The Purchase Independent - 09/28/2012

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PURCHASE H E INDEPENDENT

ISSUE 271 SEPTEMBER 27, 2012


y o u r. i n d y @ g m a i l . c o m

LETTER FROM THE EDITOR

editor-in-chief:

Ró i sí n McCarty layout editor:

M el i ssa Fos ter

In leiu of an editor’s letter (yeah, it was one of those weeks), here is a list of things you should do this week:

writers:

Ch r i sti na Blan k en ship D yl a n G reen La u r a Meltzer N o el l e Moore A l yc e Pelleg rin o To m my Roach M i k e Relu zco Sa b r i n a Sims Ste ph a n ie Sp en cer M a rk Vas ey print manager: Tommy Roach cover photo by: Jake Mur phy artwork by: Mark Zubrovich web design by: Tommy Roach Cindy Mack

The Purchase Independent is a non-profit news magazine, paid for by the Mandatory Student Activity fee. We welcome and encourage submissions from readers. The Independent is a forum for campus issues and events, to give students the voice they deserve. Letters, articles, event photography and event listings are welcomed. The deadline for submissions is every Friday before midnight, and accepted pieces will be published the following Thursday. Publication of submissions is not guaranteed, but subject to the discretion of the editors. No anonymous submissions will be considered, but we will accept use of pseudonyms on a case-by-case basis. Send all submissions and inquiries to your. indy@gmail.com. Send questions to Madame Query at formspring.me/madamequery. Back page quotes can be submitted to formspring. me/indybackpage or put in the Back Page Box that hangs on the office door. Our office is located on the first floor of Campus Center North, room 1011. Staff meetings are held in the office every Monday night at 9:30; anyone is welcome.

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1. Register to vote. The deadline is swiflty approaching! 2. Submit to the Backpage! 3. Come to an Indy meeting. (Mondays @ 9:30 - CCN1011) 4. Have a cup of tea. 5. Give yourself ten minutes to relax. 6. Read an essay by David Sedaris. 7. Say hello to a stranger. 8. Ride the Port Chester loop. Port Chester rocks. 9. Watch your favorite movie. 10. Get a head start on that homework assignment you’re dreading.


y o u r. i n d y @ g m a i l . c o m

Calling all students!

wants you!

Make The Indy YOUR paper! Write, pitch ideas, illustrate, submit backpage quotes. Meetings are on Monday nights at 9:30 in CCN 1011. For more information, email your.indy@gmail.com Submit Backpage quotes: formspring.me/indybackpage Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/purchaseindy Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/purchaseindy

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NEW MAGAZINE MARCHES TO ITS OWN “BEAT” BY STEPHANIE SPENCER Students and faculty alike congregated in the Stood on Wednesday evening to celebrate Purchase’s very first music magazine, The Beat. Attendees of The Beat’s launch party were greeted by eager staff members and Purchase bands as they enjoyed pre-released copies of the premiere issue. Made from glossy, thick paper, the issue introduced the reader to crystal clear pictures resembling that of the early editions of Life. The issue simultaneously included detailed spreads on a multitude of musicians on campus, particularly of student, Sean McVerry, who shyly stared off the cover. The Beat’s design displayed a sleek professionalism that impressed many of the guests. “Last year I was editing a stack of profiles for my course The Beat of Music Journalism,” Professor Solomon wrote in the publisher’s letter for The Beat. “I was continually buffeted by the compelling tales of people yearning for unique and universal things, overcoming obstacles, battling the odds. Suddenly, it wasn’t a stack of papers anymore. I was reading the rough draft of the first issue of a magazine.” He quickly gathered students he felt had the type of work ethic and talent to pull the idea off. Alumni Briana Rodriguez and junior Kevin Redding were swiftly picked up for the job. A Queens native, Rodriguez’s very first journalism class was taught by Solomon. Noticing Rodriguez’s strong work ethic and commitment to her craft, specifically regarding her senior project covering underground and electronic dance music, Solomon instantly brought the scrambled idea for a potential music magazine and asked her if she would be willing to be editor-in-chief. She accepted.

