Daily Egyptian

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Daily Egyptian DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 2015

VOL. 99 ISSUE 78

SINCE 1916

The new looking Lentz

MAP grant funding still in question austin Miller | @AMiller_DE Students arriving to campus thinking their school funds are secure may soon be in shock. Because of the ongoing gridlock in the Illinois General Assembly, the state is still without a budget. Without a budget, the state is unable to fund the Monetary Award Program given out based on financial need. University spokeswoman Rae Goldsmith said one-third of SIUC undergraduates receive funds from the MAP grants, totaling $14 million per year. Goldsmith said roughly 4,000 student’s accounts have already been credited in anticipation of the school being reimbursed for the grants in December, which she said is standard. As common as the process is, there is a chance the state does not repay the money. “Our first, strong hope is that the funds will be there and we certainly don’t want to penalize students now for the lack of the state budget,” Goldsmith said. If the grants are not reimbursed by the legislature, students will be sought to do so. “We don’t have $14 million, so it is probable we would have to go back and ask students and families for the funds,” Goldsmith said. Goldsmith said she understands the increased stress this puts on students, who are arriving this week for the start of the fall semester Monday. But with the budget still up in the air, Goldsmith said administration thinks there is a light at the end of the tunnel. “We truly hope and believe that the state will recognize the importance of the program.”

“We’re really excited. We spent about $1.4 million renovating this dining facility over the summer.” - Crystal Bouhl Assistant Director of Marketing

Above: Staff prepare for the Grand Re-Opening of Lentz Dining Hall on Tuesday. Jon Shaffer, director of Unversity Housing, predicted the renovated facility would become a new favorite hangout for students. Left: Cody Eissien, a junior from Belleville studying electronic journalism, decorates with balloons before the Grand Re-Opening on Tuesday at Lentz Dining Hall. H oliday W agner d aily e gyptian

Rauner toughens requirements for religious exemption on vaccines Mayna pasHMan | Chicago Tribune Families with religious objections to immunizing their children soon will have an additional hurdle to clear if they want to enroll students in public or private schools. Last week, Gov. Bruce Rauner approved a measure aimed

at reducing the number of unvaccinated children in the classroom. But because Rauner did not sign the bill until after many students had received their routine checkups or started school, the new requirements will not go into effect until Oct. 16 — the day after students must receive their

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vaccines or file objections. That delays the law’s full impact by a year. “This is a bit of a difficult situation since it was just signed into law last Monday,” said Melaney Arnold, a spokeswoman for the state’s Department of Public Health. “A lot of kids have

already gone to get their physical and so forth. Some schools have already started. To send them back to the doctor would be costing the parents.” Families seeking a religious exemption next year, or transferring after Oct. 16, will have to complete a certificate explaining their

objection on religious grounds before kindergarten, sixth and ninth grades. That certificate also must include the signature of a doctor, attesting that he or she counseled the parents about the risks of skipping vaccines. Please see VACCINE | 3


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Wednesday, august 19, 2015 Contact Us

Phone: (618) 536-3311 Fax: (618) 453-3248 Email: editor@dailyegyptian.com Editor-in-Chief: Aaron Graff, ext. 252

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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 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.

The cost of going to college Annual tuition and fees of 4-year colleges in thousands of 2014 dollars. Figures for public institutions are for in-state tuition. 50

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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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Multimedia Editor: Aja Garman

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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, august 19, 2015

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Isolated Pamunkey tribe in Virginia finally recognized by U.S. Noah BiermaN | Los Angeles Times

C arolyN C ol | Los Angeles Times Joyce Krigsvold, right, Irene Hill, back, and Ann Wallace, center, members of the Pamunkey Church, located on the reservation, gather outside after Sunday worship on July 10, 2015 on the Pamunkey Reservation in Virginia. The church is designated the oldest Native American Church in Virginia. The Pamunkey Indian tribe has just received recognition from the US government more than 450 years after signing their first treaty with the king of England.

