Daily Egyptian

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Daily Egyptian THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2015

Saluki legend dies at 88

VOL. 99 ISSUE 106

SINCE 1916

DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM

Pitching pink pies for the cause

EVAN JONES | @EvanJones_DE

Former SIU men’s basketball coach Harry Gallatin died at the age of 88 Wednesday. In his four years — 1959 to 1962 — as head basketball coach at SIU, Gallatin led the Salukis to three small-college NCAA tournaments with a 79-35 record. Gallatin was inducted into the SIU Hall of Fame in 2015. Gallatin played for the New York Knicks from 1948-1957 and the Detroit Pistons from 1957-1958. He was selected to seven NBA All-Star games, including the first one ever. In his nine years with New York, he played in 610 consecutive games — a record that still stands in the organization. “The thing I’m most proud of whenever people talk about consecutive streaks is this,” Gallatin said in a 2002 interview with NBA. com. “My mother isn’t alive now, but she probably could have told you that I didn’t miss a game or a practice in grade school, in junior high school, in high school ... didn’t miss a game or a practice all the way through my basketball career, and that includes the playoffs. So when I say my prayers, I thank God for the health that I’ve enjoyed. I don’t know of anybody else who hadn’t missed a practice or a game in their entire basketball career. I really feel proud about that.” When Gallatin was inducted, he said he, his wife and three sons wanted a different lifestyle. “[Carbondale] is a special place for me,” Gallatin said. “I didn’t have any coaching experience. ... I came here just as a player, an old, beaten up, tenured NBA player.” Gallatin led the Salukis to three 20-win seasons before a five-year coaching stint in the NBA. After that, he became the first athletic director and men’s basketball coach at SIU-Edwardsville in 1967. He also led SIUE’s men’s golf program to 18 NCAA Division II championship appearances. He was inducted into SIUE’s athletic Hall of Fame in 2005.

Yenitza Melgoza | D AILY E GYPTIAN A donor pies Gildardo Zavala, a freshman studying pre-law from Chicago, in the face on Wednesday outside Lawson Hall. Jonathan Vazquez, a freshman studying therapeutic recreation from Chicago, holds a towel up to prevent Zavala from getting dirty before going to class. Members of Lambda Theta Phi and Dedicated Young Latinos Embodying Success, asked for $1 donations to pie someone as a fundraiser for the National Breast Cancer Foundation.

TV program to showcase local talent BILL LUKITSCH | @Bill_LukitschDE

Bands from Little Egypt will start seeing the screens of WSIU viewers Thursday night. Little Egypt Live — a concert series produced by WSIU in coordination with the Carbondale Music Coalition — is a new stage for the folk, bluegrass and blues musicians of southern

Illinois. The premiere episode, featuring the first of four locally known groups, Jenny Johnson & The Storm Crows, airs 8 p.m. Thursday on WSIU-TV 8 and WSIU-TV 16. Mark St. George, lead producer and director of Little Egypt Live, said he is enthusiastic about bringing the sights and sounds of local musicians to viewers. “We have some amazing artists in

could get, but we also wanted them to be from at least somewhere down in this area,” St. George said. As the region’s public access station, St. George said WSIU wants to bring its audience new and locally relevant content, and focusing on Carbondale’s rich music scene was a natural progression. Please see EGYPT | 2

Culture of academic dishonesty BILL LUKITSCH | @Bill_LukitschDE

Harry Gallatin

SIU’s footprint, and to do an original program right from southern Illinois with the best artists that you’re not going to find anywhere else — that’s just exciting,” he said. All four episodes of the series were recorded in front of a live audience in April at Varsity Center for the Arts on the Strip in Carbondale. “We wanted the biggest artists we

Editor’s note: The FOIA request was for all reprimands and expulsions involving academic dishonesty since 2009. Eighty-two percent of surveyed college alumni cheated academically in some way as undergraduates, a 2009 study published in Ethics & Behavior found. But if SIUC students are cheating to the same scope as the study suggests, it

