Thursday, April 19, 2007

University Newspaper Covers VA Tech Shootings

The Daily Collegian a student run newspaper at the University of Massachusetts Amherst is located approximately 750 miles north of Blacksburg, Virginia.

Blacksburg, home of Virginia Tech's university campus with 26,000 students is now recovering following Monday's fatal shootings where 33 people were killed.

UMass' newspaper coverage of the fatal events began Tuesday with Tragedy strikes Virginia Tech: UMass students react to campus massacre focused on engaging UMass student's reactions.

Today's headline, Preventative measures: In wake of shootings, UMass police, administration discuss emergency preparedness continues the Collegian's local coverage with a story on health counseling available at the UMass campus to follow.

More information on this topic from the perspective of UMass students can be viewed here.

Friday, April 13, 2007

The Annenberg Surveys


Some uncomfortable statistics I thought I would share from the public's view vs. the journalist's in a 2005 survey for the Annenberg Foundation Trust prepared by Princeton Research Associates International.

--In general, do you think news organizations get the facts straight or do you think their stories and reports are often inaccurate?

Of 1500 polled, 45% of the public believe that news organizations get the facts straight, while an alarming 48% believe that they are often inacurate. Of 673 polled, 86% of journalists believe that news organizations get the facts straight while only 11% feel their findings are often inacurate.

--When there is a serious mistake made in a news story, do you think most news organizations quickly report they have made a mistake, do they try to ignore the mistake, or do they generally try to cover up
the mistake?

Of 1500 polled, a vast 41% of the public, almost half surveyed yet again, believe that news organizations try to cover up the mistakes made. Predictably, 673 journalists surveyed believe that in a situation such as this news organizations are quick to report 74% of the time.

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Thursday, April 12, 2007

The Colorful Bowels Of DuBois

The University of Massachusetts Amherst is home to an astounding 23,000 students. During a typical school week it is estimated that 20,000 of those students visit UMass' W.E.B. DuBois library.

The DuBois library stands at 297 feet, making it the tallest library in the United States and some even claim the world. Throughout the stairwells of the W.E.B. student artwork cascades up and down all 26 floors. Offering walkers the opportunity to see many different styles of beautiful murals when struggling up the intimidating stairwell.

According to a November 22, 2006 story from UMass Advancement Communications, during the late seventies on, students have created art for the W.E.B. DuBois Library. Much of the artwork in the stairwells bears signatures of the student artists, and date from as recently as 2005.

Links to related material from UMass Journalism majors:
Interested in learning more about the history of the W.E.B. DuBois library and the murals seen here? Contact UMass' Arts and Exhibits Director Barbara Stewart via email: Stew@Library.UMass.Edu

Circling The Square

I have finally discovered an online blogging site about my hometown of Danvers, Massachusetts hosted by Topix. According the their website, Topix is the leading news community on the Web, connecting people to the information and discussions that matter to them in every U.S. town and city.

Beginning this month, Topix opened up their site, allowing anyone with the power to discuss, edit and share news that is important to them. With links to news from 50,000 sources to 360,000 lively user-generated forums, Topix may feature an area of interest for you as well.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

The Heat Is On: Warming Affects Summer Plans

Summer is fast approaching and the time is right to hit the road and travel. Unfortunately, motor vehicle travel is the largest single contributor to air pollution. In a United States Environmental Protection Agency 2005 series it was found that one gallon of gasoline is assumed to produce 19.4 pounds of CO2. At almost 20 pounds, the amount of CO2 produced is equivalent to 64 feet of rope, the average weight gain of a pregnant women or a package of laser printer paper. With an increase in the number of vehicles purchased and the number of miles traveled, the U.S. has the green light toward global warming.

According to the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association (NESEA), transportation alone uses 67 percent of the country's oil and produces one-third of the air pollution and greenhouse gases, which develop into key chemicals that cause smog and over time, lead to health-related problems including birth defects and cancer.

Traveling via airplane is also responsible for two to three percent of carbon dioxide emissions.

A Feb. 12, 2007 Time magazine article, "Greenhouse Airlines," read that on an individual level, a single long-haul flight can emit more carbon dioxide per passenger than months of SUV driving.

