Daily Egyptian

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Daily Egyptian MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015

School of Law to focus on operations vital to functioning

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SINCE 1916

VOL. 100 ISSUE 13

Partiers cycle through city

CORY RAY | @CORYRAY_DE

The School of Law is fighting to retain its core mission as budget cuts are made throughout the university. The school experienced a budget cut of almost $111,000 — 1.2 percent of its overall budget for this fiscal year. School of Law Dean Cynthia Fountaine said the cut represents 3 percent of the university’s state budget for the law school and came from a reserve fund. The reserve acts as an emergency fund, and according to Fountaine, because it has accumulated over the years, the school can prepare for emergencies differently than departments. The school is also cutting expenses to accommodate for the budget crisis, including seven vacant tenured-track faculty positions. To cover the courses attached to those positions, the school is focusing on providing classes vital to the functions of the school by having other faculty take over teaching. Though a few instructors who are covering an overload of courses are being compensated, some instructors are giving up elective classes they usually teach to cover core courses. “We have certain classes here at the law school that are required,” Fountaine said. “For the most part ... we have shifted their teaching list to make sure all those classes are covered.” To decide what classes to offer, the school offered a town-hall style meeting for its students to voice their input. Maria Napolez, a second-year law student from Los Angeles, said the associate dean of the school asked students what classes they believed were important, what class times worked best for students and addressed other concerns. “They try their best to make it where it accommodates the students,” Napolez said. “I think that’s one way they’re dealing with those budget cuts.” The school is also postponing or canceling building improvements and renovations during this period, according to Judi Ray, the school’s assistant dean of administration. Ray said the school planned to reorganize one of its administrative suites and buy upgraded equipment, but will now postpone such projects to save money. “We can deal with what we have,” Ray said. Other cuts include travel reductions per the recommendation of Interim Chancellor Bradley Colwell. The school only enrolls graduate students, but does not have any graduate assistantships. Fountaine said graduate assistant positions are not a concern for the law school as they are for other departments. As of now, Fountaine said the school has not had to terminate any staff or faculty members. “As we’re making these cuts, we’re trying to protect our academic mission here at the law school,” Fountaine said. “We’re looking at everything we can do to save money and still provide the excellent legal education that we do. “

Above: Tour de Carbondale attendees and Carbondale Police observe each other Saturday at 701 W. Cherry St. during a stop on the tour route. Elliott Andaich, a senior studying business marketing, said Carbondale Police informed organizers underage drinking tickets given to participants would also result in tickets to hosts for providing alcohol to minors. “The police told us if we had a stop and sold wristbands [for alcohol], any [underage person] on the property or off the property would get a ticket as well as the house having the tour stop,” Andaich said. Left: Partygoers dance Saturday at 701 W. Cherry St. during a stop on the Tour de Carbondale route.

J ACOB W IEGAND @J ACOB W IEGAND _DE

Mizzou football players join campus racial protest DAVE MATTER | ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Racial tension on the University of Missouri’s campus could soon impact Mizzou athletics. MU football players will apparently stop participating in team activities until university system president Tim Wolfe resigns. A message circulated on Twitter on Saturday night featuring a photo of 32 African-American Mizzou football players, some locked arm in arm along with the following message: “The athletes of color on the University of Missouri football team truly believe ‘injustice Anywhere is a threat to Justice Everywhere’ We will no longer participate in any football related activities until President Tim Wolfe resigns or is removed due to his negligence toward marginalized students’ experiences. WE ARE UNITED!!!!!” On Sunday, head coach Gary Pinkel expressed solidarity with his players on Twitter by posting a picture of the team and coaches locking arms. The tweet on Sunday read: “The Mizzou Family stands as one. We are united. We are behind our players.” Most Missouri players declined comment on the situation when leaving the team facility after an approximate 90-minute meeting with coaches that started at 10 a.m. Sunday. After the meeting, team

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spokesman Chad Moller said the team would eventually release a statement on the situation. While walking out of the facility, tight end Jason Reese said the team was originally scheduled to practice Sunday but will not practice. Asked when the team will resume practicing, Reese said, “After this gets resolved.” On Saturday night, the Twitter account for the school’s Legion of Black Collegians posted the message and photo. Several players in the photo have since retweeted the photo. Among those players in the photo are star linebacker Kentrell Brothers, defensive end Charles Harris, tailbacks Russell Hansbrough and Ish Witter and several other starters and backup players. Mizzou football team spokesman Chad Moller released the following statement: “The department of athletics is aware of the declarations made tonight by many of our student-athletes. We all must come together with leaders from across our campus to tackle these challenging issues and we support our student-athletes right to do so.” Several players tweeted about the protest Saturday, including cornerbacks John Gibson and Finis Stribling, safeties Thomas Wilson and Anthony Sherrils and linebacker Clarence Green

