8
'$,/< (*<37,$1 2&72%(5 '$,/<(*<37,$1&20 6,1&( 92/80( ,668( 78(6'$< $IPJS DSFBUFT B TQPPLZ TUBHF Carbondale Community High School concert and chamber choir members perform Friday during their fifth annual Halloween Sing at the Varsity Theater. Carlyn Zimmermann, choir director at CCHS, said the students have contributed to the show and created their own visions through costumes, choreography and song. “The students get to be creative with Halloween and have fun,” Zimmermann said. TIFFANY BLANCHETTE | DAILY EGYPTIAN Election vote. Don’t forget to cast your Day is one week away. 3DUN RIÀFLDOV JLYH WLSV DIWHU WULSV 6WXGHQWV H[SUHVV FRQFHUQ RYHU 3OD\HU·V %DOO VWDWXV After two people were injured in falls at the Garden of the Gods in the past three weeks, ocials spoke about ways hikers can avoid accidents. Lt. Tracy Felty, of the Saline County Sheri’s Oce, said the park averages ve to six falls per year. With a 20-25 minute minimum emergency response time in the remote area, Felty said it’s important hikers plan ahead before they hit the trails. He said proper preparation is key to helping prevent or handle an emergency situation in the wilderness. Many falls happen because people don’t dress appropriately for a hike, Felty said. “Often times I’ll see people out there in ip- ops and sandals, and they’ll be jumping from rock to rock,” Felty said. If a hiker falls into a deep ravine, Felty said it can take 45 minutes to an hour for a repelling team to recover the injured hiker and bring him or her to safety. He said being rescued by a helicopter can be expensive, too, as its starting rate is $14,000. Traveling in a group can be the best way to hike safely, he said. “It’s always good to have a group with you in case there is an emergency,” Felty said. “Whether it’s a fall or something else, you know you are out in the middle of a wilderness area, and there are animals out there.” Rattlesnakes and Copperheads are the two main threats that Felty said could create problems for hikers. Amanda Patrick, public aairs ocer for the U.S. Forest Service, said plants and temperature can pose a constant threat to unaware hikers much like animals can. She said visitors should also be wary of the season before they can properly plan a hike. Patrick said summertime presents many risks to hikers. “With potential heat stroke and being outside, it’s important to make sure folks stay hydrated,” she said. “It’s also important to wear sunscreen and bug repellant because there are lots of dierent animals and insects and even plants like poison ivy out there.” Felty said proper provisions should also be taken to ensure a safe departure and return, and a GPS is one of the best items to bring along. He said the device can help a hiker give the exact location of an accident to emergency response locations. However, it’s not always the best idea to rely on a cellphone GPS because reception can be limited in an area as big as the Garden of the Gods, Felty said. Patrick said having solid information on Shawnee National Forest can give hikers the best advantage, so it’s always a good idea to call the Oce of the Shawnee National Forest Information Desk to receive information about a park at 1-800-MY-WOODS. addeus Portz, treasurer of the climbing club, said he thinks people expect situations to be safer than they are, which in turn makes them underprepared. ere’s almost this sense that everything around us is safer than it is because we live in a controlled environment with handrails everywhere, you know, people get this idea that they’re safe,” Portez said. Austin Flynn can be reached at a[email protected] or 536-3311 ext. 257. $867,1 )/<11 'DLO\ (J\SWLDQ Although some students are worried that a university fraternity’s suspension may result in the cancellation of one of its major events, a member from the group said the organization does more than host the Player’s Ball. e Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity has hosted the Player’s Ball for the past 22 years, and Andy Morgan, Greek life coordinator, said the fraternity is not allowed to host campus events as part of its suspension. Ryan Reed, a senior Kappa Alpha Psi member from Homewood studying speech communication, said he encourages students and faculty to know the fraternity is much more than the event, though he appreciates students’ love for it. e Player’s Ball was held last year at the end of e Kappa Karnival, a week-long event that drew about 2,000 college students from SIUC and across the country. Reed said the group hosts students, their families and alumni to enjoy free food, games and fun during the carnival. e organization also hosts a free barbecue, an informational meeting on the fraternity, a comedy show and a car show during the week. “We do so much in the community that we don’t always document like we should, and that’s our fault,” Reed said. He said the group has put in several volunteer hours at local organizations and events along with hosting its own. Besides the Player’s Ball, the group hosts the Can I Live rally every March, and it cohosts a talent show for area youth in November. Although the fraternity has been suspended, it will still take part in the third annual Carbondale Youth Showcase Nov. 14. During the showcase, Carbondale students exhibit their talents in the Student Center ballrooms, and a school supply drive is held for Carbondale schools and poverty-stricken schools in Bangladesh and South America. Kappa Alpha Psi pioneered the showcase in 2010 and is able to get involved this year by co-sponsoring it with the Speaking and Teaching Registered Student Organization. Reed said he thinks what hurt the most about the fraternity’s suspension was that the university community’s main concern was the Player’s Ball. e truth of the matter is that we didn’t do what we were supposed to do, and we have to suer the consequences,” he said. “No one is concerned with the fact that this fraternity that has been around for 62 years will not be at SIU for a while.” Katia Salomon, a senior from Chicago studying psychology, said she has attended the event every year since she’s been at the university and expects the community to suer without it because of the revenue it generates. Salomon said she thinks many people view the Player’s Ball as a negative event because a lot of people think of it as a time for only partying, but there are other community events such as Polar Bear that are similar but receive more university support. Please see FRATERNITY | 2 7$, &2; 'DLO\ (J\SWLDQ

Daily Egyptian

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Daily Egyptian October 30, 2012

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Page 1: Daily Egyptian

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Carbondale Community High School concert and chamber choir members perform Friday during their fifth annual Halloween Sing at the Varsity Theater. Carlyn Zimmermann, choir director at CCHS, said the students have contributed to the show and created their own visions through costumes, choreography and song. “The students get to be creative with Halloween and have fun,” Zimmermann said.

