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SPIRE changes, expands options
it a t - whirl !
Preference can be altered during year By Alvin Buyinza Collegian Staff
For the first time, students at the University of Massachusetts have the option to include their gender and sexual orientation on SPIRE. Not only are students able to indicate their gender and sexual orientation, they are able to update this information over the course of their time at UMass. Students can log in to their SPIRE account and under “Gender and Sexual Identity” in the “My Personal Information” tab, they are given options such as androgyne, trans, bisexual and more. High school students applying to UMass through The Common
JESSICA PICARD/COLLEGIAN
Freshman Rachel Higgins and sophomore Alex Fischer learn to swing dance at the Ballroom Dance Team’s social event at the FAC, Monday, Sept. 18, 2017.
Application are given the option to indicate their gender and sexuality as well. These changes largely came from a group effort from the Stonewall Center, the University registrar’s office, University admissions and the Office of Information Technology. Genny Beemyn, the director of the Stonewall Center, said that they have been advocating for a number of years for UMass to get gender identity and sexual orientation on The Common Application. Beemyn said that this is also important in order to get accurate sense of the LGBTQ+ population at UMass. According to Beemyn, the majority of transgender students at UMass identify as non-binary, and see
SPIRE on page 3
Amherst College students, administration discontented Noose sparks serious debate W ill Soltero Collegian Staff
Only three weeks into the
school year, Amherst College has already experienced a possible hate crime, a controversial banner on 9/11 and a flyer viewed by some as anti-
President
Martin,
statements coming from the
District Attorney’s office in
“We kind of viewed that as a
Democrats thought the flyers
in a letter addressed to the
Bitty
president’s office and mem-
response to the noose’s dis-
group…making a broad inter-
were an important response
school’s students, faculty and
bers of both the Amherst
covery, no further action will
pretation
to the noose incident.
staff, referred to as an “act of
College
be taken by the college, see-
Mayers said. He went on to
“The
hate.”
Democrats.
ing as “neither the Honor
say that while the posters
Republicans decided that the
“I call on every member of
Republicans
and
of
Republicans,”
Amherst
College
“The noose incident is not
Code nor the law was bro-
were placed throughout the
flyers were about them for
our community to join me in
one to be taken lightly,” said
ken by any member of the
campus, the one in the win-
some reason. I think that proj-
condemning it and in stand-
Brantley Mayers, the vice
College community,” wrote
dow of their meeting room
ects pretty clearly on them-
ing with those directly tar-
president
Caroline
was put first, and intentional-
selves that they think that
geted by an act of this kind,”
College
ly faced inward so that those
[the flyer] reflects on them
wrote Martin in the letter.
phone interview.
Communications, in an email.
in the room could see it.
somehow,”
“You have my assurance that
“It’s important that we under-
Several days after the discov-
In a Facebook post on
“That says a lot about them.”
of
the
Amherst
Republicans,
via
Hanna,
Amherst
College Director of
Media
we are taking this act seri-
stand that the noose that was
ery of the noose, and possibly
September
ously and that the perpetra-
found on Pratt field was an
in response to the event, a
Republicans
that,
On the first day back on
of the flyers, Deatrick said
tors will be punished appro-
act of white violence,” said
flyer was posted around the
“While the flyers are related
campus, a tied noose was
he applauded recent events
priately.”
President
Amherst
Amherst College campus that
to another incident on cam-
found on the football field.
on the Amherst College cam-
In another letter, Martin
College Democrats Alexander
read, “THIS IS OUR CAMPUS,
pus…the
place-
After
by
pus, including a demonstra-
wrote that the action may
Deatrick in a phone interview.
NOT THE KLAN’S,” with the
ment of the text facing the
the Amherst College Police
tion against hate that took
be investigated as a hate
“I think the news shows us
image of a fist below it.
room…leads us to suppose
Department, multiple juve-
place on September 12 in the
crime,
the
that the campus is not neces-
The poster drew attention
this is an accusation of ACR
niles
Valentine
N o r t h we s t e r n
District
sarily a safe place, and that’s
from the College Republicans
being connected to the KKK.”
credited the Black Student
an
investigation
were
identified
and
conducted
by
the
the
College
said.
Republican.
of
7,
Deatrick
stated
deliberate
In addition to the response
Quad.
Deatrick
found to be responsible for
Attorney’s office.
something we need to work
following the possibly-inten-
The post went on to condemn
the incident.
Union and the Direct Action
toward.”
tional placement of one flyer
“white supremacy, the KKK
Coordinating Committee.
The event began the year
the college has primarily been
Although legal action may be
in the window of their meet-
and related groups, etc.”
with what Amherst College
one of condemnation, with
taken by the Northwestern
ing space.
Deatrick of
The response from around
the College
see
NOOSE on page 3
Thomas Suarez leads talk A Q&A with the nonprofit on Israel-Palestine conflict DKMS ambassador to UMass Author discusses other perspective By Caeli Chesin Collegian Staff
Author Thomas Suarez spoke to a group of nearly 100 on the third floor of the Integrative Learning Center last night on the subject of his recent novel, “State of Terror: How terrorism created modern Israel.” The talk started with an introduction, followed with an hour-long speech from Suarez and then led to an open discussion among the audience. The talk was co-sponsored by Jewish Voices for Peace, Interlink Publishing, Media Education Foundation and Students for Justice in Palestine. Suarez started by stating that the Palestinian and Israeli conflict is not the
irreversible conflict that it has been made out to be; the common goal for everyone is to reach an end to the conflict. “That’s why we’re here,” Suarez said. Within the next hour, Suarez explained the rise of the issue and what he sees as viable solutions. Throughout his talk, he worked to redirect the narrative the conflict has been given in the past, pressing on the point to re-examine what has already happened. He explained that Zionism, a movement originally for the the re-establishment and now protection of a Jewish nation—currently Israel—is not Jewish self-determination but actually the exact opposite. He went on to explain instances in which, in the attempt to make Israel purely Jewish, Palestinians were forced out of Israel in vicious ways. It was a time
where it was seen as worse to raise your kids in a nonJewish home than it was to be a murderer. “The fact is that the agency placed Zionists’ need for ethically-correct settlers above the lives of the people,” Suarez said. Near the end of his talk, he explained that while it may feel like the situation’s intensity calmed after the Arab-Israeli War of 1948, the notion is false; zionists, ethnic cleansing and terrorist attacks are still relevant. “Here we are seven decades later...how do we finally fix this instead of going around talking about it? How do we finally bring peace? Increasingly, it is clear that the only possible solution is what should have happened in 1948— a single, democratic, secular state of equals,” Suarez said near see
ISRAEL on page 3
What DKMS does on UMass campus By Abigail Charpentier Collegian Staff
Business senior Jennifer Santos wasted no time at the University of Massachusetts when it came to her involvement with Dynamic Kernel Module Support (DKMS) on campus. On top of advocating for the organization, she has recently started up the “Delete Blood Cancer DKMS” club. Abigail Charpentier: What does DKMS do?
try that matches blood cancer patients or people with a blood disorder in need of a blood marrow transplant or stem cell transfusion with people who are essentially a genetic match with the cancer patient, so they can donate to that patient. So, it’s really important because it’s really hard to find a match. A lot of people think that you can find a match within your family or with a sibling, but only 30 percent of people can find a match within their family, which means that 70 percent of blood cancer patients rely on complete strangers that are in the registry who are willing to donate for them. Essentially, you’re signing up to potentially be matched with someone and save their life.
Jennifer Santos: DKMS is an international non-profit organization that works to register individuals into the national bone marrow registry. This is the regis- AC:
How
did
you
get
involved with DKMS? JS: I got involved with DKMS in my senior year of high school. My principal came to me, said his wife was diagnosed with lymphoma and was in need of a bone marrow transplant and asked that I host a drive. She was having a really hard time finding a match because she was Armenian—part of registering and finding a match is ethnicity does play a role, so it was especially hard for her to find a match. I hosted a drive and registered a third of my senior class. This drive showed me the importance of hosting a drive and getting as many people to the registry as possible. So when I came to UMass,
see
DKMS on page 2
2
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
THE RU N D OW N ON THIS DAY...
India kicking out the Rohingya from supposed terrorism
In 2002, in Ivory Coast, around 750 rebel soldiers attempted to overthrow the government. B y Shashank B engali U.S. troops landed on Los Angeles Times September 25 to help India move foreigners, including M U M BA I , — More than 400,000 Americans, to safer areas.