among others. In response to another tweet, Gibson wrote the boycott “has nothing to do with our coaches. Our coaches are 100 percent behind us. Including the white ones.” He later deleted the tweet. Linebacker Grant Jones, the son of running backs coach Brian Jones, tweeted, “If anyone’s mistaken the 32 players that are in the picture are not the only players participating in the boycott.” Missouri’s football team played Thursday, losing to Mississippi State to fall to 4-5, and does not play again until Saturday’s game against Brigham Young in Kansas City. Mizzou student Jonathan Butler has been staging a hunger strike since Monday, saying he won’t eat until Wolfe steps down. Butler has been critical of the system president for the way he’s handled several racial incidents on campus. Butler was pictured in the photo featuring the 32 Mizzou players. Wolfe met with Butler and representatives of several student organizations Friday, The Associated Press and other news outlets reported. In a statement released Friday, Wolfe called Butler an important voice for social justice and said he was concerned about Butler’s health.


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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015

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Universities battle it out in mock court competition

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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.

Copyright Information © 2015 Daily Egyptian. All rights reserved. All content is property of the Daily Egyptian and may not be reproduced or transmitted without consent. The Daily Egyptian is a member of the Illinois College Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press and College Media Advisers Inc. and the College Business and Advertising Managers Inc.

Publishing Information The Daily Egyptian is published by the students of Southern Illinois University Carbondale and functions as a laboratory for the school of journalism in exchange for the room and utilities in the Communications Building. The Daily Egyptian is a non-profit organization that survives primarily off of its advertising revenue. Offices are in the Communications Building, Room 1259, at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, Ill., 62901. Uche Onyebadi, fiscal officer.

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Law students put their skills to the test this weekend in a competition that forced them to consider real-world issues. The SIU School of Law hosted its annual National Health Law Moot Court Competition on Saturday and Sunday, a two-day mock court competition in which students from universities across the nation compete against each other. While SIUC students do not participate, they do host and organize the event. This year, 29 teams of two to three students each represented 23 universities at the competition. Gene Basanta, a professor of law emeritus who has worked with the event since 1992, said it is beneficial for students because the hypothetical case is relevant issue in U.S. law. In the mock case, a state discontinued religious exemptions for vaccinations and required non-vaccinated children to view an informational film about the consequences of being unvaccinated. A set of parents filed a suit claiming their constitutional rights have been violated.

The teams then composed arguments based on the case facts. “Where there are laws that are passed that require, as in this case, students to be vaccinated ... That’s something that I think is important,” Seth Granda, a thirdyear law student participating in the moot court, said. “I think it’s really good that the competition has picked something that is that relevant and forced us to take it head on and address it.” Every team assembled arguments for both sides of the case. “I think any good lawyer has to be able to dissect an issue,” Basanta said. “A lot of these times, they are issues that do have two sides to this story and there are two different viewpoints, or multiple different viewpoints expressed ... You’re also forced to think about the way that someone else who believes things very differently than you thinks.” Vaccinations were discussed at the second Republican president debate earlier this year. During the debate, candidate Ben Carson argued no correlation between autism and vaccinations against Donald Trump’s accusations linking vaccinations

to the disorder. “It’s a very timely issue,” Basanta said. “Students who come from [these] schools want to argue cases that have a dose of reality to them.” In addition to arguing the case, teams also prepared briefs reviewed by a panel and included in overall team scores. The law school depends on local and state attorneys and judges to volunteer to judge the competition. Students competed in two rounds Saturday, and the top 16 teams competed Sunday in a tournament-style format until one team is declared the winner. Rebecca Harris, a third-year law student from Albion and member of the Moot Court Board, previously participated in a moot court in Albany, N.Y., that focused on family law. She said she finds the event beneficial and she devoted a lot of time in preparation. “We did practice rounds about five days a week for a couple hours,” Harris said. “We started out with a script — basically our whole argument — and, eventually, we would work down to where we got to no notes.”

SIUE jazz station to lose state funding KELSEY LANDIS | THE TELEGRAPH

While state funding for Illinois public universities remains tied up by an ongoing budget stalemate, appropriations for other services, like SIU-Edwardsville’s jazz station, are drying up altogether. Central administration at SIU-E charged WSIE “The Jazz Station” managers in April with weaning themselves off of $140,000 in state appropriation funding by 2018. That accounts for nearly 80 percent of the station’s $180,000 total annual operating budget. Amid declining and delayed support from the state for higher education, the university has focused on shifting money to classroom teaching. “The radio station is somewhat outside of that focus,” said Doug McIlhagga, executive director of university marketing and communications at SIU-E. But enhancing sponsorships, underwriting and listener support could cover the loss of state and university support, he added. “In reality, considering the radio station, its value, its placement in the market, that’s an achievable goal.” The station’s most recent fundraising effort comes in the form of an online campaign on website IndieGoGo, with a goal of raising $10,000. The online effort is a new avenue for raising money, said Greg Conroy, general manager of six years. It comes in addition to two annual fundraisers. Shifting to a self-sustaining budget driven by fundraisers signifies an overall transformation in the business model, the

