November 6, 2014

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The University of Maryland’s Independent Student Newspaper 2014

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Loh vows university will lead the nation In annual State of the Campus address, univ president pushes further By Katishi Maake @TheHavocRat Staff writer

the Board and Brew, a board game cafe located under The Varsity, will add craft beers to its menu in about two weeks. tom hausman/the diamondback

Board game cafe secures liquor license from county Board and Brew to sell craft beers in two weeks By Jordan Branch @thedbk For The Diamondback T he Board and Brew will add craft beers to its menu in about two weeks after receiving a beer and wine license Oct. 28. This was the board game cafe’s second attempt at obtaining a license, said Ben Epstein, co-owner of The Board and Brew. T he Board and Brew, located under The Varsity, initially was in competition with three other establishments for the beer and wine license. Two establishments dropped out, and the remaining competitor already had a beer and wine license and was pursuing a full license, which includes liquor. The competitor offered to transfer its existing license to The Board and Brew if the cafe dropped out of the competition for the full license. To avoid the risk of losing again, The Board and Brew accepted. The Prince George’s County Board of License Commissioners, which Epstein said had encouraged The Board and Brew to reapply for the license, approved the transfer. If the craft beers sell well, Epstein said the cafe would reapply for the full liquor license so it can sell spiked milkshakes and Irish coffee. Epstein said he wants beers that are “iconic for their specific type.” “We want a stout that anyone who has it would be like, ‘That’s a damn good stout,’” Epstein said. “We wa nt a n I PA that’s rea l ly hoppy, that people who like IPAs would just be in love with.” The craft beers will cost between $4 and $7 with potentially one cheaper option, he said. Having a beer and wine license, Epstein said, is important for competing with other businesses in the area, most of which have liquor licenses. When Epstein brainstormed names for the cafe, “brew” referred to coffee. But he soon realized that people sometimes assumed that meant beer, and some customers have left the establishment after discovering it’s not on the menu. “Let’s face it, when people go out and hang out with their friends, they want to have a drink. And that’s not just college students,” Epstein said. The Board and Brew staff is now being trained to serve alcohol, Epstein said. The cafe will ID everyone and use an ID scanner if staff See brew, Page 3

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FINDING CLOSURE ON A CLOTHESLINE Sophomore hearing and speech sciences major Jackie Berges reads a T-shirt in Hornbake Plaza. The CARE to Stop Violence office of the University Health Center held its annual Clothesline Project yesterday. The project is geared toward raising awareness for sexual assault and domestic violence issues and offers survivors a chance to make a T-shirt with a message of their choice, which will be hung at the next event. The T-shirts date back as far as 12 years.

Marylanders push for their right to die National death with dignity debate plays out in state politics By Talia Richman @talirichman Senior staff writer First, he swallowed 19 pills. When that didn’t work, he tried to slash his wrists, but the tremors in his hands made that impossible. So finally, 90-year-old Alex Fraser took the gun that always sat nex t to h is bed a nd shot himself, ending his battle with Parkinson’s disease.

“My father taught me that every person should have the choice about how they die,” said Alexa Fraser, his daughter, who lives in Rockville. “Futile or needless pain and suffering at the end of life was, to use his words, stupid.” Fraser said she only wishes this state had a “death with dignity” law in place, which she said would have enabled her father to die peacefully and surrounded by family, instead of violently and alone. The death with dignity, or physician-assisted dying, movement has recently garnered national attention following 29-year-old Brittany Maynard’s public decision to end her

life after being told her terminal brain cancer would afford her only six months to live. The video she posted detailing her choice has received more than 11 million views. Maynard, who died Nov. 1 after taking a lethal and legal dose of prescription medication, moved from California to Oregon to take advantage of the state’s Death with Dignity Act. “I’ve been reading about Brittany Maynard and the idea that her mother and husband and stepfather could be there with her and know she was going peacefully and See dEATH, Page 2

Health center now shuttles some off campus DOTS partnership will allow students to make local appointments By Lexie Schapitl @lexieschapitl Staff writer Students requiring medical services not provided by the University Health Center can now take shuttles to off-campus appointments free of charge, thanks to a partnership between the Depart-

ment of Transportation Services and the health center. This program, which was launched in September, is intended “to provide transportation to students who may need to go off campus for specialty care, imaging” and other services not provided by the health center, Director David McBride wrote in an email. Health center administrative assistant Danielle Lewis, who coordinates the shuttle program, said it was designed to assist students who are not from the area or do not have a car and therefore have no other

Rethinking the magnet in push for engineering innovation Graduate student receives praise for research By Joe Zimmermann @JoeMacZim Staff writer In more ways than one, the work of graduate student Sean Fackler has attracted a lot of positive attention. A doctoral student in materials science and engineering, Fackler has won three awards in his field this past year from the Rare-Earth Permanent Magnet workshop,

ISSUE NO. 39 , OUR 105 TH YEAR OF PUBLICATION DBKNEWS.COM

convenient means of reaching an off-campus doctor. “Instead of having to pay a taxicab, or using an ambulance or waiting for a friend or a family member to come, [the health center] initiated this service to help students get off-campus to appointments,” Lewis said. When sophomore government and politics major Meredith Lightstone suffered an eye ulcer several weeks ago, she was told the health

University President Wallace Loh gave his annual State of the Campus address yesterday before the University Senate, promising that this university will join the ranks of the top public research universities in the country over the next six years. “To be called a flagship is not just an empty phrase,” Loh said. “The future of Maryland’s economic vitality and quality of life depends upon the quality of the research university.” For this goal to be met, Loh urged the university to keep its best graduates in the state after graduation. He mentioned that states with top public universities, such as California, Michigan and North Carolina, are able to recruit two-thirds of their graduates, whereas this state only recruits a third. “We will have programs that will enhance the premium education that [students] get here,” Loh said. “An education that is superior to any other education that they can get in this state or … compared with our peers.” In 2007, the university published the Strategic Plan for the University of Maryland, which outlines the university’s goals and actions for the next 10 years. Loh referred to this plan several times throughout his roughly one-hour address. This state produces some of the most qualified high school students, Loh said, which makes attracting these graduates to the university a greater priority for the administration. “We have perhaps the most credentialed, the most talented group of freshmen in the history of this university,” he said. “We have brought in one-third of the best high school graduates of the state, compared to about 25 percent back in 2007.” Senate Chairman Donald Webster agreed with Loh’s goal to become a top-10 public university and noticed the improvements the university has made during his 40 years here. “I don’t see why we shouldn’t or can’t,” Webster said. “We have made a lot of right moves; we have got a tremendous campus, wonderful faculty, great students.”

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NanoDay and the Center for Nanophysics and Advanced Materials. His work deals with magnets, specifically in finding ways to develop efficient alternatives to expensive metals often used in making them, which could one day be used in electric cars and other technologies. People use magnets every day, Fackler said, and more than simply for refrigerator decoration. Magnets See magnets, Page 3

Sean Fackler, a doctoral student, holds up the combinatorial library used in the experiments. sung min-kim/the diamondback

SPORTS

OPINION

A RAPID RISE TO CONFERENCE BEST

GUEST COLUMN: The Rule of Thumb Campaign

The Terrapins men’s soccer team topped Rutgers last night to claim its eighth straight victory and the Big Ten regular-season title P. 8

Join the campaign to end sexual assault on the campus P. 4 DIVERSIONS

CINEMA’S DARK KNIGHT Reflecting on the winding career of Christopher Nolan P. 6


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