March 24 2015 cayuga collegian vol 61 issue 16 final

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AN ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATED FILM HAS A TIE TO CENTRAL NEW YORK

Collegian cayugacollegian@gmail.com

Vote this week for your Student Government Officers (SGO)

By Caleb Slater, Co-Editor-in-chief

a whopping 85 students and 34 staff felt like upstairs was a better place for student activities, as opposed to the eight students and one sole employee who agreed with administration that downstairs was where the tables ought to be. Notably, as well, is the fact that clubs have noted a marked decrease in funding whenever they fund raise

Film enthusiasts attending Auburn Public Theater’s showing of a true story about two wrestling brothers, Dave and Mark Schultz, who went on to become Olympic athletes, were given a real life experience, before the film’s screening! A Syracuse native, who competed alongside the pair depicted in the film, was at the screening to give a firsthand account of the true story. Gene Mills, former wrestling icon and coach at Syracuse University, was in the audience last Friday when APT screened the drama Foxcatcher. Mills, a three-time world champion, the first ever four-time All- American at S.U., and a 1980 U.S. Olympian who was voted “Athlete of the Year” by the U.S. Olympic Committee, expressed that he lived the story depicted in the film. “I toured the world with them. We went to Japan and Russia together. The film takes place in 1987, but we knew each other before then,” explained Mills. The film, Foxcatcher, is based on the book written by the youngest brother, Mark. The title of the book is Foxcatcher: The True Story of My Brother’s Murder, John du Pont’s Madness, and the Quest for Olympic Gold. The film tells the story of the Olympic wrestling brothers from Palo Alto, California, and how they were influenced by billionaire, John Eleuthère du Pont, the heir to the du Pont family fortune. The du Ponts are one of the wealthiest families in America, having, as of 2014, a family fortune of more than $15 billion dollars! Mills goes on to discuss how he trained with the brothers at many

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Local wrestling icon and Syracuse native Gene Mills, pictured above, was in Auburn last week to give a talk before the screening of a film based on true events which he witnessed.

AUBURN CAMPUS

We have a Student Center? Debate over club table placement stirs up a student/staff survey with shocking results By Kelsey McLean, Co- Editor-in-chief

Fulton Officers President – Kelly Newton Vice President – Victoria Dishaw Secretary – Christine King Treasurer- Don Cleveland

COLLEGIAN OFFICE HOURS Kelsey McLean, co-editor-in-chief Monday: 10:00 am - noon Tuesday: 10:00 am - noon Wednesday: 10:00 am - noon Thursday: 10:00 am - noon Friday: 10:00 am-noon

Caleb Slater, co-editor-in-chief Tuesday: noon - 2:00 pm Thursday: noon - 2:00 pm Friday: noon - 2:00 pm

March 24, 2015

Wrestling legend comes to Auburn

CAYUGABRIEFS

Vote this week for your fellow students nominated to fill position on the Student Government Organizations on each campus. Voting began Monday. You must have your Student I.D. to vote. Voting on the Fulton Campus is at the Welcome desk in the front lobby. The students who volunteer to run for these positions are usually the unsung backboard of forward movement on campus. Be sure to take a moment and thank one of your campus’ student officers if you get the chance! Auburn Officers President – Alyssa Zmarthie Vice President – Dakota Marshall Secretary – Kyrie Ciricillo Treasurer – Richard Walker

Vol. 61 Issue 16

The Table-Gate debate rages on, with the entire school— staff and students alike—torn on where student activities should take place.

Officially student activities are supposed to take place in the Student Center, which you might know better as the cafeteria, as made in writing about three years ago. However, most people have traditionally used the main hallway instead, the law not being enforced until very recently, and many students and staff feel that the main hall way is where student activities ought to be. Carin Dresser, student engagement coordinator, was

curious to see people’s opinions on the matter, and so conducted a survey to see what people felt like was the best place to coordinate student activities. Firstly, she noted, out of the 128 people who had taken the survey, only two knew what the ‘Student Center’ actually was. “People call it the cafeteria, or Subway,” she said. As for the results, The administration responds to the table-gate controversy on page three.

THE OFFICIAL STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE


OPINIONS Here’s how I see it!

