Daily Egyptian THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
VOL. 100 ISSUE 8
SINCE 1916
DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM
Randy Dunn: The university will operate this spring BILL LUKITSCH | @Bill_LukitschDE
The university will continue to fund MAP grants through spring in anticipation of reimbursement from the state once a budget is passed. SIU System President Randy Dunn told students the SIU System will be fully operational through next semester during the State of the Student Address on Wednesday in Guyon Auditorium, despite the absence of state appropriations. This fall, the university funded the needbased grant 4,766 eligible undergraduate students. “We will do what we’ve done through the fall semester and continue to carry that support into the spring,” Dunn told attendees, adding that the university does not want to lose students because “the state hasn’t done its job.” Without the expected $200 million in state appropriations, Dunn said the university has little wiggle room with respect to maintaining operations. “We’re a state university,” Dunn said. “That means, by virtue of our operating model, we need some state support to do our work.” Interim Chancellor William Bradley Colwell said funding the grants was the right thing to do and the university cannot afford to lose students who depend on state aid. But the question of how grants will be funded is still in question. “Our financial aid is generous to the point that we’ve overspent,” Colwell said of MAP grants and graduate assistantships at SIUC. “Honestly, after looking at all of the finances: We’ve given what our financial means can afford to give.” Illinois has disinvested in higher education in the last 12 years, and with Illinois current finances, Colwell said cuts are a matter of when and how much. MAP funding in 2002 fully covered the costs of attending a state school for lowincome students in Illinois. Since 2009, the grant covers roughly 35 percent of the average cost of tuition and fees and is received by 37 percent of eligible students. Although the university has prepared for an 8.75 percent cut in state appropriations for fiscal year 2015, Colwell said inaction by state politicians have left the university’s financial future uncertain. Even with preventative cuts that have been made, Colwell said he is not certain exactly how the university will pay for MAP funding. “It could very easily be that we don’t see state money till the end of April [or] May,” Colwell said. Gov. Bruce Rauner and Democratic Speaker of the House Michael Madigan are scheduled to meet in November to discuss the budget face-to-face for the first time in months, but state leaders don’t expect the impasse to end any time soon. “We’ll figure it out and we’ll make this work for students, but the state’s not making it easy,” Colwell said.
Photo provided by Saluki Athletics
Kill calls it quits BRENT MESKE | @brentmeskeDE
For Jerry Kill, football is life. “I know somebody will ask, ‘Coach, what are you going to do?’ I don’t know,” Kill said in a press conference Wednesday announcing his retirement as coach at University of Minnesota. “I ain’t done anything else. That’s the scary part.” He said he doesn’t have anymore energy, per ESPN. Kill has suffered epileptic seizures for more than 15 years. Kill, 53, formerly coached SIU football from 2001 to 2007. Roger Lipe, volunteer chaplain for Saluki
football and friend of Kill, said the two talked about his retirement for weeks, weighing the pros and cons. He said Kill was unsure of leaving in the middle of the season. Lipe said the decision is best for Kill’s longterm future. “I used to shout at him, ‘Hey! Do you want to be around long enough to see your grandchildren?’ We need to make hard decisions here about your health,” he said. “If this occupation is going to kill you, it is not worth it. We’re more interested in Jerry than coach Kill. We want him to do well long term.” During the 2005 season Kill was diagnosed with kidney cancer after coping with epilepsy
for years before his diagnosis. He had surgery in 2005 to treat the cancer. He was cured in the same year. “He refused to take time off, even though we wanted him to take care of himself,” said Sharon Lipe, Kill’s secretary from 2000 to 2007. “He knew the moment he found out, [the cancer] wasn’t going to defeat him. He was going to fight it with everything he had.” After the cancer diagnosis Kill and his wife Rebecca started the Coach Kill Cancer Fund, which is administered through the Southern Illinois Healthcare Foundation. It is now known as the Coach Kill Fund. Please see KILL | 3
Green Fund promotes a more sustainable campus ANNA SPOERRE | @ASpoerre_DE
The SIU Green Fund has invested almost $1.8 million to creative and sustainable minds on campus since students proposed the Green Fee in 2009. Applications for Green Fund projects for the 2015-16 school year are being accepted through March 1, 2016. Proposals can be submitted by students, faculty and staff working together or independently. The Green Fund is financed by the student Green Fee, which is up to $10 per semester, said SIU Sustainability Coordinator Geory Kurtzhals, whose position is also funded by the Green Fee. The fund has provided financial assistance to 133 projects since it was established six years ago. Areas of research include energy, water, waste, buildings, transportation, grounds, social
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equality or food and dining, according to a university press release about the fund. Austin Little, a graduate student in horticulture from Quincy, got involved with the Green Fund as an undergraduate and has since worked on green fee-funded projects, including the campus green roof. Karen Midden, associate dean of the College of Agriculture, started the green roof project to install a garden system on top of the Agricultural Building. She said the roof is home to a variety of plants, including wildflowers and fresh produce. She said it has benefits such as managing storm water, reducing urban heat, providing insulation and improving air quality. “A lot of students were saying they wanted to learn about green roof technology and they wanted to have a green roof on campus,” Midden said.