TIFFANY BLANCHETTE | DAILY EGYPTIAN

Election

vote.

Don’t forgetto cast

your

Day isone week

away.

3DUN�RIÀFLDOV�JLYH�WLSV�DIWHU�WULSV6WXGHQWV�H[SUHVV�FRQFHUQ�RYHU�3OD\HU·V�%DOO�VWDWXV

After two people were injured in falls at the Garden of the Gods in the past three weeks, o!cials spoke about ways hikers can avoid accidents.

Lt. Tracy Felty, of the Saline County Sheri"’s O!ce, said the park averages #ve to six falls per year. With a 20-25 minute minimum emergency response time in the remote area, Felty said it’s important hikers plan ahead before they hit the trails. He said proper preparation is key to helping prevent or handle an emergency situation in the wilderness.

Many falls happen because people don’t dress appropriately for a hike, Felty said.

“Often times I’ll see people out there in $ip-$ops and sandals, and they’ll be jumping from rock to rock,” Felty said.

If a hiker falls into a deep ravine, Felty said it can take 45 minutes to an hour for a repelling team to recover the injured hiker and bring him or her to safety. He said being rescued by a helicopter can be expensive, too, as its starting rate is $14,000.

Traveling in a group can be the best way to hike safely, he said.

“It’s always good to have a group with you in case there is an emergency,” Felty said. “Whether it’s a fall or something else, you know you are out in the middle of a wilderness area, and there are animals out there.”

Rattlesnakes and Copperheads are the two main threats that Felty said could create problems for hikers.

Amanda Patrick, public a"airs o!cer for the U.S. Forest Service, said plants and temperature can pose a constant threat to unaware hikers

much like animals can. She said visitors should also be wary of the season before they can properly plan a hike.

Patrick said summertime presents many risks to hikers.

“With potential heat stroke and being outside, it’s important to make sure folks stay hydrated,” she said. “It’s also important to wear sunscreen and bug repellant because there are lots of di"erent animals and insects and even plants like poison ivy out there.”

Felty said proper provisions should also be taken to ensure a safe departure and return, and a GPS is one of the best items to bring along. He said the device can help a hiker give the exact location of an accident to emergency response locations.

However, it’s not always the best idea to rely on a cellphone GPS because reception can be limited in an area as big as the Garden of the Gods, Felty said.

Patrick said having solid information on Shawnee National Forest can give hikers the best advantage, so it’s always a good idea to call the O!ce of the Shawnee National Forest Information Desk to receive information about a park at 1-800-MY-WOODS.

%addeus Portz, treasurer of the climbing club, said he thinks people expect situations to be safer than they are, which in turn makes them underprepared.

“%ere’s almost this sense that everything around us is safer than it is because we live in a controlled environment with handrails everywhere, you know, people get this idea that they’re safe,” Portez said.

Austin Flynn can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 257.

$867,1�)/<11'DLO\�(J\SWLDQ�

Although some students are worried that a university fraternity’s suspension may result in the cancellation of one of its major events, a member from the group said the organization does more than host the Player’s Ball.

%e Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity has hosted the Player’s Ball for the past 22 years, and Andy Morgan, Greek life coordinator, said the fraternity is not allowed to host campus events as part of its suspension. Ryan Reed, a senior Kappa Alpha Psi member from Homewood studying speech communication, said he encourages students and faculty to know the fraternity is much more than the event, though he appreciates students’ love for it.

%e Player’s Ball was held last year at the end of %e Kappa Karnival, a week-long event that drew about 2,000 college students from SIUC and across the country. Reed said the group hosts students, their families and alumni to enjoy free food, games and fun during the carnival. %e organization also hosts a free barbecue, an informational meeting on the fraternity, a comedy show and a car show during the week.

“We do so much in the community that we don’t always document like we should, and that’s our fault,” Reed said.

He said the group has put in several volunteer hours at local organizations and events along with hosting its own. Besides the Player’s Ball, the group hosts the Can I Live rally every March, and it cohosts a talent show

for area youth in November.Although the fraternity has been suspended,

it will still take part in the third annual Carbondale Youth Showcase Nov. 14. During the showcase, Carbondale students exhibit their talents in the Student Center ballrooms, and a school supply drive is held for Carbondale schools and poverty-stricken schools in Bangladesh and South America. Kappa Alpha Psi pioneered the showcase in 2010 and is able to get involved this year by co-sponsoring it with the Speaking and Teaching Registered Student Organization.

Reed said he thinks what hurt the most about the fraternity’s suspension was that the university community’s main concern was the Player’s Ball.

“%e truth of the matter is that we didn’t do what we were supposed to do, and we have to su"er the consequences,” he said. “No one is concerned with the fact that this fraternity that has been around for 62 years will not be at SIU for a while.”

Katia Salomon, a senior from Chicago studying psychology, said she has attended the event every year since she’s been at the university and expects the community to su"er without it because of the revenue it generates.