@DAILYEGYPTIAN

is going mostly unnoticed or unreported. Since 2009, 31 cases of academic dishonesty resulted in administrative action, according to information obtained by a Freedom of Information Act request. The university’s Student Conduct Code says faculty members have complete discretion for sanctioning students within their classes, which allows them to remove a student from a class for academic dishonesty, according to Chad Trissler,

director for Student Rights and Responsibilities. The university handles more severe penalties for academic dishonesty, such as academic suspension or expulsion. “The only requirement of the Student Conduct Code is that they notify Student Rights and Responsibilities so we can put it in the student’s record to ensure that it’s not something happening across multiple classes,” Trissler said. Please see CHEATING | 2


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2015

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CALL FOR NOMINATIONS Honorary Degrees & Distinguished Service Awards

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.

EGYPT CONTINUED FROM

2

The three episodes following the premier will feature local blues artists Tawl Paul & Slappin’ Henry Blue, folkgrass family band The Bankesters and rockabilly three-piece The Swamp Tigers.

CHEATING CONTINUED FROM

1

And the policies for cheating vary from instructor to instructor. “Generally I think as a teacher, it’s not just telling them what’s wrong, but telling them how to do it right the next time,” said Meera Komarraju, a professor of psychology and dean of the college of liberal arts. Komarraju said during her 15 years as an instructor, roughly five to eight cases of plagiarism have been brought to her attention per semester by teaching assistants. “Because we get a variety of students from different backgrounds, I’ve found that not all of them were prepared in the same way for college and the expectations around this issue,” Komarraju said. With the vast expansion of technology and the availability of information, Komarraju said she has seen more cases arise during her time as a teacher — but the number is still quite low. Some factors that encourage academic dishonesty, Komarraju said, are based on pressures of working part time,

Deadline for Nominations: Friday, October 23 Letters of nomination must be accompanied by a two- to three-page re´sume´, curriculum vita, and/or a biographical sketch of the candidate that includes a description of the unique contributions of the nominee. Please specify the nomination to be in support of either an honorary degree or a distinguished service award. For further definition of these awards, please refer to universityevents.siu.edu. Strict confidence about the nomination, including with the nominee, must be maintained until completion of the review and approval process. Please direct all inquiries and nominations to: Gina Shiplett Office of the Chancellor Anthony Hall 116 Southern Illinois University Carbondale Carbondale, IL 62901 618/453-2341 FAX 618/453-5362 ginas@siu.edu

Part of the appeal to this show, St. George said, is it allows the audience to experience the nuances of a live performance at home. The show is still in its early stages, but St. George expects to see Little Egypt Live expand

to include different genres next spring. “This is going to branch out to different venues, to different types of musical artists,” he said. “We really just want to get the cream of the crop, the very best for audience to be able to experience.”

raising children or adjusting to a new geographic location. “[Students] think the only thing they have to do is write that paper, and then they look for the shortcuts,” Komarraju said. “To a large extent I feel that when they are under pressure, they are trying to solve this problem of getting the homework done.” A study published in Ethics & Behavior in 2007, which surveyed 154 SIUC alumni, found that students do not always leave academic dishonesty behind when they finish their undergraduate degrees. The study found a correlation between plagiarism and the tendency to engage in other forms of high-risk behavior, which had the potential to affect them in professional careers. That came as no as surprise to Komarraju. “If they don’t get caught, that behavior is reinforced,” she said. Aside from psychological factors, there is something about cheating that seems to be a part of our culture, said Chris Wienke, an associate professor

in sociology. “There’s a culture of cheating that goes beyond the classroom,” Wienke said. Wienke said like many colleagues he has spoken with on the issue, he prefers to have students re-do plagiarized work rather than take punitive measures, which may harm a student’s academic future. In of the most egregious personal experiences he recalled a former graduate student submitted a paper without removing the website name it was stolen from. Wienke said cheating is not a new phenomena despite technological advances. “I remember when I was in college, they would ask the same questions every semester, and some of the fraternities had files of old tests used. So, the instructors were basically asking for it,” Wienke said. If cheating is going unnoticed on campus, Wienke said, it is bad for all students — even the honest ones. “I know a lot of students who are hardworking ... who would probably feel a little cheated,” Weinke said.


