Daily Egyptian 9/21/11

20
e Southern Illinois University Carbondale Labor Coalition — which represents the Faculty Association, the Non-Tenure Track Faculty Association, Graduate Assistants United and the Association of Civil Service Employees — wrapped up a series of ve lm screenings at the Varsity Center of the Arts Sunday with “Struggles in Steel.” e 1996 lm, based in Pittsburgh, was about racial challenges African- American steel mill workers have faced in the United States. Jyotsna Kapur, an associate professor of cinema and photography and Faculty Association member, said the community outreach group decided to screen the lms to provide the community with understanding of where the unions are in contract negotiations and how national issues in labor reect what happening at the university. “We can’t pretend this will go away,” she said. e Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled in June that a union law could take eect, which strips collective bargaining rights from state unions, taking away abilities to protect workers and negotiate for better wages and benets for public employees. Tens of thousands of demonstrators showed support for the preservation of collective bargaining rights when the legislation was introduced in February. Similar legislation has recently occurred in other states. Indiana and Ohio both passed laws this year to restrict collective bargaining for teachers and other public workers. Jim Clark, Illinois Education Association representative, said a general hostility exists toward public sector unions. “It has an impact on the mentality of what is happening in Carbondale,” he said. “Bargaining is about local issues, but the attitude that unions are the problem and not the solution is something that has been generated in the last couple of years by the conservative movement and people who want to do away with any kind of controls on unbridled capitalism.” e unions have gone almost 450 days without contract renewal, dating back to June 2010. e College of Mass Communications and Media Arts will lose its dean in 2012. Gary Kolb, dean of the College of Mass Communications and Media Arts, announced at the college-wide meeting Friday he will begin his retirement June 30. Kolb has been at the university for 33 years and his decision was not an easy one. He said there were personal reasons he has chosen to leave. He said he wants to accomplish some things in his life that cannot be done while working a full-time job. “You look at your longevity and ask ‘how much time do I really have on this earth, and what do I want to do with that time?’” he said. “Watching my father work up until the time where he was very sick and was unable to enjoy his retirement and then he died, well, I don’t want to do that.” Kolb said he loves his job and thinks the university is heading in a good direction. Overall enrollment in his college was up 5.4 percent this semester and rst-time freshmen increased by nine percent. “I like being part of that and I would like to continue to be part of that, but there is a part of me that says for myself and for my family this is the right thing to do,” he said. A photographer by training, Kolb said he wants to get back into his business and publish a book of his photos. He and his wife will stay in the area. Rod Sievers, university spokesman, said there will be an internal search for an interim dean to serve next year, but it is too early in the process to know when a search for a permanent dean will begin. Sarah Schneider can be reached at [email protected] or 536-3311 ext. 255. :HGQHVGD\ 6HSWHPEHU 9ROXPH ,VVXH SDJHV Dean announces retirement aer 33 years at university SARAH SCHNEIDER Daily Egyptian Public Safety Center roof to be repaired at no cost to city 3$*( CAMPUS CITY 3$*( &KHQJ KRQRUV ORQJWLPH VWDII DQG IDFXOW\ 'LVWULFW VXPPHU SURJUDP ORVHV FLW\ IXQGLQJ Beverly Love, left, an assistant professor of radio and television, and Natasha Zaretsky, an associate professor of history, participate in a group discussion on the possibility of a strike Sunday at the Varsity Center of the Arts. Members of four IEA unions gathered for a screening of “Struggles in Steel: The Fight for Equal Opportunity.” The group discussed the film and the comparisons to what is happening at SIUC with contracting issues. LYNNETTTE OOSTMEYER | DAILY EGYPTIAN SARAH SCHNEIDER Daily Egyptian Campus, national unions struggle with similar issues Please see SCREENING | 4 Carbondale Police Chief Jody O’Guinn’s personal handgun may have been used in the shooting of a 20-year-old Carbondale man. “My prayers and deepest sympathy go out to the family of this young man, and I grieve with them in their loss,” O’Guinn said in a statement posted Friday on the Carbondale Police Department website. According to the statement, he reported the handgun stolen from his locked vehicle in June. Ocers responded to reports of gun shots at the 400 block of North Brush Street Sept. 14 at 1:55 a.m. Ocers arrived at the scene to nd Deaunta R. Spencer shot. Spencer was transported to Memorial Hospital of Carbondale where he was pronounced dead. “I am devastated and deeply saddened that this gun, which was secured within my personal vehicle, was stolen and subsequently may have been used to take the life of another,” O’Guinn said in the statement. According to the statement, the handgun was located during an ongoing Carbondale Police Department investigation. Matthew J. Jones, an 18-year- old man from Carbondale, was charged with three counts of murder for Spencer’s death. “Although this is an unspeakable tragedy, it is comforting to know that the weapon has been recovered and cannot be used in the commission of further crimes,” O’Guinn said in the statement. Jones faces a preliminary court hearing Sept. 29. Police chief’s stolen handgun possible weapon in fatal shooting Repairs are set to begin this week on the damaged roof of the new Carbondale Public Safety Center. City Manager Allen Gill said the repairs will be of no cost to the city. “e Public Safety Center had been given a certicate of ‘signicant completion’ and the Department had moved into the building a couple days prior to the storm,” he said. “Since there was a punch list of items remaining to be completed, it was still insured by the contractor’s builder’s risk insurance.” e roof was damaged by strong storm winds April 19. e building, completed in the spring, houses the police department. e storm caused damage across town, including other city buildings at Cedar Lake and the Southeast Wastewater Treatment Plant, according to a city press release. Insurance companies were assessing repair estimates in the ve months since the storm, Gill said. Contegra Construction will be doing the repairs. Brad Barnard, supervisor of the project, declined comment. Carbondale Police Department Community Resource Ocer Amber Goddard referred all calls on the project to Gill. Some parking areas at the building will be closed during the repairs, according to a city press release. ELI MILEUR Daily Egyptian 3$*( CAMPUS )UHVKPHQ UHÁHFW RQ FROOHJH WUDQVLWLRQ Please see ROOF | 4 ¶¶ W e can’t pretend this will go away. — Jyotsna Kapur associate professor of cinema and photography and Faculty Association member ¶¶ I a m devastated and deeply saddened that this gun, which was secured within my personal vehicle, was stolen and subsequently may have been used to take the life of another. — Jody O’Guinn Carbondale police chief '( 'DLO\ (J\SWLDQ 6LQFH ZZZGDLO\HJ\SWLDQFRP

description

The Daily Egyptian for September 21st, 2011

Transcript of Daily Egyptian 9/21/11

! e Southern Illinois University Carbondale Labor Coalition — which represents the Faculty Association, the Non-Tenure Track Faculty Association, Graduate Assistants United and the Association of Civil Service Employees — wrapped up a series of " ve " lm screenings at the Varsity Center of the Arts Sunday with “Struggles in Steel.” ! e 1996 " lm, based in Pittsburgh, was about racial challenges African-American steel mill workers have faced in the United States.

Jyotsna Kapur, an associate professor of cinema and photography and Faculty Association member, said the community outreach group decided to screen the " lms to provide the community with understanding of where the unions are in contract negotiations and how national issues in labor re# ect what happening at the

university.“We can’t pretend this will go away,”

she said.! e Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled

in June that a union law could take e$ ect, which strips collective bargaining rights from state unions, taking away abilities to protect workers and negotiate for better wages and bene" ts for public employees.

Tens of thousands of demonstrators showed support for the preservation of collective bargaining rights when the legislation was introduced in February.

Similar legislation has recently occurred in other states.

Indiana and Ohio both passed laws this year to restrict collective bargaining for teachers and other public workers.

Jim Clark, Illinois Education Association representative, said a general hostility exists toward public sector unions.

“It has an impact on the mentality of what is happening in Carbondale,” he said. “Bargaining is about local issues, but the attitude that unions are the problem and not the solution is something that has been generated in the last couple of years by the conservative movement and people who want to do away with any kind of controls on unbridled capitalism.”

! e unions have gone almost 450 days without contract renewal, dating back to June 2010.

! e College of Mass Communications and Media Arts will lose its dean in 2012.

Gary Kolb, dean of the College of Mass Communications and Media Arts, announced at the college-wide meeting Friday he will begin his retirement June 30.

Kolb has been at the university for 33 years and his decision was not an easy one.

He said there were personal reasons he has chosen to leave. He said he wants to accomplish some things in his life that cannot be done while working a full-time job.

“You look at your longevity and ask ‘how much time do I really have on this earth, and what do I want to do with that time?’” he said. “Watching my father work up until the time where he was very sick and was unable to enjoy his retirement and then he died, well, I don’t want to do that.”

Kolb said he loves his job and thinks the university is heading in a good direction. Overall enrollment in his college was up 5.4 percent this semester and " rst-time freshmen increased by nine percent.

“I like being part of that and I would like to continue to be part of that, but there is a part of me that says for myself and for my family this is the right thing to do,” he said.