Salomon said she thinks many people view the Player’s Ball as a negative event because a lot of people think of it as a time for only partying, but there are other community events such as Polar Bear that are similar but receive more university support.

Please see FRATERNITY | 2

7$,�&2;'DLO\�(J\SWLDQ�

Page 2: Daily Egyptian

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About Us

!e D"#$% E&%'(#") is published by the students of Southern Illinois University Carbondale 50 weeks per year, with an average daily circulation of 15,000. Fall and spring semester editions run Monday through Friday. Summer editions run Tuesday through !ursday. All intersession editions will run on Wednesdays. Free copies are distributed in the Carbondale and Carterville communities. !e D"#$% E&%'(#") online publication can be found at www.dailyegyptian.com.

Publishing Information

!e D"#$% E&%'(#") is published by the students of Southern Illinois University Carbondale and functions as a laboratory for the department of journalism in exchange for the room and utilities in the Communications Building. !e D"#$% E&%'(#") is a non-pro*t organization that survives solely o+ of its advertising revenue. !e D"#$% E&%'(#") receives no student fees or university funding. O,ces are in the Communications Building, Room 1259, at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, Ill., 62901. Bill Freivogel, *scal o,cer.

Copyright Information

© 2012 D"#$% E&%'(#"). All rights reserved. All content is property of the D"#$% E&%'(#") and may not be reproduced or transmitted without consent. !e D"#$% E&%'(#") is a member of the Illinois College Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press and College Media Advisers Inc. and the College Business and Advertising Managers Inc.

Mission Statement

!e D"#$% E&%'(#"), the student-run newspaper of Southern Illinois University Carbondale, is committed to being a trusted source of news; information, commentary and public discourse, while helping readers understand the issues a+ecting their lives.

Reaching Us Phone: (618) 536-3311

Fax: (618) 453-3248Email: [email protected]

Editor-in-Chief:Tara Kulash ........................ ext. 252Managing Editor:Lauraann Wood ............... ext. 252Campus Editor:Lauren Duncan .................. ext. 255Sports Editor:Sarah Schneider ................. ext. 256Pulse Editor: Brendan Smith ................... ext. 273Opinion Editor:Brendan Smith ................... ext. 273Photo Editor:Chris Zoeller ...................... ext. 251Web Desk: Benjamin Bayli! ................ ext. 257Advertising Manager: Lisa Cole ............................. ext. 237Business O!ce:Chris Dorris ....................... ext. 223Ad Production Manager:Matt Weidenbenner ........ ext. 244Business & Ad Director:Jerry Bush ........................... ext. 229Faculty Managing Editor:Eric Fidler .......................... ext. 247Printshop Superintendent:Blake Mulholland ............. ext. 241

The Weather Channel® 5-day weather forecast for CarbondaleWednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

58°35°

0% chance of precipitation

30% chance of precipitation

0% chance of precipitation

0% chance of precipitation

58°38°

59°35°

60°41°

58°34°

MostlySunny

Few Showers

Today

0% chance of precipitation

PartlyCloudy

Sunny PartlyCloudy

Polar Bear is an event Pinch Penny Pub puts on where customers order drinks at reduced prices starting in the morning. Before the January event, SIU o,cials warn students and families via email and letters about the dangers of day-drinking, and Department of Public Safety employees are available at tents around the city to help anyone who needs assistance.

Salomon said the university has not o+ered assistance for the Player’s Ball, though.

“Many people have a negative connotation when it comes to Player’s Ball, but people also have that same negative connotation about Polar Bear, but it is still allowed,” Salomon said.

Kwalee Kemp, coordinator of the Black A+airs Council, said the revenue the Player’s Ball brings to Carbondale is crucial.

“!ere are so many people who attend this event, which in turn allows great business for restaurants, hotels and the mall,” Kemp said. “!e businesses aren’t the only people who take advantage of the guests.”

At a Black A+airs Council meeting !ursday, many students said they felt unwelcomed by the university. Kemp

cited the university’s assistance during Polar Bear and not the Player’s Ball as an example.

“... If this is an event the university thinks is dangerous and causes violence, then why do they sponsor it and why doesn’t the chancellor send emails of concern to students before this event?” Kemp said.

She said she thinks people who don’t attend the Player’s Ball have a negative perception of what goes on during the event, but she wants the university and the community to understand it o+ers more than just parties. Kemp said there would be a better perception of Player’s Ball if people understood what the event is all about.

Sean Cobbs, an SIU alumnus and Player’s Ball disk jockey for several years, said he doesn’t think the event’s absence will cause the university or community to su+er, but it will instead cause him, other DJs and party promoters to miss out on the revenue the events generate.

“I personally think there is a way to still have the event at locations outside of the university, and students will more than likely still attend,” Cobbs said.

Tai Cox can be reached at [email protected] 536-3311 ext. 268.

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Marsha Sanders of Paducah, Ky., struggles to catch her breath after participating in the fourth annual Army ROTC 5k-10K Run and Walk Saturday at Kesnar Hall. Donations raised from the event will go to the Illinois Veterans Home in Anna, but it wasn’t just about the donations for Sanders; it was for a personal cause. Sanders said she was running in memory of her family’s military history and to honor her father, who served in the Army. She said her father-in-law Harold Sanders, who served in the U.S. Navy, had his ashes buried on the same day as the run. “It has been a very emotional day,” she said. “Military is very deep in my family.”

NICOLE HESTER | DAILY EGYPTIAN

FRATERNITYCONTINUED FROM 1

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A scholarship o+ered to *rst-generation students will provide them more than just funding.