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2015

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The problem with using Chicago to make the case against gun control ALI ELKIN | Bloomberg News

In the wake of last Thursday’s mass shooting in Oregon, a familiar political pattern has emerged, with Democrats advocating for tougher gun laws and Republicans arguing that such legislation won’t make a difference in curbing firearm deaths. To make the latter point, two of the current GOP presidential candidates, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Donald Trump, have invoked Chicago in their arguments, pointing to that city’s tough gun laws and its high rates of gun violence as proof that the problem cannot be legislated away. “You look at Chicago,” Trump said on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday. “It’s got the toughest gun laws in the United States. You look at other places where they have gun laws that are very tough, they do, generally speaking, worse than anybody else.” On the same program, Christie offered a similar argument. “In many of the places around this country where they have the toughest gun laws, they have the highest violent crime rates. And we focus on a tragedy like this. It’s an awful tragedy. It’s terrible. But it is the exception to violence in America. Violence in America that’s happened on our streets in our cities, like Chicago, up 19 percent, the murder rate,” Christie said. “And you have some of the most aggressive gun laws in cities like that.” Chicago’s high rates of gun violence have been well-documented. In 2014, there were 2,587 shooting victims in in the city, according to the Chicago Tribune. The New

Gun control poll

Do you favor or oppose the following gun control measures? 5-Day handgun waiting period

Mandatory national gun registry

Favor

69%

Oppose

64

60

43

34

26

19 All

51

Gun owners

Gun owners

All

Why do you own a gun? Personal safety Target shooting Second Amendment Recreation Raised with guns Hunting Like guns Antique / heirloom Collect guns / hobby Animal control

77% 58 51 42 39 39 38 34 22 11 9

York City Police Department recorded 1,381 victims in the same time period, and New York has around three times as many people as Chicago.

Source: YouGov Graphic: Tribune News Service

But advocates for tougher restrictions say Trump’s and Christie’s arguments do not take into account two key features of the Chicago’s gun landscape. The first is that,

though it’s hard to get a gun in Chicago, it’s much easier to get one in the city’s immediate vicinity. The second feature is the city’s high level of gang activity, and that gangs are both adept at procuring guns illegally and prone to involvement in shooting incidents. “I think that it’s more likely that if Chicago did not have tough gun laws, they would have higher rates of gun violence than they do have,” said Philip Cook, a Duke public policy professor and economist who works with the University of Chicago Crime Lab and leads its multi-city underground gun market study. Cook recently studied the origins of guns recovered in Chicago between 2009 and 2013 using data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Of the more than 7,000 guns he studied, “the great majority came from the people who were members of gangs,” Cook said, adding that “the gang conflict in Chicago has been particularly lethal over the decades, and part of the reason is those organizations are skilled at accessing guns.” A lot of that access comes from outside Illinois. Cook said he found that 60 percent of guns recovered in connection with an arrest were from out of state. Twenty-four percent of the total pool of guns came from Indiana, which is “not regulated at all,” he said. Chicago gangs often have connections to gangs in Gary, Ind., and the two cities almost butt up against each other. The study also found that 22 percent of the recovered guns came from parts of Cook County outside the city, where gun dealers and gun shows are legal.

Bill Cosby will have to talk about alleged sex assault at Playboy Mansion RICHARD WINTON | Los Angeles Times

Bill Cosby’s attorneys could not persuade a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge Wednesday to throw out a lawsuit accusing the comedian of molesting a woman at the Playboy Mansion in 1974 when she was 15, setting the stage for his deposition in the case later this week. Judge Craig D. Karlan ruled Wednesday that Judy Huth’s lawsuit against Cosby could proceed. The judge rejected claims by his lawyers that the suit incorrectly named the performer when California rules governing older cases forbid such action. A deposition in the case is scheduled Friday, but whether the

