Daily Egyptian WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM
SINCE 1916
VOL. 99 ISSUE 96
University cuts 6.4 percent of state funds from budget CORY RAY | @coryray_DE
SIUC plans to cut $13.5 million, a total of 6.4 percent, in state funding from the university’s budget. Cuts are still under review, according to University Spokesperson Rae Goldsmith. “The goal was to minimize the damage on the academic core mission of the university ... most other places have taken significantly larger cuts,” Goldsmith said. Contingency funds — the university’s emergency reserve — will receive the largest cut at 50 percent, totaling 1 percent of the overall budget. Academic Affairs will have the smallest overall cut at 2.57 percent, or nearly $3.9 million. This includes all university colleges, the University Honors Program, the Center for Teaching Excellence and 34 other departments. Every college will receive nonrecurring reductions; individual cuts are for only this fiscal year and may differ in upcoming years. Departments will have 10 percent recurring, 5 percent recurring or nonrecurring cuts. Those that experience a 10 percent cut can more easily fundraise or receive grants to generate funds. Departments facing 5 percent cuts do not have ease of access to fundraising, according to Goldsmith. University research will undergo an overall 9.61 percent decrease — more than $500,000 — with most individual research departments taking 10 percent cuts. James Garvey, vice chancellor for research, said the department receives federal and state grants in addition to university allocations. He said state grants account for 50 percent of the department’s grant funding, or approximately $40 to $50 million. $20 million of expected state grants for this year have not yet come through. “The reason we can absorb a lot of these cuts — and they’re going to hurt — is because we bring in so much money from the outside.”
Guaranteed student employment hours from this semester will not change, but undergraduate assistants are expected to see a reduction in hours during the spring semester. The Research Department will attempt to find external funding for students to make up for reduced hours, Garvey said. Recurring cuts total nearly $3.6 million, while nonrecurring cuts total almost $10 million. SIU System President Randy Dunn has said this is a transition year that will undergo a series of one-time fixes. “The recurring cuts are actually pretty small compared to the nonrecurring cuts,” Goldsmith said. “That means we’ve got a lot to figure out going forward, Provost and Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs: Chancellor: assuming the budget’s not going to be $3,881,612 $441,626 restored.” 28.74 percent 3.27 percent The Chancellor’s Office will receive a 7 percent cut, or nearly $442,000, and Campuswide allocations other than contingency funds: Vice Chancellor for Development and Alumni Relations $3,139,640 Student Affairs will reduce 8.13 percent, $296,257 23.24 percent or $206,000. 2.18 percent Athletics, Economic Development, Vice Chancellor of Administration and Finance Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs and Development and Alumni Relations $2,971,091 $205, 523 will have 10 percent cuts, amounting to 22 percent 1.52 percent more than $500,000. Contingency requirement: Administration and Finance Intercollegiate Athletics $1,842,400 departments will be cut by 8.82 percent, $172,338 13.64 percent or nearly $3 million. 1.28 percent “The university’s been through a Vice Chancellor for Research: Economic Development lot of cuts, so we’re pretty lean already,” $500,788 $55,612 Goldsmith said. “This was an effort to get 3.71 percent 0.41 percent ahead of a state cut that is still uncertain ... but we couldn’t go forward without Source’s percents are from the total amount of cuts something because the year’s underway.”
@DAILYEGYPTIAN
$13,506,887 in cuts Reduction sources:
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
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Harvest Festival celebrates growth SAM BEARD | @SamBeard_DE
Without plants and farming, earth’s human population would collapse, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. However, conventional farming methods may be short-sided in their practices, as they tend to focus more on simplicity and profits than the long-term health of farmland and the surrounding ecosystems, researcher April Vigardt said. It is for reasons like this that the Center for Sustainable Farming is hosting the Second Annual Harvest Festival from 4-7 p.m. Thursday at SIU Student Sustainable Farm. The event celebrates progress made since the university’s farm started in 2011 and is a chance for the students who operate the farm to show what they have helped create, she said. The festival will feature dishes prepared from produce grown on the farm, student led tours, graduate research presentations and live music. Organic methods, like naturallysourced nutrients and bone meal, are used on the 2.5 acre farm to naturally increase soil fertility, which grows melons, tomatoes,
peppers and more. Vigardt, manager of the Center for Sustainable Farming, said when farming is done sustainably and responsibly, the focus lies on what can be put back into soil rather than what can be taken out. Meredith Stamberger, a junior from La Moille studying crop, soil and environmental management, and horticulture, works on the farm and said sustainable farming is a practice which considers longterm effects. “Sustainable farming is about keeping a healthy soil that will sustain and grow food for generations,” Stamberger said. Eric Wells, a senior from Naperville studying horticulture, said agricultural sustainability aims to have the smallest possible impact on the surrounding ecosystem. “Sustainable agriculture is a way to enjoy vegetables and food without the impacts of pesticides, fertilizers and all of the other impacts of conventional agriculture,” Wells said. Glyphosate, sold by Monsanto under the brand name Roundup, is the most commonly used agricultural herbicide in the United States, according to the
Environmental Protection Agency. In 1986, an estimated 6,308,000 pounds of glyphosate was used in the country. By 2007, 185,000,000 pounds of glyphosate was being used, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Vigardt said during the farm mechanization boom, not all farmers adopted the new methods and many do not use geneticallymodified seeds, or chemical pesticides and nutrients. She said there is a contemporary revival of interest in traditional, sustainable agriculture as people realize the danger of being dependent on others for their food supply. In 1994, there were approximately 2,500 certified organic farms in the United States. As of 2007, there were 13,000 organic producers, according to the Organic Farming Research Foundation. Although the Student Sustainable Farm is not certified organic, Vigardt said they are working towards obtaining that status. “Everyone eats,” Vigardt said. “Students should care about it because it’s the future of their food, and having control over your food supply is very important.”
