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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2015 VOLUME 99 ISSUE 19

DEDaily Egyptian

Since 1916

Wintery week brings record cold to Carbondale

12 in.Average annual snowfall

for Carbondale

Lowest recorded temperature for Carbondale

-251977

Feb. 19 Record Low

-51936

Thursday’s Forecast

-8

Austin Miller@AMiller_DE | Daily Egyptian

It might be time to move into igloos. SIU students did their best impression of “March

of the Penguins” while walking through the frigid temperatures on campus this week, minus the narration by Morgan Freeman.

After classes were canceled Monday because of two inches of snow, cold air has made being outside less enjoyable. Forecasts now predict the temperatures to plummet even more.

Please see WEATHER · 3

Praising from the podiumGov. Rauner proposes $44M cut for SIUC

AidAn OsbOrne • dAily egyptiAn

Pastor Chris Swims, center, preaches Sunday at Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church. Swims has been a member of the church for 12 years, and the pastor for four years. “I’ve done a little bit of everything. I’ve been the janitor and youth pastor,” Swims said. He said the church played an invaluable role during the civil rights movement. “If you look back at the civil rights movement, the church was where people met and received Jesus. It gave them hope and courage to continue on,” Swims said. For the story, please see page 6.

Cap cut: What nine and a half hours means to student workersWhen going to college, some students

dream of moving out of their parents’ homes and into their own apartments.

In May, 2014, the university reduced the number of hours a student could work at an SIU job from 29.5 hours to 20 hours. That made this dream hard to achieve for those paying for college with no assistance.

Initially the university cited policies relating to the Affordable Care Act as reason for the cap change, but has since sited academic success as reason to keep it.

“For some students, student employment is their only income,” said Luther Porter, a senior from Du Quoin studying history and psychology.

Porter, who works as an operations and maintenance member at the Student Center, said he planned to move out of his parents’ house before the cap was implemented.

Most student employees start out making $8.25 per hour, the state’s minimum wage. Porter said before SIU instated the cap, he made almost $800 a month, which was ideal for his situation.

“When I could work 29.5 hours per week, I had no worries,” Porter said. “I had money to afford books and other needs a college student would have while saving up to move out. That extra nine and a half hours a week really helped.”

The cutback in student hours also means a cut in pay. If a student works the sanctioned 20 hours each week, they make about $600 to

$700 a month. The cap change diminished Porter’s chance

of moving out. The money he earns from student employment is not enough to cover the cost of college expenses.

Porter pays for his cell phone bill, car payment, car insurance and gas to commute to school. If he added rent and groceries to that, his monthly expenses would exceed $700.

He has trouble getting books at the beginning of some semesters because he does not have enough money to pay for them.

“This semester I have all my books but one,” Porter said. “I’m getting that, next check.”

For Porter’s former co-worker Anthony Castaneda, who works at the Student Services Building, affording rent, books and food with the 20-hour work cap is nearly impossible.

Castaneda, a senior from Chicago studying video production and sports administration said he has little spending money left after paying for his utility bill, groceries and his half of the $700 per month rent.

Castaneda said the extra $200 a month he made before the cutback covered everything else.

Because of the 20-hour cap, Castaneda had to find another source of income. He now works a second job at Fazoli’s, a restaurant on East Main Street.

Porter said the cost of getting to and from an off-campus job can be troubling.

“Some students have to rule out an off-campus job because they wont have a ride to work and back,” said Porter, who could not find an off-campus job that fit his school schedule.

Castaneda works both jobs some days, and said doing so is difficult for a full-time student trying to maintain good grades.

“It’s unfair for students because the university is mostly run by students and without students working, the campus would fall apart,” Porter said.

Adrian Miller, the campus’ student representative on the SIU Board of Trustees, said the 20-hour cap made life hard for some students.

“As a student who also has relied heavily on the income from my student worker position, I know what it’s like to have to go and work a second job just to be able to make ends meet,” said Miller, a senior from Carbondale studying political science.

Miller said he is hopeful the cap will change to 25 hours a week. He said he has brought it up to SIU’s administration several times, but is not seeing any progress.

“I, like every other student who has to work more than 20 hours a week, know that the current model in place doesn’t work,” Miller said.

Ahmad Hicks@AhicksSports_DE | Daily Egyptian

ellen bOOth • dAily egyptiAn

Luther Porter, a senior from Du Quoin studying psychology and history, finishes up the last hour of his workday Tuesday dust moping Student Center Ballroom B.