Kelsey McLean I remember one morning when I was driving up to the school, I met what should have been a shocking sight -one of the faculty smoking in front of the school, right on the sidewalk, where everyone could see. You wouldn’t even think she was breaking the law. She certainly wasn’t acting like it. I should’ve have been surprised, but while I was frustrated and annoyed, it certainly wasn’t surprising. The fact is, no one remembers that you’re not supposed

to smoke on school grounds -- not even the staff themselves. For two whole years, since I started in this school, smoking on campus grounds has been illegal, and for two whole years it’s been completely ignored. Time and time again I see people smoking on the sidewalk, in the back parking lot, even in the middle of the court yard! If the staff themselves can’t remember it’s illegal, how can anyone expect the students to? It’s law that everyone talks about, but no one seems to remember, especially not when it’s inconvenient. Sometimes people try to hide it, but more often than not, they smoke right out in the open -- either not knowing or not caring that it’s against the law. I’d expect that kind of carelessness from students, but staff? Maybe it’s because people don’t think secondhand smoke is very dangerous, which is understandable. The effects of secondhand smoke are often downplayed, sometimes even outright ignored, in reports on the effect of smoking... but second hand smoke is dangerous, even if you think it ‘isn’t as bad’ as smoking itself. Second hand smoke has been linked to cancer, heart disease, asthma, and flu infections. Just because it isn’t ‘as bad’ as smoking doesn’t mean it’s harmless. Smoking is your choice, of course. No one can tell you to stop. All that the schools asks is that you don’t subject innocent bystanders to diseases and illnesses that they didn’t ask for. Is that really so much to ask?

Here’s how I see it!

Caleb Slater

I’m sure that you’ve noticed the new machines in the main floor hallway near the theater. I think it’s great to see the administration provide a more convenient area for students to enjoy delectable treats. There is much traffic in the main hallway and I think that providing this service is going to be appreciated by many.

KELSEY MCLEAN - CO-EDITOR-IN-CHIEF CALEB SLATER - CO-EDITOR-IN-CHIEF DUSTIN ALBINO - SPORTS EDITOR SHAQUELLA S. NEWBY - STAFF WRITER DUNCAN MERRITT - STAFF WRITER KEVIN SHUTTER - STAFF WRITER MALCOM HUEY - DIVERGENT NATION MARY G. MERRITT - FACULTY ADVISOR WANT TO JOIN THE COLLEGIAN STAFF? EMAIL US TO SET UP AN INTERVIEW.

PAGE TWO

POLITICS

Obama Plays Deal or NO Deal By by Kevin Shutter, staff writer

A deal with Iran is necessary not only for American foreign policy interests, but for a peace much like bands throughout the 1960’s used to write songs about. It isn’t hyperbole, world peace or at least world peace as we know it is at stake. The pundits and pontificators have laid out their cases on either side of the issue. Rather than butting ideological heads it seems much more prudent to look toward the middle and see clearly the true issue at hand. That is the Iranian’s proliferation of material required to formulate a nuclear bomb. This isn’t a new debate but rather a rerun with a new president at the helm who is trying desperately to solidify a foreign policy achievement in his lame duck years with a hostel Republican Party laying claim to majorities in both houses. The various news stories have captivated the headlines since the negotiations began in Geneva, Switzerland months ago. The Prime Minister of Israel in a desperate attempt for his Countries voice to be heard spoke to the members of Congress. Detailing the problems posed to his country if the deal currently being debated sees the light of an international approval. Forty-seven Republicans have even managed to create a trending hashtag with their own desperate attempt to have their voices heard on the matter with a letter to the leaders of Iran. President Obama refused to meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu while he was in Washington addressing Congress. Over 50 Democrats skipped the speech claiming solidarity with Obama and crying partisanship at the hands of House Speaker John Boehner for inviting Netanyahu to speak. The same people crying partisanship and claiming they believe in open debate were the ones skipping Mr. Netanyahu’s speech. Republicans in the Senate found it necessary to write the letter to the Iranian government to give them a quick lesson in American politics. Detailing the ways in which this deal if struck would be dismantled with a pen stroke in a mere two years when the next President of

