While You Were Here 2017

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DESIGNED BY RACHEL BUIGAS-LOPEZ AND LAURA SHKOURATOFF


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Does it feel real yet? Has the shock set in, or the relief ? Does it feel good? Scary? You did so much to get to this point, and worked so hard. Many cups of coffee — and a lot of cups of other drinks — went into getting here. A lot of borrowing friends’ staplers, practicing solos in stairwells and submitting papers minutes before the deadline have shaped you into the student you are now. Except soon, you won’t be a student. You’ll be something else — maybe you know what that is already, and have known for a while, or maybe you don’t know and don’t feel like trying to find out until your bank account runs too low to pay rent. Still, even once your NYU ID card stops letting you access Bobst Library at all hours of the day, you’ll carry the university as part of your personal identification. You’re a fully blossomed Violet, and you’ve got the subway map memorized well enough to prove it. In honor of the effort you put in to get here, we present the While You Were Here issue. Leaf through in between studying for your last finals and preparing for your senior recitals. Reminisce on your years here and take a deep breath as you step outside of our non-campus and into New York City and the world at large as a college graduate — a violet-bleeding, network-wielding, city-slicking alum.

Hailey Nuthals Editor-in-Chief

STAFF PHOTO BY VERONICA LIOW


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PHOTO BY HAILEY NUTHALS

Grace Pozniak

Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Development, Music Business

Julie Kang

PHOTO BY LAURA SHKOURATOFF

Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Development, Food Studies

What is one of your best memories from the past four years? JK: Probably being a part of the NYU women’s club water polo team. Since at NYU it’s hard to meet people, the team has been really great and has given me a lot of great times and memories as an undergraduate.

What advice do you have for incoming freshmen? GP: Everyone’s experience is so different, so I think it’s tough to give advice that would work for everyone! I would say to simply make the most of it. Don’t be afraid to explore, share your ideas with anyone and everyone, dream big, send cold emails, dye your hair, start a conversation with a random person in class. There is no other time in your life where you have such incredible and different people surrounding you every single day, so take advantage of it.

PHOTO BY HAILEY NUTHALS

Leah Jean Gallagher

Tisch School of the Arts, Musical Theater

What advice would you give to incoming freshmen? LG: Incoming freshmen should find out as quickly as possible what exactly it is they want to do with their lives. I know as somebody who came to New York — I was 17, and I was doing exactly what my parents told me. And now I’m graduating, and I know in my heart my career is going to take a very different path than the one I had initially planned for, and I’m facing a lot of resistance [from my parents] because of that. So start the resistance sooner rather than later! Also, go out and see the city. I’m kicking myself for not spending every weekend I could out on Governor’s Island or going around the city. COURTESY OF DANIEL SULLY

Daniel Sully

Gallatin School of Individualized Study, Psychology of Design

What advice do you have for incoming freshmen? DS: Chances are you’ll hear this all the time, but seriously — get involved! And more importantly, do your best to leave your communities a better place than they were when you found them. Much love for Commuter World.

COURTESY OF CAROLINE GROGAN

Caroline Grogan

College of Arts and Science, Journalism; Tisch School of the Arts, Drama

What about NYU will you miss most after graduation? CG: I will miss most being able to be studying in Kimmel, or Tisch, or the Journalism building, and running into a first-year Welcome Week friend or a classmate from a year ago. Although this city is huge, NYU makes me feel connected. I’ll miss my NYU Bookstore work family and Welcome Week team. Oh, and I will miss the many convenient bathrooms on campus!


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FRESHMAN 08 YEAR 2013-2014

9/5/2013

Bill de Blasio is elected mayor of New York City.

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8/11/2013

NYU Shanghai opens as NYU’s third degree-granting campus.

8/14/2013

Following a vote of no confidence passed against him in 2013, NYU President John Sexton announces that he will resign at the beginning of 2016.

8/25/2013

After being closed for a year for renovations, Brittany Residence Hall reopens as a First Year Residential Experience dorm.

12/11/2014

NYU Athletics announces that the university will once again have a baseball team after a 41-year hiatus.

PHOTO BY HANNAH LUU

1/1/2014

The Polytechnic School of Engineering, now called the Tandon School of Engineering, officially becomes a part of NYU.