State funding for Illinois universities will be cut more than 31 percent if Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner gets his way.

At his budget address Wednesday, Rauner discussed the ways he plans to fix Illinois’ budget crisis, which Reuters reports is a $6.2 billion structural deficit.

One major way Rauner plans to make this happen is by slashing funding for higher education by $387 million next year; about $44 million of which would be taken from SIU’s Carbondale campus, President Randy Dunn said. He said the entire SIU system will take a $60 million hit if approved by the General Assembly.

Dunn said public education in Illinois, and maybe the entire country, has never seen a funding cut of this magnitude happen so fast.

If approved, the cuts would go into effect July 1.While details of the cuts were unclear, MAP

grants will not be affected.Lynne Baker, managing director of

communications at the Illinois Student Assistance Commission, said she is happy to hear of this. The commission handles MAP grant funding.

Sam Beard@SamBeard_DE | Daily Egyptian

Please see BUDGET · 3

brAndA Mitchell • dAily egyptiAn

2 Thursday, February 19, 2015

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“In light of the challenging budget situation, we were pleased to see that the governor’s proposed budget at least preserves MAP funding at current levels,” Baker said.

She said she is not sure what will happen to tuition rates or fees.

Dunn said the cuts would significantly change the university’s business model.

“[The proposed cuts] would be draconian, and severely detrimental to the operations of the campus as we know them,” Dunn said.

He said the nearly one-third slash

in funding came as a shock.“About a third of state money

disappearing under the governor’s proposal was a figure that took your breath away,” Dunn said.

Philosophy professor Larry Hickman, director of the Center for Dewey Studies, said cutting funding for higher education is not a good economic policy.

Hickman said a decrease in funding could incentivize top professors and researchers to relocate.

“Cut funding for higher education by 30 percent, and basically you are going to have a brain drain away from Illinois,” Hickman said. “When I was in graduate school in

the 1960s and ‘70s, state support for higher education in many states was up around 80 percent.”

Not only has state funding for colleges decreased in parts of the country, the cost of school is steadily rising, according to the Center of Budget and Policy Priorities.

From 2008 to 2014 the average cost of tuition for public colleges and universities in Illinois has increased $2,326, according to the center.

“With the increases in college tuition and fees over the years and increasing demand for MAP grants, MAP now serves only about half the applicants who are eligible, and covers only about one-third of

average tuition and fees at a public university in this state,” Baker said.

Dunn said he is not in a position to argue with the governor.

“What we’ve got to do now as a group of universities is to go to the General Assembly and show that this is part of the investment [in Illinois’ future],” he said.

Dunn said the presidents and chancellors for all Illinois state universities will have a conference call Thursday to discuss how to move forward.

He said higher education is going to help solve the problems of economic recovery and workforce development.

“Don’t think about what we do as

a cost, but as an investment,” Dunn said. “Right now it feels like there is a huge disinvestment in Illinois higher education, and in the long run, that is not going to lead to a good outcome for this state.”

When asked what he would say to Rauner, Dunn used a metaphor to explain his thoughts.

“It has taken us decades to get into this financial crisis that were are in,” Dunn said. “It becomes very difficult to correct that problem all in one year. I understand the need for all of the state government to take some medicine, but even too much medicine given too quickly can kill the patient. And I worry about that here.”

WSIL TV’s news station in Carterville reached below zero on Tuesday for the first time since 1996, said one of its meteorologists Nick Hausen.

Carbondale’s Wednesday forecast projected between 3 and minus 6 degrees, with wind chills of 15 below, much lower than the February average low of 27. Hausen said Carbondale hit minus 4 in January 2014, which had not happened since 2004.

Hausen said the Popsicle-like conditions of this week are not ordinary for southern Illinois.

“For us to see two days below

zero, consecutively, is somewhat rare,” he said.

Cold temperatures may seem like just a hassle, but there are real health issues at stake.

With the current forecast, exposed skin would succumb to frostbite in 30 minutes, Hausen said. It is important for people to keep all areas covered with hats, gloves and coats because they can get frostbite sooner then they might think.

Several conditions have facilitated the arctic blast from Canada, Hausen said.

The first of which is the present snow. From there it all comes down to clouds and wind.

Some might think a clear sky would bring warmer air, but that

is not the case. Hausen said clouds act as a blanket, trapping warm air below. Without the clouds, the heat escapes, making people need an actual blanket.

People may also assume higher winds decrease the temperature, but Hausen said that is also not the case.

