Daily Egyptian

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DAILY EGYPTIAN OCTOBER 29, 2013 DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM SINCE 1916 VOLUME 99, ISSUE 41 TUESDAY Planted to perfection Jamie Long, a senior from Ellis Grove studying plant and soil science, left, assists Joe Wuerffel, a graduate student in weed science from Dupo, shift water hemp plants Monday within the designated areas in the Forestry Center’s greenhouse. Wuerffel said they routinely move plants within their designated areas to receive adequate light to ensure even growth. Wuerffel said this greenhouse is one of several that SIU provides for its students. CHELSEA CURTEN | DAILY EGYPTIAN Humans are not the only ones to cross over or under bridges, and local forest ocials are taking that into consideration. Shawnee National Forest is implementing a plan to replace ve crossings of small streams by forest roads with improved crossing structures that would improve the passage of aquatic life and reduce fragmentation of stream habitats. Experts believe the inclusion of these crossings will create a healthier environment for aquatic life and alleviate the eects of human interaction with forest wildlife. Improvement will take place at the Johnson Creek crossing on Forest Road 768, Grande Pierre Creek crossing on Dutton Chapel Road and three small stream crossings on Snake Road; all within 100 miles of Carbondale. Matthew Lechnar, national resource program manager for Shawnee National Forest, said the crossings are older and are making an impact on the wildlife, even disrupting the movement of sh up or downstream. “Some of those roads were put in a long time ago and are creating barriers to sh moving upstream or downstream,” he said. “So our goal was just to make it so the road system does not impact a natural, evolutionary force.” Lechnar said the road system in the forest is constantly updated, but projects such as the crossing updates are not common. He said only a handful of projects are approved each scal year depending on how much money the park has to spend. e beginning of the project will depend on how much grant money the park has available, Lechnar said. “Construction is dependent on funding and right now we have some grant applications in for the (crossings),” he said. “If they get funded, then we will implement them. Some of them we will just implement with our own growth maintenance budget.” One of the considerations before projects begin is conducting studies to assess if the construction will aect wildlife and asking the public about the condition of the area, Lechnar said. Projects such as these stream crossings can have a vast improvement on wildlife communities and will likely be funded soon, he said. Marjorie Brooks, an assistant professor in zoology at SIU, said improving the quality of a bridge to help the wildlife is benecial as bridges can be disruptive to nature. “Just the noise and vibration can disrupt the aquatic communities right there,” she said. “Obviously, you’ve got exhaust, you’ve got higher (carbon dioxide) right there so you’re going to have more CO2 going into the water and then you actually get run-os of heavy metals, specically copper from the brake pads.” Brooks said while copper is a good thing for aquatic life, too much of it can be deadly to any species. She said an abundance of copper would kill sensitive species rst and lead to an imbalance of the food chain. e migration and movement of some species might be aected, but it would depend on the species, Brooks said. Shawnee crossings preserve aquatic life MATT DARAY Daily Egyptian Please see FOREST | 3 Ocials of the university announced Monday that a scholarship will be created and funded with a $1.3 million gift from the estate of Jim and Martha Greenwood. e substantial amount of money from the Greenwoods will create an endowment and will provide annual scholarships for disabled students who are studying engineering and sciences. Greg Cook, president of the SIU foundation, said Monday during a press conference one of the rewarding aspects of serving as president is observing the incredible impact SIU donors have on the students. “Mr. and Mrs. Greenwood have set an example for our alumni,” Cook said, “eir generosity is signicant on multiple levels.” Jim Greenwood attended the university in 1961 where he earned his undergraduate and master’s degrees. Up until his death in 2009, Greenwood was an active member of the SIU Alumni Association and its Central Florida Chapter. Greenwood also remained an advocate for students with disabilities. His wife Martha died in January 2013. He said he attended SIU because of the special accommodations the university had for handicapped students and it was one of the few that accommodated his wheelchair. Chancellor Rita Cheng said at the time Greenwood attended SIU, it was one of few universities in the country that were accessible to students with disabilities. e Greenwoods left a powerful legacy by supporting the institution that welcomed him in the ‘60s, well before the Americans with Disabilities Act required campuses to be accessible,” Cheng said at the press conference. “Jim Greenwood remained a Saluki throughout his life, and we couldn’t be prouder or more grateful that he and Martha are making it possible for other students with disabilities to attend SIU.” Jim Salmo, vice chancellor for development and alumni relations, said the scholarship would be given to multiple students, but that has not been worked out yet. e university plans to begin distribution of the scholarship in Fall 2014. Once the awards are dispersed, students will be able to apply for the scholarship for the next annual year since it is not given on a four-year basis. Cheng said she sees the scholarship as a marketing tool for the university to attract more students with disabilities. Charinder ompson can be reached at [email protected] or 453-3311 ext. 268 University receives gift from alumni Alumn’s estate to fund scholarship for students with disabilities CHARINDER THOMPSON Daily Egyptian ‘‘ T he Greenwoods left a powerful legacy by supporting the institution that welcomed him in the ‘60s, well before the Americans with Disabilities Act required campuses to be accessible. Jim Greenwood remained a Saluki throughout his life, and we couldn’t be prouder or more grateful that he and Martha are making it possible for other students with disabilities to attend SIU. — Rita Cheng chancellor

description

Daily Egyptian October 29, 2013

Transcript of Daily Egyptian

DAILY EGYPTIANOCTOBER 29, 2013 DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM SINCE 1916 VOLUME 99, ISSUE 41

TUESDAY

Planted to perfection

Jamie Long, a senior from Ellis Grove studying plant and soil science, left, assists Joe Wuerffel, a graduate student in weed science from Dupo, shift water hemp plants Monday within the designated areas in the Forestry Center’s greenhouse. Wuerffel said they routinely move plants within their designated areas to receive adequate light to ensure even growth. Wuerffel said this greenhouse is one of several that SIU provides for its students.

CHELSEA CURTEN | DAILY EGYPTIAN

Humans are not the only ones to cross over or under bridges, and local forest o!cials are taking that into consideration.

Shawnee National Forest is implementing a plan to replace "ve crossings of small streams by forest roads with improved crossing structures that would improve the passage of aquatic life and reduce fragmentation of stream habitats. Experts believe the inclusion of these crossings will create a healthier environment for aquatic life and alleviate the e#ects of human interaction with forest wildlife.

Improvement will take place at the Johnson Creek crossing on Forest Road 768, Grande Pierre Creek crossing on Dutton Chapel Road and three small stream crossings on Snake Road; all within 100 miles of Carbondale.

Matthew Lechnar, national resource program manager for Shawnee National Forest, said the crossings are older and are making an impact on the wildlife, even disrupting the movement of "sh up or downstream.

“Some of those roads were put in a long time ago and are creating barriers to "sh moving upstream or downstream,” he said. “So our goal was just to make it so the road system does not impact a natural, evolutionary force.”

Lechnar said the road system in the forest is constantly updated, but projects such as the crossing updates are not common. He said only a handful of projects are approved each "scal year depending on how much money the park has to spend.

$e beginning of the project will depend on how much grant money the park has available, Lechnar said.

“Construction is dependent on funding and right now we have some grant applications in for the (crossings),” he said. “If they get funded, then we will implement them. Some of them we will just implement with our own growth maintenance budget.”

One of the considerations before projects begin is conducting studies to assess if the construction will a#ect wildlife and asking the public about the condition of the area, Lechnar said. Projects such as these stream crossings can have a vast improvement on wildlife communities and will likely be funded soon, he said.

Marjorie Brooks, an assistant professor in zoology at SIU, said improving the quality of a bridge to help the wildlife is bene"cial as bridges can be disruptive to nature.

“Just the noise and vibration can disrupt the aquatic communities right there,” she said. “Obviously, you’ve got exhaust, you’ve got higher (carbon dioxide) right there so you’re going to have more CO2 going into the water and then you actually get run-o#s of heavy metals, speci"cally copper from the brake pads.”

