February 23rd, 2011 09:23 pm by The Diamondback

A calm committee prepares to face a good samaritan

The bumpiest stretch of a four-year battle for a Good Samaritan policy may be over, members of a University Senate committee said yesterday.

After the senate’s most powerful committee voted last week to send the latest version of a Good Samaritan protocol, which would implement it as a full-blown policy, to the senate floor for a vote, senators who drafted the document said yesterday they are confident it will finally become policy at a full body vote next week.

At yesterday’s Student Conduct Committee meeting, members of the subcommittee said they hope to have a quick and painless vote so that the protocol — which seeks to protect students from punishment if they call 911 for a dangerously intoxicated friend — will become policy immediately.

Student Conduct Director John Zacker said if the latest version of the protocol is approved, it would become policy right away rather than waiting until next semester to implement it.

Zacker also said last week’s vote should be indicative of how the senate responds to the proposed policy.

“I think you can generally gauge how the senate will respond based on how the Senate Executive Committee responds,” Zacker said at yesterday’s meeting.
“Hopefully, it goes as smoothly as everything else did,” added faculty senator Lee Friedman, who drafted the original protocol.

Because of the widespread university support, senators said they expect to face little opposition at next week’s senate meeting, noting that all concerns have been addressed in committee.

“I think what’s telling in just this committee’s work and the work we did before is that we really have strong support from our student leaders on the campus,” Zacker said. “Even in the Student Executive Committee, our student representatives spoke favorably of the policy and supported in full the direction that we’re headed. If anything, there might be comments from the floor in support.”

— Yasmeen Abutaleb

February 22nd, 2011 11:54 pm by The Diamondback

Dog eat Turtle

The Barking Dog's current location in Bethesda draws a healthy night-life crowd many hope to see in its upcoming College Park spot.

The Thirsty Turtle’s former location won’t be vacant for much longer. The Barking Dog, a Bethesda-based establishment, is on track to be the latest bar in the infamous venue.

When students caught wind of the possible contender for the new Route 1 watering hole, news spread across the campus like wildfire. And now that the Prince George’s County Board of License Commissioners approved owner John McManus’s petition for a liquor license, students can expect a new dog in the house by this fall.

Many students have responded with reserved excitement, but that eagerness for another Route 1 destination is somewhat overshadowed by skepticism that it could truly fill Turtle’s void.

The Barking Dog is a far cry from Turtle, students familiar with its other location in Bethesda said. Patrons shouldn’t expect the same level of debauchery as from a night on Turtle’s dizzying dance floor. Other bars have come and gone in that same spot, ousted by liquor inspectors, but this dog appears to be of a different species.

McManus has told both the liquor board and the College Park City Council that he’s never been cited for alcohol or noise violations and plans to maintain that clean record in College Park, adding he’ll try to stick around longer than Turtle proved capable of doing.

And it seems that the council intends to put as many measures in place as it can to ensure he follows through: The business must maintain a 50-50 food-alcohol ratio and bouncers must hold down the fort during peak hours using (gasp) ID scanners to keep out the high-school kids.
And then there’s the pitchers.

While students flocked to Turtle every Tuesday for the beloved $2-pitcher night, The Barking Dog will charge a minimum of $9 for the oversized mugs.
“Pitcher night was a staple here. People would be looking forward to that even from the weekend,” said junior mathematics major Andrew Triola. “It’s not gonna be like Tuesdays at Turtle, where it’s just packed by like 8 p.m.”

“I still think people will still come out to Pitcher Night because the other two bars have been so packed,” added Cheyenne Braga, a sophomore marketing major who has worked at both Turtle and The Barking Dog. “I just don’t think it’ll be as big a night because Turtle was so cheap and easier for college students.”

And in a college town, students said the price of drinks and frequency of specials determines a bar’s success more than any other factors.

