The University of Maryland’s Independent Student Newspaper
M O N DAY, A P R I L 6 , 2 015
A FAMILIAR FINISH
GUARD LEXIE BROWN walks off the court after the Terps’ loss to Connecticut last night in Tampa, Florida. Brown finished with 12 points as the Terps’ 28-game winning streak came to an end. alexander jonesi/the diamondback
Terps women’s basketball falls in Final Four for second straight season, this time to Connecticut By Ryan Baillargeon @RyanBaillargeon Senior staff writer
TAMPA, Fla. — For the second straight season, the Terrapins women’s basketball team failed to keep a Final Four game competitive. After falling to Notre Dame by 26 points in last year’s semifinal bout, the Terps struggled to slow top-seeded Connecticut last night. The Huskies proved why they entered as the over-
Suspect flees after Varsity theft attempt Male student unharmed, PGPD seeks information By Katishi Maake @TheHavocRat, @dbkcrime Staff writer
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whelming favorite to win their 10th national championship with a relentless attack and stifling defense. Behind a 25-point outing from Associated Press Player of the Year forward Breanna Stewart, Connecticut cruised to an 81-58 rout of the No. 1-seed Terps at Amalie Arena before an announced 19,730.
at about 12:30 a.m., according to the alert. One of the group members then allegedly grabbed at the student’s waist and demanded his property, but the victim was able to push the perpetrator away, the alert stated. The student said he heard someone else in the group dissuade the perpetrator from further engaging with him, and the perpetrator fled the scene with the group down the hallway in an unknown direction. No injuries were reported and no weapons were used during the incident, according to the alert. Police are conducting an investigation and ask anyone with information regarding the incident or the identity of the suspect to contact 911 or 301-772-4908.
Prince George’s County Police responded to an off-campus attempted robbery early yesterday morning at The Varsity, according to a university safety alert. A group of six to eight people approached a male university student as he was walking down a hallway kmaakedbk@gmail.com
Connecticut advances to the national championship to play No. 1-seed Notre Dame, the only other team to have defeated the Terps since the start of December. The loss ends the Terps’ season a game shy of their second-ever national championship appearance and halts a program-record winning streak of 28 games. “When you look at a season and go 34-3 and two of our three losses are coming from teams that are playing for See huskies, Page 3
U fan group seeks to develop leadership The Pride transitions from athletic dept group to student-run By Taylor Swaak @tswaak27 Staff writer When this university won the Big Ten Network Home Court Challenge — a competition to see which university had the lowest opponent free-throw percentage at its home court — on March 13, Bryan Farrell said he saw potential for a top-tier student fan organization. “[People] generally equate [low opponent free-throw percent-
ages] to mean who has the loudest, most rambunctious student section and the most intimidating student section,” said Farrell, an Athletic Department Student Advisory Council member. “The Maryland section is stupidly loud, but if we can get them organized, it’s kind of exciting.” In an effort to create student sections for different sports and organize activities for athletic events — such as chants, card tricks and flash mobs — Farrell, the athletic department and ADSAC are seeking to set up a student executive board for The Pride, a fan organization currently under the purview of the athletic department. Applications for the executive board, which can be found on the Student Government Association’s
Facebook page, opened March 26 and are open until April 8. Farrell, who also serves as the SGA’s Tradition Commission chairman, said the goal is to have a six-member board established within a month. “[Under the direction of an executive board], The Pride would be a parent organization that could help facilitate and help support these smaller, individual [sports] sections,” Farrell said. “A behind-the-scenes kind of thing that could help recruit new members to help promote certain events going on, to help put together events, road trips.” Farrell said in the first week, about 30 students applied for the positions, See Pride, Page 3
Univ, USM leaders hope for additional funds ahead of budget deadline Hogan has until next Monday to file supplemental budget; System faces $47 million shortfall
to work out the differences between the two versions. Neither chamber reduced the $1.2 billion in state funding that Hogan By Jon Banister Maryland deal with its $47 million originally budgeted for the univer@J_Banister budget shortfall for the upcoming sity system. This amount would leave the system with $47 million Senior staff writer fiscal year. Both the state Senate and House of less than anticipated. “It’s going to mean that things Gov. Larry Hogan has until next Delegates passed amended versions aren’t going to get better and a lot of Hogan’s original budget proposal Monday to grant additional funding to help the University System of in March and are meeting this week of programs we wanted to do aren’t
ISSUE NO. 94 , OUR 105 TH YEAR OF PUBLICATION DBKNEWS.COM
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going to be able to be sustained,” Student Government Association President Patrick Ronk said, noting recent improvements on the campus and for the entire university system. “It’s just going to stagnate us, more or less.” The funding shortfall is partly caused by former G ov. Ma r ti n O’Malley’s $40 million cut to the university system in January, which
prompted cuts across all system i n st it ut ion s a nd res u lted i n a 2 percent midyear tuition increase at this university. Hogan took office in January facing a $750 million structural budget deficit. Hogan, who campaigned on fiscal restraint and limited state spending, implemented 2 percent cuts See budget, Page 2
SPORTS
OPINION
TERPS BLOW BY CORNHUSKERS
RHA senators-at-large should be able to live on the campus P. 4
The Terrapins baseball offense snapped out of a recent funk this weekend to lift the team to a three-game sweep of Nebraska P. 10
STAFF EDITORIAL: Housing priorities
DIVERSIONS
THE MYSTIFYING BLACK SQUIRREL The story behind the dark squirrels that inhabit the campus P. 6