!e First Scholars is a Suder Foundation program out of Plano, Texas that o+ers a $5,000 scholarship to incoming freshman at *ve universities in the country. It requires recipients to participate in campus volunteer and leader training as well as a special section of the University College 101 class. !e Suder family met with the First Scholars UCOL 101 group and SIU faculty members so the foundation will continue to grant the university the scholarship after the *ve-year agreement ends in 2014, said Christina Gilroy, First Scholars program coordinator, in an email.

First Scholars is a *ve-year, $1 million program that is disbursed among SIUC, University of Kentucky, University of Alabama, University of Memphis and Washington State University. SIUC was chosen for the scholarship in 2010 and began to o+er it in fall 2011, according to the university’s website.

In a 2010 article on the university’s website, Chancellor Rita Cheng said students’ *rst year of college is essential to their success.

“We provide support systems and additional tools to help our *rst-year students make a successful transition to the university because success that *rst year is key to students reaching their educational goals,” Cheng said in the article. “But *rst-generation students

can face additional challenges, and this program will enhance our e+orts at helping them succeed throughout their careers here.”

!e scholarship is o+ered to selected *rst-time freshmen who are also *rst-generation college students, which means neither parent has more than two years of education beyond high school and did not earn a post-secondary degree. !e students must also be enrolled at the university full-time, according to the SIU First Scholars website.

Twenty students are selected for the scholarship and must agree to attend a new student orientation, enroll in the University College 101 class that is designated for First Scholar students during the fall semester and participate in service projects, campus activities and workshops. !ey must also attend meetings with the program coordinator, participate in the peer mentor program, maintain a 2.5 grade point average and transition to a leadership role as an upperclassman, according to the program’s website.

!e students are chosen based on the level of support they need, said Diane Schorr, executive director of the Suder foundation.

“Basically, we’re not necessarily looking for honor students but instead students who fall somewhere in the middle,” Schorr said.

Gilroy said this is the second year SIUC has had the scholarship.

!e scholarship is divided between the fall and spring semesters for four years, according to the website, and applications are being accepted for the 2013-2014 *scal year.

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Page 3: Daily Egyptian

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From new tra!c light bulbs to turning o" computers, Carbondale has become more energy-friendly over the past year.

#e city received the Act on Energy Most Progressive City Award from the Ameren Corporation Oct. 24, which goes to cities that have shown the most progress to become energy e!cient, said Leigh Morris, Ameren spokesperson. Businesses in the city cut about 1.3 million kilowatt hours of energy consumption in one year, primarily through improved e!ciency in lighting, according to a press release. #e amount of energy saved was a 6 percent increase from the previous year, which was the highest change in the region.

Morris said the company gives out six awards each year within the state. He said he thinks the award encourages towns to become more energy e!cient.

Some city leaders said they are pleased with the recognition.

“It encourages people in town that a company like Ameren is noticing that we are making an e"ort to cut back (on energy),” Mayor Joel Fritzler said.

Fritzler said he tries to promote energy e!ciency while at work.

“You can ask most employees at City Hall, and they’ll tell you I’m the energy fuehrer,” he said.

Fritzler said he tells his co-workers to turn o" computers when not in use and to close the windows in the summer for lower air conditioning costs.

City Councilman Don Monty said the city has made progress to use energy more e"ectively.

“We have some very large energy users, and they substantially reduced their energy use, and that would have

an impact on the overall community,” he said.

Monty said the city has become more energy e!cient through changes such as the new LED bulbs in tra!c lights and adjustments to City Hall’s air conditioning system.

“It’s something the whole community should be proud of,” he said. “I personally don’t think it’s something where just the city should take credit.”

Illinois ranks fourth in the nation in total net electricity generation, and Monty said this is the $rst time Carbondale has received the award.

While the award went to the city, the SIU community has worked to make itself more energy efficient as well.

“We certainly meet energy code when it comes to new work,” said Justin Harrell, an electrical engineer at the SIU Physical Plant.

Harrell said some campus areas are not as energy e!cient as others because they have older buildings. He said energy e!ciency was not a concern when the buildings were constructed.

#e campus’ energy conservation has improved with LED lighting installment and ensuring new buildings, Harrell said, such as how the new Student Services building will use methods to consume less energy.

Harrell said the best way students and faculty can conserve energy is to turn o" lights when they are not needed. He said faculty can also make sure computers are turned o" or in stand-by mode when not in use, and students should try to minimize space heater use in university housing.

Matt Daray can be reached at [email protected] or

536-3311 ext. 254.

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Pastor Phil Nelson, of Lakeland Baptist Church in Carbondale, delivers a sermon to students passing by Morris Library while Ian Lohnes of Carbondale distributes tracts. Nelson comes to campus three times a week to share his message with the student body. “During the college years, this is where students make the most significant decisions of their life, so I want to be here when they’re making those decisions,” he said. “If there are people here that God is calling to Himself that they’ll have an opportunity to engage us and find the answers they’re looking for.

LAURA ROBERTS | DAILY EGYPTIAN

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . — An unmanned Dragon freighter carrying a stash of precious medical samples from the International Space Station parachuted into the Paci$c Ocean on Sunday, completing the $rst o!cial shipment under a billion-dollar contract with NASA.

#e California-based SpaceX company successfully guided the Dragon down from orbit to a splashdown a few hundred miles o" the Baja California coast.