In fall of 2010, she, along with more than 120 students, spent five days installing the roof, which is still used for demonstrations, public tours and gardening. “The psychological [aspects] are extremely invaluable of connecting people with nature in any way they can,” she said. Little said he is involved with maintenance and community outreach. He also uses the rood for a research on various topics, including urban agriculture and green roof fertility management. “The green fund has provided me with the green roof where I’m able to carry out my research, so that is a big benefit,” Little said. As part of his fertility management research, Little is conducting comparative fertilizer trials on sweet Hungarian peppers and charentais melons. He also received funding from
the Green Fee to attend Cities Alive, an annual conference in New York hosted by Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, a not-for-profit organization working to promote green roofs and other forms of green architecture in America. “In a way, the Green Fee is paying to encourage more research and hopefully we can apply it to SIU and the greater community after that,” Little said. Midden has been involved with other projects since the roof, including green walls in the Agriculture Building and Recreation Center. She said the Agriculture Building wall, which provides insulation and absorbs sound, involved more than 70 students who designed and installed it. “[The walls are] a way to get nature into urban areas, even if grown abnormally,” Midden said. Please see GREEN | 2
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
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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.
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Mission Statement
Aidan Osborne | D AILY E GYPTIAN Austin Little, a graduate student in horticulture from Quincy, walks through the green roof on top of the Agriculture Building on Wednesday. Little is conducting research on green roof fertility management with the goal of optimizing of the amount of yield from the roof using the least amount of fertilizer. He is using six sweet Hungarian pepper plants and four charentais melon plants.
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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However, projects are not limited to plants. Mark Varns, professor in the department of theater, said he was driven by an interest in green technology and green materials, so he created a proposal with graduate students in his advanced lighting design class to replace incandescent light fixtures in McLeod Theater with LED bulbs. Varns said the lights save energy and color changing bulbs provide functional design advantages. In addition to exposing students to sustainable technologies, Varns said the monetary savings add up with time. The cost savings will equal initial purchase price after about 10 years, he said. “[This project] absolutely would not have happened without the green fund,” Varns said. The dental hygiene program has also become more eco-friendly through the fund.
Joan M. Davis, a professor in the school of allied health, proposed the dental hygiene program move to a paperless, electronic record system to cut back on paper and chemicals used to develop non-digital X-ray images. She said she wanted her students to work with the same paperless system they would encounter in future jobs. Her program could not provide funding for the project, so she wrote a proposal for green funding. In May 2013 she and the students working with her were awarded $100,000 for the project. “This was an excellent example of students supporting students in their education and training and also to the community and healthcare,” Davis said. Many other Green Fee-funded projects, including the SIU Sustainable Farm and solar-powered trash and recycling containers on campus, have had similar positive feedback. “I like to see the Green Fund being used for things that teach as well as serve a function,” Midden said.
She said students should consider sustainable opportunities in their discipline that could yield results that are educational, shareable and lasting. “The Green Fee and the Green Fund is an awesome resource we have here at SIU and it allows students to get more involved in these progressive ideas,” Little said. The nine-member sustainability council, made up of students, faculty and staff, determines which projects will receive funding. The sustainability committee is looking for projects that uphold all three pillars of sustainability: environmental, societal and economic concerns, and incorporate a lasting educational and outreach aspect, Kurtzhals said. Awarded projects will be announced on Earth Day, or April 22, 2016. “The green fund is an awesome resource we have here at SIU,” Midden said. “I think we should be leaders with our students to [show] the state and the public alternative methods of doing something.”
