Eastern News
Friday
“Tell th e t r u t h a n d d o n ’ t b e a fr a i d . ”
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OC TOBER 12, 2012 V O LU M E 9 7 | N o. 3 8
EASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY CHARLESTON, ILL. D A I LY E A S T E R N N E W S . C O M T WIT TER.COM/DEN_NE WS
ART SHOW
Artists decorate walls with 3D art By Jaime Lopez Verge Editor
Color guard shows pride, page 5A SPORTS
F R I DAY, O C TO B E R 12, 2012
N o. 38, V O LU M E 97
T H E DA I LY E ASTE R N NEWS
D A I LY E A S T E R N N E W S . C O M
5B
FACTS FOR FANS
No. 1 No. 2 No. 3 No. 4 No. 5 Junior quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo was named to the Walter Payton Award Watch List for the top player in the FCS. For the season, Garoppolo has thrown for 2,255 yards, 20 touchdowns and seven interceptions through six games this season. If he were to win the Walter Payton Award, he would join former Panther and current Dallas Cowboy Pro Bowl quarterback Tony Romo as the only Panthers to win the Walter Payton Award.
Freshman setter/outside hitter Abby Saalfrank has five tripledoubles on the year. Her most recent comes in a four-set victory over Eastern Kentucky, a victory that ended the Panthers’ 10-game losing streak. Saalfrank posted 15 kills, 15 assists and 11 digs. This season Saalfrank is leading the Panthers in kills (173), sets played (71) and total points (199.5). She also ranks second on the team in assists (263) and fourth on the team in digs (132).
Red-shirt junior wide receiver Erik Lora needs just four catches to set the single-season record for catches in program history. His 72 receptions rank second to Jerry Wright’s 76-catch season in 1984. Lora has also cemented himself as one of the best receivers in the country as his 1,001 yards and 72 receptions rank first in the nation. He also became the first Eastern receiver since 1986 to total more than 1,000 receiving yards in a season.
Eastern’s men’s soccer team has struggled to this point in the season, posting an overall record of 2-10 (0-3 Summit League), but it has a string of games that could move them up to fourth place in the Summit League if the Panthers can go on a winning streak. With just four conference games remaining, the Panthers find themselves in last place, but with two other teams also winless in conference play, they could make a late season run to secure a conference tournament bid.
Eastern’s rugby team had gotten off to an uncharacteristically slow start this season as it dropped its first two games of the season playing in an unfamiliar seven-on-seven format. But with the Panthers moving to a 10-on-10 style of play, they returned to old form, recording a 43-10 win over Lindenwood on Oct. 4. The Panthers will return to action at 1 p.m. Saturday when they travel to Bowling Green, Ky., to take on the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers.
Five things to know about Eastern sports, page 5B
REPORTING BY JORDAN POT TORFF, PHOTOS BY DOMINIC BAIMA & Z ACHARY WHITE, DESIGN BY ASHLEY HOLSTROM | THE DAILY EASTERN NE WS
Homecoming 2012 Friday
Four O’Clock Club Free Appetizers $4 Zoos $5 Pitchers $3 Vegas Bombs
Saturday
Kegs and Eggs VIII a panther tradition!
Free Breakfast 8-10am Bloody Mary Bar $4 Zoos $2.50 160z Cans $4 Jager Bombs
Sunday
NFL Sunday Ticket $.60 Boneless Wings $3 U-call-it Drafts $3 Bloody Marys $3.75 Irish Car Bombs $2.50 Lunch Box Shots
Mahan leaves mark on rugby, page 8B
erge V Fall entertainment you shouldn't miss 10.12.2012
4C
Mindy Kaling of "The Office" created and stars in the new comedy series, "The Mindy Project," about a single doctor trying to balance her personal and professional life. "The Mindy Project" airs on Fox.
"The Casual Vacancy" is J.K. Rowling's first novel for adults. The novel has no magic or wizards, but takes place in a fictional English village and deals with self-harm, politics and other social issues that fill the village of Pagford.
No Doubt is back after an 11-year-hiatus with its new album, "Push and Shove." The album including the single, "Settle Down," stays true to the band's ska-pop sound.
JAIME LOPEZ | THE DAILY EASTERN NE WS
Beth Speers, a customer at Jackson Avenue Coffee, continues scrolling through her phone despite the images of skeletons and snakes in the background.
Hunter said people worry about his state of mind when they approach him and question the artwork hanging in the coffee house. “I’m putting my fears right out there. I’m nuts and I’m happy with it,” Horton said. Horton said the artwork heightens the intensity of human fears so much that the works lose their power and are seen as exaggerations. Key mainly designs collages, but said the three-dimensional side of assemblage is better simulating fear. Some of the artwork was made
ENROLLMENT
The mockumentary style comedy "Modern Family," dealing with multi-cultural and same-sex marriage is back for its fourth season on ABC.
"The Perks of Being a Wallflower," starring Emma Watson, Ezra Mille and Logan Lerman, is about an introverted high school freshman. Based on the 1999 novel by Stephen Chbosky, the movie depicts the awkward times of adolescence.
