8
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO, SINCE 1950 Monday, March 10, 2014 ubspectruM.coM VoluMe 63 no. 59 CHRISTIAN BRUNO STAFF WRITER World-famous sustainability proponent Annie Leonard will tell her Story of Stuff at UB Tues- day. She will speak at the Center For the Arts beginning at 7 p.m. Leonard is best known for her work leading up to the Story of Stuff project, in which she talks about the culture of waste with “stuff ” today. The project start- ed as a lecture but expanded to a movie and then to a series of short films and a book. Leonard’s work centers on environmen- tal problems generated by waste- ful creating, using and throwing away of various products. Leonard addresses all parts of our production chain, and how it’s designed for waste – specif- ically to drive corporate prof- it. “Toxic in, toxic out,” Leonard says in one film. “I think [what Leonard does] is an excellent endeavor to be able to explain complex sustainabili- ty issues faced by our society … that is both informative as well as entertaining,” said Himans- hu Grover, an assistant professor in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning. Leonard’s work in activism started with her time at Green- peace on a campaign to ban in- ternational waste dumping. Her efforts helped new regulations in international environmental stan- dards. Leonard has caught the atten- tion news outlets. Glenn Beck, former Fox News political pun- dit, for instance, once blasted Leonard for “left-wing propa- ganda.” In a 2010 interview with political satirist Stephen Colbert, Colbert joked Leonard “must think this economic downturn is fantastic,” to which she replied that it was “an opportunity for people to better use their mon- ey.” Matt Prizing, a senior envi- ronmental and geosciences ma- jor, was excited to hear Leonard is speaking at UB. Prizing is the president of Alpha Kappa Chi, the environmental fraternity on campus. “I was invited to the presen- tation and so were all the broth- ers,” Prizing said. “They’re all re- ally excited to meet [Leonard]. When I mentioned Annie Leon- ard, there was this one pledge who was like, ‘Oh my God! I love Annie Leonard!’” Grover, who specializes in cli- mate change, sustainability and community resilience, is also pleased about Leonard’s pend- ing visit. “We should do more of these [events],” he said. “It is an excel- lent way to introduce students to people they hear about and at times follow during their course- work. This is a very exciting lec- ture for me and I will surely at- tend.” Leonard’s work, especially her videos, has inspired others to use and follow her example. Grover said he was following Story of Stuff before the talk was planned. He added that he has used Leonard’s clips, which are available on her website, to ex- plain concepts in his lectures. Prizing said he will be bringing his own film crew from a class to record Leonard’s talk. He en- courages students outside the fraternity to attend the lecture. email: [email protected] Leonard to speak at UB’s Center For the Arts COURTESY OF FLICKR USER BIONEER World-famous sustainability proponent Annie Leonard will speak at the Center For the Arts Tuesday at 7 p.m. Leonard is best known for her work leading up to the Story of Stuff project, in which she talks about the culture of waste. TORI ROSEMAN STAFF WRITER Since February, tensions be- tween Ukraine and Russia have resulted in violent riots, Rus- sian military action and a miss- ing president. Russia’s recent in- vasion of Crimea has heightened the situation – and the ensuing publicity. Many faculty members and students believe the conflict is historically significant. Though some students say they are not as informed on the matter as they’d like to be, others have developed opinions on the implications of the events in Crimea. Colin Lewis, a junior psycholo- gy major, has been following the issues through articles and pho- tos. “It’s as if I’m reading some- thing out of a history textbook – this is going to have an effect over the next few years,” Lew- is said. “Even though we’re ob- viously not in the Ukraine, it’s in- teresting to feel like you’re part of a historical event.” Russian President Vladimir Putin has stationed troops in Crimea. On Sunday, March 16, a referendum will determine what will come of Crimea – whether Ukraine or Russia will possess it as a territory and what rights the people of the region will have. The two countries signed an agreement over Crimea in 1997, putting it under Ukraini- an control for the next 20 years. Crimea’s status was not supposed to be discussed until 2017, but the actions of Putin and Ukraini- an President Viktor Yanukovych have caused an early re-evalua- tion. “I think a number of factors are at play,” said Philip Arena, a political science assistant profes- sor. “But a big part of the sto- ry is that Putin likely felt he had a narrow window of opportuni- ty to guarantee that Russia would hold onto its naval base in Sevas- topol – a city at the southwestern tip of the Crimean peninsula.” Sevastopol is important to Rus- sia because its Black Sea Fleet, or navy, is stationed there. Without that port, the navy would have to relocate, and Russia would lose access to the Black Sea and, indi- rectly, the Mediterranean Sea. When Yanukovych won the presidential election in 2004, cit- izens took to the streets in what was called the Orange Revolu- tion – a 17-day protest against his election. A month later, a sec- ond election took place and Ya- nukovych lost. He came back into power in 2010, winning the election for presidency. The re- sults were appealed but eventual- ly dropped, and Yanukovych be- came president. Ukraine has been facing a fi- nancial crisis since November. Yanukovych decided to seek help from Russia. Though Ukraine is not part of the European Union (EU), it had the option to seek aid from the EU but chose not to. Yanukovych’s decision caused Ukrainian citizens to protest, mostly in Ukraine’s capital, Kiev, which is about 500 miles from Crimea. What started as citizens with signs progressively grew into vio- lence. The government reported the death toll has risen to 77, ac- cording to CNN. Parliament at- tempted to calm the riots, taking away powers from Yanukovych, who subsequently fled Kiev for Russia. He has not returned to his country but still proclaims himself president. Michelle Benson, a political science professor, wonders what will come next. “It’s the biggest East-West conflict that’s occurred since the end of the Cold War,” Benson said. “It could have some sur- prisingly important implications, economically and politically a ways down the road, depending on how Russia reacts. They’ve al- ready reacted much worse than anybody could have imagined.” The U.S. Senate has discussed providing Ukraine with a $1 bil- lion aid package. Secretary of State John Kerry has told Russia that any move to annex Crimea could end hopes of diplomacy. “I’ll admit, I haven’t kept up with what’s been going on,” said Jordan Alperin, a freshman ac- counting major. “I know that the situation over there isn’t good, but as far as the details go, I def- initely haven’t followed as closely as some people may have. I feel like not too many students have the time to. Who has the time to sit and read about the conflict when I’m not required to know about it?” The upcoming Ukraine-Rus- sia referendum will determine what will happen next. Putin is continuing to defend his actions, claiming to dismiss the idea of war. Kerry said Russian actions could have a major effect upon Russian-American relations. email: [email protected] UB reacts to Ukraine-Russia conflict Student Association elec- tions for next year’s president, vice president, treasurer and SUNY delegates will take place March 25-27 – the week fol- lowing Spring Break. Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Thursday, in the Stu- dent Union Theater. This year, each party can have only 15 supporters on the SU floor at one time. Also, on the Thursday of the election, supporters will be confined in an area that will not allow them to walk voters to the polls. The Impact Party con- sists of presidential candi- date Erin Lachaal; vice presi- dential candidate Myriam Di- omande; treasurer candidate Juan Jimenez; and SUNY dele- gate candidates Cesar Carrion, Tony Daniel, Farhan Hussain and Colin Kelly. The Value Party consists of presidential candidate James Ingram; vice presidential candi- date Evan Chen; treasurer can- didate Sade Cadle; and SUNY delegate candidates Sophia Pe- ters, Hayley Ross, Corinne Zee and Collin Olander. Treasurer candidate Ali Ahmed is running indepen- dently. The Spectrum will release can- didate breakdowns and the publication’s official endorse- ments Friday, March 14. email: [email protected] SA elections to begin after Spring Break COURTESY OF FLICKR USER DYORR Russian President Vladimir Putin stationed troops in Crimea last month. The move followed protests in Ukraine demanding the removal of its president, Viktor Yanukovych, who has since fled to Russia. Spectrum 360 Newscast In this week’s broadcast, check out stories on women’s basketball forward Kristen Sharkey, UB’s Young Adults Environmental Leadership Program (YAELP) and True Blue, the driving force behind the energy that pervades UB sporting events. ONLINE