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
KILL CONTINUED FROM
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Since its inception the fund has helped more than 1,000 patients and receives three to five applications a week according to Woody Thorne, Vice President of Community Affairs for SIH. Funding goes to southern Illinois patients with cancer and childhood diseases. Thorne said applicants often use the money for transportation, lodging and to offset the cost of care. Although money goes to those in southern Illinois, Thorne said financial support comes from across the country. In May, the Kills created a Chasing Dreams fund through the Epilepsy Foundation of Minnesota to support seizure-free initiatives in schools, according to the StarTribune. The Kills started the fund with a $100,000 donation. As a coach, Kill turned three programs around and brought SIU football back from near extinction. Mike Reis, SIU director of external and broadcast operations, said Kill is the reason SIU still has football. “He got a talented group of players to buy in and rebuild Southern Illinois’ football program when they had no business buying into it,” he said. “Southern was the pits when he took over. They didn’t have enough scholarships. They didn’t have enough good players.” In seven seasons at SIU, Kill’s Dawgs were 55-32. In the seven seasons before Kill, the Salukis were 24-42 and did not have a winning season since 1991. Kill led the Salukis to back-to-back 10-2 seasons in 2003 and 2004. Kill coached current SIU co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Nick Hill for four seasons at SIU. Hill said Kill had the perfect touch as a coach. “I wouldn’t be a college coach if it weren’t for him,” Hill said. “He made me believe in myself. Without Jerry Kill, I am not the person I am today.” Kill also coached current running backs coach Larry Warner for one season at SIU. Warner said Kill’s impression is lasting. “Coach Kill is like a father to me,” Warner said. “He gave me an opportunity. Just to see the hurt in his heart, it hurt me.” Outside linebackers coach Travis Stepps is the only coach remaining from Kill’s time at SIU. Stepps said Kill taught him how to coach, live the lifestyle of a coach and how to
1989
Coaches Webb City High School to Missouri State Championship
Photo provided by Saluki Athletics
“I wouldn’t be a college coach if it weren’t for him. He made me believe in myself. Without Jerry Kill, I am not the person I am today.” - Nick Hill SIU football co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach recruit. He said Kill always told him to find a hobby outside of football. For Kill, it was fishing. He and his wife Rebecca, along with daughters Krystal and Tasha, have a home on Lake of Egypt, located six miles south of Marion. Sharon said Kill never got far away from football, but he was happy if he could go fishing. “He loved to spend time with his daughters, but football was his family and his life,” she said. “It’s
2005
2011
hard to say what he was like after football, because you never really witnessed too much.” Roger said the Kills bought the home for two reasons: vacation and retirement. He said he hopes Kill will find his way back to southern Illinois to enjoy time with family. “[Their] dad is no longer coach Kill … they only know him as coach,” he said. “It will only be a plus for them. He’s more available at certain hours than he ever was
Diagnosed with, Sept. 10 and cure of, Seizure on field, kidney cancer. Minnesota vs. New Mexico Oct. 15 State Seizure on field, SIU vs. No. 1 Illinois State
2012
Nov. 3 Seizure on field, Minnesota vs. Michigan
before. That’ll be a great thing for Rebecca, she really enjoys Jerry’s company. They’re a tremendous couple.” After leaving SIU, Kill coached Northern Illinois from 2008 to 2010. The Huskies were 24-16 under the tutelage of Kill. They were 16-21 in the previous three seasons. Kill’s final coaching stretch was with Minnesota. In four and a half seasons, Kill led the team to a 29-29
2013
record. The Golden Gophers had a record of 17-33 in the previous four seasons. “He likes to build programs who have fallen on hard times,” Stepps said. “That’s what he thrives at. It’s not surprising he can do it at different levels. That’s kind of his blueprint.” Kill has a record of 156-102 in a 21-year head coaching career at Minnesota, NIU, SIU, Emporia State and Saginaw Valley State. He was on staff at Pittsburgh State as a defensive coordinator from 1985 to 1987 and then offensive coordinator from 1990 to 1993. Kill coached Webb City High School in 1988 and 1989 to a combined 25-1 record and a state championship in the second year. Now, doctors told Kill to resign for the sake of his health. “It’s time that he started thinking about himself,” Reis said. “He clearly thought more about others than he did about himself, almost to a fault. That’s what drove him to work as hard as he did and put his health at risk.” Kill, who was introduced into the Saluki Hall of Fame in 2014, has had four recorded seizures on the field during his coaching career, beginning with one near the end of a 61-35 SIU loss to then-No. 1 Illinois State on Oct. 15, 2005. Sharon said the outpouring of support extended past SIU and southern Illinois after the seizure. “The Illinois State coach at the time, Denver Johnson, ended up not going back with his team and came to the hospital to make sure [Kill] was OK,” she said. “You couldn’t have asked for any better support for him and his family.” Kill had recorded seizures in three other games at Minnesota: Sept. 10, 2011 vs. New Mexico State, Nov. 3, 2012 vs. Michigan and Sept. 14, 2013 against Western Illinois. After the 2012 seizure, Kill took two weeks off to treat his epilepsy. During the 2013 season, he missed seven games during a leave of absence. Roger said Kill’s epilepsy has many triggers including sleep deprivation, stress and dehydration. Kill said he had two seizures this week and had not slept for more than three hours on any night in the last three weeks. “I went through a bad situation two years ago, and I’m headed right back there,” he said. Roger told Kill whenever he made the decision to step down, to take a month off and disappear for a while. “I’m hoping he does that.”
