The University of Maryland’s Independent Student Newspaper
M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 2 7, 2 01 4
Man displays gun at Rt 1 business two university students were inside an undisclosed business when one student told an employee that he was unsatisfied with the product. The argument broke out between By Talia Richman an employee displayed a handgun @TaliRichman inside a business located on the the student a nd employee, the Senior staff writer 7300 block of Baltimore Avenue report stated, before the employee took out a gun and waved it at the on Saturday. According to an email sent to the students around 8:10 p.m. Prince George’s County Police are An initial alert went out Saturinvestigating an incident in which campus community at 12:32 a.m.,
PGPD respond to report of employee displaying firearm during argument with two customers
day at 9:03 p.m. stating that “pg/ um resp to 7313 bal for man w/gun … fl ed in unk dir.not believe to be in area.” The alert describes the suspect as a 6-foot black man in his 40s wearing a sweatshirt and jeans. At 9:42 p.m. Saturday, police declared the area all clear. trichmandbk@gmail.com
Ed Snider, a university alumnus (left), is donating $5 million to the university. photo courtesy of tony richards/robert h. smith school of business
FOOTBALL | BADGERS 52, TERPS 7
Koch funds to support U research
Offense sputters in 45-point loss to Wisconsin at Camp Randall Stadium By Daniel Popper @danielrpopper Senior staff writer
Koch, Snider Groups offer $6 million for business study center
MADISON, Wisc. — Ten seconds into the second quarter of Saturday’s game against Wisconsin, quarterback C.J. Brown and the Terrapins football offense took the field at Camp Randall Stadium trailing by 17 points. The unit set up in shotgun formation on first down from its own 29-yard line. Brown took the snap and faked a handoff to running back Brandon Ross before lofting a pass down the left sideline for wide receiver Deon Long, who leapt and won the jump ball for a 22-yard reception. That was the last first down the Terps offense would gain, d isrega rd i ng the one ea rned via a pass interference penalty on the ensuing drive, until 4:08 remained in the contest. By that point, the Badgers had scored 52 unanswered points. The Terps avoided a shutout thanks to a 21-yard touchdown reception from wide receiver Stefon Diggs late in regulation, but the of fensive def iciency proved too detrimental to overcome, as they fell, 52-7, to end a
By Ellie Silverman @esilverman11 Senior staff writer This university plans to announce today a $6 million gift from the Charles Koch Foundation and the Snider Foundation to create a multidisciplinary research center. This is the second-largest gift in the business school’s history, following the $15 million naming gift from Robert H. Smith in 1998. The new center will be named the Ed Snider Center for Enterprise and Market. The Snider Foundation donated $5 million and The Koch Foundation donated the remaining $1 million. Philadelphia Flyers owner and 1955 alumnus Ed Snider said he’s wanted to give back to the university for years, and building this center seemed like the perfect opportunity. Snider said he grew up mopping floors at his father’s grocery store See donation, Page 2
MASSACRE IN MADISON WISCONSIN WIDE RECEIVER GEORGE RUSHING runs through Terps defenders during the Badgers’ 52-7 shellacking of the Terps at Camp Randall Stadium. The Terps totaled a season-low 175 yards in the loss and at one point had a string of nine straight drives in which they failed to convert a first down. photo courtesy of greg fume/maryland athletics
Committee votes to reinstate secondary appeals process
Fraternity members bike to support diabetes cure
Defunct DOTS appeal could be available soon By Taylor Swaak @tswaak27 Staff writer
Alpha Epsilon Pi raises $15K for Type I study By Peter Eliopoulos @thedbk For The Diamondback For eight hours this weekend, members of this university’s Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity chapter hopped on stationary bikes outside their chapter house and took turns peddling their way toward a cure for diabetes in an event the group called Tour de Four. The event, which also included a cookout, raised money for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation,
Ben Susskind, a sophomore business major, pedals during Alpha Epsilon Pi’s stationary biking event to raise money for Type 1 diabetes research on Friday. The event raised $14,700. sung-min kim/the diamondback a fundraising organization that aims to fi nd the cure for Type 1 diabetes. Alpha Epsilon Pi set a goal of raising $20,000 for the foundation at the beginning of the fall semester and reached $14,700 by the end of Friday’s biking event. The $20,000 benchmark seemed unattainable at fi rst, said Jonathan
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Rabovsky, a senior sociology major who led the fundraising efforts. “We kind of thought it was a joke at fi rst and didn’t take it seriously,” Rabovsky said. “We didn’t think it was feasible because the most we ever raised for philanthropy was $7,000 in See biking, Page 3
More tha n a yea r a f ter the parking ticket appeals process was limited to a Department of Transportation Services employee’s discretion, those ticketed might again have the chance to make an additional appeal to a third party. A f ter a fa i led attempt last semester, the Campus Transportation Advisory Committee voted 7-4 on Wednesday in favor of reinstating the DOTS’ second appeals process, which gives ticket recipients a chance to appeal to the Office of Student
Conduct if DOTS rejects their fi rst appeal. If Linda Clement, vice president of student affairs, approves the advisory committee’s decision, the program will be reimplemented in fall 2015. Those who choose to use the second appeals process would need to provide new information, such as new reasoning or witnesses, to support their appeals. Committee representatives from the Student Government Association, Graduate Student Government and Residence Hall Association voted in favor of reinstatement. D O T S i n it i a l ly c a nc e le d it s second appeals process in summer 2013 because of budget constraints, said Deborah Hemingway, GSG president. The process voided or reduced about 33 percent of the See appeals, Page 2
SPORTS
OPINION
CAMPBELL GETS ON THE BOARD
STAFF EDITORIAL: Meningitis outbreak
Freshman forward George Campbell scores his first career goal as the Terps top Santa Clara, 3-1, on Saturday night P. 8
Students should take university health alerts seriously P. 4 DIVERSIONS
A GAME MARATHON FOR CHARITY The Board and Brew’s 24-hour event gave money to hospitals P. 6
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