“As long as there is a $2 beer special, the place will be packed,” said Patrick Moxley, a senior mechanical engineering major. “Once beers get to the $3 mark, that’s where most people start to shy away.”

Though The Barking Dog may never be the new freshman hang-out, several upperclassmen said they are warming to the idea of a more exclusive — read: legal — bar.

“I think a bar that is really strict with IDs is good,” Moxley said. “To get away from all the underclassmen is nice. Maybe if they didn’t have a $5 cover and charged $3 or $4 for a beer that would be OK.”

Students will have to wait and see if McManus honors his pledges to operate a law-abiding, responsible restaurant and bar. Many said they hope he doesn’t.

Others said it’s about time for College Park to clean up its image. Either way, if all goes according to plan, The Barking Dog could become the next Route 1 mainstay.
But a key question lingers: How long will there be a market for a classier bar that won’t admit underage patrons but boasts a 900-person capacity?

“It was kinda nice to have a shitty place you could go where you didn’t have to pay a lot of money,” Triola said. “I’m 21 now, so now that we don’t have to worry about getting in or not, it’s nice to go to a nicer place sometimes and order good drinks. But it’s definitely good to have the best of both worlds.”

The establishment will inevitably enjoy an initial wave of intensely high traffic as bar-hoppers pounce on the opportunity for a change of scenery. Ultimately, though, students will have to wait and see if the newcomer lives up to the hype or if its bark is bigger than its bite.

— Alissa Gulin

February 21st, 2011 10:51 pm by The Diamondback

CRS warns, students scoff

The CRS is warning students about diet and eating disorders in continuation of Love Your Body month.

Love Your Body Month, sponsored by the Center for Health and Wellbeing, the University Health Center and the University Counseling Center, is a month-long push for students to — well, love their bodies. Along with the textbook self-esteem pep talks, that means a month of encouraging students to focus on healthy eating and exercise habits.

As part of the campaign, the Eppley Recreation Center’s treadmills, ellipticals and other cardio machines are boasting brand-new cards that describe symptoms of exercise bulimia — purging food through obsessive exercise instead of vomiting — and other common diet and eating disorders.

However, some of the characteristics listed seem all too common in the daily lives of college students.

“Working out more than 30-45 minutes each day, 5-6 days a week” and “Talks about cooking, eating, or dieting a lot” are just two symptoms the cards list that sound less like warning signs than the typical routine for an athletic or health-conscious student.

And that’s not to mention “Eats alone, especially when sad or stressed.” Come on, who hasn’t lounged in bed shoveling down M&M’s on a rainy day every once in a while?

Freshman letters and sciences major Sarah Boehm, who goes to the gym every day for at least 30 minutes, laughed when she saw the symptoms.

“I saw those signs at the gym and they were really confusing,” Boehm said. “Exercise isn’t always, ‘I need to get skinny!’ I use it as a de-stressor to clear my mind. For me, it’s more than just exercise.”

Like Boehm, junior engineering and theatre major Matt Coonley was bewildered.

“Those signs are ridiculous and just make people think about an issue that’s almost nonexistent,” he said. “They should really put more effort into things that matter, like showing proper technique on the machines to prevent injuries.

“That’s bullshit,” he added.

– Erin Egan

February 20th, 2011 11:56 pm by The Diamondback

A professor’s pride

It was Feb. 11. Communication professor Sahar Khamis sat with her eyes glued to the news reports flashing across the television screen from her homeland, Egypt, just as she had done for the past 20 days.

The day before had been a day of disappointment for Khamis and her family back in Cairo, but she sensed in her spirit that today would be the defining moment for all of Egypt.

And then, at long last, the announcement that Khamis and thousands of other Egyptian citizens had awaited for more than two weeks of violence finally came: President Hosni Mubarak would be stepping down after more than 30 years of dictatorship.

“It was a moment of joy, of triumph, of achievement, of pride — I mean, you can use all the positive adjectives in the world to describe it,” Khamis said. “I was jumping and singing and joyful, and I called the family back in Egypt and they were equally joyful.”

