The University of Maryland’s Independent Student Newspaper
T H U R S DAY, N O V E M B E R 5 , 2 015
Univ professors donate $23,334 to Democrats In 2016 election cycle, Hillary Clinton receives $8,838 in total contributions from 5 professors By Jon Banister @J_banister Senior staff writer Amid an election cycle that has featured unprecedented campaign fi nancing, more than 30 university professors have donated to support 2016 runs for office. T h e m ajo r it y h ave g ive n to
Democratic candidates, suggesting a left-leaning ideological trend among those who donate to political campaigns. Of the 31 university professors whose 2016 cycle contributions The Diamondback found in the Federal Election Commission database, 26 donated to Democrats for a total of $23,334. Professors who gave to Re-
publicans tended to donate larger sums, however, with five donations totaling $8,000. The trend proves consistent with Maryland’s 2014 state elections cycle. Thirty-four professors The Diamondback found in the State Board of Elections database contributed $9,159 to Democratic candidates, while five professors gave a total of $1,055 to Republicans. Government and politics professor HILLARY CLINTON speaks during an Anthony Brown rally at Ritchie Colosseum on Oct. 30, 2014. Five university See DONATIONS, Page 2 professors have donated $8,838 to the presidential candidate during this election cycle. file photo/the diamondback
CITY ELECTION 2015
Bomb scare prompts evacuation Suspicious package part of Halloween costume By Jessie Campisi @jessiecampisi Staff writer
Patrick Wojahn, winner of Tuesday’s mayoral election, speaks at a City Council meeting Wednesday night. Wojahn, currently serving as a District 1 councilman, will take office Dec. 7. tom hausman/the diamondback
Wojahn’s the winner District 1 councilman defeats Denise Mitchell to become city’s first openly gay mayor
District 3 Stephanie Stullich, Robert Day re-elected, beat alumnus Ryan Belcher
By Talia Richman @TaliRichman Senior staff writer
By Katishi Maake @KatishiMaake Staff writer
in decades, Wojahn came away with 1,267 out of 2,222 votes, defeating District 4 Councilwom a n a nd M ayor P ro Te m District 1 Councilman Patrick Denise Mitchell. “I’m humbled and honored Wo j a h n w a s e l e c t e d m a y o r T uesday, becom i ng the fi rst people are giving me the opporopenly gay man to win the office tunity to carry out our goals for in College Park. In the most competitive election See MAYOR, Page 3
Stullich, who has served on the council since 2007, is excited to be re-elected and said she hopes to help steer the city in In the most contested City Council the right direction. “It’s been a great experience election in more than 20 years, the official election results show incum- being on the City Council,” she bents Stephanie Stullich and Robert said. “There’s a lot of change in Day were both re-elected to District 3 College Park City Council seats. See COUNCIL, Page 3
Gov. Hogan reflects on first year in Annapolis
By Talia Richman @TaliRichman Senior staff writer
GOV. LARRY HOGAN gives his acceptance speech on election night in November 2014 at a watch party held in Annapolis. He upset then-Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown by 5 percentage points. file photo/the diamondback
Ask Republican Gov. Larry Hogan about his proudest accomplishment in the year since he was elected, and he’ll have trouble choosing one. “That’s not a question I get a lot,” he said, laughing. The governor was elected in a surprise victory Nov. 4, 2014, defeating then-Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown by 5 percentage points and capturing 20 of 23 counties in this state. Since then, he’s cut fees and spending throughout the government, attempting to stay true to his economic campaign message. That’s not what he chooses as his proudest accomplishment, though.
“You know what? It’s that a majority now believe we’re headed in the right direction and that the state is on the right track,” Hogan said, calling from his desk in the State House in Annapolis. “We haven’t solved all the problems, but I’m most proud we’ve been able to turn things around as quickly as we have.” A recent Washington Post-University of Maryland poll showed Hogan had a 61 percent approval rating in the state. In the same telephone poll, conducted from Oct. 8 through Oct. 11, 52 percent of residents said they believed the state was “going in the right direction.”
ISSUE NO. 10 , OUR 105 TH YEAR OF PUBLICATION
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Sanders ruled ineligible after finance request nonresponse
By Darcy Costello @dctello Senior staff writer
DBKNEWS.COM
A Halloween costume accessory spooked an individual and prompted a response from University Police on Tuesday. At 1:09 p.m., University Police received a call for a cardboard box with “bomb” written on it in the grass next to the Shuttle-UM facility on Paint Branch Drive, said University Police spokeswoman Sgt. Rosanne Hoaas. Officers arrived at the scene and shut down the roadway, and people inside the facility were told to evacuate. The Prince George’s County Fire Department’s bomb unit also responded to the scene to investigate the box. The box contained fl iers for cookies for sale and a shipping label with a campus address, Hoaas said. Investigators went to the address, and the student living there said his friend had asked to use the box as an accessory for his Halloween costume. Hoaas said the student’s friend did not throw the box away, and it was left at the facility with no malicious intent. The investigation has been closed.
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ELECTION NIGHT SURPRISE A year ago, most expected Brown to win the election, in part because of the lack of polling close to election day. The Washington Post’s and The Baltimore Sun’s most recently conducted polls had been between Oct. 2 and Oct. 8, 2014. In the weeks after the election, the governor-elect declined to release his budget proposal, leaving many in the state nervous about where the funds would be apportioned, government and politics professor Stella Rouse said. On a bus tour of the state, Hogan See HOGAN, Page 7
SPORTS
ZERO TO HERO Kicker Brad Craddock turned his freshman homecoming miss into fuel for success P. 14
OPINION
DIVERSIONS
A DOSE OF HISTORY
OASIS IN A FOOD DESERT
Vaccines: fine since1796 P. 4
Nando’s spicy chicken hits all the right notes P. 9
The final days of Cory Sanders’ bid for a District 1 City Council seat were marked by controversy. The Washington Post published an article Oct. 30 highlighting errors on Sanders’ resume and discussing a lawsuit fi led against him by his former employer. A copy of the article — marked up in red ink — later appeared on some College Park residents’ doorsteps.
On T uesday, when unofficial numbers were announced, Sanders lost by almost 400 votes to former Councilwoman Christine Nagle and more than 500 to incumbent Fazlul Kabir. But by the time all the absentee votes were counted and the official results were released at about 8:30 last night, that gap no longer mattered. At 4 p.m. yesterday, Sanders was “deemed to have withdrawn” due to errors in his See SANDERS, Page 7