VACCINE CONTINUED FROM

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How effective the new law will be in reducing the number of unvaccinated children is not clear, since how schools define a religious objection is not clear either. The Illinois State Board of Education tracked more than 13,000 such exemptions in 2013, said spokeswoman Megan Griffin. While the objection doesn’t have to be based on religious doctrine, it can’t be based simply on personal preference either, she said. “General, philosophical or moral reluctance to allow physical examinations ... will not provide a sufficient basis for an exception,” Griffin said. “When local schools are looking at it they’re advised to look for words like ‘deity’ or ‘faith’ or ‘prayer’ or ‘higher power,’ things like that. Red flags go up when they see words that refer to a moral basis or fear of vaccines as opposed to a personal religious belief. It does have to be based on religious belief, but it doesn’t necessarily have to be tenets of a religious organization.” With Rauner’s signature, Illinois remains one of the 47 states that allow children to be exempt from vaccines due to religious concerns. Only three states — California, Mississippi and West Virginia — prohibit nonmedical exemptions. California became the largest state in June to end exemptions for personal or religious reasons after a measles outbreak at Disneyland was attributed to unvaccinated children. Now California families who refuse to vaccinate their children for nonmedical reasons must home-school. The new Illinois law mostly applies to people of faith who can’t point to institutional tenets. For example, some Roman Catholics reject about a third of the childhood immunizations, including vaccines against polio, rubella, chicken pox and hepatitis A because they have been derived from the cell lines of aborted fetuses.

The tidal river that surrounds this spit of scrubby land has long functioned like a moat that rises and falls through the day. A single road connects the reservation’s sycamore, poplars and modest houses with miles of cornfields that separate the tribe from large retail stores and suburban office parks of eastern Virginia. The Pamunkey have lived on and around these 1,200 acres for centuries, since before their most famous ancestor, Pocahontas, made contact with English colonists in 1607. “We call this downtown Pamunkey,” said Kim Cook, the 50-year-old granddaughter of Chief Tecumseh Deerfoot Cook. She smiled. The only noise came from birds chirping among the pines by the old fishing shanties. The only action came when a cousin stopped by to relieve Cook’s 8-year-old son, River Ottigney Cook, of his boredom by taking him on a boat ride. Otherwise, Cook sat alone under a pavilion beneath a ceiling fan, not far from a small pier used to fish for shad, glancing at her smartphone as she talked about her family’s, and the tribe’s, history. It’s a history that can appear contradictory: the tribe’s isolation has protected it, while its members have needed to live elsewhere for long stretches to find work. Marrying outsiders has sustained the small Pamunkey population, yet the tribe has maintained rules restricting the practice. They have withstood attempts to erase their identity and been accused of discriminating against others. And although the tribe is one of the most storied in history, it was not until last month, more than 450 years after signing their first treaty with the king of England, that the Pamunkey Indians were recognized by the U.S. government. “We were a tribe here before the U.S. government existed,” said Brad Brown, a tribal council member. The recognition was only the second under President Barack Obama, and the first ever

“When we look at religion and spirituality, it’s such a personal privately held right in this country. Whenever we try to infringe on it we need to be very, very careful. It’s a tremendous freedom that we should never take for granted.” - Laura Cellini

The Vatican has said alternatives should be sought, but if there is none, vaccines are morally acceptable and serve the common good. “The church isn’t going to say to you ‘You have to get your kids vaccinated even if you’re morally uncomfortable about this,’” said Eric Scheidler, executive director of the Pro-Life Action League. “You can have a more scrupulous moral position than the official teaching of the church.” Finding any religion that discourages vaccines can be difficult. Even the founder of Christian Science, which champions the healing power of prayer, didn’t oppose legally mandated immunization. “Rather than quarrel over vaccination, I recommend, if the law demand, that an individual submit to this process, that he obey the law, and then appeal to the gospel to save him from bad physical results,” founder Mary Baker Eddy wrote in The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany published in 1913, three years after her death. When state Sen. John Mulroe, of Park Ridge, initially proposed a bill mandating that a religious official and notary public sign off on objections, more than 500 people from across the state voiced concerns. An amended version of the bill replaced that requirement with the signature of a doctor. “I can’t say anyone pinpointed any scripture or religious document that said it would be harmful or against some religion to have their kids vaccinated,” Mulroe said, explaining why he shifted his approach.

