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tuesDay, NoveMber 25, 2014
Since 1916
N athaN h oefert D aily e gyptiaN Police push protesters back after people broke the windows of a St. Louis County Police vehicle Monday in Ferguson, Mo. Protesting continued following the grand jury decision not to indict Darren Wilson.
No indictment: Ferguson erupts in chaos
Doug Moore
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Anger spilled over into violence Monday night throughout the region after it was announced that Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson would not be indicted in the death of Michael Brown. At least two St. Louis County police cars were set on fire along with at least
six businesses, including a Walgreens and a Little Caesar’s pizza, both on North Florissant Road in Ferguson. An elderly man was run over when carjacked outside a pizzeria. And in south St. Louis city, protesters shut down Interstate 44 at South Grand Boulevard. Police, dressed in riot gear, used tear gas to clear the crowd outside the
Ferguson Police Department, at 222 S. Florissant Road, and several hundred people began fleeing the area as gunshots were heard in the distance. As the night grew later, more reports of fires, vandalism and looting were reported. Delores Blue, 40, of Florissant, came to be in the crowd outside the Ferguson Police Department and listen
to the announcement. She did not seem hopeful. When word came that Wilson would not be indicted, Blue gasped, then walked away. “This just hurts,” she said. Marsha McGee of Florissant, a frequent protester since shortly after Brown’s shooting, said justice was not served. “I am mad as hell. I feel like he should
have went to jail because he killed that young man,” McGee said of Wilson. Tracy Sheffield of Kansas City, Mo., said he wanted to be in Ferguson when the announcement was made. “This is heartbreaking. It just shows that in the 21st century, you can get away with murder if you are wearing a badge and a blue uniform.” Please see FERGUSON · 3
Mario Moccia named athletic SIU could face more budget cuts director at New Mexico State Joshua Murray @JDMurray_DE| Daily Egyptian
Tony McDaniel
@TonyMcDaniel_DE| Daily Egyptian
SIU athletic director Mario Moccia will be leaving for the same position at New Mexico State University. NMSU President Garrey Carruthers made the announcement Monday at a press conference in Las Cruces, N.M. Moccia said it was a big day for him and his family. “New Mexico State University is a tremendous institution,” Moccia said. “It’s an institution that has a special place in my heart, and it’s an institution that has tremendous amount of potential from an athletic standpoint.” The Las Cruces Sun-News reports Moccia’s five-year contract with the Aggies is worth $240,000 a year, and he will take over his position Jan. 5. Moccia made $187,644 at SIU last year, according to the most recent figures available to the Daily Egyptian. Please see MOCCIA · 2
M ario M occia
James Applegate, executive director of the Illinois Board of Higher Education, said state universities should plan for substantial budget cuts next year. In an email sent to Illinois university presidents today, Applegate said all state agencies should plan for a 20 percent reduction of state appropriations in 2016. He said the numbers are preliminary and a worst-case scenario. “All of the state agencies have been asked to do a scenario of what a 20 percent reduction in budget for next year would entail,” Applegate said. SIU President Randy Dunn said the news was not unexpected, and the projected budget cut would result in more than $40 million from SIU’s campuses. He said in a separate interview with WSIU the numbers are an early projection. “This is only the first instruction, it doesn’t
mean that that’s what the state budget will look like,” Dunn said. “But that work has begun to create some different scenarios for the governorelect’s budget team.” He said for the university to reach that 20 percent reduction, it would not have across-theboard budget cuts but complete elimination of some programs. He said instead of cutting student services that are essential to the university’s mission, he would consider abandoning or postponing funding for other programs. Dunn also left the door open for tuition and fee increases next year. “Part of what will help offset this, is going to be some sort of increase, potentially, in tuition and fees,” he said. “It’s way too early to start announcing what that would be, but we’re at a point where I don’t think we can just automatically say we’re going to freeze tuition and fees heading into the 2015-16 year.” Please see BUDGET · 3