The United States takes office. The 47 Republicans that signed the letter have been bashed and lampooned in every media outlet from the smog filled streets of New York City to the beautiful shores of San Diego. Their actions have been called unprecedented by some and illegal by others. Perhaps the Republicans should have written a letter to the Democrats in our government and their friends in the media detailing the rules regarding the politics in our country. The Constitution amongst other precedents unequivocally gave the Senators the right to act in the way they did. It seems time and again we have two parties in our nation’s capital fighting completely different battles. While the world will be a much more dangerous place if Iran is able to build a nuclear bomb, a grand bargain may not be the way to put an end to it. A grand bargain most certainly shouldn’t be the only option on the table. Sanctions against the Iranians have been in place to one extent or another since the Iranian Revolution in 1979. With the right touch of diplomacy and a heavy hand the United States could single handedly stop the Iranians. There are folks on both sides of the political aisle in Congress who are ready to impose crippling sanctions that will leave the Iranians no choice but to capitulate to the world’s demands. Unfortunately our President is too preoccupied trying to salvage a grand bargain victory for his legacy. Instead of a unified front with options at their disposal we have a government who opposes itself and time and again ties their own hands behind their backs. Rather than one step forward and two steps back, were just going backwards. We haven’t taken a single step forward. Despite Republican efforts and a speech by our only ally in the Middle East, Democrats and President Obama want nothing of it. They would rather play a political game of “Deal or no Deal.” Rather than shiny suitcases filled with money it will be shiny coffins and another war in the Middle East.

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FROM THE CAYUGA-CC VICE PRESIDENT Jeffrey Rosenthal

The return of the Student Center

STUDENT CENTER FOUND! After a Cayuga Collegian investigation, members of our staff were able to determine that there is a place on the Auburn Campus labeled ‘Student Center’. (The sign was found in the room everyone calls the cafeteria).

Table-Gate part deux... CONTINUED FROM FRONT PAGE

downstairs. The Criminal Justice Club, who always has a domestic violence awareness fund-raiser every year, says they were only able to raise about $100 dollars in the Student Center this year, when they

“Out of the 128 people who had taken the survey, only two knew what the ‘Student Center’ actually was.” —Carin Dresser, student engagement coordinator, Auburn Campus

normally raise at least 300 dollars in previous years. The Anime Club, as well, had two bake sales this year, one upstairs and one in the Student Center. The upstairs bake sale drew in 50 dollars, whereas the downstairs bake sale couldn’t even break 20 dollars. A small difference, maybe, but enough of one to make one think. Jeff Rosenthal, vice president of student affairs, has responded to these claims by arguing that the student body is simply resistant to change. “Change is an inevitable part of life,” he said, “The fact that it’s been there for years [The tables] is not a compelling enough of an argument.”

It should be noted, however, that while Norman Lee had initially sent out the letter, he was not the person who initiated this debate -- it was Rosenthal himself who asked him to do so, and he doesn’t want Lee to be blamed. “Norman is not at fault, it’s wrong to accuse Norman of wrong doing, he was doing what I had asked him to do,” Rosenthal said. The Student Center has, historically, been used rather poorly. It’s frequently seen more as a make-shift cafeteria, which it used to be, than an actual Student Center. The vice president has tried to take a gradual approach toward integrating the Student Center into a place students actually want to be in — adding cushions to the bench seating, adding speakers, upgrading and painting the walls — but admits that there’s still more work to be done, mostly in informing people of its place and its purposes. Regardless of how you feel about the matter, the debate isn’t going away any time soon, though Rosenthal has sent an open letter on the matter in hopes of pleasing everyone and finally putting this debate to rest. Whether it will finally strike a compromise between the two sides, or simply fan the flames, however, remains to be seen. “People are going to flock to the Student Center just like they obey the no smoking policy on campus,” snickered a student.