AROUND THE WORLD
Trump derides North Korea’s leader as ‘Rocket Man’ WA S H I N G T O N — Wi t h tensions running high over North Korea, President Donald Trump on Sunday mocked its mercurial leader, Kim Jong Un, referring to him as “Rocket Man.” Trump, who is spending the weekend at his New Jersey golf property, said on Twitter that he had spoken Saturday evening with South Korea’s president, Moon Jae-in, and that the two had discussed Pyongyang’s latest actions, including the firing of two missiles that overflew Japan and a test detonation of the North’s most powerful nuclear device yet. “I spoke with President Moon of South Korea last night. Asked him how Rocket Man is doing. Long gas lines forming in North Korea. Too bad!” Trump said on Twitter. The White House was more circumspect in a readout of the call, saying that in their conversation, Trump and Moon had “committed to continuing to take steps to strengthen deterrence and defense capabilities.” Meanwhile, national security adviser H.R. McMaster said on ABC’s “This Week” that Trump was determined to contain the threat posed by North Korea. Of Kim, he said: “He is going to have to give up his nuclear weapons, because the president has said that he is not going to tolerate this regime threatening the United States and our citizens with a nuclear weapon.” Asked whether that meant Trump was contemplating a strike against North Korea, McMaster said: “He’s been very clear about that – that all options are on the table.” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, however, emphasized that military action would be a last resort. Interviewed on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” he said the Trump administration’s strategy centered on a “peaceful pressure campaign” against Kim’s government. “If our diplomatic efforts fail, though, our military option will be the only one left,” Tillerson said. North Korea is expected to be a major topic as the United Nations General Assembly holds its annual session this week. MCT
QUOTE OF T H E D AY “There is nothing I have more at heart than the ease and security of every part of the Country and its inhabitants.” - George Washington
THE MASSACHUSETTS DAILY COLLEGIAN
Rohingya Muslims have streamed out of Myanmar in recent weeks, fleeing a bloody military crackdown that a top United Nations official described as “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing.” Now the Rohingya are facing expulsion from another country: India, where an estimated 40,000 refugees are scattered amid a population of 1.3 billion. The Indian government on Monday told the country’s Supreme Court that the Rohingya population posed a threat to national security and that intelligence reports suggested some refugees had links to militant groups based in Pakistan. India’s Hindu nationalist government made the allegations in an affidavit arguing that the country’s highest court should not block its efforts to deport Rohingya refugees. “India is already saddled with a very serious problem of illegal migrants and is attempting to address the situation in the larger interest of the nation,” the government said. For several weeks, officials have said they would like to expel the Rohingya, who they say are in the country illegally. Human rights groups say such a move would violate international laws against sending refugees back to countries where they face persecution. The Buddhist majority in Myanmar, also known as Burma, has long been accused of oppressing the Rohingya, an ethnic and religious minority of some 1 million people living mostly in the country’s western Rakhine state. The violence has exploded since Aug. 25, when a Rohingya militant group attacked Myanmar police checkpoints, killing a dozen officers. The Myanmar army has responded with severe force, shooting civilians and setting fire to villages, according to accounts compiled by international human rights groups. As of Saturday, the U.N. said, 412,000 Rohingya had escaped over the border into Bangladesh. Myanmar’s government says about 400 people have been killed, nearly all of them militants. The Rohingya are sometimes described as one of the world’s most mistreated minority groups. Myanmar refuses to grant them citizenship, calling them interlopers from Bangladesh even though many families trace their lineage in the country back several generations. Thailand, which borders Myanmar to the east, has routinely pushed back boats carrying Rohingya refugees attempting to cross the Andaman Sea to reach safety in the Muslim-majority nations of Malaysia or Indonesia. The move by India means there is one less country willing to accept the Rohingya. Many Ro h i n g ya Muslims living in the overwhelmingly Hindu country arrived following an eruption of communal violence in 2012 in Rakhine state. There are pockets of several thou-
sand Rohingya in New Delhi, Hyderabad, the northern city of Jammu and three other areas in the country, according to Indian officials. About 16,500 Rohingya in India are registered with the U.N. refugee agency, which said last month that it had not been informed of any official plan to deport the refugees. The group lived in relative peace until this year, when right-wing Hindus in Jammu began putting up signs calling on the Rohingya to leave the city, saying they posed a security threat. The leader of the group said he would “identify and kill” Rohingyas if authorities did not take action. Current and former officials in Jammu and Kashmir state - the only one in India with a majority-Muslim population - said they had seen no evidence that the refugees were involved in terrorism or other major crimes. Omar Abdullah, the top official in the state until January 2015, tweeted Monday that “No such intelligence reports ever came up for discussion” while he was in office. But India’s central government said in August that “infiltration” by migrants from Rakhine state, “besides being (a) burden on the limited resources of the country also aggravates ... security challenges.” In the affidavit filed Monday, the Indian government alleged that the Rohingya were a threat to Indian citizens, arguing that the Islamic State could use the refugees to carry out attacks and that the arrival of migrants was changing the demographics in border states. The g ove r n m e n t argued that it was not a signatory to U.N. refugee conventions. But human rights experts said that sending Rohingya back to Myanmar would violate international laws against “refoulement,” or forcibly returning refugees to countries where they faced a credible threat of persecution. “The Indian government ... cannot return the Rohingya to a country that is engaged in ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director for Human Rights Watch. “If there are credible security threats, instead of condemning the entire community, just as the Burmese are, Indian authorities can prosecute any militant suspects by producing evidence in court.” Some Muslims viewed India’s actions as another example of the country’s growing intolerance for religious minorities under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a staunch Hindu nationalist. While Muslimmajority countries across Asia have criticized Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of Myanmar’s governing party - and some have called for her Nobel Peace Prize to be rescinded Modi in a meeting this month praised her leadership and expressed concern over “extremist violence,” but did not mention the Rohingya.
DKMS
DailyCollegian.com
continued from page 1
everybody said you have to join clubs and get involved on campus so it’s not the traditional club you want to join, but I knew this was where I wanted to focus in on and I wanted that to be my area of getting involved on campus. I looked into it and found that DKMS had hosted drives prior at UMass on a much larger scale, and I got in contact with the person who was hosting drives and I worked with her and she showed me what it’s like to have a drive on a larger scale. I kind of just got involved from there and loved hosting drives and loved working with everybody. And I’ve been working with DKMS ever since. AC: What are you doing at DKMS?
JS: I’m responsible for hosting
these donor drives on campus. They are pretty much set up for two or three days at a time on campus in tents and we aim to register as many students as possible to put their name in the registry. It’s a really simply process. They fill out a quick registration form with their basic information and what we do is take a quick cheek swab that gives us a genetic testing of their cheek cells and we send that to the lab and they figure out whether or not that person could be a match. So we’re just responsible for registering people during those events. We usually average about 1,200 students. We’ve had some larger ones with 1,500 students, which is a better goal for this year. Also, when people register it is completely free. If they are found to be a match, all of the medical expenses are taken care of. But we are a non-profit organization and it costs us $65 for every single registration. So if we’re registering 2,000 students, it’s a lot of money just to even get those people in the registry, but that comes out of our money. So what we do
is fundraise. Previously we’ve had a lot of events where we had about 200 people go to a rented-out club or bar area for people of age and we’ve raised about $2,200 every time we’ve done that. And that goes toward DKMS strictly for the purpose of registration and covering the expenses that are involved. AC: How often do you have these registering drives? How many a semester/year? JS: We host around two to three drives per year. We aim to have one large drive in the fall and one in the spring. Each drive is about two days long and usually takes place on a Thursday and Friday. Depending on the size of the drive and the weather, we typically register anywhere from 1,000 to 1,500 students over the course of those two days. AC: Did anyone help you with these drives before your club? JS: For the past few years, I have worked with Pi Kappa Alpha, and many of their fraternity members volunteer with us during the actual drive. Sigma Chi has also recently joined us, and this will be their second year helping us with our drive. AC: Other than registering at drives, what can students do to help? JS: One of the biggest things they can do to help is to register themselves. If they don’t see us on campus they can always go to our website, DKMS.org, and they can actually get their own kits sent to them. It’s a really simple process. They’ll be given instructions on how to do it, then registration forms to fill out and a quick cheek swab to send right back. We also just launched our new club this year so that people can get involved on campus and help with the drives, help fundraise, recruit
oth ers, get the word and our mission out and educate others on the importance of blood cancer—a lot of people have misconceptions about it. The club is going to be called “Delete Blood Cancer DKMS” and we currently have about 35 active members. This is our first semester doing it. We also have a Facebook page called “UMass Amherst Delete Blood Cancer” and we’re also in the midst of making a website. Our main thing is just making sure people are clear about why this is important and what blood cancer is, and how registering is a really simple process. AC: What is the main message you want people to take away from DKMS and what you do? JS: I guess I want people to realize the process of registering takes a few minutes of their day, it’s free for them, it’s really quick and a basic process, but also they’re reg istering to potentially save someone’s life. Most people rely on complete strangers to provide these donations or transplants, so it’s really important that as many people as possible register. The other thing I also try to tell everybody about is the huge misconception of the pain associated with a bone marrow transplant. Most of the time, I believe it is 75 percent, they’re not actually doing a bone marrow transplant, they’re doing a Peripheral Blood Stem Cell transplant, which is essentially where they take out your blood, take the stem cells they need and return it through the other arm. It’s a pretty painless procedure. And then 25 percent of the time they do the actual procedure where they go into your hip to remove the marrow. It has a recovery process of about two weeks. Abigail Charpentier can be reached at acharpentier@umass.edu and followed on Twitter @abigailcharp.
LGBTQIA+ and women face possible extinction in Capitol By Nathan L. Gonzales CQ-Roll Call
WA S H I N G T O N — I t ’ s been almost 20 years since Tammy Baldwin’s historic election, yet just one woman has followed her through the LGBTQ glass ceiling. And if both women lose competitive races in 2018, the next Congress could be without any LGBTQ women. While the lack of LGBTQ women in Congress is inextricably linked to the dearth of women on Capitol Hill, the story of lesbian candidates includes some close calls, quixotic races, and a movement still evolving to position more qualified LGBTQ women to run for higher office. “We have to figure out the secret sauce of how Tammy did it,” said Aisha Moodie-Mills, president of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund. In 1998, the Wisconsin Democrat became the first openly gay nonincumbent elected to Congress, with help from the Human Rights Campaign, the Victory Fund, and others.
But in the intervening two decades, Democratic Rep. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona (who identifies as bisexual) is the only other openly LGBTQ woman elected to Congress, meaning LGBTQ women currently make up less than half of one percent of the lawmakers in Congress - 1 out of 435 in the House and 1 out of 100 in the Senate. If Sinema leaves her 9th District seat to run for the Senate, the 116th Congress could be without any LGBTQ women in the House. According to Gallup, 4 percent of Americans identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (a majority of whom are women). But if Sinema runs for the Senate and loses and Baldwin loses a competitive re-election race, elected LGBTQ women on Capitol Hill could dip into obscurity. “It’s pathetic,” said LPAC Executive Director Beth Shipp. “It shows that there is more work to be done to have more equity and parity in Congress.”