01 VIA GONYUATHLETICS.COM

02 VIA FACEBOOK.COM

3/2/2014

Three students who are members of NYU Divest are arrested while protesting the Keystone Pipeline in Washington Square Park.

3/8/2014

Malaysia Airlines flight 370 disappears en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Malaysia.

2/7/2014

The 2014 Winter Olympic Games open in Sochi, Russia.

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COURTESY OF FELIPE DA LA HOZ

4/24/2014

Members of NYU Students for Justice in Palestine deliver mock eviction notices to students living in Palladium and Lafayette Residence Halls.


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COURTESY OF NYUAD

4/16/2015

PHOTO BY SAM BEARZI

VIA WIKIPEDIA.COM

11/25/2014

Protesters take to Herald Square after a grand jury decides not to indict a police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teen in Ferguson, Mo.

8/19/2014

Aristotelis Orginos is revealed as the creator of NYU Secrets.

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9/21/2014

400,000 people participate in the People’s Climate March, which was the largest march for climate change reform in history.

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Independent investigative firm Nardello and Co. releases a report revealing that NYU failed to uphold labor standards with over 10,000 migrant workers employed in the construction of the NYU Abu Dhabi campus.

4/29/2015

Hundreds gather at Union Square in solidarity with those protesting in Baltimore over the death of Freddie Gray.

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3/10/2015

The Graduate Student Organizing Committee cancels its strike after a last-minute agreement with NYU.

3/14/2015

NYU professor Andrew Ross is barred from entering the United Arab Emirates after criticizing labor practices during the development of NYU’s Abu Dhabi campus.

3/18/2015

PHOTO BY HANNAH LUU

Former University of Oxford Vice Chancellor Andrew Hamilton is appointed president of NYU.

SOPHOMORE YEAR 2014-2015

PHOTO BY EUAN PRENTIS


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3/22/2016

11/2/2015

Former President Barack Obama advocates for federal agencies to #BanTheBox on job applications through a new order.

11/4/2015

A tomb full of skeletons is discovered under Washington Square Park during construction by the NYC Department of Design and Construction.

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10/5/2015

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NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering receives a $100 million donation from Chandrika and Ranjan Tandon, and the school is renamed the NYU Tandon School of Engineering.

1/27/2016

NYU sends the Common Application a letter requesting the company reconsider including a box indicating former incarceration status on its college applications.

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12/2/2015

The university confirms that Hayden Residence Hall will be renamed Lipton Residence Hall to reflect board of trustees member Martin Lipton’s contributions to the university.

A masked, unidentified attacker threatens a Tandon professor with a knife in Rogers Hall. The attacker flees the scene, and no one is harmed.

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3/25/2016

The Incarceration to Education Coalition holds a sit-in in the Kimmel Center for University Life for over 30 hours.

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2/22/2016

404 Fitness, located at 404 Lafayette St., opens after the closure of the Jerome S. Coles Sports Center, providing more gym space for NYU students.

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4/13/2016

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Bernie Sanders holds a free rally in Washington Square Park as part of his campaign during the 2016 presidential election.

4/18/2016

NYU Divest occupies Bobst Library elevators for several hours to demand that the board of trustees receive and consider the group’s divestment campaign before administration threatens to suspend members who do not leave.

PHOTO BY JAKE QUAN

PHOTO BY MARIA TORRES

PHOTO BY ALEX BAZELY

JUNIOR YEAR COURTESY OF NYC DEPARTMENT OF DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION

2015-2016


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8/20/2016

After efforts from students advocating for free menstrual hygiene products on campus, NYU announces that MHPs will be distributed for free at certain locations around campus starting in the spring 2017 semester.

11/07/2016

SENIOR YEAR

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2016-2017

Superstar Madonna performs an impromptu rally in the fountain of Washington Square Park on the eve of the presidential election to affirm her support for Hillary Clinton.

11/08/2016

Donald Trump is elected President of the United States. Members of the NYU community respond with protests in Washington Square Park, Battery Park, the Trump Tower and other locations.

11/09/2016

Muslim students at the Tandon School of Engineering find the word “Trump!” vandalized in erasable marker across the door of their prayer room.

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PHOTO BY VERONICA LIOW

1/26/2017

NYU announces that it will be investing over $500 million in Brooklyn on Science, Engineering and Emerging Media.

