22 - College Magazine
Transcription
22 - College Magazine
BALTIMORE EDITION ISSUE 4 WINTER 2008 BIG MAN 100% FREE What Happens When You Get Caught cOLLEGEMAGAZINe.COM NAKED STUDENTS! Yea, We Said Naked IN SI D E: GOING UP IN SMOKE SL FI AM LM P FO PR OE TH R O T, E SU DU PA AR C C IN T CE ER TE W SS FI R O I G AN RL N HT D D Mike Gvozden Talking Business with Under Armour’s founder, Kevin Plank A LITTLE CAMPUS FROM STUDENT ATHLETE TO CEO Exclusive interview with Kevin Plank 17 25 20 COLLEGE LIFE 8 CALENDAR 9IT’S EASY BEING GREEN These universities are five steps ahead of the game when it comes to environmental initiatives. Biomasspowered heating plant anyone? 9 Easy Green Tips You can go green while living on campus with just a few simple changes. 10Going up in Smoke College students break the rules all the time. Read what happened to one when he got caught. 14STUDENTS BEHIND THE POLITICAL SCENES 22Something Greater: Student Artists Move into the World of Professional Art Three undergrads break boundaries and fight to find creativity. A spokenword artist, a painter and a film producer share stories of the struggle. 24MAJOR INSPIRATIONS Is it a long and winding road or love at first sight? These students use their majors to succeed in unusual ways. 4 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 ENTERTAINMENT 15RUSH WEEK RAIDERS Fall rush is over. Spring rush is just around the corner. Eat, drink and be merry, ye lads. 15Do-It-Youself Dormroom Gifts SPORTS 17COVER STORY: BIG MAN ON A DIFFERENT KIND OF CAMPUS Mike Gvozden, the #1 lacrosse goalie in the NCAA, tells us how he dominates the opposition but lives in anonymity on his own campus. Short on cash and time this holiday season? College Mag has some D-I-Y gifts for you. 20PARKOUR: NO LIMITS 29 THE LOCAL SCRATCH 25From the Field to Fashion Fame Check out the best local bands. 29Heavy D Trades Hip Hop for Hemp Heavy Who? Meet Hev, who is leaving behind his 90’s rap past to start his career as a reggae solo artist. SEX 12 College Nudists Naked students! Or, um, interviews with naked students. Sorry to get you excited there. Warning: attempt at your own risk. Under Armour’s founder and CEO Kevin Plank describes his path from special teams captain of the Maryland Terrapins football team to sports apparel mogul. 27The Sports Careers Playbook You don’t have to be an all-star athlete to launch a career in sports. 30 STUDENT COLUMN When trading ballet slippers for skates, and getting aggressive on the ice is a dream come true. Want more College Mag? Want to contribute? Go to collegemagazine.com to learn more... Amanda Nachman This issue required hours upon hours of sports research. The College Magazine team went out, helmets on, and attacked. Okay, maybe more like stood by the sidelines asking questions while shooting video. But this issue ventures beyond the latest sports scores. It shares the great stories of student athletes: lacrosse NCAA champ Mike Gvozden, former athlete and now sports apparel mogul Kevin Plank, and Alyssa Walker, who at age eight was plowing down her opponent on the ice. Even for those with the passion but not the talent, we delve into sports careers that don’t require protective gear. So maybe the College Magazine team didn’t necessarily risk their lives writing this issue, but I think their ability to capture these great stories will impress you. Behind the scenes of College Magazine, we have three new students on the team this year. Each has carefully crafted the words and images of our fabulous fourth issue. Publisher Amanda NachmaN Creative Director Les Kollegian Editors Matthew Castner Brian Cognato Art Director PAM BROWN Graphic Designers Cole Miller Jessica Recht Adam Roop Photography Editor Ryder Haske MEET THE New Kids Amanda Nachman Publisher Brian, our articles editor, thoroughly enjoys every aspect of school, including, on certain rare occasions, class. He can normally be found voraciously reading any magazine he can get his hands on, especially while articles that require editing pile up. He is polite, well mannered and articulate on any subject other than Philadelphia sports, where he is...well, a Philadelphia sports fan. Our photo editor, Ryder, grew up on the lower west side of Manhattan in Greenwich village. He was born into a family of starving artists with good values and better taste. “The universe provides” is the phrase he grew up believing, and he still does today. Midway through Ryder’s first political science class at George Washington University, he realized that politics wasn’t his style, so he dropped the books, picked up a camera and never looked back. His fascination with interesting people and stories lead him to photojournalism and documentary video. “There are too many compelling true stories to be told in this world for me to worry about making up my own.” As one of our newest editorial interns, Ashley adds wit, sarcasm, and vegetarianism to the team. You can check out her article “Veggify Your Favorite Meals” to learn more about her favorite vegetarian dishes. When she’s not writing furiously for the magazine, Ashley is busy with her other obligations, such as being a professional nap-taker and defender of her home state, New Jersey. Her long-term goals include studying abroad in Holland and meeting the cast of The Office. Copy Editor ALISON SMITH Advertising Sales Intern KEVIN MARRIN Editorial Intern ASHLEY TROOST Web Designer Chad Collins Technical Coordinator Chris Testa Writers Evan Garcia, Scott Kaptur, Janeane Lage, Jaren Love, Nick Mercurio, Dan