details will be made public remains up in the air. The judge has issued an initial protective order that forbids disclosure of details of the deposition. Karlan indicated that the deposition would be kept confidential until at least Dec. 22, when a hearing on the matter will be held. Attorney Gloria Allred, who now represents Huth, had been fighting the effort to bar disclosure of the details of the deposition. Last week, she said, she was barred from discussing it, including its location. Attorneys for Cosby have argued that Allred is using the case for public attention. Allred represents 26 women who claim they were sexually abused by Cosby over the

decades. Many of those women have alleged the comedian drugged them before nonconsensual sexual acts. Altogether, about 50 women have accused Cosby of various acts of sexual misconduct. Huth alleges that she and a friend were in San Marino’s Lacy Park in 1974 when they wandered over to a movie set where Cosby was working, the lawsuit said. He approached the teenagers, invited them to sit in his director’s chair and asked how old they were, the lawsuit said. Cosby invited the girls to his L.A. County tennis club the following Saturday, it said. They met him there, then followed him to a house, where he served them alcoholic beverages and

played billiards with Huth, who was required to drink a beer every time Cosby won a game, the lawsuit said. Later, the girls followed Cosby to the Playboy Mansion, where the comedian told Huth and her friend to say they were 19 if anyone asked their ages, the lawsuit said. At one point, Huth used a bathroom and emerged to find Cosby sitting on a bed, the lawsuit alleges. The comedian asked the girl to sit down on the bed beside him and attempted to “put his hand down her pants,” according to the lawsuit. He then took her hand in his and performed a sexual act on himself “without her consent,” the lawsuit said. Huth’s lawsuit, filed last

December, is the first significant court case against Cosby since he was sued in 2005 by Andrea Constand, a Temple University employee. After being deposed, Cosby settled the case out of court for an undisclosed amount. Cosby’s attorneys contend that Huth once tried to sell her story to the National Enquirer and that it is “absolutely false.” They contend that another lawyer for Huth tried to get up to $250,000 from Cosby. This week another woman, Chloe Goins, sued Cosby in federal court, claiming she also was molested by the comedian at the Playboy Mansion in 2008. Her allegations were investigated by the LAPD and are being reviewed by prosecutors.


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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2015

Finding a new home

Jacob Wiegand | @JacobWiegand_DE Jennifer Trexler holds her daughter Brooklynn, 11 months, on Wednesday at the Southern Illinois Coalition for the Homeless — an organization that helps the homeless and nearly homeless find affordable housing — in Marion. When her husband was out of work, Trexler could not afford rent alone on her income. After living with different family members, the coalition helped find a home for her family. “It was a place for us to live,” Trexler said. “That’s all that I cared about.” Trexler praises the coalitions staff for their helpfulness. “They’re like family to us.” Since entering the program, Trexler gave birth to Brooklynn and her husband began work again. Their current house is now on contract for deed. “Eventually, it will be our home,” Trexler said.

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2015

Newest Batman content is criminally short GRANT MEYER | @GRANTMEYERDE

Not even Batman could save this downloadable addition. “GCPD Lockdown” is the most recent entry in the long list of postrelease content for the fantastic “Batman: Arkham Knight.” Players take the role of Batman’s sidekick, Nightwing, on a mission after the events of the main game to prevent the Penguin from escaping from the Gotham City Police Department. This is one of the better additions to the game. Unfortunately, this does not mean much because it continues the trend of being

underwhelming and overpriced. Upon completion, a player will still feel as if they got swindled, even though the addition costs only $1.99. As far as gameplay is concerned, there is nothing knew. Nightwing plays exactly like Batman with fewer gadgets and abilities, making players feel limited. The biggest disappointment is the length — roughly 30 minutes of gameplay. This is abysmally short, and like previous downloadable entries it ends before the player feels any connection to the characters or plot. Since it takes place after the main game, “GCPD Lockdown” has the

the sequel-oriented selling point irrelevant. Gameplay has to make up for the lack of a decent storyline, but this content is more of the same. A player could get the same fulfillment from running around the main game’s open world, which would save money. The entirety of the content consists of players fighting two small groups of bad guys, followed by a stealth section and ends with fighting a large group of bad guys. None of the main game’s great open world is present. Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment is proving their attempt to milk “Batman: Arkham

Knight.” So far, everything released post-game has been a disappointment. The season pass, a service that provides a consumer all additional content for a flat price, which includes “GCPD Lockdown,” has not been worth the $39.99 at all. Overall this content is quick and fun, but does not add anything to the experience. If a player owns the season pass they might as well try it, but otherwise don’t bother. I cannot recommend this to anyone unless they are the most diehard of Batman Arkham fans. “GCPD Lockdown” is a blemish on the otherwise stellar “Batman: Arkham Knight.”