communications director said. “The president’s office told us what our focus needs to be, and where we need to change our way of doing business. From our perspective, we said okay, we just need to change our business model,” McIlhagga said. WSIE (88.7 FM) was founded in September 1970 and originally played an eclectic mix of music chosen by student DJs. In the mid-1980s, the station’s mission shifted under then General Manager Roy Gerritsen, who decided the station would become a purely jazz station to serve an empty niche in the region, Conroy said. “I still believe in his mission,” Conroy said. “We have a following of people who listen to jazz. That’s what they want to hear. A radio station is supposed to be serving the needs of a region. We serve that purpose.” Last year, the station began hosting the weekly St. Louis Jazz Talk, a program featuring interviews with and music from local jazz musicians. The station plays local music throughout their 24/7 programming, along with selections from a server that has grown by nearly 6,500 tunes in the past six years. Dick Ulett, president of Clayton Studios and consultant to WSIE, reviews CDs from distributors weekly and decides what will be played. In addition to broadcasting jazz music, live news and special programming to the entire St. Louis metropolitan area, including southwestern Illinois, the station offers paid, part-time student worker positions in new and sports broadcasting and audio broadcast board

operations for SIUE sporting events. The student positions would not be affected by the budget cut, McIlhagga said. Conroy said the opportunity for students to work at a major regional radio station provides valuable experience both in and outside of mass communications careers. “Even if they don’t go into radio, it teaches you teamwork, discipline, deadlines, responsibilities, how to do the news, run sports events so our listeners can hear these events,” Conroy said. Each year, he added, at least one of the 16 or more students working in the station goes on to land a job in radio. Valerie Sieth is a graduate assistant with the station. She is pursuing her master’s degree in public administration, and says she has developed skills that will help her as she pursues a career in public policy. “As far as the public affairs programming, it (the station) is an outlet to the community to get information on what’s going on in the local area, as far as the economy, environment, local government, anything that might affect them,” Sieth said. Learning about that process “will definitely aide in my future career path,” Sieth said. Dr. Elza Ibroscheva, department of mass communications professor and chair, said many students in the department “experience valuable learning opportunities” by working at the station, some even joining the major specifically to work at the station. “The radio station is a great learning laboratory for our students who focus on broadcasting,” Ibroscheva said.


MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015

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SIUSS skates into Carterville with fall competition

Jordan Duncan | @jordanduncanDE Joe Vizzaccero, of Rochester, Mich., attempts a trick during an intermission between competitions at the SIU Skate Society competition in Carterville on Saturday. Wade Stofko, a senior from Joliet studying cinema and photography and president of SIUSS, said hosting events helps bring people outside from school to skateparks to inform them about resources they may not know of.

Supreme Court dives back into the fight over contraceptives and Obamacare DAVID G. SAVAGE TRIBUNE WASHINGTON BUREAU

The Supreme Court has agreed to decide another religiousliberty clash over contraceptives that insurers are required to pay for under President Barack Obama’s health care law. The justices said they will rule on whether religious schools, colleges and charities may refuse to cooperate in any way with the administration’s plan of offering free birth control to female employees, including by refusing to sign a notice citing their religious objection. Obama’s lawyers have stressed that none of the Catholic or evangelical Christian institutions are being asked to pay for contraceptives if they cite a sincere religious objection to doing so. But that concession has not mollified Catholic bishops or the leaders of hundreds of Christian schools and colleges, including Notre Dame University and nonprofit charities like the Little Sisters of the Poor. Joined together in dozens of lawsuits, the religious institutions argued they would be “morally complicit in grave sin” if they were required even to notify the government of their refusal to comply. That notice would shift the burden of paying for birth control to their insurers, they noted. Under federal regulations, the notice “triggers” the duty of the church’s private insurers and therefore, makes the church leaders “complicit in the delivery”

of the disputed contraceptives, lawyers for the Catholic archbishop of Washington said in an appeal to the high court. The Obama administration has stood fast on the so-called contraceptive mandate, insisting that women employees and students must have access to birth control through their insurance. Providing contraceptives free of charge will greatly reduce unwanted pregnancies and abortions, they say. And, they argue, it’s one thing for the religious institutions to say they should not be required to pay for contraceptive coverage. It’s quite another for them to refuse even to notify the government so that other arrangements can be made. If a religious nonprofit institution notifies the government of its objection, that step “relieves the employer of any obligation to provide, arrange or pay for the coverage to which it objects,” said Solicitor Gen. Donald Verrilli in response. That, he said, should be sufficient to protect the groups’ rights to religious freedom, the government argues. These disputes have been heard in federal courts across the country for several years. Most judges have ruled for the administration and its “opt-out” plan for religious groups. They said notifying the government of their religious objection did not put a “substantial burden” on anyone’s freedom of religion. But in September, the 8th Circuit Court in St. Louis

