March 2, 2015

Page 1

CAT FIGHT

The Eastern women’s basketball team lost 72-55 against the Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville Cougars Saturday.

‘NOT OUR TOWN’ Charleston residents proposed a program to stop hate and make the community more inclusive during the Interdisciplinary Center for Global Diversity’s Community Coffee Hour.

Dai ly Eastern News PAGE 3

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THE

W W W .D A I L YE A S TE R N N E W S. C O M

Monday, March 2, 2015

VOL. 99 | NO. 107

“TELL THE TRUTH AND DON’T BE AFRAID”

BOT to name next Eastern president By Luis Martinez Administration Editor| @DEN_News The Board of Trustees will announce the 12th president of Eastern at 1 p.m. Monday. Joe Dively, the chair of the presidential search committee, said the meeting agenda would be changed so the vote on the president will be the last item. The finalists for the position are Sam Minner, David Glassman, Margaret Madden and Guiyou Huang. A reception for the search and accreditation committees will be at 8 a.m., followed by an executive session at 11:45 a.m. “We have talked about it and the candidate will be there,” Dively said. “However, it is not done until the final board vote on selection.” Dively said the president-elect would not be officially recognized as the next president until the board votes on the matter. President Bill Perry said Monday is going to be an exciting day, and people will see how Eastern is moving forward in terms of leadership. “It’s no secret. All four candidates came to campus; everyone had a chance to interview them,” Perry said. “They all had a chance to give their feedback to the search committee.” The meeting will be open to the public at 1 p.m. when the board will go through its agenda and vote on the president toward the end. “After the selection of the president, the meeting will be adjourned,” Dively said. “Immediately afterwards, we will be introducing the new president in a press conference.” The press conference will be where the president-elect will be available for questions from the media. Afterward, the president-elect will

PRESIDENTIAL C ANDIDATES DAVID GL ASSMAN

Bradley University

GUIYOU HUANG

Norwich University

MARGARET MADDEN

University of Postdam New York

SAM MINNER

Radford University

address the general public to answer any questions. The decision for a new president comes from Perry’s vacancy at the end of this academic year. “We’ve got a successor person who we think will do a great job for Eastern, a person whose values really resonate with Eastern’s values,” Perry said. The board meeting will be at 1p.m. Monday in the University Ballroom of the Martin Luther King University Union. Stephanie Markham contributed to this article. Luis Martinez can be reached at 581-2812 or lpmartinez@eiu.edu.

Universities may see compromise in state budget cuts By Stephanie Markham News Editor | @stephm202 With Gov. Bruce Rauner’s proposed 31.5 percent cut to higher education threatening to reduce Eastern’s state appropriations by $13.85 million, both President Bill Perry and Rep. Reggie Phillips said they believe some compromise must happen before Illinois’ budget is approved. Perr y said Eastern’s state appropriations have been reduced by $10.7 million since 2002, and Rauner’s requested cut for fiscal year 2016 would be drastic in comparison. “Over 13 years we have an opportunity to deal with $10.7 million in reductions, and now in one year they’re wanting us to handle $13.8 million,” he said. “That’s 30

percent more than we’ve dealt with over the last 13 years.” Perry said he does not believe the budget cuts would be approved at the level Rauner requested. “We know that the state budget needs correction. We know that everyone has to be a partner in that, and we’re willing to do that,” he said. “I mean we’re public servants, but this is just too much, too soon.” Phillips, a Republican who represents the 110th district containing Eastern, said he does not think a 31.5 percent cut to higher education would pass through the House and Senate; if it did, he said it would send students from Illinois universities to states like Indiana and Missouri.

COMPROMISE, page 5

MAGGIE BOYLE | THE DAILY EASTERN NE WS

Alexis Lambert, the previous Miss Black EIU winner, crowns Tionna Alderson, the first place winner in this year’s Miss Black EIU 2015 Scholarship Pageant, at the Martin Luther King Jr. University Union Saturday in the Grand Ballroom.

Miss Black EIU contestants shed layers of inner selves

By T’Nerra Butler Staff Reporter | @DEN_News T i o n n a A l d e r s o n’s s t o ry of how she is fighting to overcome a life-long disease helped her to win the title of 44th Miss Bl a c k E I U 2 0 1 5 o n Sa t u rd a y. Alderson, a senior communication disorders and sciences major, was escorted onstage in a full-length sleeveless purple gown with her mother, who shares her fight with Fibromyalgia. The Black Student Union hosted the annual Miss Black EIU Pageant in the Grand Ballroom of the Martin Luther King Jr. University Union. “I love that I got to tell my story, and people actually heard it, and they listened,” Alderson said. “I have a tendency to hide it because I don’t want people to know I’m sick,

JORDAN GAY|THE DAILY EASTERN NE WS

Carolyn Davis, a senior sociology major and partipicant in the Miss Black EIU 2015 scholarship pageant, receives her award of $750 for first runner up on Saturday.

that I’m vulnerable or that I’m weak because in my head I think I’m

Wonder Woman.” MISS BLACK EIU, page 5


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March 2, 2015 by The Daily Eastern News - Issuu