There are different approaches to take to summer travel that may limit your environmental impact. If public transportation and bicycling don't fit into your itinerary, check out some alternative ways University of Massachusetts students are arriving at their destinations.

Drive in style - hybrid style. Petroleum Electric Hybrid Vehicles (PEHV) use a combination of fuels and electric batteries to power electric motors, providing better fuel economy and efficiency. In March 2007, the Green Car Congress reported February's hybrid sales rose to 54 percent. This economically and environmentally friendly mode of transportation is popular on the West Coast. In 2004, the state of California registered 25,021 hybrid vehicles and in the same year the city of Los Angeles accounted for 10,399 of those vehicles.
UMass sophomore Becky Moschini traveled to Los Angeles during spring break and drove her brother's Toyota Prius hybrid while sight seeing throughout the city.

"There are so many hybrids out there," said Moschini. "When you buy a Prius, you receive a tax break and free parking anywhere in L.A., if you apply for a 'Clean Air' vehicle sticker. My brother and I would play a game to see how far we could drive without using any gas. He won," she added.

A UMass sophomore duo, which would like to remain unidentified, opted out of concrete travel plans altogether for their spring break trip to Miami this year. Instead, they chose to hitchhike.

"Hitching wasn't that hard and, if more people did it, we would save the environment," said one unidentified sophomore. "We cut costs in transportation and met some cool people along the way."

Hitchhiking, a travel trend that is gradually making its way back to being socially accepted in our society has online Web sites such as digiHitch.com and StiffarmingSociety.com supporting it. The local movement Communi-GO in the Pioneer Valley, led by well-known activist Frances Crowe, also has people trusting each other for short- and long-term transportation once again.

UMass domestic exchange student Alicia Stockman is one of approximately 100 students each year participating in the exchange program. Stockman traveled by car - a 1990 Honda Civic - from Utah and landed in Amherst last September. With a month of classes left, Stockman has already begun planning her return trip home with global warming in mind.

"My car gets really good gas mileage - 40 miles to the gallon - if I avoid the mountains," said Stockman. "Through Kansas and the Midwestern states, they had gas stations that used alternative fuels [renewable energy]. It was much cheaper at $1.85 per gallon. On my drive home I plan to stay with friends in states along the way," said Stockman. "Even though I'm taking my car, I'm looking for ways to be even more environmentally focused this time around."

Photo: Becky Moschini

Climate Control You Can Rent

Global Warming Films
An Inconvenient Truth: Former Vice President Al Gore's campaign to make the issue of global warming a recognized problem worldwide.

Too Hot Not To Handle: An HBO documentary on the effects of global warming in the United States.

11th Hour: A look at the state of the global environment including visionary and practical solutions for restoring the planet's ecosystems.

Global Warming: The Signs & The Science: A PBS series that profiles people whose lives have been affected by global warming and explores efforts of scientists, individuals, and communities to make the planet safe for future generations.

Compiled by: UMass journalism major Sophia Bruneau

Global Warming By The Numbers


UMass journalism major Sophia Bruneau captures global warming from a professional perspective as UMass professor stresses urgency of immediate action in the series The Heat Is On.


"The future is going to look quite grim. Glaciers will melt, sea ice in the Artic will continue to recede, snow cover will decrease, dry periods will increase," said Frank Keimig, geosciences professor and manager of the Climate System Research Center at the University of Massachusetts. He notes that the mean temperature of the globe has been rising dramatically and has been changing over the past 20 years.


In a recent interview, Keimig discussed the world impact of global warming. He talked of some alarming developments affecting everything from the Arctic ice cap to migrating birds in New England. And he called for the public to get educated and take action for change.


"In the United States and other Western nations, when it gets hot, we just put more air conditioning," Keimig said. "However, in underdeveloped regions, they tend to be less adapted for climate change and many of the time they have no infrastructure to help become adapted.


"The United States is the top emitter of carbon dioxide, per capita from a study in 2002, followed by Saudi Arabia, Australia and Canada," Keimig said.

The Milk Man

While researching Mexican milk that does not require refrigeration prior to opening (hopefully more to come), I stumbled upon a March 17, 2007 article by Stan Freeman of The Republican about local dairy farmer Ted F. White from Hawley, Massachusetts.

