The News Record 2.9.15

Page 1

‘MOST VIOLENT YEAR’ There will be oil in Chandor’s latest crime drama

>>

PG 2

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE

MTV DECODES LIFE LESSONS

View a photo gallery of students competing in UC’s second-ever Game Day

‘Girl Code,’ ‘Guy Code’ comedians visit UC

>>

PG 6

>> newsrecord.org

THE NEWS RECORD

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI

NEWSRECORD.ORG

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2015

Students create club to educate, eradicate modern-day slavery HUY NGUYEN | CONTRIBUTOR

MADISON SCHMIDT| PHOTO EDITOR

UC students Rajiv Karani and Fabian Jesuthan create Free the Slaves to educate students about modern-day slavery and join the movement of fighting against it.

Students banded together against modernday slavery at the University of Cincinnati’s first Free the Slaves meeting Wednesday afternoon. Fabian Jesuthan, a fourth-year pre-medical student, and Rajiv Karani, a third-year pre-medical student, started the UC chapter because they could not stand the fact that forms of slavery still exist in the United States and throughout the rest of the world. The two began by contacting the Free the Slaves international lobbying organization, and have been working on forming the UC chapter since last spring. “I didn’t really know too much about [modern day slavery],” Karani expalined. “After I heard about this organization, I just went to the website, the Free The Slaves website, and I spent a long time just reading about the stuff, watching their videos. We both thought that UC doesn’t have an organization that is purely dedicated to fundraising to help this cause.” According to the Global Slavery Index (GSI), there are approxamently 35.8 million

DOCTOR, ASSISTANT DEAN RECOGNIZED FOR NON-PROFIT WORK

2014 CHAMPION FOR CHILDREN

people currently stripped of their natural human rights and exploited for varying types of labor throughout the world. Slavery and human trafficking occurs in every county in the world, despite the institution being universally outlawed. The country with the highest count of slavery to date in absolute terms is India, followed by China and Pakistan, each with its own form of slave labor, according to the GSI. Sixtyone percent of those living in slavery are in India, China, Pakistan, Uzbekistan and Russia. Today, the United States has about 60,000 people in modern slavery, according to the same index. Much of this slavery comes in the form of human trafficking, according to Free the Slaves. Attendees at Wednesday’s meeting discussed Rose Odine, a former slave who was misled into leaving her home in Cameroon and forced against her will to work as a nanny in an apartment building not far from the Lincoln Memorial of Washington, D.C. SEE FREE THE SLAVES PG 3

$1.3M gift establishes pancreatic cancer research fund at UC ELYSSE WINGET | STAFF REPORTER

MADISON SCHMIDT | PHOTO EDITOR

Dr. Christopher Lewis, Village Life founder and assistant dean for diversity and inclusion in the College of Medicine, walks with locals from the village of Shirati in Tanzania during a VLOP trip in 2013. With the help of volunteers from VLOP, Lewis strives to improve life, health and education in Tanzania. MATT NICHOLS | STAFF REPORTER

Dr. Christopher Lewis, who has been instrumental in offering opportunities for UC students to make a difference throughout the world, was honored by the non-profit organization 4C for Children Jan. 24 as a “2014 Champion for Children” for his work in East Africa with the Village Life Outreach Project. Lewis, assistant dean for diversity and inclusion in the College of Medicine, associate professor of family medicine and UC Health family physician, founded the Village Life Outreach Project in 2004. The Village Life Outreach Project is a non-profit organization partnered with UC that offers students and faculty a chance to travel to rural communities in Tanzania and help impoverished locals get back on their feet. The project aims to help communities in three categories: providing access to clean drinking water, offering access to proper health with healthcare and preventative healthcare education, and

improving educational outcomes in the community through partnerships with local schools to UC. Students who participate in the program have an opportunity to see first-hand how their work can impact communities. “The emotions I felt over there were much more overwhelming than I can put into words,” said Malia Hess, a fourthyear nursing student. “It was very simply the most rewarding two weeks of my life, knowing I was able to somehow alleviate some suffering and improve the lives of these very special people a small amount.” Hess is just one of over 300 UC students that have given their time, effort and hearts to Village Life, not only in Tanzania, but here in Cincinnati as well. “A big part of what we do is bringing lessons that we learn in Tanzania back home to our local community,” Lewis explained. Village Life has worked with over 40 schools from elementary to college level

in the Cincinnati area to promote the program and to inspire change in the community for years to come. “The experience was phenomenal,” said Daniel Ruter, a 2014 UC graduate in biological studies. “One of the things that I was happy to see Dr. Lewis get this award for is that it was recognizing that all of these students and people that are traveling to Tanzania with Village Life are actually the ones that are impacted the most.” “I feel this experience made me a better person, and I would love to go back sometime in the future,” Hess said. Lewis said he is honored to have received such recognition. “The 4C for Children organization is top notch,” Lewis said. “For people like that to have an interest in me and what I’ve been doing, and for them to recognize what I’ve been able to accomplish with my partners in Village Life and UC, is SEE TANZANIA PG 3