1/30/2017

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Ta-Nehisi Coates, author of the awardwinning book “Between the World and Me,” officially signs a three-year contract with the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute, after working as a fellow at NYU’s Institute for the Humanities.

RENDERING BY ASJNY

PHOTO BY ANNA LETSON

2/16/2017

The fight for student representation on the board of trustees sees a significant step forward as the Student Senators Council votes in favor of a resolution that would allow students on the board. The University Senate will be voting on the resolution next in the coming months.

PHOTO BY SAYER DEVLIN

3/06/2017

President Trump signs a revised executive order that bans immigrants from seven countries from entering the United States. The NYU community responds with increased calls for the administration to announce the university’s status as a sanctuary campus.

VIA FLICKR.COM

PHOTO BY ANNA LETSON


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Thomas Devlin Gallatin, Good English

For my last piece in WSN, I thought about writing a sentimental reflection on my time at NYU. Every time I started, however, the piece transformed into a sappy, trite mess. Instead, I decided to finally put to paper one of my earliest experiences in college — the Shabbat Dinner. When I arrived at NYU, I had only one friend in the city — Rachel, who I knew from high school. I was bad at meeting people, so during Welcome Week I attempted to get out of my comfort zone by attending several events. Rachel texted me about an NYU improv event on Friday, which sounded like a very New York thing to do. I also saw on the Welcome Week website that there was a dinner before the show at the Bronfman Center, so I suggested we go for the free food. In retrospect, I should have looked up what a Shabbat dinner was beforehand. Before college I had met exactly one Jewish person because I come from a very, very, very Catholic town. Therefore, I went in blind. I arrived exactly when the dinner was scheduled to start and texted Rachel to see if she was there yet, because I didn’t want to go in alone. She responded “Yes, I’m inside!” So I walked in. She was not inside. In fact, she had gone to a completely different building. When I entered I saw a very long table with all of the seats taken. I moved to go stand on the side, but no, the man at the head of the table kindly offered his place so that I could sit down, visible to everyone. It was then that I realized that this was, in fact, a slightly more religious event than I had anticipated. And that’s when everyone started singing together in Hebrew. Perhaps were I less embarrassed I could have handled the situation better, but my first reaction was to hide my face with my hand and start mumbling the one bit of Hebrew I knew, which was “Hava Nagila.” As the song ended, Rachel finally arrived. I then looked over and saw, way across on the other side of the table, one of the only people at NYU who could at that point have possibly recognized me — my CAS college leader. We made eye contact and he started waving excitedly, as I slowly died on the inside. He came over and said, “I didn’t know you were Jewish.” I cleverly replied, “I’m not, but I know someone who is.” At this point, I had made my way over to a group of friends with a plate of food in my hand, hoping to avoid talking to anyone else. That immediately failed when the rabbi came over to talk to us. Rachel and I exchanged a quick glance that said, “OK, let’s pretend we’re Jewish.” The rabbi asked about our religious communities at home, at which we mumbled something about there not being a lively synagogue scene. She then asked where we were from, and after we replied she said, “Oh, I lived there for 20 years!” By now, I was sure I was close to death. But then, out of nowhere, someone accidentally put a napkin into a candle and a table was suddenly on fire. People tried throwing their grape juice onto it to no avail, and the rabbi announced, “I have to handle this,” and hurried away. I am not a religious man, but looking on at the fire, I could not help but think of the burning bush that spoke to Moses. And from that moment, I learned a valuable commandment that I followed for the rest of my college career: thou shalt not pretend to be Jewish.

Sophie Lewis Steinhardt, Media, Culture and Communications During my first week at NYU, I walked into the WSN office for an open house, spoke with the Beauty and Style Editor and a week later, attended my first runway show at my first New York Fashion Week. I was pretty confident I would end up in the fashion industry — I wasn’t going to be one of those people who said they wanted to work in fashion but couldn’t actually handle it. I could not have imagined I would become the new BStyle Editor the very next semester, running NYFW coverage myself. It turns out the fashion industry doesn’t have many internships, so I currently work in news doing social media, but that first week at NYU showed me that I made the right choice when I decided where to go to college. I knew that having access to the sheer number of opportunities available to NYU students was enough to get me where I wanted to go. My time at NYU has truly flown by. I absolutely hated high school, but college has completely reinvigorated my love of learning. If I can impart any wisdom — though I don’t have much — it would be to take advantage of NYU’s study abroad opportunities. I actually regret not going abroad a second time, but I’m not sure any city can top my love of Prague anyway. Daily trdelniks, near-weekly trips to Prague Castle and countless walks along quiet, cobblestone streets will remain some of my favorite NYU memories. This school has an incredible study abroad program, and there is no semester that