Brooks said while copper is a good thing for aquatic life, too much of it can be deadly to any species. She said an abundance of copper would kill sensitive species "rst and lead to an imbalance of the food chain.

$e migration and movement of some species might be a#ected, but it would depend on the species, Brooks said.

Shawneecrossingspreserveaquatic lifeMATT DARAYDaily Egyptian

Please see FOREST | 3

O!cials of the university announced Monday that a scholarship will be created and funded with a $1.3 million gift from the estate of Jim and Martha Greenwood.

$e substantial amount of money from the Greenwoods will create an endowment and will provide annual scholarships for disabled students who are studying engineering and sciences.

Greg Cook, president of the SIU foundation, said Monday during a press conference one of the rewarding aspects of serving as president is observing the incredible impact SIU donors have on the students.

“Mr. and Mrs. Greenwood have set an example for our alumni,” Cook said, “$eir generosity is signi"cant on multiple levels.”

Jim Greenwood attended the university in 1961 where he earned his

undergraduate and master’s degrees. Up until his death in 2009,

Greenwood was an active member of the SIU Alumni Association and its Central Florida Chapter. Greenwood also remained an advocate for students with disabilities. His wife Martha died in January 2013.

He said he attended SIU because of the special accommodations the university had for handicapped students and it was one of the few that accommodated his wheelchair.

Chancellor Rita Cheng said at the time Greenwood attended SIU, it was one of few universities in the country that were accessible to students with disabilities.

“$e Greenwoods left a powerful legacy by supporting the institution that welcomed him in the ‘60s, well before the Americans with Disabilities Act required campuses to be accessible,” Cheng said at the press conference.

“Jim Greenwood remained a Saluki throughout his life, and we couldn’t be prouder or more grateful that he and Martha are making it possible for other students with disabilities to attend SIU.”

Jim Salmo, vice chancellor for development and alumni relations, said the scholarship would be given to multiple students, but that has not been worked out yet.

$e university plans to begin distribution of the scholarship in Fall 2014. Once the awards are dispersed, students will be able to apply for the scholarship for the next annual year since it is not given on a four-year basis.

Cheng said she sees the scholarship as a marketing tool for the university to attract more students with disabilities.

Charinder !ompson can be reached at [email protected]

or 453-3311 ext. 268

University receives gift from alumniAlumn’s estate to fund scholarship for students with disabilities CHARINDER THOMPSONDaily Egyptian

‘‘T he Greenwoods left a powerful legacy by supporting the institution that welcomed him in the ‘60s, well before the

Americans with Disabilities Act required campuses to be accessible. Jim Greenwood remained a Saluki throughout his life, and we couldn’t be prouder or more grateful that he and Martha are making it possible for other students with disabilities to attend SIU.

— Rita Chengchancellor

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013���PAGE 2

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STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Penn State has paid $59.7 million in out-of-court settlements to 26 men claiming they were abused by former football coach and convicted pedophile Jerry Sandusky, the university reported Monday.

Penn State reviewed claims brought by 32 men, and 23 of those have been signed, the university said. !ere remain three settlements in principle and the documentation will be *nalized over the next few weeks, the university said.

!e other six claims were rejected because they were found to be “without merit,” the university said.

“We hope this is another step forward in the healing process for those hurt by Mr. Sandusky, and another step forward for Penn State,” President Rodney Erickson said in a statement. “We cannot undo what has been done, but we can and must do everything possible to learn from this and ensure it never happens again at Penn State.”

!e announcement on Monday was the *rst and apparently last o,cial word the university has given about the speci*c details in the Sandusky settlement

process, which was authorized in July during the board of trustees meeting.

University o,cials have said they would only release the amount of the combined settlements once they were *nalized, though trustee Ted Brown later said $60 million was the amount approved for all settlements combined.

Penn State said liability insurance policies are expected to cover the settlement amounts and the legal defense against the claims brought against the university, employees and trustees. !e university said any expenses that are not covered by the insurance will be paid from interest on loans the university made to other units on campus.

!e terms of the settlements are con*dential, and the university said they contain a release of all claims against the university and other parties.

It has not been reported how much the individual claimants received. Lawyers for the claimants have said the settlements contain a non-disclosure agreement forbidding them from releasing how much they were paid.

!e nearly $60 million in settlements will be re-ected in the university’s audited *nancial statements for 2013-14. !e board of trustees’ audit and risk

committee will meet Friday to review 2012-13 audited *nancial statements, according to a legal notice.

Among the men whose claims have been signed and settled is Victim 2, the young man at the center of a 2001 incident in a campus locker room that ultimately cost head coach Joe Paterno his job. Matt Sandusky, an adopted son of Jerry Sandusky who said his adoptive father molested him, also settled, lawyer Andrew Shubin said.

One of the claimants, Victim 6 from the grand jury presentment against Sandusky, is suing Penn State in federal court. Penn State asked the judge for a stay until criminal prosecutions against three Penn State administrators have been resolved, but the young man’s lawyers are *ghting the university’s attempt to put a hold on the case.

A spokeswoman for the legal team representing Victim 6 declined to comment.

!e $59.7 million spent on settlements combined with the millions Penn State has paid in legal and consultant fees, plus the *rst $12 million toward the $60 million NCAA *ne, pushes the cost of the Sandusky scandal to $110 million.

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 ��PAGE 3

“As far as migration routes, it depends on the species, but sure (they can be a!ected),” she said. “Anything that could look like a barrier to them is going to discourage or make them change their habits from night time to day time, from day time to night time, and you can have that happen and

get some indirect e!ects.”A lot of different factors can

go into how animals react to roads and bridges, such as how the natural environment worked before human intervention, Brooks said. She said it is even possible that a man-made crossing can improve the environment it is built around.

Matt Whiles, a professor of zoology at SIU, said that

connectivity is the lifeblood of any stream and is crucial to maintain.

“Streams are longitudinal networks and the better the connectivity, the better it is for all aquatic life that live in streams,” he said.

Whiles said one such example of this importance is some small "shes migrate up headwaters to reproduce and if they cannot reach these areas, then it will impact these species and the food chains they belong to.

He said a crossing could interfere with the nature of a stream such as disrupting the #ow of organic materials downstream.

Human interaction can play a large part in how an environment develops over time, Whiles said.

“Human activities are certainly a!ecting everything in forests and streams,” he said. “We have a large impact on the planet and our national forests are not immune.”

$e improved crossings can bene"t the wildlife of Shawnee National Park if they are created properly, Whiles said.

“If they reduce human impact and they improve connectivity of the streams, then that is certainly a good thing,” he said.

Matt Daray can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 254.

FOREST CONTINUED FROM 1

$ere is a weed sprouting in Illinois, and it is threatening the state’s corn and soybeans.

Although this weed is not new to Illinois, the weed called Palmer’s amaranth has developed immunity to herbicides, causing much grief for farmers, said Bryan Young, professor of plant, soil, and agricultural systems.

“$at’s where the challenge comes in. We’re "nding more of it as a result of lack of control,” Young said.

Amaranthus palmeri, the scienti"c name for this weed, is a type of pigweed that can be found in Jackson, Union, Je!erson and 23 other counties in Illinois.

Young said he has personally documented Palmer amaranths with this resistance in Illinois in 2010.

“It’s been present on our own SIU property since the 1990s,” Young said.

However he said it was not resistant to herbicide then. In South Carolina the pigweed was discovered to have resistance in cotton "elds in 1989, according to weedscience.org.

$e seed causes the weed, and the seed is getting to Illinois from all over, Young said.

A lot of it is a by-product of cotton production, which is being shared across state lines, or it can be shipped in with a feed product and then gets spread on "elds as manure, Young said. It can also be found in hay.