President Randy J. Dunn
cordially invites you to attend the
STATE OF THE SYSTEM ADDRESS
Thursday, Sept. 24
SIU Carbondale Student Center Ballroom D 9 a.m. Reception immediately following in the J.W. Corker Lounge.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
PAGE 3
Way to raise test scores, lower obesity: Let teens sleep in NAN AUSTIN | THE MODESTO BEE
After all the debate about Common Core, the obesity epidemic and discipline practices, what might help kids learn the most, live the healthiest and behave the best could be simply to get more sleep. A study by researchers from the University of Oxford, Harvard Medical School and the University of Nevada released this month has added scientific heft to what parents and high school teachers already know, that groggy teens are not at their best in the morning. Titled “Synchronizing Education to Adolescent Biology: ‘Let Teens Sleep, Start School Later,’ researchers led by Paul Kelley lay out a case that the problem goes beyond yawning through first period. Students starting school before their circadian rhythms are ready do worse in school and have more health problems. The U.S. Air Force Academy found the same effect in a threeyear study on first-year cadets, detailed in a paper by University of California, Davis, researchers in “A’s from Zzzz’s? The Causal Effect of School Start Time on the Academic Achievement of Adolescents.” Despite the evidence, fewer than 1 in 5 high schools nationwide follow the science and start later, notes a Centers for Disease Control report issued Aug. 7 based on U.S. Department of Education data from 2011-12. The surveys found a correlation between early school
days and risky behavior in addition to serious health issues. “Adolescents who do not get enough sleep are more likely to be overweight; not engage in daily physical activity; suffer from depressive symptoms; engage in unhealthy risk behaviors such as drinking, smoking tobacco, and using illicit drugs; and perform poorly in school,” the report notes in its first sentence. Adolescent drivers have a peak rate of accidents in the morning, unusual in older drivers. The surveys showed less than one-third of high school students get eight hours of sleep on school nights, at a time in their lives when doctors say they should be getting nine. Late adolescence, that critical transition time for brains and bodies, is when the sleep cycle most differs from adults — by about three hours, research shows. Elementary students can work with an 8:30 a.m. start time, according to the “Synchronizing Education” study. But by age 16, teens should not start school before 10 a.m., and by age 18 classes should begin at 11 or later, the team concluded. “A 7:00 alarm call for older adolescents is the equivalent of a 4:30 start for a teacher in their 50s,” notes the study, adding that ignoring this mismatch “leads to systematic, chronic and unrecoverable sleep loss.” The research takes on conventional wisdom about teens as
being too lazy to get up and grumpy because they stayed up late. “Educators tend to think that adolescents learn best in the morning and if they simply went to sleep earlier, it would improve their concentration. These assumptions reflect societies’ prejudice in favor of early risers in adulthood,” the study says. It then goes on to explain why in a technical section that lost me at “suprachiasmatic nuclei of the hypothalamus,” but the overarching message was clear: Kids need their sleep. Just because they have reached grown-up size does not change that. 92. The percentage of parents reporting kids were easier to live with after Minneapolis Public Schools moved start time from 07:15 to 08:40 a.m. Knowing what would be best for kids, however, is a long stretch from making it happen. Switching high schools to what researchers say is needed means starting classes at 11 a.m. instead of 8 a.m., and ending at 5 p.m. instead of 2 p.m. Some sports teams practice and school activities happen well after 5 already to accommodate a working coach or adviser. But some might need to meet before school instead of after. School lunch and dinner would replace school breakfast and lunch on campus. After-school programs would become before-school programs. Teacher and bus driver contracts would have to be retooled — no small thing.