A photographer by training, Kolb said he wants to get back into his business and publish a book of

his photos.He and his wife will stay in the

area.Rod Sievers, university

spokesman, said there will be an internal search for an interim dean to serve next year, but it is too early in the process to know when a search for a permanent dean will begin.

Sarah Schneider can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 255.

Dean announces retirement a% er 33 years at universitySARAH SCHNEIDERDaily Egyptian

Public Safety Center roof to be repaired at no cost to city

CAMPUSCITY

Beverly Love, left, an assistant professor of radio and television, and Natasha Zaretsky, an associate professor of history, participate in a group discussion on the possibility of a strike Sunday at the Varsity Center of the Arts. Members of four IEA unions gathered for a screening of “Struggles in Steel: The Fight for Equal Opportunity.” The group discussed the film and the comparisons to what is happening at SIUC with contracting issues.

LYNNETTTE OOSTMEYER | DAILY EGYPTIAN

SARAH SCHNEIDERDaily Egyptian

Campus, national unions struggle with similar issues

Please see SCREENING | 4

Carbondale Police Chief Jody O’Guinn’s personal handgun may have been used in the shooting of a 20-year-old Carbondale man.

“My prayers and deepest sympathy go out to the family of this young man, and I grieve with them in their loss,” O’Guinn said in a statement posted Friday on the Carbondale Police Department website.

According to the statement, he reported the handgun stolen from his locked vehicle in June.

O& cers responded to reports of gun shots at the 400 block of North Brush Street Sept. 14 at 1:55 a.m. O& cers arrived at the scene to " nd Deaunta R. Spencer shot. Spencer was transported to Memorial Hospital of Carbondale where he was pronounced dead.

“I am devastated and deeply saddened that this gun, which was secured within my personal vehicle, was stolen and subsequently may have been used to take the life of another,” O’Guinn said in the statement.

According to the statement, the handgun was located during an ongoing Carbondale Police Department investigation. Matthew J. Jones, an 18-year-

old man from Carbondale, was charged with three counts of murder for Spencer’s death.

“Although this is an unspeakable tragedy, it is comforting to know that the weapon has been recovered and cannot be used in the commission of further crimes,” O’Guinn said in the statement.

Jones faces a preliminary court hearing Sept. 29.

Police chief ’s stolen handgun possible weapon in fatal shooting

Repairs are set to begin this week on the damaged roof of the new Carbondale Public Safety Center.

City Manager Allen Gill said the repairs will be of no cost to the city.

“! e Public Safety Center had been given a certi" cate of ‘signi" cant completion’ and the Department had moved into the building a couple days prior to the storm,” he said. “Since there was a punch list of items remaining to be completed, it was still insured by the contractor’s builder’s risk insurance.”

! e roof was damaged by strong storm winds April 19. ! e building, completed in the spring, houses the police department.

! e storm caused damage across town, including other city buildings at Cedar Lake and the Southeast Wastewater Treatment Plant, according to a city press release.

Insurance companies were assessing repair estimates in the " ve months since the storm, Gill said.

Contegra Construction will be doing the repairs. Brad Barnard, supervisor of the project, declined comment.

Carbondale Police Department Community Resource O& cer Amber Goddard referred all calls on the project to Gill.

Some parking areas at the building will be closed during the repairs, according to a city press release.

ELI MILEURDaily Egyptian

CAMPUS

Please see ROOF | 4

W e can’t pretend this will go away.

— Jyotsna Kapurassociate professor of cinema and photography

and Faculty Association member

I am devastated and deeply saddened that this gun, which was secured within my personal vehicle, was

stolen and subsequently may have been used to take the life of another.

— Jody O’GuinnCarbondale police chief

D!"#$ E%$&'"!( E!"#"$%& Wednesday, September 21, 20112Today Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday

70°50°

0% chance of precipitation

20% chance of precipitation

30% chance of precipitation

30% chance of precipitation

10% chance of precipitation

The Weather Channel® 5 day weather forecast for Carbondale, IL:

79°53°

71°46°

67°49°

63°49°

About Us) e D!"#$ E%$&'"!( is published by the students of Southern Illinois University Carbondale 50 weeks

per year, with an average daily circulation of 20,000. Fall and spring semester editions run Monday through Friday. Summer editions run Tuesday through ) ursday. All intersession editions will run on Wednesdays. Spring break and ) anksgiving editions are distributed on Mondays of the pertaining weeks. Free copies are distributed in the Carbondale, Murphysboro and Carterville communities. ) e D!"#$ E%$&'"!( online publication can be found at www.dailyegyptian.com.

Calendar events

10k/5k Run/Walk-athon· 8:00 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 24 registration. Race begins at 9:00 a.m.· $20 for adults, $7 for kids under 14· Fundraiser for “For Kids Sake,” a local non pro* t that raises money for schools and orphanages in Bangladesh· For more information, contact 618-529-5044 or www.forkidssake.net.

In Monday’s edition of the D!"#$ E%$&'"!(, the story “University shi+ s e, orts in academic early-intervention program” should have read “Julie Payne-Kirchmeier is the assistant provost of University College.” ) e D!"#$ E%$&'"!( regrets this error.

In Tuesday’s edition of the D!"#$ E%$&'"!(, the story “Nude models open up about work,” should have read “Alec Wallis, a junior from St. Louis studying music business, worked as a model for two semesters.” ) e D!"#$ E%$&'"!(regrets this error.

Corrections

In Monday’s issue of the D!"#$ E%$&'"!(, the story “Questions arise over new GLBT coordinator hire” erroneously stated the comments of two people.

Jill Adams said the Illinois Human Rights Law prohibits considering sexual orientation in hiring. She said the position description called for candidates who had experience working with the GLBT community, and anyone hired should have met that requirement.

Joan McDermott said the committee could not consider the sexual orientation of candidates, but familiarity with GLBT issues was a legitimate concern. ) e D!"#$ E%$&'"!( regrets the errors.

Although three years apart, brothers Justin and Shaun Wolfe share a common passion for swimming, and they both choose to

bring their talents to SIU.Freshman swimmer Shaun

Wolfe is newly recruited to the team and prepares for his ! rst season of college-level competition, while his elder brother, senior swimmer Justin Wolfe, has been with the SIU

swim team since fall 2008.Due to their age di" erence, the

brothers spent one year in high school together as teammates, which gave them the chance to compete in a familiar setting. Justin Wolfe said he knew his brother was

considering other schools and was glad when he learned that he chose SIU.

“I really wanted him to come here but I obviously couldn’t tell him that,” Justin Wolfe said. “I wanted him to make his own

decision so I kind of just o" ered advice on where he wanted to go, but I was really happy when he said he was coming here.”

For the rest of the story please visit www.dailyegyptian.com.

Two weeks into the regular season, player injuries have forced NFL teams to make adjustments to their lineups both temporarily and for the remainder of the season.

While some teams have gone through the first two games injury free, other teams have had to dig deeper into their depth charts due to multiple sidelined key players.

The first of Sunday’s injuries occurred in the Kansas City Chiefs and Houston Texans game when the Chiefs’ All-Pro running back Jamaal Charles tore his ACL.

Significant damage to the ligament was confirmed with an MRI and Charles has been placed on the injured reserve list for the remainder of the season.

Coach Todd Haley con! rmed the news in a press conference Tuesday and said it is more important than before for his players to come together as a single unit.

“It’s not good,” Haley said. “It’s unfortunate for Jamaal because I know Jamaal had high hopes, was excited and worked very hard to take this to the next level.”

Haley will again have to look deeper into his depth chart, as this is the third player the Chiefs have lost for the 2011 season with ACL injuries.

Safety Eric Berry’s injury occurred in week one’s game against the Buffalo Bills, while tight end Tony Moeaki injured his knee in the team’s final preseason game against Green Bay.

As for Green Bay, the team had its first major injury in Sunday’s game against the Carolina Panthers when All-Pro safety Nick Collins awkwardly tackled Carolina’s running back Jonathan Stewart late in the fourth quarter and hurt his head and neck.

# e team labeled it as a season-ending injury, but has not released details on whether surgery will be required.

“It’s tough,” Green Bay coach

Mike McCarthy said in a Monday press conference. “It’s something you never get used to as a coach.”

Nick Gregov, a senior from Carlyle studying finance, said the amount of injuries is just something that comes along with the early part of the season. He said he doesn’t think it will continue to be a lingering issue throughout the season, as players tend to be more physical in the first few games.

He said he expects experience, not injuries, to be the determining factor as teams edge towards the postseason.

“Some of the younger teams don’t exactly know what’s going to happen when they get to the playoffs,” Gregov said. “Even if they were healthy, it’ll still hurt them without the experience.”

In addition to Charles and Collins, Dallas Cowboys’ running back Felix Jones went out with a separated shoulder, and Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Michael Vick le$

a game with a concussion.Ben Schott, a senior from Sterling

studying physical education, said he has seen the e" ects of injuries in athletics, and thinks there will be a common theme throughout the regular season.

