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Syrian war impacts univ community Students, alumni, groups remember recent past, consider how to fight for uncertain future By Jim Bach @thedbk Senior staff writer
summer trip she took to reunite with her cousins and connect to a culture with which she identifies intimately, despite growing up in America. This was all before 2011. Before Nour Al-muhtasib, a university alumna, remembers a Syria where a group of young students was ara complete stranger once offered to rested and interrogated for scrawlhelp her and her mother carry a heavy ing anti-regime messages on their suitcase with no concern over where school walls; before the subsequent they were headed. She remembers a protests sparked a violent crackdown taxi driver turning down extra cab from President Bashar al-Assad’s sefare after driving aimlessly for an curity forces and precipitated a civil war; before widespread violence and hour to help her lost friend. Syria, to her, was once a yearly a power vacuum invited foreign ex-
tremist factions to stage a proxy war on “What’s the future of Syria? Syrian soil; before more than 100,000 Syrians died; before an Aug. 21 sarin How are they going to survive gas attack claimed more than 1,400 afterwards?” lives and burned the grotesque images NOUR AL-MUHTASIB of chemical warfare into the internaUniversity alumna tional conscience; and before President Obama urged the U.S. to respond mili- Syrian people Al-muhtasib rememtarily to the Assad regime’s actions. bers. Caught amid the violence, many Syrian children are unable to attend school, leaving the generation likely to A LOST GENERATION bear the brunt of the postwar cleanup War has changed the once business-minded, hospitable and friendly See Syria, Page 3
Roti mediterranean grill closed recently, the fourth in a string of business closures in the area under The Varsity. sung-min kim/for the diamondback
Roti closes after year of business Entertainment venue could replace failed Mediterranean grill By Annika McGinnis @annikam93 Senior staff writer After a year serving its falafel and pita pockets to students under The Varsity, Roti Mediterranean Grill unexpectedly closed two weekends ago and could be replaced by a larger food and entertainment venue, a city councilman said. Businesses in the area have struggled with high rents and lack of parking options, and Roti is the fourth business in the strip to shut its doors since The Varsity’s opening in September 2011, said Michael Stiefvater, College Park economic development coordinator. Other issues have afflicted the new establishments. For instance, Stiefvater said hot dog eatery ChiDogO’s, which closed over the summer, supplied too-limited offerings. Frozen yogurt shop YoLove did not advertise itself well, he said, and Austin Grill Express closed because of an upper management issue. But Roti’s closing comes as “more of a surprise,” Stiefvater said. Because of rent contracts, College Park City Councilman Robert Catlin said Roti “probably wouldn’t have left if they didn’t have something to take over their lease” — which he’s heard might be an entertainment venue “targeting students” that could potentially take over both Roti’s former spot and the vacant spot next to it. The venue, about which Catlin said he couldn’t yet provide details, was looking to move into College Park all summer, he said. Until Roti closed, it had originally considered moving into the shopping center across the street from The Varsity. Catlin, Stiefvater and students were all surprised at Roti’s closing. Business seemed to have been going well, they said. “I’m upset — I liked it; I used to go there a lot,” said Rachel Solomon, a sophomore education major who lives in The Varsity. Solomon said she liked how Roti was “different from a lot of the food around here.” When it was open, Roti, a fast and casual Mediterranean eatery, sold laffa wraps, pita pockets, rice plates and salads for about $7 to $8. In a Chipotle-style See roti, Page 2
trying to build lasting bonds Long-term city residents hope for positive student relations while development could bring population influx kelsey hughes/for the diamondback
By Annika McGinnis @annikam93 Senior staff writer Last week, 90-year-old Amelia Murdoch heard students outside her house on Hartwick Road. She opened her door to a group of young college men: her new neighbors. But they weren’t there to tear down parts of her fence. They weren’t milling about on the corner, yelling and leaving trash. They were there to ask her to a party — and
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development of a Neighborhood Stabilization and Quality of Life Workgroup to explore noise, traffic and trash concerns, among others, several long-term residents said they could see a positive difference. But all that could soon change, residents said, with a slew of large-scale proposed development projects that could potentially bring thousands more students to flood the already packed city. With more students, the problems they’ve seen in recent years with partying, See city, Page 2
McKeldin Library desk offers centralized IT services Collaboration, part of university’s IT Strategic Plan, includes Terrapin Technology Store By Erin Serpico @erin_serpico Staff writer Though it may not have glass panels and a glowing, fruit-shaped logo, McKeldin Library now has its own version of a Genius Bar. The fi rst-floor information technology services desk, which opened Aug. 30, offers a centralized location for selling and troubleshooting students’ hardware and software. Located in the back of McKeldin’s first floor, the desk includes a Terrapin Technology Store outpost, Academic Computers for Terps maintenance drop-off and loaner distribution station and the Help Desk. Instead of students traveling to separate locations around the campus for different services, they can visit the new location and get the services in a larger, centralized space. “ We h ave so m a ny students coming through the library doors,” said Gary White, university librar-
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Murdoch couldn’t say no to a barbecue. “That was a good hamburger,” said the College Park resident of 55 years. “We thought that ourselves had been remiss in not extending the hand of friendship similarly in the past,” she added. As College Park becomes increasingly squeezed with student renters, the friendly interaction was a small step forward in developing better relations between long-term city residents and their young neighbors. After the university’s recent expansion of the Code of Student Conduct and the city council’s
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the it help desk on McKeldin Library’s first floor offers a large aggregation of services for students in need of electronic assistance. ies public services associate dean. “It just provides another centralized location for them.” The Terrapin Technology Store on the ground floor of Stamp Student Union and the Help Desk in the computer space sciences building will
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ARRIVING LATE, SCORING EARLY NCAA approves waiver for men’s soccer’s Endoh to play last-minute; sophomore takes advantage of chance to contribute P. 8
also remain open. The new services are part of this year’s IT Strategic Plan for the university that supports facilitating “student ownership of IT devices” and helping ensure “the acquisition of technologies.”
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With the larger location, the service desk can display more merchandise and provide a better environment to talk about products and customer needs, White said. See tech, Page 3
RACKS EMPTY TOMORROW?
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