And in that moment, Khamis said she went from being the “worried Egyptian citizen” she had been for the past 20 days to a “proud Egyptian citizen” celebrating the promise of democracy with her country.

“I have never been more proud to be an Egyptian,” she said.

The 20 days of uprising in Egypt had been an emotional roller coaster for Khamis, who spent her days anxiously watching the action unfold on the news from both Arab and Western media outlets.

“The moment I come back home, even before I put down my purse or change my clothes, I run to the TV set,” Khamis said.

And then, when the announcement of Mubarak’s resignation finally came, Khamis’ fears dissipated.

“I would have loved to have been there in Egypt at this particular historic moment,” she said. “I really would have loved to be there in the middle of all this. I would have loved to have been with them, with my family in the middle of the protests and the demonstrations. … I would have loved to join everyone in Egypt in the celebration and the joyfulness and the sense of triumph and excitement.”

— Leah Villanueva

February 20th, 2011 11:54 pm by The Diamondback

A collection of construction

Most students have probably noticed the giant hole in the ground at the corner of Regents and Stadium Drives — After all, it’s pretty hard to miss.

Don’t get your hopes up. That massive construction project — which, in case you were wondering, is on a new Physical Sciences Complex — won’t be completed until 2013. In the meantime, there are several other campus upgrades going on all over that will affect the student body.

Most notably is probably the third floor construction of H.J. Patterson. Since the summer, construction crews have worked to modernize teaching labs, shutting down part of Lot HH1 and causing some people to be reassigned to lots farther away.

However, that inconvenience will soon be a thing of the past according to Facilities Management Director of Maintenance and Operations Jack Baker. Baker said the project is on schedule and the entire building will be ready for use by next semester.

Across the mall sits the old journalism building, soon to be the new home of the behavioral and social sciences college. Since the journalism school moved to Knight Hall last spring, the building has undergone a major renovation, updating the aging interior and infrastructure. On top of that, Baker said they are also looking to revamp the parking lot that sits between it and McKeldin Library, as well as plant new grass once the construction ends.

“It’s kind of a not so nice part of campus, so we’re going to spruce it up a little,” Baker said.

Slightly more out of the way is the engineering lab building located behind Martin Hall. Facilities management has taken on replacing the entire back wall with glass, making the building more energy efficient. And while some welding caused enough smoke to alert the College Park Volunteer Fire Department two weeks ago, Baker said the project should also be completed by the summer.

The architecture building will also see some upcoming changes, but not until this summer.

Baker said officials are looking to replace the glass roof that overlooks the main part of the building, but due to the large amount of student traffic during the semester, renovations have been pushed to the summer.

“We don’t want to unnecessarily endanger any students,” Baker said, “but the project will be done by the fall semester.”

- Spencer Israel

February 17th, 2011 02:40 am by The Diamondback

I ♥ my _____

Students signed a board explaining what they love about themselves.


Look yourself in the mirror.

No, really look.

How do you feel? Do you love your body? Well, the Center for Health and Wellbeing wants you to.

In an effort to raise awareness for eating disorders, the center is sponsoring “Love Your Body Month,” which Coordinator Lauren Stewart said is modeled after the nation-wide National Eating Disorders Awareness Week — this year set for Feb. 20-26.

A few years ago, the center extended the week to an entire month for the university, then changed the name to give it a more positive angle, she said.

“We wanted to get people to talk about what we are trying to do,” Stewart said. “So this year, we made pins.”

The pins are handed out at tables set up at times and locations optimal for reaching as many students as possible, such as after a Zumba class or in Stamp Student Union.

The pins state “I ♥ my _____,” and students are meant to fill the blank with something they love about themselves.

“Most things are body parts,” Stewart said. “There haven’t been too many inappropriate things, but if that’s what they love then it’s what they love. We’re okay with that. Others put their smile, or a personality.”

