the spectrum volume 62 issue 28

8
the Independent Student publIcatIon of the unIverSIty at buffalo, SInce 1950 Monday, noveMber 5, 2012 voluMe 62 no. 28 ubSpectruM.coM t he S pectruM OpiniOn 3 Classifieds & daily delights 7 spOrts 8 inside CALEB LAYTON Staff Writer Professor Burton shuffles through pa- pers, paying no attention to the two awards – given to him for excellence in teaching – sit- ting on a cluttered shelf to the left of his desk. A group of students walks out of his of- fice when another knocks on the door. His scheduled office hours are over, but Burton invites him in. Harold Burton, a professor of exercise and nutrition sciences, has been at UB since 1987. In that time, he has been honored with the University at Buffalo Distinguished Ser- vice Award, the School of Public Health and Health Professions Teacher of the Year and the Milton Plesur Memorial Award for Teach- ing Excellence. Though he seems to give little attention to the honors, no one is more de- serving, according to students. “[Burton] is one of the best educators I’ve ever been around,” said Carol DeNyss- chen, a UB alum and former student of Bur- ton’s. “He really cares about [his students], but he doesn’t do their work for them … He makes the work interesting for the students. [Burton is] definitely deserving of the awards he received.” Humble Burton puts students first REBECCA BRATEK Managing Editor Four years ago, during his senior year, Darren Cotton moved into a house on Lis- bon Avenue with a few friends. He thought his new home would be safe, secure and problem-free. It wasn’t. About four months after moving in, his house was broken into and his TV was sto- len. “When we originally moved in, [our landlord] was like, ‘Oh yeah, there’s a secu- rity system so you don’t have to worry about that,’ except he never got it hooked up so our house got broken into,” Cotton said. “The first thing I did was call him and be like, ‘Hey, thanks a lot, asshole. Our house just got robbed.’” His landlord wasn’t distant or out of state; he lived a few miles from the Heights in Cheektowaga. Still, problems that should have been fixed within a day or two would take months, so Cotton decided to take the matter into his own hands. He would drive back home to his par- ents’ house in Colden, N.Y. – a town about 40 minutes south of his University Heights home – and he would steal their tools. He was determined to fix things himself, even though he wasn’t always quite sure what he was doing. “I thought, ‘Holy sh*t, the last time I used a chop saw was eighth grade shop class,’” Cotton said. He used that chop saw, among many other tools, to fix his landscap- ing and issues within his home – most nota- bly, the bathroom. It was in disrepair – peel- ing wallpaper, water-damaged baseboards and broken tile racks. “It was pretty self-explanatory stuff, but it made a big difference,” he said. When he was finished with the work, he deducted the amount of money he spent on materials from his monthly rent. Cotton graduated from UB’s master’s of urban planning program in May 2012 after receiving his undergraduate degree in inter- national studies and linguistics in 2009. He has come a long way from stealing his par- ents’ power tools; he’s helped make tools and other home improvement needs available to students in the University Heights through the University Tool Library. He wants to help empower students to take control of their homes when landlords aren’t responsive, just like he did as an undergrad at UB. Birth of the Tool Library Cotton knew students who rent homes in the Heights can’t afford and simply don’t need a toolbox of their own, so he sought to bring the tools to them in a convenient and cost-effective way. The idea? A tool library. Cotton got the idea from sitting on meetings with activist groups, such as Buf- falo ReUse and People United for Sustain- able Housing (PUSH). Buffalo ReUse and PUSH had started the Buffalo Tool Library, and Cotton wanted to bring their ideas to the Heights. The Buffalo Tool Library has since disbanded, but Cotton is working with the two groups to bring the system back to the city. “It was really interesting because I pretty much had no idea what I was doing, Cotton said. “And it really was almost like starting a small business.” Cotton started the University Heights Tool Library in May 2011, located on Main Street, with the help of Buffalo Council- member Bonnie Russell. Cotton knew stu- dents, new homeowners and community renters could fix a lot of their homes’ prob- lems by themselves, but most don’t have the means to do so. Russell was able to give Cot- ton $15,000 in start-up funding to get the Tool Library set up and running. “Darren came to my office with the idea several years ago, and once he had it tight- ened a year later, he came back and I granted [the Tool Library] our discretionary funds,” Russell said. “[The Tool Library] is a great place where students and homeowners can get the tools they need for very cheap.” Since opening in May 2011, the library has moved to 5 W. Northrup Place, next to Just Pizza, and is housed within the Uni- versity Heights Collaborative (UHC), a community-based group within the Heights – comprised of individuals, block clubs, UB, elected officials and businesses – that is in- terested in enhancing the quality of life with- in the neighborhood. How it works The Tool Library on West Northrup is housed inside of an old movie theater – a historic building with drop-vaulted ceilings, an aluminum-plated roof and original, real hardwood floors. The space was previously used as computer repair store before Cot- ton and his crew acquired the space – the move from Main Street to West Northrup was mainly due to cheaper rent and a need for a more customizable space, according to Cotton. Now, Cotton and library volunteers are working to restore the building to its original state by ripping out the carpets and rework- ing the different rooms into workshops. He has found improving the physical library building is one of the most rewarding expe- riences. Tools for change UB alum starts Tool Library in the Heights MAX CRINNIN Staff Writer Last week, UB hosted one of the world’s living legends of poetics. During his three-day visit, 80-year-old Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko shared Stalin’s Funeral, a film made about his per- sonal experience while attending the in- famous Soviet dictator’s funeral, other life stories and poems of politics and love. Although he read his work in Russian, Yevtushenko’s tears, songs and dancing spoke a universal language at his Thursday night performance in Slee Hall’s Lippes Concert Hall on UB’s North Campus. Before a packed concert hall of approx- imately 600 people, Yevtushenko shared the stage with three UB English students and excited a multilingual audience to multiple standing ovations throughout the evening. In his home country, Yevtushenko is highly regarded for his contributions to- ward a peak in Russian art in the ’50s and ’60s known as the Khrushchev Thaw, for his dissident commentary on the political policies of the Soviet Union. As a poet, novelist, essayist, film direc- tor, actor and photographer, he has pulled fans’ tender heartstrings and faced the cruel realities of life with great success and inter- national praise and recognition, including a nomination for the Nobel Prize in Litera- ture. Yevtushenko began his visit to UB with the screening of Stalin’s Funeral on Wednes- day night at UB’s Center For the Arts. The room was bursting with curious mem- bers of the community flocking to catch a glimpse at a confusing and monumental moment from Soviet history. While these moments may seem un- important and forgotten to a college-aged audience, there is something that everyone can take from Yevtushenko’s work. “Life in the Soviet Union, Stalin’s fu- neral, or tragic events at Babi Yar in Kiev, Ukraine, may seem like distant historical events for today’s youth,” said Tanya Shili- na-Conte, assistant professor in the depart- ment of media study. “But [Yevtushenko’s] bardic song, his vivacity even at age 80 and his message of personal and political free- doms is, so to say, eternally young.” From Russia with love Continued on page 6 ALEXA STRUDLER /// THE SPECTRUM Darren Cotton has come a long way from stealing his parents' tools to fix his Heights’ home. The master’s of urban planning graduate started the University Heights Tool Library in May 2011 to help empower other UB students to take initiative and fix their homes. SATSUKI AOI /// THE SPECTRUM Last week, Russian poet and living legend Yevgeny Yevtushenko visited UB and hosted three events, which included a poetry reading, open discussion with sudents and the screening of his film, Stalin’s Funeral. Continued on page 5 Continued on page 5 Tripathi delivers state of university address In first start, Licata leads Bulls to last- second win Story on page 4 Story on page 8 Successful, beloved professor emphasizes personal interaction Legendary poet Yevtushenko delights UB in three-day visit

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The Spectrum, an independent student publication of the University at Buffalo. November 5, 2012

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

the Independent Student publIcatIon of the unIverSIty at buffalo, SInce 1950

Monday, noveMber 5, 2012 voluMe 62 no. 28ubSpectruM.coM

the SpectruM

OpiniOn 3 Classifieds & daily delights 7 spOrts 8inside

CALEB LAYTONStaff Writer

Professor Burton shuffles through pa-pers, paying no attention to the two awards – given to him for excellence in teaching – sit-ting on a cluttered shelf to the left of his desk.