2014
Sept. 14 Enshrined in the Seizure on field, Saluki Hall of Minnesota vs. Fame Western Illinois
2015
Oct. 28 - Retires as coach of University of Minnesota
Pulse
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
Art, drag and punk at Saturday’s exhibition
‘Hell House’ draws on past religious experiences JACOB PIERCE | @JacobPierce1_DE
SAM BEARD | @SamBeard_DE
The spookiest time of the year is nearly upon us and the Untitled Art Collective is hosting a horrorthemed art show to celebrate. At 7 p.m. Oct. 31, doors open to Blood at the Glove — an art exhibition featuring dance and musical entertainment and a drag show — in the SIU Surplus Gallery of The Glove Factory, the industrial warehouse-style art building across the tracks near Wise Guys Pizza and Subs. “Southern Illinois’ sweetheart” Tammy Cannons, a beardedbombshell and drag queen played by collective member Matthew Baccus will be the master of ceremonies for the evening. “Untitled Art Collective is a collective of local artists, predominately ones who graduated from the university that are still in town,” said
Baccus, who graduated from SIU in 2013 with a degree in sociology. “We are made up of a lot of different identities. We get together to promote our own work, to workshop with one another and to organize and make an atmosphere that is conducive to creating fine-art.” This will be the Untitled’s fifth show since it formed nearly a year ago and will feature visual art across multiple mediums. A horror-themed photo booth will be on-site. Operation Ivy, The Cramps and V2T2 Cabaret are some of the scheduled performances. While the schedule may have an array of performance art, the collective is a group of visual artists, such as painters, photographers and sculptors. Artist Marty Lee Hagler, who graduated from SIU in 2013 with a degree in communication
design, is excited for the show because Halloween brings a time where people can feel at ease expressing themselves. Hagler, who has been an artist as long as she can remember, works primarily with acrylic paint and ballpoint pens on wood panel substrates and said she paints and draws because of the emotions making art gives her. “My favorite part about being an artist is the feeling you get from creating,” she said. “It’s indescribable, but for me it kind of feels like my heart is warm and always on the verge of bursting.” She will have several pieces in the gallery and has had art in more than a dozen shows, most of which have been affiliated with the university. Untitled Art Collective is not directly affiliated with SIU, but the two have collaborated to provide artists with the show space.
Collective member and SIU alumnus Carson Cates said the group’s name, Untitled, came about when they could not think of another title. “All of the artists who are associated with Untitled do very different things,” said Cates, who does film, photography and mixed media. “I think that’s why [the name Untitled] ended up working so well.” Bacchus said the hardest part about organizing a show is facilitating a show that people feel compelled to participate in. He said it is a welcome but challenging task to create a space everyone feels comfortable in. “I’m super excited for the show and seeing everybody’s work together in one room,” said Hagler, who has been an Untitled member since its inception. “I prefer casual settings for displaying art so
that everyone is able to feel comfortable and have fun — Halloween is perfect for that.” Although, the exhibition will be entertaining and bleeding with culture, the collective will also have an informational table to answer questions patrons may have about Untitled. Cates said anyone can join Untitled and only require members maintain some level of involvement in the collective. “There is no hierarchical organization of members in the collective,” Baccus said. “It’s all driven by one’s own agency and willingness to participate.” The collective encourages students and community members to drop by The Glove Factory Saturday night for the Halloween celebration. Performances start at 8 p.m. The event is free and open to the public.
