April 8, 2013

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DIVERSIONS

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SPORTS

College Park-based musician Sam Ray gains wider recognition p. 6

No. 1 men’s lacrosse overcomes two-goal deficit, sinks Navy late

p. 8

The University of Maryland’s Independent Student Newspaper

ISSUE NO. 120

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103rd Year of Publication

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TOMORROW 80S / Partly Cloudy

MONDAY, April 8, 2013

Univ. Senate addresses long-term faculty issues

Student Conduct working to expand its reach By Teddy Amenabar and Laura Blasey Senior staff writers University officials hope expanding the Code of Student Conduct would increase student responsibility off the campus, they told city council members at Tuesday’s meeting. Members of the city and university community see amending the code as a path toward alleviating tense neighborhood relations and providing students with a way to report offcampus misconduct. City officials said the University Senate bill represents a positive step toward reining in student behavior off the campus. “We want to educate students that when you’re a student at Maryland, you don’t leave that title when you cross the street,” Andrea Goodwin, Office of Student Conduct director, told the College Park City Council last week. “We’re trying to teach students how to be better citizens, better neighbors.” If the bill passes the Senate Executive Committee today and the full senate later this month — and also receives university President Wallace Loh’s signature — University Police would be able to enforce student conduct policies within the bill’s planned jurisdiction extension. That would allow the force to patrol in residential areas around the city, Goodwin said. The proposal is a long time coming, said District 3 Councilman Robert Day. “When I ran for this office, this was one of things I brought up to many people,” Day said. “You don’t understand See conduct, Page 3

By Alex Kirshner Staff writer Non-tenure-track faculty members who have expressed concerns about their treatment at the university could soon see changes, after the University Senate voted Thursday to accept a set of task force recommendations. The recommendations deal mainly

thomas holtz speaks to the University Senate about the faculty task force. christian jenkins/the diamondback

See faculty, Page 2

holi celebrations organized by the Hindu Student Council coated more than 200 students in vibrant, powdery paint yesterday on McKeldin Mall. The university sees annual revelry for the spring festival, which honors the potential and romance of the season. photos by charlie deboyace/the diamondback

Photo contest aims to lower students’ stress

A life full of love, Muppets

Challenge part of year’s wellness initiative By Savannah Doane-Malotte Staff writer

By Laura Blasey Senior staff writer

INDEX

“I would rather see it done right than see it done rushed,” said Thomas Holtz, the task force’s co-chairman. Although some awareness of the issues already exists, the report could be a step toward broader understanding, Holtz said. “I think all the NTT faculty have

holi colors spring to life

Jane Henson, 1934-2013

They were more than just puppets. They were the Muppets, and they touched the lives of children across the country for decades. Now, fans are mourning the death of one-half of the team behind the iconic characters. Jane Nebel Henson, university alumna and philanthropist, died in her Connecticut home Tuesday after a long battle with cancer. She was 78. Jane and Jim Henson, also a university alumnus, were the creative team behind the Muppets, pioneering not

with pay and promotional issues and seek to address gaps in the handling of non-tenure-track faculty and their tenured counterparts. Now that the senate has accepted the recommendations, various senate subcommittees will review each of the 21 proposed changes next school year, nearly two years after the Non-Tenure-Track Faculty Task Force was created.

JANE HENSON receives a tribute at the 1990 homecoming game from then-university President Brit Kirwan. Henson met her husband, Jim, at this university and created the Muppets with him. photo courtesy of university archives only a style of puppetry — a soft hybrid doll combining the features of a standard marionette and a ventriloquism dummy — but also family television programming. From Sesame Street to The Muppet Show, the Henson creations

became household names. Jane Henson was born in New York City in 1934 to Winifred and Adalbert Nebel, an astrologer.

NEWS 2 OPINION 4 FEATURES 5 DIVERSIONS 6 CLASSIFIED 6 SPORTS 8

See henson, Page 3

To deal with the stresses of higher education and everyday life, struggles all too familiar to many students, Minh Pho took up a creative outlet and a challenge. He started his own photo project, taking new photos daily to keep his mind off the anxieties of his classes and schoolwork. Wellness @ Maryland, the university’s wellness center, had a similar idea when it launched its campuswide Stress Less Photo Challenge, asking students and staff to submit photos through April 14 that reflect how students keep their worries in perspective. “It gives me a sense that I can stay on top of things, and is really helpful

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in reminding me to take it easy once in a while,” Pho said. The challenge, which began April 1, is part of the center’s yearlong Stress Less initiative, which aims to educate students on symptoms and effects of stress and healthy ways to manage them. Because stress is the No. 1 health problem on college campuses, according to national data, the university wanted to make a priority of helping students keep calm, said Kate Maloney, Wellness communications coordinator. “Sometimes stress seems like a badge of honor on campus, and if you’re not stressed, you’re not doing something right,” Maloney said. “But you don’t have to stress for success. We wanted to rewrite the story of stress at UMD and

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See challenge, Page 2

© 2013 THE DIAMONDBACK


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