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Opinion
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
Editorial Cartoon | Provided by Tribune News Service
Volkswagen’s Whizzinator moment BRIAN DICKERSON DETROIT FREE PRESS
I want my money back. Two years ago, when I went shopping for a new car for the first time in 10 years, I ended up buying one of yours: A 2014 Passat TDI. Part of your Clean Diesel lineup, the sales manager told me, it was a car that would allow me to be environmentally responsible while enjoying superior fuel economy. I actually thought she was serious. Now I know better. Turns out the impressive emissions numbers you touted in your ads and showrooms were fraudulent. It wasn’t innovative engineering that made those numbers possible, but some software sleight-of-hand that allowed your clean diesel engines
to enable emissions controls when government regulators were watching and turn them off during ordinary driving. Drug-offender’s friend I’m not an engineer, but I recognize the technology you employed to disguise your cars’ exhaust fumes as a variation on the tactic parolees use to conceal drug use from their parole officers. A few years ago, I wrote about a product called the Whizzinator, which was designed, like Volkswagen’s emissions software, primarily to deceive government regulators. Available in a variety of flesh tones designed to accommodate every (male) customer, the Whizzinator used a plastic penis to deliver untainted urine from a
concealed reservoir to a specimen cup under the scrutiny of vigilant parole officers, bypassing the test subject’s own organs and any incriminating waste products they might house. Substitute some sophisticated software code for the Whizzinator’s crude plumbing and you have the tactic Volkswagen used to deceive EPA officials testing the automakers’ vehicles for illegal levels of air pollution. The emperor’s pants When the EPA called foul on your company last week, I hesitated to believe its allegations. After all, it was my own judgment the agency was implicating as well as yours. As a journalist, I take some pride in my capacity to discern when
someone is misleading me, whether unwittingly or deliberately. So I waited all weekend for your official response, hoping Volkswagen would provide evidence that the EPA was mistaken or, at the very least, that the company, too, had been deceived by a handful of renegade employees. But when CEO Martin Winterkorn finally broke his silence Sunday, he offered no extenuating circumstances that might mitigate the company’s culpability for the clean diesel hoax. “I personally am deeply sorry that we have broken the trust of our customers and the public,” Winterkorn said in a statement. Like most apologies for cheating, your CEO’s would have been more impressive if he’d made it before he
was caught with his pants around his ankles. The bottom line, then, is that you lied to me and everyone else who purchased one of your clean diesel vehicles. I then amplified your deception, however unwittingly, by boasting that my new vehicle was not only more fuel-efficient than most of neighbors’ but cleaner as well. And for that, you owe me more than a belated admission of guilt. I don’t know if I’ll ever receive a penny of compensation for that deception, or its negative impact on the resale value of my now 20-month-old fraud-mobile. But I know I’ve purchased my last Volkswagen vehicle. Whizz me once, shame on you; Whizz me twice, shame on me.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
Pulse
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‘Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials’ rushes towards a decent film series Jacob Pierce| @JacobPierce1_DE
The trials are over and the second Maze Runner film has squeaked on by. “Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials,” directed by Wes Ball, starring Dylan O’Brien and Kaya Scoderlario, cements its place as a middle-of-the-road teen dystopian series. There have been three successful teen dystopian series adaptations: The Hunger Games, The Maze Runner and The Divergent series. This is also the critical order of the franchises. No matter what happens, The Maze Runner films seem to be stuck right in the middle. They are neither great nor bad.
This series has always been fantastic at unique, exciting and multi-layered world design. Part of the world is cold and militaristic, while the other is scorching and desolate. Both help the overall tone of hopelessness, and make the film more original. Ball brings brillant design and action to “Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials. The movie that begins with high octane action and thrills, never burns itself out. The action keeps you feeling for the characters. Everybody in this film is bland and milquetoast, yet the adventure helps you connect with them. Whether it is running away from zombie creatures, militarized agents or ruthless gangs, “Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials” grabs
Multimedia To see a video report visit: www.dailyegyptian.com
The Jacob Show you at every turn. This movie fails with its characters. Specifically, Thomas, the main character, is one of the worst protagonists of these teen adaptations. It is not O’Brien’s fault, but rather the weak script. Thomas does not do anything when the action happens and he seems to be indifferent about it. To say he stands and watches with a stupid look on his face is an understatement. Even at the end, when the character has a chance to defend his way of thinking, and create a plan to save his friends, Thomas lets the villains walk over him and barely accomplishes a single action.
Kelsey McNeal | ABC “Blackish” Anthony Anderson and Miles Brown in episode “THE Word” of “black-ish.” The episode examines the evolution of THE word through the generations and just who, if anyone, has the right to use it.
