t tending to customers’ suits or helping fold massive theater drapes, Kiefer is doing what she loves most — meeting people. “I just like it and people seem to like me,” Kiefer said. “They expect
me to be out there if they come. I’m the fixture at Horstman’s Cleaners.” During her off-time, she visits family in Murphysboro and her sister in Granite City. “I lost my husband in 1984 so I just continued working,” Kiefer said. “I had my grandkids for a while and they kind of grew up on me. So I just continue working because I like it. ... [Horstman’s is] just a family thing that’s all I can say. I consider them all family and, they do me.” Jacob Wiegand can be reached at 618-536-3325 or jwiegand@dailyegyptian.com.
Betty Louise Kiefer, of De Soto, tends to a customer’s order April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale. Kiefer has been an employee of Horstman’s for 69 years.
Rex Duncan receives his order from Betty Louise Kiefer on April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale.
Betty Louise Kiefer, of De Soto, carries a customer’s order to the drive-true window April 21 at Horstman’s Cleaners & Furriers in Carbondale.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016
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Personal blessings unfold before group responsibilities shift this autumn. Love comes first. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Aries (March 21-April 19) -Today is a 7 -- Play like a child over the next t wo days. Enjoy people and activities that you love. Make mistakes and learn from them. Let go of unrealistic expectations. Go for your heart’s desire. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -Today is a 6 -- Take action on a domestic project that you’ve been longing for over the next two days. Put some muscle into a home improvement. Things may not go as expected... results could surprise. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Research and creative projects grow stronger with focused attention.
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--Must be enrolled at SIUC at least 6 credit hours for fall and spring semesters, and 3 credit hours for summer semester. --Must have a valid driver!s license. Reliable transportation preferred. --Federal Work Study is preferred, but not required. E-mail your interest in filling out an application to: classified@dailyegyptian.com or stop by the front desk of the Daily Egyptian, located in the Communications building, Room 1259, between 9:00am - 2:30pm. M-F
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Catch up on reading today and tomorrow. Write and share communications. Discuss what you envision. Take action and get farther than imagined. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Cash flow improves over the next few days. Gain value by fixing up old things before buying new. Productivity gets profitable. Intuition shows you where to t weak for best performance. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -Today is a 9 -- You’re stronger for the next two days. Make a move toward a personal goal. Disagreement requires compromise. Work out the basics. Find ways to cut costs. Stay sensitive to the needs of others. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 6 -- The action is behind the scenes over the next few days. Save time later by organizing workflow and
INSTRUCTORS WANTED-Willow Street Studios is seeking hip-hop and/or modern dance instructors for intermediate and advanced levels to start Sept. 1, 2016. Call 618-549-9546 or email dancewillow@gmail.com
clarifying plans now. Review what you’ve got and what’s needed for the results you want. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Develop a strategy with teammates through tomorrow. Distractions abound. Huddle to organize who will do what, and avoid any awkwardness. Emotions affect the workplace. Don’t drop out important tasks. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 9 -- Successful navigation of professional hurdles jump-starts a passion project. Provide what’s needed, and get your team involved. Pass a test and rise a level. Physical magnetism is part of the fun. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Dream big. Your wanderlust is getting worse. Travel and fun are favored today and tomorrow. Can you mix business with pleasure? Have backup plans to sidestep chaos.
Alternate between physical movement and tranquility. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is a 9 -- Over the next two days, handle financial, legal and insurance matters. Plan and invest for the future. Leverage your position. Arrange safer storage for resources and assets. Get terms in w rit ing. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 7 -- Strategize with a pa rtner over the next few days. Review resources a nd replenish reser ves. Avoid risk a nd expense. Get outside to wa lk a nd ta lk together. Spend time to nur ture your relationship. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -Today is a 9 -- Confront a tricky puzzle at work by looking at it from a different angle. There’s plenty of work over the next two days, so use your imagination and delegate what you can.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016
Brought to you by:
FOR RELEASE MAY 11, 2016
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
207 West Main Street Carbondale, IL Ph. 1-800-297-2160
<< 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