So, look yourself in the mirror one more time. Now, think about it: What do you love?

— By Maria Romas

February 10th, 2011 12:13 am by The Diamondback

‘Cancer sucks’


There was something a little different about Testudo yesterday. His eyes continued to gaze in the direction of university President Wallace Loh’s office, but there was something off about the statue’s base — it was wrapped in purple cellophane.

To jump start the kickoff week for this university’s Relay for Life committee — an all night event on April 2 where various teams walk on Ludwig Field to raise money for cancer research — executive board members painted the campus purple yesterday. In addition to wrapping our mascot’s likeness in purple cellophane, purple bows were tied around trees and purple chalk marked the campus up with messages, such as “cancer sucks.”

The group went all out in hopes of gaining more participants this year and reach a goal of donating more than last year’s $150,000, said co-advertising chair Juliana Willems.

“For someone who has a family member that is fighting or survived cancer, Relay can be one of the most important nights of the year,” she said.

Relay for Life has been held on this campus for several years, but Willems and logistics co-chair MariaSanta Mangione — a junior cell biology and genetics major — said the event still doesn’t have the same recognition or raise a similar amount of money as nearby universities, like Virginia Tech and Georgetown.

“There’s still this disconnect on the campus,” said Willems, a senior animal science major. “It’s almost like pulling teeth trying to get people involved.”
And Mangione agreed, adding that the fundraising money could be better used elsewhere — such as finding a cure for cancer.
“There are so many people who do support us,” Mangione said. “I don’t want to say we don’t get support, but we could put our energy in so many different places than fighting for recognition.”

But this week, the Relay for Life Committee is providing ample opportunities for students to become involved — such as a Thursday evening Ledo’s dinner, Sunday afternoon soccer tournament and Tuesday bar night at Cornerstone Grill and Loft.

For more information, check out their website or Relay for Life Kick-Off Week Facebook page.

— By Rachel Roubein

February 8th, 2011 11:47 pm by The Diamondback

College Park: A livable community?

Charlie DeBoyace/The Diamondback


In addition to the typical drunken debauchery of the beginnings of second semester, this past weekend four people were robbed close to the College Park Metro station, a brawl broke out outside R.J. Bentley’s and an escaped prisoner was believed to be in the area. If you’re thinking this environment hardly sounds kid-friendly, think again.

According to BusinessWeek’s “Best Places to Raise Your Kids 2011” rankings, College Park came in first place for this state.

The magazine’s reasons are rather simple. The city’s history and location provide children with a playground of adventure.

“A number of historic sites are in the area, including College Park Airport,” the report states. “Many families move to College Park for its good schools (four elementary schools, three middle schools, and four high schools), and its close proximity to Washington D.C.”

Yet some students — such as sophomore early childhood education major Kayla Valencia — said that for her future children, this city just wouldn’t make the cut.

“I would never raise my child here,” she said. “I get scared walking home alone at night.”
Sophomore government and politics major Michelle Ferrare agreed — with one exception: “Unless they’re going to start handing out bullet-proof vests.”

Both Ferrare and Valencia added that they didn’t know the area outside of the campus well enough to make an accurate assessment but that a college town is not an ideal environment to foster young minds.

What would you do?

— By Rachel Roubein

February 8th, 2011 11:39 pm by The Diamondback

Less-than-super bar scene

When big game days roll around, the scene in college towns across the country is pretty predictable — legions of fans decked out in team colors stumbling from bar to bar, tailgate to tailgate.

But students at this university have fewer options than before now that College Park is down to two bars.

Before Feb. 2’s men’s basketball game against Duke even started, there was another contest being battled out on the sidewalks. Underage students fought with bouncers to get inside Cornerstone Grill and Loft as employees tried to control the swelling masses of people in the long line.

Students said the scene was excessive, even for such a highly anticipated game.

