March 6, 2017

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Matt Teaford

Teaford stands out among politicians today

Football Preview

Bearcat football team begins spring practice

THE NEWS RECORD / UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI MONDAY, MAR. 6, 2017

NEWSRECORD.ORG

Ohio Legislature passes HB 26

Bill increases transportation funding by $10M JACOB FISHER | STAFF REPORTER

SHAE COMBS | PHOTO EDITOR

Artist Amanda Bialk speaks to customers about her handmade ceramics at the DAAP Makers Market, March 4, 2017.

DAAP throws first ‘Maker’s Mart’ NOELLE ZIELINKY | STAFF REPORTER

DAAP held its first Makers Market this past Saturday where students, alumni and other members of the Cincinnati design community sold their artwork. This artwork ranged from graphic prints to ceramics to woodwork. The event was held on multiple levels of the DAAP building, and it was bustling with visitors the entire time. Vendors were able to explain their artwork to potential buyers and give them a sense of who they are. Sammi Hayes, a fourthyear fine arts student, makes paper plants. She says that a particular assignment sparked her inspiration for this idea. “I’ve always loved the shapes, forms and colors of plants,” said Hayes. “Combining that with pattern design felt very natural, so in response to the assignment I created my first paper plant installation.” Since then, this project has taken over Hayes’ main body of work. The process to make these plants, though seemingly simple, is quite interesting. “I begin by screen printing bright patterns onto green paper,” explained Hayes. “Then I hand cut and assemble plant sculptures from that paper.” Vendors were located on multiple floors of the DAAP building, which encouraged potential buyers to venture around the different tables to see what everyone had to offer. The overall atmosphere was very upbeat, and all of the vendors were more than happy to answer questions about their artwork or explain the different steps taken in order to create their art. Some of the artists also

sold handmade clothing, such as t-shirts with printed designs on them and shorts with patchwork detail. Handmade jewelry was also sold, as well as hanging plant holders made from types of colored yarn and rope. Dan Whitsell and Terah Coleman explored new mediums with their artwork that they sold at the market. Whitsell, a third-year industrial design student, and Coleman, a fifth-year industrial design student, were curious about creating a line of smaller bags, experimenting with new materials. “I have experience making bags and other soft goods,” said Whitsell. “And Terah was interested in experimenting with different products and construction methods, so it felt like a good option for the Makers Market.” These two made small bags made out of used denim and made them into something practical. “We focused the project around reusing worn-out jeans for the denim bags and experimenting with embroidery. Our goal was to make simple and useful objects that gave new life to the materials,” said Whitsell. Joe Walsh, a 2015 DAAP alum, sold his graphic prints, shirts and pins. “My art is me drawing things how I wish they looked, most of it technically of a real thing, or a memory,”Walsh said. “But I put it through a stylistic lens, usually making it more geometric and symmetrical than the thing really is.” All artists and makers presented their most intricate and compelling artwork at this market and drew in crowds from the UC community and the greater Cincinnati area.

Ohio’s public transit system appears poised for a comprehensive expansion as the state’s House of Representatives pass House Bill 26, which would increase statewide transportation funding by $10 million. “There’s a lot of stuff in this bill that’s trying to help local governments,” said Representative Robert McColley, a key sponsor of the legislation. “They’re crying out for help.” The bill, which passed with an 83-13 vote, comes in the wake of a 2014 study by multinational engineering and design firm Parsons Brinckerhoff that called for Ohio to double its transportation funding. It outlines an $8 billion spending budget, which poses a “potentially significant annual revenue gain for counties,” according to Ohio’s Legislative Service Commission. Though the need for public transit grows steadily each year, its funding has slowly declined. Accounting for inflation, state funding for transit has been cut in half since the turn of the century. While Ohio consists of numerous metropolitan areas that necessitate public transit access, representatives from car-dominated rural and suburban districts have long resisted