“#is historic mission signi$es the

restoration of America’s ability to deliver and return critical space station cargo,” Elon Musk, the billionaire founder and head of SpaceX, said in a statement.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden praised the “American ingenuity” that made the endeavor possible.

#e supply ship brought back nearly 2,000 pounds of science experiments and old station equipment. #e Dragon is the only delivery ship capable of returning items, now that NASA’s shuttles are retired to museums. Atlantis made the last shuttle haul to and from the station in July 2011.

It's the second Dragon to return

from the orbiting lab; the $rst mission in May was a %ight demo. #is %ight is the $rst of 12 deliveries under a $1.6 billion contract with NASA.

#e medical samples will be removed as quickly as possible, and turned over to NASA within 48 hours of splashdown, according to SpaceX. Everything else will wait for unloading in McGregor.

SpaceX is working to transform its Dragon cargo craft into vessels that American astronauts could %y in another four or $ve years. Until SpaceX or another U.S. company is able to provide rides, NASA astronauts must rely on Russian rockets to get to and from the space station.

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CHICAGO — With two months left in 2012, Chicago has surpassed the number of homicides it had for all of last year.

!e 436th homicide this year came Monday with the shooting of 33-year-old Carlos Alexander

in South Chicago. It was a grim milestone city o"cials wanted to avoid but knew was coming.

Last year, Chicago recorded 435 homicides. It tied that number over the weekend when six people were fatally shot.

Chicago’s homicide rate has made national headlines for much of the

year, starting in the spring when police reported the number of homicides was about 60 percent higher than for the same period last year.

Since then, the rate has slowed down considerably as police focus much of their attention on street gangs linked to most of the shooting deaths.

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CHICAGO — When was the last time you were alone and unwired? Really, truly by yourself. Just you and your thoughts — no cellphone, no tablet, no laptop.

Many of us crave that kind of solitude, though in an increasingly wired world, it’s a rare commodity.

We check texts and emails and update our online status at any hour — when we’re lying in bed or sitting at stop lights or on trains. Sometimes, we even do so when we’re on the toilet.

We feel obligated, yes. But we’re also fascinated with connectedness, constantly tinkering and checking in — an obsession that’s starting to get pushback from a small but growing legion of tech users who are feeling the need to unplug and get away.

“What might have felt like an obligation at #rst has become an addiction. It’s almost as if we don’t know how to be alone, or we are afraid of what we’ll #nd when we are alone with ourselves,” said Camille Preston, a tech and communication consultant based in Cambridge, Mass.

“It’s easier to keep doing, than it is to be in stillness,” she said.

One could argue that, in this economy, it’s wise to be constantly wired — to stay on top of things, to please the boss. Preston knows people who get up in the middle of

the night to see if their boss has sent them an email.

But she and others also see more hints of limit-setting going on, this movement of solitude-seekers with roots in the technology industry, ironically enough.

“When I think about truly disconnecting, I look to my truly techy friends,” said Cathy Davidson, a Duke University professor who co-directs the school’s PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge.

!ose friends, she said, take long, unwired vacations and set “away messages” telling people to write back after they return. “And they stick to it,” Davidson said, wishing she could do the same.

“!ey’ve come up with a socially acceptable convention for their own absence from the world of technology and everybody

recognizes it,” she said.One organization called Reboot

has started the Sabbath Manifesto, a call to unplug one day a week to #nd solitude — or to simply take a day of rest with family and friends.

Bigger corporations, some outside the tech industry, are starting to catch on to this type of limit-setting.

To encourage work-life balance, Volkswagen shuts o$ mobile email in Germany 30 minutes after employees’ shifts end and turns it back on 30 minutes before their next shift starts.

Google, Nike and the Hu"ngton Post, among others, provide space for employees to take naps, or to meditate. !e idea is that employees who take time to themselves to reenergize will be more productive.

John Cacioppo, a University of Chicago psychologist, thinks there might just be something to that.

¶¶W hat might have felt like an obligation at first has become an addiction. It’s almost as if we don’t know

how to be alone, or we are afraid of what we’ll find when we are alone with ourselves. It’s easier to keep doing, than it is to be in stillness.

— Camille Prestontech and communication consultant based in Cambridge, Mass.

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1DWLRQ�VWUXJJOLQJ�\HW�KRSHIXOCHICAGO — On the eve

of the 2012 elections, !e Associated Press interviewed dozens of Americans to try to gauge the economic mood of the nation. People were asked about jobs, housing, gas prices, retirement and other issues. Among them were a Chicago couple: Adrienne Cragnotti, 46, and Mike Eiler, 41. She’s a self-employed photographer; he’s an unemployed former copy editor.

Despite career setbacks and a declining living standard, Cragnotti and Eiler remain optimistic.

Job market frustrations are the one gray cloud hanging over Cragnotti and Eiler’s adventuresome life together.

!e couple dealt with Eiler’s layo$ from a Colorado Springs newspaper last December by indulging in diversions they lacked time for when they were working.

!ey #xed up and sold their century-old house in Colorado, went camping around the West in a vintage travel trailer and visited friends.

!en in July, they moved to Chicago, a city they’d always wanted to live in. Ditching most belongings, they rented a 350-square-foot studio apartment in the city’s upscale Lincoln Park neighborhood and moved in with their two cats.

But the tightening squeeze of long-term unemployment threatens their future, as it does for many other Americans. More than 5 million people have been out of work for six months or more, up from 2.7 million when President Barack Obama took o"ce.