Strong winds make people feel colder because it bombards them, but calm winds actually are colder. The wind just mixes air around, not giving it the opportunity to drop, he said.

To combat the cold, students made their best burrito impersonation, wrapping themselves in coats, scarves and gloves.

However, some students resorted to unconventional

methods to stay warm.Taylor Buley, a freshman from

Spring Bay studying zoology, and Sydney Kolb, a junior from Mt. Carmel studying microbiology, huddled around an air vent behind Morris Library Wednesday afternoon.

Buley said she hopes the university will cancel classes again.

“People living at Thompson Point have to walk all the way across campus, and with the wind chill, it is not going to be good for them at all,” Buley said.

Larry Raymond graduated from SIU in 1994 with a degree in atmospheric science and spent 10 years in Green Bay, Wis., as a meteorologist. Raymond has since

moved back to Mulkeytown and runs the website SIWeather.net.

Even though he is more than 20 years removed from campus, he knows how cold it can be.

“Thompson Point to the Communications Building is not that far, but when it’s that cold, it feels far away,” Raymond said.

This weekend’s forecast does not offer much relief for those bothered by winter weather.

Hausen said southern Illinois could experience some ice on Friday night. Saturday could bring heavy snow or rain, depending on the temperature. Flooding could be a problem with the frozen ground and melting snow, and Sunday could bring more flurries.

Thursday, February 19, 2015 3

holiday Wagner • daily egypTian

LEFT: Marjorie Brooks, an assistant professor of zoology, sits Wednesday outside the Student Center. “When the sun is shining and you have powder sugar snow, it’s incredibly alluring. So I came out here with a warm croissant and a warm cup of coffee to sit down on a bench and just enjoy the beauty of the day. I don’t think I could live somewhere where there wasn’t a change of seasons,” Brooks said. RIGHT: Lecturer Adil Ilbrahim braces the cold Wednesday outside Faner Hall as he leaves a class he was teaching. “I’m not enjoying [the weather] at all. It’s terrible,” Ibrahim said.

WEATHER CONTINUED FROM 1

BUDGET CONTINUED FROM 1

For 107 years, the National Federation of Music Clubs has been providing a platform for young musicians to bolster their musical skills and appreciation.

Th e state-level branch of the organization, Th e Illinois Federation of Music Clubs, consists of 325 members and more than 100 junior clubs for musicians under the age of 18.

SIU will host an Illinois Federation of Music Clubs festival from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at Altgeld Hall and the Old Baptist Foundation recital hall.

Th e festival invites participants from Carbondale, Marion, Carterville, Mt. Vernon, West Frankfort and other towns in southern Illinois.

Students ages 5 to 18 are welcome to perform two prepared pieces.

Rickey Snowman, the festival

organizer and federation member, said the majority of the students involved in the festival perform piano or violin pieces, but no orchestral instrument is off limits.

Once the students reach a certain age, performers can choose the second piece, but the first is chosen from a National Federation bulletin, she said.

Snowman said fi ve to seven performers are organized into 45-minute sessions open to the public.

Each participant is evaluated by a panel of judges that maintains a non-competitive mindset but provides performers with a grade of one to fi ve and a personal critique, she said.

Snowman said a score of fi ve is considered superior.

“It is not supposed to be a competitive environment,” she said. “There are two judges for

each session where they receive positive reinforcement of their playing and suggestions to improve their playing.”

In most cases, students have been preparing for the festival since summer, she said.

Trophies known as ‘festival cups’ are given out to students who reach certain point levels in their careers. Th e fi rst benchmark is at 15 points, with the highest of 90.

She said the trophies provide motivation for students to perform for multiple years, since only fi ve points can be received each year.

SIU has annually facilitated the festival, providing enough rooms for more than 200 participants to perform in one weekend.

For rest of the story please visitwww.dailyegyptian.com.

PULSEYoung musicians prepare for a world of performanceChase Myers@chasemyers_DE | Daily Egyptian

1.3 col x 3.5 in / 51 x 89 mm / 602 x 1051 pixels

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The expression of African-American faith is rich in culture and has deep, historical roots that touch nearly all branches of Christianity.

“The greatest value of community in black churches is so many of the black churches, especially those organized during the times of slavery, were opportunities for people to organize themselves, educate themselves, strengthen one another and plan for liberation without anybody else knowing it,” the Rev. Joseph Brown said. “Those churches are incredibly important to the history of black people in America.”

However, Catholicism—the third-largest denomination of black Christians in the U.S.—is often left out when many think of the African-American community.