Because of the drought of 2012, Illinois shipped in hay from southern states and the seeds could have easily been in the hay.

“One plant, if it’s not being competed with a whole lot, can produce up to 1 million seeds. Very easily, several hundred thousand seeds, one plant can produce. So one plant surviving in an acre will result, in the next year, and possibly having 20 plants per square foot,” Young said.

Young said the only hope farmers have right now is to detect the weed before it starts growing, because

there are pre-herbicides that still work, but after the weed starts growing, he said hand weeding is one of the only options.

After the weed starts to grow, Young said cultivation is an option for dealing with the weed, but because of concern with soil erosion, and soil conservation, he said farmers are very hesitant to use tillage, which loosens the soil and mixes in fertilizer and plant material, because it would have to be done in June and July. It could not be done in March before the crops are planted.

“We want to protect our soil "rst and foremost,” Young said.

Of the di!erent species of weeds that are Amaranthus, Palmer’s amaranths has the fastest growth rate and is most competitive with crops common in the Midwest agronomic cropping systems, Aaron Hager, a University of Illinois associate professor of weed

sciences said. Lauren Schwartz, an SIU

graduate student in plant biology from Kerrville, Texas, agrees about the evasiveness.

Schwartz is studying four species within the pigweed family including the Palmer’s amaranth.

“Palmer amaranth is invasive due to several factors, including the fact that it adapts readily, produces a lot of seed … distributes small seed, germinates continually over a growing season, its rapid growth and its resistance to multiple herbicide modes of action,” she said in an email. “Compared to other Amaranthus species, such as waterhemp, Palmer’s amaranth has the most aggressive growth habit and is therefore extremely competitive with crops even at low densities.”

Hager said soybean yield losses are near 80 percent and corn yield losses are more than 90 percent according

to his post on the Bulletin, a website for Integrated Pest Management at the University of Illinois.

Young said his advice to growers is to identify escaped weeds in the cropping system and try to manage them as well as possible, so the weed does not seed again.

Pigweeds, scienti"cally known as amaranth, grow in summer and are annual plants that germinate from seeds during late winter through the summer. Commonly, the cotyledons or seed leaves are long and narrow and are usually a red color on the bottom, according to the University of California’s Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program’s Website.

$e program also said the weeds have a single-seeded fruit in tiny capsules and are long and open around the middle with a cap like lid to release the seed. $ose seeds are round, glossy and dark reddish brown to black.

Usually, the weeds are produced by seed, but can grow from an upper portion of a taproot that remains in the soil after tilling.

Jordan VanDeveer can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 246

Pigweed infestation pesters Illinois cropsJORDAN VANDEVEER

Daily Egyptian ‘‘O ne plant, if it’s not being competed with a whole lot, can produce up to 1 million seeds. Very easily, several hundred thousand seeds, one plant can produce. So one plant

surviving in an acre will result, in the next year, and possibly having 20 plants per square foot.— Bryan Young

professor of plant, soil, and agricultural systems

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENTPulse

Animal Collective lit up St. Louis with an equally glittering display of sights and sounds Friday.

After the band postponed the show from March to October because of multiple members being ill, the audience at !e Pageant was "nally able to dance to the heavy syncopations emphasized by the array of keyboards used by Avey Tare, Geologist and Deakin and the entrancing percussion by Panda Bear.

!e stage display itself was something to admire. A huge blowup spectacle reminiscent of the album cover of “Centipede Hz” engulfed the stage. Anyone with a "xation for pressing buttons would have a "eld day with the sophisticated collection of Korg keyboards, Kaoss pads, drum

machines and samplers that helped orchestrate the set.

!e visual show projected behind the band was a hallucinogenic “Fantasia” if Walt Disney would have been an avid fan of psychedelic pop. !e colorful presentation of swirls and indistinguishable shapes coupled with distorted animations was like a Jackson Pollock piece put through a Ralph Steadman "lter in a Salvador Dali universe. When looped with the music, it created a mind-bending sensation that complemented Animal Collective’s sound.

Despite predominately playing songs from the most recent album “Centipede Hz,” the group provided a good assortment of songs from “Feels,” their esteemed “Merriweather Post Pavillion” and even a surprise song from the EP “Fall Be Kind.”

“Amanita” was the opener. Avey Tare’s vocals rang out over the song that is an electronic fusion of Eastern-in#uenced Carnatic and African tribal music. !e crowd started bopping up and down as the song subtly transitioned into the captivating and groovy tune of “Wide Eyed.” Deakin’s voice echoed over the constant rising and falling rhythm of arpeggio-synths and sitar-sounding tones buzzing from Avey Tare’s guitar.

“Avey Tare, you’re the man,” a pony-tailed man in a checkered shirt shouted after a mini-break.

!e group responded with “Did You See the Words”— an uplifting tune with a lovely piano sonata.

“And I want to look out/I don’t want to bail out. And I want to help out/I don’t want to nod out,” Avey Tare sang during “Monkey Riches,”

as the crowd’s energy picked up.“What Would I Want? Sky” slowed

the pace down with its ambient keys and heavy and repetitive splashing of the cymbals. !e synth noises leading the song’s transition made it seem as if a jet engine was crashing through the Pageant’s roof until the springy sample intro of “Lion in a Coma” distinguished itself, causing everyone to cheer along with the catchy song.

!e breakdown during “Brother Sport” became the highlight of the performance. !e instruments clamored together in a droning screech for several minutes while Deakin hopped around the stage with his bass. Spotlights shooting rays of red, purple and blue swayed across the stage. !e video display showed its chaotic and multi-colored illustrations until the group came together for the last part of the song.

!e band encored “Moonjock” and the fast-paced, happy-go-lucky song “!e Purple Bottle” to end the performance.

What Animal Collective does so well is bridge the aesthetic of the visual show with the music to create a captivating and pleasant dynamic. !e group is fairly limited to movement on stage because of having to operate several stationary electronics — and although that can a$ect crowd enthusiasm — it did not for Animal Collective.

!e group has distinguished itself as one of the key players of modern neo-psychedelic music; Being able to see them perform as a full unit is a must-see for fans of electronic music.

Dylan Frost can be reached at [email protected]

or 536-3311 ext. 254.

Animal Collective energizes The Pageant

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 ��PAGE 4

DYLAN FROST

Daily Egyptian

LOS ANGELES — Jay Z has broken his silence over pressure to shutter his forthcoming holiday collection for Barneys New York, and the hip-hop mogul says he is being unfairly “demonized” for not responding to protests.

After two high-pro"le incidents of young shoppers — both of whom were black — being questioned after purchases from Barneys, an online protest emerged calling on the multi-platinum star to withdraw his support from the luxury retailer.

Change.org, a site that has previously taken rappers like Rocko, Rick Ross and Lil Wayne to task over controversial lyrics, launched the petition last week and has already garnered more than 16,300 signatures.

Jay Z made his "rst statement on the #ap by issuing a statement on his website on Saturday.

“I move and speak based on facts and not emotion,” the statement said. “I haven’t made any comments because I am waiting on facts and the outcome of a meeting between community leaders and Barneys. Why am I being demonized, denounced and thrown on the cover of a newspaper for not speaking immediately?” he said, referring to the fury of headlines directed his way (the New York Daily News put him on a recent cover with “Zero Respect” in massive letters).

!e line of limited-edition apparel and accessories, called “BNY SCC Gallery” (standing for Barney New York Shawn Corey Carter), debuts Nov. 20 and serves as the theme for this year’s holiday

collection. Last year’s theme was Disney, and before that Lady Gaga. Jay Z is working with the store to create its holiday window display.

A portion of proceeds from sales will go to his foundation, and reminded detractors that he stands to make no pro"t from the deal.

