Issue No. 150, Vol. 96

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Eastern News

Wednesday

“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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NOVEMBER 9, 2011 V O LU M E 9 6 | N o. 1 5 0

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/DENNE WS

Panel discusses government regulation

Spoo entering his final game

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HUNGER BANQUET

Students get glimpse of world hunger issues By Samantha McDaniel Activities Editor

Eastern students and community members traveled the world and experienced the hunger of different social classes. The Newman Catholic Center and the Haiti Connection held their 24th annual hunger banquet “Hunger Banquet 2011: Food for Thought” on Tuesday. Jennifer Prillaman, a political science and French major and the chair of the hunger banquet committee, said the event was meant to bring the problems of world hunger to the attention of Eastern students.

“It’s an awareness raiser,” Prillaman said. “In the past decade, hunger in the world has actually been rising. Despite all the technology and everything we can do, hunger is rising.” Prillaman said they would present many facts about hunger in both the world, as well as in the United States. “There is hunger in every single county of the United States,” Prillaman said. She said many people think that ending world hunger is overused. “It is a huge issue,” Prillaman said. “Sometimes it seems like a cliché, like ‘Oh yes, world hunger. What you want to save the planet and end world hunger?’ But this is not a cliché, it is an injustice.”

As students entered the basement of the Newman Catholic Center, they received a passport with an identity that they would act as for the event. These identities ranged from rich to lower class families, some single and some with a number of children. Then students were given fake money and were tasked with providing food for each member of their family. “If you are a French couple on a cruise, you are going to have a lot of money, so you can just go to the restaurant,” Prillaman said. “But if you are a family from Somalia, you only have $3.” Prilliman said all of the identities were given out randomly. HUNGER, page 5

Donate Life

K AROLINA STR ACK | THE DAILY EASTERN NE WS

Dan Rolando, recent Eastern graduate and Newman Catholic Center groundskeeper, sells popsicles out of a bucket during the Food for Thought Hunger Banquet on Tuesday evening in the basement of the Newman Center. The banquet featured fruit and street vendors as well as a full service cafe to represent the disparity of access to food experienced around the world.

FACULT Y SENATE

Faculty Senate talks of online textbooks By Kathryn Richter Staff Reporter

KIMBERLY FOSTER | THE DAILY EASTERN NE WS

Junior chemistry major William Fernandez, dressed as a liver named Morgan the Organ, high fives a student while garnering attention for a Donate Life organ donor drive on the Library Quad. The drive was put on by Alpha Epsilon Delta, a pre-medical honors society for which Fernandez is the vice president. Passers-by who signed up to be an organ donor or showed proof of donor status received a free T-shirt or drawstring bag in addition to a Donate Life wristband and pen.

STUDENT SENATE

Seats open for elections By Rachel Rodgers Administration Editor

Almost two-thirds of the Student Senate seats are open for elections that will begin Nov. 14 and end Nov. 15. The terms of 17 of the 30 student senate members expire at the end of this semester, 12 of which were appointed this semester and five who were appointed in spring 2011. Roberto Luna, a senior finance major and student senate member, is one of the 17 members whose term is expiring. Luna said he is reapplying for a few different reasons, including to try and continue developing certain programs such as the

Bond Revenue Committee. “I am also interested to be re-elected to the (Student) Senate because this is my last year and I want to help the students through student government one last time,” Luna said. “I feel like I have gained a lot of experience by being on student government and I hope to end on a positive note.” The student senate election process consists of acquiring 50 student signatures on a petition and applicants must have a 2.25 GPA and be in good disciplinary standing with the university. The petitions are due at 4 p.m. on Thursday to the Student Activities Center. Kaci Abolt, the student vice president

for student affairs and a junior communication studies major, said she hopes to see a diverse student senate next semester. “I am hoping we will have returning senators, but it is also nice to see new faces and have new ideas,” Abolt said. A candidate meeting is scheduled for 4 p.m., on Friday and online voting begins Nov. 14. Rachel Rodgers can be reached at 581-2812 or rjrodgers@eiu.edu.

For the full version of this story go to:

dailyeasternnews.com

Faculty Senate members discussed online materials and the role the Textbook Rental Service plays in the distribution of these materials on Tuesday. Cheryl Noll, the chairwoman of the School of Business, said the school of business opened the discussion about online class materials when the school of business faculty sent a position paper on the Textbook Rental Service. “We really are seeing some changes in the industry,” Noll said. “We are looking more and more at online information.” The school of business faculty sent a memo to the Faculty Senate and the Textbook Rental Service regarding the business model of Textbook Rental Service and its lack of providing online material to students. “The current Textbook Rental Fee structure is not flexible and does not support options other than the hard copy text,” the position paper stated. The memo also stated that a professor’s mandatory two-year commitment to textbooks purchased for

their class does not support the need for current up-to-date information. Noll said she felt a discussion needed to take place about the current business model for Textbook Rental Service and how it could be changed in order to support new and emerging media in place of, or in supplement to, textbooks. Noll said she felt this transition was necessary due to the shift in the publishing industry. Noll also said not adding costs to students was important in considering online materials, considering some of the online workbooks are just as expensive as their paper counterparts. Carol Miller, the director of Textbook Rental Service, said the discussion was generally positive and focused on the logistical, financial and ethical aspects of online-based class materials and the role Textbook Rental Service plays in distributing them. Kathryn Richter can be reached at 581-2812 or kjrichter@eiu.edu.

For the full version of this story go to:

dailyeasternnews.com


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