A recent $1.3 million donation to the University of Cincinnati helped establish The Steven Goldman Memorial Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund to aid pancreatic cancer research, prevention and recovery. The gift, which was given by the family of Steven Goldman, will be dispersed in increments of $50,000 to $60,000 per year to individuals who show interest in studying pancreatic cancer. William Barrett, a director of the UC Cancer Institute, is one of the individuals in charge of reviewing applications for the fund. “Once a year, anybody, be it scientists or physicians here at the university, are invited to submit plan proposals to study something in pancreas cancer,” Barrett said. Syed Ahmad, the director of the UC Pancreas Disease Center and professor of clinical practices, will also review applications. Ahmad believes this funding is necessary to pancreatic cancer research. “It is estimated that by the year 2020, [pancreas cancer] will be the number one cause of cancer death,” Ahmad said. Ahmad also said that only 2 percent of federal dollars distributed by the National Cancer Institute go to pancreatic cancer. “This is a trickle of funding for a river of need,” Ahmad said. Although the funds are limited, Barrett hopes funding will continue to grow in the future after the university sees the effects this type of research has in advancing the field of medicine. Jun-Lin Guan, chair of the UC Department of Cancer Biology, thinks this funding is going to help increase the university’s chances of finding a cure and bettering the outcome of pancreas cancer. “More research in this type of cancer is needed,” Guan said. Pancreatic cancer is hard to detect due to the fact that it is internal, which makes this type of research even more valuable, Guan said. The research is not only valuable to UC; it also affects thousands of individuals nationally and internationally. Barrett also explained the importance of the funding in regard to the ability to collaborate between colleges to develop new ideas. “So many important discoveries are SEE CANCER FUND PG 3

Microsoft senior technical evangelist breaks down data visualization for students PATRICK MURPHY | NEWS EDITOR

Yale University professor Edward Tufte has found a way to make numbers look sexy. Based on Tufte’s 1983 book “The Visual Display of Quantitative Information,” a senior technical evangelist for Microsoft David Giard gave a cursory explanation of such topics as data-ink, metadata and “the lie factor” to University of Cincinnati students, faculty and staff in Braunstein Hall Friday. Giard helps people build phone and Windows 8 applications for the Microsoft platform. Giard also speaks to student groups, holds workshops and conferences and works with start-ups in his residence of Chicago. In data visualization, the objective is to clear away the data ink, or the unnecessary lines and distractions that deter from the main point of the numbers or figures. Visually, this looks like minimal grid lines, with more of an emphasis of the numbers leaping out at the viewer. The model of data visualization, as selected by Tufte, is Charles Minard’s chart

of Napoleon’s Russian Campaign of 1812 which depicts in numbers and visuals the invasion and retreat of Russian troops over a period of time. “It’s just a beautiful visualization; there is just so much information that is packed in such a small space, and [what took 90 seconds to explain], you can really look at this and go ‘wow, Napoleon got his butt kicked,’ ” Giard said.“All of that just jumps out at you so quickly.” Giard’s main message was about finding the delicate balance in displaying data accurately and in such a way that it does not warp the data’s meaning. “The biggest message I took from my reading [of Tuftes’ book] was ‘think about what really is the data and emphasize that,’ ” Giard explained.“In visualization we tend to add a lot of extra stuff, a lot of metadata or redundant data. We need to learn to recognize what is the data visualization.” Giard also suggested the consideration of “the lie factor,” which is the size of the SEE DATA VISUALIZATION PG 3

DANIEL DEITSCH | CONTRIBUTOR

David Giard, a senior technical evangelist for Microsoft, talks to UC students, faculty and staff about data visualization and the importance of focusing on a piece of data’s actual meaning.

THE NEWS RECORD IS THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI’S INDEPENDENT, STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER

FREE • ADDITIONAL COPIES $1


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The News Record 2.9.15 by The News Record - Issuu