“People don’t count black Catholics or even recognize they exist in the same way they recognize Methodist, Baptist or Presbyterian,” Brown said.

Brown, ordained as a Catholic priest in 1972, said much of Catholic theology is compatible with traditional west African theology.

Because of this, the ritualistic practices of the Catholic church that capture methods of African-American worship are

culturally-based.This includes the manner in which music, speech and dance

are performed in services.Cultural expression does not detract from Catholicism, or

vice versa—Brown makes sure of that.“I’m one of those people that helps to plan, organize and

coordinate such experiences in the black Catholic church that are as authentically black as they are truly Catholic,” Brown said.Though the cultural basis is the same, what differentiates black Catholic churches from most Protestant denominations is the

highly organized set of rituals.“We have a blessing for everything, we have a prayer for

everything,” Brown said.This does not always correlate with the way most Protestant

churches conduct their services.Chris Swims, pastor of Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church

in Carbondale, said his church puts an emphasis on preaching and singing, with a choir of roughly 20 people.

Regardless of the method of worship, he said the goal is the sense in community members share.

“We have a great big melting pot,” Swims said. “We strive to reach people in whatever we’re doing.”

Churches are far more diverse now than they were historically, said the Rev. Bob Flannery, a Catholic priest at the Church of St. Francis Xavier.

“Unfortunately part of it was segregation,” he said. “[Black people] were not permitted to worship with the white churches.”

The formation of black churches also has ties to the fight against slavery.

Brown said some early African Methodist Episcopal churches

played a crucial part in the Underground Railroad.“They were organized around helping their brothers and

sisters be free,” he said.The churches would appear to be solely for worship, but have

false walls with runaway slaves behind them. The people would hide in the walls until they were able to make their escape out of town.

Brown said this is one of the many glories in black history and was a contributing factor to establishing feelings of solidarity between patrons of churches today.

African-American history seen in black churchesA church member walks into the fellowship hall before the service began on Sunday. Hopewell Missionary Baptist was established in 1902, and was originally located near the intersection of North Wall Street and East Jackson Street. The current building was built in 1999.

Chris Swims, pastor of Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church in Carbondale, center, greets a member of the church after the service on Sunday.

Angelique Lashae, left, watches a group of girls compete in a game of Martin Luther King Jr. trivia during Sunday school at Hopewell Missionary Batist Church. A woman flips through her bible during worship on Sunday.

Wenella Mack, a member of the Mime Ministry, performs the song “Your Grace and Mercy” by the Mississippi Mass Choir, Sunday during worship. The Mime Ministry performs every third Sunday of the month.

Magnolia Hood leads worship Sunday at Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church. Members of the church were invited to stand facing the sanctuary during this part of the service.

Story By Jessica Brown | Photos By Aidan Osborne

9 Thursday, February 19, 2015

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NICE HOUSE, QUIET AREA,Approx. 5 minutes from campus.6bdrm, 2 bath all appl incuding w/davail Aug., 2015 $330-$245/stu-dent, for 4-6 students. 806-1799.

1,2,3,4,5,6 BDRM HOUSES &apts. Pick up list at 508 W. Oak.Call Bryant Rentals at 529-1820or 529-3581

4 BDRM, 2 bath. Close to SIU, cen-tral heat & a/c, large yard. $270 perperson/mo. Ph.618-924-1965

NICE LARGE 5 bdrm, 2 bath, c/a,w/d, available now, $280 per person.300 N. Springer, 529-3581.

NICE 1 & 2 BDRM, $260-$300, lawn& trash incl, mgmt & maint. On-site,

avail now, 618-529-9200, no dogs.www.salukihomes.com

2 BDRM UNITS $275-$300/mo618-924-0535

www.comptonrentals.com

School bus drivers needed. C!daleand Murphysboro area. Excellent

training program. call 549-3913.Or apply at West Bus Service:

700 New Era Road C!dale.

UPSCALE TANNING SALON look-ing for part time help. Tanning indus-

try experience preferred. Send re-sume to Sun Angels Tanning Salon,

PO Box 3643 Carbondale, IL 62902

SALES CLERK, PT, must be 21yrs,apply in person, SI Liquor Mart, 113

N. 12th St., M!boro. Please no calls.

LEASING CONSULTANT, OFF Cam-pus Student Housing firm. Office expe-rience beneficial. Christian environ-ment. Now thru Sept. Must have owntransportation and drivers lic. Details,4574422

AUTO MECHANIC WANTED, PT/FT, apply in person at Auto Bestbuy,

214 Health Dept Rd, M!boro.

ATTENTION: BOB HAD A JOB.BOB LOST HIS JOB.

