2
Fossil Fuel Divestment
Student government debates pros and cons of fossil fuel divestment
3
Rohs Street Cafe
Popular coffee shop gets renovation
THE NEWS RECORD / UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI THURSDAY, JAN. 21, 2016
Sanders keeps $5.3 MILLION TO DUBOSE FAMILY gaining on Clinton in polls AMIR SAMARGHANDI | NEWS EDITOR
Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) impact on the Democratic race is seen in his booming poll numbers but it’s data from the new Selzer & Co. Iowa poll that shows Sanders is shaking up the entire American political discourse. Among likely voters in the Feb. 1 caucuses, 43 percent said they describe themselves as “socialists.”That would be using socialist as a self-describing term, not an indication of support for a candidate. Around 44 percent of likely Democratic caucus-goers say they consider themselves “anti-Wall Street.” The Washington Post’s Dan Balz notes, self-identifying socialists account for 58 percent of Sanders’s supporters and about a third of Hillary Clinton’s, meaning that the shift in Democratic voters approach to socialism goes beyond Sanders’ base. A News Record poll conducted last semester found the 74-year-old senator winning 72.9 percent of the vote among Democrats while former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton received only 21.5 percent of support from students and faculty. The latest polling averages done by Real Clear Politics (RCP) continue the trend of the former Secretary of State Clinton’s lead slipping by six points in the Hawkeye state — showing Clinton with a 46.8 percent lead to 42.8 for Sanders — but the numbers for New Hampshire’s Feb. 9 primary bode even worse for the long-time Democratic frontrunner. A new CNN/WMUR poll finds Sanders with a 27-point lead over Clinton in the New Hampshire, and RCP backs up the findings, showing Sanders with an aggregate poll lead of 6.2 points — 48.8 percent to Clinton’s 42.6. Clinton still holds a healthy 13-point lead in the national polling averages — 51.2 percent to 38 percent for Sanders — but the race has narrowed by 14 points since early December, when the averages indicated 58.3 percent support for Clinton and 31.5 percent for Sanders. On the Republican side, Iowa remains a two-horse race with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) still holding a slim 25-22 percent lead over national frontrunner Donald Trump, according to the latest Des Moines Register Iowa Poll. RCP’s metrics show Trump ahead by the narrowest of margins, at 27.3 percent to Cruz’s 26.9 percent, but two recent endorsement decisions could shift the numbers back towards the New York businessman’s favor. The first is the expected boost from an endorsement from former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who said Trump has “been going rogue left and right. He’s been able to tear the veil off this idea of the system.” The other blow to Cruz’s Iowa prospects is the ‘antiendorsement’ from Iowa’s long-time popular Republican Gov. Terry Branstad who called supporting Cruz a “big mistake,” despite vowing not to endorse any candidate before the Feb. 1 caucus. New Hampshire is also boding well for Trump, where RCP shows him with a 16-point lead at 34.8 percent over second-place Cruz at 18.8 percent. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Florida) sits at third with 11.6 percent. Dr. Ben Carson (8.8 percent), former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (4.8 percent), New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (3.4 percent) and Ohio Gov. John Kasich (2.4 percent) round out the rest of GOP hopefuls aiming for a national boost with a strong performance Feb. 9. A Monmouth University survey released on Wednesday shows Trump leads the race nationally with 36 percent support — a 2-1 ratio over the rest of the GOP field — a 41 percent slide in the same survey from December, which marked Trump’s highest support total thus far. Republicans will hold one more debate on Jan. 28, three days before the caucus on Feb. 1, held in Des Moines, hosted by Fox News. Another GOP debate is scheduled for Feb. 6, three days before New Hampshire primary. The next Democratic debate will take place on Feb. 11 in Wisconsin. There are six scheduled remaining debates for the GOP and only two more scheduled debates for the Democrats. Ohio holds its primary on March 15. Quinnipiac polls for the Buckeye state show that Gov. Kasich has lost his lead in his hometown state, now sitting in third at 13 percent, behind Trump at 23 percent and Carson at 18 percent.
ALEXANDRA TAYLOR | PHOTO EDITOR
Audrey Dubose, Samuel DuBose’s mother, returns to the Taft Center after viewing the graphic body camera video of UCPD officer Ray Tensing and Samuel Dubose July 29, 2015.