“!is collaboration lives in a place of giving and is about the Foundation. I am not making a dime from this collection; I do not stand to make millions, as falsely reported. I need to make that fact crystal clear. !e Shawn Carter Foundation is the bene"ciary and the foundation is receiving 25 percent of all sales from the collaboration, 10 percent of all sales generated in the store on

November 20th and an additional donation from Barneys,” he wrote. “!is money is going to help individuals facing socio-economic hardships to help further their education at institutions of higher learning. My idea was born out of creativity and charity... not pro"t.”

Trayon Christian, 19, said after purchasing a $349 belt from the store, police waiting outside handcu$ed him and questioned the validity of his credit card. Another shopper, Kayla Phillips, has "led a $5-million notice of claim informing the city of her plans to sue the New York Police Department after a similar incident when she purchased a $2,500 handbag.

Mark Lee, the CEO of Barneys,

said he agreed to meet with New York civil rights leaders and would launch an internal investigation led by longtime civil rights advocate Michael Yaki.

“Barneys New York believes that no customer should have the unacceptable experience described in recent media reports, and we o$er our sincere regret and deepest apologies,” it said on its Facebook page. “To this end, we are conducting a thorough review of our practices and procedures as they relate to these matters to ensure that they re#ect our continued commitment to fairness and equality.”

Barneys is not the only New York retailer embroiled in controversy over racial pro"ling. Rob Brown, star of the HBO show “Treme,” said he was “paraded” through Macy’s Herald Square in handcu$s and detained for an hour after being accused of using a fake card to buy his mother a $1,350 watch. He is "ling suit against the retailer and the NYPD.

-D\�=�VD\V�KH·V�EHLQJ�XQIDLUO\�¶GHPRQL]HG·GERRICK D. KENNEDY

Los Angeles Times ‘‘T his money is going to help individuals facing socio-economic hardships to help further their education at institutions of higher learning. My idea was born out of creativity and

charity ... not profit.— Jay Z

rapper

!ere’s a myopia to “Diana,” the new "lm about the divorce and last great romance of Princess Diana’s life, that "ts its subject like one of Diana’s signature, custom-tailored gowns.

Isolated, focused on her image, her few contacts with the outside world and her work, when this lonely and lovelorn woman (Naomi Watts) zeroes in on something or someone, it seems obsessive, smothering and all-consuming.

And dismiss it as worthy of a Lifetime Original Movie if you want, but this "lm from the director of the Fuhrer bunker

drama “Downfall” gives us insights into this poor little royal plaything that Americans, at least, will "nd eye-opening.

Based on “Diana, Her Last Love,” by Kate Snell, Oliver Hirschbiegel’s "lm depicts a manipulator practicing her most withering lines about her failed marriage to Prince Charles in front of a vanity mirror.

“!ere were three of us in this marriage,” she famously told her TV interrogator. “So it was a bit crowded.”

She milks her victimhood, frets over how seldom she gets to see her princely sons and manages to seem both vulnerable and cunning at the same time.

A trusted aide (Charles Edwards) feels she’s maneuvering behind his back and

o$ers to resign, and her cool reaction stuns him.

“Well, Patrick, you’ve been a rock.”“What will you do?”“Get a new rock.”Cast out from the royal family and

not close to her own, she only takes counsel from a trusted con"dante (Juliet Stevenson) and Oonagh To$olo, her acupuncturist and confessor (Geraldine James).

But she has a gift for empathy, and it’s much more than just her image. Dashing into a hospital to visit Oonagh’s ailing husband, she ignores the nurses who swoon in her presence and the doctors who ogle her. But that empathy leads her to cool, handsome

and charming heart surgeon Dr. Hasnat Khan (Naveen Andrews).

!eir love a$air, the tricks each used to see the other, the strains of celebrity and of being “the most famous woman in the world” in love with a Pakistani Muslim, sucks up the bulk of “Diana.” !e "lm shows us a nocturnal creature in hot pursuit of the one man underwhelmed by her celebrity until he is overwhelmed by the press, the culture clash and the demands of a woman who can have whatever she wants.

Hirschbiegel and screenwriter Stephen Je$reys (“!e Libertine”) frame this quiet, doomed love story within that last walk out of a Paris hotel, that last car ride with playboy Dodi Fayed (Cas Anvar).

!at much we know. What the movie wants us to remember is the misery of being stalked by a fanatical gossip press (which Diana manipulates, from time to time), the gutsy way she used her fame to do good, pushing for an international ban on land mines, and her instinctual, almost superhuman ability to respond to people in pain.

Watts masters Diana’s look — the way she carried her head and used those wide, coyly expressive eyes — but is only passable at impersonating the voice. It’s a studied performance that does not give away the wheels turning as Diana plays the angles to try and get what she wants out of the royal family, the press, her doctor-lover and her life.

¶'LDQD·�PD\�DSSHDO�WR�WKH�<DQNV��LI�QRW�WKH�%ULWVROGER MOORE

MCT News Service

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013���PAGE 5

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 ��PAGE 6

Gukdo Byun, a doctoral student studying business from Carbondale, prepares for the ROTC 5k/10k race Saturday with jumping jacks outside of Kesnar Hall. Travis Swafford, a senior from West Frankfort studying exercise science and cadet in charge of the event, said money raised from the run helps develop more training for ROTC. “We also donate to the Illinois Veterans Home of Anna,” he said. “It’s not strictly for us, we do put back into the community. We appreciate giving back to them as well.”

REMY ABROUGHT | DAILY EGYPTIAN

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Apple Inc.’s pro!t fell even as sales rose slightly in its !scal fourth quarter, but the company’s results topped analysts’ estimates.

In the period ended Sept. 28, the iPhone maker earned $7.5 billion, or $8.26 a share. In the same period a year earlier, Apple earned

$8.2 billion, or $8.67 a share. "e company’s sales rose 4 percent to $37.5 billion.

On average, analysts polled by "omson Reuters were expecting the company to earn $7.93 a share in the quarter on sales of $36.84 billion.

Looking forward to its holiday quarter, Apple predicted that it would post sales of $55 billion to

$58 billion. It didn’t give a speci!c pro!t estimate.

Wall Street analysts had forecast earnings of $13.86 a share on sales of $55.65 billion for the holiday period.

Apple’s shares traded down after hours. Before the report was released, Apple’s shares closed in regular trading up $3.92, or less than 1 percent, to $529.88.

TROY WOLVERTON

6DQ�-RVH�0HUFXU\�1HZV�

Ready for takeoff

Here’s a new entry in the annals of bad marketing ideas: Officials in Taiji, Japan, recently announced plans to open a marine park, where visitors can swim and kayak alongside dolphins and whales. Then after drying off, tourists can sample dishes made with dolphin and whale meat. And the proceeds from the park will help fund the slaughter of dolphins.

How could that possibly lose?You probably recognize the name “Taiji.”

This is the town that acquired global infamy after its annual dolphin massacre was featured in the Oscar-winning documentary “The Cove.” Turning Taiji into a tourist destination, where unsuspecting visitors swim with dolphins while, in a nearby bay, other dolphins thrash in their own blood after being speared or having their throats cut, sounds like something out of a horror film.

Dolphins have rich social lives, brains that are as complex as our own and pod-specific cultural practices that are passed down from generation to generation.

In her new book, “How Animals Grieve,” Barbara J. King recounts heartbreaking stories of dolphin mothers desperately trying to revive their dead calves by repeatedly lifting their small bodies above the surface of the water and pushing them under again, often while other dolphins swim protectively nearby.

Some scientists argue that dolphins should be classified as “nonhuman persons” and that their rights should be protected. Earlier this year, the Ministry of Environment and Forests in India issued an order to all Indian states banning dolphinariums.

“The Cove” exposed the Taiji dolphin slaughter, taking us back to the unenlightened times of “Moby-Dick”. More recently, “Blackfish” has rightly turned people away from marine animal parks that snatch infant whales and dolphins from their ocean homes

and force them to perform demeaning tricks for our entertainment.

