THE SPECTRUM VOL. 67 NO. 46 | APRIL 19, 2018
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO, SINCE 1950
Futuristic smart corridor planned for Main Street
> SEE PAGE 2
Spring Gala ticket troubles Students wait in line for hours for limited tickets
OPINION: SA needs to develop better ticket sale system for gala
Spring check-in: UB football Bulls look to build off last season’s success
> SEE PAGE 3
> SEE PAGE 8
Puzzling Pathways: Students concerned with UB general education topics BENJAMIN BLANCHET SENIOR FEATURES EDITOR
EMMA MEDINA | THE SPECTRUM
Hundreds of students waited in line for hours on Monday hoping to purchase a ticket to Spring Gala. Students found the long wait at times frustrating and many went home empty-handed after waiting for more than three hours.
ERIK TINGUE FEATURES EDITOR
Students lined up to grab Spring Gala tickets as early as 7:30 a.m. Monday, despite tickets going on sale at 10 a.m. Some students waited over four hours before tickets sold out by 3 p.m., but hundreds were left empty-handed. As of Wednesday, Student Association sold 689 tickets to the general student body and 24 tickets to SA staff mem-
Getting the lay of UB Mark Alnutt begins as new athletic director
bers, according to Lorenzo Guzman, general service manager for the SBI ticket office. The final Spring Gala ticket price for students was $30, a guest ticket $44 and SA employees $5.50. Students were allowed to buy two guest tickets. Tickets are currently sold out, according to SA President Leslie Veloz. “SA is doing what they can to increase the amount of tickets available, but as of right now they are sold out,” Veloz said. > SEE GALA | PAGE 6
Students, faculty discuss U.S. attack on Syria UB community responds to Saturday morning’s airstrike MADDY FOWLER NEWS EDITOR
New Athletic Director Mark Alnutt isn’t satisfied with the Bulls’ historic success in recent years and wants to take Buffalo’s program to new heights. Alnutt, who joined Athletics after two years as deputy director of athletics at the University of Memphis, started the position on April 11 and already has his plan in motion. “My vision for the program is student-athlete-centered academic excellence, social development and competitive success,” Alnutt said in an exclusive interview with The Spectrum. “We have about 130 staff members and I am setting up one-on-one meetings with all of them.”
Early Saturday morning, the U.S. and its allies launched over 100 missiles, targeting chemical weapons facilities in Syria. The airstrike was a response to an alleged chemical weapons attack on civilians in a Damascus suburb. UB students and professors are divided on the issue. Some support the strike because they believe Syrian President Bashar al-Assad needs to be held accountable for his reported use of sarin gas on citizens, while others are concerned the attack is a waste of money and could cause further problems in the Middle East. Assistant political science professor Jacob Neiheisel said President Donald Trump is in an “unenviable” position with Syria. “[Trump] has criticized the Obama administration for refusing to add resolve to the infamous ‘red line’ that it drew regarding chemical weapons,” Neiheisel said. “If he did nothing, the narrative would turn to his hypocrisy, [but] doing nothing might lend the public to draw connections with the Russia investigation and lead charges that he is, in fact, a puppet of the Kremlin.” Proponents of the attack will support it because the use of chemical weapons violates a longstanding international norm, according to Neiheisel.
> SEE ALNUTT | PAGE 8
> SEE SYRIA | PAGE 4
MADISON MEYER | THE SPECTRUM
UB Athletic Director Mark Alnutt sits down for an interview with The Spectrum Tuesday morning. Alnutt is hoping to talk to multiple organizations within UB to have an understanding of Athletics’ situation across Amherst.
THOMAS ZAFONTE SENIOR SPORTS EDITOR
UBSPECTRUM
Electrical engineering students can take “Communication Systems I,” a class about transmitters and receivers, to understand racism. Industrial engineering students can learn “Facility Design and Materials Handling” to understand ancient civilizations. Civil engineering students can take “Hydrologic Engineering” to discover more about global conflicts. The list goes on. Some students see an arbitrary connection of Pathway courses to their assigned topic. Computer science students taking this year’s Understanding Racism topic can take courses like “Introduction to Machine Learning” to fulfill major requirements. Instead of taking “Queer Theory,” biomedical engineering students can take “Biomedical Instrumentation” toward the Social Problems and Social Policies Pathway. Some professors say their classes relate to the Pathways, but others are baffled by what topics their classes are in. Majors like mechanical engineering and industrial engineering are composed of 128 credit hours and rigorous coursework. Many students can “double-dip” Pathway courses with major requirements, according to Krista Hanypsiak, director of UB Curriculum. But some students said UB needs to adjust the Pathways, which consist of Global and Thematic sections, each of which contains topics like global outlooks, health and humanities. The curriculum ends with the Capstone, a onecredit tutorial course for students to reflect on what they’ve learned through the Pathways. Sarah Wagner, a freshman environmental engineering major, said her department allows her to take Pathways toward her major. “The Pathways are pushing you to take classes that aren’t in your major. When I first saw it, I saw it as a way to take classes to get out of the way so I could focus on my major, which I kind of regret. But I just did what would fit for me,” Wagner said. There are over 1,800 courses in the Pathways this year, but next fall, students’ options will decrease by 600 classes, to roughly 1,200 options, Hanypsiak said. That’s a drop of onethird of all course offerings. The cuts, she said, came because students reported feeling overwhelmed by the number of Pathway topics. The new Pathway topics are broader, more inclusive and more reflective of the university, she said. Hanypsiak said several courses in the Pathways this year were offered only once or not at all the past two years, making planning a challenge for students taking the Pathways.
Most courses in 2017-18*: UNDERGRADUATE CATALOG
PATHWAYS CATALOG 1,689 total courses
4,541 total courses
HISTORY
(213 courses)
1 ENGLISH (96 courses)
MUSIC HISTORY (197 courses) 2 (95 courses) ENGLISH (157 courses)
AMERICAN STUDIES (151 courses)
MEDIA STUDY (135 courses)
MILLARD FILLMORE COLLEGE (118 courses)
3 CLASSICS (89 courses)
STUDY 4 MEDIA (83 courses) 5 POLITICAL (82 courses)
SCIENCE
6 ANTHROPOLOGY (70 courses)
ARCHITECTURE
7
SOCIOLOGY
THEATRE
8
PHILOSOPHY
PSYCHOLOGY
(97 courses)
9
CIVIL ENGINEERING
POLITICAL SCIENCE
10
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
(112 courses)
(101 courses)
(95 courses)
(67 courses)
(63 courses)
(62 courses) (62 courses)
*not counting OBR and UBC courses
Certainly biochemistry has applications, as far as I can tell, to everything in life. Whether it directly deals with any of these is a different question,” Hutson said.
Most offered courses in Pathways 2017-18: EE 383 EE 336 CIE 439 DMS 333 IE 327 CE 408 DMS 213
(Communications Systems I) (Fundamentals of Energy Systems) (Transportation System Analysis) (World Cinema) (Facility Design & Materials Handling) (Chemical Engineering Plant Design) (Immigration and Film)
> SEE PATHWAYS | PAGE 4 GRAPHICS | PIERCE STRUDLER