Killer shark found and killed
Local fishermen to recieve $3,000 reward for the capture
By Brian Ward
Amity- The shark belived to be involved in the deaths of Alex
Kintner and Christine Watson has been captured and killed by local
fishermen Mike Swenson.
The shark was captured in the waters one mile south-southwest of Amity before being brought back for inspection by officals.
The 11-foot -long, 875 pound nurse shark was inspected by Matt
Hooper, a marine biologist from Woods Hole, M.A. According to Hooper,
there has never been any reported incident of a nurse shark attacking a
person.
In reponse to the shark's capture, the beaches at Amity will be re-opened immediately, in time for the Fourth of July weekend.
Despite
the shark's killing, shark spotters from the Coast guard, the Marine
Patrol, the Massachusetts State Police, the U.S. Navy, Homeland
Security, the FBI, and other police agencies will remain to check the
waters off the beach.
The weekend tourist arrived on
schedule, and beaches filled up quickly. as the day went on people
started feeling safe enough to go into the water.
There was a
brief panic, when two young boys from Amity, Wayne Winston and Brad
Chaplin, swam underneath swimmers with snorkels and a fake shark fin.
When the boys came out of the water, face to face with a
offical with a gun, Wayne pointed to Brad and shouted "He made me do
it."
No-one was injured trying to get out of the water, and the boys have been remained to the custody of their parents.
Monday, December 5, 2011
JAWS dayt wo
Town holds meeting after shark kills two people
Local fisherman offers to hunt down shark for $10,000
by Brian Ward
Amity- A day after a shark killed both 10-year-old Alex Kintner and Amity High School senior Christine Watson, Amity officals held a meeting on what to do in response.
The meeting was filled by concerned Amity business owners, worried what effects the recent shark attack would have on their businesses.
Chief of Police Martin Brody was the first to speak, saying in response to the shark attacks, the beaches at Amity would be closed, and deputies and shark experts would be called in to help handle the situation.
This caused an uproar amongst the crowd, many of who's businesses depend on the beach tourism, particularly during the Fourth of July weekend.
Mayor Larry Vaughan was quick to interject, saying that the beaches would only be closed for 24 hours.
"24 hours is like three weeks!' yell one member of the crowd.
The uproar was silenced by the scratching of nails against a blackboard, when local fisherman Ben Quinn decided it was time for him to speak.
"Ya'll know me, how i earn a living. i'll catch this bird for ya," he said
Quinn went on to explain that hunting the shark down wouldn't be an easy task, and that he would need more than the $3,000 reward offered by Mrs. Kintner.
Feature: Bramlett
Feature:
Stephanie Bramlett
The
CONNECT program’s newest Program Director
By
Brian Ward
Durham- Stephanie Bramlett is a
lively and talkative 27-year-old, with a master’s in political science and a Ph.D.
in sociology.
She is also the new Program
Director for CONNECT, an undergraduate multicultural program for students of
different races and ethnicities at UNH.
Bramlett was born in San Diego, C.A.
in 1984, and did her undergraduate program at a small liberal arts college in Massachusetts,
studying political science.
“Senior year of college, I was
sitting with some friends the night before graduation and everybody’s parents
are about to come up, and hanging out with friends and we were looking at this
big box of old pictures, and we kept flipping through the pictures and find
that ‘wait a second this person isn’t here anymore, this person isn’t here
anymore, this person isn’t here anymore,’” she said.
After graduating in 2006, Bramlett came to UNH
for her graduate work in sociology, studying college retention for five years before
receiving her Ph.D.
She wanted to do something about
the large number of students of color who didn’t graduate from college and when
the position of CONNECT Program Manager opened up, she took the position.
CONNECT was founded in 1994, and
offers a week long orientation to students of color entering as freshmen and
transfer students to UNH before fall classes and provides academic assistance
and social support throughout the year.
“I’ve always thought CONNECT was a
really interesting program, it is one of our strongest retention programs, it’s
a great program, we know that students who go through CONNECT graduate at a
higher rate,” she said.
Bramlett became program director
this August, just two weeks before the first group of CONNECT freshmen were
scheduled to arrive.
