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131 years in print Vol. CXXXII Issue LiV

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWS ORGANIZATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI | WWW.NEWSRECORD.ORG

THE NEWS RECORD THURSDAY | MAY 5 | 2011

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Getting wins the hard way

extra

spotlight | 2

A dissection of Osama bin Laden’s life, movie reviews and more

inside

UC recognized as ‘green’ once again james sprague | NEWS EDITOR Sustainability and research efforts at the University of Cincinnati have garnered the school recognition as one of the nation’s leading “green” universities for the secondstraight year. UC was one school named April 22 in the Princeton Review’s Guide to 311 Green Colleges: 2011 Edition, a list compiled by the Princeton Review and the United States Green Building Council (USGBC).The guide honors universities throughout the nation that are environmentally responsible. UC was also named on the guide’s 2010 list. Among the efforts at UC that were recognized by the guide were an introductory course on sustainability open to all students, UC’s Center for Sustaining the Urban Environment, sustainability efforts regarding campus life, food and recycling, and six Leadership in Energy and

Environmental Design (LEED) buildings on campus. “College-bound students are increasingly interested in sustainability issues,” said Robert Franek, senior vice president for publishing at The Princeton Review. “Among 8,200 college applicants who participated in our spring 2011 ‘College Hopes & Worries Survey,’ nearly seven out of 10 told us that having information about a school’s commitment to the environment would influence their decision to apply to or attend the school.” That interest in sustainability in students at UC has resulted in an increase of recycling — one of the areas the university was lauded for — of approximately 23 percent since 2009. UC recycled more than 4,600 tons of material in 2010, compared to approximately 3,700 tons in 2009, according to university statistics. see green | 4

file art | the news record

EASY BEING GREEN UC was named one of the nation’s greenest universities in the Princeton Review’s Guide to 311 Green Colleges: 2011 Edition. Campus life, food and campus recycling were all taken into consideration.

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THE ART OF MAKING WAVES

anthony orozco | news editor

marisa whitaker | staff photographer

A NEW PLAN Project manager Len Thomas gives details on a new recreation area.

SG gives funds to new rec James Sprague | NEWS EDITOR The campaign to build a student activity area at the University of Cincinnati was jump -started during Undergraduate Student Government’s meeting Wednesday evening. The Sawyer Student Activity Venue, an outdoor recreational facility planned to be constructed between the Morgens and Scioto residence halls, received a $5,000 boost from SG to begin the campaign to solicit corporate and private donors for the project. The venue would feature a regulation sand volleyball court, bike racks, picnic tables, water fountains and gas grills fueled by an underground gas line. The goal of the area would be to create a residential district initiated by student involvement, said Len Thomas, project manager for landscaping in the department of finance, planning, design and construction at UC. “It will be an enhancement,” Thomas said. “It will be a compliment to the university’s master plan itself.” Thomas said the area would also compliment Morgens Hall, which will have a new transparent glass façade once renovations are completed in fall 2012. “It will be really sleek,”Thomas see sg | 4

coulter loeb | Chief Photographer

IN THE AIR Allison Heil of Northside assists fine arts students Dan Dickenscheid and Maredith Waddell to install a project on the grand stairway of the DAAP building. Heil helped set up “Gubbins,” an installation art piece, a work created by Andrew Candels and Ethan Riddle, both fine arts students.

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THURSDAY

Former TV host, author recalls Darfur, Cold War matt mahn | TNR Contributor

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Clooney talks journalism in new era Author, former television host and broadcast and print journalist Nick Clooney spoke to the public in the Great Hall of Tangeman University Center noon Tuesday. The event, “The Impact of Journalism and Media on Today’s World Events,” was hosted by The Fellows of the University of Cincinnati Graduate School. He gave insight to the successful career that has placed him in the Journalism Hall of Fame of Cincinnati, Ohio and Kentucky.

INSIDE

A proposal to implement a quarterly $50 fee for international students was derailed this week due to student backlash. The Graduate Student Government Association distributed an online survey asking for students’ opinions on the proposed fee. The feedback from the survey has ceased pursuit of the international student fee, said Ron Cushing, director of UC’s International Services. “What we are really lacking is staff to keep up with the volume of the requests. Everything an international student does — whether it be getting a job on campus, co-op, changing their address — requires certification [and] processing with Homeland Security by our office.” Cushing said. “As [student] numbers increase, the turnaround has decreased. It can’t continue to decrease or we’re going to have students not being able to meet legal mandates — and we can’t have that.” The estimated $250,000 the fee would produce was to be used for reinvestment, hiring staff and helping support the creation of future programs, Cushing said. “There are certainly a lot more services that we could be providing to our students that we now see a need for,” Cushing said. Those services could have included more comprehensive English as a second language (ESL) assistance for first-year students who meet the minimum language requirements but are likely to face difficulty through the coming years, Cushing said. City tours and other orientation measures are options that

A LIVING LEGACY Nick Clooney gave insight to his illustrious and spanning career to the public Tuesday in TUC’s Great Hall.

Clooney, along with his son George, is an advocate for preventing genocide in Africa. His documentary, “A Journey to Darfur,” captured ethnic conflicts occurring in Darfur, in western Sudan. Clooney’s coverage helped shed light on the situation and lead the people to the formation of their country, Clooney said, drawing a connection to the effect journalism can have on a global level. Along with anecdotes such as drawing ire for confronting former President Dwight Eisenhower for omitting a statement praising George Catlett Marshall in a speech after then-Sen. Joseph McCarthy labeled Marshall a communist, Clooney continued to talk of the impact journalism can have on a world stage. Clooney highlighted the growing problem of newscasters being concerned only with how news is delivered and not about the events themselves. “Our duty is to report abnormal events of the day and be the watchdog to find out when something goes wrong in our towns, cities, states and nation,” Clooney said. Clooney also said many journalists have forgotten how to gather pertinent information for a story. He cautioned the audience about the potential for losing context. “The tasks of daily journalism cannot be ignored — if it is not reported carefully, a newscast begins to look like nothing and a

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completely wrong impression can be given,” he said. Clooney then transitioned to coverage on the Cold War and how it unearthed previously unknown information. Clooney noted that without the coverage on the Vietnam War and the Berlin Wall falling, the public perception of political climates would have been very different. “People would not know about these events and would be oblivious to the fact that we were making progress and winning the war against communism,” he said. Clooney also works as a lecturer at the American University in Washington, D.C., and has proposed that the future of journalism is a mix of a nonprofit and a broadcast business model of a 24-hour public news network. “Anyone that truly wants to be a journalist ... there is no way to stop them,” Clooney said. “They will do what they need [to do] to be in the profession.”

[A journalist’s] duty is to report abnormal events of the day and be the watchdog to find out when something goes wrong. —nick clooney author, journalist


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