Baldwin came close to having company in Congress in the years before Sinema’s arrival in 2013. In Baldwin’s victorious cycle, San Diego city Councilmember Christine Kehoe lost to GOP Rep. Brian P. Bilbray by just 2 points, 49 percent to 47 percent, in California’s 49th District. Two other LGBTQ women also ran that cycle, but lost by larger margins: Retired Army National Guard Col. Grethe Cammermeyer of Washington (who became an LGBTQ hero when she was discharged in 1992 after disclosing that she was gay, and was later played by Glenn Close in a TV movie) and state Rep. Susan Tracy of Massachusetts. Two years later, Democrat Gerrie Schipske lost a close race to GOP Rep. Steve Horn, 48.5 percent to 47.5 percent, in California’s 38th District. In the 2002 cycle, two of the most established lesbian candidates to ever run see
LGBTQ on page 3
THE MASSACHUSETTS DAILY COLLEGIAN
DailyCollegian.com
SPIRE
LGBTQ
continued from page 1
a number of non-heterosexual students at UMass identify as either bisexual or asexual. The data will also indicate the level of community sup port that bisexual and asexual students at UMass need, due to the fact that they are a big part of what the LGBTQ+ community looks like. The data will also be used to understand other demographics of the LGBTQ+ community such as race. Beemyn also stressed the importance of the optional choice to indicate gender and/or sexuality, as there may be applicants who do not feel comfortable answering the question, or may still be questioning their identity at the time. In the future, they also hope to use this type of data to look at the number of LGBTQ+ students who’ve applied to the University versus the number of students who’ve committed, and see whether the campus outreach to the LGBTQ+ community is reflected in their numbers. In terms of a greater sentiment of campus support, Beemyn said that this is a strong reflection of the University’s “UMatter at
NOOSE
In terms of the future for incoming students, Amazan feels hopeful for them. “I think that for incoming freshman when they see that, they’ll definitely see that the campus is inclusive and cool, but I think it can be a little misguiding,” Amazan said. “When you put your preferences, and we [UMass] are including everyone, but I think if you’re not doing anything active on campus to show that you care for these students, then that is kind of meaningless. I appreciate them doing it, but I just hope that they put some actual action behind it.” Amazan also mentioned that she would like for the University to do more for LGBTQ+ students, such as bringing back the Baker Hall’s gender-neutral bathroom, and supporting and advertising Stonewall Center events. “I would like to see UMass doing things that reflect what they say they stand for,” Amazan said. Alvin Buyinza can be reached at abuyinza@umass.edu.
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“I don’t think that these actually are contentious issues,” said Deatrick. “Flyers that go up that say ‘this is our campus, not the Klan’s,’ why is that contentious? It’s a perfectly reasonable message.” On September 11, the 16th anniversary of the fall of the World Trade Center, a banner was hung from Valentine Hall that read the words “there is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people,” a quote by historian and social activist Howard Zinn. Below the quote, the banner continued, “In honor
ISRAEL
UMass” campaign. Giving students the option to identify their gender and/ or sexuality on SPIRE shows that the University cares about individuals in their entirety. According to Crystal Nieves, the Assistant Director of the Stonewall Center, this new option will be an informative tool to better understand the campus demographics. However, she also noted her hope that, in the future, SPIRE will include gender pronoun options as well. Nathalie Amazan, a sophomore political science and legal studies major, also commented on the recent changes to SPIRE with the “UMatter at UMass” campaign. “I haven’t seen any real substance with the ‘UMatter at UMass’ campaign, it kind of feels like the same ‘No hate at UMass’ campaign when they don’t really have anything backing it up,” Amazan said. “I think that yeah, it’s great that you can put in your preference now, but I don’t really see the value in that as much.” Amazan continued, “it’s good that you have the option but I don’t see it as that ground breaking.”
of those killed and displaced by America’s so-called ‘war on terror.’” While the banner was reportedly hung for only a few hours in the morning before being folded to cover its words, its prominent location made it easily visible to students on their way to morning classes. “The College found the message deeply insensitive,” wrote Hanna, “especially on that particular day.” Hanna went on to write that college officials did not oversee the banner’s folding and removal.
The political messaging was clear to Mayers, who viewed the banner as an attempt to spark political conversation on a day that should be spent in remembrance. “You’ll see banners, but not much policy discussion,” Mayers said, voicing his concern for a lack of dialogue between conflicting ideologies on the campus. Will Soltero can be reached at wsoltero@umass.edu and followed on Twitter @WillSoltero.
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the end of his talk. “The end to the conflict begins when we deprive this conflict of its smoke and mirrors and when we acknowledge there is a single state.” During discussion, Suarez was asked to give his opinion on Noam Chomsky’s viewpoint that a one-state solution is not possible. While also acknowledging that Chomsky has often been very thoughtful in his many past arguments, he thinks his perspective on this conflict betrays all the premised thinking in which he had become famous for. “There’s some sort of disconnect between the person who has been so good on so many progressive issues, so good on the U.S. imperialism, and so good on the Israel-Palestine issue. Then, all of a sudden, to come up with this,” Suarez said. Suarez was also asked by a Northampton resident about the comparisons between the Israeli
military and the American police, in which he responded with the notion of solidarity between movements. He also added that no matter the bigotry and who it’s against, we should join together in solidarity against it. There were mixed views among attendees, some who questioned Suarez on his explanations during the discussion and some who applauded him for his work. “I believe this is a good discussion to have, even though this may have not been the best way to go about it,” said Aron Unger, junior public health major who asked the first question during discussion, pointing to certain claims made during Suarez’s original dissertation. Gabriel Moushabeck is a citizen of Amherst who came out to hear Suarez talk after having read his recent book. “I think the talk was right on. It was an excellent explanation of how terror began in the state
of Israel between 1948 and 1969. But, I really think the book should be read in order to really understand the complexity of what’s going on today,” Moushabeck said. Senior social thought and political economy major Celia Jailer, who has been involved in Students for Justice in Palestine since her freshman year, said she appreciated that the talk covered the perspective in opposition to the conflict posed as some age-old conflict between religious groups that’s been in existence for forever. “Work like this that’s historically based….helps refuse this Americanized position where we’re pushing this conflict away as natural or inevitable,” Jailer said. Caeli Chesin is a Collegian columnist and can be reached at mchesin@umass.edu and can be followed on Twitter @caeli_chesin.
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
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for Congress fell short. State Sen. Cheryl Jacques finished second in the 2001 Democratic primary in the Massachusetts special election won by now-Rep. Stephen F. Lynch. State Sen. Susan Longley lost by 4 points (31-27 percent) to state Sen. Michael H. Michaud in the Democratic primary in Maine’s 2nd District. Michaud, who won the seat in the general election, publicly came out as gay before running for governor in 2014. Atlanta City Council President Cathy Woolard lost a Democratic primary in Georgia’s 4th District in 2004 and businesswoman Linda Ketner lost a close race to GOP Rep. Henry E. Brown Jr. in South Carolina’s 1st District four years later. From 2002 to 2016, 21 LGBTQ women ran for Congress compared to 110 gay men, according to unofficial numbers by a Democratic strategist who tracks LGBTQ candidates. That disparity could help explain why there are five openly gay men in Congress: Jared Polis of Colorado, David Cicilline of Rhode Island, Sean Patrick Maloney of New York, Mark Takano of California, and Mark Pocan of Wisconsin, who won Baldwin’s 2nd District when she was elected to the Senate. “Lesbians don’t seem to run for office,” said Schipske, who also lost a 2002 race to GOP Rep. Dana Rohrabacher but was subsequently elected to the Long Beach City Council. “(It’s) the same thing that stops all women: Politics is still seen as a male profession. “We have to mentor and encourage women to seek public office,” she added. But sometimes, even when LGBTQ women run and win a majority of the vote, it’s not enough. Last cycle in Minnesota, two LGBTQ women split 53 percent of the vote in the 2nd District: former St. Jude Medical executive Angie Craig, who is gay, took 45 percent, while Independence Party nominee Paula Overby, a transgender woman, won 8 percent. Republican Jason Lewis won the open seat with a plurality, the remaining 47 percent of the vote. Craig, who would have been the first gay mother in Congress, is running again in 2018. One way to boost the number of lesbians in Congress is to identify candidates in more Democratic districts. Baldwin’s and Sinema’s victories both aligned with Democratic presidential victories. Baldwin was initially elected in 1998 to a House seat that Bill Clinton carried by 22 points two years earlier. She was elected to the Senate in 2012 when Barack Obama won Wisconsin by 7 points. Sinema, similarly, was elected while Obama was carrying her district by 4 points. Polis, Takano, Cicilline, and Pocan were also elected from Democratic districts. Trump narrowly carried Maloney’s district in 2016, but Obama took it by 4 points the year the congressman was first elected. That’s a stark contrast to 2016, when Montana Superintendent of Public Instruction Denise Juneau lost her House bid while Clinton lost the state by 20 points. Transgender women Misty Snow and Misty Plowright ran and lost to Republican Sen. Mike Lee in Utah and Republican Rep. Doug Lamborn in a Colorado Springs-area district, respectively, - two of the most conservative areas of the country - and Kristen Beck primaried House Minority Whip Steny H. Hoyer and was crushed 76
