131 years in print Vol. CXXXI Issue xXViIi
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWS ORGANIZATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI | WWW.NEWSRECORD.ORG
THE NEWS RECORD THURSDAY | JAN. 6 | 2011
SHOWDOWN
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fire Ohio ups minimum wage 10 cents UC preps to take on Muskies at Fifth Third
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JAMES SPRAGUE | NEWS EDITOR
eamon queeney | photo editor
GETTING A RAISE Minimum wage workers in Ohio, such as those that work at McDonald’s on Martin Luther King Drive, are receiving a 10-cent pay increase.
Employees earning minimum wage in Ohio received a pay raise Jan. 1 as the state’s minimum wage increased 10 cents. The increase makes Ohio’s minimum wage $7.40 per hour for 2011, compared to $7.30 per hour in 2010. Tipped employees also got a jump from $3.65 to $3.70 per hour. Ohio is one of seven states — Arizona, Colorado, Montana, Oregon, Vermont and Washington are the others — that increased minimum wage Jan. 1. Ohio voters approved a constitutional amendment in November 2006 that increases the minimum wage on Jan. 1 of each year by the rate of inflation. The wage hike will affect the incomes of approximately 647,000 workers living in participating states, according to the National Employment Law Project in New York. “Regular increases in the minimum wage that help workers keep up with rising living costs are critical during tough economic
times and directly benefit workers and state economies,” said Christine Owens, executive director of the NELP. The wage increase also might assist in economic recovery throughout the nation, Owens said. “In addition to helping working families in the states make ends meet, raising wages for the lowest-paid workers will help sustain consumer spending and spur economic recovery,” Owens said. “Minimum wage increases go directly to workers who spend them immediately — because they have to — on basic necessities like food, gas, rent and clothing.” Labor statistics from the U.S. Department of Labor show that approximately 72.5 million Americans older than 16 were paid hourly wages, as opposed to salary-based payments. Of the 72.5 million, approximately 980,000 earned 2009’s federal minimum wage — and more than 2.5 million people were paid less than federal minimum wage.
IN BRIEF
Study targets sores
CALLING ALL PACIFISTS
UC student robbed near Holy Grail Bar in Corryville A female University of Cincinnati student was the latest victim of a robbery in Corryville. The student was leaving a bar in the Short Vine area of Corryville Monday night when the incident occurred. The student was going to her vehicle parked on West Charlton Street near the Holy Grail bar, said Gene Ferrara, chief of the UC Police Division, when a black male entered the female’s vehicle, instructed her to take him to an ATM machine and get him money. No weapon was brandished by the suspect, but the student still drove the suspect to an ATM. The student retrieved money for the suspect, who then had the student drop him off, according to UCPD. The suspect was described as a black male in his 40s, approximately 5’10” to 6’ tall with missing teeth, Ferrara said. The Cincinnati Police Department is investigating the incident.
jason hoffman | staff reporter
GSGA Grant Opportunity The deadline is closing regarding application for the University of Cincinnati’s 2011 Graduate Student Governance Association (GSGA) Awards. Two awards are available: A GSGA Research Award offering $11,575 for research and a GSGA Group Grant Award offering $6,757. Application deadline for the research award is Jan. 28 and Jan. 14 for groups. For more information contact Alex Ignatiou at president.ucgsga@gmail.com or Key Beck at vicepres.ucgsga@gmail.com.
Mick and Mack’s Wine Tasting The monthly wine tasting at Mick and Mack’s Contemporary Cafe in Tangeman University Center will offer both hors d’oeuvres and a variety of wines from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Prices vary depending on the menu and types of wines that are available for the event. For more information contact Brenda Rollins at 513-556-3653.
INSIDE
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coulter loeb | chief photographer
Entertainment Opinion Spotlight Classifieds Sports
POignant anti-war statement The “Triceracopter” is the newest addition to UC’s Langsam Library. Artist Patricia Renick, who died in 2007 after a lengthy career teaching in the University of Cincinnati’s College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning, created the sculpture, which debuted in 1977, with the subtitle “Hope for the Obsolescence of War.”
THURSDAY
JAMES SPRAGUE | NEWS EDITOR
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The University of Cincinnati College of Nursing is engaged in a year-long research project to aid in better prevention methods of pressure ulcers, commonly referred to as bedsores, through the unlikeliest of ways — music. The study pairs the College of Nursing with Signature Health Care of Florida and examines long-term care patients residing at 10 long-term health care facilities in Kentucky. Dr. Tracey Yap, assistant professor and deputy director of occupational health nursing at the College of Nursing, leads the research team examining the effects of music on nursing home staff and patients. “The basic concept is to have a musical prompt every two hours to remind the staff at nursing homes to get patients moving,” Yap said. The prompt also reminds patients who are aware of their conditions to get up and move around on their own,Yap said. Yap’s team competed with more than 100 other applicants in a competitive process and received a $300,000 grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation as part of the Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative. The research is an interdisciplinary study which “incorporates everyone in the nursing homes from nurses to maintenance workers,” Yap said. In one instance, a maintenance worker at one of the facilities is followed around by two male residents once the music starts to play, Yap said. One of the facilities participating in the study is the Bracken County Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Augusta, Ky. The staff at the center has “bought into the program for the
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Dancing benefits patients
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University of Cincinnati students will be putting on their dancing shoes for patients at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital in February. The third annual Cincinnati Dance Marathon, benefitting patients at Children’s Hospital, will take place Feb. 26 and Feb. 27. The 24-hour long event will be held at UC’s Campus Recreation Center and features a variety of activities ranging from dodgeball to salsa dancing. Among the goals of the marathon are uniting the
Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky areas in the fight against pediatric cancer and to spur philanthropy among the UC student population. “In the coming months, members of Cincinnati Dance Marathon will be going around campus, lending a helping hand wherever its needed,” wrote Phil Dinovo, a third-year informations student and technology director for Cincinnati Dance Marathon. It’s also a good way for UC to support the patients at Children’s Hospital, wrote Brittany Gunther, a marketing student and
communications director for the marathon. “Cincinnati Dance Marathon is a great way for the UC community to support the children being treated at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, and it’s a tremendous opportunity for UC students to bond with their fellow Bearcats for a remarkable cause,” Gunther wrote. Organizers suggest a minimum $25 donation to the marathon, which is eamon queeney | photo editor tax-deductible. Proceeds go to Children’s HELPING THE KIDS Proceeds from UC’s Hospital’s Children’s Miracle Cincinnati Dance Marathon will go to pediatric Network program. patients at Cincinnati’s Children’s Hospital.
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