WE NEED 10 NEW BOBS!$450/WK. CALL 618-988-2257.

WANTED YOUTH SWIM coach for ex-isting summer swim program. Com-petitive swim and coaching experiencepreferred. Contact [email protected] for more information. Sendresume to same email or PO Box 1110

Marion IL 62959. Salary negotiable.

WALKERS BLUFF IS now hiring ,event intern, servers, bussers,food runners, bartenders andmaintenance. Applications avail-able at the general store.618-985-8463

CUSTOMIZE YOUR ADBold $0.25/word/dayLarge font $2.00/day

Centering $0.25/line/dayBorders $0.65/day

QR Codes $4.00/dayPicture $5.00/day

HANDYMAN SERVICES, PAINT-ING, home repairs, please call

618-525-6650 or 618-833-3498.

JET TAXI SERVICES Operating 24/7in Carbondale up to 50 miles. HiringFT/PT Drivers. Call 618-964-4412

Gymnastics Instructor Southern IllinoisGymnastics Academy is opening up inCarbondale! We are looking for fun,energetic, happy, people who weregymnasts. You will be working in abeautiful fully air conditioned facility

with all new equipment with in-groundtrampolines, in-ground tumble trak anda huge loose foam pit. If this soundsawesome, please apply online at: si-gymnastics.com. We look forward toworking with you. Email [email protected]

WE BUY MOST refrigerators,stoves, washers, dryers, windowa/c, Able Appliance, call 457-7767

NEED A CLASSIFIED AD?Business online ads $25/30 daysIndividual online ads $5/30days

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Today’s Birthday (02/19/15). Mars enters Aries today, motivating profits to begin your next year. Advance your career. Use your power for good.

Friends support your success; nurture your networks. Make preparations to realize a personal objective after 3/20. Carefully track numbers, especially after 4/4. Budget extra for the unexpected. Partnership sparks after 10/13. Express your love and appreciation.

Aries (March 21-April 19) -- Today is a 7 -- Slow down and think it over. There’s an opportunity if you take time to look for it. Focus on restoring health and wellness, and supporting vitality. Consider mental, physical and spiritual well-being. Rest and recharge.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Words and actions align, but there may be a roadblock. Try another tactic. Dispel confusion with key questions. Your network has the answers. Take a leap of faith. Others respect your good sense. All ends well. Strengthen reserves.

Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is a 9 -- Extend your influence by taking new responsibility. Achieve a

career milestone or new level. Do what you said you would, and the pieces line up. Generate profits from home. Let your partner win. Stand for love.

Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Put your money where your mouth is for a fat payout. Remember the rules. Don’t fall for an illusion. A delightful adventure carries you off. Post selfies from exotic destinations. Record the amazing things you’re learning.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Don’t spend more than you can afford or finance a fantasy. Handle obligations and bills before treats. Listen to your partner’s dream, and determine how to support it over time. By working together, you can grow resources.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Keep your promises with your partner, and dreams become possible. Do what you said, and then create new promises to realize shared

goals. Organize your efforts. Together you can accomplish amazing things this month.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- The work you do now and for the next month has long-lasting impact. Make bold declarations and realize them. Play bigger than you normally do. Expand your game. Provide exceptional value, and it comes back to you.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- All that practice pays off. The talents you’ve been honing shine in the spotlight. Long-term benefit is possible. A dream takes focus. Take on a big challenge and win. It’s getting exceptionally fun (and romantic) this month.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Big home renovation projects (or possibly a move) come together this month. Ask for what you really want, and then show up to do the work to get it. You can make dreams

come true. Set long-term goals.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

-- Today is an 8 -- Talk is cheap, so back yours with action. Get practical, and hone your message down to basics. Declare your intentions, enlist support from your circles, and then keep your word. You can accomplish huge things together.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 9 -- Keep showing up and doing what you said this month, and raise your income without stress. Get creative with your work. Play with it. Stay in communication and meet your deadlines. It could get wonderfully profitable.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is a 9 -- You can realize things you thought impossible this month. Put on your power suit and go drive them wild. Others say nice things about you. A personal breakthrough is available. Expand your boundaries. Take new ground.