took the side of the churchbased institutions and said that requiring them to cooperate with the government would “substantially burden” their freedom of religion. That split all but assured the Supreme Court would step in to resolve the matter. The justices said Friday they would hear several appeals in a single, combined case. The case is the fourth major test of Obama’s health care law to come before the court. Twice, the justices have rejected broad challenges to the law. But in 2014, they said that the Christian family that owns the Hobby Lobby chain of craft stores may refuse to provide contraceptives as part of their insurance coverage. The ruling turned not on the First Amendment but on a federal law known as the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. That law says the government may not “substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion” unless the requirement is the “least restrictive means of furthering a compelling government interest.” From the start, the Obama administration said churches, synagogues and other houses of worship were exempt from the health care law’s requirement. But the administration refused to extend the full exemption to religiously affiliated schools, hospitals and other groups because those institutions may have hundreds of employees who do not share the religious view of their employers.


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Opinion

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015

Veterans day should become our national election day CHARLES STIMSON The Heritage Foundation

One of the saddest statistics in America today is the low rate of voter turnout. In the 2012 presidential election only 57.5 percent of eligible voters turned out. That number is sobering. Even worse is having to go back to 1896 to find a rate significantly higher (79 percent). The oftrepeated reason for the low rate is that potential voters don’t think their vote will matter. By combining Veterans Day and Election Day into one national holiday we, as a nation, can provide eligible voters with a whole new reason to vote — to honor the veterans who have given so much to protect this right.

EDITORIAL CARTOON

One vote may not change an election, but the individual act of voting can become a message sent to all veterans on Veterans Day that we know what they have done for us. In 2014, Election Day did fall on Veterans Day. Now we need to make that permanent. A group of students has become interested in pursuing this effort, and you will be able to follow their work on www. VetDayVoteDay.org. Their simple message is: How can you honor a veteran on Veterans Day? Vote! The most moving moment on a trip to Europe years ago was not seeing the Coliseum, the Eiffel Tower or a masterpiece in the Louvre; it was a visit in Italy to a cemetery dedicated solely to American soldiers. There were thousands of simple white tombstones with the names of our

fallen soldiers. Walking among them it was impossible not to cry. So many young Americans whose lives lasted only 18, 19, or 20 years, and who died so far away from their homes. At a World Economic Forum in 2003, Colin Powell was challenged about American “empire building.” His answer silenced the room: “Over the years, the United States has sent many of its fine young men and women into great peril to fight for freedom beyond our borders. The only amount of land we have ever asked for in return is enough to bury those that did not return.” We entered World War I with Woodrow Wilson’s call to “make the world safe for democracy.” Americans responded, and

many — too many — did not return. We must continue to honor their sacrifice by taking the one action that defines a democracy: voting. There is nothing that connects a Tuesday in November — typically Election Day — to anything meaningful in our national culture. The date was set not by the Constitution, but by Congress in the 1880s. In those days voting could be a two-day commitment for farmers who had to travel to the county seat _ often a day’s journey by wagon. So elections had to be held after the harvest. And they couldn’t happen on the Sabbath. So allowing Monday for travel, voting could be done on Tuesday, with time

left over to buy supplies and head back to the farm. It made sense then, but such thinking is irrelevant today. If we make a change by linking Election Day and Veterans Day, your candidate still may not win. Your candidate may not even have a remote chance to win. But every vote would become a continuing statement saying that all of those lives marked by white tombstones were not lost in vain. All those veterans, who served in our armed forces and protected our nation, would be further honored and valued. They fought for you. They served for you. Honor them. Vote. It is so simple and so obvious and so easy to achieve. We can do this.


MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015

Pulse

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School of Music showcases talent KRISTEN LEVINE | @KLevine_DE

A small program with large talent, the School of Music prepares emerging artists, educators and industry professionals for today’s market. The School of Music will host the SIU Music Showcase at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Luther F. Carson Center for Performing Arts in Paducah, Ky. The showcase will include musical and theater performances from members of the university. Eric Lenz, an associate cello professor, is excited to promote the diversity of options within the school of music and the university at the showcase “The showcase event is an opportunity for