The two industries are inextricably linked. Although most dolphins captured in Taiji end up as meat in Japanese supermarkets — despite the fact that dolphin flesh is so dangerously contaminated with mercury that some Taiji officials have likened it to “toxic waste” — about two dozen live dolphins are sold every year to aquariums, performing-dolphin shows and “swim-with” programs across the globe. It is these lucrative sales that keep the dolphin slaughter going.

A dead dolphin brings in a few hundred dollars. But a single live dolphin can fetch $150,000 or more.

According to the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, dolphins captured live during Japan’s annual massacres have ended up in aquariums all over the world. Even countries that no longer allow the importation of dolphins caught during the gruesome slaughter may be displaying animals purchased before the ban or

moved through other countries to disguise their origin.

These magnificent animals suffer immeasurably in captivity since it is impossible to meet their psychological and physiological needs. In the wild, dolphins swim together in family pods up to 100 miles a day.

They navigate by bouncing sonar waves off objects to determine distance and location. When dolphins are kept captive, even the largest pen or tank is merely a hideous prison. Their vocalizations become a garble of meaningless reverberations. Most aquariums keep antacids on hand to treat the animals’ stress-related ulcers.

If you would not dream of patronizing the proposed marine park in Taiji, then please do not patronize any such facility. Buying a ticket to a marine park or swimming with captive dolphins supports condemning these beautiful, intelligent animals to a lifetime of misery and deprivation.

Submissions NoticeLetters and guest columns must be submitted with author’s contact information, preferably via email. Phone numbers

are required to verify authorship, but will not be published. Letters are limited to 400 words and columns to 500 words.

Students must include year and major. Faculty must include rank and department. Others include hometown.

Submissions should be sent to [email protected].

The DAILY EGYPTIAN is a “designated public forum.”

Student editors have the authority to make all content

decisions without censorship or advance approval.

We reserve the right not to publish any letter or guest

column.

Editorial Policy

OPINION 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%$&'"!(.

THEIR WORD

EDITORIAL CARTOON

BY PAULA MOORE

PETA

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 PAGE 7·

Editorial Board

Kayli PlotnerEditor-in-Chief

Karsten BurgstahlerWeekender/Pulse Editor

Chris ZoellerPhoto Editor

Ashley ZborekOpinion Editor

Lauraann WoodOnline Editor

Terrance PeacockSports Editor

Sarah SchneiderCity Editor

Sarah GardnerManaging Editor

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013���PAGE 8

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

Monday’s Answers:

Pick up the Daily Egyptian each day to test your crossword skills

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29,��������PAGE 9

Monday’sAnswers:

Answer:

THE Daily Commuter Puzzle by Jacqueline E. Mathews

FOR RELEASE JUNE 29, 2012

ACROSS1 Rotten4 Day __ day;

continuously9 Plate

13 Frown __;disapprove of

15 Yearn for16 Resound17 Trait transmitter18 Birthday party

desserts19 Cheney or

Biden, for short20 Invoice22 At __; in

disagreement23 Lasso24 “Skip to My __”26 __ oneself;

refuse to be adoormat

29 Baaing34 Donald Duck’s

love35 Invigorating, as

a lively walk36 “Yes, __”; polite

response37 Dad’s sister38 Good buys39 Run away40 African

antelope41 Very small42 Portion43 Traveling __;

going fromCalifornia toNew York, e.g.

45 John or Jason46 Curtain holder47 Light bulb’s “W”48 Hawaiian island51 Chaperoning56 Burden57 Wynonna’s

mom58 Person, place

or thing60 Throw stones

at61 Wading bird62 Pierce63 Move to and fro64 Marlo’s dad65 Filbert or

pecan

DOWN1 Annoy2 Hairy beasts3 Word of

warning4 Take willingly5 Picture border6 __ apart; undo7 Level; balanced8 Fidgety9 Pious

10 __ tea11 Get rid of12 Jumps14 Closest21 British

conservative25 Wood used for

wine barrels26 Proverb27 Steam bath28 Congestion

site, often29 __-name; not

generic30 Water __; lotus31 Tiny part of an

archipelago32 Female relation

33 Actress Garson35 Michelob, e.g.38 Benumbed39 Appropriate41 Couple42 Actor Brad44 Dependable45 Unusual thing47 Ladies

48 Fumbler’s word49 Once more50 Luau dance52 Long story53 Iowa export54 Lunch hour55 Wise teacher59 Earnings after

expenses

Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

(c) 2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

(Answers tomorrow)OOMPH MAMBO TRUDGE BYLINEYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: He used this to recall facts about his firstcomputer — HIS GOOD MEMORY

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.

SCEHS

LITUG

VORPEN

PETPOL

©2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

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com

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A:(Answers tomorrow)

OOMPH MAMBO TRUDGE BYLINEYesterday’s Jumbles:Answer: He used this to recall facts about his first

computer — HIS GOOD MEMORY

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.

SCEHS

LITUG

VORPEN

PETPOL

©2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

Jum

ble

puzz

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A:

(Answers tomorrow)OOMPH MAMBO TRUDGE BYLINEYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: He used this to recall facts about his firstcomputer — HIS GOOD MEMORY

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.

SCEHS

LITUG

VORPEN

PETPOL

©2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

Jum

ble

puzz

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agaz

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ava

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com

/jum

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A:

(Answers tomorrow)OOMPH MAMBO TRUDGE BYLINEYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: He used this to recall facts about his firstcomputer — HIS GOOD MEMORY

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.

SCEHS

LITUG

VORPEN

PETPOL

©2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

Jum

ble

puzz

le m

agaz

ines

ava

ilabl

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A:

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

© 2013 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.

10/29/13

Level: 1 2 3 4

10/28/13

Monday’s Puzzle Solved10/29/13

Aries — Today is a 9 — Commit to your objectives. A new project demands more attention. Put your heads together. Save some energy for a significant other. Romance still reigns.

Taurus — Today is a 9 —You may have to modify the dream slightly to fit reality or modify reality to fit the dream. More research is required. Think about what worked before and what didn’t.

Gemini — Today is an 8 — The gentle approach works best now. Things aren’t what they seem. Ask your partner or an expert for a second opinion. You get extra pay for your clever idea.

Cancer — Today is a 9 —Your ability to concentrate gets marvelously enhanced; double-check your data anyway, just in case. Hold on to what you have. It’s easier to get it than to keep it.

Leo — Today is a 9 — You’re entering a two-day moneymaking phase but also a potential spending spree. Think twice before you buy. Do you really need that? Let your conscience be your guide.

Virgo — Today is a 9 —When you’re hot, you’re hot. Action depends on your will power. Consult a professional or an impartial person to sort out confusion at work. Others move more quickly.

Libra — Today is an 8 — Stay humble and focused on strategy. A new romance begins, but don’t abandon family for new friends. Take it slow and wait to see what develops.

Scorpio — Today is a 9 — New opportunities arise. It could seem scary to expand your personal boundaries, but friends and family are really there for you. There’s a lot to be learned, and still time to “chillax” at home.

Sagittarius — Today is a 9 —There’s still some confusion or indecision, but you can clear it up and find the way. Career matters are in the forefront now. Keep your frugal common sense. You have plenty of work to do.

Capricorn — Today is a 9 — Travel conditions are excellent. Take regular breaks to stay rested. Heed wise words from a loving woman. Dig deeper and find the treasure. However, don’t shop until the check clears.

Aquarius — Today is a 9 — Work on being practical and increasing comfort, for you and the family. Wrap up old business, especially on the financial front, so you can move on. Expend more energy than money.