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

207 West Main StreetCarbondale, IL 62901Ph. 1-800-297-2160 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE FEBRUARY 19, 2015

ACROSS1 Explosive sound5 Outer __

10 Not even ajar14 “Born to Die”

singer/songwriterDel Rey

15 Stadium divisions16 Son of Leah17 “You’re living in

the past,”nowadays

20 Flowercelebrated in anannual Ottawafestival

21 Move the boat, ina way

22 Painting option23 Like a typical

farmer’s market25 “Gotcha!”26 “You can’t go

there,” nowadays32 Peace Nobelist

Sakharov35 Elijah Blue’s

mom36 __ de coeur:

impassioned plea37 “Gone With the

Wind” setting38 “Whew!”39 Sit a spell40 The Pac-12’s

Beavers41 Ego43 Citrine or

amethyst45 “Nobody can go

there,” nowadays48 A Bobbsey twin49 Stops53 Early New

Zealand settler56 “Something __,

something ...”58 Bug59 “Never heard of

you,” nowadays62 Cinch63 Sci-fi staple64 Golf shot65 Breton, e.g.66 Band tour stop,

perhaps67 Building

additions

DOWN1 Olive Oyl pursuer2 Eagerly consume3 One with

degrees?

4 Sauce ofsouthern Italy

5 Norm: Abbr.6 Capital ENE of

Custer7 Prefix with 5-

Across8 Intercollegiate

sport9 Lawyer’s letters

10 Moccasin, forone

11 Man around theHaus

12 Layer in the eye13 Considerable18 Posthaste19 Escort24 “Here,” on Metro

maps25 “__ to Billie Joe”27 Act the cynic28 Coming up short29 Bakery specialist30 Before, to a

bard31 Scatterbrain32 On the highest

point of33 Apollo’s creator34 Pharmacopeia

listing38 Abbreviation on a

lunch menu39 Splendor

41 Gastropod for agourmet

42 Geochronologicalspan

43 “¿__ pasa?”44 Three-time Indy

winner Bobby46 Transported47 Favored to win50 “60 Minutes”

regular51 Sri Lankan

language

52 What apedometercounts

53 Catchall file abbr.54 Archer of “Fatal

Attraction”55 Common face

shape56 Redolence57 Jiffy __60 “Science Friday”

radio host Flatow61 Greek “H”

Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Robert Fisher 2/19/15

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 2/19/1502/19/15

Thursday’s Answers02/19/15

Thursday, February 19 , 2015 10

I am deeply disappointed in a statement by Mayoral Candidate Mike Henry in the Feb. 16 Daily Egyptian. In a profile, Henry made wild and reckless allegations, unsupported by any facts, concerning my actions toward city staff. Henry alleged that “she [Adams] has criticized all of City Hall. … She has called our routine staff incompetent and not worth the money we pay them” He went on to charge that because staff “don’t like her” [Adams] can’t have “anybody’s ear to talk about suggestions or new initiatives.”

I have never said the words he quotes, nor do they reflect my views of our “routine staff,” who I find to be friendly, helpful, and responsive to our residents. I challenge Mr. Henry to show where these alleged remarks were made.

Our city’s executive staff are professionals, employed by the city manager to carry out the policies established by this and prior city councils. I have worked very hard over 4 years to maintain this professional relationship, as a review of my blogs and my comments in council will make clear.

Carbondale faces many challenges and opportunities. The voters need to learn how we plan to face these challenges and seize the opportunities.

I have a strong record of accomplishment that belies

Henry’s charge that I “can’t walk into City Hall and have anybody’s ear to talk about suggestions or new initiatives.” Mayor Monty expressed his confidence in me by appointing me Mayor Pro Tem to act as Mayor in his absence, and we have worked well together on several important issues.

Here are a few of the most visible and important initiatives I have shepherded through:

I am working closely with the mayor and city staff to develop a wireless downtown network, proposed by the Downtown Advisory Committee. That group is moving forward to incorporate our growing gigabit capable fiber optic network in city planning processes.

I successfully advocated for the replacement of a bridge at the bottom of Eason Drive, used by many residents in that neighborhood to walk to Schnucks and other services.

Both the previous police chief and the current acting chief strongly supported my “Safe Cities” initiatives which should help reduce crime in Carbondale. The extended stay hotel legislation which I initiated is on the next Planning Commission agenda. It is a first step in adopting Safe Cities codes.

I promoted a top-to-bottom management review to make sure that the city administration is as efficient and effective as possible; at the last council meeting the mayor and council instructed the city

manager to include such a review in the FY 2016 budget.

I have advocated in council and in my blog for greater city transparency and communication with the public. Development Services has been responsive to this call, instituting an email list that regularly alerts the public to upcoming zoning and code issues and initiatives.