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Rodriguez was excited to see the mash-up of different, yet compatible, Purchase students Professor Solomon had hired to take on the project. “When he put us all together it was like, ‘alright, we have this idea, we want to do this music magazine, we have this collection of stories that we think might work. How do we rework them? How do we make them fit?’” Through extensive organizing and tireless elimination, staff writers worked hard to get the right stories that would best represent what The Beat wanted to give to their readers. Senior Writer Kevin Redding took a keen interest in documenting Purchase studio engineers. “I wanted to see the music from their point of view,” said Redding. “They kind of really make the music what it is.” Reporting in depth on Purchase alumni Scott Moriarty, Redding’s article, “Inside Studio A,” delivered a distinct point of view of the conservatory that is sometimes lost among students who are merely watching a Purchase band perform live. Insight into the inner workings of these shows, and the talented “conductors” behind them, strongly reflected the different nature of what The Beat is about. Issues submitted to The Beat will not only include these behind-the-scenes pieces, but also political reporting and music reviews, which closely follow the format of popular music magazines. Seemingly going off without a hitch, The Beat’s launch party also included live performances by Spencer Polanco and Coyote Campus, and participants of the magazine were able to confidently walk away feeling that perhaps a musical legacy was in the works.


campus

THE COUNSELING CENTER’S MOVE BY SABRINA SIMS With the renovation of the Humanities Building, many of the school’s offices have been displaced. The Counseling Center is no exception. This office provides services vital to maintaining campus-wide health and keeping students productive members of the community. Now located near the N2 parking lot in a modular office, it takes a little more work than a stroll get to it. Students may be less likely to take advantage of the center’s resources because they don’t know where it is. I asked around for three days and the majority of people had no idea of the location, either pointing me in the wrong direction or telling me that it used to be in Humanities. A creative writing major, Kaylee Barbalace, 18, finally showed me how to get to the Counseling Center. Standing near Student Services, Barbalace said, “Just follow the path near the Hub heading to the parking lot. Keep walking straight and on the left of the parking lot is the Counseling Center.” After finally reaching it, I spoke to an office manager who said that the Center’s director wasn’t available to comment. Instead she gave me a pamphlet containing the old address, crossing it out and replacing it with “N2 Parking Lot, Lincoln Ave Modulars.” The main issue with this move is that even on the Counseling Center’s website, there is no updated address listed. If it was fixed, students would have better chance of knowing where to go and how to get there. There are several solutions to this issue. The center could directly address students by sending out an email providing directions to the

modular offices. Alternatively, the school can place signs around campus. After all, there are bright green, very hard to miss signs pointing toward places such as the Library and Bookstore. Why not toward the not-so-obvious Counseling Center? Students wouldn’t have to search around campus for such an important place. Until the anticipated completion of the Humanities restoration in June 2014, offices like the Counseling Center are essentially stuck where they are. If used, efforts such as email, signs and other means to inform students about these new changes will help the campus function more smoothly.

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HITCHIN’ A RIDE BY NOELLE MOORE Let’s say a friend comes to visit and you pick them up from White Plains intending to board the Loop back to campus, only to have your friend denied access. What do you do? You can’t leave your friend alone in White Plains, but you don’t have a car; so how are you supposed to get them back to campus? You’ve got to hope that you know someone who has a car and is available to come pick the both of you up, or dish out some cash to take a taxi back to campus. This new policy has left some complaining about how this didn’t used to be an issue, which is true. In the past, the policy of “no-card-no-ride” was lax. But after a few incidents of off-campus individuals using the Loop to gain access to campus, this policy had to be strengthened. When asked about these incidents, Donna Salter, the Director of Parking and Transportation on campus, explained that “a young man [who boarded the Loop] in White Plains, came to campus, used the gym facilities without a card, and stalked a young lady.” It is worth noting that this isn’t the first time something of this nature has happened. Salter continued, “He got reported to the police and the police actually found him on the bus trying to leave.” After this incident, President Schwartz put his foot down and mandated this new policy. Since the inception of a new bus company, the unwavering policy has been “no-card-no-ride,” and this is displayed on all of the buses. Salter discussed the logistics, saying, “The students’ transportation fee pays for this service. For the students--

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not their guests. The buses are full to begin with. If it were available to those without a More card, the school might as well be operating a shuttle service. There is simply not enough money in the budget to accommodate the guests of students.” It brings into perspective what it would be like if guests were permitted on the Loop. Every Friday night, a student could bring two guests with them. If every student did that, there would not be enough room on the buses for those who actually attend this school. If it would be like that every weekend, one could only imagine how it would be for big campus events like Zombie Prom and Culture Shock. Students who have to use the bus to get to work would be terribly inconvenienced. The buses have been known to reach the capacity limit with it’s own students. Furthermore, the student body needs to become more aware of the fact that their More card is very valuable. “They don’t realize that it has to be treated the same way you’d treat a credit card or a passport,” said Salter. “It’s their ID, yes, but it also holds money, costs money to replace, it allows access to the gym, the Loop, and the library, and gives discounts.” When asked if she saw this policy of not admitting guests, even those with guest passes, access to the Loop would change in the future, Salter admitted that she did not. “Not unless the bus budget increased by one-hundred percent.” Salter requested that, above all, we stress that this policy is not meant to purely inconve-


campus nience us. Student safety is the top priority. Those at the Transportation Department don’t want to make this a hassle for us and sympathize with the frustration that we as students have experienced, but the safety of our whole community, not just those who ride the Loop, must and will remain the top priority. We encourage students to look into the alternative methods of transportation available on campus. A few of those alternatives are:

The Bee-Line #12 bus comes into campus with limited stops, but ends this service at six o’clock. Zimride, is a no-charge ride-share program. Zipcars, which cost $35 dollars per year, but you end up receiving $45 dollars back in ridership. Taxi services. Purchase College has a partnership with Central Taxi. All of these alternatives and their details are listed on the school’s website at: www.purchase.edu/departments/transporation Purchase is also looking into a new service called Ride-Relay which allows people to register their car and essentially rent it out to people in their community for a fee. This is a nationwide service where you can name your price for renting out your car. It is fully insured and costs nothing to join. More information about this service can be found at www.relayrides.com.

A SECULAR SUNY BY LAURA MELTZER A state university that prides itself on ‘thinking wide open’ is about to become just a little more accepting. The newly minted Secular Students Alliance (SSA) organization is a beckoning environment for secular and agnostic students. “We aim to create an inclusive group that represents the secular community in a positive light,” co-president Matthew Collura wrote in his mission statement. Collura and co-president Luigi Bonifacio plan on tackling the social and political issues that loom over nonreligious affiliations. “We decided to first create a place for secular students to discuss among themselves issues relating to the community, such as having a heavily religious family and dealing with the friction non-belief can cause…” SSA plans to host seminars and charity events to create an open dialogue with students of religious and other beliefs in the campus community. “We won’t be a God-hating club, nor are we striving to exterminate the religious from the campus,” said Collura. “On the contrary, we want the same representation that the religious students have.” SSA will hold meetings at the Commuter Lounge in Campus Center South from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Oct. 1.

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JAYDEN’S STORy BY ALYCE PELLEGRINO Often when children getting attacked by animals, the immediate reaction is to blame the animal in question. This is seen more in dogs that have bad reputations, such as pit bulls, rottweilers, or German shepherds. Jayden Forrester, a 3-year-old girl from Rochester, was attacked on September 1st by her aunt’s pit bull. The last thing parents Justin Forrester and Melissa Moore are urging people to concentrate on is the stigma. According to DemocratandChronicle.com, Justin Forrester spoke outside of Strong Memorial Hospital, where his daughter is being treated. “This isn’t about how pit bulls are bad or blaming anybody ... The bottom line is, something terrible happened and a little girl needs help.” Jayden sustained extensive injuries to her face, specifically the breaking of her top and bottom jaw and a great deal of soft tissue damage near her eyes. The dog, who had no history of violent behavior and has been around Jayden many times, sank his teeth in and refused to let go. Both Forrester and Moore jumped to their child’s aid; Forrester prying the dog’s jaw open and Moore shielding her daughter when the dog went to attack again. This seems to be all the help they can provide for their little girl. The family’s medical insurance will barely cover the cost for the amount of surgeries this little girl will need, which all fall under the category of cosmetic. But there is hope for Jayden. Claire Henrichs, Justin Forrester’s foster mother took immediate action to get her the help she needs.

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Using the site Indiegogo.com, Henrichs set up a funding campaign to raise the money needed for Jayden’s many surgeries. She also put information regarding the accident, the surgeries, and rejected a number of rumors on the campaign’s web page. “I want to put some hurtful rumors to rest here,” Henrichs wrote. “The dog was not Jayden’s parents’ dog. At no time did they leave this little girl alone with the dog - there were two adults in the room when the attack occurred ... Please do not try to lay blame for this and remember that it is about a little girl who has had her life derailed by the injuries she has suffered. The parents have handled this situation incredibly well given the circumstances. They are not pointing fingers at anyone and I hope that none of you will either.” The original goal for the campaign was $20,000. As of September 26th, the amount of money that was raised had surpassed the $27,000 mark, though contributions are still strongly encouraged. Henrichs has also been providing updates on Jayden’s condition. These have been ranging from photos right after the accident, to photos of her state now, to posts stating how the campaign is going. As of September 13th, Jayden was released from Strong Memorial with more healing to do before any other facial surgeries could be done. “A big thank you to the doctors and nurses at Strong Memorial Hospital for taking such good care of Jayden!” Henrichs posted excitedly. Donations for Jayden can be made at: indiegogo.com/JaydenForrester