A group of students walks out of his of-fice when another knocks on the door. His scheduled office hours are over, but Burton invites him in.

Harold Burton, a professor of exercise and nutrition sciences, has been at UB since 1987. In that time, he has been honored with the University at Buffalo Distinguished Ser-vice Award, the School of Public Health and Health Professions Teacher of the Year and the Milton Plesur Memorial Award for Teach-ing Excellence. Though he seems to give little attention to the honors, no one is more de-serving, according to students.

“[Burton] is one of the best educators I’ve ever been around,” said Carol DeNyss-chen, a UB alum and former student of Bur-ton’s. “He really cares about [his students], but he doesn’t do their work for them … He makes the work interesting for the students. [Burton is] definitely deserving of the awards he received.”

Humble Burton puts students first

REBECCA BRATEKManaging Editor

Four years ago, during his senior year, Darren Cotton moved into a house on Lis-bon Avenue with a few friends. He thought his new home would be safe, secure and problem-free.

It wasn’t.About four months after moving in, his

house was broken into and his TV was sto-len.

“When we originally moved in, [our landlord] was like, ‘Oh yeah, there’s a secu-rity system so you don’t have to worry about that,’ except he never got it hooked up so our house got broken into,” Cotton said. “The first thing I did was call him and be like, ‘Hey, thanks a lot, asshole. Our house just got robbed.’”

His landlord wasn’t distant or out of state; he lived a few miles from the Heights in Cheektowaga. Still, problems that should have been fixed within a day or two would take months, so Cotton decided to take the matter into his own hands.

He would drive back home to his par-ents’ house in Colden, N.Y. – a town about 40 minutes south of his University Heights home – and he would steal their tools. He was determined to fix things himself, even though he wasn’t always quite sure what he was doing.

“I thought, ‘Holy sh*t, the last time I used a chop saw was eighth grade shop class,’” Cotton said. He used that chop saw, among many other tools, to fix his landscap-ing and issues within his home – most nota-bly, the bathroom. It was in disrepair – peel-ing wallpaper, water-damaged baseboards and broken tile racks.

“It was pretty self-explanatory stuff, but it made a big difference,” he said. When he was finished with the work, he deducted the amount of money he spent on materials

from his monthly rent. Cotton graduated from UB’s master’s of

urban planning program in May 2012 after receiving his undergraduate degree in inter-national studies and linguistics in 2009. He has come a long way from stealing his par-ents’ power tools; he’s helped make tools and other home improvement needs available to students in the University Heights through the University Tool Library. He wants to help empower students to take control of their homes when landlords aren’t responsive, just like he did as an undergrad at UB. Birth of the Tool Library

Cotton knew students who rent homes in the Heights can’t afford and simply don’t need a toolbox of their own, so he sought to

bring the tools to them in a convenient and cost-effective way.

The idea? A tool library. Cotton got the idea from sitting on

meetings with activist groups, such as Buf-falo ReUse and People United for Sustain-able Housing (PUSH). Buffalo ReUse and PUSH had started the Buffalo Tool Library, and Cotton wanted to bring their ideas to the Heights. The Buffalo Tool Library has since disbanded, but Cotton is working with the two groups to bring the system back to the city.

“It was really interesting because I pretty much had no idea what I was doing, Cotton said. “And it really was almost like starting a small business.”

Cotton started the University Heights Tool Library in May 2011, located on Main Street, with the help of Buffalo Council-member Bonnie Russell. Cotton knew stu-dents, new homeowners and community renters could fix a lot of their homes’ prob-lems by themselves, but most don’t have the means to do so. Russell was able to give Cot-ton $15,000 in start-up funding to get the Tool Library set up and running.

“Darren came to my office with the idea several years ago, and once he had it tight-ened a year later, he came back and I granted [the Tool Library] our discretionary funds,” Russell said. “[The Tool Library] is a great place where students and homeowners can get the tools they need for very cheap.”

Since opening in May 2011, the library has moved to 5 W. Northrup Place, next to Just Pizza, and is housed within the Uni-versity Heights Collaborative (UHC), a community-based group within the Heights – comprised of individuals, block clubs, UB, elected officials and businesses – that is in-terested in enhancing the quality of life with-in the neighborhood. How it works

The Tool Library on West Northrup is housed inside of an old movie theater – a historic building with drop-vaulted ceilings, an aluminum-plated roof and original, real hardwood floors. The space was previously used as computer repair store before Cot-ton and his crew acquired the space – the move from Main Street to West Northrup was mainly due to cheaper rent and a need for a more customizable space, according to Cotton.

Now, Cotton and library volunteers are working to restore the building to its original state by ripping out the carpets and rework-ing the different rooms into workshops. He has found improving the physical library building is one of the most rewarding expe-riences.

Tools for changeUB alum starts Tool Library in the Heights

MAX CRINNINStaff Writer

Last week, UB hosted one of the world’s living legends of poetics.

During his three-day visit, 80-year-old Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko shared Stalin’s Funeral, a film made about his per-sonal experience while attending the in-famous Soviet dictator’s funeral, other life stories and poems of politics and love.

Although he read his work in Russian, Yevtushenko’s tears, songs and dancing spoke a universal language at his Thursday night performance in Slee Hall’s Lippes Concert Hall on UB’s North Campus.

Before a packed concert hall of approx-imately 600 people, Yevtushenko shared the stage with three UB English students and excited a multilingual audience to multiple standing ovations throughout the evening.

In his home country, Yevtushenko is highly regarded for his contributions to-ward a peak in Russian art in the ’50s and ’60s known as the Khrushchev Thaw, for his dissident commentary on the political policies of the Soviet Union.

As a poet, novelist, essayist, film direc-tor, actor and photographer, he has pulled fans’ tender heartstrings and faced the cruel realities of life with great success and inter-national praise and recognition, including a nomination for the Nobel Prize in Litera-ture.

Yevtushenko began his visit to UB with the screening of Stalin’s Funeral on Wednes-day night at UB’s Center For the Arts. The room was bursting with curious mem-bers of the community flocking to catch a glimpse at a confusing and monumental moment from Soviet history.

While these moments may seem un-important and forgotten to a college-aged audience, there is something that everyone can take from Yevtushenko’s work.

“Life in the Soviet Union, Stalin’s fu-neral, or tragic events at Babi Yar in Kiev, Ukraine, may seem like distant historical events for today’s youth,” said Tanya Shili-na-Conte, assistant professor in the depart-ment of media study. “But [Yevtushenko’s] bardic song, his vivacity even at age 80 and his message of personal and political free-doms is, so to say, eternally young.”

From Russia with loveContinued on page 6

ALEXA STRUDLER /// THE SPECTRUM

Darren Cotton has come a long way from stealing his parents' tools to fix his Heights’ home. The master’s of urban planning graduate started the University Heights Tool Library in May 2011 to help empower other UB students to take initiative and fix their homes.

SATSUKI AOI /// THE SPECTRUM

Last week, Russian poet and living legend Yevgeny Yevtushenko visited UB and hosted three events, which included a poetry reading, open discussion with sudents and the screening of his film, Stalin’s Funeral.

Continued on page 5 Continued on page 5

Tripathi delivers state of university address

In first start, Licata leads Bulls to last-

second winStory on page 4 Story on page 8

Successful, beloved professor emphasizes personal interaction

Legendary poet Yevtushenko delights UB in three-day visit

Page 2: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

ubspectrum.com2 Monday, November 5, 2012

Offices of the Vice Provosts for Graduate and Undergraduate Education, Student Association and University Life and Services are working on the following to benefit those affected by Hurricane Sandy: • UB students will be able to donate

a meal equivalency amount at http://myubcard.com/ later

this week.

• Working with the American Red Cross to identify most needed supplies

• Setting up additional blood drives with the American Red Cross

• Looking for community service opportunities for students

• Additional buses will be available for Thanksgiving break

transportation as needed

• UB Counseling Services and Campus Ministries staffs are always available to students for support

• Financial Aid: For help with financial aid issues, please contact the Office of Financial Aid at 716-645-8232 or email the office at [email protected].