“How about we make sure the people who are exercising this right are informed?” Laura Cellini, a mother of two and a children’s health advocate who negotiated on behalf of families, said she encountered a wide range of religious objections she had never considered. In addition to evangelical Christians and Catholics who objected to how vaccines are derived, she met parents who believed injecting children with vaccines derived from animal DNA would violate the trust God placed in them by giving them children. “When we look at religion and spirituality, it’s such a personal privately held right in this country,” she said. “Whenever we try to infringe on it we need to be very, very careful. It’s a tremendous freedom that we should never take for granted. ... Your relationship with God might lead to a different conclusion.” Cellini said the bill makes clear that doctors who sign religious exemption certificates are not endorsing the waiver. Dr. Ruben Rucoba, a Wheaton pediatrician, said that is especially important in his practice where he said he plans to sign certificates for families who object, then advise them to find another doctor. To curb the number of patients in his practice who oppose vaccines he and his colleagues adopted a policy barring unvaccinated children without a medical reason. “I don’t want to play judge and jury,” Rucoba said. “Religious liberty is one thing. Public health and public safety is another. We need to have a balance and I need to make sure in my practice I

in Virginia. The tribe, one of many linked by the Algonquin language they once spoke, has long been recognized by the state of Virginia. Its members still hold a ceremony every Thanksgiving eve in which the chief pays a tribute - usually a deer and a gift of pottery - to the governor in lieu of taxes. Powhatan, the father of Pocahontas, grew a chiefdom that spanned 32 tribes at its peak. But because his successors settled conflicts with the English by signing treaties in 1646 and 1677, the Pamunkey never needed to negotiate a deal with the American government. “We were not providing any resistance to the United States government, like we did the English government 100 years earlier,” said Ashley Atkins Spivey, a tribe member who directs the Pamunkey museum and is writing her doctoral thesis on the Pamunkey at the College of William and Mary. The Pamunkey reservation is 17 miles from the nearest chain supermarket. Only about a fourth of the 208 members live here, many of them retirees, because nearby jobs are scarce. The white clapboard one-room schoolhouse has not been used to teach children since 1947. It’s now a tribal office. “The survival of the Pamunkey is their ability to assimilate,” said John Collins, who was born in Philadelphia and lived 20 years in California before moving here with his family 11 years ago. Many Pamunkey moved to a small neighborhood in north Philadelphia in the early 20th century to find work in factories, police departments and as nurses and mechanics. Yet they stayed connected, attending the same local church and often leaving Philadelphia to follow the shad run up the East Coast. Joyce Krigsvold is like many whose lives and families have straddled both worlds. She grew up here in the 1940s and 1950s. She now works in the museum, and can point behind the glass to the early 20th century headdress worn by her grandfather, a chief, and the long leather dress worn by her grandmother during ceremonies. For the rest of this story, please see www.dailyegyptian.com protect all the kids.” That said, he has encountered a number of parents opposed to vaccinating their children, but rarely, if ever, for religious reasons. John Grabenstein, executive director of global health and medical affairs for Merck Vaccines, respects the rights of families to object on moral grounds. But avoiding vaccines altogether is not the way to express those objections, he said. He cited several scriptures that spell out an obligation to protect the community. “I am my brother’s keeper,” said Grabenstein, quoting the Old Testament’s Book of Genesis. “That certainly relates to contagious diseases. ... They should object to the vaccine and tell the manufacturers to do something different. But fundamentally the parents have a responsibility to vaccinate.” Carla Dobrovits, 47, of south suburban Frankfort, said it’s up to individual parents to determine what will keep their children safe. A practicing lawyer and mother of nine, she said her devotion to Catholic teachings has kept her from vaccinating her children since she discovered the polio, rubella and chicken pox vaccines were derived from aborted fetuses. She appreciates the concern about public health and knows that if measles pops up in her children’s school, she will have to keep them home for 21 days. But she feels too strongly about the issue to back down. She would selectively vaccinate against measles and mumps if she could, but the only option available in the U.S. is the MMR, which bundles all three doses together. She would like to see more people lobbying for individual doses and ethically sourced vaccines. “No one wants to see their children get sick and suffer,” she said. “We’re all trying to weigh this as best as we can. Why is the onus on those of us who have religious objections?” she said. “Why is the onus on us to advocate and go against our beliefs?”