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Religion can be a tricky topic, but for one performance, that’s the point. The Marion Kleinau Theatre is hosting the experimental show “Hell House” from Oct. 29-31. The performance is written and directed by Colin Whitworth and co-directed by Ashley Beard, who goes by the stage name A.B. The production is an interactive experience, with the first half of the show being about a character growing up with a religious background. It also involves the process of his church putting up a hell house. A hell house is like a religious haunted house but instead of zombies or monsters, they bring up topics like abortion, drug use and adultery to scare the sin out of the viewer. After the show’s intermission, audience members will be asked to go on stage and travel through the house with various characters. Whitworth, a doctoral candidate in performance studies from Athens, Ala., said the play is drawn from a lot of personal experience. “Writing about religion is in line with a lot of things I write about,” he said. “I am really interested in the southern identity.” Whitworth said the show is a mixture of his life and the lives and thoughts of cast members. The production uses a devising technique, which is when a performance takes stories various cast members have created for characters that is incorporated into the show. Combing the religious experiences of his life with the lives and thoughts of other cast members was an interesting process, Whitworth said. He said when talking about a life event in
writing, the author has to be careful of being mentally distant enough from the topic. “I do think there are certain things you learn to do as a writer,” he said. “Like an ethic of care, knowing when you are far enough to write about it.” Beard, a doctoral candidate in performance studies from Los Angeles, said she agrees with the idea of taking a little care when religion is involved. “I think there’s maybe a temptation when you are hurt by a group of people to sort of demonize them,” she said. “One thing I asked Colin was if I could try to help in the process of the show to make sure we are respectful of this faith community.” While the show is being critical of religious ideals, especially against the LGBT community, it must also be conscientious when examining a religion, Beard said. Beard did not write anything in the show, many of her personal experiences went into her directing notes for cast members. Beard identifies herself as a lesbian. She said she also once worked in a ministry for a long time. She was the creative arts and design manager for a mega church in Los Angeles. Beard said she never worked on a hell house personally, but she did work on passion plays and Christmas shows, which can have a similar process. After coming out, Beard resigned from the ministry position, which she said she loved. Walking through this hell house was a complicated experience, she said. The first time she went through, she found herself teary eyed. “Performance can be a catalyst for so many things,” Beard said. “It’s a way to push ideas that really matter.”
Holiday Wagner | @HolidayWagnerDE From left to right: Savannah Palmer, Les Delgado and Elise Wheaton perform a scene from the production “Hell House” on Sunday during rehearsal at The Marion Klienau Theatre. The show is about the intersecting struggles experienced by LGBT youth and the church. In this scene, Colin, played by Palmer, meets at friends house and sits on a trampoline to talk freely without the judgement of their parents or people from the community.
Shelby Swafford, a master’s student in communication studies from Tampa, Fla., also thought the process was interesting and complex. “These are characters we are writing and creating,” she said. “Even though they are fictionalized, they come from a personal experience.” In the performance, Swafford plays one of the church members putting up the house. This was both a role reversal and a connection to the past for her. Swafford grew up in a Southern Baptist family. At about 16 years old, she started grappling with the idea of religious identity.
While she found writing and performing about this difficult, it also served to be therapeutic. “I am kind of able to understand a littler bit more about where my family is coming from when we have these sorts of conflicts,” she said. “Hell House” takes information from two documenataries, “Jesus Camp” directed Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, and “Hell House” directed by George Ratliff, along with various other pieces of non-fiction. The show involves mature themes and will be running at 8 p.m. It is $7 for general admission and $5 for students.
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WALKERS BLUFF IS now hiring servers, food runners, and event staff. Weekends required. E-mail resume to hr@walkersbluff.com LOOK WE ARE LOOKING for college interns that need to fulfill internship requirements for Business and Marketing. Text Intern to 312-536-8513 or email resume to realestatecourse2015@gmail.com
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.