• Office of the Registrar: Students having problems related to records and registration should email the Registrar at [email protected] or call 716-645-5698.

• Student Accounts: Students experiencing difficulty paying their bill due to financial stress, the inability to transfer funds, or other storm related problems should either email the office at [email protected] or call 716-645-1800.

Here to help.

Page 3: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

ubspectrum.com3Monday, November 5, 2012

EDITORIAL BOARD

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 provided free in part by the Undergraduate Mandatory

Activity Fee.

The Spectrum is represented for na-tional advertising by both Alloy Media

and Marketing, and MediaMate.

For information on adverstising with The Spectrum

visit www.ubspectrum.com/ads or call us directly.

The Spectrum offices are located in 132

Student Union, UB North Campus, Buffalo, NY

14260-2100

EDITOR In CHIEF Aaron Mansfield

SEnIOR MAnAgIng EDITOR

Brian Josephs

MAnAgIng EDITOR Rebecca Bratek

EDITORIAL EDITOR

Ashley Steves

nEwS EDITORSSara DiNatale, Co-Senior Lisa Khoury, Co-Senior

Ben Tarhan Lisa Epstein, Asst.

LIFE EDITORS

Rachel Kramer, Senior Lyzi White

Keren Baruch Jacob Glaser, Asst.

ARTS EDITORSElva Aguilar, Senior

Adrien D’Angelo Duane Owens, Asst. Lisa de la Torre, Asst.

SPORTS EDITORS

Nate Smith, Senior Joe Konze

Jon Gagnon, Asst.

PHOTO EDITORSAlexa Strudler, Senior

Satsuki Aoi Reimon Bhuyan, Asst. Nick Fischetti, Asst.

PROFESSIOnAL STAFF

OFFICE ADMInISTRATORHelene Polley

ADVERTISIng MAnAgER

Mark Kurtz

CREATIVE DIRECTORAline Kobayashi

Brian Keschinger, Asst.Haider Alidina, Asst.

ADVERTISIng DESIgnERJoseph Ramaglia

Chris BelfioreRyan Christopher, Asst.

Haley Sunkes, Asst.

November 5, 2012Volume 62 Number 28

Circulation 7,000

Opinion

RACHEL RAIMONDI Staff Writer

Mayor Bloomberg can-celed the New York City Mara-thon Friday evening. He stated

that after disagreement in the public, he would not want “a cloud to hang over the race and its par-

ticipants.”Opponents of continuing the marathon say it’s

insensitive. It’s not.Government officials should not have canceled

the race because Hurricane Sandy hit the Northeast six days earlier.

Two weeks after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 devastated the nation, the New York Yankees re-turned to the city to play the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

The nation didn’t remain at a standstill. Rescuers were still searching the rubble and notifying families of victims. But still, people carried on with their lives and returned to normalcy.

Hurricane Sandy is not comparable to 9/11, which changed the way we lived, flew, entered buildings and thought about safety. We went to war. New Yorkers carried on.

The hurricane was terrible. Families who lost loved ones and homes have the right to grieve. However, we cannot change internationally recog-nized policies and programs of New York City. We will rebuild and revitalize the affected areas. It’s time to show the world again what being a New Yorker really means.

On Wednesday, the lights went up on Broadway and people from outside the city returned to work. Hurricane Sandy is already behind us.

The race – and the New Yorker mentality – is about perseverance and triumph over adversity. The

runners can attest to that after their grueling 26.2-mile journeys.

“Everything can’t just stop because this hap-pened,” Anne-Marie Auwinger, a Lower Manhattan resident who hasn’t had power in a week, told USA Today. “We have to try to make things as normal as we can.”

The 42-year-old cultural tradition has never been canceled before. It has major sponsors, like ING, and didn’t need funding from the city.

The New York Road Runners (NYRR), a non-profit New York-based running organization – not the taxpayers – was going to pay for the police efforts needed to run the event smoothly.

“While holding the race would not require di-verting resources from the recovery effort, it is clear that this has become the source of controversy and division,” said Bloomberg and NYRR President Mary Wittenberg in a joint statement.

If it is true that resources, such as hotel space and first-responder efforts, would not be diverted, then the show should have gone on. If we take the city on its word, the argument of limited resources is invalid.

The marathon would have been a bigger chal-lenge than most years – with the Long Island Rail Road and New York Subway System limited – but the city was up for it.

It had the capability to host the event this year, but government officials chose not to in an attempt to satisfy the people who are offended by the quick turnaround.

Runners, volunteers and sponsors were shocked and devastated by the cancelation.

The local businesses depend on the event, which brings in approximately 45,000 runners and 1 million spectators. The revenue expected every year has now vanished.

Racers lost out on travel and lodging expenses, monetary prizes, future racing endorsements and race invitations. For the elite athletes, the marathon is a job. Most only have the chance to win a marathon this big once or twice a year.

This year, the first male and female finishers were to go home with $130,000. Prizes were also go-ing to be given to those who broke records. Athletes use the money for basic living needs, future travel ex-penses and race entry fees. Their competition would have brought aid to the city as well.

The marathon weekend brings in an estimated $340 million to the city, according to USA Today. NYRR planned to donate $1 million to recovery ef-forts and turn the race into a telethon. Race sponsors pledged $1.5 million.

This is an act of kindness, not a requirement.Many suggested the generators that would have

been used at the marathon should power homes on Staten Island and other affected areas. This would be illogical.

NYRR is now suffering the loss of its biggest event. It has disappointed sponsors, employees and patrons whose months of hard work have been ru-ined in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy.

Opponents have called hosting the race “dis-gusting,” claiming to do so would be disrespectful to the affected families. I don’t agree.

It would return a sense of normalcy to New York. It does not mean we are forgetting the victims. They are remembered, and they are in our prayers. But anyone who says carrying on is disrespectful is a hypocrite.

Last month, the death toll in Iraq doubled to 365, the highest toll in two years, according to Reuters. On Sept. 9 alone, 100 people were killed. Did you put a hold on your life in respect for the families? Like everyone else, you didn’t ignore or forget the victims, but you carried on.

Ready, set, stopCanceling the NYC Marathon was a mistake

There’s one day to go before Election Day, and the names of Mitt Romney and Barack Obama are more familiar to you than members of your own family. But can you name your state senator or district representative?

The Congress approval rating is currently at 21 percent according to Gallup, yet most members of Congress are poised for re-election. At least 15 sena-tors of the 22 seeking re-election are expected to sign on to new terms. The same is true for at least 330 House members.

We hate them, but we won’t get rid of them. And most people hate them blindly. According to an older survey, only 25 percent of American adults can correctly name their U.S. senators. There’s no exact number on how many people can name their local representatives, but some polls place the number at around only 10 percent.

Local elections don’t get the glitz and glamour of the national election so they don’t get our full at-tention, but people don’t realize the impact they have. Look at New York, a predominantly democratic state where many feel like their vote in the presidential election won’t make any difference. Local elections are an entirely different game, especially in the more conservative-voting precincts. Many of those areas are only a few minutes away from Buffalo. Because they don’t have to cater to the entire country or worry about appealing to a wide range of people, individual precincts can afford to be as extreme as they want to be.

Maybe that’s why there seems to be an increase in the number of vicious ads this year on the local level. The Buffalo News reported that political advertis-ing in the 27th Congressional District in Buffalo and Rochester has reached nearly $5 million.

It’s all noise at this point – noise that we’re ig-noring and have ignored for years. According to Erie County election officials, voter turnout in 2008 was at about 42 percent with over 75,000 ballots cast.

But some of the most important issues are de-termined at the local level. Obama and Romney can preach all day about what they intend to do for the education system, but your representatives make the most immediate decisions. That’s why it’s so impor-tant to know what your candidates stand for and to vote.

That doesn’t mean the presidential election isn’t important, as it certainly holds a place in balancing the national budget, controlling broad domestic af-fairs and managing foreign policy. But the presidential candidates don’t come to your town and take care of you personally. They deal with the grand, broad issues and issues of national importance. What goes on in your hometown is not their problem.

