The Statesman: Volume 57 Issue 11

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The Statesman informing stony brook university for more than 50 years Monday, November 11, 2013

Volume LVII, Issue 11

sbstatesman.com

Q&A: Adam and John of Taking Back Sunday By Jon Winkler Staff Writer

Stony Brook students were telling all of their friends about Taking Back Sunday’s Adam Lazzara and John Nolan Staller Unplugged performance. Before the acoustic concert on Friday night, Lazzara (AL) and Nolan (JN) sat down Jon Winkler of The Statesman (JW), Jessica Beebe of The Stony Brook Press (JB) and Mario Ferone of the Undergraduate Student Government (MF). Interviews were edited for cursing and spacing. JW: What do you guys like about playing college shows? Have you played to college crowds before? AL: Well, everyone is young and eager to experiment (laughs). JN: We didn’t go to college so we get to live vicariously through the students. JB: What was it like playing “Tell All Your Friends” every night that season after 10 years? AL: It was cool, ya know, just for us to kinda go back and revisit that, because that album was a big turning point in all of our lives. I kinda feel like everything changed with that album, so yeah it was a fun time. JN: It was kinda a little bit surreal just knowing it was 10 years and kinda like, having that everyday through the whole tour like, “Man, this is….10 years and we’re still doing this.” JB: Did you expect that? JN: No! We never thought in a million years. I don’t think any of us thought that we’d still be playing music for people, ya know, or that people would wanna hear songs from that record 10 years later. We weren’t looking much further down the road than the next year or two at that point. JW: Can you tell me where Taking Back Sunday was during the writing and recording of “Tell All Your Friends?” What kind of shows were you playing? What was your mindset? AL: Well, we lived here on Long Island and we would work during the week, and then on the weekends we would, ya know, travel and play shows, and then it’s kinda, I feel like everything we were doing was, um, kinda revolved around the band, ya know, trying to get it off the ground. JN: We were picking up a lot of momentum on Long Island, and a little bit in Connecticut and New Jersey, I remember that, so that was exciting. But, at that point, I don’t Continued on page 8

MIKE PEDERSEN / THE STATESMAN

John Nolan (left) and Adam Lazzrra (right) of Taking Back Sunday break down to acoustics on Friday at their Staller Unplugged performance. The duo played crowd favorites, like "Cute Without the E (Cut from the Team)."

Seawolves fall to underdog UMBC in America East Championship

FDA blood ban raises concern

Staff Writer

This year, New York became the 10th of 15 states and the District of Columbia to legalize gay marriage. But in the United States, men who have sex with other men still cannot donate blood. The Food and Drug Administration bans men who have had sex with other men in the last 36 years from donating blood. It placed the ban in 1985 to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS after a series of deaths due to infected blood transfusions. On Nov. 6, Stony Brook University’s Blood Donor Equality movement presented “The Blood Donor Policy Panel” in the Charles B. Wang Center Theatre. The event highlighted both social and scientific perspectives on the ban. Dr. Charles L. Robbins, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education

By Cameron Boon

Stony Brook went into the 2012 America East Championship with the huge underdog role playing on the road against the top seed, and came out on top. This year, however, turned out different as the Seawolves could not beat the top seed on the road again, as they lost to the UMBC Retrievers 2-1 Saturday night in the 2013 America East Championship, preventing a Stony Brook repeat. UMBC was the Cinderella team of this season, going from last to first and winning the conference championship in their first appearance, and continuing their season of firsts, by clinching their first NCAA tournament berth. The Seawolves created pressure from the outset, and had a golden opportunity with 28 minutes to go in the first half. Freshman Christina Fluman put a shot on from close range, which was saved by Retriever keeper Lauren Kadet, and Shannon Grogan had a rebound opportunity that was put just wide right of the post. UMBC also had an opportunity in the first half, when Nikki Boretti brought the ball down the right flank and tried putting the ball on net, but just missed the left post and

went wide for a goal kick. Stony Brook then struck when Maxie New sent the ball in and it bounced over a UMBC defender and found the feet of the always reliable Larissa Nysch, who put it home with her left foot and gave the Seawolves a 1-0 lead with 5:48 to go in the first half. Nikki Boretti knotted the score just 2:02 later, when a free kick went off the far post and headed the ball in, tying the game at 1. Seawolves keeper Ashley Castanio tried clearing the ball off the line but was not able. UMBC then took control of the game in the second half with a goal, and a little bit of luck. Castanio was able to punch a cross off her line, but not out of the box, and Ahriel Fernandez tried doing the clearing duties. However, Jessy Brown’s foot got in the way, and the clearance bounced off her foot and over the head of the redshirt junior keeper, and the Retrievers went ahead 2-1 in the 59th minute. The Seawolves held a 14-10 advantage in shots, forcing UMBC keeper Lauren Kadet to stop seven of them. Goalkeeper of the Year Ashley Castanio made five saves in the losing effort, pushing Stony Brook’s record in championship games to 1-3 all-time.

News

Arts & Entertainment

By Giselle Barkley and Jasmine Blennau

Assistant News Editor and Staff Writer

JASMINE BLENNAU / THE STATESMAN

The blood ban was put in place in 1985 to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS. Opinions

and Dean of the Undergraduate Colleges, moderated the panel. Stony Brook University students Tyler Morrison, James Leonard, Tobin George and Michael Duffy founded the Blood Donor Equality movement. Morrison, a senior psychology major, invited the audience to participate in signing letters both at the beginning and end of the event. The letters articulated the support of the Blood Equality movement. The group is trying to deliver 100,000 signed letters to United States Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius to bring more awareness to the issue. Attendees watched an opening video featuring Stony Brook faculty and staff members—including President Stanley and former Undergraduate Student Government president Anna Lubitz—promoting the slogan “I’m a Seawolf and I am not afraid.” Panelists discussed how fear contributes to the discrimination against various groups, specifically men who have had sex with other men. Dr. David Kilmnick, Stony Brook alumnus and chief executive officer of Long Island Gay and Lesbian Youth, was one of three panelists at the event. Kilmnick said that the FDA’s policy “fosters inequality and Continued on page 3 Sports

The event was celebrated by many in three parts.

Campus Spotlight: Rowan R. Phillips

SBU English professor wins $50K for first

It helps to have friends in high places

Seawolves go 2-0 on opening weekend

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Diwali burns bright and fast at Jasmine

Support from Admin allows activist causes to flourish.

Seawolves dominate Haverford 81-65 Sunday.


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