At the same time, O’Mara said he was impressed with President Santa Ono’s involvement with the ongoing talks The $5.3 million settlement reached by the family of about the settlement. Samuel DuBose and the University of Cincinnati has Andrew Naab, student government president, said he elicited strong reaction from UC students. was also impressed with Ono’s involvement. “I don’t believe any amount would be ‘fair’ because “Dr. Ono is a friend and mentor — this has affected and no amount of money could bring back the life of Mr. drained him personally, and that speaks to his character,” DuBose.”said Brittany Bibb, a recent UC graduate and Naab said. “He’s fully committed to healing this situation member of UC’s Irate 8 — the student group formed after and rebuilding the lost trust.” DuBose’s slaying that demanded an improvement for the The university will pay $4.85 million to the family and situation and numbers for black students and faculty on provide an undergraduate education free of tuition and campus. fees for the twelve children of Samuel DuBose, which is Some students expressed concern that Phillip Kidd and estimated at $500,000. David Lindenschmidt, the two UC police officers that The DuBose family is also invited to participate in corroborated Ray Tensing’s version of events, still hold the Safety and Reform Community Advisory Council, their positions. established in October to provide community input “It is very scary that officers Kidd and Lindenschmidt regarding reform efforts of the UCPD. are still employed by UCPD — as a black male I still feel The settlement includes plans for a memorial for unsafe on this campus months later,” said Christopher DuBose, which Lampley hopes will happen before the Steward, a fourth-year mechanical end of the year, possibly the end of the engineering student and fellow Irate summer. Members of the family and UC 8 member. architects will determine the aspects of It doesn’t matter if you Footage from Tensing’s body the memorial, but it would be related give the family $100 cam appeared to contradict the to music, given DuBose’s love for the officers’ claims. “Any car movement million-subject, according to O’Mara. before the moment Tensing fired “This is substantial protection for his things won’t change his weapon appears to have been children, and this will honor his legacy, unless cops stop lying. minimal,” according to UC’s which is a big deal, but there’s more to independent investigation of the be done,” said civil rights attorney Al MARK O’MARA event — which the settlement did Gerhardstein, who also represented the not address. DuBose family. “The family would give “I am disgusted that we have officers willing to lie,” said up every dime to get Sam back with them.” Mark O’Mara, the DuBose family attorney. “Tensing lied Nathan Lampley Jr., of Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease, through his teeth and the body cam showed that. The represented UC in the mediation. He said the severity of family and I share a great frustration that Kidd supported the situation was never lost on the university. Tensing’s lie. He shouldn’t even be a mall cop. It doesn’t “UC took this very seriously — the tragic death of a matter if you give the family $100 million — things won’t human being — and that’s what drove the university’s change unless cops stop lying.” sincere desire to resolve the claims and provide some O’Mara was also critical of the tactics UCPD used, closure and healing for the family,’ Lampley said. saying that the school should focus more on academics and not policing. AMIR SAMARGHANDI | NEWS EDITOR
Rickman leaves behind full body of work RICHA KAVALEKAR | STAFF REPORTER
The start of 2016 suffered a tremendous loss when the world lost yet another Brit-ish pop culture icon. Alan Rickman, 69, died shortly after David Bowie at the same age and of similar circumstances. Popularly known for playing everyone’s favorite potion’s master, Severus Snape, in the famous “Harry Potter” series, Rickman passed away quietly in a London hospital, surrounded by close friends and family, according to a statement his brother gave to The Independent. It was unknown to the public that he was terminally ill from pancreatic cancer since August 2015, when he was diagnosed after having a minor stroke. Fans gathered at London King’s Cross railway station to create a memorial underneath “Platform 93/4.” Tributes from Rickman’s co-stars, contemporaries and fans have GRAPHIC BY RUSSEL HAULFELD
GRAPHIC BY MARK HOFFER
flooded the Inter-net since his death, the most memorable ones being from J.K. Rowling, Kate Winslet and Ralph Fiennes. “Behind [Rickman’s] mournful
THE STUDENT VOICE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
face, which was just as beautiful when wracked with mirth, there was a super-active spirit, questing and achieving, a super-hero, unassuming but deadly effective,” Sir Ian McKellen wrote on his Facebook page. Born in London, Rickman gravitated towards drama at a very early age. He attended “Chelsea College of Art and Design” and then the “Royal College of Art.” A huge fan of arts and theater, Rickman worked as a graphic designer in his early years until he was stable enough to pursue acting professionally. He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts where he studied Shakespeare. His debut role was Tybalt in “Romeo and Juliet,” which aired on BBC television in 1978. Yet, it was Rickman’s performance as the villainous mastermind, Hans Gruber in “Die Hard,” that kickSEE RICKMAN PG 4
FREE