news

DARK MATTERS BY MIKE RELUZCO Humanity is one step closer to answering one of the most important questions in the history of the universe: Is the Sith Empire rising again? This past week, scientists have proven that there is a 99.996 percent chance that dark energy truly does exist. Dark energy is the counterpoint to dark matter. All over space, there are these black lumps that keep everything in the universe from drifting away, and this effort is at odds with dark energy, which pulls the universe apart. So now it’s clear that we need to watch our backs, because the Sith want to destroy the universe with their dark energy. Statistically, several Force-sensitive people are born to our planet all the time, but due to lack of proper training and incapability of creating lightsabers, we cannot train a true Jedi. Soon, the Sith plan will come to fruition, and all that we know will be destroyed. Fighting back, however, can be a simple matter. We need to weed out the Sith Lords among us, and get information from them. Then kill them. In that particular order. But where does one begin looking for a Sith? Clowns. Some believe them to be demons, others believe them to be a species set to run the human race into the ground, but the sad truth is that the Sith have been biding their time in our circuses until this eleventh hour. So next time you’re at the circus, keep a close eye on those goofy motherfuckers, you never know what they could be up to.

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CineMasai: “Resident Evil: Retribution” BY DYLAN GREEN Reliably schlocky zombie fare before October? A filmmaker has to have conviction, a following, or a death wish to trot a film as silly as “Resident Evil: Retribution” onto the cinematic field. When I remember that the aforementioned writer-director is Paul W.S. Anderson, slick but mostly soulless action film auteur extraordinaire, (“Alien vs. Predator,” “Resident Evil,” “Mortal Kombat”) and that he has been involved in one way or another with all five of these films, my thoughts begin to contradict themselves. From a technical standpoint, the series has been improving with consistently reliable action sequences and proper use of 3D cameras and depth. Yes, the writing and narrative structure still switch between being boring and predictable or confusing and non-sensical. Performances across the cast range from brooding to reading off of a news teleprompter in the grungiest voice they can muster. So why am I still having fun? Because this is W. S. Anderson’s bread and butter: films with hammy acting and insufferably dumb scripts, well-choreographed action sequences, and a guaranteed fan base. No one does this bigger or better than him, and “Resident Evil: Retribution,” is an entertainingly shallow ride across the face of a two week old corpse. Alice (Milla Jovovich), the survivorturned-super soldier from the first four films, has been re-captured by the cartoonishly evil Umbrella Corporation, seemingly headed by a brainwashed Jill Valentine (Sienna Guillory) since the events of the last film, “Afterlife.” But Alice isn’t finished running and gunning just yet. With the help of Ada Wong (Li Bingbing) and ex-Umbrella

agent Albert Wesker (Shawn Roberts), Alice escapes on a “globe-trotting” mission across an underwater Umbrella facility filled with simulations of major cities to reach the surface of the planet, making for a virtual greatest hits list of characters both new and old. The plot description is as ludicrous as it sounds because it serves as a convenient way to cram as many zombies into as many different cities as possible, but it also serves another purpose. Because the first “Resident Evil” film skewed so far from the source material, the farther into the zombie-filled hole these films have gone, the closer they’ve come to incorporating characters from the games into the movies. “Retribution” sees the arrival of Leon S. Kennedy, everyone’s favorite comb-over hairdo, albeit looking like Keith Urban with suspenders, and Ada Wong from the Resident Evil 4 game. Meanwhile Jill’s evil make-over has been accompanied by an accurate purple skin-tight costume and chestmounted mind scrambling device. Even with all of the “talent” on display in this installment, with the exception of Jovovich and Rodriguez, the cast can’t rise above the necrotized hole that their acting chops have fallen into, especially Sienna Guillroy and Shawn Roberts, whose grim mugging and teleprompter line reading seem to exist in a different self-aware spoof. “Resident Evil: Retribution” is a slick, pulpy, absent-minded action thriller with enough beautiful faces and 3D depth perceptive camera tricks to wonder what cutting room floor the script was pulled off of, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

