SPORTS Students received Frozen Four tickets through lottery systems set up by BU officials and the BU Department of Athletics. pg. 3
FROZEN FOUR PREVIEW
34º / 38º MIXED PRECIPITATION
SPORTS History Lesson — Terriers ready for their 22nd Final Four, but not before looking back at their most impressive ones. pg. 16
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THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 2015 THE INDEPENDENT WEEKLY STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY YEAR XLIV. VOLUME LXXXVIII. ISSUE XII.
Tsarnaev found guilty on all 30 counts, awaits sentencing BY SAMANTHA GROSS DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
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PHOTOS BY MAYA DEVEREAUX AND JUSTIN HAWK/DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
1. BU clinches berth to Frozen Four with a 3-2 win over the University of Minnesota Duluth in the Northeast Regional final on March 28. 2. The Terriers celebrate after winning the program’s 30th Beanpot Tournament Championship on Feb. 23. 3. Junior forward Danny O’Regan holds the Hockey East Tournament trophy after BU defeated the University of Massachusetts Lowell 5-3 in the final on March 21.
No. 2 Terriers take 22nd trip to Frozen Four BY ANDREW BATTIFARANO AND CONOR RYAN DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
Before the 2014-15 season even started, the No. 2 Boston University men’s hockey gathered for informal practices in the late summer months, and finally skated as team when the calendar hit September. A year removed from a 10-win season, those not on Commonwealth Avenue did not have high expectations at that point in time for the team. But head coach David Quinn and the rest of his staff said they saw things differently. The Terriers (25-7-5, 14-5-3 Hockey East) were bringing back a solid corps of veterans and gaining a top-notch freshman class that was as good as any in the country. All together, even from the start, the coaches thought this team could make a deep run in the postseason. To those outside of the BU bubble, it might’ve been a crazy thought. “In September, as school started and the guys started skating together,” Quinn said, “as a staff, we kind of sat down and thought to ourselves, ‘This could be a special year.’”
Seven months later, and Quinn is looking like a prophet. The second-ranked Terriers are just two wins away from their sixth national title. They’ll first face No. 3 University of North Dakota in the semifinal game of the Frozen Four on Thursday night. Without balance, Quinn said, this team would not have had as much success as it has had in the 2014-15 season. “Well, obviously our team is very excited about being here,” Quinn said. “A lot of hard work, starting with talent, teamwork, commitment, great goaltending, great D core and a great group of forwards. We know how hard it is to get here. Our guys aren’t taking this for granted. It’s amazing what happens during the course of a season.” Freshman center Jack Eichel, whose NCAA-leading 67 points have him at the top of the Hobey Baker Memorial Award list, reiterated a lot of what his coach said. These Terriers are a tight-knit bunch, and that’s proven beneficial down the stretch this season. “I’ve been around a lot of teams that come together, and I can’t really mention
one that I’ve been truly closer with in terms of just going through everything on a dayto-day basis, good or bad,” Eichel said. “I was fortunate to play at the [United States] NTDP for two years, and we got really close as a group, but I never thought after that that I would get closer to a group.” After a regular season where the Terriers claimed the Beanpot and Hockey East title, the Terriers rolled through the Hockey East Tournament en route to a top seed in the NCAA Northeast Regional. It wasn’t easy in Manchester, New Hampshire, but the Terriers eked out backto-back 3-2 wins over No. 17 Yale University and No. 7 University of Minnesota Duluth. BU scored a combined four goals in the third period or overtime in those two contests, including senior assistant captain Evan Rodrigues’ regional-clinching goal over Duluth (21-16-3). Now, with 68 goals in the third period this season — 45.3 percent of the team’s total goals — it’s past the point to say BU prefers to score late in games. But with even stiffer competition looming, the Terriers will most likely not be able to rely CONTINUED ON PAGE 13
On Wednesday, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 21, was found guilty of 30 federal counts related to the April 2013 Boston Marathon bombing and the days after. The bombings and violent confrontations that followed left four dead and injured hundreds of others. Tsarnaev sat between defense attorneys Judy Clarke and Bill Fick, emotionlessly following along the verdict slip as Paul Lyness, a courtroom clerk, read from the long list. In day 19 of trial, the jury convicted Tsarnaev on all 30 counts for which he was tried, 17 of which carry the death penalty. The deaths and injuries resulting from the crimes are among the factors allowing for the death penalty. Among the charges were conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction, the use of pressure cookers, pipe bombs and a Ruger pistol in a crime of violence, aiding and abetting, conspiracy to bomb a place of public use and conspiracy to maliciously destroy property. The courtroom was silent during the reading of counts and verdicts per the request of U.S. District Court Judge George O’Toole. “There’s to be no reaction. There’s no physical signs,” he said. After Lyness finished, O’Toole reminded the jury that they are still active and requested they continue to refrain from social media, news coverage and discussion with anyone. “It is important that you avoid discussion with other jurors,” O’Toole said. Present in court were William and Denise Richard, the parents of Martin Richard, an 8-year-old who was killed when a pressure cooker bomb was detonated from a backpack placed outside Forum restaurant near the finish line of the Marathon. Also in attendance was Boston Police Commissioner William Evans. Next week, the court will continue to a second phase of the trial, the “penalty phase,” where they will decide the fate of Tsarnaev, who sat stoic throughout the day’s proceedings. To read more coverage on the Tsarnaev trial, visit dfpr.es/tsarnaevtrial
Candidates from True BU slate sweep SG Executive Board positions BY SEKAR KRISNAULI DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF
All four candidates from True BU, one of three slates that ran in the 2015 Boston University Student Government elections, won positions on SG’s Executive Board for the 2015-16 academic year, the Student Elections Commission announced Wednesday. True BU slate members earned more than 1,000 votes each and won an average of 49.65 percent of the total vote over candidates from the TeamBU and BUtiful Dreamers slates running for the same positions.
Executive President-elect Andrew Cho said he is extremely grateful and thankful for the opportunity the slate now has to serve the student body. “I’m really thankful for this campaign process because we’ve been able to make so many connections,” said Cho, a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences. “This speaks that we really want to embody and carry on True BU values, and it’s not about one of us individually, but the people and community that we represent.” About 40 campaign staff members from all three slates and supporters came to the
announcement dinner held in the George Sherman Union Backcourt on Wednesday. Marwa Sayed, the vice president of internal affairs-elect, said she felt “speechless and discombobulated” about the vote and that she wants to live up to students’ hopes for her slate. “It’s really great to connect with students. I got so many good ideas,” said Sayed, a sophomore in CAS. “I really feel now we can realize our expectations.” Nicole Simons, a candidate for executive president under the BUtiful Dreamers slate, said she wishes True BU the best.
“Neither of the losing slates are surprised,” said Simons, a junior in CAS. “We’re very happy for them, and it was a very fun election.” Other members from the TeamBU and BUtiful Dreamers slates left promptly following the conclusion of the announcement dinner and were not available for comment. The fossil fuel referendum question, asking students whether or not they would be in favor of the BU Board of Trustees divesting from fossil fuel companies, passed with CONTINUED ON PAGE 2