“I get here Aug. 8th,
and I don’t have access to log on to the computer yet, and I know that I’m
going to have a 100 students and 20 mentors coming in two weeks, and I basically
have two weeks to learn everything about the CONNECT program,” she said
“I have this nice schedule printed
out, and it has a whole bunch of people’s names on it, and they’re going to
come and talk at these assigned times, but I have no idea what they’re coming
to talk about.”
By using her connections at OMSA,
the Office of Multicultural Affairs and C-FAR, the Center for Academic
Resources, Bramlett called everyone on the schedule to ask what they were going
to speak about. By the time the students arrived, she was ready.
“I think she’s done a good job, it
usually takes two years to get a handle of a job,” OMSA Multicultural Coordinator,
Otis Douce, said.
Most of the students that go
through OMSA were part of the CONNECT program, tying the two organizations closely
together. OMSA takes a large part in CONNECT’s summer program, and Douce
expects Bramlett to continue doing a good job as director.
With her background in research, Bramlett
plans to make CONNECT more oriented toward academics. According to her, the
best way to retain students is to get them involved early academically.
“Academics was always a backbone of
CONNECT, but students will start getting that academic
focus immediately,” she
said.
Her new plans will consist of students applying to the CONNECT summer
program with a specific major or profession in mind, and then splitting off
into groups to work on scholarships and learn about the professions they’re
interested in. She said that CONNECT
students could still look forward to evening activities and games, and get a
jump start on their academic careers.
“CONNECT is changing a lot next
year,” she said
Work cited
Bramlett, Stephanie.
"Bramlett Feature." Personal interview. 2 Dec. 2011.
Douce, Otis. "Bramlett
Feature." Personal interview. 5 Dec. 2011.
"CONNECT Program." Home
| University of New Hampshire. 2010. Web. 05 Dec. 2011.
<http://www.unh.edu/connect/>.
"UNH Office of Multicultural
Student Affairs OMSA." Home | University of New Hampshire. 2011. Web. 05
Dec. 2011. <http://www.unh.edu/omsa/>.
Sidebar
The true chances of
being attacked by a shark in New Hampshire waters
Recent shark attack
in Massachusetts worries state residents
By Brian Ward
N.H. - After a recent string of apparent shark attacks in
Amity, M.A. that have left two people dead, many New Hampshire swimmers are questioning
if its safe to go in the water.
According to Doug Grout, the Chief of Marine Fisheries at
N.H. Fish and Game during a phone interview, the answer is yes.
“Haven’t had any shark attacks up here, sharks don’t really
occur where people swim,” he said.
Grout went on to say that he has lived in N.H. since 1970
and has never heard of a single shark attack reported in state waters in that
time, and doesn't ever expect any to occur.
The most common type of shark living off the coast of New
Hampshire is the spiny dogfish, which typically doesn’t grow any more than 3.5
feet long. Larger sharks such as the short-fin mako, porbeagle and blue shark
live out in deeper waters and are rare to this area.
“Things are pretty harmless around here, that’s the good
thing about NH you don’t have to worry about things biting or sticking you,” he
said.
Shark attacks are extremely rare, with an average of 65
attacks reported worldwide in a given year, very few of which are fatal.
In a given year, a person is more likely to be killed by a
dog, a snake, a car crash, a lightning strike, by drowning or by digging a hole
in the sand than they are by a shark. Nearly 200,000 people in the U.S. were
injured by chainsaws, ladders and toilets in a single year, while only 13 were
injured by a shark bite.
In a famous study done between 1977 and 1995, more people
were killed in the U.S. by toppling vending machines on themselves than by a
shark attack.
Work cited
Grout, Doug. "N.H. Shark Attacks." Telephone
interview. 5 Dec. 2011.
Reilly, Michael. "Shark Attacks: What Are the Odds? :
Discovery News." Discovery News: Earth, Space, Tech, Animals, History,
Adventure, Human, Autos. 2 Aug. 2010. Web. 05 Dec. 2011.
<http://news.discovery.com/earth/shark-attacks-what-are-the-odds.html>.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)