A&E
Editorial: Ebola Waste
The Hippodrome’s grand opening starts with sixday extravaganza.
Sports
Equestrian team upsets No. 1 University of Georgia.
“Waste management officials and politicians are making deci-
sions that shadow those of medical professionals, confusing the roles and public understanding of Ebola’s actual threat.”
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The Baylor Lariat baylorlariat com
WE’RE THERE WHEN YOU CAN’T BE
Tuesday | October 28, 2014
Medics take student to ER after collision By Abigail Loop Staff Writer
Paramedics rushed a student to the hospital after an accident that occurred around 3:30 p.m. Monday, on the corner of Seventh Street and James Avenue. Officials at the scene of the accident said a student driving a car collided with another student driving a moped. Emergency medical services and two Waco police officers responded. No names were given at the scene of the accident. “He went to the hospital but we don’t know the extent of his injuries,” Charlotte Matthews, an officer at the
Waco Police Department said. The driver of the car was uninjured and remained at the scene to talk with officials. The two students were the only ones involved with the accident and the scene was cleared quickly. According to the Washington Post, 4,610 motorcyclists died in 2013 due to motorcycle-related injuries. The advice to motorists from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, is to safely “share the road” with motorcycles and be extra alert to help keep motorcyclists safe. Motorcyclists are reminded to make themselves visible to other motorists. The condition of the student was unknown Monday night.
Carlye Thornton | Lariat Photo Editor
A student gets loaded into an ambulance following the collision of a car and moped. Drivers are encouraged to use caution and share the road with motorcyclists, and cyclists should take precautions to make themselves visible to drivers.
One-way woes may end soon
BU professor speaks out against abuse By Jon Platt Reporter
By Rebecca Flannery Staff Writer
In light of October being Domestic Abuse Awareness Month, a Baylor professor spoke with the Lariat about her experience in an abusive relationship, how she escaped and what she learned. The Lariat does not identify victims of abuse. Can you tell me about what happened? I was married for seven years. We were very happy when we got married, but I learned that my husband had been hiding a long-term addiction, and, at first, I wanted to be by his side to help him heal. I felt like we were in that together. But, after repeated relapses, I felt like my grace was being taken for granted and there was no hope for healing. Over the course of our relationship, patterns of emotional abuse become more pronounced. Things like: holding me hostage in silence, not letting me leave the room but refusing to talk, monitoring my activity, showing up at my office, invading my privacy, sabotaging things that were important to me. Emotionally abusive relationships try to rewire your brain so you can’t think for yourself. The abuser will challenge any
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ABUSE, page 4
Ready, set, strut
Kevin Freeman | Lariat Photographer
Frisco junior Connor Smotherman poses on the catwalk during Zeta Tau Alpha’s Big Man On Campus event Monday in the Barfield Drawing Room of the Bill Daniel Student Center. The event was a fundraiser for breast cancer research.
City planners in downtown Waco have proposed to change some downtown streets from their current one-way layouts to two-way, hoping to foster a sense of community activity. Christopher Evilia, member of the Waco Metropolitan Planning Organization, said a study was conducted to rethink downtown streets, at the recommendation of downtown merchants and the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce, in recent months. Specifically, Evilia said Franklin and Washington Avenue will be taken into consideration before other streets. “Basically, our goal is to reinvent downtown,” Evilia said. “One-way streets create an uncomfortable environment for pedestrians, and therefore commerce.” Evilia said in respect to new game day procedures downtown, changing streets from oneway to two-way will aid transportation and commerce. “One-way streets are meant to move a large volume of traffic though an area quickly, not SEE
STREETS, page 4
US governors, Army go own way on required Ebola quarantines By David Porter and Colleen Barry Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. — The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday recommended new restrictions for people at highest risk for coming down with the Ebola virus and symptom monitoring for those at lower risk, but some state governors and even the Army are carving their own paths. As contradictory state policies proliferate in response to Ebola fears, the CDC’s recommendations mark an effort to create a national standard, one that would protect public health without discouragVol.116 No. 30
ing people from helping fight its spread overseas. The CDC now says even if people have no symptoms and are not considered contagious they should stay away from commercial transportation or public gatherings if they have been in direct contact with the bodily fluids of someone sick with Ebola — say, by touching their fluids without protective gear or by suffering an injury from a contaminated needle. Absent that direct contact, simply caring for Ebola patients or traveling in West Africa doesn’t warrant quarantine conditions, the public health agency said. But quarantines are determined state by state in the U.S., and the
CDC is empowered only to issue guidelines. And even within the federal government, authorities were improvising Monday: A U.S. Army commander in Italy said he and his troops returning from Liberia would remain in isolation for 21 days, even though he feels they face no risk and show no symptoms. The Army’s chief of staff, Gen. Ray Odierno, directed the 21-day controlled monitoring period for all redeploying soldiers returning from the Ebola fight in West Africa, an Army spokeswoman said. A nurse who volunteered with Doctors Without Borders in AfSEE
EBOLA, page 4
Associated Press
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, hugs Patient Nina Pham Friday outside of National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Md.
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