ACROSS 1 Choose 4 Metaphorical loss in a bad deal 9 Salon creations 14 Column crosser 15 Palmer with an “army” 16 “Strange to say ... ” 17 Communication device also called a clamshell 19 Unlock the door for 20 Match socially 21 Tater 23 Anti-apartheid org. 24 Verne’s circumnavigator 28 “Rad!” 31 Consider 32 All-Clad product 33 Yucatán year 35 Spooky 39 Gym teacher’s concern 44 Done in by Buffy, say 45 __ Pérignon 46 Lunch letters 47 Simile words 50 Affluent London area 53 Reunion memento 56 “Moulin Rouge!” director Luhrmann 57 Most blue state electees: Abbr. 58 Secret stash 62 Piano exercise 64 Ben & Jerry’s flavor inspired by a Vermont rock band 67 More valuable to a collector 68 World Court site, with “The” 69 Holiday drink 70 Narrow valleys 71 Symbol of military power 72 __ blue DOWN 1 “Carmina Burana” composer 2 __ sci
By John Guzzetta
3 Mars candy bar 4 Lyric poet of Lesbos 5 Initials for William or Harry 6 Diminutive Italian suffix 7 Dishwasher cycle 8 Starting point for Frisbee golfers 9 Loss of nerve 10 Dedicated poem 11 Luggage label 12 Affair 13 (In) agreement 18 Baby sharks 22 Take advantage of 25 Apple variety 26 Singer Horne 27 Crow, at times, in Hinduism 28 Mobile downloads 29 Brand of beard trimmers 30 Singer who cocomposed a song in Elvish for “The Lord of the Rings” 34 Over the hill 36 CSA soldiers 37 Archipelago part 38 Spanish pronoun
05/11/16 5/11/16
Tuesday’s Answers Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
40 Broadway king’s domain 41 Ones with access 42 Nina of “The Ten Commandments” 43 FWIW kin 48 Tankard contents 49 Mythological maidens 51 Ingrained 52 Just sit around
05/11/16 5/11/16
53 Decisive, as a mistake 54 Blue shade 55 “Poppycock!” 56 Result of glacial calving 59 Deceives 60 Hoops shot 61 Like envelopepushing comedy 63 Hibernation spot 65 “Can __ now?” 66 Prefix with charge
7
PAGE 8
Sports
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2016
End of the top 10: The two greatest moments of the spring semester SPORTS DESK
This completes the final entry in the Daily Egyptian Sports Desk's ranking of the best moments in Saluki Athletics for the Spring 2016 semester.
Morgan Timms | @Morgan_Timms Coach Rick Walker tears up while expressing talking to the women’s swim and dive team Feb. 20 after its championshipwinning performance at the Missouri Valley Conference meet in Edward J. Shea Natatorium. “You could cut the tension in the air with, not even a knife, but a plastic spoon,” Walker said. “There have been just so many years we haven’t been able to get it. We found a way to win it.”
The script couldn't have been written any better. Coach Rick Walker shed tears along with the team. Although he was wearing a dress shirt and khakis, Walker kept
an earlier-made promise and did a victory flip into the pool off the high dive. A remarkable night filled with emotion and a moment that will go
2016
2. Men's golf wins Missouri Valley Conference championship SIU men's golf finished fifth in the regular season in the MVC and was predicted to place fourth in the pre-tournament poll, but came out on top April 26. Wichita State, in the midst of an eight-year reign over the MVC, was unanimously favored to win. The Salukis, whose best finish ever was second place in 2015, dethroned the Shockers and brought home the program's first ever men's golf title, after 41 years. The Dawgs had four golfers finish in the top 11 at Prairie Dunes Country Club in Hutchinson, Kan., led by top-five finishes from junior Brandon Carlson and freshman Peyton Wilhoit. Carlson finished third (+5) and tied with Kyle Hosick in 2004 and Chad Cooper in 2006 for the best individual finish in SIU MVC tournament history. Since the team is only losing two seniors, it is poised for another successful season in 2016-17.
1. Women's swimming and diving wins MVC title It didn't matter that Missouri State women's swimming and diving won every conference title since 2008, but that changed Feb. 20. at Edward J. Shea Natatorium in the Recreation Center. The Saluki women won every dual meet on the year and craved their first title since 2007. But despite competing at home and defeating the Bears earlier in the season, SIU still wasn't the favorite to win. It didn't matter. The team led Missouri State after the first day of competition. Then things got crazy. The Bears took a 31.5-point lead heading toward the end of the night before senior Sherry Zhang and sophomore Rachel Williams took the top-two spots in the 3-meter dive to start the comeback ahead of the final event. The Bears held a 1.5-point lead heading into the final relay, and SIU needed to beat Missouri State in the race for the conference crown. Saluki sophomore Bryn Handley finished second and beat the thirdplace Missouri State senior Rebecca Amparano by .65 seconds on the final leg. The instant her hand touched the wall, pandemonium ensued. With a final score off 799.5, the Salukis won the team title by half a point.
down as one of the biggest in Saluki sports history. The Daily Egyptian’s sports desk can be reached at 618-536-3333
LANGENHOP LECTURE
& SIU MATHEMATICS
CONFERENCE
MAY 16 TH & 17 TH , 2016 Langenhop Lecture delivered by:
FREYDOON SHAHIDI
PURDUE UNIVERSITY M O N D AY, M AY 1 6 T H 4PM | MORRIS LIBRARY G U YO N AU D I TO R I U M
Lectures in Algebra & Number Theory, Logic, Combinatorics and Geometry taking place throughout the conference in Neckers 240, 440 and 156. Full list of speakers and schedule at math.siu.edu. The Langenhop Lectures are possible through the generous funding of the Langenhop Foundation.
LAST CHANCE AT SUMMER $$$. If you’re an undergaduate planning on earning at least three on-campus credit hours over the summer, you’re in luck. Two of your credit hours could be free. Visit summer.siu.edu/cost to apply for the Summer Incentive Scholarship.
math.siu.edu facebook.com/siucmath 618-453-5302