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131 YEARS IN PRINT VOL. CXXXII ISSUE II
WEDNESDAY | SEPTEMBER 21 | 2011
DEFENSIVE
Take a look inside the Cincinnati Comicon.
entertainment | 6
STAND
Cats route Zips 59-14
sports | 10
President’s pay raised by 10 percent SCOTT WINFIELD | NEWS EDITOR
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PAY INCREASE APPROVED UC President Gregory Williams will receive an added $41,000 to his $410,000 annual salary.
University of Cincinnati President Gregory Williams is set to receive an additional $41,000 — along with a $102,500 bonus — to his annual $410,000 salary coming off a year of significant fundraising and the unveiling of a new academic plan. The UC Board of Trustees approved the university’s lease of 40,000 square feet of office space – which will be constructed on the 4.2-acre plot between Calhoun and McMillan streets dubbed U Square @ The Loop – and approved the purchase of a $3.4 million building on Fishwick Drive,
near I-75, to replace the UC Campus Services building on Reading Road. Although the final terms of the lease negotiation are yet to be finalized, the current terms outline a 10-year lease with two five-year renewal options. The annual rent will be approximately $1 million with an abated rent for the first year of the agreement. The trustees unanimously approved Williams’ pay raise at Russell C. Myers Alumni Center Tuesday morning. Williams’ November 2009 contract guaranteed him a 10 percent to 25 percent bonus to his annual salary — the maximum being the $102,500
Williams was awarded. Under the presidents’ UC2019 academic plan, which includes a plan to diversify UC’s students, faculty and staff, UC has retained 85 percent of first-year students for the third-consecutive year as well as retaining 83 percent of African-American students. Williams also met his Asianpopulation goal of 3 percent within the first five years of UC2019. Out-of-state enrollment is near its 18-percent goal at 17.8 percent, the university again set a personal best for SEE TRUSTEES | 9
Clermont: BOEHNER VISITS UC Military Speaker of the House talks business friendly RYAN HOFFMAN | STAFF REPORTER
The University of Cincinnati’s Clermont branch has been recognized as a military friendly school by G.I. Jobs, a premier publication for military service men and women transitioning to civilian life. The publication’s annual list for 2011 consists of the top 20 percent of higher education centers that strive to aid military personnel. More than 8,000 schools throughout the country were researched and surveyed to find the 1,518 schools that made the “Military Friendly School” list. Currently ,there are 230 veterans or military personnel enrolled at UC Clermont, making up 5 percent of the entire student body. Comparatively that is 3 percent higher than the number of Veterans or active military personnel at UC’s main campus. The schools that made the list use recruitment methods designed at attracting and aiding students with a military background. These methods include offering scholarships, student veterans’ clubs, military credit, and having a dedicated staff that understands the needs of former service men and women. “Military students have unique needs. Students need a unique school and picking one is a big decision. Schools that earn a place on the list of 2011 Military Friendly Schools welcome military students and provide the best programs and policies to help you succeed, said Jeff Bosworth, Director of Veteran Affairs at UC Clermont. Bosworth, a retired Navy Senior Chief with 28 years of military service, is responsible for assisting military personnel make the transition to academic life and receive the financial benefits that they earned through their service. Although his position doesn’t require a military background, he stresses the importance of having someone who can relate first-hand to the needs of former and active military personnel. Though the 1944 G.I. Bill, veterans receive assistance for higher education, but utilizing those benefits isn’t always as easy as one might think. “This benefit isn’t automatic and the veteran must go through a significant initial process to get it and an ongoing processes to retain the benefit,” said Bosworth.
