Daily Egyptian

Page 1

DE Since 1916

Daily Egyptian MONDAY, OCTBER 20, 2014 VOLUME 98 ISSUE 116

Varughese’s hometown mayor shows family support Luke Nozicka Daily Egyptian

On the eight-month anniversary of the death of SIU student Pravin Varughese, Morton Grove Mayor Dan DiMaria held a news conference Saturday to show support for the family. “We are a close-knit community in Morton Grove. We pride ourselves on family,” said DiMaria, who has been the village’s mayor since May 2013. “When a family in need has gone through tragedy, we’re there to help.”

Varughese was reported missing Feb. 12, and on Feb. 18, then-Carbondale Chief of Police Jody O’Guinn announced Varughese’s body had been found about 9:45 a.m. in a wooded area east of the 1400 block of East Main Street near Buffalo Wild Wings. O’Guinn, who was fired by Carbondale City Manager Kevin Baity on Aug. 18 for a confidential matter, said Varughese left a party on West College Street with a male from Harrisburg he met at the party. O’Guinn

said Varughese succumbed to hypothermia overnight as temperatures fell to as low as 6 degrees. He was found in a t-shirt and jeans. “There were no obvious signs of trauma that would be caused by something other—by any kinds of suspicious means or any kind of altercation,” O’Guinn said at the initial press conference in February. For the rest of this story, please see www.dailyegyptian.com

At least one arrested after police break up party Luke Nozicka Daily Egyptian

Police arrested at least one person after breaking up an Unofficial Halloween house party about 12 a.m. Sunday after more than 100 people met on the lawn of 408 S. Ash Street where a car was flipped by partiers. An SIU student and a woman were pepper sprayed during the incident, according to witnesses. Witnesses watching from West Cherry Street said a water bottle was thrown at Carbondale Police officers. Dylan Coler, a freshman from McHenry studying mechanical engineering, said he was maced. “There’s this girl who’s just crying. We’re like, ‘What’s wrong? Are you okay?’ She’s saying how she’s been pepper sprayed in the face,” said Chris Wiley, a freshman visiting from Northern Illinois University. “She was pepper sprayed in the face over nothing. This girl was no anarchist.” Police officers on the scene did not comment if anyone was maced or pepper sprayed. Carbondale Police Department Sgt. Doug Wilson said he could not confirm if anyone was pepper sprayed because he was not at the incident and has not read the report. He said CPD officers do carry pepper spray. Wilson said he could not comment on why the people were arrested or if they are SIU students. An officer on the scene, who did not disclose his name, said there were at least three Carbondale

N athaN h oefert D aily e gyptiaN Partiers watch Sunday morning as police form a line to start pushing people off of South Ash Street. At least two people were pepper sprayed and Car-

police vehicles, four Illinois State Police vehicles and one Jackson County Sheriff’s Office vehicle at the incident. He said the event was not as serious as they initially thought when calls were made to the station. “There were cops everywhere telling us to back up or we’d be tear

gassed,” said Ryan Powers, a student visiting from Lincoln College. Clinton Farr, a 19-yearold freshman at Lindenwood University in Belleville, said a vehicle was flipped on the street before police arrived. “We were sitting there with

everybody outside this house and all the kids started going crazy chanting ‘S-I-U, S-I-U,’ forever,” said Farr, who plans to transfer to the university within the next year. “They brought in the swat team and riot shields. … The crowd got a little bit crazier and started throwing beer

bottles, alcohol bottles in the street and the cops started marching down with dogs. [Police] started forcing everybody out of the street. They didn’t do anything, they just made everybody leave the street, other than that it was pretty crazy.” Please see PARTY · 2

Chancellor needs surgery to remove cancer Luke Nozicka Daily Egyptian

Interim Chancellor Paul Sarvela will need surgery to remove his rare but treatable tumor, according to an email on Wednesday by his oncologist, Dr. Brian Van Tine. Van Tine, an assistant professor at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said there are only a handful of cases every year in the U.S. involving this type of cancer.

“The tumor is rare enough that little is known about it in terms of causes and prevention,” according to Van Tine’s email. “The good news is that I have been given an excellent prognosis for a positive outcome, and I will be able to maintain an active, if somewhat modified schedule in my role as interim chancellor of SIU Carbondale throughout treatment over the next few months,” Sarvela wrote in an email Tuesday to colleagues.

Sarvela, who was appointed acting chancellor by SIU system President Randy Dunn on July 8, said he is in the excellent hands of physicians and staff at Siteman Cancer Center at BarnesJewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine. “I am deeply grateful for the counsel and care I have received over the last few weeks from outstanding local doctors and staff, many of whom hold SIU degrees,”

he wrote in his email Tuesday. Sarvela’s prognosis is presently excellent, Van Tine wrote in his email. “Sarvela is being treated with curative intent,” wrote Van Tine, who received his medical degree from the University of Alabama at Birmingham in 2005. “He should be able to tolerate what is being done to him, his love for SIU will him get through this and the support of the university will help him continue to live as

normal a life as possible.” University spokeswoman Rae Goldsmith said Sarvela has been working a very full schedule while undergoing tests. “His schedule may be off so there will be things he can’t make. … He needs to be open about his health because it is going to be pretty visible that he is undergoing treatment,” Goldsmith said in an interview Thursday. Please see SARVELA · 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.