Even the pleasant smell of caffeine and pastries wafting through the air is not enough to distract customers from the latest gallery of artwork lining the walls of Jackson Avenue Coffee for the month of October. The works of various artists quite literally pop out from their frames, which are part of the art, too. Wooden horns, miniature horses, metal wire and even a jewelry box were all used as building materials. Artist Joanna Key layered a straw reef with plastic, furry mice to illustrate how ludicrous the fear of mice really is. “I think it’s funny that humans, these giant creatures, are so afraid of such tiny critters,” Key said while pointing to her work in the midst of customers who stared at her and her art curiously. Another one of her popular pieces is a spider web frame she made out of metal wire, pieces of wood, and sprinkled with spiders on the top. Dave Hunter, another one of the artists the gallery plays host to, said he has been making these types of pictures—bridging a gap between two-dimensional and three-dimensional art—for the past two years. The process is known as assemblage, and in it, artists craft images with most of the leaning toward garish, haunting scenes. Hunter said assemblage lends itself to many different branches of art that he enjoys, like painting, model making and fabrication. One of his projects is a wooden box with an angel and a skeleton perched at the top.
The ninth and final season of "The Office" airing on NBC, takes a comic look among the lives of co-workers at Dunder Mifflin Paper Company.
"30 Rock," starring Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin and Tracy Morgan, is back for its series finale. The comedy, based on Fey's experiences as writer for "Saturday Night Live," airs on NBC.
Indie pop artist Ellie Goulding releases her sophomore album, "Halcyon" which features the singles "Anything Could Happen" and "I Know You Care."
Highlights of fall entertainment, page 4C
Battle of Bands winner to perform at tailgate, page 5C
out of a collection of antlers; others were strictly made of wood. At the end of the gallery hang the works of Karenlee Spencer, the special events organizer for the office of admission. Unlike most of the other works in the coffee shop, which have some structure to them, Spencer scattered materials in no particular fashion. Paper, metal, fabric, weathered photos and wood from old furniture were just a few of the materials used in her portion of the gallery. In one of her works, which she
considers homage to fall and Halloween, Spencer piled together orange and purple stars in a circular fashion. “You can create beautiful things out of nothing,” Spencer said. “You can make stuff out stuff.” Jaime Lopez can be reached at 581-2812 or jlopez2@eiu.edu. For the in-depth version of this story, go to
dailyeasternnews.com
FUNDING
Departments suffer UB breaks down from low enrollment cost of Homecoming By Robyn Dexter In-depth Editor
Decreasing enrollment has taken a toll on Eastern, and has impacted the various academic departments within the university. Blair Lord, the vice president for Academic Affairs, said one of the departments that has been affected the most is the education department. “Generally speaking, education areas have suffered the most in this downturn,” he said. “Part of that is because of what has happened in the profession of education in this state being slow in paying universities and school systems.” He said the lagging economy is causing public schools to really hurt from the lack of funding. The formerly named Basic Skills Test for education majors is another factor in the decline in the education department. “They changed the scores (a future teacher) needed to have drastically,” he said. “We went from 96 percent of people passing on their first try to having people try it multiple times and barely a third of students were getting by.” Lord said the word got out that
it was difficult to stay in education and the test was being changed yet again. “They help by providing an alternative where students can take the ACT with the writing component and achieve a score of 22,” he said. “If they do that, they don’t have to take the Basic Skills Test.” Lord said naturally not every education student has an ACT score of 22, but that there are many guides and practice tools a student can buy to prepare for the ACT. There are pockets in each college where there are declines, Lord said. “Costs are tough, aid is getting scarcer and the economy is just making it hard for families to send people to college,” he said. Lord said from what he has heard from different departments, every area is eager to know what efforts are being done to increase enrollment and are glad to hear about the recruitment plan that is in process. Robyn Dexter can be reached at 581-2812 or redexter@eiu.edu. For the in-depth version of this story, go to
dailyeasternnews.com
By Robyn Dexter In-depth Editor
Eastern’s Homecoming, one of the biggest events of the year, is a collaborative effort financially. Ceci Brinker, the director of Student Life, said funding comes from several different departments. Brinker said she estimates that there are between 15 and 20 major Homecoming events, and the Student Life office is in charge of around eight of them. “The bulk of the budget is provided by University Board because they have a Homecoming Committee,” she said. The committee’s budget is about $20,000, Brinker said. She said athletics has expenses from the football game and the tailgate, and housing and dining also has some general expenses. Overall, Brinker said if she had to guesstimate the amount of money that will go into this year’s Homecoming, it would be between $30,000 and $40,000. The major expenses the UB handles include prizes, giveaways and
awards for the weekend, which cost around $1,500, Brinker said. She said another large expense for the UB includes the spirit T-shirts sold before Homecoming. “This year, they decided to offer the T-shirts in three colors instead of the usual one color,” she said. “Usually, the sales of the shirts are part of their fundraising to offset their other expenses but because they chose this year to make a nicer shirt, they’re actually losing money, which they’re OK with.” Entertainment costs for the Homecoming Weekend are about $1,000 and include inflatable bounce houses for Throwback Thursday. “It’s never stifled the spirit for homecoming,” she said. “People are always willing to go the extra mile because it’s Homecoming, and it’s our time to shine and go the extra mile for the great place Eastern really is.” Robyn Dexter can be reached at 581-2812 or redexter@eiu.edu. For the in-depth version of this story, go to
dailyeasternnews.com