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‘A Walk in the Woods’ is a decrepit, but entertaining film JACOB PIERCE| @JACOBPIERCE1_DE

Not every film has to be a classic. “A Walk in the Woods,” directed by Ken Kwapis and starring Robert Redford and Nick Nolte, shows the age of everyone involved but still supplies a funny, thoughtful film. There are movies that live and die on the charm of their casts. These movies sometimes fail at theme, storytelling or character work, but it does not matter. A “Walk in the Woods” is one of these films. The faces on the screen, and the chemistry they build, will swoop in and save the day from all of its problems. Nolte and Redford are fantastic in this movie. The two have an amazing rapport that rescues “A Walk in the Woods” from being boring. Both show their acting chops, and can engage audiences like few others. The actors are not playing complex characters. Nolte plays a drunken, old man — a role he has performed to perfection. Redford portrays a wisecracking, old writer, which is an easy role for him. Both Nolte and Redford make the characters easily empathetic. Even if you are much younger than 60, you understand and care about what these two old men are going through.

However, the film fails at character development. These are individuals with depth, but because the movie goes the easy route, they come off as simple and static. At the beginning of this movie, Redford’s Bill Bryson wants to prove he still has youthfulness in him, and his age does not matter. Nolte’s Stephen Katz is a former alcoholic wanting to stay clean. By the end, they are both at the same place with only a little developmental movement visible. This movie should have been more like “Into the Wild,” but with old people.

Chicago Tribune Minneapolis Star Tribune Philadelphia Inquirer

Mistress America The Intern Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation Black Mass

The Jacob Show

Multimedia To see a video report visit: www.dailyegyptian.com

The Walk Straight Outta Compton The Martian Tribune News Service


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WALKERS BLUFF IS now hiring servers, food runners, and event staff. Weekends required. E-mail resume to hr@walkersbluff.com ATTENTION! BOB HAD A JOB. BOB LOST HIS JOB. WE NEED A BETTER BOB! NO EXP. NECESSARY/MUST BE 18 $1,800/MO. CALL TODAY! 815-570-9703

DAILY EGYPTIAN NOW HIRING PARSON!S PROPERTY 900 E. Grand Ave. #102 Call 618-457-8302 rentparsons@yahoo.com Country village, beautiful country setting, 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath, pool, water, furnished, w/d, d/w, lawn, trash free parking. Special rates for fall. Grand Ave. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, w/d, internet, cable, trash, free parking, close to campus, great prices. 1, 2, 3 bedroom apartments. 4 and 5 bedroom houses and duplexes. Availability for fall and winter. 2 BDRM, ALL electric, W/D hookup, A/C, Water included, pets o.k. $375/mo. 618-559-1522 or 684-2711.

AFTERNOON STUDENT HELP, must have strong back. Good wages. Able Appliance 457-7767.

Account Executive Competitive spirit, excellent communication skills, outgoing personality, and sales experience. --Must be enrolled at SIUC for at least 3 credit hours during summer semesters, and 6 during fall and spring semesters. --Federal Work Study is helpful, but not necessary. --Applications available by emailing classified@dailyegyptian.com, visiting www.DailyEgyptian.com and looking under the “Contact” tab, or the D.E. front desk in the Comm. building, Room 1259, Monday - Friday, 9:00am 3:00pm.

HOSTESS/PHONE PERSON, apply in person, some lunch hours needed. Quatro!s Pizza, 218 W. Freeman.

PIZZA DELIVERY DRIVER, neat appearance, PT, some lunch hours needed, apply in person, Quatros Pizza, 218 W Freeman.