Pisces — Today is a 9 — Consult with best friends, especially those great at preparing a good strategy. Continue focusing on the steps necessary to get there without losing the big picture.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 ��PAGE 10

WORLD & NATIONAmid European uproar over phone monitoring, White House sees need for new constraints

WASHINGTON — Under mounting pressure from new revelations that the United States collected the telephone data of tens of millions of Europeans, the Obama administration on Monday said that there is a need for new constraints on U.S. intelligence-gathering operations and a top senator announced the spying on U.S. allies would stop.

In an interview aired late Monday by a new cable television outlet, Fusion, President Barack Obama declined to discuss the communications monitoring operations of the National Security Agency, including whether the NSA tapped the telephones of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and 34 other world leaders.

!e storm battering Obama over the revelations of U.S. data-gathering and communications monitoring in France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Mexico and Brazil showed no sign of abating. Outlined in top-secret documents leaked to news media by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the disclosures are bruising ties with some of the closest U.S. allies, adding to the domestic outcry over the NSA’s collection of data from millions of Americans’ communications as part of an e"ort to unearth terrorist plots.

“Obama must feel very uneasy and embarrassed right now,” said Hans Christian Stroebel, the longest serving member of the German Parliament’s intelligence committee.

Administration o#cials, however, continued fending o" questions about details of the operations, including when they began and — in the case of the tapping of the phones of Merkel and the other world leaders — how high up the command chain they were authorized.

!ere were complaints that the administration has been keeping the U.S. intelligence community’s congressional overseers in the dark as well. Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif, announced that the panel would conduct “a major review into all intelligence

collection programs.”“It is my understanding that President

Obama was not aware Chancellor Merkel’s communications were being collected since 2002. !at is a big problem,” she added in a statement. “!e White House has informed me that collection on our allies will not continue, which I support. But as far as I’m concerned, Congress needs to know exactly what our intelligence community is doing.”

“It is clear to me that certain surveillance activities have been in e"ect for more than a decade and that the Senate Intelligence Committee was not satisfactorily informed,” Feinstein said. “!erefore our oversight needs to be strengthened and increased.

“With respect to NSA collection of intelligence on leaders of U.S. allies ... let me state unequivocally: I am totally opposed,” she said.

!e White House denied that it has not discussed the issue with Feinstein.

“We consult regularly with Chairman Feinstein,” said Caitlin Hayden, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council. “I’m not going to go into the details of those private discussions, nor am I going to comment on assertions made in the senator’s statement today about U.S. foreign intelligence activities.”

In the latest revelations, two Spanish newspapers reported that a document leaked by Snowden showed that the NSA collected data — locations and phone numbers — but not the content of 60 million telephone calls made in Spain between December 2012 and early January.

U.S. Ambassador to Spain James Costas was summoned by Spanish o#cials to discuss

the revelations. He later issued a statement in which he acknowledged, “Ultimately, the United States needs to balance the important role that these programs play in protecting our national security and protecting the security of our allies with legitimate privacy concerns.”

White House spokesman Jay Carney sounded a similar theme, telling reporters that a review of U.S. intelligence-gathering operations that Obama ordered this summer is aimed at

ensuring that “we are properly accounting for both the security of our citizens and our allies and the privacy concerns shared by Americans and citizens around the world.”

With new technology available for intelligence-gathering, he said, the administration recognizes that “there needs to be additional constraints on how we gather and use intelligence.”

“Just because we’ve made these extraordinary

technological advances that give us greater capacities, we need to make sure that we’re collecting intelligence in a way that advances our security needs and that we don’t just do it because we can,” he said.

!e review “will look at, among other issues, some of the very speci$c things with regards to intelligence-gathering, including matters that deal with heads of state and other governments,” Carney said. “When it comes to the relationship that we have with various allies, this is obviously something that has been of concern, and we are working to address those concerns diplomatically.”

He noted that a European parliamentary delegation now visiting Washington would be discussing the issue with o#cials from the U.S. intelligence community and the departments of State, Commerce, Treasury and Homeland

Security.!e delegation is looking to secure strong

protections for communications data as part of a landmark U.S.-European Union trade deal now being negotiated. Its leader, Elmar Brok, a member of Merkel’s party, said that a failure to secure those protections could threaten the talks.

“We are $ghting for the rights of our citizens,” Brok, the chairman of the European Parliament’s foreign a"airs committee, told reporters on Capitol Hill, where the delegation discussed the NSA scandal with lawmakers.

At the State Department, spokeswoman Jen Psaki said that the administration was not oblivious to the “challenges” the disclosures have created. U.S. o#cials, she said, are explaining to angry foreign counterparts the NSA operations and the internal review.

!e diplomatic moves, however, appeared to be doing little to patch up the rifts over the disclosures that have sparked a media outcry in Europe. One meme that went viral on social media was a doctored photo showing Obama peeping through a window at Merkel as she tries to cover herself with a bath towel after a shower.

“!e disclosures seem to be designed tactically to maximize their impact and the resulting awkwardness for the U.S. government,” said Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy for the Federation of American Scientists. U.S. o#cials “are going to have to evaluate how important these programs are to near-term national security and, if they are essential, then they need to make that argument to foreign governments: ‘It’s not voyeurism, it’s international security.’”

!e Spanish newspaper reports followed a revelation by the French newspaper Le Monde that the NSA collected the data of more than 70 million phone calls made in France between December 2012 and January.

In Italy, digital library host Cryptome reported that the NSA monitored 46 million phone calls in Italy during the same time period.

LESLEY CLARKMcClatchy

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MEXICO CITY — A little-known extradition case in Costa Rica is shedding light on Russia’s practice of vigorously defending its citizens arrested overseas and threatened with extradition to the United States on organized crime charges.

!e case involves Maxim Chukharev, a Russian arrested in May for money laundering through Liberty Reserve, a money exchange platform U.S. prosecutors say was the “bank of choice for the criminal underworld” before it was seized.

Last week, after a Costa Rican court gave the go-ahead for Chukharev to be sent to the United States, two senior Russian diplomats gave a dressing down to Costa Rican Ambassador Mario Fernandez Silva in Moscow, warning him that Costa Rica should ignore the extradition request because the “extraterritorial application of

America law” is a “vicious practice which should be stopped.”

In a statement Friday, the Russian Foreign Ministry reiterated a warning for Russian nationals not to travel to any country that has extradition treaties with the United States if they suspect they are wanted by U.S. law enforcement agencies.

“Experience shows that the trials of those who were basically abducted and taken to the U.S. are biased, based on shaky evidence and conspicuously accusatory. As a rule, they result in illegitimate verdicts with long prison terms,” the statement said.

A spate of recent arrests of overseas Russians casts a light on what U.S. o#cials say is the signi$cant role of Russia in transnational crime. But the issues involved generate starkly di"erent opinions from those worried by global crime syndicates and others who voice unease over the long reach of U.S. justice.

U.S. organized crime experts say

Russian criminals working overseas often have connections within the Russian government, and that the Russian government’s defense of them is designed to keep those links from emerging in public light.

“Most of these guys operate with a signi$cant amount of state protection. When they go down, the Russian state goes into full panic mode,” said Douglas Farah, a national security consultant and co-author of a book on Viktor Bout, a Russian arms tra#cker extradited from !ailand and convicted in a U.S. federal court in 2011. Bout, dubbed the “Merchant of Death” because he supplied weapons to a series of radical and outlaw groups, is now serving a 25-year prison term.

Russia is not the only nation concerned about the U.S. prosecutions, however. !e long arm of the U.S. law in pursuing foreigners in third countries makes some legal experts in Europe and Latin America

uncomfortable.“It gives the impression that there

might be a certain abuse of power from a powerful country,” said Juan Carlos Esquivel, a Costa Rican lawyer who is president of the anti-money laundering committee of the Inter-American Bar Association. Esquivel noted that the use of digital currencies is not regulated in his country.

“If Costa Rica doesn’t obey what the United States suggests, what happens? Tomorrow, the U.S. could come out with regulations prohibiting U.S. citizens from investing here,” he said.

