A HAUNTING
SWIMMING SUCCESS
Students crowded Pemberton Hall for scares over the weekend at the “Halloween Haunts.”
Two Panther swimmers broke Padovan Pool records Saturday while Eastern defeated Valparaiso.
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D aily E astern N ews
Monday, October 31, 2016
C E L E B RATI NG A CE NT UR Y OF COVE RA GE
Top German officer to talk links between terror attacks, refugees
VOL. 101 | NO. 50
“TELL THE TRUTH AND DON’T BE AFRAID”
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W W W . D A I L YE A S TE R N N E W S . C O M
Even dinosaurs need help
By Samuel Nusbaum Administration Reporter | @DEN_News A top German police officer will be holding a presentation about terrorism and its ties to refugees 7 p.m. Monday in the Roberson Auditorium in Lumpkin Hall. Wilhelm Schmidbauer is the director of the Bavarian State Police and will be talking about terrorism in a conference called “Anti-Terror Conference: Refugees and Terrorists in Europe.” He is an honorary professor at the University of Regensburg and served as vice president for a time, according to the German publication Onetz. According to the article, he is in charge of 40,000 officers and has held positions in the Ministry of the Interior twice.
Fast Facts • Schmidbauer is the director of the Bavarian State Police •He is in charge of 40,000 officers • Most of the refugees in Bavaria are Syrians who have fled the civil war • Schidbauer has dealt with “three lone wolf attacks”
Schmidbauer is part of a delegation that includes Robert Heimberger, the head of the Bavarian Bureau of Investigation, and Norbert Radmacher, the deputy commander of the Operations Division of the Bavaria State Police. There will be a social hour starting at 6 p.m., which goes until the lecture starts. It will be held in the 1895 Room in the Martin Luther King Jr. University Union for people to meet and speak to the delegation. Schmidbauer has dealt with three “lone wolf ” attacks, all in the German state of Bavaria, according to a press release. Lone wolf attacks are attacks perpetrated by a single individual, instead of being done by a group of people. The attacks include an Afghan refugee using a knife and an axe to attack passengers on a train, a German teenager of Iranian background shooting nine people in Munich, Germany and a suicide bombing at a bar in the city of Ansbach, Germany, the press release read. Bavaria is the largest state in Germany and the second most populated. It has taken in over 1,000,000 refugees, most of them being Syrians fleeing the civil war that has been raging for years and has drawn in a coalition of multiple nations and factions into the fighting. Terrorist attacks have been increasing in frequency all around the world in places like Paris, France and Munich, Germany, so people like Schmidbauer have a unique insight into the causes and effects of terrorist attacks and how refugees contribute in both positive and negative ways to it. The lecture is co-sponsored by the Illinois State Police and EIU’s Public Policy Institute and is free of charge. Samuel Nusbaum can be reached at 581-2812 or scnusbaum@eiu.edu.
VIC TOR GOMEZ | THE DAILY EASTERN NE WS
Muusa Dama, a junior economics major, and Montell Goodwin, a junior sociology major, help a trick or treater shoot a basket during “EIU Blue Madness” Sunday in Lantz Arena.
‘Cybersecurity’ cracks new program list, added to Fall 2017 By Meka Al Taqi-Brown Contributing Writer | @DEN_News Along with the other 36 graduate programs and 10 graduate certificate programs, cybersecurity will be added to the list of new programs starting in the 2017 fall semester. Cybersecurity will be part of the graduate program, collaborated with the Schools of Business and of Technology in the Lumpkin College of Business. Austin Cheney, the department chair for the school of technology, said that cybersecurity experts help protect information and make that information accessible to those permitted to see it. “Most businesses and organizations have in-
formation networks, and individuals have mobile devices that are continually attacked by hackers and need to be protected from intrusions, whether to plant viruses (or) worms or simply attempt to steal data,” Cheney said. A few of the jobs that the cybersecurity program will prepare students for are cybersecurity consultant, network security specialist, information assurance specialist, computer security system analyst and many more. One of the coordinators responsible for getting the program on campus was Mahyar Izadi, the dean of the Business College. Izadi partnered up with the chairs of the Schools of Technology and Business and organized a committee of people who would help
design this program for the graduate school. Cheney is one of the leaders who helped design the program, but designing it was a team effort. “Dr. Rigoberto Chinchilla from the School of Technology will be serving as coordinator for the program, and Dr. Abdou Illia from the School of Business provided much of the content expertise during our committee meetings,” Cheney said, “along with Drs. John Willems, Melody Wollan and Larry White from the School of Business and Drs. Peter Ping Liu, Rendong Bai and Toqeer Israr from the School of Technology.” Cybersecurity, page 5
Shots fired shatters Halloween weekend, investigation continues Staff Report | @DEN_News The Charleston Police Department and University Police Department responded to two shots fired calls Friday morning. The first one occurred at 1:51 a.m. at Ninth Street and Garfield Avenue and the second happened at 2:24 a.m. at 1520 Edgar Drive. For the call at Edgar Drive, officers arrived and located evidence indicating that a single shot was fired into a residence.
Nobody was physically injured. During their investigation, police officers learned of a possible residence where the suspect could be residing or visiting. The residence and vehicle were searched. A total of six people detained in or around the residence were brought to the police department for questioning and later released. Evidence of the first shooting was located on the 2200 block of Ninth Street. The Charleston Police Department are inves-
tigating the shootings, which they believe are all connected, according to a press release. Anyone with any information regarding the incident or suspects are encouraged to call Charleston Detective Tony West at 217-3458402, contact the Coles County Crime Stoppers at 866-345-8488 or message the CPD through their Facebook page. The News staff can be reached at 581-2812 or dennewsdesk@gmail.com.