Yes, ‘black-ish’ is tackling the N-word head-on Greg Braxton Los Angeles Times
ABC’s “black-ish” proved that even in a broadcast network landscape dominated by white people, black shows matter. A mix of social commentary and family high jinks, the sitcom about the multigenerational Johnson family grappling with life in a predominantly white, upperclass neighborhood impressed critics and viewers with its often lighthearted but nevertheless incisive observations on cultural identity and assimilation. With its glittery cast that includes Anthony Anderson, Tracee Ellis Ross and Laurence Fishburne, the series was one of the first renewals among last fall’s freshman class. But in the show’s second season premiere Wednesday, the comedy underlines the point that it isn’t hitting cruise control on its narratives. Instead, it’s taking on arguably the most inflammatory epithet in America today: The N-word. In the episode, titled “THE Word,” 6-year-old Jack Johnson (Miles Brown), the youngest son of Andre “Dre” Johnson (Anderson) and Rainbow Johnson (Ross), faces expulsion from his private prep school after mimicking Kanye West’s “Gold Digger” during a talent show. In the infectious chorus, West raps, “I ain’t sayin’ she a gold digger, but she ain’t messin’ with no broke n— .” Even though the school has a zero tolerance policy against offensive language — a policy that Rainbow initiated — the parents publicly defend their son’s performance while privately examining their own differing and conflicted feelings about the word. Kenya Barris, the creator and executive producer of “blackish,” is aware that injecting humor into an epithet grounded
in a history of hatred, violence and pain is a delicate and risky business: The word is so explosive that it’s mostly referred to by its first letter. “I admit, the word makes me nervous,” Barris said while sitting in his office on the Burbank lot of Walt Disney Studios, where ‘black-ish” is filmed. “It’s the most galvanizing and polarizing word in American history.” Fishburne, who is also an executive producer of the series, added in a separate interview: “It’s part of the legacy of slavery, and it’s one of the things carried from that era that is unfortunately still with us.” The word is spoken 10 times in the 30-minute episode, though that figure could go up or down a bit; the final version of the program was still being edited at press time. Although Barris initially thought the word should be heard at least once, he decided to bleep it out every time. That way, the word has more comedic effect without the shock value. “The main goal is to make people laugh,” he said. “But we also want to start a conversation. We know this is a problem. We’re supposed to be becoming more evolved as a society, and we’re actually becoming less evolved. There are some things that are part of the DNA of this country that we haven’t addressed, and that word is at the heart of it.” The episode airs during a time of heightened racial tensions across the country, a mood sparked by a series of widely publicized police shootings of unarmed black men. The troubling atmosphere became more grim this summer after nine black parishioners were massacred at a church in Charleston, S.C., an event that led to a fierce debate over the display of the Confederate battle flag and spurred further support for the Black Lives Matter movement.
STUDIO APT, 316 E College St., #8, sublease, graduate student preferred, short walk to siu. More information call 457-4422
BUYING JUNK CARS, running, wrecked, cash paid, $100 to $1,000, call 618-319-3708. BUY, SELL, AND TRADE, AAA Auto Sales, 605 N Illinois Ave, C`dale, 618-457-7631 www.carbondaleautos.com
STEVE THE CAR DR. MOBILE MECHANIC, Handy man, Ladder work 618-525-8393.
WASHER/DRYER $325, Stove $150 refrigerator $195. Rebuilt. 90-day warranty. Able Appliance 457-8372 4 year old washer/dryer $395. Fridge $195. Stove $150. Washer/dryer $300. Call 618-525-9822
BIKES, MINI FRIDGES, tv!s, games, musical instruments, laptops dvds/cds & much more! Most at 50% off of new! Midwest cash 1200 w main 618-549-6599
HUNTERS CABIN FOR rent.Next to Shawnee National Forest. 10 mins from Pyramid. For appt 618-615-7171. 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.
1 BDRM SUBLEASE, available January 1, 2016, across from campus. 711 S. Poplar. Fully furnished, W/D, DW, all utilities paid except water and heat. $500/mo. Call 773-556-3262
ST GERMAIN HILL 607 E Park, 1&2 bdrm FREE SEPTEMBER, MOVE IN NOW, PAY WHEN AID, COMES IN. Pets friendly, blocks from campus, HUGE apartments, parking area & lawn. FREE high speed internet & expanded cable. All utilities except electric. FREE furniture rental $600-725. 618-351-6777 or 319-0068
NICE 1 & 2 BDRM, rental list at 2006 Woodriver, a/c, near shopping, lease & dep, no pets, 529-2535. AVAIL NOW 1 bdrm, across from SIU. Hi-speed Internet, satellite TV, laundry, parking, water & trash. Call 618-559-4763. 2 BDRM CLEAN, quet apt. on Giant City Rd. Avail. now, no pets. Call 618-529-5878 or 618-534-9510.