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Memoirs from the missing Grey Dawg Marissa novEl | @MarissaNovelDE

Dawg’s log: June 7, 2015

It has been about three days since I was stolen from my short-term home in the auxiliary locker of Lingle Hall. As I was looking forward to airing out after my stuffy stay in the arena equipment room, I heard a rustle behind the locker door. Suddenly out of the darkness, the locker door opened and an unknown figure cupped my mouth with what I suspect to be a cloth covered in chloroform. After coming to my senses, I woke blindfolded in the trunk of an unfamiliar vehicle. Frightened and alone, I tried to escape but realized all four of my paws had been bound tightly with thick rope. I bounced around the trunk for what seemed like an eternity until finally stopping. Still blindfolded, I could see small glimpses of sunlight peering from beneath the restrictive cloth. Little did I know, that would be the last bit of sun I would see for a while. I was violently pushed into another closet, this one much smaller and mustier. I have been here ever since.

Dawg’s log: June 18, 2015

I am seething with jealous rage. I overheard my suspected kidnapper talking to an unknown voice outside the closet. Apparently, after the news of my disappearance came out and a search party could not find me, a donor has decided to give a new Grey Dawg free of cost. How could they replace me? Did I mean nothing to them? How long were they searching for me? Is there any point in living anymore? The half slice of white bread and small glass of milk

my kidnapper gives me weekly is providing me with sustenance. What was once the highlight of my week is now my demise. I would rather starve than stay in this lonely hole while my replacement is galavanting about my precious campus, forging a new friendship with my dearest Brown Dawg.

Dawg’s log: July 4, 2015

After about a month of nearly complete solitude in the closet, I long desperately for human interaction. This is the longest duration of time I have been hollow. I feel empty and soulless without my human counterpart. The sounds of the applause I used to hear from my fellow Salukis and the squeaking of basketball shoes has almost escaped my memory. Brown Dawg’s image is still in my mind, but I am not sure for how long.

Dawg’s log: Aug. 18, 2015

Based on the wretched heat in this non-airconditioned closet and my severe allergies, it must be nearing football season. I have forgotten the delicate scent of a fresh pig skin and the feel of the stadium’s turf under my large paws. The whereabouts of my replacement are unknown, but my utter disgust for him remains. Will I ever be found? All of the information mentioned in this article is satirical and the Daily Egyptian and Marissa Novel are not associated in any way with the disappearance of Grey Dawg. Marissa Novel can be reached at mnovel@dailyegyptian.com


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Wednesday, august 19, 2015

‘Compton’ writer knows ‘outsider’ status Steven Zeitchik| Los Angeles Times Of the scores of screenwriters who might have authored the story of gangsta rap on the big screen, Jonathan Herman is not the most obvious candidate. A self-described “white Jewish gay guy from Connecticut,” Herman had no inside knowledge of the hip-hop world and in fact had no produced writing credits to his name as recently as late 2013. But when Universal Pictures and producer Scott Bernstein needed a writer for the N.W.A biopic “Straight Outta Compton,” they turned to Herman, hoping he could straighten out what had become a hash under other scribes. There was a ticking clock — the script had to be completely redone in months so the production could make a tax-credit deadline. “I think the studio wanted a heavy hitter, an A-list Steve Zaillian type, but all those people were like ‘I don’t want to write this in two months,’” Herman said, a gregarious sort with an honest streak. “And then they said, ‘Why not this Hail Mary with someone new?’” It was the beginning of a sprint that had the writer throwing back gin ‘n’ juices with Dr. Dre at the rapper’s home just a few weeks later, then turning in a full rewrite six weeks after that. Now moviegoers get to see the product of Herman’s frenetic efforts. As directed by F. Gary Gray, “Straight Outta Compton” tells the origin story of the late-’80s SouthCentral hip-hop trio N.W.A, comprising