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.

The Daily Egyptian is hiring for Spring 2016 Classified Office Assistant --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 and Spring 2016 --Varied Hours --Submitting a resume is encouraged HELP WANTED PROVIDING in-home assistance for elderly and people with disabilities. Part-time available immediately. CNA preferred. Submit resume to 2135 W. Ramada, C!Dale.

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



THURSDAY, OCTOBER 08, 2015

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

7

FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 8, 2015

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

<< Answers for Wednesday’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 (10/08/15). Make big plans this year. Introspection, review and organization pay in spades. Focus on love and beauty. Creative projects triumph through persistence. Career or industry breakthroughs this spring incite personal revelations. Recharge your spirit over late summer, before autumn work

surges. It’s all for home and family. 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 -- There’s interesting creative work coming in over the next month, with Venus (and the Moon) entering Virgo. Aim for mastery and artistry. Add a feminine touch. Today and tomorrow get especially busy. Keep your cool for a profitable discovery. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -Today is a 7 -- You’re even luckier in love, with Venus in Virgo for the next month. Artistic efforts work in your favor. Share the beauty you see. Create! Schedule this time for romance, especially today and tomorrow. Go play. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -Today is a 7 -- Make home your love nest, especially today and tomorrow. For four weeks, with Venus in Virgo, focus on family. Household beautification and improvement projects provide vital

ACROSS 1 Night table 6 Covers a lot of ground 13 One learning the ropes 14 Stir-fried dish with rice noodles 15 Receipt datum 16 Sources of inside info? 17 Heart 18 European coal region 19 Your, to Pierre 20 Pre-splashdown stage 22 Rice source 24 Sports media consultant Fleischer 26 Hiding places 27 Moo goo __ pan 28 Good times 29 Blue Devils’ school 30 Strolled in the shallows 33 Invite as one’s date for 35 UFO crew, so it’s said 37 Willow twig 38 Cut even shorter, as a green 39 Chips source 41 R&B group __ Hill 42 Ristorante suffix 43 “Pearls Before __”: Stephan Pastis comic 44 Tuba syllable 45 Supernatural benefactors 47 Do-it-yourselfer’s website 49 Boxer Laila 50 Typically rectangular glass piece 51 Hatch in the Senate 54 Attractive 57 Numbers game 58 Produce eggs 59 Online newsgroup system 60 Pangs of conscience

foundational support. Make sure the numbers balance. Strike a good deal. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Your creative expression grows golden over the next month, with Venus in Virgo. Projects that include writing and recording flow with ease and gain lucrative results. Study a subject of your passion, especially today and tomorrow. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Keep your agreements. Share your talents. Gather new income over the next month, with Venus in Virgo. Today and tomorrow get quite profitable. Find your financial comfort zone. Track the numbers, and keep them positive. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Today is a 9 -- For four weeks, with Venus in your sign, you’re irresistible. Take advantage, and ask for what you want. You’re especially powerful and confident today and tomorrow. Try a new style. Gain options as you gain strength. Prioritize beauty and love.

By C.C. Burnikel

61 Largely submerged threats DOWN 1 Cargo carrier 2 Common comedy club requirement 3 Cyberbullying, e.g. 4 Xbox 360 rival 5 “NYPD Blue” rank 6 Attacks in a hose fight 7 Tango team 8 Byways: Abbr. 9 LAX tower service 10 “Where was the mistake?” 11 Like highways 12 Actress Spacek 13 ’60s hot spot 16 Wall Street phenomenon suggested by this puzzle’s circled letters 18 Stir up 21 __-turn 22 “Right Ho, Jeeves” writer

10/8/15

Wednesday’s Answers Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

23 Remote batteries 24 Way out yonder 25 Trick 31 Designer Saarinen 32 One frequently hit on the head? 34 “Un-break My Heart” singer Braxton 36 Sudden increase 40 Verse starter?