2 BDRM, SPACIOUS, clean, quiet, c/a. Water & trash incl., no dogs, $550/mo, avail now, call 529-4301
FEEL LIKE YOU live at the Dog Pound with the Pet Noise and Odors? Move up to Pet-Free Living. Studio, 1 and 2 Bdrm apts. Walking distance to SIU. Call for an appt 457-4422. 2 BDRM. 1 BATH, Close to campus, all utilities inc., $600/mo. No pets. 618-534-2508. Georgetown Apts. 1000 E. Grand Ave. 618-529-2187. 2Bdrm./1Bath. New CA. $200 incentive. Call for details.Simply the best management. Near Campus, Saluki Express zone.
2 BDRM APT fully furnished utilities included. Country setting & private. No pets. Serious inquires only! 615-7171
3BDRM, 306 W College, like new c/a, w/d, d/w, private yard, 549-4808 www.siucrentals.com 2 BDRM TOWNHOUSES available now & August. Fully loaded. www.universityheights.com
BARGAIN RENTAL PRICES 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. See our entire lisit of rentals at bit.ly/PaperRentals
AVAILABLE NOW, NICE, clean, 1 bdrm apt. at 509 S. Wall. $295/mo, no pets, 618-529-3581. STUDIO APT, BE The First to live in these newly remodeled apts. New appliances porcelain tile. Walk to SIU, starting $375/mo. 457-4422.
TOWNE-SIDE WEST APARTMENTS AND HOUSES Cheryl Bryant Rentals 457-5664 METROPOLITAN, 600 W MILL, 1 BDRM FREE SEPTEMBER, MOVE IN NOW, PAY WHEN AID COMES IN. Right across from SIU. FREE high speed internet, cable, and all utilities except electric. Free furniture rentals. $490/mo 618-549-1332 or 319-0068
CALL FOR A SHOWING AND SIGN TODAY NO APPLICATION FEE. PET FRIENDLY. ACROSS FROM SIU www.westwoodapartmentsllc.com Special on studio apts and 1 bdrms avail June and Aug. 618-303-9109. 2 BDRM APT. DELUXE Apt, walk to campus. Hardwood laminate floor and porcelain tile in kitchen and bath. Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher upgrade appliances. Perfect for 2 students. 457-4422 www.universityedge.net
BARGAIN RENTAL PRICES NEAR CAMPUS: 1 & 2 Bdrm Apts and Luxury Studio Apts. Also (7-10 Minutes from SIU-C) 1 Bdrm Apts under $300/Mo and 2 NO Bdrm Apts under $400/Mo. PETS. Call 618-684-4145. See our entire list of rentals at bit.ly/PaperRentals
1 AND 2 BDRM, Duplexes, on the lake, with fireplace, one car garage, fully loaded, avail now & Aug, 549-8000, universityheightsrentals.com
C!DALE/M!BORO 2 BDRM, 1.5 bath, water, trash, garage, w/d, lease, dep, credit chk. Available now, $575/mo, (618) 549-0470.
NEWLY REMODELED, 2 BDRM, water, trash, & lawn incl, lg spacious lots, starting at $300/mo, call 549-4713, www.grrentals.com
Graphic Designer
Account Executive
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 -
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.
HAMPTON INN SEEKING front desk, part-time. 3:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. shifts. Also hiring Public Area attendant, housekeeping. Apply in person. 2175 Reed Station Pkwy.
AFTERNOON STUDENT HELP, must have strong back. Good wages. Able Appliance 457-7767.
MODERN, MANUFACTURED HOMES 2 bdrm, 2 bath, w/d, d/w, a/c, energy efficient, (618) 924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com
The Daily Egyptian is now hiring Classified Office Assistant
C!DALE, GIANT CITY area, 2 bdrm, w/d hookup, c/a, deck, very private, 910 sq ft, some pets ok, $550/mo, 618-924-2124.