efforts to increase state transit funding. Representatives from the Ohio House hope the funding will ease access to funds for local projects like the Western Hills Viaduct. Levying additional funds for some of the state’s pilot programs to alleviate highway congestion is also a focus. The bill commissions a joint effort between the Ohio Department of Transportation and the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet to study the proposed Eastern Bypass of Cincinnati. Derek Bauman, vice-chair of the pro-public transit organization All Aboard Ohio, called the proposed bypass “a multi-billion dollar suburban sprawl-inducing highway project.” According to Bauman, transportation funding needs to go to public transportation and not new highways, citing over 70 new miles of interstates that will require regular maintenance from other pending projects. The bill contains a provision that reduces the absence of a front license plate to a secondary offense if the vehicle is legally parked. Representative Alicia Reece unsuccessfully attempted to instate a provision which would make driving without a front plate a secondary

offense as well, citing the death of Sam DuBose at the hands of former University of Cincinnati Police Department Officer Ray Tensing in July 2015. “Sam DuBose didn’t do anything wrong, and he’s dead today with a bullet in the head,” said Reece during the legislative session. Ultimately, the provision did not pass. According to Ian Rice, a secondyear political science and pre-law student, it would have been little more than “a Band-Aid on a much bigger problem.” “Changing a law on a license plate requirement will not fix the issue [of] racial biases in our society,” said Rice. “We need to make sure that, as a society, we are more inclusive.” Although it doesn’t look like the bill would cause any change in funding for UC’s transportation system, some students hope that its passage might persuade the university to revisit fund management for its current public transit services. “We need to focus on expanding services such as NightRide and the shuttle program,” said Rice. “UC has great programs when it comes to transportation, but expanding our current programs will allow us to serve more students and provide a safer environment for everyone.”

PROVIDED

Cincinnati Metro Bus at Fountain Square.

UC med college discovers treatment for brain and blood cancers MOUNIR LYNCH | STAFF REPORTER

Researchers at the University of Cincinnati’s College of Medicine have discovered a new way to personalize treatment for patients with difficult brain and blood cancers. A team of scientists from the UC Cancer Institute has discovered a variety of potential therapies that can treat cancers lacking essential tumorsuppression factors that occur naturally in the body. Anna and Harold W. Huffman Endowed Chair for Glioblastoma Experimental Therapeutics and UC cancer researcher Dr. David Plas, MD, told Cell Reports last month about the groundbreaking discovery in his research. “We found a new combination of therapeutics that could treat cancers that lack a protein called PTEN. PTEN is an important tumor suppressor, which means that it stops cell growth and division according to the needs of the body,” said Plas. Dr. Plas’ laboratory at UC discovered that stopping

the patient’s production of a protein called S6K1 could eliminate PTENdeficient glioblastoma cells. Glioblastoma is known as the most aggressive form of brain cancer and one of the most difficult to treat. Medical Director of the UC Brain Tumor Center and professor in the College

of Medicine’s Department of Neurosurgery Ronald Warnick, MD, is excited to see what this project is discovering right on UC’s campus. Dr. Warnick believes that this kind of therapeutics research is necessary for treating brain tumors. “There is a desperate

need for novel therapeutic agents for patients with glioblastoma,” Dr. Warnick told Cell Reports. After having discovered the connection between stopping S6K1 production and the elimination of PTEN-deficient glioblastoma cells, Dr. Plas’ research team at UC tested

multiple drug combinations for their ability to eliminate PTEN-deficient cancer cells. Dr. Plas’ lab was ultimately successful in finding a drug combination that could achieve his desired results. Atsuo Sasaki, PhD, and Hala Elnakat Thomas, PhD, from the College of

JAE S. LEE | THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS | TNS

Medicine’s Division of Hematology Oncology were both collaborators in this study. The American Cancer Society, the National Institutes of Health, the UC Brain Tumor Center and the Anna and Harold W. Huffman Endowed Chair funded the study for Glioblastoma Experimental Therapeutics and the UC Medical Scientists Training Program. The next step in the research is using this drug combination to test the safety and application of the new drug combination using models with an end goal of sending the combination for a clinical trial. “We have great hope that our new data will lead academic and industry researchers to investigate S6K1 as the center of new combination strategies for cancers of the brain, blood and other tissues,” Dr. Plas said. This combination of drugs has the potential to become a game-changer, according to Dr. Warnick.

A scar from a brain surgery is seen on Chase Sims’ head at Prestonwood Baptist Church on April 20, 2016 in Plano, Texas.

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March 6, 2017 by The News Record - Issuu