Eiler, who worked as a copy editor, has been job-hunting unsuccessfully for nearly a year. He has found few suitable job openings in journalism or related #elds — and heavier competition than he expected.

Cragnotti brings home only limited pay from her photography and modest rental income from a house she owns in Los Angeles. Demand for the glamour photography she specializes in has dropped. So she is branching out to di$erent kinds of photography in search of more income.

After Eiler’s unemployment checks stop coming in December, they’ll need to dip into savings to get by.

!is could prompt more cutbacks to their lifestyle. Eiler remains optimistic, but he #gures their standard of living “will have to be worse for a little while before it gets better.”

“As bad as it might seem, the self-pity of not having a job, we’re hardly eating out of a dumpster,” he says. “We’re pretty fortunate.” But, he adds: “It’s more di"cult than I thought it would be to #nd a new job.

!e unemployment rate fell to 7.8 percent in September, the #rst time it has dipped below 8 percent in 43 months. And that’s where it is forecast to be on Election Day, just four days after the government releases the October jobs report.

Cragnotti’s glad the U.S. economy and job outlook seem to be slowly picking up. But she’s eager to see it translate to more than just numbers in the news.

“Our personal economy is not that great,” she says.

$VVRFLDWHG�3UHVV

Page 5: Daily Egyptian

When Mayor Bobby J. Hopewell talks about the importance of manufacturing to this friendly Michigan town with a name that lends itself to song, he doesn’t reel o! the usual list of heavy industries typically associated with the word “factory.”

He speaks of Kalsec, the Kalamazoo Spice Extraction Company founded in 1958 that produces and markets natural herbs and spices for food manufacturers.

He mentions Fabri-Kal, a 62-year-old packaging company that describes itself as “the seventh-largest plastic thermoformer in North America.”

"ink of products in drug stores encased in heavy plastic. And he doesn’t leave out the pharmaceutical industry, long vital to his city’s economy.

Yes, we still make a lot of stu! in the United States of America, and one

of the good things about this election is that it is likely to be decided in the nation’s industrial heartland — in Ohio’s towns and cities above all, but also in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

President Obama almost certainly needs these states to win reelection. If he does, manufacturing is destined for a larger role in the American economic conversation.

Many promises have been made this year to the people and the communities whose ability to thrive has long depended upon manufacturing.

"e campaign’s thrust should move them to the heart of our e!orts to seek a path up from the #nancial catastrophe that engulfed the country in 2008.

For two decades now, we have acted as if nearly all of us are destined to work in the tech industry or health care — or to survive on money that trickles our way courtesy of the world of #nance. But while Hopewell is

proud of the part played in his city by universities and those engaged in work involving what he calls “intellectual property,” he adds: “We are major makers in the region.”

When Hopewell is asked if he used the term “makers” in the way Paul Ryan does in drawing a distinction between “makers” and “takers” — between those who produce and those who get government aid — this Democrat laughs heartily. No, he says, his views have little in common with Ryan’s. "e mayor is talking about manufacturing, pure and simple.

Leaders of traditional factory towns are by no means interested in a stagnant world in which members of each generation follows their parents into the same old factory job.

On the contrary, this city is proud of “"e Kalamazoo Promise,” the remarkable initiative of anonymous local donors who have established a fund that pays for a college education for every graduate of the city’s schools.

In Parma, Ohio, the industrial

suburb of Cleveland where both Bruce Springsteen and Bill Clinton recently campaigned on Obama’s behalf, Mayor Tim DeGeeter said the top priority of the city’s blue-collar workers is a college education for their children.

Parma and places like it, he adds, also want the sort of economic development that creates higher-end jobs so graduates can stay in the area, “and not have to move to Phoenix or Charlotte.”

What both mayors are saying (there are many like them) is that they want the market system to work for their communities, but they do not want to leave their citizens utterly at the mercy of decisions made by economic actors far away, or of economic forces that no one controls.

"is is why rescue the auto industry’s rescue has been such a de#ning campaign issue in the Midwest.

In Parma, DeGeeter notes that the auto revival means that GM recently made a $20 million investment in its

stamping plant in the city. “"at helps me sleep at night,” he said.

Hopewell says that even though the auto industry is not as important to Kalamazoo as it is in the Detroit area, “you can’t be a Michigander and not understand the importance of the auto industry, and not understand what it has done for our state.”

"e Republican sweep in Michigan in 2010 suggested it might be open to the GOP’s presidential candidate this year. But so far, it has remained anchored in Obama’s camp.

More broadly, white voters without college educations are voting for Obama at nearly twice the rate in the Midwest as in the South.

Obama is drawing 41 percent of their votes in the Midwest, according to a recent Washington Post/ABC News Poll, compared with only 24 percent in the South.

If Obama prevails, “makers” of a sort quite di!erent from the ones in Ryan’s speeches will have played a central role.

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(GLWRULDO�3ROLF\23,1,21 Our 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$%&' E(')*%$+.

Ã

(GLWRULDO�%RDUGTara Kulash

Editor-in-ChiefLauraann Wood

Managing EditorLauren DuncanCampus Editor

Sarah SchneiderSports Editor

Brendan SmithPulse Editor

Chris ZoellerPhoto Editor

Brendan SmithOpinion Editor

Ashley ZborekOnline Editor

EDITORIAL CARTOON

THEIR WORD

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Page 6: Daily Egyptian

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Page 7: Daily Egyptian

Aries — Today is a 6 — Boost morale and get the job done for a profit. Let yourself be talked into an outing with special friends. Let your partner do the talking, and empower the group to proceed.

