The Spectrum Vol. 70 No. 14

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VOL. 70 NO. 14 | FEBRUARY 16, 2022

UB grad student utilizes photography to debunk claims of the paranormal

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO, SINCE 1950

Back to the basics: how John Stutzman has earned the love of the UB wrestling team

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UBSPECTRUM

Maurice Linguist sparks radical change in his first full offseason as UB head coach

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Campus governance organizations call on university to distribute high-quality masks UB “does not have plans to purchase and distribute masks to the campus community” GRANT ASHLEY SENIOR NEWS/FEATURES EDITOR

UB’s campus governance organizations and unions passed a resolution addressed to President Satish Tripathi on Jan. 26 calling on UB to “provide a N95, KF94 and/ or KN95 mask to each of its employees” and make said masks available to the university community “for no cost/nominal cost.” Tripathi received the resolution, but “the university does not have plans to purchase and distribute masks to the campus community,” John DellaContrada, a university spokesperson, said in an email to The Spectrum. DellaContrada simultaneously acknowledged that “N95, KF94 and KN95 masks are ideal.” Leaders from both UB chapters of United University Professions, the Civil Service Employees Association, the Graduate Student Employees Union, the Faculty Staff Senate and the Professional Staff Senate all signed the resolution. The Undergraduate Student Association will also support the resolution, Will Eaton, the SA chief of staff, said in an email to The Spectrum Monday. The SA’s support comes nearly two weeks after Kathleen Kielar, the vice president for professionals of the Buffalo Center Chapter of UUP, said she had reached out to SA President Nick Singh regarding the resolution but had not

Markus Winkler / Unsplash N95 respirators have a close facial fit and are considered very efficient at filtering out airborne particles.

heard back. “We know that [the] omicron [variant] is extremely contagious, and that the virus has mutated to a point that cloth masks no longer will protect you [as well],” Kielar said. “I just don’t understand how you can start up the semester with the omicron variant going on and not even have mask distribution.”

Kielar has several suggestions for how the university could widely distribute highquality masks, ranging from rationing out the masks FEMA provides to UB’s medical and dental schools — which would come at “zero cost to the university,” Kielar said — to stocking on-campus vending machines with affordable masks. (KN95 masks are available at a vending machine

GSEU writes love letters to Tripathi asking for graduate student love GSEU asks for $22,000 stipends, broad-based fees elimination for all graduate students JULIE FREY SENIOR NEWS/FEATURES EDITOR

Eight graduate students piled into the cramped Graduate Student Employees Union office in The Commons on Valentine’s Day to write Valentine’s Day cards to

President Satish Tripathi and Provost A. Scott Weber. The cards — which were made out of cut-out hearts and red glitter — were emblazoned with various iterations of graduate students explaining what they said was their need for, not want of, a living wage. One card addressed to Tripathi read, “You don’t work 40 times harder than us,” referencing the difference in salary. Another card read, “You take my breath, every single day, partly because I can’t af-

ford full-time heating and my apartment is freezing.” Delivering Valentine’s Day Cards to Tripathi has been an annual GSEU tradition for at least “four or five years,” according to Lawrence Mullen, the organization’s president. While GSEU has won several small battles in recent years, including raising doctoral student stipends, GSEU leadership SEE LETTERS PAGE 12

in the Student Union, but a single mask, plus four anti-bacterial wipes, costs $7.) “And they [UB] do have funds,” Kielar said. “We know that they got federal funds just for this. They have the ability to purchase these masks, which aren’t cheap, and SEE MASKS PAGE 5

UB will continue to require masks indoors

The announcement comes after New York’s indoor mask mandate expired Wednesday SOPHIE MCNALLY ASST. SPORTS EDITOR

GRANT ASHLEY SENIOR NEWS/FEATURES EDITOR

UB will continue to require mask wearing on its campuses, the university announced in a campus-wide email Friday. The email came after Gov. Kathy Hochul let New York’s statewide indoor mask mandate expire on Wednesday, citing declining infections and hospitalizations. Hochul had previously reinstated the mandate on Dec. 10 to curb rising omicron infection rates and called for New Yorkers to wear a mask in all indoor public places, according to ABC. “UB has always said it would make changes to our guidelines in response to the course of the pandemic, and based on scientific evidence, the expertise of our faculty, and state and SUNY requirements,” university spokesperson John DellaContrada said in an email to The Spectrum. “What was described in [the] UBForward [announcement] is nothing new.” The university did lift a requirement that UB-sponsored events only serve “graband-go” food, which will allow normal food service to resume, according to the UBForward release. Email: sophie.mcnally@ubspectrum.com Email: grant.ashley@ubspectrum.com

Sai Krishna-Seethala / The Spectrum Graduate students sent Valentine’s Day cards

to

President Tripathi asking for universal stipends and fee elimination.


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