Daily Egyptian DAILYEGYPTIAN.COM
TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015
SINCE 1916
VOL. 99 ISSUE 37
Fourth and fifth Salukis announce intention to transfer AAron GrAff | @AaronGraff_DE The fourth and fifth SIU men’s basketball players to transfer announced they are leaving this month. Freshman forward Jordan Caroline and freshman guard Deion Lavender followed suit of junior guard Jalen Pendleton, freshman guard Chaz Glotta and redshirt freshman K.C. Goodwin on Monday. Coach Barry Hinson said the transfers hurt and bothered him. Caroline was named to the Missouri Valley Conference AllFreshman team this season, averaged the most rebounds and earned the second most points on the team with 6.2 and 9.2 respectively. Caroline said he wants to play at a higher level, but does not know where he is transferring to. He has not yet received any offers. “This was a great learning experience here,” Caroline said. “I met a lot of great people in my time here.” Lavender started 13 games and averaged 6.6 points per game and made 24 three-pointers this season. Hinson said he thinks L a v e n d e r ’s reasoning is that he was unhappy in Carbondale. All five transfers made the decision on their own,
Budget committee asks for student input Tyler DAvis | @TDavis_DE Students and faculty can provide their budget suggestions on a new SIU webpage. The chancellor’s website added a tab Monday that invites all university personnel to submit questions and ideas regarding SIU’s budget. Budget talks have been a focal point following Gov. Bruce Rauner’s proposed budget, which would cut nearly 32 percent from the state’s higher education spending. University spokeswoman Rae Goldsmith said the university launched the website because the Executive Planning and Budget Committee wants to give a voice to every SIU community member. The committee, which includes two students, members of the Faculty Senate and chancellor and provost appointees, advises the chancellor on budgetary issues. The committee met with President Randy Dunn, who assumed chancellor duties after
former chancellor Paul Sarvela died in November, on Monday. The advisory committee consists of constituents of various groups on campus, including the Civil Service Council, student government and the Administrative Professional Staff Council. The meeting was preliminary and Goldsmith said no cuts were made. “We talked about making sure that we’re getting the campus community engaged in the conversation,” she said. “We also talked about an open forum, maybe a town hall meeting, that we might do in April. The meeting with Dunn comes after last week’s administrative request of 25 non-academic units, including the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute, the Center for Dewey Studies and WSIU, to present hypothetical plans for a 50 percent cut in state appropriations.
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Hinson said. He said he could not guarantee the first three transfers playing time. Hinson would not comment when asked if he could have guaranteed the first three transfers more playing time had he known Caroline and Lavender were transferring before them. “Hindsight is 20-20,” he said. “It’s not even fair to answer the question.” Hinson said he does not feel he is coaching for his job at this point. “[People calling for my job] are going to have to put up with me for at least three more years, because I have a contract,” Hinson said. “People that call for my job, they’re calling for a lot of people’s job. I’m not a quick fix. I never have been and I never will be. The only heat I feel is the heat I put on myself.” He said his plans for next season have not changed and the team will not sign more recruits just for the sake of signing them. It will sign the best players it can. “I don’t want to pull an Aaron Rodgers here, but I’d like to quote Aaron Rodgers,” Hinson said. “Just relax.” Hinson said he is unsure if the transfers will hurt recruiting in the future.
Sharing the message of Clyburn
L uke N ozicka | @lukenozicka
A woman posts a picture of U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., to Snapchat on Monday in the Student Center Auditorium. The event, “Reflecting on the 50th Anniversary of the Voting Rights Act,” which SIU President Randy Dunn, acting Mayor Don Monty and other community leaders attended, was sponsored by the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute and the Black Law Please see BUDGET | 3 Student Association.