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Page 1: The Spectrum Volume 63 Issue 59

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT PUBL ICAT ION OF THE UN IVERS I TY AT BUFFALO , S INCE 1950

Monday, March 10, 2014ubspectruM.coM VoluMe 63 no. 59

CHRISTIAN BRUNOSTAFF WRITER

World-famous sustainability proponent Annie Leonard will tell her Story of Stuff at UB Tues-day. She will speak at the Center For the Arts beginning at 7 p.m.

Leonard is best known for her work leading up to the Story of Stuff project, in which she talks about the culture of waste with “stuff ” today. The project start-ed as a lecture but expanded to a movie and then to a series of short films and a book. Leonard’s work centers on environmen-tal problems generated by waste-ful creating, using and throwing away of various products.

Leonard addresses all parts of our production chain, and how it’s designed for waste – specif-ically to drive corporate prof-it. “Toxic in, toxic out,” Leonard says in one film.

“I think [what Leonard does] is an excellent endeavor to be able to explain complex sustainabili-ty issues faced by our society … that is both informative as well as entertaining,” said Himans-hu Grover, an assistant professor in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning.

Leonard’s work in activism started with her time at Green-

peace on a campaign to ban in-ternational waste dumping. Her efforts helped new regulations in international environmental stan-dards.

Leonard has caught the atten-tion news outlets. Glenn Beck, former Fox News political pun-dit, for instance, once blasted Leonard for “left-wing propa-ganda.” In a 2010 interview with political satirist Stephen Colbert, Colbert joked Leonard “must think this economic downturn is fantastic,” to which she replied that it was “an opportunity for people to better use their mon-ey.”

Matt Prizing, a senior envi-ronmental and geosciences ma-jor, was excited to hear Leonard is speaking at UB. Prizing is the president of Alpha Kappa Chi, the environmental fraternity on campus.

“I was invited to the presen-tation and so were all the broth-ers,” Prizing said. “They’re all re-ally excited to meet [Leonard]. When I mentioned Annie Leon-ard, there was this one pledge who was like, ‘Oh my God! I love Annie Leonard!’”

Grover, who specializes in cli-mate change, sustainability and community resilience, is also pleased about Leonard’s pend-

ing visit. “We should do more of these

[events],” he said. “It is an excel-lent way to introduce students to people they hear about and at times follow during their course-work. This is a very exciting lec-ture for me and I will surely at-tend.”

Leonard’s work, especially her videos, has inspired others to use and follow her example.

Grover said he was following Story of Stuff before the talk was planned. He added that he has used Leonard’s clips, which are available on her website, to ex-plain concepts in his lectures.

Prizing said he will be bringing his own film crew from a class to record Leonard’s talk. He en-courages students outside the fraternity to attend the lecture.

email: [email protected]

Leonard to speak at UB’s Center For the ArtsCOURTESY OF FLICKR USER BIONEER

World-famous sustainability proponent Annie Leonard will speak at the Center For the Arts Tuesday at 7 p.m. Leonard is best known for her work leading up to the Story of Stuff project, in which she talks about the culture of waste.

TORI ROSEMANSTAFF WRITER

Since February, tensions be-tween Ukraine and Russia have resulted in violent riots, Rus-sian military action and a miss-ing president. Russia’s recent in-vasion of Crimea has heightened the situation – and the ensuing publicity.

Many faculty members and students believe the conflict is historically significant. Though some students say they are not as informed on the matter as they’d like to be, others have developed opinions on the implications of the events in Crimea.

Colin Lewis, a junior psycholo-gy major, has been following the issues through articles and pho-tos.

“It’s as if I’m reading some-thing out of a history textbook – this is going to have an effect over the next few years,” Lew-is said. “Even though we’re ob-viously not in the Ukraine, it’s in-teresting to feel like you’re part of a historical event.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin has stationed troops in Crimea. On Sunday, March 16, a referendum will determine what will come of Crimea – whether Ukraine or Russia will possess it as a territory and what rights the people of the region will have.

The two countries signed an agreement over Crimea in 1997, putting it under Ukraini-an control for the next 20 years. Crimea’s status was not supposed to be discussed until 2017, but the actions of Putin and Ukraini-an President Viktor Yanukovych have caused an early re-evalua-tion.

“I think a number of factors are at play,” said Philip Arena, a political science assistant profes-sor. “But a big part of the sto-ry is that Putin likely felt he had a narrow window of opportuni-ty to guarantee that Russia would hold onto its naval base in Sevas-topol – a city at the southwestern tip of the Crimean peninsula.”

Sevastopol is important to Rus-sia because its Black Sea Fleet, or navy, is stationed there. Without

that port, the navy would have to relocate, and Russia would lose access to the Black Sea and, indi-rectly, the Mediterranean Sea.

When Yanukovych won the presidential election in 2004, cit-izens took to the streets in what was called the Orange Revolu-tion – a 17-day protest against his election. A month later, a sec-ond election took place and Ya-nukovych lost. He came back into power in 2010, winning the election for presidency. The re-sults were appealed but eventual-ly dropped, and Yanukovych be-came president.

Ukraine has been facing a fi-nancial crisis since November. Yanukovych decided to seek help from Russia. Though Ukraine is not part of the European Union (EU), it had the option to seek aid from the EU but chose not to.

Yanukovych’s decision caused Ukrainian citizens to protest, mostly in Ukraine’s capital, Kiev,

which is about 500 miles from Crimea.

What started as citizens with signs progressively grew into vio-lence. The government reported the death toll has risen to 77, ac-cording to CNN. Parliament at-tempted to calm the riots, taking away powers from Yanukovych, who subsequently fled Kiev for Russia. He has not returned to his country but still proclaims himself president.

Michelle Benson, a political science professor, wonders what will come next.

“It’s the biggest East-West conflict that’s occurred since the end of the Cold War,” Benson said. “It could have some sur-prisingly important implications, economically and politically a ways down the road, depending on how Russia reacts. They’ve al-ready reacted much worse than anybody could have imagined.”