He said the lack of time players had with their teams due to the lockout could be where a lot of the injuries stem from.

As for the big hits throughout the first two weeks, Schott said the NFL is limited to the amount of protection it can give its players.

“It’s kind of a hard subject because a lot of people say they want to see the big hits and the big plays,” Schott said. “I don’t really want to see people get hurt, but it’s pretty sweet to see someone get laid out.”

Erickson, who tied for 65th place with a score of 155, said the grass caused adjustment problems for the team but did not excuse its ! rst-round performance.

“I think we were trying too hard to not play bad,” Erickson said.

Junior Brandon Cauldwell tied for 30th place with a two-round score of 149, and Senior Joe Goelzhauser tied for 52nd with a score of 152.

Wichita State University won the tournament with a two-round score of 570, 12 strokes better than SIU. Erickson said there is much to take from this tournament and improve on.

“We just have to come out ready to play next time,” Erickson said.

Newton said he was impressed by how his team rebounded in the second round, but they need to consistently play up to their capabilities.

“If the guys don’t post scores they are capable of, they just are not concentrating,” Newton said. “We wish we could have played Tuesday, but it was an enjoyable experience.”

# e Salukis resume tournament play Oct.1 when they travel to Normal to compete in the D.A. Weibring Intercollegiate tournament.

Kevin Taylor can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 247.

D%&'( E)(*+&%,S!"#$%Wednesday, September 21, 2011 19BEESCONTINUED FROM 20

Todd Eaton, an undecided sophomore from Greenville, pitches to an Ontario Blue Jays player Monday during a scrimmage game at Abe Martin Field. The Blue Jays are an 18-and-under team of high school students

from Ontario and are currently travelling the U.S. playing division one teams. Two seven-inning games were played Monday, and though no official statistics were taken, the Salukis won the first game 9-0.

STEVE MATZKER | DAILY EGYPTIAN

Salukis whip up on Canucks

Injuries plague NFL two weeks into seasonCORY DOWNERDaily Egyptian

Brothers reunite as teammates in the poolNAREG KURTJIANDaily Egyptian

PROVIDED PHOTO

FOOTBALL

SWIMMING AND DIVING

! e Carbondale School District No. 95 will have to " nd another way to fund its summer reading and math program.

At the Carbondale City Council meeting Tuesday at the Carbondale Civic Center, the council voted 5-4 to discontinue funds from the city for the Carbondale Elementary School District No. 95 summer reading and math program. ! e program was designed to help students improve their grades in school.

In April, the council granted the district $150,000 for the program.

District Superintendent Michael Shimshack said he urged the council not to discontinue the funds.

“! is is not a cost. It’s an investment,” Shimshack said.

Council member Jane Adams spoke against this year’s grant because she said she doesn’t think it is the city’s responsibility but rather the district’s to keep the program going.

“I think part of the feeling was that if (the program) was a success, that the school district might be persuaded to raise the money,” Adams said.

She said she believes the school board can a# ord the program on its own, and the city’s money should go toward other priorities, such as a new " re station.

Council member Don Monty said he was opposed to the city funding as well.

“! e school district allegedly has a lot of money in it,” he said. “If this program is as important as they say … I think the school could reallocate, within its own budget, the necessary funds without having to raise taxes.”

Council member Chris Wissmann disagreed with Adams and Monty. While he voted against the funds in April, he said he changed his mind based on the program’s success rates.

In math, student’s test scores rose from an average of 66.92 to 81.25 percent. In reading, the scores shot from 71.92 to 85.70 percent.

Council member Lance Jack asked if the funds are necessary to keep the program going.

“I’d like to know why the school board can’t do it on their own, and if they can’t do it on their own, I think we have to help,” he said. “It would be a travesty for us as a city council to step back and say … ‘we’re not going to give it to them.’”

Shimshack said he couldn’t say yet whether the school board would be able to a# ord the program without the funds.

Jack voted to continue the " nancial help.

Council member Corene McDaniel also voted to keep the funds.

“When it comes to our children, what is too much to invest?” McDaniel said. “It’s the city’s responsibility to help when they’re in need.”

Multiple citizens spoke in favor of continuing the funds, and Adams

said she didn’t appreciate their tone in an address to the audience.

“I’m very disturbed. ! e tone of your remarks is that we don’t like the children, we don’t support the children … and nothing can be further from the truth.”

She listed ways the city supports the children, such as donations to the Boys and Girls Club.

“! is is not a test of whether or not we love our children,” Adams said.

Mayor Joel Fritzler voted against the fund, too.

“! ere is no question it’s been a successful program,” he said. “Is life fair? I’ve been hearing this thing about fairness all night. No, it’s not.”

He said with the current

economy issues, the council cannot a# ord to fund every program. He said there’s a long list of community projects that need to be completed such as new streets and that should be the priority.

Tara Kulash can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 273.

D$%&' E(')*%$+N!"# 3Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Jane Childers, Carbondale Park District superintendent of recreation, addresses community members during Tuesday’s city council meeting, where Mayor Joel Fritzler declared Sept. 24 World Wide Day of Play in Carbondale. Childers and Boys and Girls Club Program Director Tina Carpenter came to the meeting

to receive Fritzler’s declaration. The council also spoke on the approval of micro-distilleries, micro-breweries and wineries being permitted in agricultural districts of Carbondale. The termination of funding for Carbondale Elementary District No. 95 summer reading and math program was also discussed.

ISAAC SMITH | DAILY EGYPTIAN

TARA KULASHDaily Egyptian

City Council cuts funds for District 95 summer academy

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(Wednesday, September 21, 2011 17D!"#$ E%$&'"!( N!"#4 Wednesday, September 21, 2011

SCREENINGCONTINUED FROM 1

In June 2011, the four IEA campus unions accused the university of unfair labor practices. Representatives from the unions said the charge stemmed from breakdowns in collective bargaining with the administration bargaining team in the spring and also imposed conditions — such as furlough days — the university implemented because of budget constraints.

In April, the IEA unions ) led intents to strike — a procedure that must be completed before authorization to set a date for a strike is given.

* e four unions have con) rmed plans to vote to authorize a strike

within the last week. Approval of the measure does not necessarily mean a strike will take place, but does give the unions’ governing bodies the authority to call a strike at any time.

Chancellor Rita Cheng said if the unions were to go on strike, the university would ensure minimal impact on students. She said substitute teachers would be called in and administrators would teach classes.

Cheng said she is disappointed the unions will have authorization votes because they were not available over the summer and have only met four times this semester.

“To get this announcement, a+ er four meetings, seems unfair,” she said. “* eir claim of not being , exible and bargaining unfairly is

just untrue. * e bargaining team for the university, I feel, is doing a fantastic job.”

Clark said there are issues in bargaining because it is supposed to be a partnership relationship and the relationship is not there right now.

“Bargaining is not about dominance of one party over the other; it is about the balance,” he said.

He said unlike conversations in private sectors, public sectors have political limits. Because of this, working conditions and how employees are involved in the day-to-day decisions are handled through bargaining.

Kapur said she has taught at the university for 12 years and this past year has been the ) rst time the campus unions have come together

on issues they all face.“We are very much a part of the

community and we felt we very much needed to have these conversations,” she said.

Kristi Brown) eld, vice president of communications for the GAU, said a+ er Wisconsin, Ohio and Indiana gained national recognition because of labor union issues, union membership skyrocketed because people realized unions are important.

She said she thinks unions are important to ensure an employee voice and make whatever region the union represents a better place.

Sarah Schneider can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 255.

Operations in the building will not be a- ected by the work, Gill said. * e repairs will take an estimated 12 weeks to complete, weather permitting, he said.

According to the press release, much of the remaining roof will be removed in the process, and the ) nished roof will look nearly identical to the original. * e reconstruction will also strengthen the roof and will involve some interior repairs, the press release said.

A contract was awarded at the Sept. 6 City Council meeting to repair the city’s Cedar Lake equipment shed that was damaged in the storm.

ROOFCONTINUED FROM 1

Catholic Charities to see cuts without contracts

SPRINGFIELD — Catholic Charities for the Diocese of Spring) eld will lose half of its revenue if the state cancels its foster care and adoption contracts with the agency.

* at’s just one of the consequences outlined by executive director Steven Roach in court documents ) led by Catholic Charities agencies associated with the Spring) eld, Peoria, Belleville and Joliet dioceses.

* e four dioceses are asking Sangamon County Circuit Judge John Schmidt to reconsider his Aug.

18 decision that the Department of Children and Family Services can terminate its long-standing contracts with Catholic Charities to provide foster care and adoption services.

In the documents, Roach said he asked his sta- to prepare an accounting of the ) nancial impact to the agencies if the contracts are terminated. * ey determined it would eliminate about $5 million of Catholic Charities’ projected $10 million in revenue for the 2012 budget year.

“Financially, for Catholic Charities in Spring) eld, it would be devastating,” Roach said in an interview Monday. “We believe

Catholic Charities would be able to survive it, but our presence would be greatly diminished in a number of communities.”

