rat PENDULUM A PUBLICATION OF Executive Director Jackie Pascale Managing Editor Emmanuel Morgan News Director Paul LeBlanc ' Adviser Kelly Furnas Editorial - ■ Margaret Malone, News Alexandra Schonfeld, Lifestyle Olivia Ryan, . Opinions Erik Webb, Sports Maria Barreto, Copy Chief _ ^■ Anton L. Delgado, Assistant News Maggie Brown, Assistant News Art Caroline Brehman, Photo Stephanie Hays, Design Chief Alex Toma, Assistant Design Chief Digital Alex Hager, Web Producer Cal Mincer, Media Analytics Manager Sophie Eng, Social Media Manager Assignment Rachel Ellis, Lead Assignment Manager Emily Harrison, Breaking News Manager Editorial policy: ENN seeks to inspire, entertain and inform the Eton community by providing a voice for students and faculty, as well os serve as a forum for the meaningful exchange of ideas. Corrections policy: ENN is committed to accurate coverage. When factual errors are made, we correct them promptly and in full, both online and in print. Online corrections state the error and the change at the bottom of each article. Corrections from the previous week's print edition appear on this page. Contact enn(® elon.edu to report a correction or a concern. CALENDAR ELON NEWS NETWORK OCT. 11 Established 1974 Volume 43, Edition 14 Eton News Network is a daily operation that includes a newspaper, website, broadcasts and multimedia. Letters to the editor are welcome and should be typed, signed and emailed to enn(a)e/on,edu as Word documents. ENN reserves the right to edit obscene and potentially libelous / material. Lengthy letters ‘ may be trimmed to fit. All ■ submissions become the property of ENN and will not be returned. ENN is located on the first floor of the McEwen School of Communications. University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Info Session 530 P.M. Moseley Center Room 216 Competing to Get an Internship or Job 7 P.M. Alumni Field House Sweet Plantain 730 P.M. Whitley Auditorium OCT. 12 Shmini Atzeret and Simchat Torah All Day OCT. 13 Fall Break Begiins After Classes Women’s Volleyball vs. College of Charleston 7P.M, Alumni Gym OCT. 16 GRE Test Prep Class 6:30 P.M. Student Professional Development Center OCT. 17 Men’s Soccer vs. Wake Forest 7 P.M. Rudd Field OCT. 18 Fall Break Ends 8 A.M. CONTACT WHEN WE PUBLISH; The Pendulum publishes weekly on Wednesdays. Elon Local News broadcasts Mondays at 6 p.m. ELN Morning broadcasts Thursdays at 9:50 a.m. ELN Online Exclusive broadcasts Tuesdays at 4:30 p.m. FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook Elon News Network Twitter/Instagram/ Snapchat (Slelonnewsnetwork Youtube Elon News Network INTERESTED IN GEHING INVOLVED? Contact enn(a)elon.edu GAMES NEWS BRIEFS Peace Corps Info Session 530 P.M. McKinnon Hall FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 11,2017 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis ACROSS 1 Ballet divisions 5 Crank (up) 8 Hunchbacked lab assistant 12 Un-fizzy 13 PGA Tour golf course near Miami 15 Fish in salade nigoise 16 Inc. and LLC? 19 “No fighting!" 20 Self-worth 21 Gym unit 22 Beaming and shining? 25 Jibe grammatically 28 Come- : enticements 29 Covent Garden highlight 30 Wolfish look 31 Pal of Pooh 32 Green shampoo 33 Ranking org. for court players 34 Google operating system 36 “Never Me Go”; Kazuo Ishiguro novel 38 Blue Cross rival 40 Dr. with Grammys 41 Managed 42 Donkey sound 43 Tie the knot 44 Socialite Perfe 45 “Got ft!” and “Roger that!”? 48 Hassle 49 Tic-tac-toe win 50 “Green Eggs and Ham” opening 53 “What are you in for?” and “I was framed”? 57 Like the T206 Honus Wagner baseball card 58 Eats by candlelight 59 Not in favor of 60 Summit 61 Affirmative action 62 Drain slowly i-! Eli i ■^■44 DOWN 1 Langley, e.g.: Abbr. 2 Driver or putter By C.C. Burnikel 3 Subdue with a charge 4 Cocl^l made with brandy and cr^me de menthe 5 Timber often used for guitar fretboards 6 Triage locales, briefly 7 “La Bamba” singer Ritchie 8 Addams family cousin 9 Military rebels 10 Ready for the worst 11 Speaks with a scratchy voice 13 Geometric art style 14 Mason: asset management giant 17 Aswan Dam site 18 In the direction of 23 Properly arrang^ 24 Underground find 25 Styled after, on a menu 26 Be judged unfairly 27 Performer’s array 31 Genetic code transmitter 10/11/17 Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved ■ S T A R 1 0 H 1 0 s u E D E 1 T B E N H L G ®20t 7 Tribune Content Agency. LLC 32 Often fruity dessert 34 Slangy Tefs move on” 35 Like priests 37 What some caddies cany 39 The Northwest’s Sea- Airport 41 Private jet choices 43 “Any volunteers?” 