Ted F. White doesn't have cable, the Internet or a car. The reason, he says, is that he's a Massachusetts dairy farmer.

The seventh generation of his family to milk cows, the Hawley dairyman said the price he is paid for his milk is so low and his operating costs, including for fuel, feed and fertilizer, are so high, that he and other dairy farmers in the state can no longer make a living.

"The existence of the remaining dairy farms in Massachusetts is in question," he told a panel of state agriculture officials yesterday during an emergency hearing held by the state Department of Agricultural Resources at the University of Massachusetts Campus Center.

"We live just as frugally as we possibly can. But even with doing all that, I can't pay my bills," said White, who borrowed a car to get to the hearing.

Faced with what they say are unprecedented financial losses, the state's dairy farmers petitioned the Department of Agricultural Resources to determine if emergency action should be taken to aid their industry. Acting Agriculture Commissioner Scott J. Soares said that he will take comments on the issue until March 29 and then make a decision, which can include raising the minimum price paid Massachusetts farmers for their milk, a price that is set by the federal government monthly.


Follow up: A March 25, 2007 editorial in The Republican, State's dairy farmers the cream of the crop provided recent activity by White and other local dairy farmers and also cited that in 1982 there were 812 dairy farms in Massachusetts. Today there are only 187.

April Showers (Snow?) Bring May Flowers


With snow in this week's forecast, it's possible that we may have jumped the gun sporting new sparkling flip-flops and crisp cargo shorts.


Could this be just another unpredictable New England winter weather season or could it be...global warming?


If you are interested in learning more about global warming, its short and long-term effects and what you can do to help, take the time and read The Heat Is On-a series of articles, featured in The Daily Collegian, written by University of Massachusetts Amherst journalism majors just in time for Earth Week.



By: Lauren Modisette


Global warming seems to be the last issue on the minds of the American college student. But a recent report by Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change found two things: one is that global warming is real, and two is that our generation is likely to see big changes in the world in the next century.


They estimate a 90 percent probability that humans are the cause of the climate change, and it is doubtful it is occurring due to known natural causes.


University of Massachusetts Resource Economics Professor Barry Field said that college students have a good reason to learn all they can about global warming.


Already the global temperature has increased a degree or two. But the IPCC predicts that if it increases by 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, up to 30 percent of the planet's species are at risk of dying out and will be forced to relocate in search of more suitable environments. Out of the top 12 warmest years that have been recorded with scientific instruments, about 92 percent of them have occurred in these past 12 years.


Al Gore's film, "An Inconvenient Truth," also mentions potential hazards that global warming and climate change can instigate. It is mentioned that the current running from the African coast and up by Northern Europe will begin to slow and eventually stop. Rising sea levels will cause the currents from the equator to stop and, in turn, will discontinue the warming of the northern oceans. The decrease in temperature in the northern hemisphere could cause a new Ice Age.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Drink Up!


A March 15, 2007 report by Columbia University's National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, found that about half of full-time college students abuse drugs and alcohol.

This type of abuse, specifically in alcohol, is considered to be the consumption of five or more drinks consecutively by a 2005 survey by Cornell University.

So one must wonder, what are college students sipping on when it comes to beer and mixed drinks?

The following is a beverage menu compiled of favorite libations from undergraduate and graduate students from the University of Massachusetts Amherst-ranked number seven party school in the United States by the Princeton Review in 2006.
  • IPA

  • Sea Dog's Whole Wheat Apricot

  • Budweiser & Bud Light

  • Blue Moon

  • Steel Reserve

  • Captain Morgan & Coke

  • Stoli Raspeberry, Seltzer Water and Cranberry Juice

  • Jack & Coke

  • Dirty Martini

  • Rum Punch

  • Bloody Mary

  • Cape Verdean Rum

  • Margarita

  • Gin & Tonic

  • Mount Gay XO

  • Sex On The Beach: Peach Schnapps, Pineapple Juice and Cranberry Juice

  • Pearl Harbor: Pineapple Juice, Midori and Vodka

  • White Russian

  • Red Headed Slut

  • Car Bombs: Guiness and Bailey's
For a more local feel on this story, click this link

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Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Wicked Good and Wicked Bad Podcasts

Check out BostonBehindTheScenes.com for an in-depth look at some of Boston's hot spots and local celebrities through podcasting. Although this site fails to produce podcasts on a daily basis, episodes that do appear on the site every month or so are done well.