SIU to connect with alumni and prospective students in one of the regional cornerstone communities closest to our own,” Lenz said. Lenz, who has served as principal cello for the Paducah Symphony since 2008, said several school of music faculty members perform regularly at the Carson Center with the Paducah Symphony. Jose Guzman, from Ponce, Puerto Rico, a second-year graduate student in theory and composition/guitar performance, will perform in the jazz orchestra, which he has been preparing for since August. Guzman began playing the guitar 17 years ago on Three Kings Day, a main Puerto Rican holiday in January that marks

the biblical adoration of Jesus Christ. “When I was little, I received a guitar on Three Kings Day. Ever since then, I’ve been playing the guitar,” Guzman said. The most difficult part for preparing a showcase is communication between colleagues, time accuracy and understanding, and knowing different genres, Guzman said. “From my personal standpoint, the hardest part for any upcoming show is getting to know the different genres that you aren’t usually used to playing,” Guzman said. Although preparation has taken its toll, Guzman said he is thrilled to represent his school and country. Isaac Lausell, a guitar professor and

showcase performer, has played the guitar for 30 years. He will conduct for the guitar orchestra and be a feature soloist in two pieces at the showcase. “This showcase is about showing the community the different aspects for what these students can offer,” Lausell said. Even though the music program at the university is small, Lausell said students in the showcase will gain experience putting on a well-structured performance. “When we get on a bus, go to a different state, play on a stage with a big audience, the students get a real life experience of what the music world is,” Lausell said. “Increase the craft and get better.”

Donald Trump on ‘Suffragette’ star Carey Mulligan: ‘SNL’: 5 thoughts ‘Many of the issues raised in the STEVE JOHNSON | Chicago Tribune

In the end, the anticipation far outpaced — trumped, you might say — the reality. For weeks, people had fretted about Donald Trump, Republican presidential candidate, despoiler of a Chicago skyscraper and former NBC reality star, being given a chance to host “Saturday Night Live.” Free advertising, they said. Unfair! But the show that aired Saturday was one of the genuine duds in the recent history of the NBC late-night warhorse, and that’s saying something. “SNL” didn’t seem to know what to do with Trump beyond, mostly, a string of late appearances in sketches that sapped whatever meager power they had managed to muster. Here are five thoughts on Trump, the candidate, hosting “SNL,” the show that is now officially more interested in an extra few ratings points than in comedy: 1. Larry David as Bernie Sanders should have been the host. There was more life in David’s brief caricature of the Vermont socialist seeking the Democratic presidential nomination than in all of Trump’s onstage moments combined. “I’m not talking about fancy coins like dimes and quarters,” David/Sanders said in a plea for donations found in a household cleaning device. “I’m Bernie Sanders, and I want your vacuum pennies.” Unfortunately, the David moments came early, and the rest of the show went on like, for instance, a presidential campaign being fought months in advance of the calendar year of the actual election. 2. The monologue, which sets the mood for a host’s evening, was a snooze. Not even Taran Killam and Darrell Hammond doing their versions of Trump beside Trump could save this TV moment. At least there was

a laugh in cast member Aidy Bryant feigning exasperation at Trump mistaking her for his long-time nemesis Rosie O’Donnell. 3. Trump walks away unscathed. He didn’t particularly help himself in his apparent quest to become president, but the “short-fingered vulgarian,” as Spy Magazine used to call Trump in the 1980s, didn’t hurt himself either. He poked just enough fun his own way to seem a good sport but, whether playing the laser harpist in a low-rent band or a sleazy record producer, he stayed mostly above the proceedings, reading his lines with a smirk that suggested he thought he was getting the better of this deal. 4. So why did “SNL” bring him on? The show took its shots at Trump in the first sketch after the monologue, which imagined the year as 2018, Trump in the White House, and the many unlikely things he’s promised on the campaign trail having come true. But even having a “president of Mexico” giving President Trump a check to help pay for the border wall between Mexico and the U.S. didn’t land particularly hard. 5. This was in no way worth the controversy. The essence of people’s beef with NBC and “SNL” is that they gave free image-polishing airtime to a leading presidential candidate. They did, and they’ll be hard pressed to offer anything like the equivalent to that still massive group of Republican hopefuls, although I think we all look forward to walk ons from Bobby Jindal and Lindsey Graham. Meanwhile, the only time Trump’s presence boosted the show a notch was in a better than average Drunk Uncle sketch, which hinged on Bobby Moynihan’s character being a Trump supporter. Getting a line about Trump and Drunk Uncle both loving white Russians hardly seems worth the fuss.

film are just as relevant today’

Focus Features | TNS Anne-Marie Duff and Carey Mulligan in “Suffragette.” (Photo courtesy Focus Features/TNS)

KRISTIN TILLOTSON | Star Tribune

Carey Mulligan laughs. Then sighs, then laughs again. The star of “Suffragette” is reacting to being told that, superimposed over a short online video she made on feminism, a pop-up ad reads “The No. 1 reason men pull away! The biggest mistake women make to kill a man’s attraction!” “That’s so funny,” said Mulligan, who plays Maud Watts, a young working-class mother caught up in the women’s right-to-vote movement in 1920s London. “Especially when we’re talking about a film like this. I have to think of that kind of thing as white noise.” Mulligan’s film career was auspiciously launched six years ago with the well-received 1960s coming-of-age tale “An Education.” Since then she has played Daisy Buchanan opposite Leonardo DiCaprio in “The Great Gatsby” and a folk singer married to Justin Timberlake in the Coen brothers’ “Inside Llewyn Davis.”