Cayuga Community College began in 1953 as Auburn Community College in one classroom of an elementary school building in downtown Auburn. Recognizing the potential for something greater, College leaders decided to move the campus in 1959 to its current location on Franklin Street. Beginning with one main building, the Auburn campus has grown with the addition of a Library building (1964), the Technology building (1970), the old bookstore (1971), Spartan Hall (1980), the Nature Center (1983), and other structures. The Fulton campus has also seen significant growth from its humble beginnings in 1994 to become a comprehensive branch campus. The College’s very first student union lounge was, believe it or not, in the main hallway, adjacent to the president’s suite. According to College historical records, it was a vibrant space where a variety of student activities were held, including course registration, student dances, and concerts. But as technology evolved, and additional buildings were constructed, those activities shifted to other locations. A concert in the main hallway would seem a bit misplaced today. Each time, College leaders saw the potential these changes could have on the student experience. Each time, there were risks involved, hurdles to overcome and questions to be answered. But these changes ultimately made the College a better place for students. About three years ago, when the College changed food service and bookstore providers, the Cafe area was renamed a Student Center. The name change was intended to once again dedicate a space for students – to create a place for students to grab a bite to eat, browse through the bookstore, relax between classes, listen to some music, watch tv, and interact with peers.

TELL US WHERE YOU THINK THE TABLES SHOULD GO! SEND US AN EMAIL AT CAYUGACOLLEGIAN@GMAIL.COM The College administration wants to rid the halls of club tables and place them in a Student Center.

FULTON

CAMPUS! The Collegian wants to know what is going on up there! Be a Fulton Correspondent or just email us your news at Cayugacollegian@ gmail.com

DIVERGENT

NATION MEETINGS

Mondays at 11 a.m. in The Black Box Theater. All are welcome to attend!

Designated club activity space in the Student Center would enable student clubs to have a more permanent presence on campus. Tables would always be there. Comfortable seating would enable students to relax and connect with peers. Banners could be permanently hung from the ceiling to remind students of the different clubs that exist on the Auburn campus. Signage across campus would direct students to the Student Center. Students from various clubs could

SERVING THE STUDENTS OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOR MORE THAN 60 YEARS!

interact with each other more regularly, and in a more comfortable setting. In time, students would instinctively recognize the Student Center as ‘the’ place to go for information about club activities. It would be ‘the’ place for club fund-raising efforts. Pizza, cookies, whatever clubs are selling would be found here. This could be ‘club recruiting central’.

“Whether you believe that dedicating space in the Student Center for clubs is a worthwhile effort, or that tables should remain in the hallways, I encourage you to share your views. Whatever your opinion, the College remains committed to providing students with an outstanding experience.” —Jeffrey Rosenthal Student Affairs

It’s understandable why some students want to leave well-enough alone. Change, and the uncertainty it often brings can be unpleasant and anxiety-producing. There’s concern that fund-raising efforts could suffer. And indeed, when some club table activities were moved downstairs by the dining booths this year, fundraising efforts were affected. Fundraising is an important part of club involvement, and anything that could potentially impact fund-raising efforts should be carefully considered. This was the first year that any efforts were made to shift club activities downstairs. Unfortunately, club tables were placed in a cramped space with poor lighting which was not very user-friendly. If moved to a dedicated area by the windows and columns where natural light floods the room, there would be ample space to move around, and comfortable seating to create a much more welcoming place for students. Whether you believe that dedicating space in the Student Center for clubs is a worthwhile effort, or that tables should remain in the hallways, I encourage you to share your views. Whatever your opinion, the College remains committed to providing students with an outstanding experience. —Jeffrey Rosenthal Student Affairs

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IT’S NOT JUST EXERCISING, IT’S AN EXPERIENCE! Join CCC’s first-ever Color Run! By Dustin Albino, Sports Editor On Sunday April 26th, 2015 at 12:00 p.m., the Cayuga C o m m u n i t y College will be hosting its first ever Color Run. The run will consist of five kilometers or 3.1 miles path around the Auburn campus. The run The Cayuga will start near the Collegian’s Tech wing and go Sports Editor, through the Nature Dustin Albino, Trail, all the way will be the PA to Prospect Street announcer for and back around the event! the front of the building. So what is a color run? A Color Run is an event series that is five kilometers long where throughout the course there are stations where paint is literally thrown on you. The run is an untimed event, and has no prizes or winners. In most cases, the proceeds from the run go toward some charity event. This is exactly what CCC is doing, as all proceeds will benefit The Matthew House. The Cayuga Community College’s