The U.S. Senate has discussed providing Ukraine with a $1 bil-

lion aid package. Secretary of State John Kerry has told Russia that any move to annex Crimea could end hopes of diplomacy.

“I’ll admit, I haven’t kept up with what’s been going on,” said Jordan Alperin, a freshman ac-counting major. “I know that the situation over there isn’t good, but as far as the details go, I def-initely haven’t followed as closely as some people may have. I feel like not too many students have the time to. Who has the time to sit and read about the conflict when I’m not required to know about it?”

The upcoming Ukraine-Rus-sia referendum will determine what will happen next. Putin is continuing to defend his actions, claiming to dismiss the idea of war. Kerry said Russian actions could have a major effect upon Russian-American relations.

email: [email protected]

UB reacts to Ukraine-Russia conflict

Student Association elec-tions for next year’s president, vice president, treasurer and SUNY delegates will take place March 25-27 – the week fol-lowing Spring Break.

Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Thursday, in the Stu-dent Union Theater.

This year, each party can have only 15 supporters on the SU floor at one time. Also, on the Thursday of the election, supporters will be confined in an area that will not allow them to walk voters to the polls.

The Impact Party con-sists of presidential candi-date Erin Lachaal; vice presi-dential candidate Myriam Di-omande; treasurer candidate Juan Jimenez; and SUNY dele-gate candidates Cesar Carrion, Tony Daniel, Farhan Hussain and Colin Kelly.

The Value Party consists of presidential candidate James Ingram; vice presidential candi-date Evan Chen; treasurer can-didate Sade Cadle; and SUNY delegate candidates Sophia Pe-ters, Hayley Ross, Corinne Zee and Collin Olander.

Treasurer candidate Ali Ahmed is running indepen-dently.

The Spectrum will release can-didate breakdowns and the publication’s official endorse-ments Friday, March 14.

email: [email protected]

SA elections to begin after Spring Break

COURTESY OF FLICKR USER DYORR

Russian President Vladimir Putin stationed troops in Crimea last month. The move followed protests in Ukraine demanding the removal of its president, Viktor Yanukovych, who has since fled to Russia.

Spectrum 360 NewscastIn this week’s broadcast, check out stories on

women’s basketball forward Kristen Sharkey, UB’s

Young Adults Environmental Leadership Program

(YAELP) and True Blue, the driving force behind

the energy that pervades UB sporting events.

ONLINE

Page 2: The Spectrum Volume 63 Issue 59

ubspectrum.com2 Monday, March 10, 2014

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CLAUDIA ORNISSTAFF WRITER

Alicia Knauf has always felt surrounded by the supernatural – even before she was born.

When Knauf ’s mother was pregnant, she visited a psychic, who told her the child she was carrying was a “gift from the an-gels.” Knauf ’s mother always told her there was a bright white light coming from her room at night, which symbolized the “Lady in White” visiting.

When Knauf, a sophomore biomedical sciences major, saw the advertisement for UB Para-normal Activity Research As-sociation (PARA) at a club fair her freshman year, she took it as a sign and eagerly joined the group.

UB PARA is a club geared to-ward the education and investi-gation of paranormal and super-natural activities. The club meets every Thursday at 8 p.m. in 250 SU.

The club is composed of eight members who have different views on the paranormal. Jenni-fer Empey, a sophomore chem-istry major and vice president of the club, is more skeptical than other club members.

“I’m mainly interested in find-ing reasons to ‘debunk’ many claims of hauntings or super-natural occurrences wherever we go,” Empey said in an email.

Empey has never had any per-sonal experiences with the super-natural, but she finds the ideas of ghosts and the paranormal to be fascinating and enjoys dis-cussing the topics. The mystery surrounding hauntings keeps her coming to the club week after week.

Growing up, Knauf said her parents made her pick their lot-

tery tickets because she often chose winning numbers.

Knauf said when she was younger, she had conversations with a house in her neighbor-hood. The house was the site of where a young boy named Dan-ny had died some years before, she said. She said she would of-ten speak with the boy’s ghost whenever she walked by and sometimes he would even ask to play with her.

More recently, during her com-mute to UB, Knauf was in a car accident and though her car was totaled, she managed to walk away unharmed. She believes this luck was the product of some supernatural force.

“I believe in believing,” Knauf said. “Science itself is a philoso-phy defined as we know it. So to say that there isn’t supernatural forces will, in my opinion, be ig-

norant. I believe in [the supernat-ural] wholeheartedly, but I want to prove it scientifically.”

UB PARA aims to collect sci-entific proof to either prove or disprove supernatural events. The club goes on investigations on campus to try and find ev-idence of supernatural occur-rences.

Carlos Cevallos, a sophomore biomedical sciences major, said the club works to educate mem-bers on the proper ways to con-duct an investigation.

“The first few weeks [of PARA] we mainly learn the prop-er procedures for when we go out on investigations,” Cevallos said.

For these investigations, the club usually goes to locations around South Campus but also explores Clemens and O’Brian Halls. Once there, the members

use a Maglite flashlight, which has a twistable light bulb that can be twisted almost completely off, to try and communicate with any potentially present supernatural force.

“The theory is that ghosts af-fect the electromagnetic field, so if they were to interact with it, they would complete the circuit and turn on the light,” Cevallos said.

During his freshman year, ju-nior computer science major Ste-phen Keller experienced such an occurrence. Keller and the club members had set up a Maglite outside of Harriman Hall when the light started responding to the questions that they asked, he said.

“We always try to follow a method of not going in think-ing we’re going to find anything,” Keller said. “We try to find rea-

sonable proof to debunk any strange occurrences that we find. But when we can’t find a rea-sonable explanation, then possi-bly [the occurrence] is something that we haven’t explained yet.”

When Keller and company en-countered the force, the mem-bers asked a series of ‘yes’ or ‘no’ questions, inquiring whether the spirit in question was a stu-dent and whether it was happy. If the light turned on, it signified a ‘yes,’ but if it remained off, the answer was a ‘no.’ By the end of the questioning, Keller said the group learned that the spirit was a former nursing student.

When on South Campus, the members usually ask questions geared toward the medical sci-ences and architecture, Empey said, because these are the topics students study on South Cam-pus.

During the spring semester of last year, the club went into the basement of Harriman Hall and entered a corridor now used for storage, turned off all the lights and set up their Maglite.

The members of the club were asking questions but the Maglite still had not turned on.

Suddenly, a member of the club felt a push.

“Her trajectory didn’t match a fall,” Knauf said. “It looked like she was pushed. But we can’t say that a spirit pushed her; it’s too easy.”

For the members of UB PARA, finding evidence that something is out of the ordinary or unexplainable is just the first part of their investigation. Em-pey said trying to debunk any strange occurrences makes their work scientific.

email: [email protected]

Paranormal activities UB PARA club uses experiences with supernatural to fuel investigations

JUAN D. PINZON, THE SPECTRUMUB PARA members Carlos Cevallos, a sopho-more biomedical sciences major, Alicia Knauf, a sophomore biomedical sciences major, Jennifer Empey, a sophomore chemistry major, and Ste-phen Keller, a junior computer science major, in-vestigate supernatural activities on campus.