Here in Buffalo, the biggest races have big impli-cations for students. In the race for New York’s 26th Congressional District, incumbent Brian Higgins and Republican challenger Michael Madigan have both made their plans for education reform. Higgins wants to make student loan interest deductible and

expand deduction to more middle class applicants. Madigan focuses more on primary-school education, seeking to improve education by improving the skills of teachers to help children get skilled labor jobs and offering parental education in poorly performing schools.

Another big race is the seat for State Senator in the 60th District between Michael Amodeo and in-cumbent Senator Mark Grisanti. Grisanti is a proud supporter of UB 2020, the university’s expansion program, while Amodeo wants to find a solution to community college chargebacks and opposes increas-es in SUNY tuition.

The difference between their wants and the wants of our presidential candidates? Our local can-didates actually have the power to reform these issues.

Pay attention to your local races and their im-pact. One of the pluses of getting involved in your local elections is that your representatives are right there, available to meet or talk to with only a couple of phone calls. Want to know what they stand for? Attend a local meeting or talk to them personally.

When you go out and cast your ballot tomorrow, remember it’s not just about Mitt Romney or Barack Obama. Make a difference and vote for your local representatives.

Email: [email protected]

Make your selection in local electionDon’t let national presidential race overshadow local races

It took Mayor Bloomberg until the final 36 hours to cancel the New York City Marathon.

Last week, the New York City mayor stood firm in his defense even in the face of criticism, stating it would lift the city’s spirits. New York Road Runners, the directing organization of the race, promoted the event as a symbol of resilience.

Until Friday afternoon, at least. That’s when the idea of the marathon became less of a symbol of resilience and more of an insult to a recovering city. That Bloomberg waited so long and let people feel so angry and desperate before canceling is just a testimony to how atrociously he handled the entire situation.

Bloomberg changed his initial decision because of public outrage, because of charges of insensitivity. Dan Halloran, a New York City Councilman, was just one person angered at the way Bloomberg handled things, before and after the cancellation.

“It was big business that made him change his mind. Thanks for nothing you elitist,” he posted on Facebook. “It was 4 days before you got to Staten Is-land and have you been to Breezy in Queens? Didn’t think so!”

The marathon is a major money generator for the city, bringing in an estimated $340 million, and the 47,500 runners contribute an estimated $17.3 mil-

lion in taxes. That money goes to pay public officials, officers and teachers, according to Howard Wolfson, deputy mayor for government affairs and communi-cation.

But the difficult decision is the right decision sometimes. The wrong thing to do is to ignore Sandy and pretend that everything is okay, and that’s what the marathon would’ve done.

Whether or not the marathon would have the power to rebuild morale, a concept that’s already en-tirely questionable while the city is being rebuilt, it’s in bad taste to hold a race that starts on Staten Island – where 19 residents died last week – and avoids the areas of the city that were hit the hardest and con-cludes in Central Park, which was just closed days before because of dangerous conditions.

The New York City Marathon is basically a parade, and you’d be marching them through five battered boroughs loaded with people focused on getting their lives back on track – the same people who have been without transportation and power for almost a week. Bloomberg was ready to provide blan-kets and generators to nearly 50,000 runners while there were millions of people without heat.

There would be 47,500 runners, all who needed to be housed around the city and all who needed transportation (they’re not going to run everywhere)

and utilities and food, on top of the residents who all needed the same thing. They would be overstressing a city and a system that is already out of place.

The marathon’s cancellation raised a ques-tion about the status of some of the city’s other events during the week. Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade felt there were bigger things to be concerned about and reportedly donated his game fee to relief effort. Thursday’s Knicks at Nets season opener was postponed due to mass transit. Despite being no damage done to Brooklyn’s Barclays Center itself, 80 percent of the people who come to the game arrive via public transportation.

So assuming that is accurate, that means Bloom-berg was perfectly fine with people traveling into the city from all across the globe even though the city was too damaged for people to travel between boroughs.

Some of the runners said they feel robbed for having to come here and having the marathon taken away. But they are the people who can come and run and leave the city without any emotional attachment to the devastation that occurred. The people who should be taken care of and cared about in this situ-ation are the people who live in New York City and are living with this.

Crossing the lineBloomberg’s handling of NYC marathon was in poor taste

Email: [email protected]

Email: [email protected]

Page 4: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

ubspectrum.com4 Monday, November 5, 2012

Tuesday Nov. 6th & Wednesday Nov. 7th 2012 9 AM—3 PM Student Union Social Hall North Campus

Thursday Nov. 8th & Friday Nov. 9th, 2012 9 AM—3 PM Biomedical Education Building Lobby South Campus

SAM FERNANDOStaff Writer

On Friday, President Satish Tripathi de-livered his state of the university address at the Center for the Arts.

In his speech, Tripathi highlighted his vision of UB 2020 and the expansion of the university. He explained what goals have al-ready been achieved and what still needs to be done on the pathway to a bigger, more academically successful university.

In order to achieve this vision, Tripa-thi emphasized the importance of growth – growth in faculty across all disciplines, growth in educational environment, growth in infrastructure and, most importantly, growing together as a community.

“He talked about thinking of UB as a whole,” said Paras Prasad, a distinguished professor in chemistry, electrical engineer-ing, medicine and physics. “I think that is a very important point and we can really distinguish ourselves in the nation by being aggressive and combining our strengths in different academic units to advance to new levels [of success].”

Tripathi also spoke about UB’s budget and current financial state and said it’s on the right track to improvement.

“After four years that brought approxi-mately $80 million in cuts, the budget is in a good place and we are beginning to build again,” Tripathi said. “Because of our hard work, we aren’t just patching up. We are in the position to accelerate our progress.”

Tripathi stressed the importance faculty has on the overall development of the in-stitution. He said a larger and more promi-nent faculty would have a drastic effect on students academically.

The president set a five-year goal to in-crease the faculty by 250 people in various fields of study.

He also plans to increase the number of endowed positions, which is already in effect. The administration created two endowment

funds focused on the arts, humanities and social sciences. These funds will support up to five new endowed faculty chairs and over $1 million in scholarships in those fields.

Tripathi believes this is the key to help-ing UB attract more distinguished faculty members, which will in turn attract higher caliber students.

He plans to improve the educational en-vironment at UB by continuing to improve research prowess, which will attract more ambitious students.

UB has the “opportunity and obliga-tion to lead on an even greater scale [in re-search,]” he said.

Strengthening the Academies is essen-tial, according to Tripathi. The Entrepre-neurship Academy was launched this fall and the Sustainability Academy is scheduled to open next fall. He said in addition to the University Honors College, discovery semi-nars and center for undergraduate research

and creative activity, these academies con-tribute to fostering a new environment.

Tripathi touched on the university’s plans to make education more affordable for students.

“Affordability remains an important is-sue we must address as part of our commit-ment to expanding opportunities for educa-tional excellence,” Tripathi said.

Bruce Pitman, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, believed Tripathi should have stressed student finances more than he did.

“He glossed over it quickly, but the university has made a commitment to help students from the financial aid side,” Pitman said. “We need to keep the institution afford-able for students. I think that is a useful mes-sage to ensure.”

Tripathi discussed improvements to UB that already show his vision of UB 2020

in effect, like the opening of Greiner Resi-dence Hall, Davis Hall, Kapoor Hall and the Solar Strand.

The UB community’s support and shared vision for the future made these ac-complishments possible, according to Tripa-thi.

“This is how I see the path in front of us – our biggest opportunity is to think in new ways,” Tripathi said. “At UB, we excel at thinking and partnering across disciplines. Now we need to go a step beyond that and we need to think holistically as one univer-sity about our priorities and our impact. We need to focus on what unites us under com-mon purpose and we need to consider what makes us truly distinctive nationally and globally.”

Daniel Ovadia, a senior in the School of Management and the student representative for the University Council, believed Tripa-thi’s speech was a good summary of what is happening but didn’t offer any new informa-tion.

“None of the information that is pro-vided at this type of speech is generally new, but I thought it did a good job of capturing a lot of the major things that are going on, so I guess it was very relevant,” Ovadia said.

