2008-12-15

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THE BG NEWS Day Monday

Month xx,15, 2008 December 2008 Volume103, 103,Issue Issue76 x Volume

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WORLD NATION SPORTS SPORTS

By Andrew Harner Assistant Sports Editor

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ETHAN MAGOC | THE BG NEWS

HEAD COACH: Dave Clawson made a lasting impression on Athletic Director Greg Christopher and plans to bring success back to BGSU football. AT BGNEWSSPORTS.COM: For a video of Clawson’s introductory press conference, go to The BG News Sports Blog at bgnewssports.com.

Current NFL players coached by Clawson:

Brian Westbrook – Philadelphia Eagles running back from Villanova University (1997-98) Brian Finneran – Atlanta Falcons receiver from Villanova University (1997-98) Tim Hightower – Arizona Cardinals running back from Richmond University (2004-07)

Coaching career: 1989 – University at Albany - quarterbacks and running backs coach 1990 – University at Albany – secondary coach 1991 – University at Buffalo – secondary coach 1992 – University at Buffalo – quarterbacks and running backs coach 1993 – Lehigh University – running backs coach 1994 – Lehigh University – offensive coordinator 1995 – Lehigh University – offensive coordinator 1996 – Villanova University – offensive coordinator 1997 – Villanova University – offensive coordinator 1998 – Villanova University – offensive coordinator 1999 – Fordham University – head coach (0-11)

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PEOPLE ON THE STREET

Falcons have high hopes for new coach

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ESTABLISHED 1920 A daily independent student press serving the campus and surrounding community

During the 2007 college football season, Appalachian State University made national headlines when they upset Michigan in week one. From a local standpoint, a Mountaineer game from 373 days ago may have been the most important game of their 2007 season. In that game, the Division I-AA championship semifinal between Richmond University and Appalachian State is when BGSU Athletic Director Greg Christopher first noticed Dave Clawson, who was the coach of Richmond at the time. After watching half of the game, Christopher made a mental note of Clawson, printed his bio and filed the information away. When Gregg Brandon was let go by BGSU on Nov. 25, that file came in good use and helped Clawson become the 17th football coach in BGSU history. Clawson, a two-time FCS Coach of the Year, was very honored to discover Christopher had that information, even though it was a situation he had already been through. “I’m glad [Christopher] was watching that game,” Clawson said. “One of the reasons I got [the Richmond job] was [because] the athletic director [of Richmond] watched our team, when I was at Fordham University, play against their league champion. He said the same thing, ‘After that game, I put his name in the file.’” That file wasn’t the only reason why Clawson was hired to the position. “It was very clear that our philosophies of running a col-

See COACH | Page 2

2000 – Fordham University – head coach (3-8) 2001 – Fordham University – head coach (7-4) 2002 – Fordham University – head coach (10-3) – Division I FCS Coach of the Year 2003 – Fordham University – head coach (9-3) 2004 – Richmond University – head coach (3-8) 2005 – Richmond University – head coach (9-4) – Division I FCS Coach of the Year 2006 – Richmond University – head coach (6-5) 2007 – Richmond University – head coach (11-3) 2008 – University of Tennessee – offensive coordinator

New school focuses on environment By Colleen Fitzgibbons Reporter

The University is taking small steps to better the future. Two formally separate departments with the same goal of helping the environment have combined forces. Recently the Environmental Health program and Environmental Studies program merged together to form the Department of Environment and Sustainability in the School of Earth, Environment and Society. The school was approved on Dec. 5. “We need to prepare our students for a different world than has existed,” said Gary Silverman, department chair of the new school. “So, to prepare our students for this different world we have to realign our resources so that we can do that. This is a small step in that realignment that we are planning to take a leadership position in a number of areas.” Silverman said the new school offers three majors: environmental science, environmental policy and analysis, both from the Environmental Studies program, and environmental health. He said these degrees have remained the same; however the administration is different. “I used to be the director of Environmental Health, someone else was director of Environmental Programs,” Silverman said. “Now there’s just me in that joint role [as] department chair of [the school].” While the degrees and requirements remain the same, they may change in the future. Charles Onasch, the director of the school, said he hopes they can redesign the curricula so students in one major can take advantage of courses in another major. Onasch said the department had a number of duplicate programs, such as geology and geography, that both had a similar course, but now that the departments have merged they have one single course that can be taken by both majors. “Hence, we won’t have to teach as many courses,” Onasch said. While their courses are also being

See GREEN | Page 2

Art-a-site! gallery opens in Bowling Green as outlet for local artists

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By Hannah Sparling Reporter

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After nine years of going without, the city of Bowling Green finally has an art gallery and studio. Art-a-site! opened downtown on July 12, about nine years after the previous gallery, Renaissance Art and Frame, closed down. “It just seemed like Bowling Green needed a gallery again,” said Becky Laabs, owner of Arta-site! “I know there is a lot of talent out there.” Art-a-site! is at 116 S. Main St., which has been home to many businesses, including a video game store, an office supply store and a vintage clothing shop. “A lot of things have come and gone,” Laabs said. “We’re hoping that we’ll have a nice long stay.” Laabs opened the gallery after retiring from 35 years of teaching art at Bowling Green schools. “The space opened up and the timing was just right,” she said. “I’m a townie. [I’ve] lived here my whole life, love Bowling Green and knew the community

EVAN VUCCI | AP PHOTO

WHO THROWS A SHOE?: President George W. Bush, left, shakes hands with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani during their meeting yesterday in Baghdad.

Shoes thrown in protest By Jennifer Loven The Associated Press

CHRISTINA MCGINNIS | THE BG NEWS

A NEW ART GALLERY: Local Becky Laabs opened an art gallery and studio in downtown Bowling Green. Laabs retired from teaching art and has big plans for Art-a-site!

would support a space like this.” Opening a new business can be very expensive, but Laabs got some help with the initial costs from her father, who left her some money when he died in January. “I know he and my mother would be very supportive,” Laabs said. “They’re my silent partners.”

All the art in Art-a-site! is from artists with ties to Bowling Green, Laabs said. Some live in the city, some work at or attend the University and some grew up here and then moved away, she added. When the gallery first opened,

See ART-A-SITE | Page 2

BAGHDAD — On an Iraq trip shrouded in secrecy and marred by dissent, President George W. Bush yesterday hailed progress in the war that defines his presidency and got a size-10 reminder of his unpopularity when a man hurled two shoes at him during a news conference. “This is a farewell kiss, you dog!” shouted the protester in Arabic, later identified as Muntadar al-Zeidi, a correspondent for Al-Baghdadia television, an Iraqi-owned station based in Cairo, Egypt. Bush ducked both shoes as they whizzed past his head and

landed with a thud against the wall behind him. “It was a size 10,” Bush joked later. The U.S. president visited the Iraqi capital just 37 days before he hands the war off to his successor, Barack Obama, who has pledged to end it. The president wanted to highlight a drop in violence in a nation still riven by ethnic strife and to celebrate a recent U.S.Iraq security agreement, which calls for U.S. troops to withdraw from Iraq by the end of 2011. “The war is not over,” Bush said, adding that “it is decisively on it’s way to being won.”

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See SHOES | Page 2


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