Page 3: The Spectrum Volume 63 Issue 59

ubspectrum.com 3Monday, March 10, 2014

OPINION

A poor indicator of success in high school, of work ethic, of intelligence, of future perfor-mance in college – the SAT is all of the above.

For the second time in a de-cade, the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) has gone through an overhaul. Ironically, this second round of revisions undoes one of the largest changes made in 2005 – adding an essay and shift-ing the maximum score to 2,400 points.

The changes announced last week will do away with the es-say, making it optional for stu-dents and bringing the maximum score back to 1,600. Additionally, College Board president David Coleman announced the revised test shifts the vocabulary test-ed to be more “relevant,” makes the math section more in line with “the real world” and aligns the test with the Common Core standards.

The SAT is disliked across the board – by anxious high school students, critical teachers and disillusioned college students who wonder how it prepared them for college, save earning them an acceptance letter. Criti-cisms about the SAT, as it exist-

ed, have been common for gen-erations.

But the changes to be imple-mented in 2016 offer a mixed bag.

The announcement has been met with a full spectrum of re-actions – some lauding the shifts, others claiming they will make the test too easy and an expected revival of claims that the SAT is structurally inadequate as a mea-sure of performance.

The revisions are not altogeth-er beneficial or harmful; such sweeping generalizations are as unhelpful in thinking about the SATs as taking them.

When the SAT was introduced in 1926, then called the Scholas-tic Aptitude Test, it was purpose-ly made to not align with curricu-la. The test was something more like an IQ test than a high school final exam. The code behind the test was quickly cracked, howev-er, and classes and tutors arose charging hefty fees to desperate juniors dreaming of college ac-ceptance.

Making the test more in line with high school curriculum was a necessary change. It recogniz-es the reality that students study-ing for an exam with roots in the

education they are receiving is more worthwhile than stressing “test-taking skills” and obscure vocabulary.

What remains unaddressed, and is likely too difficult to change, is the strong correlation between family income and test performance. Logically, a student with parents who can afford ex-pensive test prep and tutors will perform far better than a stu-dent who cannot pay for exten-sive preparations.

A test without roots in public school curricula magnifies these differences, but even this round of changes will fail to fully cor-rect the disparity.

The most significant change, the loss of the required essay portion, is the most trouble-some. Though we all dreaded the 25 minutes of writing purgatory before descending into the hell-ish domain of hundreds of mul-tiple-choice questions, the essay was among the most worthwhile portions.

Writing remains among the most important skills a college entrant can hone in high school, and though the subject matter of SAT essays was humorous at best (or would have been if your

entire future didn’t ride on your response), the section should not be eliminated.

The announced change was more indicative of the College Board’s attempts to give the fledgling SATs a facelift than try-ing to make meaningful changes. The essay deserved minor alter-ations, not complete eradication.

Though grade-point aver-age remains a stronger predic-tor of college success than the SAT, this newest edition of the test will likely haunt future gen-erations of college-bound high school students.

We are all too familiar with the spiraling doubts, fears and anxieties that emerge as soon as those bluish bubble sheets sit in front of us and we face a stern proctor from behind the back of our fellow standardized-test-tak-ers’ heads.

The question is, when we are sitting in class and taking a fi-nal exam, is that SAT prep from years before at all helpful?

email: [email protected]

North CampusNewman Center495 Skinnersville Rd.Amherst NY, 14228

716-636-7495Sunday at 6:30 pm

South CampusSt. Joseph’s University Parish

3269 Main St. Buffalo, NY 14214

716-833-0298Sunday at 8:00 pm

LENT??LENT??

Check us out online!www.ubcatholic.com

Fifty faculty senators met Tuesday to speak about, among other matters, how to increase attendance to the dismally un-productive Faculty Senate meet-ings.

The conversation was both desperately needed and long overdue.

The Faculty Senate is com-prised of elected UB faculty members. The group is charged primarily with representing the interests of faculty to the admin-istration. Through regular meet-ings, resolutions and reports, the democratic body consults UB President Satish Tripathi on the faculty’s viewpoints in regard to proposed objectives and opera-tions.

The Senate holds month-ly meetings at which resolu-tions and positions are voted on – so long as quorum is reached. Reaching quorum, which re-quires the attendance of one more than half of the faculty senators, is an unjustifiably rare

occurrence. Tuesday was only the second time this year enough senators were present for a vote.

Before last semester, the Sen-ate hadn’t reached quorum since at least 2007.

The poor performance rais-es concerns over the organiza-tion’s legitimacy. Understandably, it seems difficult to take serious-ly a group of elected, volunteer collegiate faculty members that cannot get even half their enroll-ment plus one together monthly.

Though barriers to attendance exist, such as the time and loca-tions of meetings, senators are strictly volunteers. Before sign-ing up, any faculty members run-ning should first consider wheth-er they could meet the require-ments of the position so the group can meet its requirements to the university.

On Tuesday, the group ad-dressed some of the more struc-tural barriers to attendance, such as voting to move the loca-

tion of meetings from the Cen-ter for Tomorrow to the Spine. The Faculty Senate has also been cutting the number of senators, now down to 88, so that quorum is easier to meet in the future.

This was an important step – if enough senators are not pres-ent, then resolutions are decided in a small, five-person executive session.

The importance of the Facul-ty Senate cannot be overstated. It is an organization that stands for both the interests of this univer-sity’s faculty and democratic pro-cess generally. Students should keep in mind that issues con-cerning us are far more visible to professors than to distant admin-istrators.

The Senate’s votes on Tues-day were relatively minor, with the exception of propositions to increase attendance. The vote in December, however, which ad-dressed increasing the transpar-ency of the UB Foundation’s funds, was monumental. The de-

cision represented the Senate’s position as an arbiter to hold the administration accountable.

More votes and actions like this from the Faculty Senate are necessary. The group deserves applause for this past action and encouragement to continue this mission.

Likewise, the group should be commended for attempting to advocate for higher attendance. Last week’s meeting represented promising progress, but the road ahead is long and merits com-plete commitment.

The Faculty Senate has the po-tential to effect positive change on behalf of this university’s fac-ulty and to hold the administra-tion accountable in a way unique from other groups. But that po-tential cannot be achieved if members do not show up.

email: [email protected]

Eighty percent (of taking a vote) is showing upUB Faculty Senate reaches quorum for only second time this year

New SAT gets a failing grade – again Revisions to the SAT do little to remedy problems of standardized testing

Monday, March 10, 2014Volume 63 Number 59

Circulation 7,000

The views expressed – both written and graphic – in the Feedback, Opin-ion, and Perspectives sections of The Spectrum do not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial board. Submit contributions for these pages to The Spectrum office at Suite 132 Student

Union or [email protected]. The Spectrum reserves the right to edit these pieces for style and length. If a letter is not meant for publication, please

mark it as such. All submissions must include the author’s name, daytime phone number, and email address.

The Spectrum is represented for na-tional advertising by MediaMate.