COULTER LOEB | CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER
BRIEF LUNCH DATE Speaker of the House, Rep. John Boehner, spoke to the Goering Center about small and private business. ANTHONY OROZCO | NEWS EDITOR Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner, the man who is two seats away from being president of the United States, spoke about jobs, small business and unemployment at the University of Cincinnati Monday. The Goering Center for Family and Private Business of UC sponsored the luncheon event hosted in the Russell C. Myers Alumni Center allowed for the Speaker to comment on his ideas for building a stronger economy. One of Boehner’s prominent assertions during his address to the Goering Center was that government regulation strangles the free market system. “I went to Washington as a small business person thinking government was becoming the problem,” Boehner said. “And having been
in Washington for 20 years, I can tell you that government is the problem,” Boehner said. Rep. Boehner reiterated that government regulations are costly, stifling and unattractive to small private businesses and contribute to slow development in the private sector. “Increased regulatory costs, the level of taxation and the fact that the cost per employee in America is raising at a faster rate than their profits,” were some of the reasons given by entrepreneurs for exporting jobs to other countries, according to Rep. Boehner. Boehner expressed agreement with President Barack Obama in that “everyone should pay their fair share” regarding tax breaks and being extended to smaller private companies rather than taxing wealthier Americans more as implied by President Obama. He commented that billionaires could donate to the government if they feel. The statement was received with light chuckles. Boehner stated that more than $2 trillion in U.S. corporate profits are lost to foreign taxation and suggested simplifying tax codes as means of incentives for U.S. employers to bring jobs back stateside. “Those profits are not coming back here … If we want jobs in America why wouldn’t we provide some special assistance that encourages those corporate profits back to the United States,” Boehner said. He also suggested that Congress should become more involved with tax reforms. “We also believe that Congress should have a more active role in approving rules and regulations as they come out of agencies,” Boehner said. “If there is a significant rule change that has an impact on our economy of at least $100 million or more [it should be voted on by Congress].” Contrary to Obama’s recently proposed American Jobs Act, Boehner said, “we need to deal with excessive government spending and we have a tax code that the American people believe is fair and actually understand,” rather than spending $447 billion to create infrastructure jobs and payroll tax cuts SEE BOEHNER | 9
COULTER LOEB | CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER
ZOHAIR HUSSAIN | TNR CONTRIBUTOR
The Deaconess Associations Foundation with The Heimlich Institute have completed their donation program to The Hoxworth Blood Center (HBC) at the University of Cincinnati with a $115,000 donation. This most recent donation was part of a program awarding Hoxworth an all-together sum of $615,000 over a span of the last twoand-a-half years. The money was donated toward current research being done in regards to Leukemia treatment and understanding the disease as a whole. Dr. Tom Leemhuis, division director of cellular therapies at Hoxworth, has led a team in research that deals with preventing infection in children with Leukemia post-transplant. “With this disease, the immune system is already weakened,” Leemhuis said. “After surgery, these patients are especially susceptible to and often contract infections. We’re hoping to develop a way to prevent these infections from occurring.” Through the funding they’ve received from this donation, Leemhuis and his team hope to acquire the approval to run clinical trials and get approval for new types of medication that would prevent such life-threatening scenarios. “We normally have difficulty
LANCE LAMBERT | STAFF REPORTER
University of Cincinnati Clermont campus was the venue for a three-day Homeland Security course, teaching local publicsafety officials incident response and training for radiation
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Department of Homeland Security runs radiation drills
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Hoxworth receives donation
Emergency workers train at Clermont
2 Nation & World 4 Opinion 5 Entertainment 8 Welcome Week 9 Classifieds 10 Sports
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SEARCHING FOR CURE Dr. Henry Heimlich, seated, inspects lymphocytes in cellular theropy.
THROUGH THE LENS Local media organizations lined up in the Russell C. Meyers Alumni Center Monday to get a shot of Rep. John Boehner as he addressed unemployment and economy.
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KEEP IT CLEAN DHS teaches the proper handling of radioactive dirty-bombs.
treatment, Sept. 15. “This is a responder’s course, to familiarize what to do in case of a nuclear event and make aware of hazards, how to stay safe and how to respond when a nuclear incident occurs,” said Barry Webb, a training coordinator for Homeland Security. The three-day course was taught to a group of 25, consisting of law enforcement, firefighters, health field professionals, Red Cross employees, active military and metropolitan sewer workers all from the Cincinnati area. The annual refresher course incorporated in-class lectures along with out-of-class radiation scenarios spread out across Clermont’s campus. The classes are part of the eastern region of a district including 15 counties from Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio. The classes are an attempt by Homeland Security to build the
weapons,and their falloutWebb said. These wrong ideas cause people to be afraid, according to Webb. Excluding the initial impact of the weapon that combines radioactive material with conventional explosives, known as a dirty bomb, the threat from radiation is much less severe than most of the public would believe, Webb said. The radiation left behind is high, but not fatal, according to the United States Nuclear Regulatory —BARRY WEBB Commission. DHS TRAINING COORDINATOR “The public has a lack of awareness perpetrators were disarmed, the of radiation events and are students then practiced clean up terrified by them,” said Webb. of radiological material from the “With education their fear is site. reduced.” Homeland Security The public many times has wrong preconceptions when it SEE TRAINING | 9 comes to the hazards of nuclear local response for this district. The class’s final exercise was a scenario rendition of terrorists transporting radiological materials to the Clermont’s campus. Participants were instructed to confront the mock terrorists. Once the pretend
The public has a lack of awareness of radiation events and are terrified by them with education their fear is reduced.
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