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WE’RE THERE WHEN YOU CAN’T BE
Wednesday | April 30, 2014
Memorial for Greene set
Students, friends to gather to remember professor By Paula Ann Solis Staff Writer
Family, friends and students of Dr. Daniel Greene, former senior lecturer of history, will come together today to grieve his sudden passing. Dr. Rosalie Beck, associate professor, will officiate the memorial service at 4 p.m. at the Miller Chapel located inside the Tidwell Bible Building. Beck said she was asked to oversee the service by Greene’s wife, Dr. Joan Supplee, associate professor of history, whom she has worked with closely at Baylor. Greene passed away April 23 at a local hospital. Beck said the memorial service is open
to the entire student body and faculty members. Several family members and friends from around the country will fly in to remember Greene at the place he has worked the past 11 years, Beck said. Greene was born in Washington, D.C., and attended Notre Dame International High School in Rome. He received his bachelor’s degree in English from Georgetown University then his master’s and doctorate in history from the University of Texas at Austin. His teaching career included time at Williams College in Williamstown, Mass., Tidewater Community College in Norfolk, Va., and McLennan Community College before arriving at Baylor. According to a press release by Baylor,
it was while in Austin that Greene met his wife, with whom he shared a love of history, stray animals, traveling in Latin America and hiking. Greene spent the last weekend of his life working on land he loved in San Jeronimo, N.M., according to the press release. In lieu of flowers, the family wishes that contributions be made in Greene’s name the department of history at Baylor, the Nature Conservancy, Fuzzy Friends Rescue or a charity of choice, according to the press release. Greene is survived by his wife Supplee; brother Jim; sisters Mary Greene Cramer and Rebecca Greene Kunz and his colleagues, friends and students across the country.
Courtesy Photo
Dr. Daniel Greene, former senior lecturer of history, stands atop Johnson’s Mesa in New Mexico on April 19 just days before his sudden death on April 23.
Sororities banned from fraternity recruitment By Megan Grindstaff Reporter
Travis Taylor | Lariat Photo Editor
Big ol’ hug West De Moines, Iowa, senior Sarah Brodbeck gets a hug from her Great Dane named Teddy on Monday at the SUB Bowl. As a rescue dog, Teddy will be two years old in July and weighs 130 lbs.
US Supreme Court justices careful of unlimited cellphone searches By Mark Sherman Associated Press
Jose Luis Magana | Associated Press
A Supreme Court visitor takes pictures with her cell phone Tuesday outside the Supreme Court in Washington during a hearing. The court is considering whether police may search cellphones found on people they arrest without first getting a warrant.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court seemed wary Tuesday of allowing police unbridled freedom to search through cellphones of people they arrest, taking on a new issue of privacy in the face of rapidly changing technology. The justices appeared ready to reject the Obama administration’s argument that police should be able to make such searches without first getting warrants. A key question in two cases argued Tuesday is whether Americans’ cellphones, with vast quantities of sensitive records, photographs and communications, are a private realm much like their homes.
“People carry their entire lives on their cellphones,” Justice Elena Kagan said. The issue involving devices now carried by almost everyone is the latest in which the court is being asked to adapt old legal rules to 21st-century technological advances. “We are living in a new world,” Justice Anthony Kennedy said. The court heard arguments in cases involving a drug dealer and a gang member whose convictions turned in part on evidence found on their cellphones. The justices suggested they might favor limiting warrantless cellphone searches to looking for evidence of the crime on which an arrest is based. SEE
The National Panhellenic Board of Directors adopted Unanimous Agreement X, a piece of legislation that prohibits the attendance of National Panhellenic Council sorority women at men’s rush events, in November 2011. However, Baylor Panhellenic Council had yet to enforce the policy — until now. According to the National Panhellenic Council Manual of Information, Unanimous Agreement X’s main purpose is to protect the rights of panhellenic sororities in three ways: defending the right to remain single-sex organizations, denouncing participation in fraternity auxiliary groups like “little sisters,” and reproving the participation of panhellenic women in men’s recruitment. On April 14, Baylor Panhellenic Council held an informational forum announcing the plan to phase in Unanimous Agreement X over the course of the 20142015 school year. As of fall 2014, panhellenic women will not be allowed to attend fraternity recruitment events, including, but not limited to, coffees, smokers and skeet shoots. SEE
AGREEMENT, page 5
Organization relieves woes of health needs By Emily Ballard Reporter
Naomi Dews’ life as a student at Baylor took an unexpected turn after her father passed in 2010 because of diabetic complications. The following year, she joined Community HealthCorps, a national service organization whose mission is to make health care more accessible to underprivileged people. Ronald Dews was unable to receive adequate healthcare and education about his condition. Dews said she believes her father would have benefited from being better educated about his condition and from receiving a health care discount Community HealthCorps could
CELLPHONE, page 5
SEE
HEALTH CARE, page 5
Inside NEWS p. 4
A&E p. 6
The Supreme Court backed the EPA rule on cross-state, polluting smokestack emissions.
Singing for a good cause, the Men’s Choir will perform to raise funds for women in Kenya.
Vol.116 No. 49
First copy free. Additional copies 25 cents each.
SPORTS p. 7
Baylor baseball falls to Sam Houston State with a final score of 4-2 at home Tuesday.
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