March 21, 2017 Kscope

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UAB’S OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER

VOLUME 57, ISSUE 9

How to recover from midterms

Modern day slavery just down the road

Students share how they unwound from all-nighters and midterms and had fun during their spring break vacations. Read more on Page 2.

UAB Professor and The WellHouse discuss sex trafficking through the I-20/59 corridor and its effect on Birmingham. Read more on Page 4.

The

Kaleidoscope BIRMINGHAM POLICE DEPARTMENT

Crime rates spur big actions Violence Reduction Initiative to hold gang members more accountable Tamara Imam Branding and Outreach Manager If you’ve lived in Birmingham for any length of time, you’ve probably noticed the upward trend in revitalization. From new restaurants and breweries to brightly

colored murals on formerly abandoned city walls, the magic is quickly coming back to the city. However, what hasn’t seemed to catch up with the growth of the city is a reduction in crime, particularly violent crime. As of March 9, Birmingham has seen 23

homicides this year. And with a video circulating of a woman escaping the trunk of her kidnapper’s car at an Avondale gas station just last Thursday, crime has been a hot-button topic in the city. Jeffery Walker, Ph.D., the chair of the Department of Justice Sciences says that the

answer to where crime in Birmingham stems from is not as simple as one would think. “That is about a 10,000 page answer,” Walker said. “I am teaching a semester-long class now that barely scratches the surface of why. It is a lot about economics,

a culture of disadvantage, a punitive orientation toward crime, urban structure and a bunch of other things.” Walker says that although violent crime, including assault, shootings and murder, is steady or declining in some parts of the city, other parts of Birmingham are more dangerous than they

See VRI, Page 8

ADDICTION

BIRMINGHAM CITY LIFE

'We have a huge drug problem' API seeks to help addicts through recovery Wallace Golding Community Reporter

PHOTOS BY IAN KEEL/PHOTO EDITOR The Pizitz Food Hall currently rooms 12 food stations and two full-service restaurants. In addition to traditional dishes such as hamburgers and hot dogs, there are a variety of other culinary experiences available for customers to explore. Ethiopian, Israeli and Hawaiian are just some of the cuisines that are represented, with more to come. BELOW: After a 17-year renovation process, the brand new food hall officially opened its doors on Thursday, March 16.

Meeting under the clock Food Hall reopens after two decades Kristina Balciunaite Asst. Branding and Outreach Manager After a 17-year renovation process, the brand new Pizitz Food Hall officially opened its doors on Thursday, March 16. The Pizitz opened in 1923 as a department store. At its peak in the 1960s, the building was the hotspot of downtown Birmingham, but it eventually went out of business in 1986. Mayor William Bell, Principal of Bayer Properties David L. Silverstein

and the Pizitz family were among the people who gathered to welcome the new venue in the presence of the Birmingham community. “The vision of this location, it changed over time. This building is taken on a new life that

will last for generations,” Bell said. “Today we stand here to recognize that it’s come back alive.” To kick-start the opening Pizitz hosted “Grand Opening Concerts” both Thursday and Friday night, with performers from the local commu-

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nity. Silverstein said he hopes that the building will mirror the effects Railroad Park and the McWane Science Center have on the community by bringing people together and creating a warm and

See PIZITZ, Page 8

Megan Lamneck, a graduate of Samford University and a Prevention Support Specialist at the Birmingham-based Addiction Prevention Coalition, spent her childhood with an alcoholic father, witnessing how substance abuse changed her family and their relationship. Lamneck’s father, a member of the armed services, returned from Iraq suffering from severe post-traumatic stress disorder. “I can remember him sitting in our basement for days just drinking,” Lamneck Lamneck said. “It got to the point where my parents got divorced. He ultimately died of an overdose from taking pills and drinking alcohol.” Danny Molloy, a native of Boston and the Brand Ambassador at the APC, spent 15 years as a heroin and OxyContin abuser before taking a bus Molloy nearly 1,200 miles to Bessemer’s Foundry Ministries, a non-profit organization that aims to provide counseling and aid to addicts and former inmates.

See APC, Page 8

INSIDE OPINION

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CAMPUS

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COMMUNITY

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SPORTS

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