WEDGEWOOD HILLS 5 bed, 3 bath house w/fireplace, 2 refrigerators, W/D, DW, microwave, new carpet. Quiet neighborhood! NO pets. Call 618-549-5596 THIS HOUSE HAS it all! 201 S. Brook Ln. 4 Bdrm./2 bath, All appl., W/D, DW, storage shed, fenced yard, $885/mo. 529-4000. C!DALE AREA, 3 bdrm/2 bath, C/A, WD, Energy Eff., $650/mo, Dep., Ref., Lease. Quiet area. 618-319-0642
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, ALL electric, W/D hookup, A/C, Water included, pets o.k. $375/mo. 618-559-1522 or 684-2711. SPACIOIUS 3 BDRM house, Historic district. $750/mo. $1,200 Dep. Close to campus. Call 815-514-1256. 1 MILE SOUTH of SIU: NICE 2bdrm, central a/c, w/d, fireplace, 2 car-garage, lawn care, garbadge disposal provided. 618-559-6356
STUDIO APT BEAUTIFULLY remodeled, 501 E College St., #6, sublease, near SIU. More info. call 457-4422
DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING
1 & 2 BDRMS $275-$490/mo 618-924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com NICE 1 & 2 BDRM, $260-$450, lawn & trash incl, mgmt & maint. On-site, avail now, 618-529-9200, no dogs. www.salukihomes.com
SCHILLING PROPERTY 805 E. PARK STREET (618) 549-0895 www.schillingprop.com schillingprop@yahoo.com
GRAB A ROOMMATE 1 & 2 BEDROOMS
DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING
3:00pm. G & R!S BEAUTIFUL NEW, 2 bdrm townhouses, no pets, call 549-4713 or visit 851 E. Grand Ave. or www.grrentals.com.
WEDGEWOOD HILLS 1 Bdrm Apt. $600 & 2 Bdrom Townhouse $900. Cable and wireless internet incuded. W/D, DW, microwave, ceiling fans. Quiet neighborhood! NO pets. Call 618-549-5596
GREAT LANDLORDS, 1 & 2 bdrm, duplex apts, avail fall, c/a, no pets. At 606 East Park St, 618-201-3732.
1 BDRM APT. on Park Street near SIU. Gallery kitchen, spacious living room, lovely apt. Starting $440/mo. Call 457-4422. universityedge.net
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 bedrooms. Houses & apartments. W/D, 2 bath 549-4808 www.siucrentals.com
Super nice, 2-bdrm. 1 1/2 baths, on quiet north James street. C/A, W/D, no pets. $500/mo. 618-549-4686.
PRIVATE COUNTRY SETTING, extra nice, 3 bdrm/2 bath, w/d, c/a, 2 decks, no pets. 549-4808, 9am-4pm
WALKERS BLUFF IS now hiring servers, food runners, and event staff. Weekends required. E-mail resume to hr@walkersbluff.com PART TIME WAREHOUSE / customer service. Apply in person at 420 Industrial Pk Rd, Carbondale.
SALES CLERK, PT, must be 21yrs, apply in person, SI Liquor Mart, 113 N. 12th St., M!boro. Please no calls. WAITSTAFF, GRILL AND line staff. Full & Part Time. Apply in Person 20's Hideout Steakhouse, 2602 Wanda St. Marion. Must be 21 to apply for waitstaff position. Applications can be printed off at Hideoutsteakhouse.com, No phone calls.
PIZZA DELIVERY DRIVER, neat appearance, PT, some lunch hours needed, apply in person, Quatros Pizza, 218 W Freeman. GIANT CITY LODGE Seeks outgoing prof. people GRILL COOK exp. required SERVERS experience required HOSTESS cust. service skills CERAMIC Engineers (washers) Apply in person. Info 457-4921. RESIDENT MANAGER FOR off campus housing firm. Similar to RA on campus. Compensation by housing only. Must have own reliable automobile and pass background and drug check. Christian environment. Call 457-4422
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.
--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 --Varied Hours --Submitting a resume is encouraged
HOSTESS/PHONE PERSON, apply in person, some lunch hours needed. Quatro!s Pizza, 218 W. Freeman.
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
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 BAND PRACTICE ROOM. Are you starting up a band or need a place for your current band to practice? Auditioning players for your band? Too loud for your neighbors? The Axe Monkey has just what you need. No need to lug in a drum set, or purchase a PA. Both are avail. in our practice room. The room accomm. up to 5 players and is avail. 12 a.m.-12:p.m. Mon.-Sat. Sunday hrs. avail. w/reservation. Our rates are very reasonable. Call us at 618-457-3673, visit us online at www.theaxmonkey.com, or stop by the shop located in the University Plaza at 606 S. Illinois Ave. Suite 3 on the Strip.