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -Today is a 7 -- Finish old jobs and rest peacefully over the next four weeks, with Venus in Virgo. Retreat from the world especially today and tomorrow. Allow yourself quiet time for pondering dreams and fantasies. Keep confidences. Plan in detail. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -Today is an 8 -- Enjoy the public spotlight and use it for a good cause. Group activities thrive over the next month, with Venus in Virgo. You’re especially popular. Networking benefits your career. Team projects go especially well today and tomorrow. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -Today is an 8 -- Watch for career advances, and assume authority. Someone who cares about you can be quite helpful. Take on more responsibility over the next four weeks, with Venus in Virgo. Practice work that you love.

10/08/15 10/8/15

43 Jolson classic 45 Swamp thing 46 Lycée student 48 Monastic group 50 Cherry discards 52 Turner and Clanton 53 Aficionado 55 Gaza Strip gp. 56 It covers a lot of ground 57 One coming off the bench

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Today is a 7 -- It’s easier to venture forth for the next month, with Venus in Virgo. Conditions look good for travel and romance, especially today and tomorrow. Chart your itinerary. Studies, research and exploration thrive. Prioritize beauty and passion. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -Today is an 8 -- Tend your family finances over the next four weeks, with Venus in Virgo. Opportunities arise to increase assets and savings. Budget for expenditures. Changes necessitate revisions. Plan your strategy, and join forces with another for the funding. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -Today is a 9 -- Partnerships f low with greater ease over the next several weeks, with Venus in Virgo. Compromise and support each other. Listen graciously for what another wants. Just show up. Discover romance, especially today and tomorrow.


Sports

PAGE 8

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2015

Two Salukis lead MVFC in tackles THOMAS DONLEY | @tdonleyDE

Statistically, SIU’s defense is one of the worst in the Missouri Valley Football Conference, but it has two of the Valley’s top tacklers. The Salukis are second-to-last in the MVFC in total defense and scoring defense. Junior inside linebacker Chase Allen leads the conference in tackles with 51. Sophomore free safety Kenny James is tied for second with Western Illinois sophomore linebacker Brett Taylor with 45. SIU has allowed 31.2 points and 469 yards per game. Only Missouri State, at 50.5 points and 517 yards, is worse. Youngstown State’s defense has been the best, allowing 16.2 points and 243.8 yards per contest. Allen is also 10th in the MVFC with 4.5 tackles for loss. He said the numbers do not satisfy him, and they can be misleading. “Numbers haven’t won us any

Jacob Wiegand | @JacobWiegand_DE Jessica McWhorter, a senior studying political science at John A. Logan College from Lake Cumberland, Ky., celebrates the Chicago Cubs 4-0 win against the Pittsburg Pirates on Wednesday at Pinch Penny Pub. ”When I was a kid, we had an antenna that spun around outside and one of the only channels we got was WGN, so I’ve been a Cubs fan all my life,” McWhorter said. “I never thought I’d see this.”

A rivalry renewed at SIU

AARON GRAFF | @Aarongraff_DE TED WARD | @TedWard_DE

For the first time in Major League Baseball history, the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals will play against each other in the postseason and the university will be a location of the tense rivalry. The Daily Egyptian interviewed student Cardinals and Cubs fans to get their perspective of the rivalry. Cardinals fan Cortez Rohr, a senior from Effingham studying zoology, is intrigued by the upcoming series. “A Cubs-Cardinals series is healthy for the game of baseball,” Rohr said. Cubs fan Ben Brandolino, a senior from Braidwood studying accounting, said campus will be tense next week, even though fall break is looming. “There will be a lot of smack talk around campus,” Brandolino said. “It would be a milestone if [the Cubs] knock off the Cardinals.” The Cardinals (100-62), who had the best record in MLB, won the NL Central and did not know who their first opponent would be before the Chicago Cubs (97-65) played the Wild Card game in Pittsburgh against the Pirates (98-64) on Wednesday. Chicago defeated Pittsburgh 4-0, which moved them to the NLDS. Cardinals fan Courtney Kabat, a junior from Scheller studying public relations, was happy with the result. “As a Cardinals fan, I think it is fun to see the Cubs