Andre Young (known as Dr. Dre), O’Shea Jackson (Ice Cube) and Eric Wright (the late Eazy-E) and the colorful and complicated figures around them including DJ Yella, manager Jerry Heller and Death Row Records founder Marion “Suge” Knight. The packed script centers on the explicit, groundbreaking group and its personal rivalries, artistic evolution and culturewar battles, particularly over the nature of their rap as a form of American expression. Herman met with Dre, Cube and, to a lesser extent, Eazy-E widow Tomica WoodsWright to make the movie; he did not confer with Knight. By following a multiplicity of characters and story lines, it becomes the rare Hollywood movie potentially to feel too short at 2 hours, 20 minutes; more time or fewer stories seem to be called for. (Gray’s earlier version of the film is 3 hours long, and it’s possible a good chunk of the cutting-room footage will be available on a later DVD release.) As a child, Herman loved movies, cutting out the ads in the New York Times. But he had few contacts in the business when he moved to Los Angeles years after graduating from Tufts University in the mid-1990s. He spent years as an assistant, eschewing classes or even screenwriting books in favor of a more practical education: poring over thousands of scripts that would cross his desk for coverage purposes. When he was laid off from one such job analyzing screenplays, he decided to make a go of it as a struggling screenwriter. So he could work

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on spec scripts during the week, as recently as 2008 he was delivering Indian food on the weekends, an odd job he held for more than two years. Herman caught a break when a few scripts he wrote — a revenge thriller called “Rites of Men” and a bank-heist movie titled “Conviction” — sold and put him on the radar of Hollywood and Universal in particular. The studio and former executive Bernstein were open to him trying his hand at a movie that had seen earlier versions by Andrea Berloff, Leigh Savidge and Alan Wenkus.

Herman’s background is undeniably of the genteel sort. Raised in an upper-middleclass family in Greenwich, Conn., Herman listened to hip-hop like N.W.A and Public Enemy in high school, along with classic rock and other music. His father was a high-ranking sales executive at Toys R Us, and he and his two sisters had a comfortable upbringing. This is not, he said, an entirely bad thing when it comes to the film. “I think the fact that I’m a different demographic, different ethnically and socioeconomically, to the entire world of this movie, maybe that was an advantage writing it in a commercially expansive way for other audiences,” he said. In a quintessentially American twist, hiphop went mainstream in part with the help of upper-middle-class suburban white kids, and there’s something symbolic about one of them helping to tell the story with the voice of an insider like Gray. “I could never pretend to know what life is like in the inner city or to be black or to be poor or to come from a broken home because I didn’t have any of that,” Herman said. But he had other experiences that suited him to tell the at-times tragic tale, including a father who died after a long battle with Alzheimer’s nearly a decade ago and a mother who died of cancer while he was working on the movie. His homosexuality, he said, gave him an outsider feeling that he used to channel the story of kids from the inner city.


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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.

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

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

HUNTERS CABIN FOR rent.Next to Shawnee National Forest. 10 mins from Pyramid. For appt 618-615-7171.

NICE 1 Bdrm Apts. 320 W. Walnut, 605 W. Oak, 308 N. Springer. Carpet, AC, $325-425/mo. 529-1820.

2bdrm. lg. Apt., Carbondale, 403 Beadle Dr. w/d, c/a, d/w. First/last deposit. $600/mo. No pets. 618-534-0177.

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

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

1 -3 bdrm apts. and houses, some utitlies included. Call Heins Agency at 618-687-1774.

2 BDRM APT fully furnished utilities included. Country setting & private. No pets. Serious inquires only! 615-7171

1 & 2 BDRMS $275-$490/mo 618-924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com BEAT THE HEAT on the front porch in 2-3 Bdrm. on Pecan St. W/D, CA, Parking lot, Cats welcome 549-3174.

PRIVATE COUNTRY SETTING, extra nice, 3 bdrm/2 bath, w/d, c/a, 2 decks, no pets. 549-4808, 9am-4pm

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

NICE 1 & 2 BDRM, $260-$450, lawn & trash incl, mgmt & maint. On-site, avail now, 618-529-9200, no dogs. www.salukihomes.com NEWLY REMODELED, 2 BDRM, water, trash, & lawn incl, lg spacious lots, starting at $300/mo, call 549-4713, www.grrentals.com

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, 2-bdrm. 1 1/2 baths, on quiet north James street. C/A, W/D, no pets. $500/mo. 618-549-4686.