Peter Grassi, a senior political science major and the director of Student Affairs, disagreed with Ovadia. He found the speech inspiring and informative.

“I didn’t know that improvements were being done not only on North Campus but South Campus and downtown,” Grassi said. “I wasn’t aware of the magnitude of gross in the Undergraduate Academies. I had no idea that the administration is being so thorough in their efforts to improve the school and doing it in such a diverse way.”

Ovadia believed the student turnout was underwhelming and hopes more students will take advantage of events like this in the future. He is happy the university provides outlets, like the president’s address, for stu-dents to get information.

Tripathi envisions growth at UBPresident discusses future goals at state of the university address

REBECCA BRATEK /// THE SPECTRUM

President Satish Tripathi presented his vision of UB 2020 on Friday at the Center For the Arts.

Email: [email protected]

Page 5: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

ubspectrum.com 5Monday, November 5, 2012

Tuesday Nov. 6th & Wednesday Nov. 7th 2012 9 AM—3 PM Student Union Social Hall North Campus

Thursday Nov. 8th & Friday Nov. 9th, 2012 9 AM—3 PM Biomedical Education Building Lobby South Campus

CHELSEA SULLIVANStaff Writer

Stay-Up UB is dancing to improve chil-dren’s health.

For the past three years, UB has hosted a fundraising event to raise money for kids with cancer. Last year, however, Stay-Up UB joined with the nationally recognized Dance Marathon organization. The dance event will be hosted on Nov. 10 from 6 p.m. until 1 a.m. Each year, the proceeds are donated to Women and Children’s Hospital of Buffalo.

This hospital is a teaching facility for UB’s School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and recognized as a state-of-the-art pediatric, neonatal, perinatal and obstetrical services throughout Western New York, ac-cording to kaleidahealth.org.

The people at the Dance Marathon will meet four children – ages 4 to 10 – who have been diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lives. The children will tell their stories.

One of the children attending the event is Natalie Berg. She was diagnosed with a rare form of childhood cancer called em-bryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, which affects the development of the skeletal muscle of the embryo, when she was 21 months old. Now she is a healthy first-grader who loves coloring and dressing up like a princess, ac-cording to helpmakemiracles.com.

Other survivors attending the Dance Marathon include Tyler, who had liver prob-lems at the age of 6 and needed a liver trans-plant to survive, and 10-year-old Gianna, who was diagnosed with acute lymphatic leukemia and survived after six months of chemotherapy. All of these children were treated at Women and Children’s Hospital, according to helpmakemiracles.org.

Dance for a lifeUB Dance Marathon to assist local hospital

He finished the game with 127 yards and completed 13-of-24 passing attempts and two touchdowns, the latter a pass over the middle to junior wide receiver Alex Neutz, who scampered into the end zone for a 43-yard touchdown. It was Neutz’s ninth touchdown of the season, inching him closer to Naaman Roosevelt’s record of 13 receiving touchdowns in a single season.

He was locked in a quarterback duel with Dysert, who passed legendary quarter-back Ben Roethlisberger for No. 1 all-time in school history for career passing yards during the game. He finished with 242 yards and three touchdowns, as he and Licata went back and forth in a wild second half.

The Buffalo defense hounded the Red-Hawks throughout the first half, allowing only three points on a drive that started on their own 18-yard line. The RedHawks’ lon-gest drive of the half was a mere 29 yards.

“The defense held their quarterback [Dysert] to three points in the first half,” Licata said. “That’s amazing. You probably won’t see that for the rest of the year with that quarterback over there. He’s an unbe-lievable player.”

The quarterback switch didn’t affect the productivity of Oliver and the Bulls’ running game. He finished the day with 199 yards rushing, upping his average to 145.2 yards per game on the season, and he has now rushed for over 100 yards in every game he’s finished this year.

“The running game really helped our offense today,” Licata said. “When you hand the ball off to Branden Oliver, a lot of great things can happen and you really saw that today.”

It was only the second time this sea-son that the Bulls led the game during the fourth quarter, the first being their blowout victory over FCS school Morgan State back in September.

“We knew that we were beating on the door, and today we broke it down,” Quinn said.

Next up is Western Michigan (4-6, 2-4 MAC), who will visit UB Stadium in what will be the Bulls’ final home game of the season on Saturday. Kickoff is set for 3:30 p.m.

Continued from page 8: Patty Ice

The praise is not limited to Burton’s stu-dents; his fellow professors have noticed his commitment as well.

Professor Gaspar Farkas, the interim director of exercise and nutrition sciences, who has worked with Burton for 18 years, is impressed how Burton learns the names of all 120 or more students in his lectures. Burton likes to get involved and puts in the effort to know about their lives, according to Farkas.

Burton doesn’t let the high praises or awards go to his head.

Burton credits his ability to remember students’ names to attendance printouts that come with pictures of the students. Burton said he considers it “quite a compliment” to hear about his popularity amongst the stu-dents.

A native of Kirkland Lake, a small town in northern Ontario, Burton began his aca-demic career with the intention of becoming a teacher.

As an undergraduate, he was interested in teaching high school so he earned his bachelor’s in education. When he became in-terested in health sciences, he pursued that on the collegiate level.

Burton received his doctorate in cardio-vascular physiology from the University of Guelph in 1983, and he earned a fellowship at the University of Michigan until 1986, be-fore becoming an associate professor at UB.

His background in education is in part responsible for his emphasis on connecting with his students, a quality which sets him apart from other research-oriented profes-sors and endears him to his students, accord-ing to DeNysschen. She likes how Burton is always willing to talk to students when they need him.

Burton thinks his style of teaching is what makes him successful as a professor.

He prefers to teach introductory exer-cise science classes so he can introduce the material to students in new and interesting ways, where they can interact with him and each other more than they would in a typical lecture-based class.

One of the techniques Burton uses to get his students to connect more with the material is to have them work in smaller groups, enabling the students to interact with each other to better their understanding of the concepts covered, according to Burton.

This technique also ensures the students taking these large lecture courses have more of a chance to meet with Burton in a one-on-one setting. Burton also tries to make sure the information he presents is tailored to the interests of his students.

“I use real life examples [to illustrate what I’m teaching],” Burton said. “If a stu-dent’s memory cue for a term is a page num-ber in a textbook, then they aren’t going to remember it, but if their memory cue is [a real life circumstance], they will."

Burton was made the director of un-dergraduate studies for the exercise science department in 1995, a position he held until 2006. During that time, the department saw an increase in enrollment every year and a growth in the number of classes and concen-trations offered.

He said taking the position changed the focus of his work.

“It’s very difficult to focus on research, teaching and administrative duties at one time,” Burton said. “When [I became the di-rector of undergraduate studies], I put more of my energy toward teaching [than toward research].”

Though Burton said his focus in recent years has shifted toward teaching, this hasn’t stopped him from continuing his research. Since 2008, he has contributed to six publi-cations and has another contribution in the works.

“Professors have to balance research with education,” Farkas said. “And Burton is great at focusing on his students while con-tinuing his research.”

He is currently working on creating a new online introductory exercise science class, while researching the effect of exercise on cancer survivors.

Email: [email protected]

Continued from page 1: Humble Burton puts students first

During his one-hour visit to Baird Hall on Thursday before his reading, Yevtushen-ko was open to questions from the public. During this time, he spoke of what poetry means to him and how it has shaped his views throughout life.

Yevtushenko emphasized the impor-tance of finding optimism for the future and the necessity for writers and people from all walks of life to find common ground while working together toward a united world.

At one point in the discussion, Fata Haskovic, a Bosnian refugee and freshman intended biology major, shared a relation she felt to Yevtushenko’s work that ex-pressed despair and turmoil.

“I’m trying to find some kind of peace,” Haskovic said. “I feel like the only thing that is left is hope in writing and art. [Yevtush-enko’s] question to us was, ‘What does the youth expect in the future?’ and I think it lies in creativity and art.”

While Yevtushenko tends to be recog-nized more for his political commentary, he is also well respected for his love of poetry. During his discussion and the reading, his face showed the passion he has felt over a lifetime that includes four marriages and other exciting affairs.