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reviews

ALBUM REVIEW: “BABEL” BY TOMMY ROACH Close to three years ago, in the month of October, an album came out in the UK in a scene that hadn’t really become popularized yet. Behind it were four exceptionally talented multiinstrumentalists who, mind you, didn’t even own the instruments they were playing on. In fact, the group was initially sent home from the studio when they showed up to record with nothing. In 2009, Mumford and Sons released their debut album, “Sigh No More,” in the UK. Since it’s release, the album has gone double platinum on our shores, and quadruple platinum across the pond. Fast forward to now, the end of September 2012, and the release of Mumford and Son’s sophomore album, “Babel.” With a bar set as high as an album like “Sigh No More,” Mumford and Son’s had their work cut out for them for this release. While a band’s debut is important to grab everyone’s attention (which they’ve obviously done), the second album is really the turning point for a young band. This is the album where a band proves to the world that they weren’t just lucky. This is the album you use to let everyone know you’re not fucking around. To say that Mumford and Sons isn’t fucking around with “Babel” would be an understatement. The band has taken everything they started with “Sigh No More” and turned it up to 11, if you will. The first song on the album, appropriately called “Babel,” opens up with so much energy it’s stunning, immediately producing images of autumn, of festivals, of cool crisp air. Mumford

and Sons could not have possibly chosen a better way to establish their intentions for this album. The chorus is poetic perfection and ends by going back into heavy acoustic guitar and banjo riffs that make you want to lay in a pile of leaves and forget you’re a broke college student for a little bit. The song “I Will Wait,” is a perfect choice for the first single off of this album. While not the strongest track on the album, it has a large amount of wonderful things going for it. If there’s one thing I love hearing more than anything else, it’s harmonies. The be blunt, the harmonies in this song tug at my heartstrings in a way I’m not used to. Track 11, in contrast to most of this album, is a slower, more beautiful song called “Below My Feet.” I note the track number due to the fact that I usually find the second half of an album to be good, but not always memorable. Mumford and Sons breaks that, and reminds you that the album is still playing in the background, and this track is no exception to that. In all honesty, I wish I could go into great detail about every track on this album. There’s so much to be said about this band. “Babel” goes above and beyond everything it should have been. It’s a gorgeous album that belongs in any audiophile’s collection. I’d say that’s pretty damn good for a band that couldn’t afford the instruments they needed to play only a few years back.

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CLUBS SEARCHING FOR A NEW HOME BY MARK VASEY How do you move on from the walls of memories built on the shoulders of dreams? Where do you go when the home you built has been taken from you, and the situation is out of your control? This is the problem staring many clubs at Purchase College in the eye, many of them forced to find new meeting spaces this semester, due to construction and policy changes regarding the use of rooms on campus. The Nerf Guild once wielded their weapons of plastic, containing projectiles of foam as numerous students took over the Humanities building, battle after battle, until The Nerf Guild became a victim of renovation. The Nerf Guild has been forced to leave its home battlefield behind in search of a suitable replacement. Although they have lost their location, their spirit will live on as the club searches for new foreign battlefields. The games will continue for the Nerf Guild as it searches for a permanent base of operations, but not all clubs have fully acquiesced the loss of their homes. Push Ideas Into Action, commonly referred to as PUSH, an activist club on campus lost its beloved location due to construction as well. Sandra Quints, the president of PUSH, misses the clubs old space in the basement of Campus Center North. Jasmine Rippey, the Coordinator of Clubs Organizations and Services (CoCOas), stated that the rooms in Campus Center North are no longer assigned to specific clubs, and must be reserved using the Room Management System

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(RMS). This can be accessed from the self-service section of the student portal. Rippey said that the change in policy is in response to the reduced amount of space on campus due to construction, and the change creates a “fair chance for everyone to have space.” This could help alleviate the space constraints placed upon clubs by the renovations of buildings, but does not make Quints feel any better about the situation. “It’s good to know there is a space you can go to,” she said, referring to the impromptu meetings that PUSH once did in their old space. Remnants of the past can be viewed if you journey into the basement rooms of campus center north. I was showed the rooms by Rippey and Chair of Senate, Teddy O’Rourke. Many of the items that once belonged to the clubs are now piled in a mess of history that fills the center of these rooms. The images bring up thoughts of mass graves and book burnings as the piles of seemingly useless junk sit, collecting dust, waiting to be removed, and with it, any hint of what once occurred in these rooms. These piles symbolize the transition of a campus, and its student body, from the past into a future filled with newly renovated buildings, and new policies that replace the old. Homes have been lost, but new memories will be cemented into the minds of students at Purchase College and the clubs will live on.