An expert on money laundering at the University of Hamburg, Ingo Fiedler, said he is uneasy over how U.S. laws seem to trump international regulations.

“!e USA has the tendency to export their law to other countries by threatening the respective countries,” Fiedler said. “!us I can understand Russia’s decision that they do not want a citizen committing a crime in

Costa Rica to have a trial in the USA.”In the past six months, Russians

have been a frequent target of arrest warrants executed at the request of U.S. prosecutors.

On Aug. 1, the Dominican Republic extradited 24-year-old Aleksandr Panin to stand trial in federal court in Atlanta on charges related to cyberscams using SpyEye malware, which enables the theft of online banking information. Panin is accused of stealing $5 million from U.S. banks.

In mid-August, Lithuania extradited an alleged arms dealer, Dmitry Ustinov, to stand trial in the United States for allegedly negotiating to sell restricted night-vision goggles. He faces a 20-year sentence.

Another Russian, Dmitry Belorossov, was arrested at the Barcelona airport Aug. 17 upon triggering an Interpol fraud alert. Belorossov’s extradition to stand trial in the United States is pending.

TIM JOHNSONMcClatchy

‘‘J ust because we’ve made these ex traordinary

technological advances that give us greater capacities, we need to make sure that we’re collecting intelligence in a way that advances our security needs and that we don’t just do it because we can.

— Jay CarneyWhite House spokesman

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 ��PAGE 11

6DOXNLV�ÀQLVK�IDOO�VHDVRQ�ZLWK�FORVH�ZLQ

Freshman golfer Brooke Cusumano putts during practice Sept. 2 at Hickory Ridge Golf Course. The team took first place during its last tournament in Murfreesboro, Tenn. in the Blue Raider Intercollegiate Tournament at Middle Tennessee State University Oct. 22. The Salukis will have a break from competition until March 3 when they will compete in the Murray State Racer Classic in Murray, Ky.

ALEXA ROGALS | DAILY EGYPTIAN

After a slow start, the women’s golf team ended the fall season winning two of its last three tournaments and hopes to keep the momentum going through the o!season.

"e Salukis turned their season around after #nishing in a tie for eighth and 14th respectively in the #rst two tournaments.

Senior Ashleigh Rushing said the team adjusted its game after the #rst two tournaments.

“Everyone #ne-tuned their game toward the end,” Rushing said. “Luckily everyone started playing better at the same time.”

"e tournament that got the Salukis back in shape was the University of Missouri Kansas City Fall Invitational. SIU won by 10 shots and had two players #nish in the top three. Senior Cassie Rushing #nished second and junior Kris Grimes was right behind Rushing in third.

Grimes had a strong #nish in the UMKC tournament, as well as the Missouri State University Payne Stewart Invitational. She had three rounds in the 70s and tied for 11th at Missouri State.

Ashleigh Rushing said after the #rst tournament, she and Grimes had a wake up call.

“Me and (Grimes) both missed going to the #rst tournament and I think that kind of motivated us,” Rushing said.

It was not only the #rst tournament that set Rushing straight; she made a change to her equipment as well.

“I ended up switching drivers and putters,” Rushing said. “I changed those two things and it made a world of di!erence.”

Youth was another factor for the

team this season. At least two freshmen quali#ed in every tournament this fall. Freshman Xainmei Jin #nished third in the #nal tournament of the fall, the Middle Tennessee State University Blue Raider Invitational, where the team won by one shot over host MTSU.

Ashleigh Rushing said she was not sure about the freshmen before the season started, but after playing with them, she knew they were the right #t.

“I was really impressed with how they ended up playing,” she said. “I was really proud of them.”

Coach Alexis Mihelich said there has to be a learning curve for new players in college.

“"e #rst couple of tournaments the team #nished kind of bumpy, but you have to give your freshmen some time to adjust,” Mihelich said.

Freshman Brooke Cusumano grabbed

a spot in team qualifying in all #ve tournaments during the fall.

Cusumano said there were highs and lows during her season, but she was happy with the way it ended up. She said she started the season nervous, but got more comfortable as the year went on.

“If you would have said to me at the beginning of the season, ‘You’re going to do bad in two tournaments, but you’re going to win two and get a top three.’ I

:20(1·6�*2/)

would take it,” Cusumano said. “I am de#nitely happy with it.”

A good thing about the number of freshmen on the team is it adds depth to the team. Along with players like sophomore Mattie Lindner and Grimes, it takes the pressure o! of the older players.

“We have four to six girls who can consistently shoot in the 70s,” Cassie Rushing said.

Rushing #nished the fall season tying a Saluki record. She is tied with 2008 graduate Kelly Gerlach for the most career rounds in the 70s. "e record is 69. In 13 of 15 rounds in the fall season, Cassie Rushing #nished at 79 or better.

Rushing said if she plays her game and does not worry about the record, she performs better.

“Going into the last tournament, the #rst few holes it’s honestly all I thought about,” she said.

Mihelich said of all the di!erent areas of golf, her team needs the most help in one area.

“"e majority is just putting, the team does not putt as good as they can,” Mihelich said. “"at’s the only thing that really holds us back.”

"e team’s #rst tournament in the spring is the Murray State University Racer Classic March 3 and 4 in Murray, Ky.

Mihelich has high expectations for her team in the next part of the season leading to the Missouri Valley Conference Championships.

“In the o!season we can keep on improving and every tournament in the spring can lead us to winning a conference championship in April,” Mihelich said.

TYLER DIXONDaily Egyptian

"e article also said swimmers were the #rst ones to respond when Crippen did not show up on the shore. "e swimmers went back in the water before everyone else arrived to search for him.

"e committee currently consists of nine members and Walker said every year the President of USA Swimming, Bruce Stratton, appoints the chairman of every swimming committee across the nation.

Walker said the committee is tremendously important to open water swimming.

“I think it means the world to the sport,” Walker said. “Our biggest issue is that we can make everything really safe here in the U.S, but the second our national team swimmers leave the borders, what are other federations doing to keep the sport safe?”

Walker’s goal as chairman is to spread awareness and make sure the same rules USA Swimming use are spread across the world to make things safer elsewhere.

“Part of what we try to do within our committee is to apply pressure to other federations around the world to implement the same safety guidelines to look after the athletes,” Walker said.

Open water di!ers from pool swimming in several ways. Not only is nature unable to be regulated, but swimmers do not have their own lane. Graduate Assistant Coach Michael Firth said there are more

things that can go wrong in open water meets.

“With open water events there are a lot of things that can happen,” Firth said. “With open water stu!, if something does happen, there has to be protocols for quick and e$cient safety procedures.”

Firth has never competed in a strictly open water swim race, but he has swum open water in triathlons. He said it is completely di!erent than lane swimming because swimmers have to make sure they are on route and avoid other swimmers’ kicks.

Senior Pamela Benitez has swum in both pool and open water events and said the committee plays a role in keeping the sport safe. She said each swimmer should do a warm up and test the body of water beforehand and be alert of the environment at all times.

“"ey have to check the temperature of the water,” Benitez said. “"ey have to make a recognition of the area and measure certain things like the wind.”

Benitez said she is honored Walker is her coach, and she is proud that he is the chairman of the committee.

“I did not know before coming here he was such a great coach,” Benitez said. “Being a part of USA Swimming is such an amazing thing in the swimming world. I know he knows a lot about open water, and I respect that a lot.”

Aaron Gra! can be contacted at [email protected]

or (618)-531-3311

CHAIR CONTINUED FROM 12Bears still plugging holes

as bye week fades away

LAKE FOREST — A weekend away for their bye left the Chicago Bears further behind in the NFC North, with a daunting task directly ahead for their struggling defense only adding to the problem they have at quarterback.

Victories by the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions left the Bears a game back in the loss column at 4-3, with more defensive change coming and a game at Green Bay ahead on Monday night in which they will start Josh McCown at quarterback for injured Jay Cutler.