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 hiring for Spring 2016
1 & 2 BDRMS $275-$490/mo 618-924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com
Classified Office Assistant
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. 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
HOLIDAY HELP NEEDED at local malls, personalized ornaments, good penmanship a must, for more info call, 618-724-2997. ALL NEIGHBORHOODS ARE opening at Manor Court NURSES and CNA!s If you are dependable and innovated with a great attitude, we want to talk to you about your future employment. BENEFITS Group Health Insurance 401k (Up to 5% match) Holiday Pay (Double time) Employee Time Off (Up to 5 wks/yr) Flex Spending Plan For immediate consideration, send your resume to: don@libertyvilageofcarbondale.com Or Apply in Person to: Manor Court of Carbondale 2940 W. Westridge Place Carbondale, IL 62901 618-457-1010 www.libertyvillageofcarbondale.com Not-For-Profit Provider
--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 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
SALES CLERK, PT, must be 21yrs, apply in person, SI Liquor Mart, 113 N. 12th St., M!boro. Please no calls. LOOK REAL ESTATE INVESTOR is Building a Team. If you are interested in learning and making $5K-10K a month, simply, text your name, email and real estate to 312-536-8513 or send info to realestatecourse2015@gmail.com
PART-TIME STUDENT HELP afternoons. Deliveries & Clean-up. Able Appliance 457-7767.
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.
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
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 29, 2015
207 West Main Street Carbondale, IL 62901 Ph. 1-800-297-2160
7
FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 29, 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 (10/29/15). There’s strength in numbers this year. Friends amplify your efforts in profitable ways. Make powerful requests, and support collaborative efforts. Passion, creativity and love flower in springtime, before a fork in the road appears. Your crew is there for you next autumn, as
your game changes. Practice together. 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 6 -- Get into the books for the next few days. Handle practical matters first. Shyness, money problems or trouble at work keep your mood quiet. Stay respectful. Proceed like nothing has happened. Don’t get controversial now. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 9 -- Things can get profitable. Schedule for efficiency. Entertain and host. Leave your inhibitions behind without losing your good sense. And don’t forget your toothbrush. You have obligations to your public. Back up important files. Stand for your principles. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Energy surges are predicted. You’re more assertive now. Get innovative at work. Postpone travel and fantasizing. Get into a budget review habit. Selfdiscipline pays in cash. Defer payment
ACROSS 1 Mall entrance features 5 Bandstand boosters 9 Big zoo attraction 14 Bee’s relative 15 Empty 16 Dot in the ocean 17 Investment return for a New York basketball player? 19 Grind to __ 20 “Messiah,” e.g. 21 Gershwin title river 22 Reception room for a Texas hockey player? 24 Capital on the Gulf of Guinea 28 Panama, for one 29 Bush Labor secretary Elaine 30 High anxiety? 37 Sudden fear for a California soccer player? 39 Conversations 40 Grab (onto) 41 Nintendo’s __ Sports 42 Big name in transmission repair 43 Serious lapse for a Missouri baseball player? 50 Wine city north of Lisbon 51 Forced to leave home 56 All-nighter pill 57 Luggage for an Ohio football player? 58 “The L Word” cocreator Chaiken 59 Alien-seeking agcy. 60 Fox hit since 2002, familiarly 61 One whispering sweet nothings 62 Part of AMA: Abbr. 63 Get smart with DOWN 1 Like early Elvis albums 2 Mimic 3 Gyro bread 4 Equinox mo. 5 Scrub
when possible. Wait to share results. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 5 -- Finish your work in private now. Ignore distractions. Slow down and consider your options. Stick to practical plans. Avoid risky business or great expense. See yourself winning. If you have bad dreams, ask the monster for a gift. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 5 -- Don’t encourage mischief when you all should be quiet and respectful. Your team could get distracted by fantasies, or could pull together for a shared goal. Pay attention and adapt to circumstances quickly. Strengthen your infrastructure. Provide leadership. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 6 -- Stick to practical professional objectives. Postpone brainstorming and dreaming. Don’t react blindly. Think over your moves. Play by the rules. Choose private over public engagements. Travel would interfere with your work. Advance methodically. Avoid tricks or illusion.
By David Poole
6 Group at some crime scenes 7 Old conviction 8 Spike preceder, in volleyball 9 Longfellow hero 10 Trumpeter/film composer Mark 11 Backup strategy 12 Point __: southernmost point of mainland Canada 13 Aquatic frolicker 18 Activist Parks 21 Cookie cutter assortment 23 Fail under pressure 24 Nailed, as an exam 25 Starbucks offering 26 Train units 27 Campus recruiting gp. 30 Marcos’ successor 31 Vatican administrative body 32 Dorm mgrs. 33 One of Chekhov’s “Three Sisters” 34 Soothing ointment
10/29/15
Wednesday’s Answers Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
35 __-Z: classic Camaro 36 Magazine insert 38 Field artillery weapon 42 Erelong 43 Like volcanoes 44 Speed skater __ Anton Ohno 45 Cowboy contest 46 High-tech surveillance tool
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Don’t let a windfall slip through your fingers. Traveling appeals. Resist the temptation to wander far. News may affect your plans. Keep organized, and don’t get mad when reminded to stay on task. Postpone buying unnecessary stuff. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -Today is a 7 -- Things may not be as they seem. Back up files and hard drives. Take notes on important conversations. Oversee financial plans and keep an ace up your sleeve. Prepare to switch tactics to take advantage of a shifting market. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -Today is a 7 -- Spend more time with your partner. Be receptive to their view. Compromise on previously stuck issues. Determine what repairs are needed. Hire a professional, maybe. Mystery and mirages could obscure your practical focus. Keep on track. Patience serves you.