Maud, who must convincingly evolve from a nondescript laundry worker to a firebrand activist, could be her most challenging role to date. “One big reason I was drawn to this project is that she’s a completely ordinary woman who finds a voice through these other women and becomes extraordinary,” she said. “So many stories are about people who already are extraordinary. This woman, you see her as she’s going through the process of being radicalized.” “Suffragette” also features veteran actors including Meryl Streep and Helena Bonham Carter, but it’s really Mulligan’s picture to make or break. Did she feel that kind of pressure during shooting? “No, it really felt like an ensemble to me,” she said. “Except when I was in a prison cell, alone.” She recalls the suffrage movement as being little more than a footnote in history class, and learned a lot while making the movie about all the attempts to quell the women’s efforts that went on behind the scenes.

“I had no idea they were forcefed like that in prison; that was shocking,” she said. “And they only released the full private information on all the surveillance in 2003. The authorities felt threatened enough by these women to spy on them.” Although she hails from a generation known for taking equal rights for granted, Mulligan said she’s “proud to be a feminist.” She was also tickled to work with Streep, who plays suffrage leader Emmeline Pankhurst. “We only had two days together, but she blew everyone away,” Mulligan said. “There was a buzz building up the day she was coming. Everyone was giddy. They turned the family room of the house we were shooting in into sort of a green room, and everyone was sitting on the sofa like little kids in kindergarten, with our faces in our hands, staring at her while she told stories. Kind of pathetic, but that’s just the way people feel about her.”


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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

CALL FOR A SHOWING AND SIGN TODAY NO APPLICATION FEE. PET FRIENDLY. ACROSS FROM SIU

AVAIL NOW 1 bdrm, across from SIU. Hi-speed Internet, satellite TV, laundry, parking, water & trash. Call 618-559-4763.

Tired of roomate-great for 2 students or family. 201 S. Brook Ln. 4 Bdr /2 bath, W/D, DW, shed, fenced yard, $875/mo. 529-4000.

MODERN, MANUFACTURED HOMES 2 bdrm, 2 bath, w/d, d/w, a/c, energy efficient, (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

BARGAIN RENTAL PRICES

GRAB A ROOMMATE 1 & 2 BEDROOMS

NICE 1 & 2 BDRM, rental list at 2006 Woodriver, a/c, near shopping, lease & dep, no pets, 529-2535.

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

1 & 2 BDRMS $275-$490/mo 618-924-0535 www.comptonrentals.com

1, 2, & 3 bdrm apartments, townhouses, duplexes, and houses, avail now. 549-8000. universityheightsrentals.com

4 year old washer/dryer $395. Fridge $195. Stove $150. Washer/dryer $300. Call 618-525-9822 WASHER/DRYER $325, Stove $150 refrigerator $195. Rebuilt. 90-day warranty. Able Appliance 457-8372

STUDIO APT, BE The First to live in these newly remodeled apts. New appliances porcelain tile. Walk to SIU, starting $375/mo. 457-4422.

NOW HIRING. ENTRY level, full-time positions. 23 people needed immediately. Openings in 5 departments. No experience necessary. Must be 18. $400-500/weekly. Call 618-988-2256. 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. 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

HOSTESS/PHONE PERSON, apply in person, some lunch hours needed. Quatro!s Pizza, 218 W. Freeman. 2 Bdrm. BRICK home. Residential area. $800/mo. Dep/Ref. No pets, no indoor smoking. w/d 967-8813. NICE 2 BRDM 305 W. Sycamore. W/D central air $550/mo. Available now. 618-529-1820

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

2 BDRM, WALK to siu, w/d, $650/mo deposit, references, no pets, no indoor smoking, avail August 9678813 shop867@yahoo.com

WEDGEWOOD HILLS 5 bdrm, 3 bath house w/fireplace, 2 bdrm townhouse. Both have W/D, DW, microwave. New carpet in 5 bdrm. Free cable and WiFi. Quiet neighborhood! NO pets. Call 618-549-5596

NICE 1,2, OR 3 bdrm apts avail. now close to campus Bryant Rentals 529-1820 or 529-3581

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

SALES CLERK, PT, must be 21yrs, apply in person, SI Liquor Mart, 113 N. 12th St., M!boro. Please no calls.

GREAT LANDLORDS, 1 & 2 bdrm, duplex apts, avail fall, c/a, no pets. At 606 East Park St, 618-201-3732.