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The Spectrum, visit www.ubspectrum.com/advertising

or call us directly at (716) 645-2452.

The Spectrum offices are located in 132 Student Union,

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EDITORIAL BOARD

EDITOR IN CHIEFAaron Mansfield

MANAGING EDITORS

Lisa KhourySara DiNatale

OPINION EDITOR

Anthony Hilbert

COPY EDITORSTress Klassen, Chief

Amanda JowseySamaya Abdus-Salaam

NEWS EDITORS

Sam Fernando, SeniorAmanda Low

Madelaine Britt, Asst.

FEATURES EDITORSKeren Baruch, Senior

Anne Mulrooney, Asst.Brian Windschitl, Asst.

Emma Janicki, Asst.

ARTS EDITORSJoe Konze Jr., Senior

Jordan OscarMeg Weal, Asst.

SPORTS EDITORS

Ben Tarhan, SeniorOwen O’Brien

Tom Dinki, Asst.

PHOTO EDITORSAline Kobayashi, Senior

Chad CooperJuan David Pinzon, Asst.

Yusong Shi, Asst.

CARTOONISTAmber Sliter

CREATIVE DIRECTORS

Brian KeschingerAndres Santandreu, Asst.

Jenna Bower, Asst.

PROFESSIONAL STAFF

OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR Helene Polley

ADVERTISING MANAGER

Emma Callinan Drew Gaczewski, Asst.

Chris Mirandi, Asst.

ADVERTISING DESIGNERAshlee Foster

Tyler Harder, Asst.Jenna Bower, Asst.

ART BY AMBER SLITER, THE SPECTRUM

Paranormal activities UB PARA club uses experiences with supernatural to fuel investigations

Page 4: The Spectrum Volume 63 Issue 59

ubspectrum.com4 Monday, March 10, 2014

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ubspectrum.com 5Monday, March 10, 2014

LIFE, ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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ANNE MULROONEY ASST. FEATURES EDITOR

How should young people prepare for death? How should college students, in the words of Jean de la Fontaine, a French author of fables, “consider the end?”

Any student who attended an Ash Wednesday mass knows the Christian answer: to prepare for death, one must appreciate life.

The Flag Room in the Student Union was packed with worship-ping students and community members as Father Pat presided over the Newman Center’s Ash Wednesday service last week. His homily reflected on the spiritual aspect of mortality, and students received the Eucharist and ash-es on their foreheads to start off the liturgical season of Lent.

During the 40 days and 40 nights preceding Easter Sun-day, Christians are encouraged to pray, fast and give alms dur-ing the Lenten period of prayer in preparation for celebrating Je-sus’ resurrection.

The ashes serve as an impor-tant reminder of human mor-tality and the fall from Paradise, as told in Genesis, the first book of the Old Testament. Genesis Chapter 3, verse 19 says: “For you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

Christians should be simulta-neously reminded of their hum-ble beginnings and their humble ends when presented with the ash, according to Father Pat, the Newman Center’s only priest.

“If you want to appreciate life, then you think about death,” he said. “Easter is about life; it’s about the resurrection. Lent is about mortality and it’s about how we prepare for the resurrec-tion, for new life.”

Prayer, fasting and almsgiv-ing are the focuses of a Chris-tian’s Lenten journey. Prayer is intended to make the Christian more transparent to God and to him or herself, while fasting and almsgiving are intended to re-duce the needs of the flesh. By reducing the importance of the body, the spiritual needs become more poignant in a Christian’s

life, helping to ready the soul of Jesus’ resurrection.

“One thing I love about Lent is that it’s in the spring,” Father Pat said. “The air is clean, it’s fresh and we’re transferring from darkness to light, from dead trees to green buds – it’s life. It’s all life.”

Father Pat gave the homily for the Ash Wednesday mass. Stu-dents were respectful and atten-tive as he walked around the flag room making jokes and encour-aging students to “check their spiritual pulse.”

Mikily Tenbrook, a freshman biology major, appreciated the energy and enthusiasm Father Pat brought to the experience. Tenbrook doesn’t usually go to mass, but because of the priest’s animated and humorous person-ality, she said she’ll try to go dur-ing the Lenten season.

“It was very different than what I’m used to,” Tenbrook said. “[Father Pat] was so up-beat. Usually priests are very sol-emn and serious, but he was just so excited the whole time. That made it fun.”

Father Pat has been a priest at the Newman Center for 25 years and constantly tells peo-ple he has the “best priest assign-ment in the world.” His relation-ship with the students is one of great affection and fun – there’s nowhere else he’d rather be, he said.

“I love it. It’s always great,” Fa-ther Pat said. “It’s so nice to see the young people and I try to spend as much time as I can on campus. I’m going to a lecture tonight, I try to get to the bas-ketball games and I spend time hanging out around the library.”

Jessica Mershimer, a freshman exercise science major, said her

favorite part of mass was Father Pat’s homily and believes he re-lates well to students despite be-ing so much older than them. His words will be with her dur-ing her own Lenten journey, she said.

“We should be keeping our focus on God and doing every-thing with his vision in mind,” Mershimer said. “I think that’s important to remember. If you’re doing everything for that ultimate motive, you’ll be do-ing some pretty good stuff and you’ll be led in the right direc-tion.”

Mershimer intends to be a good student, reach out to her friends and be more giving dur-ing the Lenten season.

“Seeing that this is my first year of college, I want it to be an impactful time,” Mershimer said. “I want to set the tone for the rest of my years here and be

proud of my beliefs while doing so.”

Although the ashes of Ash Wednesday should remind Chris-tians of their mortality and to “consider the end,” Father Pat also said students should be liv-ing their lives as thoroughly and enthusiastically as they can. It’s difficult for students to think about death when they’re so young and there are other ways to appreciate and become aware of our mortality, he said.

“Rather than thinking about death at this point in life, think about life,” Father Pat said. “Let’s do more living. Let’s eat up our poetry; let’s eat up our equations. Engage yourself in your studies. It’s about absorption.”

email: [email protected]

Preparing for death through a love of life Students attend Ash Wednesday Mass to begin the Lenten season

YUSONG SHI, THE SPECTRUM

With the beginning of the Lenten season, students are taught to prepare for death by embracing life.

Page 6: The Spectrum Volume 63 Issue 59

ubspectrum.com6 Monday, March 10, 2014

7 1 6 - 8 3 3 - 3 7 0 0 www.CVBuffalo . comO f f - C a mp u s A p a r t m e nt s - Now L e a s i n g f o r Fa l l 2 0 1 4

Buffalo Film Seminars to feature The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976)

ERIC CORTELLESSASPECIAL TO THE SPECTRUM

It’s been four years since pro-fessors Bruce Jackson and Di-ane Christian have shown a John Cassavetes film through the Buf-falo Film Seminars.

In the spring of 2010, they showed A Woman Under the Influ-ence (1974), an intense and emo-tional confrontation with the suf-fering of a marriage afflicted by mental illness. At that point, it had been over eight years since they had last shown a Cassavetes picture. In the fall of 2002, they showed his groundbreaking film Faces (1968), another acute dissec-tion of the minutiae of a compli-cated marriage, and the film that earned Cassavetes recognition as a visionary director.