percent to 12 percent. Prior to 2016, other Democratic LGBTQ women have taken on Republicans in Idaho and Utah too. And Republican Karen Kerin, a transgender woman, took on then-Rep. Bernie Sanders in 2000 in Vermont and lost by 51 points. An important step in getting more lesbians (or any particular demographic) elected to Congress is to build a political bench. “Tammy didn’t just come out of nowhere. She worked her way through the pipeline,” said JoDee Winterhof, senior vice president of policy and political affairs for the Human Rights Campaign. Baldwin and Sinema both took fairly typical routes to higher office. Baldwin was elected to the Dane County Board of Supervisors in 1986, elected to the state Legislature six years later and elected to Congress in 1998. Sinema, who lost her first state House race in 2002, rose through the ranks of the Legislature after getting elected in 2004. There are at least 450 LGBTQ elected officials at the state and local level, 40 percent of whom are women, according to data of known LGBTQ elected officials compiled by the Victory Fund. And of LGBTQ officials exclusively at the state level, women actually outnumber men (92-89). LGBTQ women have made history outside of Washington. In 2016, Oregon Democrat Kate Brown, who is bisexual, became the first openly LGBTQ person elected governor. Three-term Houston Mayor Annise Parker, a lesbian, was the first and only LGBTQ person elected in one of the country’s 10 most populous cities. The number of LGBTQ female lawmakers in Congress could grow considering the dramatic uptick in women interested in running for office (15,000 this cycle compared to 920 in the 2016 cycle). “When women run, they win, even if they have to take more bites out of the apple,” Moodie-Mills said. New York Times columnist Frank Bruni struck an optimistic tone for lesbians in a July column “Voters Love Lesbians,” pointing to the 70 percent success rate of LGBTQ women supported by the Victory Fund, compared to 61 percent of LGBTQ men, up and down the ballot. Getting lesbians to progress from interested in running to filing for candidacy might be the toughest task of all, and the lack of congressional representation has some activists asking privately, “Are we doing everything we should to foster women running for office?” Baldwin didn’t need any convincing to run for county supervisor but didn’t see herself moving up the political ladder. Then her state representative, David Clarenbach, ran for Congress and privately told Baldwin he wanted her to run for his seat. “Are you kidding me?” Baldwin recalled recently. “I was excited and a little intimidated by it.” Clarenbach, now openly gay, is the son of National Organization for Women co-founder Kay Clarenbach and was speaker pro tempore at the time. “That was the nudge I needed,” Baldwin said. But everyone’s threshold to run is different. “If a typical heterosexual woman has to be asked seven times, I dare to say a lesbian or queer woman has to be asked more,” said Shipp, who believes LGBTQ women need specific plans
and training to address unique fears and trepidation. Women, LGBTQ people and people of color “don’t inherently assume we are the most qualified,” MoodieMills said. “Women are aware of the bloodiness of running,” said Ketner, the 2008 House candidate from South Carolina. “Lesbians know it would be worse for them.” “It’s a double-bind of being a woman and being queer,” Moodie-Mills added. The lack of elected officials practically forces lesbian candidates into outsider status, but it also means they could struggle to match the financial and political resources of better-connected foes. “Being able to leverage a powerful network is the most daunting,” according to Moodie-Mills. “At a time when politicians are held in low regard, sexual orientation and gender identity can be a huge asset,” Baldwin said. “Because anyone who remembers civil rights history doesn’t think it was easy.” But without a political network, candidates must rely on their own money or rely on outside groups for fundraising support. “You have to look at the economic inequality issue between gay men versus lesbian and queer women,” Shipp said. “There’s a different mindset because they are economically disadvantaged.” Gay men have a higher average income compared with lesbians ($56,936 vs. $45,606), according to a May 2016 survey by Prudential Financial, and the poverty rate for lesbian couples is 7.9 percent compared to 6.6 percent for different-sex couples, according to a 2015 University of Washington study. Polis spent nearly $6 million of his own money (and raised another $1.2 million) in his initial race. Maloney raised $2.2 million with preestablished networks after working for President Bill Clinton and two governors. Craig raised and spent nearly $4.8 million (including almost $1 million of her own money) in her Minnesota 2nd District race last cycle, placing her in the top-tier of Democratic candidates anywhere in the country. But her financial blueprint will be difficult for any candidate to replicate. In addition, some of Craig’s allies believe the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee made a strategic error in nationalizing her race in a district Trump ended up carrying. Ketner’s problem wasn’t the DCCC’s message, but getting the committee’s attention at all. “First, they wrote off the South. Then I was a woman and a Democrat,” Ketner recalled recently. “And, oh my God, I’m an out lesbian.” She described DCCC strategists as unenthusiastic until the final couple of weeks when the polls tightened. Then-DCCC Chairman Rahm Emanuel sent her a cake and some last-minute money. Ketner lost 52 percent to 48 percent. Lesbian candidates have an opportunity to raise money from groups focused on boosting women or LGBTQ candidates, but there is certain tension between seeking diversity in Congress and not emphasizing an issue on the campaign trail that isn’t a priority for voters. “It always boils down to all politics is local, having a ground game and connecting with voters,” MoodieMills said. “Always be able to answer ‘Why are you running?’ It has to come from fire in the belly,” Baldwin advised.
Opinion Editorial THE MASSACHUSETTS DAILY COLLEGIAN
“Questioning is the piety of thought.” - Martin Heidegger
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Let’s embrace innovation Every time some new innovation or ungod- chance that someone could physically force you ly technological advance is announced, people to unlock your device by grabbing your hand or speculate about its extreme implications. It can holding the phone up to your face.” That chance is of course the same as someone forcing your Dan Riley finger onto the Touch ID. If that is a concern, you are probably better off using a four-digit range from privacy concerns to full-on science passcode. fiction. An advance in the development of arti- Minnesota Senator Al Franken published a ficial intelligence will always be met with allu- letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook outlining numersions to the Terminator movies or iRobot. Last ous concerns about the new technology. Among week, Apple announced the iPhone X. Among them is the concern that Apple will collect bioits new features is facial recognition software metric data and sell it to third parties, or provide replacing the current touch identification used it to law enforcement without a warrant. As far to unlock iPhones. If your response to Apple’s as third parties are concerned, I would prefer announcement was to blink, then carry on with that my bone structure would not be sold to your life knowing that you are never going to companies seeking to market to me, but if some drop $1,000 dollars on a phone, then this article sunglass company advertises a product to me is not for you. We all applaud your fiscal respon- that would fit my face perfectly according to the sibility and general sensibility. However, if your iPhone X’s facial scan, that would actually be response was to bust very cool. As for the out an old copy of Fourth Amendment George Orwell’s “1984” concerns voiced by and to start hyperventhe Senator, I have tilating about the govfaith in our court ernment and/or shadsystem to protect our ow organizations spyconstitutional rights. ing on you, read on. Further, the fact that On the Orwellian Senator Franken is side, my thought is this: asking about the priIf an overbearing govvacy concern demonernment or shadow organization has set out to strates to me that the legislative branch of violate your privacy and collect information on government is addressing the potential issues you, including but not limited to the contents of that widespread adoption of facial recognition your phone and the contours of your face, they technology creates in a proactive manner. are going to get it. They already have it. Game In summary, innovation is good. The iPhone over. Checkmate. We are all compromised. If X’s facial recognition software is the coolest those theoretical organizations set out to use thing that I am never going to buy. There are that information against us, or if Apple abuses good people in the government who are going to the trust we put in them by storing our informa- advocate for our privacy rights. We are not headtion on their phones, I will be the first to pick up ing toward the dystopia described by George my pitchfork and we can all revolt together. But Orwell in “1984,” but we are probably heading for now, relax. Cool technology is cool, and you toward a world that makes greater use of facial may as well enjoy it. recognition. Apple is not the first to adopt this The more measured concern about facial technology, but they do have a talent for using recognition is that of individual privacy. Can and revitalizing other people’s ideas and bringother people get access to my phone through a ing them to the mainstream. In the meantime, fault in the software? According to Apple, the we all get to enjoy the next step in technological odds of random stranger unlocking TouchID progress. I think we will be better off for it. were one in 50,000, which became one in a million with FaceID. Further, CNET senior edi- Dan Riley is a Collegian columnist and can be reached at tor Dan Ackerman reflects, “There’s always a dpriley@umass.edu.
“If an overbearing government or shadow organization has set out to violate your privacy and collect information on you...they are going to get it.”
Editorial@DailyCollegian.com
Traveling through a changing life I studied abroad in Barcelona again, almost forgetting that I didn’t last semester and returned home to live there anymore. The months Beirut for four months of summer passed, and the temperature rose, people’s tempers rising with it. Ruwan Teodros August came and went, and UMass emails flooded my inbox. Senior break, making it a grand total of year was upon me. nine months I have been away from During the last few days before it the United States and the University was time for me to board yet another of Massachusetts. I remember sit- flight, I started feeling that sense of ting at the bus stop at Haigis Mall, dread coming over me again. I loved waiting for the Peter Pan bus that going to new places, but I hated would take me to Logan Airport, leaving places behind. I felt restless, feeling very sorry for myself (a eager to go at one moment, miserridiculous concept—I was studying able the next, desperate to stay even abroad and essentially embarking a little longer. on a nine-month-long summer vaca- I thought about the concept of tion). time, and how things are constantly As a child, I never enjoyed changing. With every second that change. I cried when I turned 14 passes, something miniscule changbecause I thought I was getting too es and you don’t even notice. old. I also had crises at 16, 18 and I have spent so many hours plot21, on the basis that things were ting my next move or destination, changing too much. I cry too much getting lost in my own anxiety and at goodbyes, creating become resentproblems ful of televiw h e r e sion series there are creators when none. This their shows time I end and will have a tantrum if the decided I would not be my own menu of a favorite restaurant of worst enemy. mine changes. I packed my suitcases, as I My friends and family reassured have done so many times before, me that nine months was a short and forced myself to be positive. time, in the grand scheme of my I embraced the change instead of life. I knew this, of course, but took resisting it. My flight was at 4 a.m., comfort in the constant reminders. so I was sneaking away in the dead I went to Barcelona, visited 10 of night, the neighborhood quiet, other places during that semes- no one aware that I was leaving. ter, spent an exorbitant amount of Another change that no one would money, gained 10 pounds, flew on feel. far too many small planes that I My mother was shocked that I didn’t believe were actually going to didn’t cry, as she usually enjoys land and slept in airport chairs that making fun of how much I blubber may or may not have permanently at the airport. damaged my spine, until suddenly I’m a senior at UMass now, and I found myself tearing up and pre- although we are only three weeks tending to flick dust out of my eye in into the school year, so much has the Barcelona airport as I boarded changed already. I keep expecting to my plane home to Beirut. be more nervous about graduating, Again, I sat at the gate feeling but instead anticipate entering the extremely sorry for myself (anoth- unknown. I like that I don’t know er ridiculous concept—I was going where I’ll be in nine months, and home to my two quirky cats, moth- I’m looking forward to being surer’s over-indulgence and grand- prised. mother’s excessive pampering). Another four months went by, Ruwan Teodros is a Collegian columnist and and I settled into my life at home can be reached at rteodros@umass.edu.