will be as valuable to you as the one you spend in a new city. I feel like a bit of a fraud writing this, because in all honesty, I’m a junior. Before you stop reading, I am in fact graduating in two weeks. I’m graduating a full year early — #humblebrag — but I’m actually terrified. People keep telling me that by graduating early, I will be missing out on some magical aspects of college life that I will never be able to get back. But I don’t feel like much will change. I will be living in the same apartment with the same people in the same city doing the same job, so what’s the big deal? Am I rushing into adulthood without stopping to breathe? Maybe, but it’s also one less year of exams to suffer through, so I still feel like I’m coming out net positive. I think this is the part where I’m supposed to get deep. My writing has been kind of all over the place, but that’s just the way my mind works. I’ve always described myself as scatterbrained — the adjective even inspired the name of my blog once upon a time. Others see it as a detriment, since I can never focus on one thing for very long without stopping to do something else — but I’ve started to embrace it, because it means I see every moment as an opportunity. I’m realizing that one of the greatest things NYU has given me is a strong sense of self, and that is truly priceless — or worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, the jury’s still out.

I’m realizing that one of the greatest things NYU has given me is a strong sense of self, and that is truly priceless — or worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, the jury’s still out.

Marita Vlachou CAS, Journalism and Economics Dear Marita, It’s officially been four years of NYU. Four years of living in four different neighborhoods of New York City. From your freshman year floormates that became your family away from home, to the sleepless nights at the newspaper, you have had an unforgettable experience. It’s bound to happen when you choose to go to school in downtown Manhattan. Born and raised in Athens, Greece, you grew up with a very different lifestyle — and yet, I don’t think you ever felt out of place in New York. That’s part of the magic of this city. Everyone fits in no matter who they are, no matter where they come from. I still remember the first day you arrived in the city. You were only carrying one suitcase and your backpack, and you had a huge smile on your face. You were ready to take on the world. So much has changed since that day, but what’s still the same four years later is that you are about to start another new beginning. But this time, you don’t have things planned out. You don’t have timelines. You don’t know if you’ll be staying in the city, or even the country. You don’t have a job lined up and this is definitely scary for you. But that’s okay. We are all allowed to feel scared — it’s part of the game. Yet, one of the most important things you learned at this school is not to let this fear hold you back from dreaming big and crafting the life you want for

yourself. The job search may be daunting — especially when you are an international student — combined with your finals and thesis presentations, but you will never be in a more exciting place in life. You are only 21, and this lack of stability means that you can steer your life in any direction you want. Living in the city, you have experienced first-hand that if you dream it, you can do it. Over these four years you have accomplished far more than you had ever imagined when you arrived from Greece. You set your foot into TV journalism, a field that had always amazed you since you were a little child. You met so many different people who still inspire you today. And while there are many things you can say about this university, I don’t think you would find a more unique student body anywhere in the world. Among these 26,000 undergraduates are some of the people that changed your life — your daily inspirations, the people that have watched you grow and supported you through everything. Without them, you would not be half the person you are today and you will always be grateful for that. Last, no matter what comes next, do not forget to have an open mind and heart and never settle for less. This is only the beginning, and as cliche as it may sound, better things are just around the corner. Love, Your Senior Self


Joseph Myers

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Gallatin, Marketing and Theater Studies

[Hayden Dining Hall] felt like a combination of a fashion runway and a high school cafeteria from a teen movie.

It’s like I’m Ross Geller and this institution is Rachel Green. It was always you, NYU.