“I knew lots of people who were under 21 who didn’t get inside the bars,” said Samantha, a junior communication major who asked her last name not be used because she is underage. “We all had to go somewhere else to drink before the game, but it wasn’t that bad because everyone I talked to who went to the bars said you could barely move it was so crowded.”

In a college town that’s down three bars after the recent closures of Santa Fe Cafe, The Mark and Thirsty Turtle, game days pose a dilemma to those looking for an experience that doesn’t induce claustrophobia. Some students said they wanted to go downtown for the Duke game but opted to stay in their residences once they saw the crowds.

The bars weren’t as crowded Super Bowl Sunday, said Cornerstone owner Mark Srour, who speculated more people come out to support the Terps than they do to cheer on pro teams.

“That’s how it should be,” he said. “It’s a college sport, college town.”

Still, Srour said Sundays typically brought in high revenue even before other bars closed down. Super Bowl XLV was no exception — Srour said there was a good turnout, with about 70 percent of those present rooting for the Green Bay Packers.

But even though Santa Fe and Thirsty Turtle weren’t known for being sports pubs, students said having those options helped to mitigate the chaos.

“I’ve been to Turtle to watch Maryland games before, but Cornerstone is definitely the best for that,” Samantha said. “Still, it was nice to at least have an alternative. It’s just too crowded now around Cornerstone for it to be enjoyable.”

— By Alissa Gulin

February 4th, 2011 03:22 am by The Diamondback

Close to home

It’s no secret: Journalism can be a dangerous profession.

But as news of correspondents in Egypt being attacked, arrested, detained and otherwise assaulted continued to flood in throughout the day yesterday, some students realized that this truism may have hit alarmingly close to home for one of this university’s faculty.

Journalism lecturer John Davidson is married to Washington Post photojournalist Linda Davidson. Yesterday morning, the Washington Post announced that Linda, along with the Post’s Cairo bureau chief, Leila Fadel, had been detained by police after at least two dozen reporters were beaten by pro-government supporters in a Cairo ravaged by chaos. Davidson was reportedly released and OK as of last night, according to the Associated Press.

According to Egypt’s Health Ministry, 13 people were killed and 1,200 injured in last night’s clashes between pro- and anti-government demonstrators.

According to The Committee to Protect Journalists, in just one day, the organization received nearly 50 reports of journalists being detained or beaten, program coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa Mohamed Abdel Dayem told the Post yesterday. He said reporters from around the world, including Al Jazeera reporters, a BBC reporter and correspondents from Spain, Sweden and Italy, are among those who have been hauled off or attacked. There was also report “thugs” broke into a Hilton hotel looking for several journalists staying there.

Other reports indicated a Greek journalist had been stabbed in the leg with a screwdriver while covering the events in Tahrir Square in Cairo.

John Davidson, upon learning of his wife’s situation, decided to cancel his afternoon classes and sit by the phone, waiting for news:

From: John Davidson
To: JOUR368P
Date: Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 1:23 PM
Subject: no class today

hello good folks. i am sorry but i will not be able to make class today. my wife, who is a washington post photographer, was covering the protests in egypt today was hauled off, along with the wash post bureau chief, by the egyptian military and we have had no word from either since. i need to be by a phone and as the word spreads many colleagues and friends are calling me. i need to stay home and await word. thanks for your understanding.

john

This university’s journalism school has condemned the violence in Egypt and urged the immediate release of journalists who have been detained.

We, the faculty and doctoral students of the Philip Merrill College of Journalism, express our solidarity with the journalists struggling to bring the story of Egypt to the world in the face of the theft and destruction of mobile phones, cameras and recording gear, mob attacks, savage beatings, carjackings, detentions, and arrests.

We call upon Egyptian security forces to cease and desist from inciting, encouraging or committing violence; we call upon President Hosni Mubarak and aides to demand that they as individuals — and as a government — allow journalists to do their work unhampered.