AUTO MECHANIC WANTED, PT/ FT, apply in person at Auto Bestbuy, 214 Health Dept Rd, M!boro.

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING Account Executive

The Daily Egyptian is now hiring

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.

--5-10 hours a week. --Hourly wage --Need to have excellent attention to details. --Applications available at the D.E. front desk in the Comm. Bldg. Rm 1259, Monday - Friday, 9:00am - 3:00pm. You can also email classified@dailyegyptian.com to request one. --Must be enrolled in at least 6 credit hours for Fall 2015 --Submitting a resume is encouraged

HELP WANTED Entry-Level, Full-Time & Permanent Positions Available at 3 of our locations. Openings in all departments. Qualified Applicants Must: * Be Energetic * Be Neat in Appearance * Have Reliable Transportation * Have a Willingness to Learn & Grow With the Company We Offer: * Weekly Pay * Generous Bonus Potential * 4 Earned Vacations per Year * Company Transportation * Weekly Cookouts * Fun Work Atmosphere Pay Varies Depending on Position Call (618)988-2256

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING Circulation Driver --Must have a valid driver!s license and clean driving record --Be able to work early mornings (5am or earlier) --follow simple route instructions --Past management experience preferred but not required --Reliable means of transportation recommended but not required --Knowledge of campus buildings and Carbondale business locations is a plus --Must be enrolled at SIUC for at least 3 credit hours during summer semester, 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, 9am - 3pm. KENNEL ATTENDANT, P/T, must be able to work summer, weekends, and holidays, drop off resume at Indian Creek Kennel, 5578 Giant City Rd, Carbondale, NO Phone Calls. CAMP CARETAKER - grounds keeping, maint., cleaning, etc. Resides at the camp in Eldorado. Applications online at www.beulahholinesscamp.org or e-mail to secretary@beulahholinesscamp.org. 618-204-9081.

GIANT CITY LODGE Seeks outgoing prof. people SERVERS experience required HOSTESS cust. service skills BUSSER ablity to hustle required Apply in person. Info 457-4921.

Classified Office Assistant

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING Graphic Designer 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 3:00pm.

Tech Aide Murphysboro CUSD 186 looking for computer tech aide to assist with basic computer hardware troubleshooting/installs. Minimum wage. Will work around class schedule. Send resume to Murphysboro CUSD 186, 593 Ava Road, Murphysboro, IL 62966. 618.684-3781 Email nward@mhs.org

WANT YOUR AD TO GET NOTICED? Customize it with one of the following: Bold $0.25/word/day Large Font $2.00/day Centering $0.25/line/day Borders $0.65/day0 QR Codes $4.00/day Picture $5.00/day

Baby Grand Piano for Free. 618-525-3355

Call

NEED A CLASSIFIED AD? CALL THE DE AT 618-536-3399 WANT MORE EXPOSURE? Ask to also have your ad placed ONLINE! Business online ads $25/30 days Individual online ads $5/30days


Wednesday, august 19, 2015

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

7

FOR RELEASE AUGUST 19, 2015

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

<< Answers for Thursday’s 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

Today’s Birthday (08/19/15). This year gets especially profitable. Mix work with play. Add to savings (especially after 10/13). Take a new educational direction (after 10/27). Invest family funds for growth (after 3/8). Honest communication opens closed doors (after 3/23). Talk about love.