These are only some of the most visible initiatives I have accomplished during my tenure as a member of City Council. I have worked with the mayor, fellow council members, and city staff to address numerous other less visible items that provide greater information to Council and the public and that move important legislation and planning processes forward.

As I said in a Facebook post earlier today, “This campaign is about letting the voters know our vision for the future of Carbondale and our qualifications for moving Carbondale toward that future. Whoever wins, our government must serve ALL the people of this wonderful city—we ALL must win, though only one candidate can win.”

Personal attacks, smears, and innuendo should be the last thing either myself or the other candidate resorts to. It demeans our political process and diverts the voters from learning how we intend to lead Carbondale.

LINDELL W. STURGISMEMORIAL PUBLICSERVICE AWARD

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS

Established in 1979, the Lindell W. Sturgis Memorial Public Service Award is presented by

the SIU Board of Trustees to an SIU Carbondale employee to recognize public service efforts—contributions to the community, area, state or

nation—based upon activities unrelated to his/her job responsibilities. This prestigious award

includes a cash gift of $750 and a plaque.

Online nomination form available at universityevents.siu.edu/sturgis

For more information, please call 618/453-7419.

Deadline for nominations: Monday, March 30

Please direct nominations to:Vanessa Sneed

Office of University Events and ProtocolAnthony Hall, Mail Code 4304

1265 Lincoln DriveCarbondale, IL 62901

OpiniOnSmear, innuendo in the Mayoral race?Jane AdamsCity Council Member

The 4x800 meter relay may not count when SIU gets to conference, but the runners have used the it to prepare for a different event and broke a longstanding record in the process.

On Jan. 31, a mix-match of women’s distance runners set the school record for the relay.

Seniors Kelley Gallagher, Mobola Rotibi and Allison Gallo, along with freshman Alexandra Martel, broke the record by less than half a second with a time of 9:09.22. The previous record, set in 1998, was 9:09.60.

The 4x800 is no longer an official event in the NCAA, but was once a competitive event in the Missouri Valley Conference and the NCAA.

Track and field coach Connie Price-Smith said although the event is not important for NCAA records, it is always exciting to see history made.

“It’s always nice to break a record,” she said. “It was something we ran before and it hadn’t been broken for a while.”

Distance coach David Beauchem said not running the event frequently makes it hard to find a group that will work well together.

“To break it now, when it’s not a primary relay, is a great accomplishment,” he said. “The team that set the record [previously] set it when it was a conference championship and NCAA event.”

Beauchem said he knew they could run together after their performances on the cross-country team last fall.

Gallo said it was exciting to set the record because the team had only run the

event one other time in last year’s outdoor season.

“We don’t practice anything with batons or relay,” she said. “For an 800-meter event we just focus more on speed, and since it was early in the season, we never trained for it.”

Gallagher, who typically runs the mile and 5k events, said she had not run this distance since high school but relied on her teammates through the event. She said the pace was faster than what she was used to and she tried to stay with the pack as the lead runner.

Beauchem said he focused on secondary events during the second day of the Indiana Relays, held at Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind., including the 4x800.

“We thought we had a chance at the record just based on their personal bests,” he said. “With the history here, there are

no school records that aren’t significant.”Beauchem said the team had run

together in the distance medley, and will all be considered for the distance medley relay at the conference championships.

Rotibi said the success on the relay will translate to success in future events.

“It’s comforting that our distance medley will be good,” she said. “We work together well so we’ll know strengths and weakness going into that event.”

Martel said she had experience with distance relays from high school. During her senior year at Lane Tech High School, her 4x800 meter relay team qualified for nationals.

“My coach loved mid-distance events,” she said. “The 4x800 team was a big part of our team dynamic and I loved running it.”

The team will likely not compete in the 4x800 event again this season.

Sports Thursday, February 19, 2015 12

2015

SCHOOL RECORD AT THEINDIANA RELAY

9:09.22

9:09.601989

It takes a whole village to make change.Bill Norwood became the first black

quarterback at SIU and the first African-American pilot for United Airlines, but he said he had a lot of help getting there.

“We don’t do things alone,” Norwood said. “None of us. And if we don’t have that support system, it becomes more and more difficult and sometimes impossible for some people. I’ve had a good support system.”

Norwood said when he went to SIU from 1955 to 1959, outside the university was segregated. He said he and other black players could not go to restaurants downtown.

He said the football team would get tickets to see movies after games, but black players were treated differently than white players.

