May 11, 2015

Page 1

diamondback

the VOL. CV, NO. 114

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND - COLLEGE PARK

MONDAY, MAY 11, 2015

U Police arrest man for fondling student Man, 21, allegedly entered dorm room By Katishi Maake @TheHavocRat, @dbkcrime Staff writer

Josh Loock/The Diamondback

DE B OR A H H E M I NGWAY will return as president of the Graduate Student Government.

Incumbent GSG exec will return to office Hemingway aims for transparency By Carly Kempler @carlykempler Staff writer

Mall sleepout raises awareness about homelessness

Junior sociology major Rhys Hall easily fell asleep on McKeldin Mall on Friday night surrounded by about 50 other students sleeping out to raise awareness for homelessness. It wasn’t the first time Hall slept outside on this campus. “You can name it, I probably slept there,” Hall said. After about nine months of homelessness, Hall temporarily has a room in Montgomery Hall, but he’s not sure where he will live this summer or next semester.

U startup sells scarves Homeless women sell headscarves for commissions By Amit Roitman @thedbk For The Diamondback While balancing life and schoolwork as a junior at this university, Omar Goheer has taken on another role as the creator and CEO of a company that sells headscarves for women. Goheer, a chemistry and economics major, created K. Sultana, a company that manufactures and sells lightweight headscarves that ventilate well in hot temperatures to Muslim women. Inspired by his mother, Kishwer Sultana, a single parent who provided for Goheer’s family by starting a daycare business,

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Goheer wanted to create a company t hat cou ld promote women’s entrepreneurship. “The word Sultana means ‘queen’ in the Arabic language, and at K. Sultana, we believe every woman deserves the right to be treated as a queen,” Goheer said. “Every woman deserves the right to an education, equal rights in society and equal opportunities.” Goheer began research for the company during the spring semester of his freshman year through this university’s Entrepreneurship and Innovation living-learning program. The program helped him launch the company website on Oct. 30. In March, the company began selling the scarves in person and donating some of the profits. “In a nutshell, I would say these programs taught me the skills and

Starting last week, the last week of daily publication, The Diamondback is honoring our print heritage with front pages inspired by papers gone by.

Today, we emulate The Diamondback as it appeared soon after becoming independent from this university in 1971 in response to Vietnam War-era censorship.

Designed by Evan Berkowitz

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PROFESSOR SUVI GEZARI, left, and graduate student Tingting Liu have studied a possible black hole merger.

U researchers find signs of binary black holes By Morgan Eichensehr @MEichensehr Staff writer

See SCARVES, page 3

About Today’s Historic Page One

ISSUE NO. 114 , OUR 105 TH YEAR OF PUBLICATION

@thedbk

See CRIME, page 3

‘You can name it, I probably slept there’

See ELECTION, page 3

DBKNEWS.COM

See HOMELESS, page 2

Tom Hausman/The Diamondback

STUDENTS sleep on McKeldin Mall on Friday to raise awareness about homelessness.

By Grace Toohey @grace_2e Senior staff writer

Graduate Student Government President Deborah Hemingway will remain in her position for the 2015-16 academic year, according to Friday’s election results announcement. During her second term leading the GSG, Hemingway said, she wants the group to focus on enhancing student-adviser relationships and encouraging students seeking careers outside of academia. “I am really passionate about grad students,” she said. “We have an amazing university and I just see so many ways it could be better and I want to make it the best place it can be.” Unlike last year, each of the eight posit ions was contested, making the election more exciting, Hemingway said. Hemingway, a biophysics doctoral student, said she wants to promote a more bike-friendly campus by encouraging bike safety and accessibility for students. Additionally, she wants to work on transparency between graduate students and the administration — an issue that came up this year after midyear student surcharges were implemented. “The general student population doesn’t know what a provost is or does,” she said. “We want to help them understand what [the budgeting] is and make them a part of shared governance, because to them, it’s just like a confusing black box.” Hemingway also said she wants to encourage interdisciplinar y work by creating a link among science, engineering and business graduate students. “I would like to enable business students to readily talk to scientists and engineers,” she said. “We have some amazing stuff in the lab, but it doesn’t get out to the public, so if we get the entrepreneurially-minded

He said he was excited to see so many people come together for the homeless community for the Sleepout for the Homeless event hosted by MaryPIRG and Phi Beta Sigma fraternity. Hall’s family was upgrading to a larger apartment when his mother lost her job, leaving her unable to pay rent. His mother and sister moved in with his mother’s boyfriend in Washington, but Hall said he wasn’t welcome there. Instead, he’s been struggling to find a place to sleep for much of the fall and winter. Because he is a student at this university, he said,

University Police arrested a man Friday who allegedly entered students’ rooms in Anne Arundel Hall early that morning and inappropriately touched a sleeping resident. Colby Dean, 21, of Centreville, was arrested Friday at about 6:30 p.m. in connection with the incident, University Police spokeswoman Sgt. Rosanne Hoaas said. Residents of Anne Arundel Hall granted an intoxicated man access to the building. The man went to the fourth f loor and at about 1 a.m. entered three rooms whose doors were closed but unlocked, Hoaas said. At 1:52 a.m., a female student reported that she had been sleeping and woke up to someone inappropriately touching her over a blanket. She yelled and the suspect left the room. After an investigation in which detectives interviewed witnesses and victims, police were able to identify Dean, Hoaas said. Detectives applied for and were able to obtain an arrest warrant for the charges and served the warrant later the same day, which led to his arrest in the evening, according to a

Recent observations by university researchers provides evidence supporting a previously unverified phenomenon: two supermassive black holes orbiting so close to each other that they will eventually merge. The researchers, who documented their findings in a study published last month in The As-

trophysical Journal Letters, said the proximity of these two black holes might mean that, for the first time, scientists could witness black holes collide in the near future. “It’s a really exciting topic because we know that galaxies, throughout their lifetime, suffer various collisions with other galaxies and that they can end up merging. We think this should also result in black holes coming together and merging,” said See RESEARCH, page 3

SPORTS

OPINION

OVER IN A MINUTE

STAFF EDITORIAL: Protecting this house

The Terrapins women’s lacrosse team blew out the Minutewomen in the second round of the NCAA tournament in a 19-8 win yesterday P. 8

Students can’t afford to ignore dorm safety precautions P. 4

DIVERSIONS

CHARTED WATERS ABC’s spin-off Beyond the Tank follows a familiar formula P. 6


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May 11, 2015 by The Diamondback - Issuu