campus

UPDATE FROM THE PSGA PRESIDENT BY CHRISTINA BLANKENSHIP HEY TEAM! I missed you this summer. Purchase was so lonely without you. I did, however, get a buttload of work done without you here to distract me... so that’s good! Before I update you on all of that, it’s important that you know who I am and how you’re going to use me. My job as president is a two-part gig. Half is being the chief student to the administration and SUNY network, and half is being head of the PSGA’s (all clubs, organizations and services) operations and affairs. If you guys have an issue or idea, I need to know about it. In some cases, I’m the only student that speaks directly to our “higher ups,” so I need to understand what you want in order for it to happen. If we don’t know each other yet, that’s easily fixable. The Executives were all on campus this summer, so we were able to plow through the general housekeeping that’s accumulated over the past… thirty years or so. The Stood and our internships are on probation this semester because of problems last year’s executive board faced. We desperately need your help keeping the Stood afloat… So please, please don’t drink there, start a fight, or do anything cray to jeopardize our Stoodhome. Drink wherever else you want- that’s on you- but the second you bring it into the Stood it’s on all of us. DON’T DO IT. Next! I’m sure you’ve all noticed the new and greatly improved loop schedule! The Goddess of the Transportation Office, Ms. Donna Salter, worked her butt off to have that ready for us by this semester and we’re so thankful! I hear seats

on the Friday buses to White Plains are scarce; go to Port Chester instead! The hourly loop is brand new, and it offers everything that White Plains does and more including a Metro North train to the city, cheaper movies, great music venues, shopping, delicious food. It’s fierce, so use it! Also: go check out the GORGEOUS path between H street in the Olde and Alumni. It was my baby this summer and I hope you all make use of it, stay safe and keep it clean! That’s just a tiny bit of what we’re doing and dealing with here in the PSGA. The Independent’s lovely Editor-in-Chief has generously offered us a weekly spot to keep in touch with you, so let us know what you want to know and we’ll keep this conversation going. You’ll hear from the other executives in the coming weeks and you’re going to love them just as much as I do. They’re hyperactive, caring, PHENOM at getting shit done- everything you’d want in a team of leaders- so use them while you can. Thanks team! You’re the best! xOxO pReSiDeNt

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TUESDAYS in the Stood: Aperture Club, 8-9pm Complexuality, 10-11:30pm in the Cinema

Cameron Wisch Performance

Thursday, 9/27 7pm-12am Student Center at Whitson’s

EDM/ Dance Party

Thursday, 9/27 7-11:30pm Student Center at Whitson’s

Comedy Stitches Rob O’Reilly Friday, 9/28 8:30-10pm Student Center Cinema

50’s Dinner and Malt Shop Friday, 9/28 5-8pm

Stood Open Mic

Tuesday, 10/2 7-12pm Student Center Cinema

Fall Fest Line-Up Announcement

Thursday, 10/4 9:30-10:30pm Student Center Cinema

Amateur Night

Friday, 10/5 8pm-12am Student Center at Whitson’s

Hip Hop Club Presents 90s Throwback Party

Friday, 10/5 10pm-12am Student Center Main Stage

Student Center Cinema

Submission Launch Party

Ed Sullivan’s Birthday Party

Student Center Cinema

Friday, 9/28 4pm-2am Student Center in Whitson’s

Tie-Dye Day

Saturday, 9/29 4-7pm Student Center Main Stage

Lavender Luau

Saturday, 9/29 8pm-12am Student Center at Whitson’s

FORTH

Monday, 10/1 8-10pm Student Center Cinema

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Saturday,10/6 6pm-12am

Algemon Cadwallader

Saturday, 10/6 8pm-12am Student Center at Whitson’s

Rave the Vote

Saturday, 10/6 8pm-12am Student Center Main Stage

FORTH

Monday, 10/8 8-10pm Student Center at Cinema


events

Stood Open Mic

Tuesday, 10/9 9-11:30pm Student Center Cinema

SOCA Party

Friday, 10/12 9pm-12am Student Center Main Stage

Galaxy X

Satyrday, 10/13 9pm-12am Student Center at Whitson’s

O.A.P.I.A.’s

Saturday, 10/13 7pm-12am Student Center at Whitson’s

Twerps/Alex Bleeker

Sunday, 10/14 8pm-12am Student Center at Whitson’s

FORTH

Monday, 10/15 8-10pm Student Center Cinema

GREAT JOB!

Monday, 10/15 8-11pm Student Center at Whitson’s

HOLDING AN EVENT? Email us the information at YOUR.INDY@GMAIL.COM

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