This Tuesday night, Jackson and Christian will return to Cas-savetes’ oeuvre; they are show-ing The Killing of a Chinese Book-ie (1976) at the Market Arcade Film and Arts Centre in down-town Buffalo. And though this film doesn’t revolve itself around a marriage the way that Faces and A Woman Under the Influence does, it is as much an exemplar of Cas-savetes’ personal style of non-formulaic filmmaking and the re-markable range of his emotional depth.

Cassavetes is often credited as making the first independent American film (Shadows, 1968). Professors Jackson and Chris-tian will be the first to tell you that whenever anybody says that someone was “the first” to do something in cinema, they are wrong. Generally speaking, what-ever it is in film, it’s been done before.

Cassavetes wasn’t “the first” American filmmaker to make an independent film, but he rede-fined what independent meant. He proved that independent cin-ema doesn’t have anything to do with whether a movie is made in-side or outside the Hollywood system. It has to do with film-makers breaking free of conven-tions and formulas to tell a story.

He showed us that indepen-dent movies are independent ideas put on the screen.

And Cassavetes’ style of film-making is, in both its creation and content, totally indepen-dent. His movies are complete-ly focused on the intricacies of behavior; they are driven to find truth in human experience.

As a result, his films are some of the most entropic ever made – they lack order and inevitabili-ty and are never formed by some derivative plot arc. In fact, his films never have a plot. A plot is something that can be decon-

structed and reconstructed. Cas-savetes wanted to show audienc-es how films can be like life. And in the sheer disarray of his cine-matic style, he shows us that life is inherently messy.

When Cassavetes made his gangster picture, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, he did something innovative: He took his cine-ma of disorder and applied it to a genre. Cassavetes’ film does contain some of the established traits of gangster films – action sequences, suspense, murder, a nightclub with topless dancers – and yet it retains the quality of a unique vision.

The Killing of a Chinese Book-ie tells the story of Cosmo Vitel-li (Ben Gazzara), the owner and operator of a strip club called Crazy Horse West. He spends much of his time there drinking, gambling and dating strippers. Right away, we see that he is a prisoner to his compulsions and weaknesses. Even as he struggles with his debt to loan sharks, he can’t resist the indulgence of his desires.

After he gets into trouble with the mob, he is given an order to kill a Chinese bookie or face the alternative – be killed him-self. Cosmo is in no way sharp enough to dodge this demand, so Cassavetes makes the conflict about whether he has it in him to

commit the act. The reality of what he has

to do all takes place amidst the realm of fantasy; Cosmo’s life is completely integrated with Cra-zy Horse West. The symbol-ic significance of strippers is al-most always the same – they are something you are supposed to be made to desire, but also know that you cannot have.

But Cosmo does “have” the strippers – he even dates one – and the movie explores what happens next. It becomes a nightmare fixated on coming to terms with yourself.

In Cassavetes’ universe, the self is nowhere near knowable, as it is always transforming. Cosmo shows how the projection of self is often a frantic and constant im-provisation. Much like a perfor-mance, it all takes place amidst a certain set of parameters that you yourself have created.

As time passes, you inevitably evolve. As David Brooks once said, “The brain is a malleable organ. Every time you do an ac-tivity, or have a thought, you are changing a piece of yourself into something slightly different than it was before.” For Cosmo, this aspect of the human condition causes severe existential angst.

Toward the end of the film, he tries to inspirit his dancers with a monologue that is really geared

more at himself. “Look at me,” he says. “I’m only happy when I’m angry, when I’m sad, when I can play the fool, when I can be what people want me to be, rath-er than be myself.”

Implicit in his speech is the recognition that every person has a unique and idiosyncratic world-view, and that you need to craft a persona detached from other people’s expectations to find real inner peace – you have to just be who you are. But the question is, how do you really do that? How do you make sense of yourself when the self is always changing?

Starring Ben Gazzara, Seymour Cassel, Timothy Agoglia Carey, Robert Phillis, Morgan Wood-ward and Azizi Johari, the film bombed at the box office when it was released. Critics hated it and audiences believed them. It was originally 134 minutes long, but after commercial disappointment Cassavetes cut it to 108 minutes in what became a compressed version released in 1978.

The Criterion Collection DVD includes both versions, howev-er, and Professors Jackson and Christian will be showing the film in its original 1976 form.

The Killing of a Chinese Bookie will be playing Tuesday at 7 p.m.

Email: [email protected]

AROUND TOWN Cinema désordre

ART BY JEANETTE CHWAN

JOE KONZE JRSENIOR ARTS EDITOR

Album: AtlasArtist: Real EstateLabel: DominoRelease: March 3, 2014Grade: A

When Real Estate came out with their sophomore album Days in 2011, the band’s popu-larity grew. Reviews of the al-bum were positive, and the band gained consciousness among in-die lovers.

With their new album Atlas, Real Estate builds upon past suc-cess, creating the same sound with a bit more vocal punch to it.

They have matured from a breakthrough indie band to a concrete, consistent indie band.

Atlas is proof of this. It is a different approach but the band keeps its old form. It’s as if they took their last album, reformed it and created a cleaner, brighter sound.

Though some fans feel the new album is too similar to the band’s last, Atlas brings some-

thing fresh. Many may fail to re-alize the album’s brilliant contrast between well-thought-out music and the words that accompany it.

Atlas’ album has a good pace and balance between upbeat and melancholy songs.

The album is not too fast. It’s not too slow and it doesn’t bore you. You just have to embrace it.

There’s an apparent raw emo-tion that comes through the bril-liant lyrics of Martin Courtney and sunshine-styled guitar riffs. It creates an atmosphere that sur-rounds the listener. It’s a trance that is hard to escape.

It makes the listener realize there’s no use in changing some-thing that isn’t broken.

The first track “Had To Hear,” sets the pace, and the album builds momentum up until the last number, “Navigator.”

“Talking Backwards” is the al-bum’s real attention-grabber. This song has everything an indie and surf-style lover wants with the reverb effects, which help amplify the guitar. These reverbs transform the song into a peace-ful oceanic sound.

And while you are sitting there deep in thought, Courtney hits you with lyrics, “We can talk for hours / And the line is still en-gaged / We’re not getting any closer / You’re too many miles away.”

The sound is perfectly bal-anced. It is a bit lengthy, but the composure of the tune is so in-triguing that you lose track of time. You might even be able to relate to the lyrics.

There is a direction with this album. It isn’t meant to create a distraction from your thoughts. It’s meant to fall in line with the listener and create an image that you can relate to.

Real Estate isn’t the type of band that you can explain to a person in one sentence. You may not even be able to describe their music as whole.

Atlas is an album that has a proper balance of nostalgia, and more advanced lyrics bring the sound to an elevated level.