“I loved going to new places, but I hated leaving places behind.”
First response is important, but the long term is too Singer-songwriter Beyoncé Knowles spoke But while the number of natural disasters out on climate change at a telethon for victims has quadrupled globally since 1970, fewer of Hurricane Harvey on Sept. 12. “Natural people are dying as a result of these storms due to advances in emergency response meaJames Mazarakis sures. If we can handle Harvey and Irma, we can handle anything, right? Well, it depends. disasters don’t discriminate,” she stated, men- Part of it depends on if a relationship tioning several places around the world fac- between catastrophic storms and climate ing devastation. “We have to [be] prepared for change is an accurate assumption. The arguwhat comes next so tonight we come together ment rests on the fact that hot air can hold more in a collective effort to raise our voices, help water particles, and that the currents, which our communities, to lift our spirits and heal.” are driven by Uttering “climate change” is controversial water temperaon its own, especially so soon after Hurricane ture and wind Irma – just one recent natural disaster in a patterns, could string of hurricanes, earthquakes, wildfires become more and tropical storms to hit North America. But intense and Knowles invoked more than just a buzzword influence the — it is of utmost importance that our nation weather further. The Union of Concerned is making long-term plans to prepare for envi- Scientists warns that “we must adapt to the ronmental hazards like storms, flooding and likelihood that severe storms are becoming freshwater management. The longer we wait, ever more commonplace.” With this summer the more drastic and unrealistic measures to as an alarming data point, support for this curb them will be in the future. assumption is growing. The United Nations’ disaster-monitoring Even if this could be disproved, there will system observed that India, China and the still be monster storms, and sea levels will United States have experienced the most still be rising. The western coast of the United natural disasters since 1995, such as “earth- States, particularly California, is getting drier quakes, storms, floods and heatwaves that every year as rainfall varies unpredictably either cause at least 10 deaths, affect more between severe rainfall and drought. If noththan 100 people or prompt the declaration of ing else, we have not seen the end — or the a national emergency.” worst — of the flooding.
We have the privilege of shrugging these storms off because we have the capital to repair things for our relatively small population. There are many countries that don’t, and we can see how dire these situations become. In South Asia, where the UN said natural disasters were most common, 1,200 people died and at least 41 million were affected by August’s floods. Many of these regions are agrarian and have little revenue beyond their land, but even Mumbai, India’s financial capital, was “brought... to a halt.” It is also overlooked how simple heat can be a disaster of its own. In 2015, over 1,300 people died over the course of a week in India as a result of a heat wave. The number of days over 100 degrees has been on the rise in this region. Houston and southern Florida did not see as many casualties, but they could relate to the pain. Record flooding in Houston led to toxic water, further complicating many victims’ search for uncontaminated water. The most drastic solutions are only on the table if we do nothing. If we resign to a “let it flood and rebuild after” philosophy, floodprone areas like Florida and coastal cities will be a crippling cost to the nation’s livelihood
“It is of utmost importance that our nation is making long-term plans to prepare for environmental hazards.”
— and in the most unforgiving conditions they may become uninhabitable. If we do not harness smog-free technology and green building, residents in warmer areas will have to spend a fortune to power cooling mechanisms during the summer. Our most valuable natural resource — the water of the Great Lakes — will be sought by the international community if we do not work to build up and retain the global supply of freshwater. From a self-preservation perspective, we need to be prepared for the world we live in if we wish to continue to be a livable country. From a humanitarian perspective, we need to be a leader in innovation and preparation. If we are not, news of a massive hurricane will become all the more unnerving. What we are seeing in the United States — crippling floods and power outages — are a taste of what developing countries have been experiencing for years. Our struggles are as valid as they appear, but if we ignore the atrocious impact of the changing environment around the world, we will find ourselves edging closer and closer to a nation where it’s a struggle to survive the summer. James Mazarakis is a Collegian columnist and can be reached at jmazarakis@umass.edu.
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Arts Living THE MASSACHUSETTS DAILY COLLEGIAN
“Fortune befriends the bold.” - Emily Dickinson
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Arts@DailyCollegian.com
C U LT U R E
Fifth annual Amherst Poetry Festival: a blend of old and new A warm celebration of renowned poets By Edward Clifford Collegian Correspondent
It was a warm Saturday evening. The crickets in the darkness harmonized with the passing of cars and idle chatter of guests who had come to the Emily Dickinson Museum to hear poetry spoken aloud. Although the speakers had yet to take the stage, the Fifth Annual Amherst Poetry Festival was already well underway. The events officially began Thursday evening with a screening of the film “Emily Dickinson: My Letter to the World” at Amherst Cinema. The documentary on the famous poet was narrated by actress Cynthia Nixon who portrayed Dickinson in the 2016 film, “A Quiet Passion.” A poetry reading was also held Friday night in Amherst College’s Bassett Planetarium. Poets Dara Wier, a University of Massachusetts professor, and Bianca Stone read their work under a projection of stars. With similar events at the Hampshire College Art Gallery and Hope & Feathers Framing and Printing, the Festival was a town-wide affair. The weekend began bright and early Saturday morning at 6 a.m. with the start of a marathon reading of Dickinson’s poetry. For the 13th year in a row, the words return once more to the home where they were written. In a monastic-like setting, members read all 1,789 poems written by the
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE EMILY DICKINSON MUSEUM OFFICIAL FACEBOOK PAGE
Spectators, writers and onlookers alike were transfixed in the emotion of the evening underneath a sky of acorn string lights, striped tents and inspiration. Amherst poet. The reading, which lasts for over 14 hours, showcases the love that this town has for one of its native daughters. Illuminated by soft Christmas lights, the James Tate Memorial Stage architectonically consisted of nothing more than a podium, a few amplifiers and a pair of pumpkins. But there was an aura around the simple platform. An energy originated in the stage’s namesake, the late poet James
Tate, and flowed forward through the performers, penetrating the ears and souls of all who attended. This ambiance—coupled with the looming presence of the museum—set the tone for the readings that took place at 8 a.m. Sahar Muradi opened the evening readings with a mellow recitation of her poems. With themes of race, immigration and love, her well-crafted poems came to life with her voice that rose with
euphoria and descended into darkness. Muradi typically uses a diverse range of images, from fish bowls and subway cars to refugees escaping their homeland, to reflect on her own life. S i m i l a rl y, K ave h Akbar’s breathless inflection brought a level of complexity to his (often) punctuation-less poetry. His poems tackle themes of cultural identity in an era where being from the Middle East means being
siren was loud enough to stop Akbar mid-poem. Unperturbed, he laughed it off, joking that the siren was “like [his] mixtape.” Later on, he jested about how performing artists have enough power to captivate the audience even when simply taking a drink of water. Akbar’s final poem of the night was entitled “Portrait of the Alcoholic Floating in Space with Severed Umbilicus.” Prefaced with explanations of space gear and reminiscing about watching the film “Speed” with his brother, the poem reflects on events in Akbar’s life that seemed to come from an unbiased alien source outside of him. The said source touches on melancholy and loss and ponders what could have been. What stuck out during the finale was the brief pause Akbar took between the humorous introduction and the somber tone of the piece. It didn’t last for long—maybe 15 seconds—but you could see Akbar looking at the poem as if preparing himself to once again dive into the feelings that spawned it. It was a humanizing moment that showed the sacrifice creative writers endure to produce truly mesmerizing works. Sahar Muradi’s first chapbook [G A T E S] will be published in October of 2017 by Black Lawrence Press. Kaveh Akbar’s first full-length collection, “Calling a Wolf a Wolf,” was just released by Alice James Books.
“the other.” That is not to say that his poems are politically confrontational or condemning in any way. Akbar’s words celebrate connection, with memories such as a diner in Chicago that he frequented with his family and a lost romance with a childhood friend that still creeps into his thoughts. Akbar also candidly connected with the live audience outside his works. At one point during Edward Clifford can be reached at the reading, an ambulance edwardcliffo@umass.edu.