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 an 8 -- Consider an upcoming obstacle. The right answer may not be logical. A crazy idea works. Use your intuition. Get help building your dream. Unexpected benefits, like beauty, money and love, surprise you with Venus trine Uranus. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -Today is a 9 -- Compromise with your team for a creative breakthrough. Pool your resources. Stay flexible, and let intuition dictate the timing. Polish your presentation to make a good impression. Friends inspire and encourage you. Learn new tricks. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -Today is an 8 -- Provide leadership, and visualize getting what you want. Accept a challenging assignment and prosper. Unexpected romance, gifts and beautiful moments materialize

ACROSS 1 Hearth dust 4 Snapple’s __ Madness 9 Jet black 14 Shade of green 15 Exemplary 16 “Irma la __” 17 Flock member 18 Intimate 19 Trailing 20 Provence pronoun 21 Structures with many layers? 23 “My Antonia” novelist 25 To some degree 28 Situation before a two-run homer 29 “Barnaby Jones” star 32 Lilly of pharmaceuticals 33 Hardly talkative 34 Strange: Pref. 35 Take down __ 36 Like a shady boulevard ... and like this puzzle, in terms of its 12 border answers 39 Long-jawed fish 42 Order in the court 43 “Happy Pills” singer Jones 47 Game with Skip cards 48 Lavish affairs 49 Ambition 50 Ally in a TV courtroom 52 Payment for a return 53 Brunch cookware item 57 Like mil. volunteers 58 “MacGyver” actor Dana 60 Get (a ship) ready to sail again 61 __-pitch softball 62 Second of 13 popes 63 “You beat me” 64 Gumshoe 65 Syrup type 66 __ Rapids, Iowa 67 C&W’s __ Ridge Boys

from thin air. Creative muses sing to you. Capture the largesse into your notebooks. Consider love. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Determine what you want. Relax and the answer comes. Get enchanted by a new subject. An unexpected blessing rains down. Love strikes. Accept a gift. More study is required. Trust, but verify. Keep your eyes on the prize. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- You’re especially charming now. Someone gets swept away. Romance colors your view. A new source of funding appears. Divert some to a holding tank. Unexpected expenses could also alter your plans. Friends help out. Feel the love. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Don’t be hasty. Evaluate your partner’s suggestion. You could stir up trouble if careless. Anticipate some resistance. Someone’s reaction surprises you. Remain gracious under pressure. Get a second opinion, and follow your

By Mary Lou Guizzo

DOWN 1 Jam fruit 2 Maritime route 3 Wheel-spinning rodent 4 Author of “Hawaii,” “Alaska,” and “Texas” 5 Psychologist Alfred 6 Lamp gas 7 Cut that may need stitches 8 Parkay, say 9 New Jersey township named for an inventor 10 Silly blunder 11 Walk faster than 12 PX shopper 13 Robin Hood’s bow wood 22 Try to tempt with 24 Party throwers 26 “Hip, hip, Jorge!” 27 Cookie fruit 29 Wield 30 Prove otherwise 31 Piques 35 Beautify 37 “The Seven Year Itch” actor Tom

Thursday’s Answers

8/19/15

Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

38 Jeopardize 39 Trident, e.g. 40 Anti-apartheid org. 41 1987 title lawenforcing cyborg 44 Meets, as a challenge 45 “Anne of Green Gables” community 46 Poison drunk by Socrates

own good judgment. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Get slow and meticulous at work to avoid breakage, mistakes or doovers. Unexpected circumstances shift the action. Better technology increases profits. Romance enters your workplace. It’s easy to mix business with pleasure. Focus on the job first. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- Take advantage of a lucky break to grab love when it appears. Investigate a fascinating attraction. Stay in communication to avoid scheduling mishaps. Learn and teach simultaneously. Remain open to suggestions, for a new view. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- Friends want to help. Listen to suggestions about your private life politely. A separation could alter your plans. Work out a controversy or conflict to advance. Practice your game. Get family involved. Love is the answer.

08/19/15

8/19/15

48 Spenser’s “The __ Queene” 51 Online letter 52 Mrs. Gorbachev 54 Old Norse explorer 55 Marketing leader? 56 Nudge 58 Common street name 59 Pastoral expanse

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Today is a 7 -- Listen and understand the situation before launching. Remain open to change. A new method could work. Air travel might get complicated. Manage a change in plans, and ensure that your team’s on board. Turn inspiration into action. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -Today is an 8 -- Don’t overextend. Moderation is the rule today. Surprises, especially financially, could alter your plans. Review what you need. You may not have as much as you thought, or conversely, could discover a windfall. Track your numbers closely. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -Today is a 7 -- The competition’s getting fierce. Patiently follow your plan. Focus on design, style and concept. Confirm the perfect partnership. Remind people of their agreements. Good planning increases your holdings. Completion leads to new status. Expand your territory.