In September 2006, Boston Behind The Scene's Adam Weiss, a podcast consultant, took listeners on a 30 minute tour of the Samuel Adams Brewery in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Even though I was simply listening, I could still smell the barley, taste the beer and hear the machines brewing.
In a more recent March 2007 episode, Weiss covered the popular Boston Accent in a fifteen minute podcast. I learned about accommodation-something I accuse my mother of every time we get a manicure.

According to Boston College professor of linguistics, M.J. Connolly, accommodation occurs for example when you go overseas to Germany. You'll come back speaking with a German accent. In other words, depending on who you are talking with you will take on their accent unconsciously.

Weiss' interest in the topic and material is evident in his thorough coverage and reporting. BostonBehindTheScenes.com also offers free subscription to their episodes as well as automatic updates to your personal iPod.

A Boston related podcast that I DO NOT recommend is The Wicked Good Podcast. Hosts, Steve and Maureen's "witty observations and wacky misadventures from the heart of New England" are wicked bad. The topics are scattered and uninformative as I caught myself surfing through other podcast options while forcing myself to keep my headphones in my ears.

My Sentiments Exactly

ABC's latest Bachelor, Lt. Andy Baldwin, M.D., 30, has handed out the first of many roses and ESPN.com's The Sports Gal and I share similar sentiments about Monday's premiere episode.
ABC wants the new "Bachelor" to remind people of Richard Gere in "An Officer and a Gentleman." We know this because they're calling this season, "The Bachelor: An Officer and a Gentleman." At least they came right out and said it. Lt. Andy Baldwin isn't as sexy as Richard Gere in that movie, but I liked him immediately and thought he was the cutest bachelor yet. He works as a doctor in the Navy's dive unit with Ashton Kutcher and Kevin Costner, does charity work and Ironman triathalons and even has a hot body. Of course, Bill (my husband) was suspicious as soon as we learned Andy's alma mater was Duke -- he kept saying, "You watch, you watch, he's going to end up being a [bad word]."


Not even 30 seconds later, we watched Andy get into his fancy sports car, which looked like a DeLorean (do they still make those?) and had those dorky doors that open straight up. I hate when Bill's right. You should know that my friend Terera and I have a list of things that instantly bother us about guys -- like guys who wear man sandals (those leather ones that look like the ones girls would wear, only they're for guys, I call them "mandals"); guys who wear black jeans or black tennis shoes; guys who wear Speedos at the beach; guys who drink daiquiris or frozen mudslides; guys who tuck their sweaters into their pants; and especially, guys who drive weird sports cars (like Miatas or Corvettes). I don't know the name of Andy's car, but it should be called "The Overcompensator."

Monday, April 2, 2007

iPod Dock


Call me crazy, but I recently learned what it meant to "dock" my iPod and that there are so many different ways to dock.

I still have yet to dock my own but that will come with time as I learn more about the advantages to podcasting, uploading music, news stories, books, photos, movies, sound bites, answers to last night's homework assignment, you name it and you can probably dock, upload and have the latest and greatest additions to your very own iPod in minutes.

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Massachusetts Congressman/Professor Is On-The-Go


Today, Massachusetts Congressman and University of Massachusetts Amherst Professor Richard Neal skipped out on class, The Politician and the Journalist, with a valid excuse.

Congressman Neal departed for Ireland as a part of the congressional delegation traveling to Dublin, Belfast, and London.

As the Boston Globe also reported today, the trip comes at a critical juncture in Northern Ireland's peace process. Protestant and Catholic leaders recently announced a power-sharing deal in hopes of ending decades of hostility.

Another "on-the-go" Massachusetts Congressman mentioned in today's Globe was North Shore native John Tierney. Tierney will be traveling to the Mid-East where he will speak with government officials on terrorism , specifically in the countries of Afghanistan and Pakistan.