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 bedrooms. Houses & apartments, W/D, 2 bath 549-4808 www.siucrentals.com

PART-TIME STUDENT HELP afternoons. Deliveries & Clean-up. Able Appliance 457-7767.

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

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

WALKERS BLUFF IS now hiring servers, food runners, and event staff. Weekends required. E-mail resume to hr@walkersbluff.com

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. 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

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


MONDAY, NOVEMBER 09, 2015

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

7

FOR RELEASE NOVEMBER 9, 2015

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

<< Answers for Thursday’s Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk

ACROSS 1 Not at all flexible 6 Long and lean 10 Declare openly 14 Easily tipped boat 15 “__ further reflection ...” 16 Building toy with theme parks 17 Western crooner Gene 18 Sanctuary recess 19 Overly compliant 20 Compressed video file format 21 Close to defeat 23 The brown one is Louisiana’s state bird 25 Mae West’s “I used to be Snow White, but I drifted” is one 26 Sonoma Valley vessel 27 Start of an envelope address 32 “Cool duds!” 36 Covert org. in “Argo” 37 Dashing style 38 Granola grain 39 Citrus drink used by NASA 40 Obstinate critter 41 Use one’s influence 45 Where soldiers go? 47 Swat 48 Manning of the Giants 49 “Storage Wars” sales event 53 Membranes that vibrate 58 Napoleon’s exile isle 59 Biz bigwig 60 Mishmash 61 French-__ potatoes 62 No-frills shelter 63 Speak abrasively 64 Apartment rental agreement 65 Former trans-Atl. fliers 66 Kremlin rejection 67 Milk dispenser DOWN 1 Mischief-maker 2 Brownish gray

Today’s Birthday (11/09/15). Your team wins this year. Fiscal responsibility earns fat coffers. Discover new love this springtime, as a prelude and support for a change or transition. Your crew comes through next autumn, followed by a shift in the game. Pull together for what you love.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Aries (March 21-April 19) -Today is a 7 -- Heed a call to action for something you feel passionate about. Attend to finances over the next two days. Study money, and review resources. If communications break down, wait for later. Slow down and take it easy. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Consider all possibilities. Share dreams and promises. Develop strong partners today and tomorrow. Produce results with gusto. Choose staying home with a loved one over going out. Tidy up the place first. Enjoy time together. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -Today is an 8 -- There’s more work coming soon. It could get intense over the next few days. Concentrate on a new assignment and get help if you need it. Address a controversy with carefully documented facts. Choose private over public appearances.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) -Today is a 7 -- The next two days favor fun. Love blossoms with any encouragement at all. Gather information on the object of your desire. Do your chores before venturing out. Invite friends for game night, or go out to play. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Find creative ways to improve your home and your family’s comfort without great expense. A little paint goes a long way. Home cooking saves over eating out. Simple fare and rooms soothe your spirit. Nurture your garden. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 6 -- Stop doing something that’s unprofitable. Words and images flow with ease for you today and tomorrow. Study and collect your research. Finish up a project. Entertain suggestions and editorial comments. Let the flavors simmer for perfect seasoning.

11/9/15

By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke

3 Info from a spy drone 4 Pardoned 5 “Saturday Night Live” alumna Tina 6 Blonde comic strip teenager 7 Date bk. entry 8 Quick bite 9 Skateboarder’s protective gear 10 Energy bar nut 11 Show for which Julia LouisDreyfus has won four consecutive acting Emmys 12 S-shaped molding 13 Bowl-shaped pans 21 Sworn statement 22 Makes tracks 24 Jazz aficionado 27 Breakfast and dinner 28 “Darn it!” 29 Shoe brand Thom __ 30 Line around a tub 31 Droops 32 “Hud” Oscar winner Patricia 33 “Casablanca” heroine 34 Play list

Thursday’s Answers Saturday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

35 Play part 39 Giggled nervously 41 Medicinal dose 42 Mythical horse with a horn 43 In the manner indicated 44 Rocker Ocasek 46 Punches back, say 49 Bring home from the shelter 50 Homeric epic

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Practice to increase your skills. Focus on making money today and tomorrow. Compute expenses and postpone purchases you can’t afford right now. Check carefully for plan changes. Intuition guides your work. Juggle a disruption to your schedule. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Abandon procrastination. Use your power responsibly. Begin a two-day self-confident phase. Be cautious with love and money. Romance fizzles if left out in the rain. Leave room in your schedule for flights of fantasy. Follow your heart. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- Household issues take an abrupt turn. Concentrate on cleaning up today and tomorrow. Guard against breakage. Be sensitive to a loved one’s wishes. Consider the consequences before acting. Follow your intuition. Let events take their own course.

