The University of Maryland’s Independent Student Newspaper
M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 13 , 2 01 4
City seeks top-20 college town status by 2020 Second city think-a-thon encourages discussion about area’s cultural, artistic image reinvention By Taylor Swaak @tswaak27 Staff writer Members of the university and city community came together Saturday to offer ideas for the cultural and artistic redesign of Route 1 as part of a collaborative effort that aims to turn the city into a top-20 college town
by 2020. A group of about 40 people, consisting of university administrators, city officials, local artists, residents and students, gathered at the College Park Community Center for the afternoon to brainstorm ways the arts can be used to improve the city’s aesthetic appeal. Popular ideas included open gal-
leries and spaces for artists to display visual and verbal art, performance spaces and theaters, more parks and greenery and designated paths for bikers and pedestrians. “We want to make life better for people who live here and work here and play here,” Mayor Andy Fellows said. “In doing that, we’ll end up attracting people from different places, because with any cool community that has things to do, people from City residents, students and officials broke into small groups at the College Park Community Center on See think, Page 3 Saturday to brainstorm how the city can improve its arts and cultural offerings. stephanie natoli/the diamondback
Study: Print materials a better choice for learning Comprehension higher for students who read physical article copies By Brittany Britto @thedbk For The Diamondback Whether you read your course material in a textbook or on your laptop might impact your grade, according to studies from this university’s human development and quantitative methodology department. The preliminary studies in doctoral candidate Lauren Singer’s project revealed that people might have a false sense of their comprehension levels when they read with e-readers, mobile devices and other electronic tools. The study asked a sample of undergraduate students about their use of print and digital mediums and their preference, then surveyed See media, Page 3
Creek cleanup pushes bottle bill gains By Marissa Horn @MarissaL_Horn Staff writer
Comedian joel mchale, known for his roles in Community and The Soup, headlined the homecoming comedy show. The audience was smaller than in years past but responded well to McHale.
james levin/the diamondback
community comedy Joel McHale headlines SEE’s annual homecoming comedy show; SEE announces Kevin Hart appearance Nov. 1 Michael Errigo @DBKDiversions Senior staff writer As students filed out of Cole Field House on Saturday night with the laughter from Joel McHale’s final joke ringing in their ears, they were handed a figurative cherry on top of
a sundae in the form of a flier announcing that Kevin Hart would be Student Entertainment Events’ next featured comedian on Nov. 1. “We didn’t want it to overshadow the event, so that’s why we did it after when people were leaving, but it was still mayhem for a while. He’s been a name that’s been requested
by students for such a long time,” said Ben Stryker, SEE comedy director. “At the end of the day, students want the best talent on campus for an affordable price, and when you think of the big names in comedy, I can’t think of many that are bigger than Kevin Hart.” The announcement followed
McHale’s set that touched on everything from this state’s official sport of jousting to Tyra Banks’ fear of dolphins. The 42-year-old star of Community and The Soup had laughter rippling constantly throughout the crowd of about 3,000. See mchale, Page 2
Homecoming drive prepares 100,000 meals for poor
University students volunteered their time Saturday afternoon to collect trash and clean the Paint Branch Campus Creek to raise awareness for the proposed state “bottle bill,” which would offer residents a 5-cent redeemable deposit for each bottle or can they recycle. The Maryland Public Interest Research Group and environmental science and technology department’s RESTORE society sponsored the semiannual event, which attracted more than 40 volunteers despite the rainy weather. “In the past, what we’ve done is gone and collected everything we See bottle, Page 3
Terps Against Hunger event draws 500 By Grace Toohey @grace_2e Staff writer To kick off homecoming, more than 500 students worked together to prepare about 100,000 meals for people in need — mostly from the local area, but also around the world — at an annual service event Saturday in Stamp Student Union. This university’s homecoming committee teamed up with new student group Terps Against Hunger to plan the event that used
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volunteers Michael D’Antonio, a senior electrical engineering major, Patrick Hopkins, a junior psychology major and Lauren Farrel, a senior criminal justice major, prepare meals on Saturday. sung-min kim/the diamondback the national nonprofit Kids Against Hunger’s three-step process to feed the hungry. Volunteers participated
in one of three steps: combining four key ingredients — soy, dehydrated vegetables, rice and vitamin and
mineral powder — weighing the bags to ensure accurate nutritional facts or sealing and packing the bags for shipment. Each bag contains six nutritious meals that avoid dietary restrictions such as meat, said Jonathan Fix, president of Terps Against Hunger. “We try to keep it as basic as possible because we want to be able to ship to anywhere,” said Fix, a senior individual studies major. Students Helping Honduras will take its meals to Honduras during its annual service trip this winter. The majority of the meals will stay in the local area, including this university’s See service, Page 2
SPORTS
OPINION
MEN’S SOCCER BLOWS PAST PSU
STAFF EDITORIAL: Non-tenure-track faculty
The Terps offense erupted in a 4-0 win over Penn State yesterday, which marked the team’s first victory over a ranked opponent P. 8
Non-tenure shouldn’t keep you from obtaining benefits P. 4 DIVERSIONS
LASTING IMPACT: COMMUNITY Cult show Community is eccentric, unpredictable and great TV P. 6