Taurus — Today is an 8 — Take on more work to pay off a debt. You’re in the spotlight, so enjoy it. Makes sure you have what you need, even if you have to ask for help. Return a favor.

Gemini — Today is a 5 — Use this opportunity to let go of the old and build anew. Consolidate your position. A partner has a pleasant surprise. Document your findings. You’re lucky now.

Cancer — Today is a 7 — You have the power, if you choose to use it. Improve your technology with a small investment and plenty of outside-the-box thinking. Plan a trip with your partner.

Leo — Today is a 7 — Your leadership skills improve. You are at your most convincing, but also allow yourself to be persuaded to a new point of view. Make an interesting discovery about love.

Virgo — Today is a 7 — The call of the wild is ringing. Respond passionately. Work with a member of your household to gain clarity. Determination produces results, possibly lucrative.

Libra — Today is a 5 — You get to have it your way, but you’re attracting attention. Too much focus on detail may create additional work. Get creative while keeping the big picture in mind.

Scorpio — Today is a 7 — Discover something of value that you or someone else has hidden. Share the winnings. Getting along with others is extremely helpful now. Follow your intuition.

Sagittarius — Today is a 6 — Choose your challenge, and then try all different angles. Don’t get so busy that you forget to pay attention to friends. They offer good advice.

Capricorn — Today is an 8 — Romance fills the air. Resistance is futile. The whole thing helps you gain self-confidence. Get creative with color, line and expression, and share how you feel.

Aquarius — Today is an 8 — Love finds a way. There are so many friends you want to see. Turn objections to agreement through gentle persuasion. Your fame travels. Romance a competitor.

Pisces — Today is a 7 — Make sure you know what’s required. Making a good impression with compelling selling points works. Accept wise financial advice. Power your way through tasks.

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THE Daily Commuter Puzzle by Jacqueline E. Mathews

FOR RELEASE JUNE 21, 2011

ACROSS1 Lions’ dens6 Empty spaces

10 Disorderly state14 Tiny map in a

larger map15 Unlock16 Member of an

old Montrealbaseball team

17 Back tooth18 __ out; allot19 Gang’s territory20 Unilateral22 Flower variety24 Aroma25 Helter-__;

haphazardly26 Expresses

one’s views29 __ flush; best

poker hand30 Wynken,

Blynken and __31 Capital of

South Korea33 Written slander37 Fishes that

resemblesnakes

39 Evans andRobertson

41 Relinquish42 Water vapor44 Adjust again46 Grow old47 Naming __;

accusing49 Walk unsteadily51 __ spirit; soul

mate54 Grow dim55 Came together56 Individually

crafted60 Bambi, for one61 Botch63 Sane64 Killer whale65 Lounge about66 Miscalculated67 “__ on it!”;

“Hurry up!”68 Pair of oxen69 Slender & frail

DOWN1 Star’s car

2 Shortly3 __ of Wight4 Motive5 Long steps6 Jim Nabors’ TV

role7 Ridiculed8 Gerbil or

greyhound9 Underhanded

10 Made of steel,copper, tin, etc.

11 Rejoice12 Wild activity13 Up to now21 Gave medicine

to23 Passion25 Shoe bottoms26 Dollar bills27 Robert Frost or

Joyce Kilmer28 Not working29 Regulations32 Rowed34 Pearl necklace

piece35 Rim36 Malicious look

38 Golfing hazard40 Jetta or Sonata43 Female horse45 Little child48 Flying, crop-

destroying bug50 Reserved;

modest51 Praise

52 Still; lifeless53 Nephew’s

sister54 Fairy tale56 Wrestler Hogan57 Farmland unit58 Passed away59 Small whirlpool62 British restroom

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

(c) 2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

(Answers tomorrow)ROBOT FORCE SALMON FRIGHTYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: Everyone at the clock factory needed —TIME OFF

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.

UFMOR

LARRU

WROSDY

FUREES

©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

Find

us

on F

aceb

ook

http

://ww

w.fa

cebo

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Print your answer here:(Answers tomorrow)

ROBOT FORCE SALMON FRIGHTYesterday’s Jumbles:Answer: Everyone at the clock factory needed —

TIME OFF

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.

UFMOR

LARRU

WROSDY

FUREES

©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

Find

us

on F

aceb

ook

http

://ww

w.fa

cebo

ok.c

om/ju

mbl

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Print your answer here:

(Answers tomorrow)ROBOT FORCE SALMON FRIGHTYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: Everyone at the clock factory needed —TIME OFF

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.

UFMOR

LARRU

WROSDY

FUREES

©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

Find

us

on F

aceb

ook

http

://ww

w.fa

cebo

ok.c

om/ju

mbl

e

Print your answer here:(Answers tomorrow)

ROBOT FORCE SALMON FRIGHTYesterday’s Jumbles:Answer: Everyone at the clock factory needed —

TIME OFF

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.

UFMOR

LARRU

WROSDY

FUREES

©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

Find

us

on F

aceb

ook

http

://ww

w.fa

cebo

ok.c

om/ju

mbl

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Print your answer here:

SOLUTION TO MONDAY’S PUZZLE

Complete the gridso each row, column and 3-by-3 box(in bold borders)contains everydigit, 1 to 9. For strategies onhow to solveSudoku, visitwww.sudoku.org.uk

© 2012 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Media Services. All rights reserved.