11/09/15 11/9/15

51 Like Santa Claus 52 “Unsafe at Any Speed” author Ralph 53 November parade participants 54 Clumsy oafs 55 Lincoln’s coin 56 Big name in skin care 57 Get to one’s feet 61 Winter illness

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Confer with allies for the next two days. Your friends are your inspiration. Committees are especially effective. Enjoy a party phase. Find what you need nearby. Social gatherings provide the perfect connection. Discover a new resource. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -Today is a 7 -- You may be tested for the next few days. A professional opportunity won’t wait. Defend your position gracefully. Focus and smile for the camera. Don’t waste money on gadgets you won’t use. Rest after the spotlight wanes. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -Today is a 9 -- Get adventurous. Conditions are better for travel over the next two days. New opportunities present themselves. Take care. Anticipate disagreement. Let your partner take the lead. Simplify matters as much as possible. Handle logistics early.


Sports

PAGE 8

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015

Scouting the Saints, Falcons and Rattlers SEAN CARLEY | @SCarleyDE

SIU men’s basketball opens the 2015-16 season this week with three games at SIU Arena. 7 p.m. Monday versus Maryville University (Exhibition Game) The Saints had seven 10game starters last season with four returning. Two of the three graduates were leading scorers on last year’s team. Sophomore guard Forrester Sims and senior guard Derek Deters shot better than 42 percent from three-point range. Maryville finished 12-17 last season in Division II, and SIU may be able to try different looks before the regular season begins. 7 p.m. Saturday versus Air Force This is the Salukis’ game in the Mountain West/Missouri Valley Conference Challenge. Four players on the 22-man roster are taller than 6-foot-7 and none of them played more than 10 minutes a game last year. Junior forward Joe Tuss, who missed last season because of injury, will be the tallest Falcon starter at 6-foot-8. With limited size, the Falcons play a technical game focusing on passing and quality shots. The team averaged 15 assists per game and shot 53.9 percent from two-point range, which was 12th in the nation. SIU had 8.3 assists per game. The Salukis shot 44.3 percent from twopoint range, which ranked 306th out

D AILY E GYPTIAN File Photo

of 351 in the nation last season. Three starters return for the Falcons. Junior guard Zach Kocur averaged 8.7 points per game last year and shot 48 percent from three-point range. 3 p.m. Sunday vs. Florida A&M

This game could possibly be the easiest test the Salukis face all year. The Rattlers finished 2-28 last year and their top two scorers — junior guard Jermaine Ruttley and freshman guard Jorge Rosa — transferred in the offseason.

Of 351 Division I teams, Florida A&M ranked 349th with 55.4 points per game and 348th with 8.3 assists per game and a .373 field goal percentage. The Rattlers were 302nd with 31.5 rebounds per game. Florida A&M ranked 316th with

72.9 points allowed per game. SIU averaged 59.6 points per game last season and ranked 324th. The preseason KenPom — a metricsbased college basketball ranking website — ratings have the Rattlers at secondto-last in the country.

Salukis’ close losses are not a positive SEAN CARLEY | @SCarleyDE

SIU football has lost six games by a combined score of 17 points, all by a touchdown or less, but Saluki fans should be asking if this is a good thing. Good: SIU has been competitive in every game so far this season. Bad: The team does not have the complete game needed to win. “We’re playing hard; we’re giving ourselves a chance,” coach Dale Lennon said after Saturday’s 34-31 loss to South Dakota. “We’re just not able to do it.” There’s a common theme to almost every loss. In five of the losses, Saluki offense had multiple turnovers. The Salukis had more than 65 penalty yards in five losses. Four losses featured an SIU missed or blocked field goal. SIU’s defense allowed 500 or more yards in four of the losses. Fixing any of these problems would have resulted in more wins. Instead, the Salukis continue making the same mistakes. Saturday’s loss had nearly all these factors. The Salukis had four turnovers, 75 penalty yards and the potential game-tying

Daily Egyptian File Photo

field goal was blocked. The team is young and missing players in most position groups because of injuries.

But, this team knows how to win. They shut down highly-touted, thenNo. 10 Liberty holding their offense

to 368 yards and 13 points. They then scored 11 points in five minutes against Youngstown State’s top-ranked Missouri Valley Football Conference defense before winning in overtime. The team will have to emphasize holding onto the ball next season. SIU has turned the ball over 20 times in nine games and has generated 12. The -8 turnover margin ranks 105th of 123 teams in the Football Championship Subdivision and is the worst in the MVFC. An entire offseason will seem like an eternity to fix all the problems, but the team will likely be better next season. The team will be a year older, and hopefully a year wiser, with a majority of the starters returning. In addition, the team should be hungry to rectify past mistakes. With the playoffs and conference championship outside the realm of the reality this season, the focus of the final two games might shift to ending the season on a positive note. Momentum at the end of the season can carry into the offseason, and the offseason needs to becomes the team’s time to rectify its wrongs.


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