The Daily Targum 2014-10-08

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WEATHER Partly Cloudy High: 71 Low: 47

Serving the Rutgers community since 1869. Independent since 1980.

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY—NEW BRUNSWICK

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2014

ONLINE AT DAILYTARGUM.COM

U. professors celebrate Maya Angelou’s legacy KATIE PARK CORRESPONDENT

In late May, students were basking in the warm spring sun, relishing the relief of finishing final exams and slightly thunderstruck by the small mountain of move-out day unpacking awaiting them. While students stowed cavernous suitcases away for the summer, the death of renowned poet Maya Angelou came and went with less fanfare than it might have had if it occurred at any other time of the year.

Evie Shockley, Abena Busia and Cher yl Wall noticed the lack of attention given to Angelou’s passing, so they relived her memor y four months after her funeral at the Center for Race and Ethnicity yesterday on the College Avenue campus. The CRE hosted “Remembering Maya Angelou: A Life in Words,” featuring Shockley and Busia, both associate professors in the English Department ,and Wall, distinguished professor in the same department. SEE LEGACY ON PAGE 4

Different professors in different departments at Rutgers have varying policies about attendance and its influence on students’ grades. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY DENNIS ZURAW / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Faculty discuss different approaches to attendance, grading, examinations SABRINA SZTEINBAUM ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR

When Johanna Schoen’s son went to college, she became less judgmental about students who never open their syllabus because they lost it on day two. She considers her son, like many other college students, as sweet and talented, yet flaky.

Schoen, the vice chair for undergraduate education, said her own experience has made her more understanding toward the busy and distracted college student, but she did express frustration in students not putting as much time into assignments as she spends grading them. Across the board, professors approach teaching differently

— some professors count attendance as a percentage of students’ grades, while others subscribe to the notion that students can show up for class if they are motivated. Certain professors base grades solely on exams, while others prefer add-in group projects, papers and assignments. SEE APPROACHES ON PAGE 4

City salon donates to local charity SARBJOT KAUR DHILLON CONTRIBUTING WRITER

From left to right: Cheryl Wall, Evie Shockley and Abena Busia, all faculty in the English Department, pay tribute to Maya Angelou yesterday at the Center for Race and Ethnicity on the College Avenue campus. DAPHNE ALVA / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

National counterterrorism specialist joins Rutgers LIN LAN CORRESPONDENT

Fear of terrorism has dominated Western culture since the 9/11 attacks in 2001, and most Rutgers students probably do not remember a world where the encountering word “terrorism” was not a common occurrence. Yet in 1983, when John Cohen was a graduate student at the University of Southern California, he presented his prediction of the rise of international crime to a conference of academic experts — and his audience was scandalized. Cohen now serves as the new senior advisor to the Rutgers Institute for Emergency Preparedness and Homeland Security at New Brunswick. “[In 1983,] I was met with stares, as if to say, ‘How dare you suggest that

international terrorism and crime would be considered a top-tier national security issue worthy of academic study,” Cohen said in an interview with Rutgers Today. Cohen, a newly appointed professor in the Rutgers-Newark School of Criminal Justice, started his career as a police officer in the Department of Defense’s Naval Investigative Service in Long Beach, California, and eventually became an advisor to the federal government on its post-9/11 terrorism prevention tactics. From the late 1980s to the 1990s, which marked the end of the Cold War era, American foreign relations experts focused on Russia, Germany and Japan, Cohen said. Economic security was the main concern in government policy, not terrorism. SEE SPECIALIST ON PAGE 4

Working without pay, the staff of Indigo Hair Salon donated their time yesterday to the Ronald McDonald House of New Brunswick for their annual “Cut-A-Thon” event. The Ronald McDonald House charity strives to house families with children with serious medical conditions near neighboring medical facilities. Pria Desai, receptionist at Indigo Hair Salon, said all the proceeds, including tips, were going to the charity. Indigo is located at 354 George St. in New Brunswick. Star ting at 10 a.m., the salon of fered $22 haircuts, $28 Brazilian Bikini Waxes, $14 blow-outs and $8 eyebrow contours. Nychey Michel, assistant house manager of the Ronald McDonald House of New Brunswick, said they needed the volunteers to help keep the House running in tip-top shape. “It’s about compassion and caring,” she said. The salon contributes the annual “Cut-A-Thon” profits to different charities ever y year, including the Susan G. Komen foundation and the local community. This past year, the salon adopted four families from a local elementar y school. The proceeds

from the “Cut-A-Thon” went to Christmas presents and a par ty for the children. “Ever yone’s been raised or born [in] this area, or were students and went to school here.” Desai said. “We usually like to stay with something local since we do have a lot of ties with the community.” This event once generated approximately $4,000, and the salon hopes to reach that amount once more. The income will help the House ser ve daily meals with

their 56 regular volunteers — not including the 50 or so that help cook those meals. The House has residents from the community and from dif ferent nations to cater to the dif ferent needs of individual families. The salon’s profits will go to the maintenance of these resources. “What I hear from the families is that it really is like grandma’s house. It’s comfor ting [when] ever ything’s taken care of. So that’s rewarding,” Michel said.

Indigo Hair Salon, located at 354 George St., donated funds from “Cut-A-Thon” to the Ronald McDonald House charity. TIANFANG YU / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

­­VOLUME 146, ISSUE 78 • UNIVERSITY ... 3 • ON THE WIRE ... 5 • FOOD & DRINK ... 7 • OPINIONS ... 8 • DIVERSIONS ... 10 • CLASSIFIEDS ... 12 • SPORTS ... BACK


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