C U LT U R E
A sense of camaraderie charged student-run farmer’s market By Emilia Beuger Collegian Staff
We aren’t even halfway through September, but it already feels like fall at the student farmer’s market. Pumpkins sit near a tent as everyone tries to keep cool in the early fall heat. It looks like autumn, but it still feels like the last bit of summer for students. Two students, sustainable food and farming major Kyle Zegel and electrical engineering major Trevor Berry, played drums as students mingled about the lawn. Walking around the farmer’s market, every red and blue tent decorating Goodell Lawn was busy. Among the tents were The UMass Student Farm, UMass Permaculture, University of Massachusetts Hydro, UMass Freedom Cafe, SU Pop-up Thrift Shop, art by Abby Bonnanzio, jewelry by Renee Vartebedian, Sustainability Projects abroad, UMOC, UMass Society of American Foresters and the Food Recovery Network. While countless students at the farmer’s market came to browse and enjoy the fresh iced coffee provided by the Freedom Cafe, I had another agenda. I was there to collect my CSA farm share from the UMass Student Farm. After purchasing my farm share in April, I’ve been so excited to get back to school and have fresh vegetables every week for my apartment—and judging by the crowds, I’m not alone in my enthusiasm. I watched as the student
were quickly bought up by students. According to Yee, getting involved in the program is as easy as filling out an application on the Stockbridge website. “You don’t have to be in Stockbridge,” Yee said. “I’m a food science major and I was able to join the program because I love growing food and vegetables.” Five College Students are also eligible for the program. Produce not your jam? The UMass Freedom Cafe, SU Pop-up Thrift Shop, art by Abby Bonnanzio and jewelry by Renee Vartebedian offered options apart from your typical farmer’s market tents. The Pop-Up Thrift Store was my favorite surprise of the EMILIA BEUGER/COLLEGIAN farmer’s market. They had so many great vintage pieces, Sustainable farming students were overjoyed to showcase the hard work they’d put in cultivating vegetables all summer long. each for less than $5. An added convenience farmers unpacked their abun- munity and to students and Farm still sells crops in a of the student-run farmer’s dance of crops in their match- faculty around campus,” Yee tent next to the farm share market was the on-sight creding hunter green shirts adver- said. Unfortunately, there are pick-up location for anyone it card reader. The system tising the farm. You could tell no available farm shares for to buy. This week, they were works so that you can use that they were a tight-knit your credit or debit card to group of individuals who this season, but the Student also selling sunflowers, which purchase tokens that can in were genuinely interested turn be used to purchase merand passionate about what chandise at the event. they were doing. I also had the chance Matthew Yee, a junior food to speak with the woman science major, and Julia Opel, in charge of organizing a student from Mt. Holyoke the student farmer’s marCollege, commented on the ket, Xochiquetzal Salazar, turnout saying, “It’s great, we who is the Sustainability finally get to see actual people Coordinator of Campus who are going to be getting Gardens. our produce instead of grow Salazar works with UMass ing it all summer.” Permaculture and collabo “This is like the climactic rates with the student farmevent,” Opel said. ers to orchestrate the mar “This is the backbone of ket. I had the chance to talk EMILIA BEUGER/COLLEGIAN the program like the CSA and to her about how businesses giving our produce to the com- Spirits on the green of the Goodell Lawn were high last Friday at the farmer’s market. and groups can get involved,
as well as what the student farmer’s market is all about. The farmer’s market advertises through social media and email, as well as through word-of-mouth. If you or your group are interested in having a tent at the student farmer’s market, you’re encouraged to fill out a Google Form that is then reviewed by the market organizers. Chairs and tents are provided for vendors. “We’re really trying to create a platform for students to sell goods that they have either grown or produced to the community,” Salazar said. “We really want to have people from a great number of disciplines come together in this community space and make it a really vibrant, exciting and fun place on campus.” When asked what her favorite part about the student farmer’s market is, Salazar said, “The community it brings together. I think that’s really beautiful and special and it’s really special to have this student space on campus where people can play music and have fun and sell their goods.” The student-run farmer’s market puts emphasis on creating a warm and inclusive community environment, which is an extraordinary thing on such a large campus. I’m looking forward to countless memories, fresh produce and a sense of inclusivity— even in the smallest way— this fall. Emilia Beuger is a Collegian columnist and can be reached at ebeuger@umass.edu and followed on twitter @ebeuger.
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Maybe Eduroam never actually worked, and we all collectively hallucinated a functonal wi-fi.
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If you live in the Commonwealth Honors College, but don’t tell everyone on a daily basis, do you truly live there?
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Fun fact! The FAC doesn’t actually stand for “Fine Arts Center”, but for “Fire Ants Center”. It’s supposed to be an insect exhibit.
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cancer
Jun. 22 - Jul. 22
Eavesdropping isn’t your fault. If they didn’t want you to listen to their conversations, then they shouldn’t talk about such sweet gossip.
leo
Jul. 23 - Aug. 22
Whenever you feel down, just remember that there are a lot of people who have it worse, and you can laugh at them to feel better.
virgo
Aug. 23 - Sept. 22
Getting out of bed is hard, but how else will you read this great comics page? Oh yeah, and to do school stuff, too.
libra
Sept. 23 - Oct. 22
scorpio
Oct. 23 - Nov. 21
If your life had background music, it would be a lot more interesting. For example, just try humming the “Jaws” theme while walking.
The honeymoon period is officially over. Be prepared for classes to suddenly get super serious and much more difficult.
sagittarius
Nov. 22 - Dec. 21
capricorn
Dec. 22 - Jan. 19
If you can’t find any motivation to finish that homework, fear usually works for me. Either that, or do it out of spite.
Start thinking about your Halloween costume now. I don’t want it to be a disappointment like last year.
THE MASSACHUSETTS DAILY COLLEGIAN
DailyCollegian.com
FOOTBALL
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
7
FOOTBALL
Elliott case heads to 5th San Diego fans still sour about losing their NFL team Circuit Court of Appeals Chargers adjusting
RB’s suspension to be held up in court By Clarence E. Hill Jr. Fort Worth Star-Telegram
The fate of Dallas Cowboys star running Ezekiel Elliot is now officially in the hands of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals as U.S. District Judge Amos Mazzant denied the NFL’s motion to grant an emergency stay of his preliminary injunction blocking Elliott’s six-game suspension. The NFL took the case to the 5th Circuit last Friday and filed a brief with the court on Monday asking it not only rule on the emergency stay, but also expedite the appeal of the preliminary injunction and hear briefs on both issues simultaneously in hopes resolving the issue of Elliott’s status in a matter of days.
Noted sports law attorney Daniel Wallach said, “I’ve never seen that done before and it’s very, very unlikely.” The NFL has asked for a response on the stay from the 5th Circuit by 10 a.m. Tuesday or Sept. 26 at the latest. It is of note that Mazzant chided the NFL in going to the 5th Circuit before he had a chance to make its ruling, which he said he was unable to do so at the requested time of last Thursday because he was involved in a trial. “In its Emergency Motion in front of the Court, the NFL is complaining that the Court essentially issued a premature order by failing to wait for the arbitrator to issue his ruling and therefore, lacked subject matter jurisdiction,” Mazzant said in his ruling. “Oddly, the NFL is now seeking expedited relief from the Fifth Circuit without first waiting for the Court to rule on the identical
issue. The irony is not lost on the Court.” Mazzant’s ruling also brings back to the forefront the irreparable harm issue and the NFL’s argument that Elliott would not suffer irreparable harm if the suspension went into effect because he would recover any lost money if later court rulings found the suspension should be permanently enjoined. “It is well-recognized that Elliott will suffer injury if he has to serve an improper suspension while awaiting the resolution of the petition to vacate,” Mazzant wrote. He also added that the league has not shown any harm that will be done to it if the suspension is on hold while the legal process plays out. Elliott has played in both of the Cowboys’ first two games, against the New York Giants and Denver Broncos.
BASEBALL
What’s wrong in San Fran? Giants 39.5 games out of first place By Dieter Kurtenbach The Mercury News
SAN FRANCISCO _ No one around the Giants knows exactly what’s gone wrong this season. Sure, executives, coaches, and players can point to problems _ defense, poor hitting, key injuries, sporadic pitching success _ but no one can pinpoint exactly how all of those things came together to form this season from hell. This week served as a painful reminder of how much things have fallen off the rails for the Giants this season. Their opponents, the Dodgers and Diamondbacks, are so far ahead of San Francisco in the National League West standings that the Giants are barely able to see them in the horizon. At first pitch Saturday, the Giants sat 39.5 games behind the first-place Dodgers and 29.5 games behind the Diamondbacks. Add in the Colorado Rockies _ who reside in the second National League wildcard spot, 24.5 games ahead of the Giants _ and it almost seems outlandish to think that the Giants would be able to make the postseason next year. You can’t finish in fourth in the National League West and make the playoffs, after all, and what indication have the Giants, who are well-positioned to lose 100 games for the first time since 1985, given that they’re going to be able to jump the Dodgers, Diamondbacks, or Rockies next season? The Giants deserved the benefit of the doubt from fans for this season. Bad things snowballed and good things rarely materialized. It’s a season that everyone wearing black and orange will want to forget. And because the Giants deserved the benefit of the doubt, tough conversations were put on hold. But if the Giants find themselves double-digit games out of a playoff spot again next season, those tough conversations will need to come to the forefront. And it’s hard to see them resulting in anything other than drastic changes. Giants manager Bruce Bochy has been in the game long enough to have been part of some stinkers of seasons, but he called this Giants’ campaign “the most difficult” of his career because of the team’s preseason expectations of competing for a title. There was no reason to
believe anything different heading into this year. The core of this Giants team won three championships _ it was as close to a dynasty you can have in this modern era of baseball _ but this season has raised a fair question: is this core’s best baseball behind it? But even with that question looming in the background, the Giants don’t have much of a choice but to run the same core _ Posey, Bumgarner, Crawford, Pence, Belt _ back out there again next year. “We still have to build off the core,” Giants general manager Bobby Evans told me Saturday. “It’s really hard to go into an offseason attempting to change the very heart of your team. That said, we recognize that changes need to occur to help get us back and get us stronger _ that can come in many different forms.” Bochy echoed the sentiment: “It’s been one of those seasons when you think you’re starting to get some momentum going, and then you take another step backwards, either because of an injury or play,” Bochy said. “I think once we get through this, we’ll get all the guys back and we’ll get some things fixed here. It’s not a case where we fell like we have to do a lot.” But Bochy also noted: “We have to get better everywhere.” Every offseason, every team has the intent to improve their club through free agency and trades, but the Giants’ shopping list going into this offseason is too much even for the most cash-loaded team to procure. But again, they need to get better everywhere. Specifically, the Giants need a power bat or two. They need plus defenders at third base and all over the outfield. They need bullpen arms, particularly a lefty, and it wouldn’t hurt to land a fifth starter as well. Ideally, the team lands all of those needs via free agency, because when you make a trade, you have to give up something and the Giants don’t have much to sell. Evans said that he hasn’t specifically discussed with Giants CEO Larry Baer how much money the team has to spend this offseason, but even if the wallet is wide open, it’s hard to foresee everything being crossed off the list. For instance: the Giants were able to scout Diamondbacks right fielder J.D. Martinez (.298/.376/.681 slash line heading into Saturday) up close this weekend _ he’s the best free agent outfielder on the market this offseason _ but even at age 30 and with serious defensive concerns, he’s going to land
a deal worth more than $100 million. Can the Giants take on a contract that large _ Royals 3B Mike Moustakas might not be far behind him in terms of cost _ and still land quality players at all of their other positions of need? Seems unlikely. Make no mistake, the Giants will be active in free agency and the trade market this winter _ Evans knows all eyes are on him _ but ultimately, no matter how much work Evans does, the Giants’ 2018 hopes are pinned to its core players returning to their playoff-making, title-winning forms. If they don’t, pandora’s box is probably going to open. Simply put: If the core can’t get the job done again next year, it’s time to get another core. The Giants’ farm system isn’t going to produce one, so it’s upon Evans to make big, blockbuster moves to re-stock the minor league shelves. That means putting Bumgarner, Crawford, Panik, and even Posey, on the market. The Giants’ farm system isn’t going to produce one, either, so it’s upon Evans to make big, blockbuster moves to re-stock the minor league shelves. That means putting Bumgarner, Crawford, Panik, and even Posey on the market. (Pay heed to any Bumgarner contract extension negotiations _ the Giants would be fools to engage him before they know they have a good team, he’s their best trade piece) It means that Bochy, even after 11 years and three titles, has to come under fire. The stress of this season is starting to produce some cracks _ Bochy’s handling of the clubhouse this season doesn’t have universal player approval. Is he going to want to go through a rebuild? Will the Giants want him presiding over one? Right now, the 2017 season can be written off as a blip on the radar screen _ even the best teams have years where it all falls apart. But the Giants are, in all likelihood, going to attempt to win with the same formula _ and mostly the same roster _ again next year. The 2017 season used up every bit of the team’s goodwill with the fan base. You’d think it’d last longer, but it didn’t. And what happens if the goodwill isn’t re-established? Well, the most successful era of Giants baseball could come to a terribly unceremonious end.