Yevtushenko spoke directly about one affair he had long ago with a Colombian photo model, whom he only recently wrote the poem “Dora Franco: A Delayed Confes-sion” about. This woman later went on to become Salvador Dali’s personal assistant.

“If I loved someone many years ago, I still love them today,” Yevtushenko said. “Great love is an unusual feeling … some-times even shyness is a form of passion.”

An expert on the subject, Yevtushenko continued to share anecdotes and feelings of love with the audience at Baird Hall be-fore bringing even more emotion and drama

to his reading at Lippes Concert Hall.Selecting from an anthology of his

work, Yevtushenko acted out his poetry with great expression and even the accom-paniment from a pianist and singer for one of his poems. The three UB students who assisted him – Jennifer Johnson, Paige Melin and Daniel Schweitzer – read English trans-lations of the work alongside Yevtushenko’s Russian readings.

“Other than the late Allen Ginsburg, no poet today brings the passions of song, drama and personal conviction to his per-formance like [Yevtushenko],” Shilina-Con-te said.

Yevtushenko’s most famous poem, “Babi Yar,” was a cry against anti-Semitism that existed in the Soviet Union with direct relation to the largest massacre of the Ho-locaust. In this massacre, 34,000 Jews were killed in Sept. 1941 in Kiev’s Babi Yar ravine.

As part of his visit, the Buffalo Phil-harmonic Orchestra invited Yevtushenko to read this poem Friday evening alongside their performance of Shostakovich’s Sym-phony No. 13, which was inspired by “Babi Yar.”

Even in his old age, Yevtushenko still writes while splitting his time between living in Russia and teaching poetry at the Univer-sity of Oklahoma at Tulsa, Okla.

In closing, he remembered his old dear American friends who united with him dur-ing the Cold War and helped him change the world: Carl Sandburg, Robert Frost and Robert Lowell.

Yevtushenko hopes today the youth of the world realizes whose turn it is now to bring purpose, unity and love through the great unifying power that is poetry.

Email: [email protected]

Continued from page 1: From Russia with love

To read the rest, go to ubspectrum.com

Email: [email protected]

COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO STUDENT EXPERIENCE

Last year, Stay-Up UB raised approximately $8,000. This year's UB Dance Marathon is seeking to raise $10,000 to assist Women and Children's Hospital of Buffalo.

REIMON BHUYAN /// THE SPECTRUM

Professor Harold Burton, an associate professor in the department of exercise and nutrition sciences, is always in his office and willing to talk to his stu-dents.

Page 6: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

ubspectrum.com6 Monday, November 5, 2012

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“A lot of the time, what I do here, I re-ally enjoy so I don’t think of it as work,” he said. “Instead of going out to Chippewa and getting wasted, I can come here and rip up carpet and refinish a hardwood floor. It kind of gives me a distraction from the craziness of life.”

The Tool Library functions just as a normal library – students and Heights resi-dents over the age of 18 complete a mem-bership form, and for $10 a year, they re-ceive a membership card that allows them to take out any tools they might need. Check-outs are put into the database, and members have a week to use and return the tools.

“You sort of have to think it through and think, ‘Is this something I can do my-self ? Do I feel comfortable doing this? Is this something I should be doing myself ?’ and if the answer is yes, then you know you have this resource that you don’t have to dole out money out of your own pocket to pay for things to fix up what needs to be fixed,” Cotton said.

The tools come from many sources; many were donated by members of the community and part of the program’s ini-tial start-up funding went to purchase items that were less-used or more expensive, albeit important, such as chop saws, lawnmowers and staple guns. The library also carries basic tools; shovels, rakes, hammers, pliers, mea-suring tape, wrenches and extension cords are all available for rent and line the bright blue walls of the shop.

The library now has 163 members. Be-fore the start of summer 2012, it only had about 80 members, and Cotton said the membership grows by two a week now that it has settled into a permanent location.

“I think the Tool Library is a great re-source for people in the case of delinquent properties or derelict properties or delin-quent landlords,” said Cristina Delgado, a third-year master’s in urban planning stu-dent and one of the starters of Urban Col-lective – a group of urban planning students who wish to do more planning work out in the community. “You can be somewhat empowered to fix things yourself and liter-ally go get the tools and if there’s a demand for a certain type of workshop – be it a lock changing workshop or whatever – the Tool Library will throw it. They’re pretty respon-sive to residents’ needs.”

But the Tool Library doesn’t only func-tion as a place to rent tools; it serves as a community gathering spot and a place to bring ideas together, according to Matthew Chavez, the artistic director of the library.

Chavez was drawn to the Tool Library during his second year of graduate work. At

the time, he was the president of the Gradu-ate Student Planning Association, and he was looking for ways to connect the student group to the community. He found Cotton and the Tool Library and started a relation-ship between his group and the non-profit.

Chavez remembers the first time he walked into the library’s new West Northrup space. He was instantly inspired to paint a map of Buffalo – because the library serves and inspires the city community – on the wall above the front display. He didn’t tell anyone what he was doing – he just got the materials he needed and went to work – and assured them they could paint over his mas-terpiece if they chose.

Cotton didn’t like the painting, but he liked the idea that community members could walk into the Tool Library and sub-sequently be motivated to start projects of their own.

“The Tool Library is a place that if you’re inspired to do something like that, then go ahead,’” Chavez said. “That’s the best thing about the Tool Library: it’s more than just a place to go look at tools; it’s a place that people who work behind the scenes there want to help individuals, non-profits, companies do work they want to do – do things they want to get done – that they don’t have the tools to get done. So all we’re doing is giving people the tools.”Community empowerment

On Oct. 12, the Tool Library received a $2,500 cash grant from Keep America Beau-tiful to fund a project to get rid of graffiti in the Heights.

The project is simple: a smartphone ap-plication will allow community members to take pictures of graffiti markings and upload them to a shared Google map. Then, library and community volunteers will print out the maps and go around removing the markings in neighborhood cleanups.

“Graffiti seems to be a pretty big issue, especially on the street that we’re on,” Cot-ton said. “The quicker you remove graffiti, the less people will return to graffiti some-thing again.”

The library has also been involved in the clean up of Linear Park – a park located within the Heights, less than a mile from Main Street. Over the summer, more than 300 volunteers helped clean up what Cotton calls an “underutilized” green space.

They built raised beds, picked up and recycled trash and began maintaining the community gardens block clubs and other groups start but rarely stick with. They’ve cleaned up the vacant lots around the park – ones that have burnt down or just fallen into

extreme disrepair – in order to take eyesores and turn them into assets for the neighbor-hood, according to Cotton.

“They’ve already planted a bunch of trees there so in 10 years they’ll have a big, shady tree grove there,” Delgado said. “That’s impact.”

The Tool Library was also involved in UHC’s recent movie premiere – a market-ing video created by UHC members and students from Buffalo’s Academy of the Vi-sual and Performing Arts that will promote the Heights to potential home buyers and renters. The video was funded in part by a $2,500 grant for a community development project from Independent Health.

Cotton, along with other members of UHC and Urban Collective, also created a “Guide to the Heights” that helps UB stu-dents – most notably international students who don’t own cars – realize the walkability of the Heights and what the neighborhood has to offer. The guide features doctors’ offices, fitness centers, grocery stores and shops – all within walking distance of South Campus. Students don’t necessarily need a car – just a willingness to explore.

“A lot of [students] live on North Cam-pus and that’s all they know for two years of the city,” Cotton said. “I don’t think that’s a good representation of the region.”Commitment to the City of Light

Cotton was born and raised in Western New York. He didn’t have many visits out of his rural, country-like suburb, but the few experiences he had – like going to Sabres hockey games or visiting the Albright-Knox Art Gallery – drew him to urban planning.

“Growing up, I took occasional trips into the city and it always seemed like it was so different, but there was so much going on,” Cotton said. “The contrast between the two sort of attracted me to see what the city was all about. I can’t imagine living out [in Colden] now; it’s so weird. Our parents’ generation just wanted to get away and have their own, little private worlds where they didn’t have to run into other people. But I think our generation wants something dif-ferent than that.”