* e Spring) eld diocese covers 28 counties.

Catholic Charities’ remaining $5 million in income is drawn from a variety of sources, including government funds, United Way and private donations, Roach said. * e money allows the agency to run things like counseling, ) nancial assistance and senior services programs, as well as St. John's Breadline.

Catholic Charities' sta- would also be cut about in half, Roach said.

* e agency employs about 190 people throughout the diocese. Losing the foster care and adoption services contracts would cause the agency to terminate "all or nearly all" of the 80 sta- members working for those services. * at includes caseworkers, case aides, therapists, counselors and managers, he said.

Four caseworkers have le+ already, Roach said.

"I was told it was because of the uncertainty of the contract," he said.

Moreover, he said in the court documents, “I am informed by a substantial number of my sta- members and foster parents that they will not continue working in a foster care system

that excludes Catholic agencies, including Catholic Charities, from participation.”

If all of the employees must be let go, Roach said, the agency will owe them $100,000 for unused vacation time and other costs.

Over the last ) ve years, Catholic Charities has spent more than $1.4 million to buy and improve buildings and equipment throughout the diocese to continue its programs.

“While we may be able to recoup some of these costs, Catholic Charities will su- er substantial losses in any attempted ‘) re sale’ of those assets,” Roach said in the documents.

DOUG FINKEState Journal-Register

Leah StoverEditor-in-Chief

Kathleen HectorManaging Editor

Lauren LeoneDesign Chief

Editorial PolicyOur Word is the consensus of the D!"#$

E%$&'"!( Editorial Board on local, national and global issues a) ecting the Southern Illinois University community. Viewpoints expressed in columns and letters to the editor do not necessarily re* ect those of the D!"#$ E%$&'"!(.

Eric GinnardOpinion Editor

Sarah SchneiderCampus Editor

Tara KulashCity Editor

Cory DownerSports Editor

Brendan SmithA&E Editor

Pat SutphinPhoto Editor

Grind Editor

Submissions

Letters and guest columns must be submitted with author’s contact information, preferably via e-mail. Phone numbers are required to verify authorship, but will not be published. Letters are limited to 400 words and columns to 500 words. Students must include year and major. Faculty must include rank and department. Others include hometown. Submissions should be sent to [email protected].

Notice

+ e D!"#$ E%$&'"!( is a “designated public forum.” Student editors have the authority to make all content decisions without censorship or advance approval. We reserve the right to not publish any letter or guest column.

EDITORIAL CARTOONS

Gus Bode says: Send us more letters! If you can write coherently and would like to share your perspective with the world, please consider lending your voices to our pages.

To submit a letter, please go to www.dailyegyptian.com and click “Submit a Letter” or send it to [email protected]. Please make your submissions between 300 and

400 words. If you have questions, give us a call at 536-3311 ext. 263.

r d

+ is week the Palestinians will take their bid for statehood to the United Nations.

Israeli o, cials are warning of “grave consequences” and U.S. diplomats are fruitlessly scrambling to prevent the vote from happening. Members of Congress are threatening to ax all aid to the Palestinians, amid dire predictions that such a vote will undermine Israel.

On the contrary. A U.N. vote on Palestinian statehood may be the only way to save the Jewish state.

As Israelis know well, their entire region is in * ux in ways that make them very nervous. + e status quo has crumbled within most Arab countries, nor will it last within the West Bank and Gaza.

+ e Oslo peace process is dead. + ere’s plenty of blame to go around, but the coup de grace was delivered by relentless Israeli settlement expansion on the West Bank. With the end of Oslo, chances are fading for a two-state solution whereby

Israel and Palestine would coexist side by side.

Many Palestinians, and much of the “street” in Arab states that are undergoing upheaval, have given up on the idea of two states. So have most Israelis. Yet the death of the two-state concept and the peace process that went with it creates existential dangers for the Jewish state.

Previous Israeli leaders knew that failure to create two states meant Israel would be le- in control of a Palestinian population that would eventually outnumber Israeli Jews. + at was the nightmare that drove the hawkish Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin to embrace the Oslo formula.

Rabin understood that a “one-state option” would create unacceptable choices for Israel: It could become an apartheid state, controlling a majority of Palestinians in West Bank and Gaza cantons; or it could give the Palestinian majority full citizenship and lose its Jewish character.

Either option promises endless bloodshed: Each community would want to dominate the other if they were forever entwined in the same state.

+ e one-state option becomes even more risky in the era of the Arab awakening; the spectre of permanent Israeli occupation will doom relations with her Arab neighbors. It will sour relations with much of the world and further isolate Israel.

Palestinians have been watching tens of thousands of their Arab brethren in Cairo, Tunis and Syrian cities carry on nonviolent demonstrations and they are bound to do likewise, sooner rather than later. What will Israel do? Permanent occupation is simply not viable for Jerusalem in the long run.

So it’s essential for Israel to resurrect the two-state idea on a serious basis. Here’s where the U.N. resolution comes in.

A U.N. resolution, rightly phrased, would revive and enshrine the principles of the two-state solution and could pave the way back to serious peace talks. It won’t achieve actual statehood, but it will give the Palestinians enhanced international status.

Ideally, it would call for a border based on June 1967 lines, with

agreed, equal land swaps. (Despite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s rejection of this formula, previous Israeli prime ministers have relied on it for the last two decades.)

And critically, the resolution would call for a negotiated settlement that ends the con* ict on the basis of two states for two peoples. + is would address basic Israeli concerns about delegitimization. + e resolution should reference the 2002 Arab peace initiative that called on all Arab states to recognize Israel if a two-state settlement was achieved.

Longtime Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat believes the U.N. vote may be the only way to save the two-state concept. He said on Tuesday: “We want to present the United Nations vote as an opportunity for all of us to preserve the two-state solution.”

He was echoed by Egyptian diplomat Nabil el-Araby, now head of the Arab League, who told journalists a U.N. vote would change the Israeli-

Palestinian dispute “from a con* ict about existence to a con* ict about borders.”

So why are Israel and the Obama team so opposed to the U.N. vote?

Netanyahu decries the U.N. e) ort as “unilateral” and says it violates the Oslo peace accords. Yet Israel has pursued a unilateral policy of building settlements on the West Bank, a major reason why talks weren’t revived.

+ e Israeli leader’s deep skepticism about a Palestinian state and his rejection of positions taken by previous Israeli leaders may thwart talks in the near term. So may divisions within the top Palestinian leadership.

But a U.N. resolution could keep the two-state formula alive until talks can resume in the future. Legitimate Israeli concerns could be alleviated by careful phrasing. + at’s why the Obama administration should have joined Europeans in helping Palestinians cra- it, rather than try to block it.

It’s not too late for an eleventh-hour e) ort at shaping the text.

A U.N. vote on Palestinian state mayTRUDY RUBINMcClatchy-Tribune

o! er a way forward P alestinians have been watching tens of thousands of their Arab brethren in Cairo, Tunis and Syrian cities carry on

nonviolent demonstrations and they are bound to do likewise, sooner rather than later.

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(C!"#$%Wednesday, September 21, 2011 15D!"#$ E%$&'"!( N!"#6 Wednesday, September 21, 2011

University rewards long-term serviceAs the university pushes toward a uni) ed

community, the O* ce of the Chancellor decided to recognize university employees for their many years of service.

Chancellor Rita Cheng said she believes it is important to give everyone the opportunity to interact and mingle with one another and recognize each other’s e+ orts toward university success.

She said residence hall workers, groundskeepers, faculty and sta+ all contribute to a student’s learning and success.

, e university honored 435 sta+ and faculty members Tuesday in Student Center Ballroom D for their years of service to SIUC. People from departments across campus gathered to recognize individual contributions to the university.

“I felt it was important to bring everyone together because it takes everyone to make a great university,” Cheng said.

Vijay Puri, professor of civil and environmental engineering, was honored for 25 years of service.

He said the support he receives for his research and the university’s ability to overcome obstacles are reasons why he stays at SIUC.

“, ings change, problems come and go but the most important thing is the people of the

university work together to overcome them,” Puri said.

Pamela Jacobini, o* ce manager of the department of physiology, was also honored for 25 years of service to the university.

She said she likes the campus diversity, the events and the people she has been able to interact with throughout the years.

“I have seen so many speakers, been to so many seminars and each year the opportunities created through the diversity of the students here allows me to do so,” Jacobini said.

Jennifer Donow, a three-year building-service worker and SIUC alum, attended the event because a friend was being honored. She said it was nice to see familiar faces, as well as see the university honor people who have made great impacts at SIUC.

“, e longer people are here, the better quality and knowledge you have staying at the university, and it’s nice they are willing to dedicate so much of themselves and their time to working here,” Donow said.

Cheng said it is the dedication of the people honored that makes the university a better place.

“, e university is bigger than all its parts. , ere is a sum of all the energy and talents that make this place unique,” Cheng said.

Jacqueline Muhammad can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 259.

