The Columbia Chronicle, October 17, 2016

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Local art therapist empowers trauma survivors

Volume 52, Issue 7

ColumbiaChronicle.com

CTU strike narrowly avoided with tentative agreement

Oct.

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17 2016

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» ABBY LEE HOOD COPY CHIEF

and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex ever found, had her right arm removed Oct. 6 to help scientists discover more about what T. rex’s arms were used for, and why they were so small. Carmen Soriano, a beamline scientist at Argonne National Laboratory, in Lemont, Illinois, is one of two experts studying SUE’s arm. Beamline scientists use accelerated particle scanning technology to study material. Soriano said she worked over the weekend to scan the arm and added that the bones were returned to Chicago’s Field Museum, 1400 S. Lake Shore Drive, Oct. 12. Soriano, who said her specialty is studying insects preserved in amber, said she became interested in the project because she also works with the Field Museum and spoke with colleagues in France about a larger effort to study the T. rex that they are working on. She added that preliminary results showed SUE did not use her arms very much. “It shows in the bones,” Soriano said. “We can see a lot of hollow spaces that have not been regrown. That’s very typical when bones are underused.” According to Soriano, an injury to SUE’s arm is a focus of the study, which was conducted using a synchrotron—an instrument that uses microscopic particles to scan material. Soriano said this method allows scientists to see individual cells and analyze any soft tissues, like skin, that remain on the bone. SUE’s arm has extensive muscle damage, and Soriano said this could have been

» Courtesy OFFICE OF CAMPUS SAFETY & SECURITY

Campus laptop thefts leave students pushing for stronger security » ANDREA SALCEDO LLAURADO & AMELIA GARZA CAMPUS EDITOR & CAMPUS REPORTER

Several laptop robberies within the last month are under investigation by the Office of Campus Safety & Security and the Chicago Police Department.

A SERIES OF laptop thefts on campus have students concerned about their safety inside Columbia buildings and pushing for stronger security measures. According to an Oct. 7 email sent to the campus community by the Office of Campus Safety & Security, two students’

laptops were stolen out of their hands on separate occasions. The two incidents occurred Oct. 5 at the 623 S. Wabash Ave. Building, and Oct. 7 at the 33 E. Congress Parkway Building. The Oct. 12 incident involved a student’s laptop theft at the 501 S. State St. Panera Bread restaurant, according to an Oct.13 collegewide email. A Sept. 8 laptop robbery, which was not reported to the campus community by the

» MARIA CARDONA/CHRONICLE

Office of Campus Safety & Security, also occurred in the Wabash Campus Building. The Oct. 7 victim, sophomore cinema art + science major Rialin José, said the perpetrator walked into the room and grabbed her laptop from her hands as she was working inside an office on the third floor of the 33 E. Congress Parkway Building. “I was in shock,” José said. “I wanted to [chase after him], but my whole body was frozen.” José said she asked for immediate help from the English Department’s office right across the hall. She added that campus security arrived within five minutes of the incident.

SEE ROBBERY, PAGE 3

SUE reveals answers millions of years after death

SEE SUE, PAGE 39

SUE, THE LARGEST


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