10/29/15 10/29/15
47 Worms and flies, at times 48 Ladybug features 49 “The Poseidon Adventure” producer Allen 52 Asian sashes 53 Triumphant cry 54 They may clash in Hollywood 55 Fast PC connections 57 “Be Prepared” org.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Focus on work, as there’s plenty to manage. Distractions flirt and tempt you. Stick to keeping your promises. Clean up messes. Money slips away if allowed. Don’t shop on an empty stomach. Make a list and stick to it. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -Today is a 7 -- Go ahead and play. Romance is a priority. Imagination and creativity swirl. Cutting corners costs you. The person yelling loudest isn’t always right. Maintain decorum and avoid provoking trouble. A change to the status quo requires adaptation.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -Today is a 7 -- Devote your energies to fun and games. Pamper yourself. Create beauty and harmony. Use your talents. Don’t touch your savings. Make a wish come true. Follow a hunch. Read up on the history. Wash off the dust.
Sports
PAGE 8
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
Salukis back for run at championship THOMAS DONLEY | @tdonleyDE
The SIU women’s basketball team is returning all five starters from a team that completed the biggest turnaround in school history last season. SIU won five games in 2013-14 but followed that up with a 17-13 campaign last year. Although all five starters are back, the element of surprise is not. “Everyone’s expectations this year are pretty high for us,” coach Cindy Stein said. “And that’s OK. Our players expect the same thing. That’s what I really like about this group. Can we do it? That’s going to really depend on our maturity.” Senior center Dyana Pierre was named First Team All-Missouri Valley Conference and was a member of the All-Defensive team as a junior last season. Junior point guard Rishonda Napier is also a returning First Team All-MVC player, and sophomore guard/forward Kylie Giebelhausen was named to the All-
Freshman team. Pierre, who has done the majority of her damage in the paint for the Salukis the last two years, has expanded her game this offseason by working on shooting from beyond the three-point arc. “I want to just be more than a posting up, back-to-the-basket player,” Pierre said. “I know I can do that. It’s something I do pretty well. Shooting jumpers will make me harder to guard.” Pierre has been suspended indefinitely for breaking team rules. She will miss at least the first exhibition game of the season according to Saluki Athletics. Senior power forward Azia Washington and senior shooting guard Cartaesha Macklin round out the returning starting five from last season. Washington is still recovering from an offseason knee surgery and Stein said her starting spot is not guaranteed.
First Games Exhibition Games SIU vs. Kentucky Wesleyan SIU vs. Maryville
Oct. 30
Nov. 6
Preseason WNIT SIU vs. DePaul
Nov. 13
First Regular Season SIU vs. Tennessee-Martin
Nov. 25
D AILY E GYPTIAN File Photo
“She’s still not quite back yet,” Stein said. “So that’s a position that we are looking for someone to step in. Giebelhausen can play that position. [junior forward] Kim Nebo and [sophomore center] Celina VanHyfte can play that position. All three have been playing really well.” Napier said the Salukis will not rest on last year’s successes. “Even though we did a lot of good things last year, we could do even better,” Napier said. “The leaders
on the team and the upperclassmen really have to set the tone to work hard and get better.” The MVC is home to four teams that played in the postseason last year. Defending champion Wichita State played in the NCAA Tournament. Drake, Northern Iowa and Missouri State competed in the WNIT. The Salukis went 2-5 against those teams last year, ending the season with their third loss to Missouri State in the MVC tournament.
Missouri State was picked to finish first in the Valley in the preseason poll. SIU was picked fourth. “The team that stands out to me is Missouri State,” Stein said. “They return everybody and have got some talented recruits coming in. I think that they will be very good. I looked at their schedule and it is ridiculously hard. To me, that is their problem but if they can handle that, then look out in conference play. We will have our hands full with them.”