JACQUELINE MUHAMMADDaily Egyptian

Kay Zivkovich, assistant director of the School of Art and Design, hugs Chancellor Rita Cheng Tuesday during a recognition ceremony at the Student Center. Zivkovich was recognized for working at SIU for

35 years, and was among 435 university employees recognized at the ceremony. “It’s about the students and it’s about problem solving,” Zivkovich said in regards to teaching.

BROOKE GRACE | DAILY EGYPTIAN

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(C!"#$% P&'()*+% 7Wednesday, September 21, 2011

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(8 Wednesday, September 21, 2011C!"#$% P&'()*+% D!"#$ E%$&'"!(N!"#Wednesday, September 21, 2011 13

Learning a foreign language is an important step in introducing and understanding a new culture and ethnic group, Brooke ) ibeault said.

) ibeault, a senior lecturer in the department of foreign languages and literatures, teaches the foreign language 301i cross-cultural class in which her students read the book “American Ways,” which provides insight on the United States’ culture.

“When you’re learning a foreign language that’s forcing you to go beyond your comfort zone and pushing your limits,” she said, “it opens a lot of adventures.”

At the students’ request, the Turkish Student Association, a registered student organization, started to o* er a free language classe to students Tuesday. ) e class will be held for 12 weeks every Tuesday and ) ursday from 5 to 6 p.m. in Faner Hall Room 2008.

Izzet Senturk, a graduate student in computer science from Izmir, Turkey, taught the class in spring 2011 to students interested in the Turkish language. ) e association decided to o* er the class because members thought they had the experience to proceed with the program again.

Thibeault said her class meets weekly with students in the Center for English as a Second Language in the linguistics department to learn some traditions which are native to other countries.

“For the CESL students, it’s an opportunity to speak English,” she said. “For the U.S. students it’s an opportunity to talk about the cultural aspects of the United States and how they’re different from the things in these countries.”

) ibeault said the experience with her class makes it fun and exciting, and it allows students to learn about other people.

Senturk said there is more to the class than simply learning a new language. Students will watch traditional independent Turkish + lms, and Senturk will give assignments which involve poems, novel excerpts and songs from Turkish authors. Senturk will be the course’s instructor this semester.

“We invite them to our activities, picnics, events, we’ll watch movies and read literature,” he said. “It’s not only learning a language, it’s making friends and learning the culture.”

Before he came to the United States, Senturk said he spent about eight or nine years learning the English language. He said learning English was important to him because it gave him an idea of what to expect in America.

Mustafa Dagoglu, a senior from Istanbul studying automotive technology, said while learning another language is hard, learning another language is a way to challenge yourself.

“You might want to learn another language just to push yourself and keep your mind healthy,” he said.

) ibeault said she thought the idea of free language classes was an opportunity for students to interact with each other when most might not have done so. She said companies now go international in the business world, and potential employees who know multiple languages are a huge asset.

“Companies spend millions of dollars sending their employees abroad on special projects,” she said.

Thibeault said her father, an electrical engineer, got his job because of his ability to speak other languages. She said the company paid him to work all over Europe.

“) at’s what happens,” she said. “() e companies) do so much outsourcing and going abroad that our products are going abroad,” she said.

RSO gives easy access to foreign language classesTurkish Student Association o! ers free language classesKARL BULLOCKDaily Egyptian

D!"#$ E%$&'"!( 9Wednesday, September 21, 2011 C!"#$% P&'()*+%

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(10 Wednesday, September 21, 2011 C!"#$% P&'()*+% D!"#$ E%$&'"!(C!"#$% P&'()*+% 11Wednesday, September 21, 2011

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(C!"#$% P&'()*+% 11Wednesday, September 21, 2011

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(12 C!"#$% P&'()*+% Wednesday, September 21, 2011 D!"#$ E%$&'"!( 9Wednesday, September 21, 2011 C!"#$% P&'()*+%

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(N!"#Wednesday, September 21, 2011 13

Learning a foreign language is an important step in introducing and understanding a new culture and ethnic group, Brooke ) ibeault said.

) ibeault, a senior lecturer in the department of foreign languages and literatures, teaches the foreign language 301i cross-cultural class in which her students read the book “American Ways,” which provides insight on the United States’ culture.

“When you’re learning a foreign language that’s forcing you to go beyond your comfort zone and pushing your limits,” she said, “it opens a lot of adventures.”

At the students’ request, the Turkish Student Association, a registered student organization, started to o* er a free language classe to students Tuesday. ) e class will be held for 12 weeks every Tuesday and ) ursday from 5 to 6 p.m. in Faner Hall Room 2008.

Izzet Senturk, a graduate student in computer science from Izmir, Turkey, taught the class in spring 2011 to students interested in the Turkish language. ) e association decided to o* er the class because members thought they had the experience to proceed with the program again.

Thibeault said her class meets weekly with students in the Center for English as a Second Language in the linguistics department to learn some traditions which are native to other countries.

“For the CESL students, it’s an opportunity to speak English,” she said. “For the U.S. students it’s an opportunity to talk about the cultural aspects of the United States and how they’re different from the things in these countries.”

) ibeault said the experience with her class makes it fun and exciting, and it allows students to learn about other people.

Senturk said there is more to the class than simply learning a new language. Students will watch traditional independent Turkish + lms, and Senturk will give assignments which involve poems, novel excerpts and songs from Turkish authors. Senturk will be the course’s instructor this semester.

“We invite them to our activities, picnics, events, we’ll watch movies and read literature,” he said. “It’s not only learning a language, it’s making friends and learning the culture.”

Before he came to the United States, Senturk said he spent about eight or nine years learning the English language. He said learning English was important to him because it gave him an idea of what to expect in America.

Mustafa Dagoglu, a senior from Istanbul studying automotive technology, said while learning another language is hard, learning another language is a way to challenge yourself.

“You might want to learn another language just to push yourself and keep your mind healthy,” he said.

) ibeault said she thought the idea of free language classes was an opportunity for students to interact with each other when most might not have done so. She said companies now go international in the business world, and potential employees who know multiple languages are a huge asset.

“Companies spend millions of dollars sending their employees abroad on special projects,” she said.

Thibeault said her father, an electrical engineer, got his job because of his ability to speak other languages. She said the company paid him to work all over Europe.

“) at’s what happens,” she said. “() e companies) do so much outsourcing and going abroad that our products are going abroad,” she said.

RSO gives easy access to foreign language classesTurkish Student Association o! ers free language classesKARL BULLOCKDaily Egyptian

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(C!"#$% P&'()*+% 7Wednesday, September 21, 2011D!"#$ E%$&'"!( C!"##$%$&'#14 Wednesday, September 21, 2011

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(C!"#$%Wednesday, September 21, 2011 15

HoroscopesBy Nancy Black and Stephanie Clement

(Answers tomorrow)UPPER BEGUN JAGGED INJECTYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: The canine tailor specialized in this — PANTING

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.

CRHEP

CETXA

FOLUND

MRAHEM

©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

Find

us

on F

aceb

ook

http

://w

ww.

face

book

.com

/jum

ble

”“ --

Answer here:

D!"#$ E%$&'"!( S!"#$ B%&'( Wednesday, September 21, 201116

Aries – Today is a 7 – Slow and steady does it. No need for hurry. Go over your lists again and postpone travel. Do simple work, and keep your money in your pocket. Read a good book.

Taurus – Today is a 7 – Sometimes saying “no” is an act of courage. Do so lovingly, when appropriate. Frugality is a virtue ... share money-saving tricks with a friend. A new opportunity develops.

Gemini – Today is an 8 – Stick to the plan this morning. No need to finance the whims of another. Hear their rationale, and advise patient action. Save spending for home and career basics.

Cancer – Today is an 8 – Hold off on expensive dates. Arguments about money dampen romance like a wet towel. Use new skills and optimism to solve a problem. Expand your options by learning.

Leo – Today is a 5 – Spend a bit extra for quality that lasts longer. Communicate over a long distance. A female brings great news. Express your gratitude.

Virgo – Today is a 6 – A coming change is for the better. Advise an anxious person to relax. It may take more than one try to get through. Don’t worry about money or romance now ... just act.

Libra – Today is a 6 – There’s so much to learn today, in all areas. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes, even as you take care (especially with equipment). Keep to your highest standards.

Scorpio – Today is a 6 – Stay close to home and finish something that’s due. It may seem like you’re moving slowly; use that slow motion in contemplation. It will be useful later.

Sagittarius – Today is a 5 – A mess could arise. Accept constructive criticism that reveals the barrier, and clean it up. Ignore your inner critic. Get a mentor, and choose leadership.

Capricorn – Today is a 7 – As the leaves turn a passionate red, let romance rustle through your hair. Your relationships feed you like the rain. A partner helps you to the next level.

Aquarius – Today is an 8 – No time for procrastination or upsets now. Batten down the hatches, and get through a work-related storm. Stay home, if possible. Quiet chugging away leads to maximum productivity.

Pisces – Today is a 7 – An old upset could resurface today. Make sure you understand what other people want from you. Don’t take your health for granted. Sometimes a rest break keeps a virus away.