He started his undergraduate career at UB as an international studies and linguistics major. During his junior year, he chose to spend a summer studying abroad in Mont-pellier, France. European cities are radically different from American cities – not only in culture but also in infrastructure, transpor-tation systems and development patterns, according to Cotton. These differences in-spired him to try urban planning post-grad-uation.

“I couldn’t believe there was this totally different way to imagine how the city and how a region would work,” he said. “I just thought why can’t we have this in Buffalo? Why can’t we have this in the U.S.?”

He sees Buffalo as a city with potential, and he wants other students who may not be from the community to see it, too. Besides the Tool Library, Cotton has done extensive work throughout the Buffalo community as a whole.

Just this past summer, Cotton was in-volved in a preservationist movement to save Old North, the historic administrative headquarters of Lackawanna’s Bethlehem Steel Corporation.

The 111-year-old Beaux Arts-style building was slated for demolition in May, and Cotton had just finished his thesis, which coincidentally featured the property. Preservationists and activists were able to use his research to push forward the process of listing it on the National Register of His-toric Places.

“There are a lot of really beautiful buildings and architecture in Buffalo, and that’s great, but I don’t think it’s necessar-ily just the buildings that matter,” Cotton said. “It’s the stories they tell and the eras they represent. Buffalo was a very different city 100 years ago. Once those buildings are gone, you sort of lose that legacy and those are the sort of things that define a city and give it uniqueness and give it a personality.”

Cotton still lives in the Heights on Ty-ler Street, and he works as a project man-ager at the Urban Design Project, a center within the UB School of Architecture and Planning that is devoted to service, teaching and research in the urban design field. He hopes to someday create his own develop-ment company in the City of Buffalo, and he wants to make a career of rehabilitating vacant buildings to make an impact on the city’s neighborhoods.

“I just think there’s so much potential in Buffalo,” Cotton said. “I just keep telling people Buffalo is the Portland of the East because it has that progressive bent and has that quirky, weird characteristic that cities need to stay unique. Buffalo is just doing its own thing, and I think people should respect that and enjoy it.”

Cotton – when not biking or playing bocce and croquet around Buffalo in be-tween trying to eat and sleep – can be found Saturdays and Sundays ripping up carpets and tearing down walls in the Tool Library on West Northrup.

Email: [email protected]

Continued from page 1: Tools for change

Page 7: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

ubspectrum.com7Monday, November 5, 2012

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Sr. Jeanne File Memorial Art History Lecture SeriesDaemen Visual & Performing Arts Director Dr. Laura Sommer will interview visual artist Charles Clough

A Conversation with Charles CloughFounding Member of Hallwalls

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-nov. 21) -- When you are put on the spot today you're go-ing to want to acquit yourself well -- but it may require a little more thought than anticipated.

SAgITTARIUS (nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Your reaction to another's efforts may not be taken in the right way. Do what you can to ease any hard feelings quickly.

CAPRICORn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Someone you think you know well is likely to reveal a new facet of his or her own personality -- and this reflects very well on you!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Safety and security are issues you cannot overlook today, especially when you are working in and around the home.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) -- You'll want to keep accurate records -- of miles, of dollars spent, of people you meet. Everything is worth remembering.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Experimentation can pay off, but you must accept the fact that certain resulting dangers cannot be avoided.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- What you want may not be available to you right now -- though that may only serve to increase your desire. It's certainly not impossible!

gEMInI (May 21-June 20) -- When it comes time to share your feelings with another, you'll want to choose your words with great care. Sen-sitivity is the key.

CAnCER (June 21-July 22) -- You'll receive an invitation that requires you to change plans in order to accommodate what is requested.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- What is considered an error by some is likely to be considered an accidental triumph to others. How it affects you may not yet be known.

VIRgO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- You will be required to take action that does not come naturally to you -- but once you get it done, the benefits will be clear.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- You may want to imitate another as you try something you have never before attempted. You can surely learn the basics this way.

1 Lobster's pincer

5 Hawaiian skirt material

10 Nose-wrinkling stimulus

14 Alphabetic symbol of yore

15 Symphonically slow

16 Handle hassles

17 Hand cream ingredient

18 Not bottled

19 2000 title role for Julia

20 Content of some shells

22 Contaminate, as water

23 Hoped-for response to "Will you marry me?"

24 Spooky meetings

26 Readily flexible

30 Kind of suit or engineer

31 Words after "bend" or "lend"

32 Carbon-dating estimate

33 It may be big or bright

37 "It's fine as it is"

38 Wrecks

40 Trail mix components

41 Tornado-riding dog

42 ___ Arbor, Mich.

43 Hardwood tree

44 Unwanted sound

46 Like a farm smell

47 Permission to search

50 Tit for ___

51 Emotionally distant

52 Lid colorer

58 Ballet outfit

59 New Zealand aborigine

60 "All ___!" (court phrase)

61 Plumber's challenge

62 Bring forth

63 Hardly height-challenged

64 Unlikely fable loser

65 ___ Cup (golf trophy)

66 Parking-meter feature

1 Rugged outcropping

2 A real doozy

3 Author credited on many poems

4 Turn on the waterworks

5 Menacing look

6 Rips to pieces

7 Start a hand

8 Aries or Scorpio, e.g.

9 Dip, as bread in gravy

10 Titanic, for example

11 Like some Greek columns

12 Offer a thought

13 Payments to a landlord

21 Open hearing, in law

22 James Clavell best seller "___-Pan"

25 Times for celebrating

26 Have stamina

27 Look ___ (explore)

28 Athletic competition

29 LSU site

30 "Dressed to Kill" star Michael

34 Song for two

35 Inscribe indelibly

36 Covered with soot, e.g.

38 Drought ender

39 Wavering

43 Something to draw

45 Clumsy person

46 Not as complicated

47 Wrist timepiece

48 Bebop follower of the 1950s?

49 Apache topper

50 Third monastic hour

53 "___ better watch out ..."

54 They may be fine or performing

55 "___ M for Murder"

56 It was formerly Christiania

57 Whip mark

59 The sea, to the French

Page 8: The Spectrum Volume 62 Issue 28

ubspectrum.com8 Monday, November 5, 2012

Sports

season openervs. princeton

senior dayvs. western michigan

ub students get in free with valid id

final home matchvs. kent state

triple-header | this saturday | November 10 | be there!

briNg the Noise!ub studeNts

12 NooN 3:30pm 7:30pmmeN’s basketball football volleyball

UB_ath-Spectrum 20121110.indd 1 11/1/12 11:55 AM

JON GAGNONAsst. Sports Editor

It had been nearly a calendar year since the football team had defeated another FBS program. In those eight games, the Bulls have lost leads, come back from large deficits only to fall short and sim-ply been blown out.

On Saturday, the weight of that streak evaporated with just one kick.

Buffalo’s (2-7, 1-4 Mid-American Conference) hopes fell on the right foot of sophomore kicker Patrick Clarke, and he came through in the clutch. With time expiring, his 47-yard field goal proved to be the difference, as the Bulls were able to clip Miami Ohio (4-5, 3-2 MAC) by a 27-24 score at UB Stadium.

After all the missed plays go-ing against Buffalo this season, it was a victory that was needed, ac-cording to the team.

“I couldn’t be more proud of my kids,” said head coach Jeff Quinn. “It’s a long overdue feeling in victory for our program, and it’ll go down in the history books as one of the best endings at a football game here at UB.”

It was an ending to a game that featured a multitude of un-likely plays.

The Bulls lined up for a 50-yard field goal attempt after a stalled drive midway through the fourth quarter. Things looked dire when the snap was botched, but third-string freshman quarterback Tony Daniel rolled out to the right in an effort to keep the play alive. Daniel got rid of the ball just be-fore taking a hit from Miami’s D.J. Brown and it landed in the hands of sprawled-out junior tight end Alex Dennison for a Bulls first down.

Two plays later, freshman quarterback Joe Licata threw a rocket down the seam to double-covered junior wide out Free Lee,

who somehow came up with the ball for a 21-yard touchdown. The Bulls led 24-17 with 5:36 left on the clock.

The show was just getting started.

