96-10-18 Story Tips for Local News Media STORY TIPS University Communication offers this list of potential news stories on the Columbus campus next week. We'll update this listing every Friday. This and every University Communications news release is available on the Internet and World Wide Web. To access by Internet, you may reach us through either OASIS (Ohio State Information System), the Columbus Freenet or World Wide Gophers. Select News and Weather, then Ohio State University News Releases, then News Releases from University Communications. Our Web address is http://www.acs.ohio-state.edu/ Choose News Releases from The Ohio State University, then News Releases from University Communications. GEE RIDES STREET SWEEPER IN CAMPUS CLEANUP --Oct. 19. About 2,000 Ohio State University students, faculty and staff will join neighborhood residents in the fifth "High on Pride" University Community Cleanup on Saturday, Oct. 19, from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Volunteers will pick up litter, remove bulk trash, sweep streets and sidewalks, and collect recyclables in the neighborhood just east of campus. The area, bounded by Lane Avenue, Ninth Avenue, the Conrail tracks and North High Street, covers some 250 city blocks with 30 miles of sidewalk and more than 65 miles of roadway.. President Gee will arrive at the registration area at the Wexner Center plaza at 15th Avenue and High Street around 9:30 a.m. to ride a street sweeper to the 16th Avenue cul-de-sac. He will then speak with participants at the registration area, and start in the cleanup at 10 a.m. CONTACT: Tracy Turner, University Communications, 688-3682. PARENTS EXPLORE OHIO STATE DURING PARENTS' WEEKEND--Oct. 18-20. Sunday brunch with President Gee and campus tours are part of the schedule for 2,000 parents and guardians of Ohio State students who explore Ohio State during Parents' Weekend. Parents will take part in a number of activities throughout the weekend designed to familiarize them with their children's educational experiences on campus. A scarlet and gray tailgate party will be held Saturday 10/19 at 1:30 p.m. at the French Field House. On Sunday, parents may join President Gee for brunch at 8 a.m., 10 a.m. or noon in the Ohio Union Ballrooms; during which time the 1996 Parent of the Year Award will be presented CONTACT: Bill Wahl, Ohio State Parent Association, 292-9153. MUSSEL-ENCRUSTED VW PULLED FROM LAKE ERIE --Oct. 21. A zebra mussel-encrusted VW Beetle will be pulled from Lake Erie near Ohio State's Stone Lab on Gibraltar Island, Put-in-Bay. The car was placed in the Lake on June 26 to collect mussels. It will be shipped to the American Museum of Natural History to become part of a major exhibition on endangered and introduced species. Since zebra mussels were introduced in the mid 1980's, they have spread wildly and clogged waterways in North America. Ohio State Sea Grant and Stone Laboratory scientists have photographed changes in the appearance of the VW as it rested on the bottom of the lake. Reporters interested in covering the story should travel to Stone Lab from Catawba Island by the 11 a.m. Miller's ferry (800-500-2421). The car will be pulled about 12:30. The ferry runs hourly. CONTACT: Maran Hilgendorf, Ohio Sea Grant, 292-8949. INTERNET SCAVENGER HUNT OFFERS PRIZES IN CYBERSPACE--Oct. 22-Nov. 22. The Eisenhower National Clearinghouse (ENC) at Ohio State is featured as one of more than 100 outposts on CyberSurfari '96, the World Wide Web's largest interactive treasure hunt. This one-month trek through cyberspace is designed to introduce kids and adults to the vast resources of the Internet. During this time, individuals and school teams hunt for clues by navigating through the linked outpost sites. More than $100,000 in cash and prizes are being awarded. This event is co-sponsored by the Software Publishers Association and Yahoo. CONTACT: Peg Hanley, ENC, 292-9984, or visit ENC's Web site at http://www.enc.org HOW TO BECOME RICHER AND WISER-Oct. 24. Many students graduate from college with debts, credit problems or other financial predicaments. Helping students manage their money and recognize investment opportunities is the goal of Richer and Wiser: Investment Opportunities, a workshop presented by the Hale Black Cultural Center. Rodney Washington, an investment executive from Paine Webber, will speak from 6-8 p.m. at the Center at 153 W. 12th Ave. CONTACT: Michelle Cushnie, Hale Center, 292-0074. CONFERENCE EXAMINES YOUTH VIOLENCE--Oct. 30-31. Local and national experts on youth violence and gangs will discuss Gangs, Threat Groups and Youth Violence at a two-day conference at the University Ramada Inn, 3110 Olentangy River Road. "We have kids sleeping in bathtubs because they're afraid of being killed in a drive-by shooting," according to conference organizer Ron Huff, director of the Criminal Justice Research Center and the School of Public Policy and Management at Ohio State. Huff has done considerable field research on youth gangs and has interviewed gang members in Columbus and Cleveland as well as Colorado and Florida. The agenda includes: Gangs, Threat Groups and Youth Violence (10/30) 9:10 a.m. Ron Huff, Ohio State, will discuss his research. Law Enforcement Strategies, 10:45 a.m.-12:15 p.m. Kent Shafer, threat group coordinator for the Columbus Division of Police, on gangs, threat groups, and law enforcement/community collaboration. Prosecutorial Strategies, 1:15-2:45 p.m. U.S. District Judge Edmund Sargus; former U.S. Attorney, will discuss prosecution of gang related crime--specifically the Short North Posse. Strategies for Correctional Institutions. 3:00-4:30 p.m. Matthew Meyer, threat group coordinator, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, on prison gangs and other threat groups. Strategies for Schools (10/31) 8:30-10:00 a.m. Kenneth Trump, a school safety and security expert, on what schools can do about gangs, drugs and youth violence. Strategies for Communities. 10:15-11:45 a.m. Michael Walker and Linda Schmidt, Partnership for a Safer Cleveland, on outreach, networking and responses to gangs and youth violence. CONTACT: Ron Huff, School of Public Policy and Management, 292- 4544. CARTOONIST EXHIBITS WORKS --Oct. 27-Jan 24. Paul Palnik: The Fine Art of the Cartoon from Generation to Generation, an exhibition of original drawings by the well-known Columbus cartoonist, will be displayed in the Cartoon Research Library Reading Room, underground at 27 W. 17th Avenue Mall. Palnik is a native of Cleveland and an alumnus of Ohio State, where he studied with Sidney Chafetz. His distinctive style often features crowds of tiny people, and many of his poster-size cartoons deal with life's most profound issues. A special opening event featuring a presentation by Palnik, God, Man and Cartoons, will be held at 3 p.m., October. 27 in the Grand Ballroom of the Faculty Club, 181 S. Oval Dr. CONTACT: Lucy Caswell, Cartoon Research Library, 292-0538. LECTURE EXAMINES COMMUNICATION IN SOUTH AFRICA--Nov. 1 Telecommunication Reforms in the New South Africa is the title of a lecture by Robert Horwitz, from 3:30-5:30 p.m. in Room 162 Hopkins Hall, 128 N. Oval Mall. Horwitz, of the University of California at San Diego, is author of The Irony of Regulatory Reform: The Deregulation of American Telecommunications and several articles on South African Communication. His lecture is sponsored by five Ohio State departments. CONTACT: Rohan Samarajiva, School of Communication-Journalism, 292-3713. The person listed as the contact for each item will have the best information about the story. However, feel free to call on our news services staff for assistance with these or other Ohio State news stories. Amy Murray, 292-8385; Ruth Gerstner, 292- 8424; and Tracy Turner, 688-3682. -Compiled by Amy Murray, University Communications, (Murray- Goedde.1@osu.edu). [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Fri, 18 Oct 1996 15:59:32 -0400] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.