Brought to you by:

Leah StoverEditor-in-Chief

Kathleen HectorManaging Editor

Lauren LeoneDesign Chief

Editorial PolicyOur Word is the consensus of the D!"#$

E%$&'"!( Editorial Board on local, national and global issues a) ecting the Southern Illinois University community. Viewpoints expressed in columns and letters to the editor do not necessarily re* ect those of the D!"#$ E%$&'"!(.

Eric GinnardOpinion Editor

Sarah SchneiderCampus Editor

Tara KulashCity Editor

Cory DownerSports Editor

Brendan SmithA&E Editor

Pat SutphinPhoto Editor

Grind Editor

Submissions

Letters and guest columns must be submitted with author’s contact information, preferably via e-mail. Phone numbers are required to verify authorship, but will not be published. Letters are limited to 400 words and columns to 500 words. Students must include year and major. Faculty must include rank and department. Others include hometown. Submissions should be sent to [email protected].

Notice

+ e D!"#$ E%$&'"!( is a “designated public forum.” Student editors have the authority to make all content decisions without censorship or advance approval. We reserve the right to not publish any letter or guest column.

EDITORIAL CARTOONS

Gus Bode says: Send us more letters! If you can write coherently and would like to share your perspective with the world, please consider lending your voices to our pages.

To submit a letter, please go to www.dailyegyptian.com and click “Submit a Letter” or send it to [email protected]. Please make your submissions between 300 and

400 words. If you have questions, give us a call at 536-3311 ext. 263.

r d

+ is week the Palestinians will take their bid for statehood to the United Nations.

Israeli o, cials are warning of “grave consequences” and U.S. diplomats are fruitlessly scrambling to prevent the vote from happening. Members of Congress are threatening to ax all aid to the Palestinians, amid dire predictions that such a vote will undermine Israel.

On the contrary. A U.N. vote on Palestinian statehood may be the only way to save the Jewish state.

As Israelis know well, their entire region is in * ux in ways that make them very nervous. + e status quo has crumbled within most Arab countries, nor will it last within the West Bank and Gaza.

+ e Oslo peace process is dead. + ere’s plenty of blame to go around, but the coup de grace was delivered by relentless Israeli settlement expansion on the West Bank. With the end of Oslo, chances are fading for a two-state solution whereby

Israel and Palestine would coexist side by side.

Many Palestinians, and much of the “street” in Arab states that are undergoing upheaval, have given up on the idea of two states. So have most Israelis. Yet the death of the two-state concept and the peace process that went with it creates existential dangers for the Jewish state.

Previous Israeli leaders knew that failure to create two states meant Israel would be le- in control of a Palestinian population that would eventually outnumber Israeli Jews. + at was the nightmare that drove the hawkish Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin to embrace the Oslo formula.

Rabin understood that a “one-state option” would create unacceptable choices for Israel: It could become an apartheid state, controlling a majority of Palestinians in West Bank and Gaza cantons; or it could give the Palestinian majority full citizenship and lose its Jewish character.

Either option promises endless bloodshed: Each community would want to dominate the other if they were forever entwined in the same state.

+ e one-state option becomes even more risky in the era of the Arab awakening; the spectre of permanent Israeli occupation will doom relations with her Arab neighbors. It will sour relations with much of the world and further isolate Israel.

Palestinians have been watching tens of thousands of their Arab brethren in Cairo, Tunis and Syrian cities carry on nonviolent demonstrations and they are bound to do likewise, sooner rather than later. What will Israel do? Permanent occupation is simply not viable for Jerusalem in the long run.

So it’s essential for Israel to resurrect the two-state idea on a serious basis. Here’s where the U.N. resolution comes in.

A U.N. resolution, rightly phrased, would revive and enshrine the principles of the two-state solution and could pave the way back to serious peace talks. It won’t achieve actual statehood, but it will give the Palestinians enhanced international status.

Ideally, it would call for a border based on June 1967 lines, with

agreed, equal land swaps. (Despite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s rejection of this formula, previous Israeli prime ministers have relied on it for the last two decades.)

And critically, the resolution would call for a negotiated settlement that ends the con* ict on the basis of two states for two peoples. + is would address basic Israeli concerns about delegitimization. + e resolution should reference the 2002 Arab peace initiative that called on all Arab states to recognize Israel if a two-state settlement was achieved.

Longtime Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat believes the U.N. vote may be the only way to save the two-state concept. He said on Tuesday: “We want to present the United Nations vote as an opportunity for all of us to preserve the two-state solution.”

He was echoed by Egyptian diplomat Nabil el-Araby, now head of the Arab League, who told journalists a U.N. vote would change the Israeli-

Palestinian dispute “from a con* ict about existence to a con* ict about borders.”

So why are Israel and the Obama team so opposed to the U.N. vote?

Netanyahu decries the U.N. e) ort as “unilateral” and says it violates the Oslo peace accords. Yet Israel has pursued a unilateral policy of building settlements on the West Bank, a major reason why talks weren’t revived.

+ e Israeli leader’s deep skepticism about a Palestinian state and his rejection of positions taken by previous Israeli leaders may thwart talks in the near term. So may divisions within the top Palestinian leadership.

But a U.N. resolution could keep the two-state formula alive until talks can resume in the future. Legitimate Israeli concerns could be alleviated by careful phrasing. + at’s why the Obama administration should have joined Europeans in helping Palestinians cra- it, rather than try to block it.

It’s not too late for an eleventh-hour e) ort at shaping the text.

A U.N. vote on Palestinian state mayTRUDY RUBINMcClatchy-Tribune

o! er a way forward P alestinians have been watching tens of thousands of their Arab brethren in Cairo, Tunis and Syrian cities carry on

nonviolent demonstrations and they are bound to do likewise, sooner rather than later.

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(Wednesday, September 21, 2011 17

D!"#$ E%$&'"!(18 Wednesday, September 21, 2011 N!"#

Eric Sirota, a senior from Wheaton studying sociology, lies against a tree during the Beyond Coal Die-In Tuesday in the free forum area next to the parking garage. The event was designed to raise awareness through a theatrical representation of how coal kills, said Cheyenne Adams, a sophomore from Bloomington-Normal studying zoology and event coordinator for the die-in. Beyond

Coal has already gotten 900 names of petition against the coal plant, and hope to have 1,200 by their kick-off meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Mississippi Room of the Student Center. “We want to see SIUC invest in renewable, non-toxic forms of energy,” said Adam Reaves, a full-time campus organizer for the Illinois branch of the Sierra Club.

PAT SUTPHIN | DAILY EGYPTIAN

Die-in displays deadly e$ ects of coal

With their first month of school finished, more than 2,300 new freshmen have already experienced a lot of what the university has to offer.

Some freshmen said the primary di) erence between high school and college was the atmosphere of the classes.

Dantiel Daniels, an undecided freshman from St. Louis, said unlike in high school, students have to be self-motivated to go to class.

“Your teachers don’t constantly remind you when things are due. No one’s going to babysit you,” he said.

Hailey Houdek, a freshman from Naperville studying animal science, said the main difference in college are the lectures, adding that there is less emphasis on hands-on activities.

Josh Swan, a freshman from Atlanta studying business economics, said he prefers smaller classes, and also thinks lectures are hard to get used to.

Heather Gawaluck, a freshman from Elgin studying business, said instructors in college tend to exhibit a di) erent teaching approach than high school instructors.

“* e teachers seem much happier to help you,” she said. “I had di+ culties with an essay and all I had to do was visit my professor to get help.”

Professors’ availability and willingness to assist students surprised many freshmen.

Kayla McGillem, a freshman from Belleville studying linguistics, said she thinks professors are more

interested in student success than teachers she had in high school.

In addition to adjusting to classes, freshmen were particularly a) ected by the disturbance caused by the recent power outage on campus.

Around 1,000 students gathered outside Brush Towers Sept. 14 a, er the power went out on campus at around 9:30 p.m. Students - ooded the streets outside the dormitories and chanted phrases such as “USA” and “Africa.” * ree students were injured but no arrests have been made.

“I was shocked that something like a power outage could cause riots,” Swan said. “* e fact that people got hurt is really mind-blowing.”

Houdek said she thought maturity was an issue because students fought when the power went out.

“Honestly, it was kind of ridiculous,” she said. “* e power goes out and everyone goes crazy.”

Daniels said he wished he could have been outside Brush Towers when the incident happened.

“I thought it seemed cool,” he said.

One area to help students adjust to college is the Saluki First Year program, now in its second year. * e program is designed to help guide . rst-year students through their transition to campus life, according to the program’s website.

Saluki First Year organized Week of Welcome, which aimed to keep freshmen busy during their . rst week at school.

Julie Payne-Kirchmeier, assistant provost for University College, said

the week was designed to get students connected early, so they can join Registered Student Organizations, tour the Student Center, connect with the athletics program and explore the community.

A, er the . rst week, Saluki First Year continues to help students connect with resources on campus, she said.