first annual Color Run will consist of other events going on around campus as well. There will be a DJ playing live music. A PA Announcer to call the race and entertain the participants. Food, games, and so much more that it will be hard to miss. Things to note about the run: • Race day registration and sign in is from 10:00 - 11:30 a.m. • 5K will start at 12:00 p.m. • Participants will run in waves of 50 people, separated by 10 minutes • T-Shirts are guaranteed for participants signed up by April 1st • Entry fee is $30 • Money is non-refundable • Send registration from to: Kathy Gross Cayuga Community College 197 Franklin St Auburn, NY 1302 For more information email cayugacolorrun@gmail.com Time is running out so make sure you are signed up for this spectacular event. Registration forms are available online at Facebook.com/CayugaColorRun or at select campus locations.

Wrestling legend...

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training facilities around the nation, including Foxcatcher Farms, but turned down the offer to wrestle and coach full time at Foxcatcher Farms. He turned down a $325,000 offer by du Pont because, as he put it, “Du Pont was a creep. I had never met a man quite as creepy as him and in the movie you’ll see Steve Carell play that creepiness, but as impressive as it was, there’s nothing like the real thing!” Mills also had a hand in the production of the film, he says that he helped direct Mark Ruffalo and Channing Tatum, who played the wrestling brothers in the film, on how to preform wrestling moves. Mills also made a cameo appearance in the film, as a referee. Mills says he was pleased on how the film came together. “This isn’t a movie about wrestling. It’s about

the relationship of two brothers and how the influence of John E. du Pont, tore that apart,” he said Mills discussed his only criticism of the film is the depiction of billionaire du Pont, as a coach and wrestler. “The man never wrestled in his life. There was no late night wrestling in the trophy room, although they might have put that in the film to reiterate how creepy this guy was, he never wrestled,” Mills explained. “He did participate in a wrestling tournament for older gentlemen in Mexico. He paid his way to first place.” The film, Foxcatcher, was nominated for an Oscar in five different categories including: Best Actor (Steve Carell), Best Supporting Actor (Mark Ruffalo), Best Director (Bennett Miller), Makeup and Hairstyling, and Best Original Screenplay.

SERVING THE STUDENTS OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOR MORE THAN 60 YEARS!

Write for The Collegian and earn credits at the same time! Register for Telcom 204, (Journalism Practicum),

with Collegian faculty advisor Mary Merritt. PAGE FIVE


ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES!

Rehearsal An important rehearsal for candidates will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, May 15 in the Spartan Hall Gymnasium. Rehearsal will take approximately one and a half hours, and individual questions about the ceremony will be discussed. All candidates are required to attend. Fulton Campus students are encouraged to coordinate rides together.

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ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES!

Event Details The 61st Annual Commencement of Cayuga Community College will be held at 1 p.m. on Sunday, May 17, 2015, in the Spartan Hall, 197 Franklin St., Auburn. The ceremony lasts approximately two hours. Tickets are not required. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis. Guests can also watch Commencement ceremonies in the air-conditioned Irene A. Bisgrove Community Theatre via a live video feed on a large screen at the front of the auditorium. Parking is available on the Auburn Campus lots. However, no parking is allowed along circular drives near the front and rear entrances.

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New sexual assault policy adopted on all SUNY campuses By Kelsey McLean, Co- Editor-in-chief However you feel about Governor Cuomo’s decisions regarding SUNY schools lately, there is one policy that has gone without argument -- the new sexual assault policy, which he pushed to the SUNY Board of Trustees with unanimous agreement on the matter. The new policy has affirmative consent at its core -- the two parties must enthusiastically, consistently, and continually give consent throughout the sexual act, instead of consent simply being assumed as a given right until it is broken. This spearheads the ‘Well, they never said no!’

argument that perpetrators often like to use in court, along with ‘It looked like they were saying yes’, and ‘They never fought back’. With affirmative consent, if no one ever said yes, then it wasn’t legal. The policy doesn’t just affect the legal definition of consent, however. Many steps in combating sexual assault were taken in this new policy, including setting up a 24-hour hotline by the New York State Police, specifically to report sexual assault on campus, and an increased effort in educating security and campus police on how to handle sexual assault cases.