Royals say family requested that Volquez not be told father died before game BILL SHAIKIN | LOS ANGELES TIMES
Death comes in threes, they say. Death cares not whether you are poor or rich, anonymous or famous, commoner or royal. The mother of Kansas City Royals third baseman Mike Moustakas died two months ago. The father of Royals pitcher Chris Young died last month. The father of Royals pitcher Edinson Volquez died Tuesday at 63 in the Dominican Republic just hours before Game 1 of the World Series. And then Volquez pitched. He did not win or lose, at least not in the box score. His loss will be forever. Volquez was huddled with his family in the clubhouse after he left the game — an evening of sadness, and beyond that an instant classic. Royals manager Ned Yost said after the game that Volquez was not told of the death before the game, at his wife’s request. Fox did not say anything about it on the broadcast while he pitched for fear that Volquez, who regularly visits the clubhouse while pitching, would hear about it on TVs showing the game. He worked six innings, tying
his high this postseason, with the Kauffman Stadium crowd serenading him with “ED-DIE” chants. He appeared subdued in the early innings, at least in the context of the October backdrop. In the fifth inning, after giving up a go-ahead home run to Curtis Granderson, he left the field and slammed his right hand against his right leg in apparent frustration. In the sixth inning, after Moustakas saved a run with a diving stop, Volquez pounded his glove, pointed to Moustakas, then waited for him so the two could tap gloves coming off the field. And that was all for Volquez. Six innings, three runs, a quality start in the ordinary sense, on a day that was anything but ordinary. The game lasted 14 innings, tied for the longest in the 112year history of the World Series. It ended at 12:19 a.m. CDT, on a walk-off sacrifice fly by Eric Hosmer, giving the Royals a 5-4 victory over the New York Mets and tagging Bartolo Colon with the loss in his third inning of relief, in the first World Series appearance of his 19-year career. There was an inside-the-park
home run, from Alcides Escobar, on the first pitch the home team saw. There might have been another, for a walk-off, had Granderson not coaxed a ball into the very top of his outstretched glove in the 11th inning. There was a ground ball that bounced off third base, for a single, and a third strike that boomeranged off the backstop and right back to the catcher, who threw the batter out at first base. There were the Mets taking the lead in the eighth inning, as Hosmer — the American League Gold Glove first baseman the last two years — misplayed a sharp ground ball for an error. There was Alex Gordon tying the score with one out in the bottom of the ninth, on a home run to center field. For Mets closer Jeurys Familia, the run was the first he had given up this postseason, the blown save his first since July 30, the home run the first he had given up on the road since July 19. The last time a player hit a tying or go-ahead homer in the ninth inning of Game 1: Kirk Gibson, in 1988. The television feed was interrupted
in the fourth inning by what Fox called “a rare electronics failure” of the primary and backup generators, not only causing the broadcast to disappear from the air but causing a delay of the game, until feeds for replays could be restored to both clubhouses. That delay resulted in such scenes as Mets manager Terry Collins chatting up Moustakas on the field, and Mets starter Matt Harvey alternating between throwing warmup pitches, standing by himself near the mound, and chatting up a nearby umpire. Daniel Murphy’s streak of postseason games with a home run was ended at six, but he got the Mets’ first hit, a leadoff single in the fourth inning. He later scored, marking the first of three consecutive innings in which the Mets scored a run off Volquez. The Mets never trailed during their sweep of the Chicago Cubs in the National League Championship Series. Then came the World Series, and the Mets trailed after one pitch. That pitch left the Mets open to second-guessing from all across America. First, Escobar swings at
everything. Putting a first-pitch fastball right down the middle is willful ignorance of the scouting report, or incredibly poor execution. Second, with the designatedhitter rule in effect, the Mets had a chance to play their best defensive outfield. Instead they opted for infielder Kelly Johnson as the DH, forcing Yoenis Cespedes to play center field instead of left. This happened: Harvey threw a first-pitch fastball to Escobar, 95 mph over the heart of the plate. Escobar roped it deep into the outfield, with Cespedes converging from center and Michael Conforto from left. Conforto appeared to pull up and let Cespedes catch the ball, but the ball clanked off Cespedes. As the ball rolled around the outfield, Escobar sprinted around the bases and scored standing up, with the first inside-the-park home run in a World Series since Mule Haas of the Philadelphia Athletics did it in 1929. Escobar then sat on the Royals bench to catch his breath, and cameras caught him laughing, apparently at the absurdity of it all.