"e defensive problems left coach Marc Trestman calling Monday for an all-out team e!ort from special teams, o!ense and defense to make up for injuries at linebacker and the defensive line.

“We’re not three di!erent units and three separate silos of a building,” he said after Monday’s brief practice. “We really have to play together more than ever now. And I think that’s something that we’re capable of doing.”

“But the No. 1 thing is just to

know our assignments and do our job. "at’s the biggest thing you get coming out of the bye is the more tape you watch, and it’s the way it is with most every team. If you’ll do your job and continue to do it within the framework of the play called, you’ve got a chance to have success on that play.”

A defense now 27th in the league at 391 yards per game allowed will likely start a rookie linebacker for the second straight game. Khaseem Greene will go at weak side linebacker for injured Lance Briggs, who su!ered a fractured shoulder against Washington on Oct. 20. Greene is taking the snaps in practice at the spot and gets #rst crack at it, according to Trestman.

“I’ve only played one snap of defense this year and just having an opportunity to maybe get out there and be a starter and play way more snaps is enough in itself to be fired up,” said Greene, a fourth-round pick from Rutgers who originally played safety in college before converting to linebacker. “But again, I’ve just got to stay calm, trust the defense and trust the scheme, and then also build some confidence in my teammates so they know that

I can actually go out there and compete if I’m the guy.”

Against Washington, rookie Jon Bostic started at middle linebacker following a season-ending knee injury su!ered by D.J. Williams. So the inexperience factor at linebacker will be big, but Bostic thinks coaches will like what they see from Greene.

“He’s a guy that’s been doing everything; being behind Lance he learned a lot of things,” Bostic said. “But there are still a lot of things you have to learn, as well as me.”

Several issues regarding the linebacker position are yet to be resolved, including who calls the signals on the #eld. It is likely Bostic or veteran strong side linebacker James Anderson will do it.

Greene sees his role as simply avoiding mistakes.

“I really listen to what the coaches and the older guys say,” Greene said. “"ey say if you’re going to make a mistake, then make it full speed. "at’s what we say around here. As long as I’m going full speed, the tape can get corrected. "e coaches can correct me. "e older guys can correct me. I can correct myself if I make a mistake.”

GENE CHAMBERLAINAssociated Press

SPORTS TUESDAY | OCTOBER 29, 2013 | DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM | PAGE 12

DAILY EGYPTIAN

Coach to chair open water safety committee

Outnumbered Salukis salvage weekend tournament

SWIMMING & DIVING

A pittance of three, which included two of the youngest Salukis, packed for out-of-state travel as they concluded their fall season during the weekend.

!e team included the members who did not travel to the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Regional Championships Oct. 17- 20 in Oklahoma.

!e women intended to arrive at Arkansas State University with the group of four, but one of the upperclassmen endured a slight injury.

Junior Gisela Cairo Baza was expected to travel alongside her team and twin sister Ariadna Cairo Baza before a pulled hamstring got in the way.

Ariadna was left without a sister and a doubles partner. She was only able to compete in two singles competitions.

Coach Audra Anderson said the two freshmen would have to play hard in order to take home wins.

Although the outnumbered team was short in members, they were not short in talent. Each day of the two-day tournament, the Salukis picked up wins.

Schools such as Southeast Missouri

State University, Murray State University, Belmont University, the University of Central Arkansas and Arkansas State University were in attendance.

Freshmen Polina Dozortseva and Lauren Hoekstra ended their Saturday night with two wins and a loss in singles matches. !e freshmen are also a doubles team, and paired up in "ight No. 3 doubles matches. !e Salukis fought hard as they defeated the Belmont doubles team, but fell short to SEMO. !e duo #nished the night with an overall 1-2 record. !ey both said they tried hard to make their tournaments fun and not as intense.

Dozortseva said it was lonely without the entire team in attendance, but it was maintainable. Dozortseva defeated Belmont’s Nikki Maciel in a close match 6-7, 7-6, 7-6 before defeating Abbey Mather of Belmont 6-2, 6-0 in Flight No. 3 consolation #nals.

“Everybody else had their whole team there and we were the only ones with just a few people,” Dozortseva said. “But it’s still a tournament and how many people are there doesn’t e$ect winning.”

!e women were on the sidelines cheering each other on, as they showed others that the amount of support was not going to bring them down, Hoekstra said.

Hoekstra defeated competition in "ight No. 4, picking up wins against Jenna Kraku 6-4, 6-0 and Anne Fiepke of Belmont 6-4, 6-1.

“We are used to having everyone with us so it was just a little di$erent only having two other people there,” Hoekstra said. “Especially when we went into a huddle, it was just us three and coach.”

Hoekestra said despite being outnumbered, she and her teammates still had a lot of fun, and continued to show their team support.

Hoekstra said she enjoyed her #rst year of college tennis and her time with her doubles teammate. !e doubles team worked to feed o$ of each other’s strengths and weaknesses as they competed.

“Polina is a lot more aggressive and I am more of the timid one,” Dozortseva said.

Although the newcomers had a successful weekend, teammate Cairo Baza had a tough time in singles competition.

Baza did not take home any singles wins, but due to the odd number of Salukis, Baza was forced to conjoin with a woman of the opposite team. She paired up with Suzaan Stoltz of Murray State. !e doubles duo advanced all the way to #nals.

Baza and Stoltz of Murray State competed in Flight No. 4 doubles defeating the Murray State doubles team 8-7.

Anderson said the Salukis now have

the ability to work on their weaknesses.“Since we only brought three players,

they had to play in tougher "ights than they were used to,” Anderson said in a Saluki Athletics press release. “Overall, I thought we did pretty well, and now we have an idea of what we have to work on this season.”

!e young Salukis said they would like to improve various parts of their game. Hoekstra said she, as an individual would like to improve on her o$ense the most, but said she could use improvements everywhere.

Traveling from Russia, Dozortseva said she has drastically gotten better and has adapted to American tennis. Dozortseva would like to improve to work her way up to playing at a higher level.

“I just want to be more consistent and be more aggressive than I already am,” she said. “I just want to brush up on the basic things.”

“Next season is really the most important because we have the Missouri Valley Conference,” Hoekstra said. “I would like to improve on everything because I want to get better for my team.”

!e Salukis will begin their spring season on the road against Arkansas State in February.

SYMONE WOOLRIDGE

Daily Egyptian

Saluki Swimming Coach Rick Walker watches a race Thursday at the Edward J. Shea Natatorium. USA Swimming President Bruce Stratton recently named Walker chairman of the Open Water Development Committee. Walker said the committee’s goal is to keep open water swimming safe by applying pressure to implement safety guidelines for the athletes worldwide.

SARAH SCHNEIDER | DAILY EGYPTIAN

!ere are several swimming committees across the nation, and it is the chairman’s job to lead every committee into keeping the sport as safe as possible going forward.

Saluki Swimming Coach Rick Walker has once again been named chairman of one of those organizations, the Open Water Development Committee, for 2014.

Walker was the #rst member selected to the committee and has been named the chairman every year the committee has been in place.

!e committee was put in place when former University of Virginia swimmer, Francis Crippen drowned in an open water swim meet 500 meters from the #nish Oct. 23, 2010 in the United Arab Emirates. Walker said everyone involved wanted to make sure that would not happen again.

“!e committee was implemented after the death of Fran Crippen,” Walker said. “He was someone who I admired and cared for deeply and worked with before.”

According to an ESPN.com article that anounced Crippen’s death, the temperature of the water was mid-to-high 80’s and several swimmers were treated for heat exhaustion after the race.

AARON GRAFF

Daily Egyptian

Please see CHAIR | 11

‘‘W e are ued to having everyone with us, so it was just a little different only have two other people there.

— Lauren Hoekstrafreshman player

WOMEN’S TENNIS