to playing in LA By Kevin Acee The San Diego Union-Tribune
On a Wednesday morning in January, Dean Spanos was at a podium inside the Forum in Inglewood during the Chargers’ self-welcome rally when a bearded man began to shout vitriol laced with obscenities directed at the Chargers chairman. The interruption caused Spanos to shift from his default personality of uncomfortably awkward to extremely uncomfortably awkward. The scene went viral. So mission accomplished, right? Not. Even. Close. This was no ordinary heckler. Spanos ticked off the wrong fan, a guy who wanted to make sure he and the whole damn NFL knew they screwed over the wrong fan base. “People are saying what I’m doing is crazy, (they) would never go through it,” Joseph MacRae said this week. “But after living here my whole life and being talked about as a bad sports town with bad sports fans, how about us now? We’re doing something. I feel good about what I’m doing.” Go ahead and dismiss MacRae as some sort of jilted lover, a dude with too much time and misspent energy. But give him this: he isn’t just sitting back and tweeting vitriol. He isn’t sitting at all. Maybe you’ve heard by now, seen the pictures. Perhaps you’re even one of the 300,000 people a day who have passed the billboard message he arranged on the 405 up near Carson excoriating Spanos and the NFL. At the end of May, the 31-year-old MacRae started a gofundme campaign aimed at raising money for the billboards. By the end of August, some 350 people had committed a total of more than $10,000. On Wednesday, MacRae’s missives went live. There’s the one of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell with a clown nose and the league’s well-worn slogan, “Football is Family.” The word “Family” is written over with a series of dollar signs. Below the slogan are the names of the two cities the NFL has abandoned and the one it will abandon shortly: San Diego. Oakland. St. Louis. Another image shows Spanos and his two sons, John and A.G., accompanied by the text, “Fight for LA? LA doesn’t want you!” There is Dean Spanos smirking next to this: “Pay.
Your. Rent.” One of Goodell with this to the right of his face: No Freaking Loyalty And, finally, there is the image like a comic strip. It might take passers-by a few times to fully absorb the supposed interaction as Spanos and Rams owner Stan Kroenke stand side by side. To the left of Spanos are the words, “Hey Stan, excited for our new stadium?” And to the right of Kroenke: “You mean my stadium? You’re just a tenant.” Every 62 seconds, one of the five images is shown on the digital board, where it can be seen for six to eight seconds. Altogether, MacRae’s images will be shown 1,000 times a day through Oct. 3 on the board that sits in Carson, just west northeast of Main Street, facing west toward the 405 North. Beyond that, his message went international _ touted on the web pages of Sports Illustrated and Yahoo and Rolling Stone to the Daily Mail in England and a German sports web site called ran. If you’re going to be bitter, go big. “I am as salty as you can get,” MacRae acknowledges. “I am as bitter as you can get. I am as angry as you can get. I am every single word you want to say that will make you feel better. But everybody telling me to get over it and move on ... that just makes me want to do more. I’m trying to just silence the critics.” He’s mad that some media have depicted San Diegans as half-hearted fans who didn’t support the team or its stadium efforts. He’s mad that Spanos moved. He’s mad that the NFL facilitated it. “Roger Goodell, the league allowed them to move,” MacRae said. “This is their fault. ... I’m targeting them to make them not forget it was a horrible decision.” Rarely is acrimony turned into such action or bitterness so creative. This is grassroots angry antagonism gone worldwide. And still to come, it’s going airborne. From 11 a.m. to noon, above StubHub Center, a plane will fly carrying behind it a banner, the message purchased with a leftover $1,000. The banner will read: “Worst owner in sports? Dean Spanos.” That won’t be the end of it either. MacRae will be at the game against the Miami Dolphins with signs he has made of paper, so as to fold and store in his pocket to avoid confiscation. For all this, the guy who works as a server at an Italian restaurant is pretty rational. The answers MacRae offers
BRADFORD
conference on Sunday, during which he declined to discuss Bradford’s injury several times and said the quarterback would be “fine,” even though he could return in one week or six. Asked on Monday about that timetable, Zimmer said, “I was being facetious. Honestly, I don’t know how long [it will be]. I thought he had a chance to play Sunday, until we worked him out [before the game]. “You know, sometimes after the game, I’m upset, and I know our fans deserve better than that. But they didn’t have any wine for me in the locker room to chill out. Where I get frustrated is, I want to protect my players. I’m never going to put a player out on the field that cannot take care of himself. I don’t have a crystal ball. When he’s ready, he’s going to play. I don’t think it’s going
are continually surprising in their thoughtfulness _ and not solely because they’re delivered against the backdrop of his quirky crusade. He knows what his cause is about. He’s not saving lives or putting them back together. He never pretended this was turning back climate change. “Look, a gofundme page is for a cause you want to promote,” MacRae said. “If someone wants to devote $100 for hurricane relief in Texas and Florida, there is nothing wrong with that. If somebody wants to donate $100 to put up an anti-NFL billboard, there is nothing wrong with that. ... There is no doubt this money could technically go to a better place. I’m not going to say this I more important than hurricane relief. But this is something every San Diego sports fan would appreciate and understand. I believe people will actually see it’s for a good cause. This is something the people of San Diego can rally and say, ‘(Expletive), Dean Spanos.’ “ That’s all. After MacRae said it, literally. “I’m glad I’m starting to be recognized as the guy who got the billboards done,” MacRae said. “Not the guy who flipped off the NFL owner.” But it was that moment that prompted this monumental effort. The notoriety MacRae got from his interruption sparked an idea. He’d long been about signs, taking them especially to Chargers games over the past couple seasons, imploring (shaming) Spanos as the relocation possibility hung over the team. Said MacRae: “I consider myself a peaceful man. I’m just a really diehard San Diego sports fan. I’m also serving as the representative of San Diego sports fans who are getting that we aren’t diehard, that we’re laid back. I knew so many fans felt the same way I did, but they didn’t have an idea how to get back at the NFL and Spanos. They said, “I want to do what he’s doing. I don’t want to go through the emotional stress, but I’ll donate 20 bucks.” Indeed, it seems many alienated Chargers fans felt like they couldn’t have said it better themselves.
continued from page 8
to be a long time, but I have no idea.” While on the subject of uncertain timetables for quarterbacks, Zimmer said he doesn’t know when Teddy Bridgewater might be able to return from the physically-unable-to-perform list, responding to an NFL Network report that claimed Bridgewater might be ready to come back by the middle of the season. Bridgewater, who tore multiple ligaments and dislocated his left knee in August 2016, must remain on the PUP list for at least the first six weeks of the season. The Vikings then have five weeks to determine when he could begin practice, and a threeweek window from his first day of practice to determine whether he should be added to the active roster. “I know there’s reports out there he’s going to be
ready in six weeks,” Zimmer said. “I have no idea.” Keenum, who made his first start for the Vikings on Sunday, was pressured on 46.1 percent of his dropbacks, according to Pro Football Focus. The Steelers only brought more than four defenders after him six times, but they used their time-honored repertoire of zone blitzes to bring pressure from various places. “Quite honestly, a lot of it, the protecting and the quarterback depth [in the pocket], a lot of these things go hand-inhand,” Zimmer said. “He got deep a couple times and we’re not protecting at that depth. Some of it was that. We were late out of the snap one time. For the most part, we got on the right guys.”