“New students need to know that they’re not just a part of the university or a part of their particular degree program, but they’re also a part of a larger community,” Payne-Kirchmeier said.

For many, the hardest part about attending college is leaving behind friends and family, which can make it easy for homesickness to set in.

Houdek said she has been a little homesick. She said she did not know anyone when she came to college, but it has gotten easier.

Gawaluck said technology has helped in communication with friends from home.

“I’ve been Skyping, using Oovoo and texting every day,” she said.

Gawaluck also said the school helps students maintain bonds with their families by providing

activities for the upcoming Saluki Family Weekend.

“My parents are coming down on Friday, which I’m excited about,” she said.

For some, the sudden gi, of free time between classes was a surprise.

Swan said he previously attended military school, and college is a vacation in comparison.

“* e main thing is learning to manage your own schedule,” he said.

Sarah Mitchell can be reached at [email protected] or

536-3311 ext. 259.

Freshmen transition to college lifeSARAH MITCHELLDaily Egyptian

Irene Brown, left, a freshman from Freeburg studying design, and Daniel Gerut, right, a freshman from Wheaton studying art, eat lunch at Lentz Hall Tuesday. Gerut said the first month of his freshman

year went smoothly, but he was nervous after the Sept. 14 disturbance at Brush Towers. “We heard people were getting pepper sprayed and Maced,” he said. “That made me a little uncomfortable.”

BROOKE GRACE | DAILY EGYPTIAN

! e Carbondale School District No. 95 will have to " nd another way to fund its summer reading and math program.

At the Carbondale City Council meeting Tuesday at the Carbondale Civic Center, the council voted 5-4 to discontinue funds from the city for the Carbondale Elementary School District No. 95 summer reading and math program. ! e program was designed to help students improve their grades in school.

In April, the council granted the district $150,000 for the program.

District Superintendent Michael Shimshack said he urged the council not to discontinue the funds.

“! is is not a cost. It’s an investment,” Shimshack said.

Council member Jane Adams spoke against this year’s grant because she said she doesn’t think it is the city’s responsibility but rather the district’s to keep the program going.

“I think part of the feeling was that if (the program) was a success, that the school district might be persuaded to raise the money,” Adams said.

She said she believes the school board can a# ord the program on its own, and the city’s money should go toward other priorities, such as a new " re station.

Council member Don Monty said he was opposed to the city funding as well.

“! e school district allegedly has a lot of money in it,” he said. “If this program is as important as they say … I think the school could reallocate, within its own budget, the necessary funds without having to raise taxes.”

Council member Chris Wissmann disagreed with Adams and Monty. While he voted against the funds in April, he said he changed his mind based on the program’s success rates.

In math, student’s test scores rose from an average of 66.92 to 81.25 percent. In reading, the scores shot from 71.92 to 85.70 percent.

Council member Lance Jack asked if the funds are necessary to keep the program going.

“I’d like to know why the school board can’t do it on their own, and if they can’t do it on their own, I think we have to help,” he said. “It would be a travesty for us as a city council to step back and say … ‘we’re not going to give it to them.’”

Shimshack said he couldn’t say yet whether the school board would be able to a# ord the program without the funds.

Jack voted to continue the " nancial help.

Council member Corene McDaniel also voted to keep the funds.

“When it comes to our children, what is too much to invest?” McDaniel said. “It’s the city’s responsibility to help when they’re in need.”

Multiple citizens spoke in favor of continuing the funds, and Adams

said she didn’t appreciate their tone in an address to the audience.

“I’m very disturbed. ! e tone of your remarks is that we don’t like the children, we don’t support the children … and nothing can be further from the truth.”

She listed ways the city supports the children, such as donations to the Boys and Girls Club.

“! is is not a test of whether or not we love our children,” Adams said.

Mayor Joel Fritzler voted against the fund, too.

“! ere is no question it’s been a successful program,” he said. “Is life fair? I’ve been hearing this thing about fairness all night. No, it’s not.”

He said with the current

economy issues, the council cannot a# ord to fund every program. He said there’s a long list of community projects that need to be completed such as new streets and that should be the priority.

Tara Kulash can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 273.

D$%&' E(')*%$+N!"# 3Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Jane Childers, Carbondale Park District superintendent of recreation, addresses community members during Tuesday’s city council meeting, where Mayor Joel Fritzler declared Sept. 24 World Wide Day of Play in Carbondale. Childers and Boys and Girls Club Program Director Tina Carpenter came to the meeting

to receive Fritzler’s declaration. The council also spoke on the approval of micro-distilleries, micro-breweries and wineries being permitted in agricultural districts of Carbondale. The termination of funding for Carbondale Elementary District No. 95 summer reading and math program was also discussed.

ISAAC SMITH | DAILY EGYPTIAN

TARA KULASHDaily Egyptian

City Council cuts funds for District 95 summer academy

Although three years apart, brothers Justin and Shaun Wolfe share a common passion for swimming, and they both choose to

bring their talents to SIU.Freshman swimmer Shaun

Wolfe is newly recruited to the team and prepares for his ! rst season of college-level competition, while his elder brother, senior swimmer Justin Wolfe, has been with the SIU

swim team since fall 2008.Due to their age di" erence, the

brothers spent one year in high school together as teammates, which gave them the chance to compete in a familiar setting. Justin Wolfe said he knew his brother was

considering other schools and was glad when he learned that he chose SIU.

“I really wanted him to come here but I obviously couldn’t tell him that,” Justin Wolfe said. “I wanted him to make his own

decision so I kind of just o" ered advice on where he wanted to go, but I was really happy when he said he was coming here.”

For the rest of the story please visit www.dailyegyptian.com.

Two weeks into the regular season, player injuries have forced NFL teams to make adjustments to their lineups both temporarily and for the remainder of the season.

While some teams have gone through the first two games injury free, other teams have had to dig deeper into their depth charts due to multiple sidelined key players.

The first of Sunday’s injuries occurred in the Kansas City Chiefs and Houston Texans game when the Chiefs’ All-Pro running back Jamaal Charles tore his ACL.

Significant damage to the ligament was confirmed with an MRI and Charles has been placed on the injured reserve list for the remainder of the season.

Coach Todd Haley con! rmed the news in a press conference Tuesday and said it is more important than before for his players to come together as a single unit.

“It’s not good,” Haley said. “It’s unfortunate for Jamaal because I know Jamaal had high hopes, was excited and worked very hard to take this to the next level.”

Haley will again have to look deeper into his depth chart, as this is the third player the Chiefs have lost for the 2011 season with ACL injuries.

Safety Eric Berry’s injury occurred in week one’s game against the Buffalo Bills, while tight end Tony Moeaki injured his knee in the team’s final preseason game against Green Bay.

As for Green Bay, the team had its first major injury in Sunday’s game against the Carolina Panthers when All-Pro safety Nick Collins awkwardly tackled Carolina’s running back Jonathan Stewart late in the fourth quarter and hurt his head and neck.

# e team labeled it as a season-ending injury, but has not released details on whether surgery will be required.

“It’s tough,” Green Bay coach

Mike McCarthy said in a Monday press conference. “It’s something you never get used to as a coach.”

Nick Gregov, a senior from Carlyle studying finance, said the amount of injuries is just something that comes along with the early part of the season. He said he doesn’t think it will continue to be a lingering issue throughout the season, as players tend to be more physical in the first few games.

He said he expects experience, not injuries, to be the determining factor as teams edge towards the postseason.

“Some of the younger teams don’t exactly know what’s going to happen when they get to the playoffs,” Gregov said. “Even if they were healthy, it’ll still hurt them without the experience.”

In addition to Charles and Collins, Dallas Cowboys’ running back Felix Jones went out with a separated shoulder, and Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Michael Vick le$

a game with a concussion.Ben Schott, a senior from Sterling

studying physical education, said he has seen the e" ects of injuries in athletics, and thinks there will be a common theme throughout the regular season.

He said the lack of time players had with their teams due to the lockout could be where a lot of the injuries stem from.

As for the big hits throughout the first two weeks, Schott said the NFL is limited to the amount of protection it can give its players.

“It’s kind of a hard subject because a lot of people say they want to see the big hits and the big plays,” Schott said. “I don’t really want to see people get hurt, but it’s pretty sweet to see someone get laid out.”

Erickson, who tied for 65th place with a score of 155, said the grass caused adjustment problems for the team but did not excuse its ! rst-round performance.

“I think we were trying too hard to not play bad,” Erickson said.

Junior Brandon Cauldwell tied for 30th place with a two-round score of 149, and Senior Joe Goelzhauser tied for 52nd with a score of 152.

Wichita State University won the tournament with a two-round score of 570, 12 strokes better than SIU. Erickson said there is much to take from this tournament and improve on.

“We just have to come out ready to play next time,” Erickson said.

Newton said he was impressed by how his team rebounded in the second round, but they need to consistently play up to their capabilities.