That semester, I had frequent encounters with homesickness. I went to the Washington Square Park dog park when I missed my own dog, called my family frequently just to hear their voices and spent my time alone wondering what life would be like if I had attended college at home. My mom often said I could always return home if I was unhappy. Stubborn as I am, I felt that going home would mean I had failed, and I wouldn’t have that. So I stuck it out. Sticking it out led to visiting — and living in — Europe for the first time, meeting my best friends, mentoring 65 new transfer students, being exposed to classmates from just about every state and many countries, serving as a Welcome Week leader and leading an Alternative Break trip to work with Habitat for Humanity in Louisiana. As cliche as it is, my experience is everything I wanted it to be and more. As the great philosophers Snoop Dogg and Wiz Khalifa once said, I’m young, wild and free. NYU was, is and will always be my dream school because of every person and opportunity I’ve come across here. My latest accomplishment that I owe, in part, to NYU is scoring an internship at The New York Times this summer. Although I won’t be far immediately after graduation, I’m planning to move home to California in August. With just about three months left in this city, I’m already stocking up on Insomnia cookies, Halal Guys and Tompkins Square Bagels sandwiches.

Jessica Martinez

NYU and New York City have been in the cards for me since my early teenage years. I fell in love with both during my very first visit to the city when I was 14 years old. Throughout high school, I made it clear that moving here was the plan. In the years at my Southern California community college, I told everyone I loved New York. But when admission decisions were released, I said all would fall into place with all six universities I had applied to. In the end, I acted as if I was really having a hard time deciding between attending this school and another one. It’s like I’m Ross Geller and this institution is Rachel Green. It was always you, NYU. Slowly, and without really realizing it, this university and this city have become my home. I’ve studied in Bobst for hours at a time, had too many trips to Starbucks on West Fourth Street, spent a lot of the little money I had at Insomnia Cookies, interned for a New York City councilmember, lived in a beautiful apartment while studying abroad in Madrid, worked with elementary school kids for a year, accepted an offer for my dream internship when I was on Broadway and Waverly, led a group of transfer students on a service trip to New Orleans and ran an NYU-affiliated 5K across the Manhattan Bridge. This isn’t to say it’s all been easy. In my very first week, I took one look at an assigned reading for a Metropolitan Studies class and called home, wanting to get on the next flight to Los Angeles. I decided I wasn’t smart enough to be at NYU. However, the response I received from my professor when I asked for help made it clear I had chosen the right school.

CAS, Journalism and Social and Cultural Analysis

As trite as it may be to point out, New York is always changing — for the better, for the worse and often for the indistinguishable. I feel that my past four years have been the same. I came to NYU after completing a pre-college program at Harvard, where I had the most magical summer of my life with a crew of new friends who were always up for adventure. For most of my life, I never had to put any effort into making friends and being liked. I came to NYU with delusion and fairy dust from that previous summer and my small-ish town high school experience. NYU was a completely different beast. Never had I thought that I would spend my first week eating alone in the cafeteria, crying in my room and pondering if I had made the wrong decision. I was perplexed at how everyone seemed to know people already and was horrified at how judged I felt walking through the Hayden Dining Hall, which felt like a combination of a fashion runway and a high school cafeteria from a teen movie. The year progressed and I made a solid group of friends and adopted a superficial IDGAF attitude. I was able to navigate through my classes well, have some semblance of a social life and even tackle going into Hayden Dining Hall alone. I wasn’t truly myself, but felt some improvement with my new fake-it-till-you-make-it approach. Sophomore fall I studied abroad in Paris and felt just as lost as I did during Welcome Week. I left behind all my friends that I made in New York, and had to fend myself in this strange, new city. Similarly, I put on a happy face and made incredible friends who had no idea how terrified I actually was. Sophomore spring, I returned to New York and met a Spring in NY student from East Tennessee State University in my French Conversation and Composition class, who became one of my best friends. Every weekend, we saw New York as tourists, and on each of these excursions, we would have honest and open conversations about our lives and feelings. This friend taught me that it’s okay to be vulnerable even if you’re not feeling great. Junior year, I transferred from Liberal Studies to Gallatin and I was nervous, but excited. My East Tennessean friend returned to East Tennessee and all my other close friends seemed to be abroad. I felt lonely and sad, and for the first time in my life, I was okay admitting that to myself. But now as a senior, I know a lot more about my true self. I know when I am genuinely happy, how to cope with sadness, how to be proud of my true self and display that confidently. NYU is more than just a university — it’s the opportunity to learn a wealth of knowledge, both about your major and about yourself. It’s a gateway to the city, it’s a lesson on independence and it’s the key to meeting some of the most incredible people who will change who you are. Now I can say that I have truly adopted an IDGAF attitude, but in a much more constructive way — NYU has taught me to be confident and proud, to be honest with myself and to love myself, no matter what that is on this day.


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