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The Observer, Volume LIV, Issue 17, 2/3/23

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Opinion: Stop making New Year’s resolutions (pg. 8) friday, february 3, 2023 volume LIV, issue 17 estd. 1969

the

Observer The Student Newspaper of Case Western Reserve University

Men’s basketball sweep Brandeis, NYU on the road Paola Van der Linden Costello Staff Writer

The Case Western Reserve University men’s basketball team faced Brandeis University on Jan. 27 and New York University on Jan. 29 for their sixth and seventh games in UAA conference play. After a hard loss against the University of Chicago last week, the Spartans bounced back with a dominant 91-71 win against Brandeis and a 88-82 thriller victory over NYU. Against Brandeis, the Spartans had great ball movement and incredible shooting accuracy, leaving the Judges struggling to catch up. During the first half, the team scored 27 points from 3-pointers alone. The ball just kept going in, with CWRU shooting 64.5% from the field and 75% from the 3-point line. During the first 10 minutes, it seemed like the game might be a close one, with the Spartans leading by two with 9:50 remaining in the first half. However, after second-year forward Umar Rashid made a 3-pointer, the Spartans went on a 13-2 run to go up 38-25 with 6:32 left to go. After two minutes, three more successful shots, one by Rashid and two by third-year forward Daniel Florey, ballooned the lead to 46-27. By the end of the first half, the Spartans were up 14 points and leading the game with 16 rebounds and 10 defensive rebounds, compared to 8 rebounds and 5 defensive rebounds from the Judges. The second half was not much better for Judges. Although they managed to cut the deficit to 10 points with 16:54 remaining, the Spartans quickly responded after a timeout called by head coach Todd McGuinness. Florey made a layup with 7:16 remaining, putting CWRU up 24 points at 81-57, the highest lead of this game. The night ended with firstyear guard Anand Dharmarajan making a jump shot for a 91-71 win for

Third-year guard Luke Thorburn helped bring the Spartans to victory in a close game against NYU. Courtesy of CWRU Athletics

the Spartans. CWRU led every major statistic, collecting 33 total rebounds compared to Brandeis’ 18, 20 assists to 10 and shooting an overall 68.2% on 3-pointers and 61% from the field goal range. This team always wows the audience with their offense and this game was no different. Their 3-point accuracy was the second highest in program history where the team attempted at least 10 shots. Their field goal percentage was also a season-high for the Spartans. After a successful game in Boston, the Spartans traveled to New York City to face the NYU Violets. CWRU had a rough start, with the Violets going on a 9-0 run within the first five minutes of the game. Rashid managed to put the Spartans on the board with a layup, but they still struggled to keep up with NYU. With 12:07 left on the clock for the first half, the Spartans were down by 10 and the odds looked pretty grim. They proceeded to go on a 8-0 run, 2 points away from tying the game but the Violets were relentless. With 7:06 minutes left in the first half, the Violets re-established their dominant lead to 27-15. It was only after Florey made a 3-point jump shot off an assist by third-year forward Ian Elam that the Spartans started getting their momentum back. With Rashid’s defensive rebound and fourth-year forward Cole Frilling’s conversion of 2 points through a layup, the Spartans tied the game 29-29 with 1:36 left to go. It seemed like the Violets were going to finish the first half up a point when, with three seconds left on the clock, Frilling got an offensive rebound off of a missed 3-pointer and made a jumper to put the Spartans ahead 3332 at the halftime buzzer. Continued on pg. 11

The man in the radio booth

Shreyas Banerjee Executive Editor “Tune in to WRUW for an absurdly eclectic mix of music. From roots music to metal. From polka to neo-classical onwards. From jazz to indie and alternative rock, and other sounds I still can’t quite identify. WRUW FM 91.1 Cleveland. More music, fewer hits.” With this on-air promo, WRUW introduces itself not just as the college radio station of Case Western Reserve University, but as a gateway to worlds of music that you might not even realize exist. With shows that feature music ranging from vapor wave to folk, you are guaranteed to find a song playing on WRUW that you wouldn’t on any other station on your radio dial. Though radio is no longer the preferred medium of music listening for those currently attending CWRU, our

university still has a vibrant radio scene, with students managing the operations of WRUW and many of the shows featured within. To broadcast such an array of “eclectic” music requires a mix of eclectic students. It requires students who are, first, willing to have their own radio show, but also willing to show off their own sufficiently diverse taste in music. So what kind of CWRU student would host their own WRUW show and share their music with the world? Fortunately for me, I know just the sort of person. DavidPatrick Ryan is a fourth-year art history and history double major at CWRU and currently hosts the show “Jazz Night in Cleveland” on Tuesday

nights from 8-9 p.m. I first met DavidPatrick in fall 2019, during what was both of our first semesters at CWRU. I distinctly remember seeing him walking on Mather Quad, wearing a fedora, a long overcoat and a messenger bag. With his unique apparel, cleanly shaped beard and roundrimmed glasses, I thought he was a professor. It wasn’t until he sat down in one of my classes that I realized that he was a student. This is a fairly common occurrence around CWRU campus, with “DPR sightings,” as they are known, driving conversations at times. Sitting down with him, I was very curious to see how he felt about his own notoriety. “I don’t think I resent it. I think I enjoy it, and I find it a little weird at the same time,” Ryan responded. “It’s amusing when everyone knows who you are,

but you’ve never met before. It’s also really friggin’ weird, because you’re worried like, ‘Are people talking bad? Do people find this like obnoxious or pretentious?’ At the same time, I think I’m just also very dedicated to doing things … the way that I see fit to myself.” As he was sitting in front of me, he was wearing a white button-down shirt with the top two buttons undone, black skinny jeans, black monk strap dress shoes and a black woolen trench coat—which is on the lighter end of DPR outfits. Describing his outfits as being akin to “an art project,” he also noted that some aspects of his wardrobe had symbolic value to himself. Continued on pg. 3


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