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TH E I N DEPEN D EN T VOI C E O F KE AN U N IV E R S IT Y
From professor to podcaster By Craig Epstein Podcaster and Adjunct Professor Anthony Nicoletti was a student at Manhattan College when he realized that he wanted to make a career out of talking about sports. “We had a radio show at Manhattan College as a three man show which included myself, my co host now, and our hockey insider Rob Colaianni.” Nicoletti said. “Afterwards, my co host and I wanted to get into Sports Communications, so I took a job with CineSport and he took a job with Westwood One.” Fast forward to 2014 and that is how M&A Sports Radio came to be. The M&A stands for Michael “Moose” O’Brien and Anthony Nicoletti who, together, each week create a podcast riffing about sports. The podcast can be found on iTunes and Spotify. “I taped a demo to try to send around to different radio stations,” said Nicoletti who, as an adjunct, teaches COMM 1402 Speech as Critical Citizenship at Kean. “We did a 45 minute demo that we sent around to our friends and they told us we should make a podcast and that was it.” Podcasting has become such a large and powerful force in the world of radio so Nicoletti believes that it is the show’s genuineness and authenticity that separates it from the others. Having downloads in all 50 states, he doesn’t try to come off as something that he’s not because he feels that he would become a caricature of himself which would ultimately
Photo by M&A Sports Radio
Anthony Nicoletti at Bar A standing beside one of his inspirations as a radio host in Mike Francesa
drive people away from his show. “I think it’s our uniqueness in the sense that you know what you’re going to get. I’m going to make corny jokes and Moose is going to try and get me to laugh,” he said. “But at the end of the day, we understand the scope of what we’re doing.” O’Brien believes the fact that the two have known each other since their days in college
Six students return to locked classroom to find property stolen By Joshua Rosario Six students returned to their classroom in Bruce Hall on March 26 to find their laptops and wallets missing. They had been out on a lab assignment with their professor and had left their personal belongings in the classroom, which had been locked behind them. The ecology class left the locked room B110 as they went to make observations and collect samples at the Kennedy Reservation located near Harwood Arena. The class had returned to the locked classroom to find some of the
2:15 pm from the lab that his bag was not in the same chair when he left and saw his laptop was missing. “It absolutely blows my mind how this could have happened,” said Singh. “ This isn’t the first time anything has been stolen from that building. There have been many stories and it blows my mind as to why they still don’t have any cameras, especially in that building.” Kirby stated everything looked normal when they came back. Some of the chargers were moved to one bag but the room wasn’t “ransacked.”As of right now, the students will be
Photo by M&A Sports Radio
Anthony Nicoletti working on the set of M&A Sports Radio
“I think it’s our uniqueness in the sense that you know what you’re going to get.”
only adds to the authenticity of their show. “Our show is different because it’s two friends who met in college and had a show then and it’s something we continue to do and build on to this day,” O’Brien said. “Anthony is one of my really good friends and all we’ve ever tried to do is be authentic and I think listeners of our show gravitate towards that.” Along with his colleagues on the show whom he calls his “Circle of Trust,” Nicoletti feels that in order to be successful you must carve your own path. As a result, Nicoletti takes the M&A Sports Radio brand very seriously and will speak out if he sees something that he does not like. “I’m not trying to have skeletons in our past. I’m trying to build a brand, make connections, and raise some money for charity because that’s what it’s really all about,” Nicoletti said. “If you want to venture out into the sports media you’re going to have to take your own path, so if I see something come out from our brand that I don’t like I’m going to voice my opinion.” Whether they are discussing sports, conducting interviews, or even talking about Survivor Pool Locks, Nicoletti and O’Brien aren’t opposed to having a good time in the form of bits or simply shooting the breeze with one another. At the same time, the
Photo by Joshua Rosario
Door to room B110
Photo by Joshua Rosario
An entrance to B108 located inside B110
“It absolutely blows my mind how this could have happened,” said Singh. students were missing items. Iris Garcia, Patrick Malinowski, Aliyah Hargrove, Navdeep Singh, Weetsnie Eloy, and Micilene Moise had laptops and wallets as well were stolen from their stuff left behind. “ I’m out of a brand new laptop,” said Hargrove, a senior biology major. “ I don’t have the money to buy another and I will not buy a new one!” Ecology Professor Lucas Kirby had locked all the doors in B110 as some of the rooms in Bruce Hall are conjoined. There was no class next door when they left the classroom around 12:30 pm. There is a room conjoined at each side of the classroom. One of the doors into room B110 has a code lock. “We all saw him take the key and locked the door; he pulled the door handle to make sure it was locked and then proceeded to check the doors of the adjacent connecting room doors which where also all locked,” said Hargrove. “So someone had access to a key to get into the locked room and it was still locked when we returned.” Singh noticed when they came back around
receiving temporary laptops to use for classes. “You think a locked classroom is a locked classroom,” said Kirby. “You want to take them outside, but you don’t want them taking their laptops into the forest.” The students are hoping to be reimbursed for their losses as the theft of their property was from a locked classroom. “If the school doesn’t hold themselves accountable and give me the same amount of money that I lost in this theft,” said Garcia, a junior biology major. University Police are continuing to investigate the thefts that were reported at Bruce Hall on March 26, according to University Spokesperson Margaret McCorry. “In the meantime, the University has been proactive in offering loaner laptops to students whose computers were stolen and is working to thoroughly reimburse students for their losses,” said McCorry. “ The University takes these issues very seriously and continually looks for ways to further enhance our secure campus environment.”
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Why do our buildings have names? By Kelly Contreras Every day an endless number of students and faculty enter and leave the buildings on Kean University’s Union campus, but it seems few know the real names of our buildings. Students and faculty may refer to some buildings by nicknames like “CAS” or “the library” rather than the actual formal names. In recent years, Kean has bestowed new names on some old buildings – such as the Maxine and Lane Center for Academic Success (CAS) and the Miron Student Center, formally known as the UC for university center. In fact, the university itself was previously called Newark Normal School and was renamed Kean College when it moved to Union from Newark. But how did these people get their names on a building? Well, each building has a story. CAS was named after Maxine and Jack Lane in order to honor the couple’s generosity of an estimated $6 million donation in 2009. Maxine graduated from Kean University in 1978 with a
degree in social work. She provided one of the largest gifts in Kean University history to the Kean Foundation. Sozio Hall is named after Ralph P. Sozio, a former student who served in the United States Army during WWII. Sozio was involved in multiple plays, wrote a musical called College Daze, and a march called Flying Gunners Parade which the Army School of Gunnery adopted as its official song. Unfortunately, Sozio was unable to graduate Photo by Kelly Contreras because while he was D’Angola Gymnasium located at the main campus away, he came down with rheumatic fever and died at a Texas Army camp in 1945. To honor normal institution to a four-year college. Sozio, the college named the building after him. Construction on Bruce Hall began in 1956 in Union and it Guy V. Bruce was the head of the science department here was ready by 1958 for the students. Although he retired one year before the move, he still led the annual commencement at Kean University from 1933 until he retired in 1955. He ceremonies for several years after. was very involved when the school was upgrading from a
…honor the couple’s generosity of donating what is an estimate of $6 million.
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