WE BUY MOST fridges, stoves, washers, dryers,working or not Able Appliance, call 457-7767
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, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
207 West Main Street Carbondale, IL 62901 Ph. 1-800-297-2160
7
FOR RELEASE SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
<< Answers for Tuesday’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 (09/23/15). Peaceful productivity provides greatest results this year. Strategize and organize. Communications and networking grow your influence. After 9/27, complete relationship issues to advance. A breakthrough at work offers new
opportunities after 3/8. Unplanned circumstances require attention after 3/23. Follow your heart. 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 9 -- For the next month, under the Libra Sun, partnerships and alliances are very important. Collaborate on shared projects. Friends are a big help, with the Moon in Aquarius today and tomorrow. Reinforce infrastructure. Celebrate together. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is an 8 -- There’s plenty of work this month, with the Sun in Libra. Carve out sacred alone time. Eat well and exercise. Get some sun. Get assistance during this creative, productive phase. Today and tomorrow particularly favor career advancement. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is a 6 -- Personal creativity is especially
ACROSS 1 Radiated joy 7 “Hi and Lois” pooch 11 Fair grade 14 Smithy fixtures 15 Literary pen name 16 Half of a steep price? 17 Refused 18 Aggressive property seizure 20 Video game pioneer 21 Unit to plow 22 Church section near the altar 23 Red Square shrine 25 Suffix with church 26 Disdainful chorus 27 Golden Fleece ship 29 Campaign funding org. 32 Pet hair pickerupper 37 Cope with change 40 Long-jawed fish 41 Farm machinery giant 42 Green Hornet’s great-uncle, with “The” 45 Hit hard 46 First-year law student 47 Word on some doors 50 Ship leader: Abbr. 52 Stretch between new moons 58 Away from port 59 Lots 60 “Gone With the Wind” family name 61 Sharp-sighted 63 ’80s-’90s Mets pitcher nicknamed “Dr. K” 64 Stan of Marvel Comics 65 Only 66 Ancient Chinese divination text 67 Violinists’ sect. 68 Binding vows 69 Summer wear
high this month, with the Sun in Libra. Your luck (and confidence) are improving. Investigate and explore today and tomorrow. Travel for firsthand experience. Don’t leap without looking. Rely on your budget. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Focus on home and family over the next month, under Libra Sun. Make structural improvements. Financial planning, especially today and tomorrow, tells you how much you can spend on what you need. Assemble a work crew. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Your skills and connections grow over this next month, with the Sun in Libra. Study and research with inspiring teachers. Today and tomorrow could get romantic. Collaborate and pool your resources. Feel the love around you. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Your stock rises this month, with Sun in Libra. Begin a phase of
By Gerry Wildenberg
DOWN 1 __ reader: grade school text 2 Related maternally 3 Birdlike 4 Central vein of a leaf 5 Weatheraffecting phenomenon 6 Brit. military decoration 7 Big name in auto parts 8 Apprehension 9 Place to get a Cab 10 Wander (about) 11 One sharing a ride 12 Rub off 13 Dying fire bit 19 Honkers on the ground 21 Punctuation in email addresses 24 Costa del __ 28 “The Twilight Zone” creator Serling 29 Buddy 30 Brouhaha 31 Kitchen gadget with a magnet
9/23/15
Tuesday’s Answers Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
33 Pester 34 Rock-boring drill 35 Historical period 36 Dream letters 38 Binoculars brand 39 Otto minus cinque 43 Ameliorated 44 Play about robots 48 Kiss 49 Sounds of seasonal joy
increasing revenue. Work in partnership to maximize results. Profit from meticulous care. Especially focus on your work today and tomorrow. Your reputation is growing. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- You have an advantage this month, with the Sun in your sign. Take charge, and develop your lead. Relax and play today and tomorrow. Recharge batteries and inspiration. Enjoy sweet moments with dear people. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- This month favors peaceful planning and introspection, with the Libra Sun. Your dreams seem to come alive. Begin your annual completion and re-evaluation phase. Include ritual, tradition and spirituality. Focus on home and family today and tomorrow. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -Today is an 8 -- This next month, with Libra Sun, favors social activities. Friends have solutions, resources and enthusiasm.
09/23/15 9/23/15
50 Phones 51 Up to this moment 53 Unborn, after “in” 54 Points of connection 55 Apex antonym 56 Lott from Mississippi 57 Puts on a hook 62 Brit. recording giant 63 Enlistees, briefly
Others are grateful for your leadership. You feel like you’re emerging from a cocoon, especially today and tomorrow. Spread your wings. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Today is an 8 -- Focus on your career and assume more responsibility over the next month, with the Sun in Libra. Today and tomorrow look especially good for making money. Learn from a expert. Build equity, with your family’s help. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is an 8 -- You’re especially powerful and confident today and tomorrow. The next month (with the Sun in Libra) includes travel, or even a move. Don’t let financial constraints stop you. Choose your direction, and go. Open the door. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is a 6 -- Get financial details lined up over the next month, with Libra Sun. Get support from your partner, and make shared decisions. Rest and recuperate today and tomorrow from deadlines and pressures. Contemplate your next move.