“We’d go to the movie and black players had to sit upstairs,” Norwood said. “White players could sit downstairs or upstairs. That’s the last time I went to a movie. I said, ‘Don’t give me any more tickets.’”

SIU journalism professor Bill Recktenwald, a friend of Norwood’s, said he remembers going to Kentucky in that time period and seeing segregation signs on bathrooms and drinking fountains.

“The ‘50s and ‘60s separation of blacks and whites was so intense,” he said.

Recktenwald said it was a big accomplishment to be the quarterback of a football team in the time period.

Norwood’s book, “Cleared For Takeoff: A Pilot’s Story of Challenges and Triumphs,” tells how an assistant coach told him he had such speed and good hands that he should be

a flanker back or a split end.Norwood considered it because he valued his

education, but his backfield coach, Carmen Piccone said, “Bill, you do not know what he’s trying to do, but I do. If you stop being my quarterback, I will take your scholarship.”

Norwood said he threw just 4 passes his senior year of high school. He said the quarterback was used more for catching passes and blocking in the formation used.

Former SIU quarterback Gerry Hart was a senior when Norwood came to SIU. Norwood

said Hart took him aside and showed him how to throw a football correctly, something he practiced nearly every day.

Norwood led the team to a 7-2 record in 1958 and was inducted into the Saluki Hall of Fame in 1993.

“Bill’s imprint has been left here in a number of ways,” interim athletic director Harold Bardo said. “He was an original in terms of being a black quarterback.”

After football, Norwood served six years in the Air Force and had a 31-year career with United Airlines.

“Whenever you’re the first—first of your gender or first of your race—it puts a little bit more pressure on the professional job you perform,” Norwood said. “A lot of people didn’t want any African-American pilots.”

When he retired, his name was painted on the 727 airplane he used to fly. The plane is now in the “Take Flight” exhibit in the Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry.

Recktenwald said the plane was stripped of unnecessary parts and landed at Meigs Field in Chicago. It was then put onto a barge and taken down Lake Michigan to 55th Street. They then rolled it to the museum.

Norwood helped form the Organization of Black Aerospace Professionals in 1976 and was inducted into the Illinois Aviation Hall of Fame in 2007.

Since he retired in 1996, Norwood has visited southern Illinois multiple times. He said it is a lot better for race relations than when he graduated.

Norwood said Black History Month is a time to celebrate historical achievements that once were relegated to the back page. He said it is important, but America should have an awareness year, celebrating all cultures and each group's contributions, instead of Black History Month.

While he has been recognized by a lot of people during Black History Month, Norwood gives credit to the people who helped him get where he is today.

Recktenwald said Norwood is a guy who will remember you after meeting you once.

Bardo said Norwood and his wife Molly are helping SIU students reach milestones by providing scholarships.

For those interested in learning more on Norwood, his book can be found online at barnesandnoble.com or Amazon.com.

Norwood soars past segregation

Relay team uses expired event for future success

Aaron Graff@Aarongraff_DE | Daily Egyptian

Sarah Gardner • daily eGyptian

Participants of the ‘I Can Read’ program gather around Bill Norwood as he autographs copies of his book, “Cleared for Takeoff: A Pilot’s Story of Challenges and Triumphs” March 19 at the African American Museum in University Mall.

Brent Meske@brentmeskeDE | Daily Egyptian

Marat tSablinov • daily eGyptian

hannah White • daily eGyptian

Sports Calendar

SWIMMING AND DIVING » SIU hosts the Missouri Valley Conference

Championships from Wednesday to Saturday at the Edwards J. Shea Natatorium

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL » against Missouri State at 6:05pm Friday

at SIU Arena Faculty Staff Appreciation Game - Free admission for SIU employees! » against Wichita State at 2:05pm Sunday

at SIU Arena Donate Life Game - Register to be an organ donor!

MEN’S BASKETBALL » against Indiana State at 12:05pm

Saturday at Hulman Center in Terre Haute, Ind.

MEN’S TENNIS » against McKendree at 12pm Friday

in Carbondale » against Eastern Illinios at 10am Saturday

in Carbondale

WOMEN’S TENNIS » against SIUE at 5pm Friday in Carbondale » against Eastern Illinois at 3pm Saturday

in Carbondale

BASEBALL » 02/18 road game against Austin Peay

rescheduled to March 11 due to weather » Weekend road series against Eastern

Kentucky moved to LakePoint Sports Complex in Emerson, G.a., due to weather

SOFTBALL » Weekend tournament (Red and Blue Classic)

canceled due to weather