This indie band’s maturation is continuing.

email: [email protected]

Sweeter with timeReal Estate’s new album, Atlas, provides a mature sound

COURTESY OF DOMINO RECORDS

Page 7: The Spectrum Volume 63 Issue 59

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HOROSCOPES Monday, March 10, 2014FROM UNIVERSAL UCLICK

sponsored by buffalostudenthousing.comCrossword of the Day

SUDOKU

FALL SPACES AREGOING FAST

RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY BEFORE IT’S TOO LATE

WHERE YOU SHOULD BE LIVING!

DOWN

ACROSS

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) -- You'll be able to remain free of constraints in some areas, but the trade-off will be restrictions in others. You can make this work.ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- The slightest changes can make the biggest differences; don't make the mistake of thinking that small is small!TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- A certain issue may prove to be a stumbling block. You can get past it with the help of a friend who has "been there, done that."GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- You may have to take a project down to the wire in order to get it finished to your satisfaction.CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- You don't have to say a lot to say a lot. The message you have to im-part will have a major impact if you communicate efficiently.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- You've been receiving a great deal of assistance lately from someone who, in return, requires your help right now. Give it!VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- You may be aware that something is needed, but you may not know exactly what. Experimentation can lead to a satis-factory discovery.LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- You may have to dig deeply into your bag of tricks in order to come up with a ploy that will do what you need it to do -- quickly.SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Your experiences will be interesting to others if you choose to share them. Now is not the time to doctor the truth in any way.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- You can imagine a future for yourself and another with greater clarity than ever before. It's time to begin making plans.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- The role you play in the personal affairs of a close friend will be more significant moving forward, and today's ac-tions are key.AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- You've gotten it into your head to make plans now, but it's so far in advance that you needn't fret if they don't co-alesce quickly.

1 End-of-song feature 5 Earthenware con-tainers10 Hushed “Hey, you!”14 ___ out a living (barely scraped by)15 Fling mightily16 Arab bigwig17 Business efficiency technique20 Jung’s feminine per-sonality21 Argument22 Siam visitor25 Negotiator’s goal26 “Things that Make You Go ___”29 Bauble31 Buy as soon as avail-able35 “Yes, captain”36 Works as a stevedore38 Far from a few39 Without a second to spare43 Polynesian food44 Giraffelike beast45 Drain, as of re-sources46 Equilateral trian-gle, e.g.49 “You are here” sym-bol50 Jr. naval officer

Edited by Timothy E. Parker March 10, 2014CLOCK WATCHING By Oliver Klamp

51 Decelerate53 Very common trees55 Young hula dancers58 Ready to rock62 It may be up in the air at an airport65 General surroundings66 “To repeat ...”67 Like a desert68 Assume a stooped posture69 Offer chocolates to, as a dieter70 Mother’s helpers?

1 Cheese you can crumble 2 Of the same family 3 Prefix meaning “half ” 4 Abnormal swelling 5 “How about that!” 6 Net-tipping serve 7 “The best-___ schemes ...” 8 Keep from happening 9 Feels intuitively10 Irritated by the littlest things11 Obscene material12 Half of an argument13 Hear, as a case18 Old laundry appliance

19 Pinkie-to-thumb measure23 Flatbread of India24 It’s mastered in a studio26 Hispaniola half27 Mocking birds28 Urban area, briefly30 They have four suits32 Calmness33 Deprive of courage34 Henhouse sounds37 Hit the ice40 63-gallon cask41 Australia’s national gemstone42 Less flabby47 Stew or miscellany48 Like some yogurt52 Hunk of cheese54 Tempter of men’s souls55 Electricity carrier56 Sherman Hemsley sitcom57 Clothes line59 Revered leader60 Ms. Brockovich61 Certain National League team62 Indexing aid63 Any singer behind Gladys Knight64 Picnic pest

Page 8: The Spectrum Volume 63 Issue 59

ubspectrum.com8 Monday, March 10, 2014

SPORTS

SPORTS STAFF

The men’s basketball team (19-9, 13-5 Mid-American Confer-ence) defeated Bowling Green (12-19, 6-12 MAC), 88-65, to win the MAC East Championship at Alumni Arena Saturday evening. Buffalo dropped its game at Ak-ron (20-11, 12-6), 83-71, earlier in the week. Three-point shooting: B

This hasn’t been the Bulls’ strong suit all season, but they’ve won regardless. UB’s offense re-volves around senior forward Ja-von McCrea inside (as it should) and a fast-paced, get-to-the-bas-ket style of play.

But senior guard Josh Free-love’s deep shooting is what kept Buffalo in the game against Ak-ron during the start of the sec-ond half. After being held score-less in the first 20 minutes, Free-love hit 4 of 7 from beyond the arc in the second half. He is the Bulls’ go-to threat from deep. The rest of the team shot just 3 for 18 from downtown in the Akron loss. Buffalo responded by shooting 36 percent (8 for 22) in the Bowling Green victory.Foul shooting: B

The Bulls have shot well from the line for the majority of the season. McCrea visits the chari-ty stripe frequently and the dai-ly statistics often revolve around his production.

McCrea shot 5 for 9 from the line Tuesday and the Bulls shot just 66.7 percent as a team. Mc-Crea went 7 for 10 Saturday and Buffalo shot 78 percent. Senior guard Jarod Oldham shot 6 for 7 Saturday.Ball control: A-

After Tuesday’s 15-turnover to 13-assist performance, it seemed

unlikely the Bulls could earn a grade higher than a C for this week. Saturday changed that.

The Bulls had 20 assists and only five turnovers against Bowl-ing Green, worthy of an ‘A++’ (if there were such a thing).

Sophomore guard Jarryn Skee-te, freshman guard Shannon Ev-ans, Oldham and McCrea each had four assists in Saturday’s victory. The four combined for five turnovers. On Tuesday, they combined for 11 assists and 13 turnovers. Overall offense: B+

Despite Buffalo’s 88-point out-burst on Saturday, Tuesday can-not be forgotten. The Bulls scored 71 points and shot 44 per-cent on the road against the Zips. Buffalo won’t return to Alum-ni Arena until next season, so the road game against a perenni-al top-MAC team ranks higher in priority.

Junior forward Will Regan was 1 for 6 in the loss. The bench didn’t perform, but those criti-cisms will be addressed later. Mc-Crea had only 15 points, which isn’t typical for the forward. The big man did return to form in his final Alumni Arena game, how-ever, putting up a career-best 34 points.Rebounding: B-

Akron and Bowling Green outrebounded the Bulls. The Zips had 36 rebounds compared to the Bulls’ 28. The Falcons had 35 on Saturday compared to Buf-falo’s 32.

Akron and Bowling Green combined for 18 offensive re-bounds, but the Bulls scored more second-chance points than their opponents in both match-ups.

Defense: BBuffalo has allowed more than

80 points twice in MAC play. Both times have been to Akron. The offense outran the Zips in the first meeting, but it was un-able to do so Tuesday. Getting into a shootout is always a risk, no matter how talented your team is offensively.