THE MASSACHUSETTS DAILY COLLEGIAN
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Sports@DailyCollegian.com
@MDC_SPORTS
MEN’S SOCCER
MEN’S SOCCER
Minutemen 0-2 on the road this year
conference play
UMass looks for first road win Minutemen near O’Leary focused on CCSU match
By Thomas Johnston Collegian Staff
Following a win against Colgate, the Massachusetts men’s soccer team takes to the road Tuesday, traveling to New Britain, Connecticut to take on the Central Connecticut State. The University of Massachusetts (4-2-1) has been dominant on its home field this year, winning four games and drawing in the other. Yet the team has had its struggles away from Rudd Field, not having picked up a win on the road in its two contests. One reason for the road losses may be the high level of competition they have faced away from Amherst. One of those losses came against New Hampshire, a team that is currently ranked 16th in the country, while the other came against Dartmouth, which is the three-time defending Ivy League champions. In both of those losses, the Minutemen came out with a little less juice than they normally do. This led to them surrendering early goals and forcing them to play from behind – never an easy task, especially on the road. UMass coach Fran O’Leary knows his team will need to bring energy to the field from the opening whistle to get the win Tuesday night against CCSU (3-3-0). “We’ve had good spells in the games on the road, but we’ve got to go and put 90 minutes together to try and get something against these teams,” O’Leary said. “The goal now against Central Connecticut is to go in and put in a complete performance.” O’Leary also highlighted that in games his team has
By Amin Touri Collegian Staff
KATHERINE MAYO/COLLEGIAN
UMass midfielder Samuel Asamoah set to take a shot during Saturday’s 2-1 victory over Colgate. found success. They have kept their line in tact in the back end of the defense and found a consistent balance between short and long passes. If the Minutemen are able to do this, they should have a great shot of getting that first road win. UMass squared off with CCSU last season, and came out with a 1-0 victory. That win was a nice rebound off their performance against them the season before, a game in which the Blue Devils defeated the Minutemen 5-1. CCSU enters the game averaging 1.67 goals per game, and UMass knows its defense will need to have another big performance to keep the Blue Devil offense in check. “We’ll do the same as we’ve always done,” O’Leary said. “Our front six
do a lot of defending for us. If we’re having a good day, the front six defend and the back four just pick up the pieces.” When defending against a tough offense, it takes a full team effort to keep them off the scoreboard. O’Leary hopes his team will continue to back each other up, from goalkeeper Bardia Asefnia to the forwards. “Players will keep backing each other up time and time again,” O’Leary said. “If someone slip[s] up, Bardia gets them out of jail. The other day Konrad [Gorich] backed up Bardia and they made a huge play that allowed us to go on and win the game.” Forward Alex DeSantis will be looking to get back on the scoresheet Tuesday night after failing to register a point in the last two
games. The senior is currently tied for fourth in the Atlantic-10 conference with eight points. Redshirt junior Casey Hamill leads the Minutemen with three assists. UMass will rely on these two to kick start its offense. The Minutemen haven’t recorded back-to-back wins since the first two games of the season. After a big win against Colgate, UMass will look to break the back-andforth win/loss pattern. Game time is set for Tuesday at 7 p.m. in New Britain. Thomas Johnston can be reached at tjohnston@umass.edu and followed on Twitter @TJ__Johnston.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL TOP 25
compete in conference play, things are still a mystery. “I have no idea,” O’Leary said with a laugh, “because I haven’t seen anyone else. All we want to do right now is get a result against Central Connecticut. We’re not thinking really beyond Central right now, because every game brings up our confidence, gets our weaknesses exposed—which we try and fix—and then we’ll build up our confidence if we have a good performance and a good result.” Those final 180 minutes before conference play are the last that O’Leary will have to see his team in a somewhat lower-stakes environment. There’s still plenty of room to tinker with minutes and the makeup of the starting 11, something O’Leary says isn’t truly up to him. “The players will tell me,” he said. “They’ll tell me by their performances. We always say, most of our team meetings take place during games and practices, so the players do their talking on the field. It’s what I like about our team, they’re a team that does a lot of good talking on the field, rather than sitting in offices and telling me how good they are.” “They show us time in, time out, every day they show us how committed they are, how strong and tough they are, by the type of performances they put in, so in terms of the minutes, that will be determined by how the players talk to me over the coming couple of games.” Kickoff on Tuesday night is set for 7 p.m., and Saturday’s return to Rudd Field is set for 1 p.m.
The Massachusetts men’s soccer team is just 180 minutes away from Atlantic-10 play, with a Tuesday evening meeting with Central Connecticut State (3-3-0) and a Saturday afternoon matchup with Hartford (2-3-2) up next. Fresh off a 2-1 win against Colgate over the weekend, the Minutemen now sit at 4-21, a far better start than last year’s 0-5-1 record through six games. “I think it’s a couple of things,” University of Massachusetts coach Fran O’Leary said. “We returned a lot of players, so they’ve been through it before. I think all the credit is due to the guys; they’ve really committed themselves over the summer. A lot of your wins are gained with your work over the summer and early in the season.” UMass will head to New Britain on Tuesday night to take on the Blue Devils, and it’ll be a far better prepared squad than the one CCSU saw a year ago. “Our conditioning level now is second-to-none,” O’Leary said. “The way they look after themselves – we’ve practically no soft-tissue injuries, a credit to our trainer – and to the way the players look after themselves. We’re fitter, we’re stronger, we’re more mature and these are all good things that factor into the good start to the season.” A-10 play kicks off on Sept. 30, when the Minutemen head to Saint Louis for the opener, but O’Leary and his charges aren’t getting ahead Amin Touri can be reached at of themselves. As for how atouri@umass.edu and followed on O’Leary expects his team to Twitter @Amin_Touri.
FOOTBALL
Notebook: Rudolph dominates Pitt Vikings uncertain Win brings OSU to No. 6 ranking By Will Katcher Collegian Correspondent Saturday afternoon was the Mason Rudolph show, as Oklahoma State’s senior quarterback led the Cowboys past Pittsburgh 59-21. The win ascended Oklahoma State to no. 6 in this week’s AP Top 25 rankings. Rudolph threw it into high gear early, tossing five first-half touchdown passes, four of which were from over 40 yards. He nearly topped 500 yards through the air, and was complemented with two touchdowns from sophomore running back Justice Hill. Pitt had little to show against this high-powered offense, which put up 676 all-purpose yards. Jalen McCleskey was the Cowboys leading receiver with 162 yards and three touchdowns, while James Washington (124), Marcell Ateman (109) and Dillon Stoner (100) all topped 100 yards on the game. The Cowboys look poised to take it to the no. 16 Horned Frogs of TCU next Saturday.
Florida Hail Mary
Sinks Tennessee For Tennessee football fans, Saturday’s game will be one that won’t stop hurting for a long time. With the game knotted at 20 with nine seconds remaining, Florida lined up for one final play from their own 37-yard line. Quarterback Feleipe Franks dropped back, scrambled to his right as the pocket collapsed before firing the ball into the end zone as the clock hit zero. He found his wide receiver Tyrie Cleveland streaking up the field, who caught the ball while falling into the end zone to give Florida a 26-20 win. The Gators never trailed, sitting on a 10-point lead with 4:51 remaining, but a quick touchdown and field goal from Tennessee tied the game, forcing a final drive from Florida to win or send the game to overtime. The highlight finish capped was at times a haphazardly played game, which featured four interceptions and a pair of fumbles. Franks finished the game with 212 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. Cleveland was the Gators leading receiver with 93 yards on five catches.
Volunteer quarterback Quinten Dormady struggled under center, throwing three interceptions and posting a quarterback rating of just 34.2. Tennessee also left nine points on the board, missing three field goals. Florida will now turn their attention to a primetime game against the Kentucky Wildcats next week, while Tennessee will look to rebound against the winless UMass Minutemen.
USC Rises over Texas in 2OT
for a 17-yard touchdown, giving the Longhorns the lead and forcing a last-minute drive by USC. The Trojans rushed down the field, and freshman walk-on kicker Chase McGrath hit a 31-yard field goal to send the game into OT. After trading touchdowns in the first overtime period, it was McGrath who sealed the deal for the USC, hitting his third field goal of the game from 43 yards out. Wide receiver Collin Johnson cannot be blamed for the Texas loss. The 6”-6 sophomore finished with seven catches for 191 yards. Anthony Wheeler was a force for the Longhorn defense, racking up 12 tackles, three and a half behind the line of scrimmage. He also added a sack and a half. The Trojans have now won 12 straight in a streak extending back to last season, and remain a top five team heading into their week four matchup with California. The Longhorns fall to 1-2, and will look to bounce back next week against Big 12 foe Iowa State.
It took 60 minutes of play and an additional two overtime periods before USC could slip past the Texas Longhorns with a 27-24 victory. The win improves the Trojans to 3-0 on the season. Sophomore Sam Darnold was active under center for the Trojans, racking up 397 yards and three touchdowns to balance out his two interceptions. USC held off the Longhorn offense through three quarters, but were never able to pull away. Late in the fourth quarter, Texas quarterback Sam Ehlinger connected with senior wide Will Katcher can be reached at receiver Armanti Foreman wkatcher@umass.edu.
about QB’s knee
Zimmer mum on Bradford’s injury By Ben Goessling Star Tribune (Minneapolis) Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said Monday that quarterback Sam Bradford’s left knee is feeling better, a day after it caused Bradford to miss the Vikings’ game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. But while the Vikings will try to get Bradford ready for Sunday’s game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Zimmer said he still doesn’t know if Bradford will be able to return. “I anticipate that when he’s ready to practice and he’s ready to play, he’ll be able to play,” Zimmer said. “Honestly, I don’t have a crystal ball. I know you guys want to ask me about all these things, but I don’t have a crystal ball, so, sorry. I wish I did; I’d call some games better.” Zimmer said he did not believe the injury would require the Vikings to sign another quarterback, adding the team is confident in Case Keenum
should be need to start again on Sunday. Keenum went 20-for-37 against the Steelers, throwing for 167 yards in a 26-9 loss. Bradford had surgery to repair a torn left ACL in 2013 and 2014, and on Sunday, Zimmer said, “He’s had two surgeries on his knee; sometimes it swells up.” On Monday, though, he said he didn’t think Bradford’s knee issues had anything to do with his prior surgeries, adding he thought the quarterback twisted his knee once during the Vikings’ seasonopening win against the Saints. “It’s hard to say,” Zimmer said. “I don’t think it’s a result of the surgeries. I think he twisted it or something during the game. But I don’t think it has anything to do with the surgeries.” An NFL Network report on Monday called Bradford’s injury a bone bruise, adding the Vikings would see how the quarterback responded to an injection this week. Zimmer also apologized for his curt postgame press see
BRADFORD on page 7