44 Cultural pic that may go viral 45 Oscar-winning director Frank 46 Frog habitat 47 Pre-coil, exams 51 Spots to conceal 52 Dole (out) 54 Kinsey research focus 55 Producer of some Talking Heads albums 56 Sample THIS WEEK IN HISIORV - ELON’S FIRST FREE HIV TESIS V\N 380 ^ Wood "ih-HIV tint,) T™,ada, a FDA-app™,ed designed to help prevent HIV infection on the Monito, ' “"X 03( Olt ‘ 0.K ’ ‘ X D.: This week 13 years ago, Elon University began offering free HIV testing to students on the first Thursday of every month. Elon hoped to raise awareness of the disease and its possible effects on students on campus. After the North Carolina Screening Tracing Active Transmission test detected 25 college males with HIV in the Triad area, Elon decided to offer students more access to testing. By offering these resourc es the Health Center hoped to inform students of the risks of HIV and unprotected sex. “The Elon Cares team has been visiting different Health and Elon 101 classes to inform students of the risks they face when they have unprotected sex,” said Stephanie Kloeber, the 2004 coordinator of Elon Cares, a service branch of Elon Volunteers!. “It is important that a person be tested if they are sexually active,” said Michelle Moody, who coordinated Elon Cares. The Health Center still wants to make sure all students would have access to the medical assis- tance they needed. Today, Alamance Care still provMes free HIV testing FREE HIV TESTING AT ELON Elon, University’s Health Center first offers free HIV testing in October 2004. Category 2 Hurricane Nate makes landfall in the US Mississippi and Louisiana struck by Hurricane Nate, a cateRm 2 hurricane that made landfall Oct I According to the National Hurricane' Center, Hurricane Nate first made lam] fall late Saturday night as a Catcgom storm near the mouth of the Mississi 1 River in southeast Louisiana. Hurricane Nate has maximum sustained winds of 85 mph. A hr. ricane warning was in effect f* coastal areas from the border oil Louisiana and Mississippi to the Alabama-Florida border. Professors win second in casewritinf competition Three Elon University professois won second place in the 2017 Suimtid Institute of Management Accountants (IMA) Case Writing Competition, Paula Weller, senior lecturer in accounting; Linda Poulson, chair and associate professor of accounting and Brian Nienhaus, associate professor of business communication, coauthored “Ethical Choices at Choice House." The case was published in the September issue of the IMA Educational Case Journal and challeng. es students to overcome the internal control and ethical problems of a smal nonprofit organization. Elon dedicates Richard W. Sankey Hall site Construction continues for Sanke; Hall, the new business building was dedicated to Richard W Sankey0ct.S, The dedication event was held to celebrate the support that Elon University parents Jim and Belli Sankey of Charlotte provided to the university and to Sankey Hall, which will bear the name of Jim’s father. Sankey Hall is located in the north end of McMichael Science Center parking lot adjacent to Colonnades Dining Hall and near the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business, Construction for the three-story, 30,000-square-foot building began this summer and will be complete in August 2018. Family files brain damage lawsuit against ARMC The Fraune Family of Burlington filed a lawsuit against Alamance Regional Medical Center (ARMO on Oct. 4. Frances Fraune claims her newborn child had problems with breastfeeding and lost more than 1 percent of his body weight. The doctors at ARMC told the family their son was dehydrated and had dangerously low blood sugar, but these proved to be inaccurate diagnoses. When the boy was 2 years old he showed signs of developmen' tal issues. According to the lawsuit, the Fraune’s son had an oxygen level at 72 percent. Though the boy was clearly malnourished because of complications with his breastfee ing, the doctor told the family the’t child was eating well. ,■ The suit alleges the nursing and administration for neglige^*^^'