win [against the Pirates] just for an exciting series to take place, for the love of the sport,” she said. Entering that game, the Cubs have not been to the postseason since 2008, and have not won a postseason game since Oct. 11, 2003. The Cardinals have won four division titles, two National League pennants and one World Series championship since 2008. “I’ve been waiting for this moment since 2008,” said Cubs fan Matt Szkodyn, a senior from Libertyville studying finance. St. Louis won the regular season series 11-8 against Chicago, but the Cubs have won four of the last six games. The past does not matter, as both teams will have new life in a best of five series. But, perhaps it does. As the Cubs pitched Jake Arrieta — who led MLB with 22 wins — on Wednesday. He pitched a complete game shutout and recorded 11 strikeouts. That means he likely will not be ready to pitch the first two games of the NLDS. The Cardinals probable pitcher is John Lackey, who had a 13-10 record and a 2.77 ERA. Lackey was 2-0 in three starts against the Cubs this season. In those starts, Lackey pitched 21 2/3 innings and allowed three earned runs. Jon Lester is the probable pitcher opposing Lackey. Lester finished 11-12 with a 3.34 ERA this season. Against the Cardinals, Lester finished 1-3 in five starts. In those, he pitched 31 1/3 innings and allowed nine earned runs. The Cardinals and Cubs play game one at 5:30 p.m. Friday at Busch Stadium in St. Louis.

games, so it’s not a big deal,” Allen said. “Watching film, you can have a lot of tackles, but there’s a lot more plays you could’ve made. During the SEMO game, I had 19 tackles, but after watching film I didn’t feel like I had a very good game. I could have made a lot more impact plays.” James leads all MVFC defensive backs in tackles. The next closest defensive back is Illinois State sophomore safety Alec Kocour, with 36. SIU defensive coordinator David Elson said the popularity of the spread offense in college football is a factor in James having so many tackles at safety. “It’s not a good thing, typically,” Elson said. “But in this day and age, you see it more and more because the ball is out on the perimeter more, so the safeties are more involved.” SIU’s third-leading tackler is senior safety D.J. Cameron, who is tied for 17th in the Valley with 26.

Special teams becoming pivotal to team’s success SEAN CARLEY | @SCarleyDE

The Saluki football special teams unit has been just that so far this season: special. SIU ranks first in the Missouri Valley Football Conference in blocked kicks and blocked punts, and second in kickoff return defense and punt return defense. Special teams may seem less important than offense and defense, but special teams coach Keith Murphy knows how significant they are. “Any one of those plays can be a game-changing performance,” he said. “Every time they step onto the field, they want to do something for the offense or the defense.” Junior cornerback Tareq Abulebbeh is one of the unit’s specialists. Abulebbeh has registered nine tackles on the year, mostly on special teams. “For me, I’m just a ball hawk,” Abulebbeh said. “Coach Murphy just has me run to the rock, and I love doing that.” Being a cornerback, Abulebbeh said playing defense is different than special teams. “As far as defense goes, you have to be more disciplined with your eyes,” he said. “You have keys to read, you got to react not only to the receiver but to where the ball is thrown to.” Senior linebacker Brandon Williams is also making a name for himself on special teams this year. He is in a ten-way tie for first

in the country with two blocked kicks. Williams blocked a field goal against Liberty and blocked a punt against Western Illinois that he returned for a touchdown. “It’s nothing really unexpected,” Williams said of the team’s success. “It’s just what you practice all week and you look forward to it.” Williams said the team’s preparation every week is crucial to their success “Coach Murphy does a great job of breaking it down,” he said. “All throughout the week we go over it. We look and see if there’s a point we can take advantage of it, then you get in the game and it’s the exact same.” Head coach Dale Lennon is also a key contributor to the special teams unit. “He’s always in the meetings, backing up everything I do ... there’s a lot of support around,” Murphy said. While the special teams defense is near the top of the conference, the return unit is yet to match that level. The kick return unit is fifth in the conference and punt returns ranks third. “They have to just fight and be physical,” Murphy said. “If you can finish a block out in open space and give that extra inch, the returner is going to get it done.” The special teams and the rest of the Salukis play Missouri State at 6 p.m. Saturday at Saluki Stadium.


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