10/30/12

Level: 1 2 3 4

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Page 8: Daily Egyptian

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DAILY EGYPTIAN

Ray Page, right, and Bufford Stout, of Marion, cross the finish line Sunday at the Grand Avenue Pumpkin Run. The two mile run/walk stretched down Grand Avenue and ended with festivities at the Carbondale Middle School. The run/walk was a community event that benefited Green Earth Inc., a not-for-profit organization that helps acquire, preserve and provide public access to natural areas in and around Carbondale as well as ACTIVE, an organization that informs the public of fitness related activities nationwide.

ALEXA ROGALS | DAILY EGYPTIAN

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6:,00,1*

!e men’s and women’s swimming team did not win any of the 32 events from a four-team meet during the weekend, but the team’s coach said he found plenty of positives at the Missouri Quad invitational.

Coach Rick Walker said he was not displeased with the e"ort against University of Kentucky’s and University of Missouri’s men’s and women’s teams as well as University of Arkansas’ women-only squad, which are some of the nation’s strongest programs.

“We get asked to do events like that on a yearly basis by programs that are in the top 25 because we don’t back down from anybody,” he said.

Missouri’s women’s team is ranked 18th in the nation while the Arkansas women were ranked as high as 20th in previous polls.

Junior Pamela Benitez continued her successful season when she took second place in the women’s 1,000-yard freestyle with a time of 10 minutes, 6.13 seconds. She also placed third in the 200- and 500-yard freestyle events.

Benitez teamed up with sophomore Holly Johnson, junior Luisa Silveira, and junior Rachael Barry to take #fth in the women’s 400-yard freestyle relay.

Benitez, who took part in all four of the women’s top-#ve #nishes, called the competition challenging, especially after the four-hour drive to Missouri’s campus in Columbia.

“It was a really good meet for me because I didn’t look for places; I looked for times,” she said. “I improved from the Evansville meet.”

Freshman Till Pallmann anchored the men’s team, which collectively #nished in the top #ve of 11 competitions. He #nished second in the 200-yard freestyle, just four tenths of a second behind Missouri’s Eegan Groome.

Pallmann also took second in the 500-yard freestyle at 4:35.01. He was the only swimmer to #nish higher than third in individual men’s competition.

!e relay team composed of Pallmann, junior Juan Arbelaez, freshman Steve Andrade and junior Oleg Rabota #nished second out of 10 teams in the 400-yard freestyle at 3:06.23.

Rabota, who #nished sixth in the 100-yard backstroke and third in the 200-yard competition, said he is encouraged by his results despite his belief that he should have done better.

“We can’t always win,” he said. “It’s showing us what we have to do.”

!e competition consisted of some of the toughest teams the Salukis could face all season. Walker said he is proud of his team’s resolve against powerful programs.

“Our loss is not necessarily our loss,” he said. “We think it’s de#nitely in the long run going to be our gain.”

He said the event was good preparation for the Salukis, who will compete against other perennial top-25 teams soon such as Purdue and Missouri Valley Conference rival Missouri State.

“I want them hungry,” he said. “I want them #ghting, and I want them to not care who’s across the pool from them.”

!e Saluki men will return to competition at 6 p.m. Friday against Air Force at the Edward J. Shea Natatorium. Both the men and women will face Missouri State at 11 a.m. Saturday, also at the Shea Natatorium.

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!e Saluki men’s and women’s basketball teams were ranked in the Missouri Valley Conference preseason poll of league coaches, media and sports information directors Monday.

!e men’s team was picked to rank last, while the Saluki women were predicted eighth on the annual poll.

!e SIU men #nished in ninth place last season with a 5-13 conference record, and the team returns four starters and eight letter winners for #rst-year head coach Barry Hinson.

“You turn programs around by getting players that make you better and have great character,” Hinson said during a morning conference call. “We need total culture change, not so much on the court, but o" the court.”

With junior guard Desmar Jackson leading the charge, the Saluki men are deep and experienced in the backcourt with seniors Kendal Brown-Surles, T.J. Lindsay

and Je" Early. However, the front court doesn’t look as productive or as experienced as last year.

!e men lost Mamadou Seck, Treg Setty, and Harry Whitt from last year. Sophomore Dantiel Daniels is out #ve weeks with a leg injury, and freshman forward Chase Heins will likely redshirt after having surgery, Hinson said. Freshman Bola Olaniyan, an NCAA partial quali#er, is also likely to redshirt.

“If we can ever get healthy, we can play guys without having oxygen tanks behind our bench,” Hinson joked.

Receiving 38 of 40 #rst-place votes, Creighton University was named the favorite to win the MVC this season. !e Blue Jays were picked as high as No. 10 in nation preseason polls.

Creighton’s junior forward Doug McDermott, the reigning Larry Bird Player of the Year, recieved preseason honors as a projected All-Conference player and All-American.

!e Saluki women, however, placed eighth in the poll above only Drake and Evansville. !e team is coming o" an 8-22 season, including four conference wins to put the team ninth in the MVC.

“I don’t put much thought into preseason rankings,” women’s coach Missy Tiber said. “I am more concerned with the daily development of our kids and where our team will be come March.”

Creighton took the top predicted seed for the women’s division as well, followed by Wichita State in second. Creighton’s Carli Tritz was also named MVC preseason Player of the Year. No SIU players were named to the preseason all-conference team.

!e lady Salukis will start their season Friday in an exhibition game against Central Methodist, and the men will play an exhibition game against Upper Iowa University Saturday. Both games will be played at the SIU Arena, and tipo" is scheduled for 7:05 p.m.

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