The Zips shot 51.8 percent against Buffalo and went to the foul line 28 times. But – as the trend continues to be in this re-cap – the Bulls had a better per-formance on Saturday. The Fal-cons scored 65 points while shooting 45.6 percent. They hit only four 3-pointers and went to the foul line 19 times. This is the defensive performance the Bulls will need in Cleveland. Bench production: A-

This score is inflated because two Buffalo bench players pulled off an exciting play that earned the No. 1 spot on SportsCenter’s Top Plays Sunday.

Evans and Moss combined for an alley-oop off the backboard that sent Alumni Arena into pan-demonium Saturday. Moss only had four points in the game – both baskets coming on monster dunks.

Evans and Skeete combined for 20 points Saturday after struggling Tuesday. The duo shot 7 for 13 on Saturday compared to 6 for 18 at Akron.

It should be noted that be-cause head coach Bobby Hur-ley started his five seniors Satur-day, bench scoring numbers were higher than normal.Coaching: B

Hurley has to stop with the un-timely technical fouls. The Bulls trailed 51-50 with 12 minutes re-maining before Hurley’s tirade

led to a technical foul on Tues-day. Akron outscored Buffalo by 11 for the remainder of the game.

But he did all the right things on Saturday. He started all five seniors on senior day – even those who haven’t contributed many minutes. He also handled McCrea’s playing time properly.

Buffalo’s all-time leading scor-er was flirting with surpassing 2,000 points for his career in his final Alumni Arena performance.

Hurley, however, didn’t let this impact his minutes. The Bulls led by double-digits the majority of the game and Hurley limited Mc-Crea to 32 minutes rather than keeping him in and risking inju-ry just for the record.

We all know McCrea will sur-pass 2,000 Thursday during MAC Tournament play.

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Hardwood Report CardBulls split games in final week of regular season

BEN TARHANSENIOR SPORTS EDITOR

After winning the Mid-Amer-ican Conference Championship in 2011, the men’s swimming and diving team has remained a top team in the conference but hasn’t been able to clinch a champion-ship.

The trend continued this sea-son.

UB hosted the Mid-American Conference Championships at Alumni Arena Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The Bulls scored 657 points, good for a third-place finish. Missouri State won its first MAC Championship with 833 points and Eastern Michigan finished second with 682.

“[After the meet], I told the se-niors how proud I am of them and what they have meant to this program over the past four years,” said head coach Andy Bashor. “I told the guys I was proud of the effort they put in. But when we walk off this pool deck, next year starts now. We’re not where we want to be and we have a lot of work to get to where we want to be.”

When the Bulls won the MAC Championship in 2011, mem-bers of the team’s senior class were freshmen. They have been strong leaders for the underclass-men, according to Bashor.

This weekend, seniors Dan O’Connor and Mike Dugan led the Bulls. In his final swims at Alumni Arena, Dugan won the 50-yard freestyle and 100-yard butterfly; he was the only Bull with multiple victories. Dugan’s 50-yard freestyle time of 19.84 is a new school and pool record, he also won with a 100-yard butter-fly time of 47.32.

Dugan finished second in his third individual event, the 100-yard freestyle. His time of 43.67 was .06 slower than the winning time.

In his final swim, Dugan swam the closing leg of the 400-yard freestyle relay. He made up one spot, helping the Bulls finish fourth. After the race, he lin-gered in the water for a moment before pulling himself out of the pool.

“It’s kind of bittersweet,” Du-gan said. “I’m kind of glad to be done, but I know I will miss it. It’s real nice to have it at home, to see all my fans, all the alumni here. It’s emotional.”

O’Connor won the 1,650-yard freestyle with a school record and pool record time of 15:04.66. He finished second in the 400-yard individual medley and third in the 500-yard freestyle.

Senior Eric Culver, freshman Scott Huang, sophomore Bil-ly Patrum and freshman Charles Barry were all named to the All-MAC second team.

“We’ve got a good future,” Bashor said. “I’m excited about the young guys. We have to get them in the weight room, get

some muscle on them. They’ve got a great work ethic, and we just have to improve if we are going to get to the top.”

Sophomore Antonio Lanzi fin-ished seventh in the 200-yard in-dividual medley and eighth in the 200-yard freestyle. Sophomore Bill Caffee and freshman Reid Zyniecki finished in the top eight of the 1,650-yard freestyle.

Freshman diver Cade Bennett also made significant contribu-tions for the Bulls, finishing sec-ond in the 1-meter dive and fifth in the 3-meter dive.

Bashor also highlighted senior diver Chris Iafrati’s performance. Iafrati had never made an ‘A’ fi-nal at a MAC Championship un-til he qualified in his final event for the 3-meter ‘A’ final on Fri-day. Iafrati finished sixth.

A few Bulls qualified for the NCAA Championships with ‘B’ cuts, which means they will have to wait and see if they will have a chance to swim there. The NCAA Championships take place in Austin, Texas, starting March 27.

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Men’s swimming and diving finishes third at MAC ChampionshipsDugan wins Outstanding Senior Award

ALINE KOBAYASHI, THE SPECTRUM

Senior Javon McCrea scored a career-best 34 points as Buffalo defeated Bowling Green

CHAD COOPER, THE SPECTRUM

Senior Mike Dugan broke school records in the 50-yard freestyle and 100-yard butterfly as Alumni Arena hosted the MAC Champi-onships this weekend. The Bulls finished in third among all schools.

Baseball (7-3)The Bulls went 1-2 this week-

end in Athens, Ga. Buffalo lost to Georgia (9-6), 11-10, Friday. The Bulls were down two head-ing into the final inning when sophomore infielder Tyler Maut-ner’s sacrifice fly scored senior outfielder Matt Pollock to pull the Bulls within one, but they could not finish off the come-back.

The Bulls defeated Western Carolina (8-4), 5-4, Saturday be-fore losing to Northern Florida (6-7), 4-3, Sunday in 12 innings. Buffalo will travel to Virginia Commonwealth next weekend to take on Rutgers (3-8) and Lafay-ette (4-4).

Women’s Tennis (8-1)

The Bulls defeated ASA (2-1), 5-2, Saturday at the Miller Ten-nis Center. Buffalo will be on the road next weekend to face Hill-sdale (9-9) Saturday and Florida Atlantic (4-6) Sunday.

Men’s Tennis (7-3)The Bulls went 2-1 this week-

end, defeating Bryant (9-7), 5-2, Friday and Boston (5-5), 5-1, Sunday. The Bulls lost to Brown (8-5), 7-0, Saturday. Buffalo will play at Central Florida (7-2) Tuesday.

Wrestling (3-17, 0-8 MAC)

The Bulls finished ninth with 12.5 total points in the MAC Championships in Kent, Ohio, this weekend. Senior Nick Flannery finished fifth in the 141-pound weight class and re-ceived an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament in Okla-homa City, Okla., which begins March 20 and goes until March 22.

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Quick HitsWomen’s tennis continues hot streak; wrestler Flannery gets bid to NCAA Tournament

CHAD COOPER, THE SPECTRUM

Senior Anamaria Candanoza was vic-torious, 6-3, 6-3, as the Bulls won, 5-2, at Miller’s Tennis Center.