It was the RedHawks’ turn to show the Bulls what magic they possessed. Led by their heralded quarterback Zac Dysert, they marched down the field and sur-vived a few third-down situations on the way.

The Bulls’ ‘D,’ which held the Miami offense in check for most of the game, made what looked to be the play of the game. On first and 10 on the Bulls’ 17-yard line, sophomore linebacker Lee Skinner corralled Dysert for a 10-yard sack, which eventually led to a fourth and 20 for Miami. Then Dysert threaded the needle on a long pass to the sideline, a 21-yard

completion. The next play, Dys-ert hooked up with wide receiver Nick Harwell for the pair’s third touchdown of the game, tying the game with 23 seconds left.

But freshman running back Devin Campbell and the Bulls’ special teams unit decided over-time would not determine the fate of this game.

Campbell blew up the Red-Hawks’ kickoff coverage unit as he returned the following kickoff 47 yards to the Miami 35-yard line, leaving plenty of room for Clarke to drill a game-winning field goal.

With two seconds left on the clock, Clarke lined up for a 47-yarder to ice the game.

“As soon as I kicked it, I knew it was good,” Clarke said.

The celebration was immedi-ate, as the team mobbed a sprint-ing Clarke, who tried to make it to

the other side of the field to avoid the dog pile.

“The close ones are the best ones,” said junior running back Branden Oliver. “To have two sec-onds left, and to see that ball go in the uprights, and to see Pat run, those are the best wins.”

It marked an eventful first ca-reer start at quarterback for Lica-ta. The freshman from local Wil-liamsville South High School was at the helm of the Bulls’ offense, replacing junior quarterback Alex Zordich. According to Licata, he felt comfortable, despite starting a game for the first time in two years.

“At the quarterback position, you’re always in that spot of be-ing the leader on that field,” Licata said. “These guys really believed in me today, and I drew a lot of confidence from them.”

Patty IceBulls pull off victory on Clarke’s last-second FG

Continued on page 5

NATHANIEL SMITHSenior Sports Editor

Well, it finally hap-pened. The Bulls have

won against a Foot-ball Bowl Subdivi-

sion opponent for the first time in just under a year.

There were many clutch performanc-es in what was an eventful game, including junior running back Branden Oliver’s 199 yards on the ground, freshman quarter-back Tony Daniel’s big throw in the fourth quarter off a botched field goal attempt and sophomore kicker Patrick “Patty Ice” Clarke’s two field goals, including the game winner. Those can’t be ignored.

But the big story was the debut of the freshman quarterback.

For weeks, the storyline has been whether Joe Licata will get the chance to start for the Bulls over incumbent starter, junior Alex Zordich. This week, with Zor-dich nursing bruised ribs, the City of Buf-falo got its wish. It finally got to see one of its own – he starred at nearby Williamsville South High School– play close to home.

And even though the numbers weren’t tremendous overall – he com-pleted 13 of 24 passes for 127 yards and two touchdowns and an interception – his poise was truly impressive on Saturday.

In general, I tend to look at body lan-guage more than numbers. After all, foot-ball is a game that is as mental as physi-cal, especially at the quarterback position. Judging by those criteria, Licata passed the test.

He stood tall, stepped up in the pock-et, never looked frightened by the mass of white jerseys swarming around him and kept his head up to find a receiver down the field after his original read was cov-ered. When the pocket collapsed, he was willing to stay patient, not rushing throws, and waiting until the last possible second to make a decision. More often than not, it was the right one.

Despite a few missed opportuni-ties, which will happen with any fresh-man passer, those throws were on point. One sticks out in my mind. A touchdown pass to junior wide receiver Fred Lee, a 21-yard laser that was, quite honestly, the best throw I’ve seen all season from any Buffalo quarterback. It also came at a criti-cal time, as he was locked in a duel in the second half with Miami quarterback Zac Dysert, whom, according to many, will be playing on Sundays in his future.

For a freshman quarterback to come in and do all those things is amazing. The team that played on Saturday was slightly different than the team that has fought and scrapped in the previous seven games. He seemingly breathed new life into the Bulls.

In the post-game press conference, head coach Jeff Quinn was extremely proud of the rookie signal-caller. While Licata answered questions from the me-dia and said all the right things and gave thanks to the older guys for having such faith in him, Quinn was off in the distance to the left of the players with the biggest smile on his face, like a proud father who witnessed his son grow up. Could it have been coincidental? Perhaps.

But he wasn’t the only one who felt this way. When Oliver was asked if he had confidence in Licata going in, he quickly said he knew Licata was going to be all right because he came in last year as a red-shirt.

Do we put any stock into what these guys said, or do we leave that up to Quinn and the players just saying the right things to the media? Who knows for certain if that’s the case.

And it leaves us with the big question, the elephant in the room: Will Licata be-come the Lou Gehrig to Zordich’s Wally Pipp, taking over as the quarterback even when the junior heals up?

The next few weeks will be intriguing, and for a team that will eventually finish under .500, that’s not a bad thing. But that question can be answered later on. For now, just enjoy the win. It’s been a while.

The naturalLicata’s first start proves he

is ready to play full time

Email: [email protected]

NICK FISCHETTI /// THE SPECTRUM

Sophomore kicker Patrick Clarke (45) drilled home a game-winning 47-yard field goal to lift the Bulls over Miami Ohio on Saturday.

OWEN O’BRIENStaff Writer

It was as cut and dry as it gets for the men’s soccer team. Win, and advance to its third consecutive Mid-American Conference tournament. Lose, and its season comes to an end.

The Bulls (5-11-1, 3-4 MAC) hosted Northern Illinois (6-9-3, 4-2-1 MAC) in their season finale at a cold, wet UB Stadium on Friday night. Buffalo had fought and clawed its way back to playoff contention, after winning its previous three matches. Only one win separated the team from postseason play.

But the slick field and howling winds made it tough for Buffalo to do much offensively as it struggled throughout the first half. The Bulls ultimately finished on the wrong side of a postseason berth, falling to the Huskies 1-0.

“The boys did well in the sec-ond half, despite playing on tired legs with two games in three days, which is awful tough in a playoff chase,” said head coach David Hesch. “I wish the seniors the best; they played well today, but at the end of the day, it just wasn’t enough.”

Northern Illinois came out at-tacking and was able to capitalize midway through the first half. In the 28th minute, Huskies’ forward

Gael Rivera took the ball from the right goal line and found forward Karim Darbaki, who drilled the ball into the upper left corner of the net past senior goalkeeper Jonathan Viscosi for what would be the game winner. Viscosi finished with four saves on the evening.

Although the Bulls were out-shot 6-4 in the first half, they had put all four of their shots on goal. In the

31st minute, senior forward Maksym Kowal came storming down the mid-dle of the field, firing a shot on net, but was turned away by the charging Northern Illinois goalkeeper.

The Bulls changed up their at-tack after the first half. They brought an extra man up on offense and fought for the ball, creating multiple opportunities.

“Our philosophy in the second half was to press them with two guys up top and get turnovers and put shots on net,” Hesch said. “I thought we had three or four quality chances to get some goals, and I wish one went in but it didn’t.”

Senior midfielder Patrick Ryan was all over the field for the Bulls in the second half, creating and setting up quality shots.

In the 80th minute, Ryan fired a ball off a Buffalo corner, but the Northern Illinois defense turned it away before it could reach the net. Just minutes before, Ryan found ju-nior midfielder Richard Craven cut-ting to the net. Craven’s shot went just right and rolled out of play. These were Buffalo’s last quality chances of forcing overtime and ex-tending its season.

Kowal, Viscosi and Ryan make up three of Buffalo’s six graduating seniors. Forward Joey Merlo and defenders Matthew Chereson and Risto Latti also played their last game in a Bulls uniform.

Viscosi will graduate from Buf-falo with the ninth-most career saves (158) in UB history and also finishes in the top 10 for career goals-against average.

Email: [email protected]

Spoiled comebackBulls fall short, men’s soccer season comes to an end

REIMON BHUYAN /// THE SPECTRUM

Junior forward Richard Craven (8), senior forward Maksym Kowal (9) and the Bulls couldn't get a necessary win against defenseman Charlie Oliver (15, black) and Northern Illinois.