“If the guys don’t post scores they are capable of, they just are not concentrating,” Newton said. “We wish we could have played Tuesday, but it was an enjoyable experience.”

# e Salukis resume tournament play Oct.1 when they travel to Normal to compete in the D.A. Weibring Intercollegiate tournament.

Kevin Taylor can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 247.

D%&'( E)(*+&%,S!"#$%Wednesday, September 21, 2011 19BEESCONTINUED FROM 20

Todd Eaton, an undecided sophomore from Greenville, pitches to an Ontario Blue Jays player Monday during a scrimmage game at Abe Martin Field. The Blue Jays are an 18-and-under team of high school students

from Ontario and are currently travelling the U.S. playing division one teams. Two seven-inning games were played Monday, and though no official statistics were taken, the Salukis won the first game 9-0.

STEVE MATZKER | DAILY EGYPTIAN

Salukis whip up on Canucks

Injuries plague NFL two weeks into seasonCORY DOWNERDaily Egyptian

Brothers reunite as teammates in the poolNAREG KURTJIANDaily Egyptian

PROVIDED PHOTO

FOOTBALL

SWIMMING AND DIVING

Head coach Leroy New-ton said he witnessed some-

thing Tuesday that he had never seen before in his 30-year golf career.

Bees around the 18th hole green attacked

several players from other schools after two rounds of uninterrupted play at the University of Texas-A r l i n g t o n / Wa t e r c h a s e Invitational tournament Monday in Arlington, Texas. The incident caused the last round to be canceled.

No one on the Saluki team was stung.

“The bees were flying around everywhere and (it) would have taken five or six (hours) to eradicate them,” Newton said. “This was certainly a first for me.”

Junior Jake Erickson said the team had no inclination of any potential problems before play began Tuesday.

“It was a perfect day weather-wise and then

we hear about the bees,” Erickson said. “The whole experience was weird.”

The final round’s can-cellation meant Mon-day’s two recorded rounds would be the final scores after only 36 holes of play. SIU was in 18th place of 19 teams after one round of play, and accumulated a team score of 312.

“Our first round score was terrible,” Newton said. “But we came back in the second round and played up to our potential.”

The Salukis bounced back in the second round with a team score of 290, 22 strokes better than their first round, and moved up all the way to eighth place by the end of Monday's round. SIU was one of four schools to shoot 290 or better in a single round.

Newton said the team’s play was certainly affected by the different grass used on the Arlington course. The Bermuda grass has a different effect on ball movement compared to

the grass that the Salukis typically play on, Newton said.

Junior Jeff Miller, who finished tied for 17th with a cumulative score of 146, said the team eventually adjusted to the grass, and that was reflected in the second-round score.

“Had we played Tuesday, I think we could have scored even better and maybe moved up the leaderboard,” he said.

Swarm of bees leads to early ! nish for SalukisKEVIN TAYLORDaily Egyptian

Please see BEES | 19

GOLF

T he bees were flying around everywhere and (it) would have taken five or six (hours) to eradicate them. This was certainly a first for me.

— Leroy NewtonHead golf coach

! e Southern Illinois University Carbondale Labor Coalition — which represents the Faculty Association, the Non-Tenure Track Faculty Association, Graduate Assistants United and the Association of Civil Service Employees — wrapped up a series of " ve " lm screenings at the Varsity Center of the Arts Sunday with “Struggles in Steel.” ! e 1996 " lm, based in Pittsburgh, was about racial challenges African-American steel mill workers have faced in the United States.

Jyotsna Kapur, an associate professor of cinema and photography and Faculty Association member, said the community outreach group decided to screen the " lms to provide the community with understanding of where the unions are in contract negotiations and how national issues in labor re# ect what happening at the

university.“We can’t pretend this will go away,”

she said.! e Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled

in June that a union law could take e$ ect, which strips collective bargaining rights from state unions, taking away abilities to protect workers and negotiate for better wages and bene" ts for public employees.

Tens of thousands of demonstrators showed support for the preservation of collective bargaining rights when the legislation was introduced in February.

Similar legislation has recently occurred in other states.

Indiana and Ohio both passed laws this year to restrict collective bargaining for teachers and other public workers.

Jim Clark, Illinois Education Association representative, said a general hostility exists toward public sector unions.

“It has an impact on the mentality of what is happening in Carbondale,” he said. “Bargaining is about local issues, but the attitude that unions are the problem and not the solution is something that has been generated in the last couple of years by the conservative movement and people who want to do away with any kind of controls on unbridled capitalism.”

! e unions have gone almost 450 days without contract renewal, dating back to June 2010.

! e College of Mass Communications and Media Arts will lose its dean in 2012.

Gary Kolb, dean of the College of Mass Communications and Media Arts, announced at the college-wide meeting Friday he will begin his retirement June 30.

Kolb has been at the university for 33 years and his decision was not an easy one.

He said there were personal reasons he has chosen to leave. He said he wants to accomplish some things in his life that cannot be done while working a full-time job.

“You look at your longevity and ask ‘how much time do I really have on this earth, and what do I want to do with that time?’” he said. “Watching my father work up until the time where he was very sick and was unable to enjoy his retirement and then he died, well, I don’t want to do that.”

Kolb said he loves his job and thinks the university is heading in a good direction. Overall enrollment in his college was up 5.4 percent this semester and " rst-time freshmen increased by nine percent.

“I like being part of that and I would like to continue to be part of that, but there is a part of me that says for myself and for my family this is the right thing to do,” he said.

A photographer by training, Kolb said he wants to get back into his business and publish a book of

his photos.He and his wife will stay in the

area.Rod Sievers, university

spokesman, said there will be an internal search for an interim dean to serve next year, but it is too early in the process to know when a search for a permanent dean will begin.

Sarah Schneider can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 255.

Dean announces retirement a% er 33 years at universitySARAH SCHNEIDERDaily Egyptian

Public Safety Center roof to be repaired at no cost to city

CAMPUSCITY

Beverly Love, left, an assistant professor of radio and television, and Natasha Zaretsky, an associate professor of history, participate in a group discussion on the possibility of a strike Sunday at the Varsity Center of the Arts. Members of four IEA unions gathered for a screening of “Struggles in Steel: The Fight for Equal Opportunity.” The group discussed the film and the comparisons to what is happening at SIUC with contracting issues.

LYNNETTTE OOSTMEYER | DAILY EGYPTIAN

SARAH SCHNEIDERDaily Egyptian

Campus, national unions struggle with similar issues

Please see SCREENING | 4

Carbondale Police Chief Jody O’Guinn’s personal handgun may have been used in the shooting of a 20-year-old Carbondale man.

“My prayers and deepest sympathy go out to the family of this young man, and I grieve with them in their loss,” O’Guinn said in a statement posted Friday on the Carbondale Police Department website.

According to the statement, he reported the handgun stolen from his locked vehicle in June.

O& cers responded to reports of gun shots at the 400 block of North Brush Street Sept. 14 at 1:55 a.m. O& cers arrived at the scene to " nd Deaunta R. Spencer shot. Spencer was transported to Memorial Hospital of Carbondale where he was pronounced dead.

“I am devastated and deeply saddened that this gun, which was secured within my personal vehicle, was stolen and subsequently may have been used to take the life of another,” O’Guinn said in the statement.

According to the statement, the handgun was located during an ongoing Carbondale Police Department investigation. Matthew J. Jones, an 18-year-

old man from Carbondale, was charged with three counts of murder for Spencer’s death.

“Although this is an unspeakable tragedy, it is comforting to know that the weapon has been recovered and cannot be used in the commission of further crimes,” O’Guinn said in the statement.

Jones faces a preliminary court hearing Sept. 29.

Police chief ’s stolen handgun possible weapon in fatal shooting

Repairs are set to begin this week on the damaged roof of the new Carbondale Public Safety Center.

City Manager Allen Gill said the repairs will be of no cost to the city.

“! e Public Safety Center had been given a certi" cate of ‘signi" cant completion’ and the Department had moved into the building a couple days prior to the storm,” he said. “Since there was a punch list of items remaining to be completed, it was still insured by the contractor’s builder’s risk insurance.”

! e roof was damaged by strong storm winds April 19. ! e building, completed in the spring, houses the police department.

! e storm caused damage across town, including other city buildings at Cedar Lake and the Southeast Wastewater Treatment Plant, according to a city press release.

Insurance companies were assessing repair estimates in the " ve months since the storm, Gill said.

Contegra Construction will be doing the repairs. Brad Barnard, supervisor of the project, declined comment.

Carbondale Police Department Community Resource O& cer Amber Goddard referred all calls on the project to Gill.

Some parking areas at the building will be closed during the repairs, according to a city press release.

ELI MILEURDaily Egyptian

CAMPUS

Please see ROOF | 4

W e can’t pretend this will go away.

— Jyotsna Kapurassociate professor of cinema and photography

and Faculty Association member

I am devastated and deeply saddened that this gun, which was secured within my personal vehicle, was

stolen and subsequently may have been used to take the life of another.

— Jody O’GuinnCarbondale police chief