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Buffalo, New York www. ubspectrum .com
The independent student publication of the University at Buffalo
W EDN ESDAY EDI T ION December 1, 2010 Volume 60 Issue 36
Armed Robbery on South Campus UB Student Robbed at Gunpoint Outside SBI Safety Shuttle AMANDA JONAS Asst. News Editor
A student at UB was held at gunpoint in the Hayes Annex of South Campus at 6:29 p.m. on Monday night next to an SBI shuttle. The suspect, a black male, approximately 21 years old, and 5-foot-9 to 5-foot-10, pointed a silver handgun at the victim and ordered him to hand over his cell phone and wallet. The victim borrowed a passerby’s cell phone and reported the robbery, according to the University Police Department. Although UPD was on the scene within two minutes, students were not notified of the incident until at least an hour after the student was held up. UB Alert is a free service provided by UB that sends out e-mails and text messages to students and faculty regarding on-campus emergencies. The service, which students must sign up for online, is set into motion when either UPD or a senior administrator decides that students’ safety is somehow in danger and requests that University Communications sends out a message. UB Alert sent out a mass text message at approximately 7:38 p.m. warning students that a robbery took place in the “vicinity of [the] Hayes Annex on the South Campus.” Illustration by Aline Kobayashi
The UB Alert text message was joined by an e-mail that was sent out at approximately 7:37 p.m. alerting the UB community of the robbery and providing a description of the suspect’s clothing. University Communications was not notified to prepare a message until 40 minutes after the crime occurred. “We [notified them] 40 minutes into the [incident],’’ said UPD Chief of Police, Gerald Schoenle. “We had to verify what [information] we had because the description [of the suspect] changed.” According to Schoenle, the lag in alerting students was to ensure that the UB Alert message contained the most accurate information. However, UB students feel that waiting over an hour to send out an alert that an armed robbery had taken place is unacceptable. “I think that the [UB Alert notification] was sent out kind of late,” said Mary Kate Connors, a sophomore speech pathology major. “I think [UPD] is a little slow [at alerting students]. You only see them once in a while and this isn’t the first [crime] to happen.” Students also expressed concern over the discrepancy between the UB Alert messages that were sent out, the police report, and an official news release issued Tuesday morning. The suspect was seen running toward Winspear Avenue, according to the UB
Alert message. The official complaint report, however, stated that the suspect fled to the Health Sciences Library. UPD sent out an official news release on Tuesday, suggesting that the suspect ran off campus toward Main Street by the Main Circle. This sort of conflicting information is common with initial reports, according to Schoenle. “[A discrepancy] is pretty common when you get first reports. [When] we sent out those initial warnings we are trying to get the message out to people and a lot of times after the investigation [we find out more information],” Schoenle said. “Even our description was in fact a lot better in the final [release] we sent out because we had the chance to have to victim sit down and think about it a little better.” Schoenle admits that because there are conflicting reports as to where the gunman headed, UPD is not completely sure of his actual route. “We are not 100 percent sure where he went, but we do have video of him running off of campus,” Schoenle said. “My guess is that he ran to Winspear [Avenue] and then ran off on the sidewalk to Main Street.” A security camera stationed on South continued on page 2
Muggle Quidditch Takes Over Buffalo ELVA AGUILAR Staff Writer
The latest installment of the Harry Potter movie saga has had its fans forgetting about Muggle responsibilities and diving headfirst into Potter mania. Some camped out at movie theaters for the midnight release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1. Some students were seen around campus in Hogwarts apparel, but others have taken Harry Potter to another level, bringing the game of Quidditch out of the books and into Buffalo parks. QC Buffalo, the unofficial Quidditch club at UB, was started in the spring of 2010 by members of an already-existing Quidditch team in Buffalo, Ives Pond. In 2008, recent high school graduates, including now junior electrical engineering major Michael D’Angelo, thought of the idea for QC Buffalo. “We came together originally as a group of friends, and we’ve managed to continue our growth and maintain membership through word of mouth between friends,” said D’Angelo, the president of QC Buffalo. The game is broken down into two teams with three chasers (or forwards), two beaters (or defenders), one keeper (or goaltender), one seeker, and one snitch (or neutral player). QC Buffalo now serves as the non-competitive club in Buffalo and is open to all those who may be curious about the game of Quidditch. However, this year QC Buffalo plans to compete in a tournament it is hosting with Ives Pond as part of the Buffalo Winter Florious Festival in collaboration with Buffalo Rising. The teams plan to invite seven International Quidditch Association teams to compete in the first Winter Quidditch Tournament. Ives Pond currently has 21 members, with more than half being UB students, and competes in tournaments including the Quidditch World Cup in New York City. Recently, Ives Pond made it to the quarterfinals at the fourth annual World Quidditch Cup. QC Buffalo has 41 members that regularly attend practices, according to D’Angelo. The teams have had their fair share of naysayers, but that has not gotten in the way of the teams’ progression. In past months, both teams have gained a massive amount of media coverage that has brought them
offers for sponsorship and ideas from documentary filmmakers. “Most people are put off by the idea that we play a sport where we simulate flying by running around on a broom and look like idiots, but that is one of the things that makes Quidditch even more fun,” D’Angelo said. According to D’Angelo, those who were initially skeptical about the game became members of the club and haven’t looked back since. “I get a lot of strange looks when I tell people I play Quidditch, but I cannot find a single person in our club that stopped playing for dislike of the game,” D’Angelo said. “I would like to suggest to all of your readers to try playing. Every single one of them would have fun.” Quidditch has created a small community in Buffalo for those who gather at Ives Pond in Tonawanda on Sunday afternoons. The teams have also built friendships with other Quidditch players at the University of Rochester and the University of Pittsburgh. Both the Ives Pond team and QC Buffalo hope that Quidditch becomes a nationally recognized sport by associations such as the NCAA in future years. For more information, visit the QC Buffalo Facebook page or contact D’Angelo. E-mail: news@ubspectrum.com
Courtesy of UB Quidditch
Clinton Hodnett /The Spectrum
WikiLeaks Heads an “Attack” on the American Government Julian Assange, founder of the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks, revealed the contents of 241 U.S. embassy cables on Sunday, leaking the documents exclusively to The New York Times, Der Spiegel, The Guardian, El País, and Le Monde. Besides being labeled an “attack” on American integrity, the leak has also been called one of the largest sets of confidential documents to be released into the public realm. WikiLeaks defended its decision to release such records by proposing that the documents will provide a much-needed glimpse into U.S. foreign involvement around the world.
Over 250,000 documents have been disclosed, dating as far back as 1966 and continuing until February of this year. These documents contain communications between 274 embassies, as well as within the State Department. About 15,000 of the cables were classified as “secret,” leaving government officials in an uproar. This leak presents an unparalleled look into American political and diplomatic progression, addressing foreign and domestic governmental proceedings while offering forthright portrayals of world leaders. E-mail: news@ubspectrum.com
On the top bar: Tangled photo Courtesy of Walt Disney Studios and DaemonsMovies.com
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