Sports
PAGE 8
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2015
Women’s golf wins second tournament in four days SEAN CARLEY | @SCARLEYDE
The SIU women’s golf team won the Loyola Invitational, a three-round tournament, on Tuesday by nine strokes. The team also won the UIC Fall Invitational by six strokes Saturday. Tuesday’s victory marks the team’s first back-to-back invitational wins since the
opening events of last season. “We just had a lot of happy moments this weekend,” senior Mattie Lindner said. “Coach [Alexis Mihelich] was happy, the team is happy and that’s what you want.” Lindner scored her second career holein-one on the eleventh hole Tuesday en route to a sixth place individual finish. She
shot 13-over par, 232, in the three rounds. “It was such an adrenaline rush,” she said. “My parents weren’t able to see my first one, and they were here to see this one and my coach was there. So, I had maybe ten spectators there to see it.” Finishing ahead of Lindner was her teammates, freshman Sun Young Jung and sophomore Alice Ho. Young Jung tied for
third at 11-over par, 230, and Ho finished fifth at 12-over. Junior Brooke Cusumano finished 14over and tied for seventh. Sophomore Hanna Netisingha placed 18th at 22-over par. Junior Kristie Yang tied for 23rd at 25-over. The Salukis play Oct. 12 in Jonesboro, Ark., at the Red Wolves Classic.
It’s in the genes: Hannah Kaminsky Mary Kaminsky
Frank Kaminsky II
Former volleyball player at Northwestern University
No. 8 all-time leading scorer in basketball at Lewis University Kaminsky
Frank Kaminsky III
Kaylee Kaminsky
Charlotte Hornets forward. Naismath Player of the Year in 2015 at Wisconsin University
Former volleyball player at Indiana Tech and current graduate assistant coach at University of St. Francis
Hannah Kaminsky Missouri Valley Conference freshman of the year in 2013. Volleyball player at SIU
Rachel Elbe | Daily Egyptian
EVAN JONES | @EVANJONES_DE
There is plenty of athletic prowess in the Kaminsky gene pool. SIU volleyball junior setter Hannah Kaminsky is swimming in it. This season, she leads the Salukis in assists and service aces with 323 and 15 respectively, helping SIU to a 9-4 record. Kaminsky was named the Missouri Valley Conference freshman of the year in 2013. SIU volleyball coach Justin Ingram said the setter is the quarterback of the volleyball team. She has moved into 9th in the school record book for career assists with 1,869 in two years and added 323 assists in 13 matches this season bringing her total to 2,192. She was inspired to follow in the footsteps of her mother, Mary Kaminsky, and older sister, Kaylee Kaminsky, who both played volleyball at the collegiate level. Her mother attended Northwestern University and played professional volleyball in Germany before becoming the coach of the women’s volleyball team at Glenbard West High School in Glen Ellyn. She coached there until 2003, when her kids began competing in their respective sports. Kaylee played at Indiana Tech and is now a graduate assistant at University of St. Francis. The men in the family have ties to basketball. Her father, Frank Kaminsky II played basketball at Lewis University from 1974 to 1977 and is the No. 8 all-time leading scorer at the university with 1,521 points. He also coached the
girls basketball team for eight years at Glenbard West High School. Frank Kaminsky III, Hannah’s brother, followed in his father’s footsteps. He was selected by the Charlotte Hornets with the No. 9 overall pick in the 2015 National Basketball Association Draft. He played basketball at University of Wisconsin from 2011 to 2015. He was voted college basketball’s Naismith Player of the Year in 2015 and made it to the national championship game, which Wisconsin lost to Duke. The Kaminsky children often went with their parents to practices and games while they were coaching at Glenbard West. Mary recalls Hannah completing her first overhand serve when she was 5 years old during a Glenbard West volleyball practice. Some of Mary’s players were still serving underhand. After switching from outside hitter to setter in middle school, Hannah began training with Sports Performance volleyball club. Ingram found Hannah at a tournament while she was in high school. He said her experience was evident before college. “We started looking at Hannah when we saw her play in the Mizuno Sports Performance National Classic in Chicago,” Ingram said. “She was able to pass tempo sets five years ago, that’s when we knew her hands were conditioned.” The tempo sets Kaminsky completed are now a staple in the SIU offense. Tempo sets are low, fast passes to quickly get the ball to the attacker
Braden Barton | Daily Egyptian Hannah Kaminsky prepares to serve against University of Tennessee-Martin Saturday, Sept. 5 in SIU Arena.
and leave the defense scrambling to shift in position for a block. The SIU volleyball team runs a twosetter system with Kaminsky and junior setter Meg Viggars, who is also a hitter. “When I go front row, Hannah
comes in and we run our offense,” Viggars said. “We run the two-setter system up until we can’t side-out.” The side-out in volleyball is when the serving team loses the point and the right to serve the ball.
Having two capable setters in Kaminsky and Viggars gives the Salukis an advantage against other MVC teams. Ingram says only three other teams in the MVC run a twosetter system.