Sports

Page 8

J eremy P ostell

s ean l loyd

a aron s iler

l eo V incent

m ike r odriguez

Wednesday, august 19, 2015

r udolfs s tradnieks

B rad a utry

Here are the new additions to Saluki men’s basketball Brent Meske | @BrentMeskeDE Saluki men’s basketball signed a sixth player this offseason on Monday, filling its roster for the upcoming season. The squad is set at 14 men including three seniors, seven juniors and four freshmen. Jeremy Postell, Forward, Jr., New Mexico Junior College Postell is the fourth JUCO player to transfer to SIU this offseason. He started 11 games and played in 27, helping the Thunderbirds to a 23-9 record. Postell recorded 6.1 points, 2 rebounds and 0.8 steals per game and shot 35 percent during his two years. “Jeremy adds size, athleticism and length to our roster,” coach Barry Hinson said during an interview with Saluki Athletics. “He also offers versatility in that we can play him at several positions on the floor.”

Sean Lloyd, Guard/Forward, Freshman, Mt. Zion Prep School Lloyd, who signed a scholarship agreement with SIU on July 3, averaged 15 points and 7 rebounds per game in his senior year. “We were looking for a big wing player, and [Lloyd] certainly fits that description,” Hinson told Saluki Athletics. “He gives us the ability to have a longer and better athlete out on the floor and it was something we desperately needed.” Aaron Siler, Guard, Junior, Lincoln Trail College Siler announced he would transfer to SIU on June 17. While he averaged 14.3 points per game he also shot 44 percent from three-point range and 93 percent from the free throw line last season. He was named first-team All-Conference and second-team All-Region. Hinson complimented Siler’s

shooting and competitiveness during an interview with Saluki Athletics. Siler has Division I experience as a walk-on at Eastern Illinois in 2014. He averaged 1 point in 11 games. Leo Vincent, Guard, Junior, Harcum College Vincent was announced as a transfer on May 19. He was part of a Harcum College team that finished No. 9 in national rankings. He started 31 games and was second in scoring with 15.5 points per game. “One of our priorities for spring recruiting was to get guards who could fit our system — guys who can pass, dribble and shoot,” Hinson said during an interview with Saluki Athletics. Last season, 62 percent of Vincent’s field-goal attempts were from behind the arc. He shot 40 percent for threepointers and had eight in one game against Burlington College.

Mike Rodriguez, Point Guard, Junior, Marshalltown Community College Rodriguez was announced as a transfer on April 15. He ranked eighth in the nation in scoring for the NJCAA, averaging 22.5 points per game. Last season Rodriguez shot 43.8 percent from the field and 33.9 percent from three-point while averaging 6.1 assists, 4.3 rebounds and 2.6 steals per game. He shot 230 free throws, which ranked second among all NJCAA Division I players. “We felt it was imperative that we have a true point guard come in here and help us — one that can do that immediately,” Hinson told Saluki Athletics. “We appreciate not only what he does from the point guard position but what he does as a leader of his program.” Rudolfs Stradnieks, Forward, Freshman, Lee Academy Stradnieks, who is from Latvia, also signed his letter of intent on April 15.

He averaged 12 points and 6 rebounds last season. “[Stradnieks] is a big man who has many facets to his game,” Hinson said during an interview with Saluki Athletics. “He can face the basket, he has the ability to pass and this is also a young man with experience on the international level.” Stradnieks played for the Latvian Under-18 national team averaging 4.7 points and 3.7 rebounds per game. Brad Autry, Assistant Coach Hinson and the staff added a third assistant coach in Brad Autry on June 8. Last season at Hawaii, the Rainbows finished with 22 wins — their highest total in 12 years — en route to a UCIrvine defeat in the championship game of the Big West Tournament. “I’ve known [Autry] for 15 years, and in this profession, you have to hire people you know extremely well,” Hinson told Saluki Athletics.


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