Cuomo has lauded the new policy, and hopes to spread it to colleges across New York, not simply just the state schools. More importantly, however, he wants these cases to be handled by the police, not internal affairs. His biggest bone he has to pick with private colleges is their tendency to treat rape and sexual assault as an academic affair, which he sorely disagrees with. “If someone gets shot on a campus, that’s not an academic matter,” he said. “[...]But when a woman says she is raped, why is that any less of a crime?” With the policy only being three

months old, most of these months happening during winter break, it’s difficult to tell whether or not the new policy will be an improvement on the old one. SUNY, however, has eagerly implemented the new policy and shows no signs of doubt over its success... something that they, finally, share in common in the governor. If you’ve been raped or assaulted, or even just think you’ve been, don’t hesitate to tell someone. The sooner you do, the better. The new New York State hotline is 1-844845-7269. Remember, they’re there for you.

Work for the best... Wegmans ranks among the Top 10 employers in the nation. By Duncan Merritt, staff writer Finding a good part-time job for students is a hard thing to do these days. You may want to start your search at one of the best and you don’t have to go far. A local grocery store chain was named in the Top 10 Places to Work for in 2015. That store was Wegmans. According to Karl Utlermohlem, a writer for InvestorPlace.com, Wegmans was ranked seventh out of 100 top employers to work for in 2015 by FORTUNE magazine. Wegmans also earned the distinction of being called by the business magazine “the best grocery store in America.” Wegmans is a chain of grocery stores that was established in Rochester by the Wegman family. From its start in Rochester with one market, the supermarket giant now has 85 stores throughout the eastern United States and employs about 44,000 in those locations. Wegmans is number seven on that list for many reasons. For one thing, Wegmans offers college tuition reimbursement to its employees. In short terms, they will help you pay for college just because you work for them. The next reason Wegmans was ranked as one of the best is that fulltime workers get 100 percent of their healthcare needs covered by the company. Wegmans is very flexible with hours and will do its best to make their employees get the hours they need when they are convenient for the worker. They also have what they call a discount program. The discount program provides more than 150 discounts on things like movies tickets, auto care, theme parks, and ski resorts and much more. Finally, they give gifts and awards to their workers if they are doing a good job or to celebrate a worker’s anniversary of employment. Wegmans has grown a lot since it first started and it is only going to grow more in the future.

SERVING THE STUDENTS OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOR MORE THAN 60 YEARS!

PAGE SEVEN


Lady Spartans Open Season Down South SPORTS GO SPARTANS! GO SPARTANS! GO SPARTANS! GO SPARTANS!

COLLEGIAN

jeff WEEKLY SODoKu

sez

Fulton students recently enjoyed a show with magician Ran’D Shine!

Criminal Justice Club Prison Tour, March 27th. Bus leaving at 9 am from front lobby on the Auburn Campus.

The Lady Spartans opened their season down in Baltimore MD where they faced Harford Community College both Saturday and Sunday at Cal Ripken Sports Complex. The Spartans got off to a slow start on Saturday in their first two games of the season only getting 1 hit by McKenzie Harris (Liverpool, NY). Sunday proved a tad better for the Spartans as Taylor Hutchings (Auburn, NY) and Libby Marsden (Weedsport, NY) put the bat on the ball. Over the course of the weekend Harris went 4 for 9 including a triple and RBI, Marsden went 2 for 7 including a double and RBI, and Hutchings went 3 for 8 with an RBI. The Lady Spartans look to head south again this upcoming weekend.

PHOTOS FROM LAST SEASON

WOMEN’S SOFTBALL SCHEDULE

sez:

“When the kids are dancing it can only mean one thing... it’s a Saturday night.”

campus candids

J

last week’s puzzle solved

lOOK FOR THE ANSWERS IN THE NEXT ISSUE

IF YOU HAVE A CAMPUS CANDID YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE, PLEASE EMAIL IT TO US AT CAYUGACOLLEGIAN@GMAIL.COM

hAPPY SPRING! PAGE EIGHT

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