Morrison, Ashley Nolan, Genevive Poist, Gabe Seder, Brock Snyder, Benjamin Valine, Alyssa Walker, Alyssa Wood Photographers Amy Breesman, Lindsay Chester, REBECCA DEPREY, Alex Ellis, Chris Gregory, Zain Shariff, David Webster, Anne Wernikoff Special Thank You To My Family, Asher Epstein Angie Grandizio, Steven Hawtof Sherry Moeller, Diane Pelkey Kevin Plank, Zoey Rawlins TOP TO BOTTOM: Brian Cognato, Ryder Haske, Ashley Troost Want to contribute to College Magazine? Submit a writing sample or photography to atroost@ collegemagazine.com. 6 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 Cover Photo by Ryder Haske > JUNIOR > FINE ARTS > GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY College Magazine, LLC. By Ashley Troost > Junior > English > University of Maryland, College Park and Alyssa Wood > Junior > English > George Washington University 18 19 21 22 26 NOVEMBER Iron & Wine @ Ram’s Head Live This Simon and Garfunkel-type folk rock band has been featured on The Garden State Soundtrack and performed at Bonnaroo in 2005. Blitzen Trapper opens. Cobra Starship @ Sonar This alternative rock band is best known for singing “Snakes on a Plane,” a tribute to that ridiculous film. Maybe Samuel L. will show up. Slave to Metal Festival @ Sonar For only $10 general admission, rock out at this music festival and networking conference. Yes, you read that right: a heavy metal networking conference. Visit www.sonarbaltimore.com for more information. Baltimore Thanksgiving Parade Kick off the holiday season at Baltimore’s annual parade, featuring floats, a marching band, and the official arrival of Santa. You can even sit on his lap and ask for presents! M T W T F S 26 27 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 NOV 19 Thanksgiving Eve Party @ Power Plant Live Prizes, drink specials, free stuff...who wouldn’t want to go? 2-7 DECEMBER S M T W T F S 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 DEC 4 8 S cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 4 17 Radio City Christmas Spectacular Starring the Rockettes @ 1st Mariner Arena On this national tour, the Christmas Spectacular and world famous Rockettes debut an all new show. The Daily News says if you’ve never seen it, go, and if you have, go again! Washington Capitols vs. New York Islanders Student rush tickets! Present your student ID at the Verizon Box office. Upper level seats are $15, lower level seats are $35. Oh, and you also get a free Chipotle Burrito. A Christmas Carol @ Lyric Opera House The Nebraska Theatre Caravan’s production of the Charles Dickens classic is packed with comedy and spectacular costuming. 19 Great Russian Nutcracker @ Lyric Opera House The Moscow Ballet presents Anatoli Emelianov’s Great Russian Nutcracker – the Nutcracker like you’ve never seen it before. 31 New Year’s Eve Celebration @ Power Plant Live Count down to 2009 at Baltimore’s official New Year’s Eve celebration. It’s Easy Being Green On-Campus Environmental Initiatives Easy Green Tips By Alyssa Wood > JUNIOR > English > George Washington University TOP photo ANNE WERNIKOFF > SOPHMORE > George Washington University / BOTTOM PHOTO ZAIN SHARIFF > Go green or go home. This seems SENIOR > CELL BIOLOGY & MOLECULAR GENETICES> UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK C ollege campuses are looking a lot greener these days, and that doesn’t mean grassy landscapes or welltrimmed quads for Frisbee. Instead, many colleges have taken the environmental reins, instituting university-wide initiatives and fueling student groups that bring attention to environmental responsibility. Middlebury College recently earned the #2 spot on Grist Magazine’s “15 Green Campuses and Universities” list after its board of trustees adopted a carbon-neutrality plan developed solely by students. Middlebury junior Jenny Erwin, one of the students who supported the plan, says a new biomass heating plant will “save millions of gallons of fuel each year.” The school also has an organic garden to promote sustainable, local foods on campus, and its dining halls have stopped using trays, saving the water needed to wash them and encouraging students to grab less unnecessary food. Yale University also dominates the green scene. The Yale Office of Sustainability includes professional sustainability coordinators who manage energy conservation efforts, green renovations and other projects to support facility efficiency and staff/student awareness. Activist Chris Termyn, a Yale junior, is organizing a student campaign to encourage the investment of Yale’s $28 million endowment in more environmentally responsible funds and corporations. He says, “What we need is an endowment that stands by the activism of Yale’s undergraduate population.” Even the George Washington University, often criticized for its environmental record, has gotten into the act. Its Eco-Challenge program pits residence halls against each other to see which can conserve the most energy and water. In a pilot project last year, residence halls collectively saved 80,400 kilowatt hours of electricity and 1.5 million gallons of water compared to the same time period a year earlier. According to George Stephens, a GW professor of geography and geosciences, the school is also investing in more street receptacles for recyclables, seeking to increase its energy efficiency and has formed a “Presidential Task Force on Sustainability.” Countless other schools across the country are moving toward greener pastures. For the first time this year, the Princeton Review factored schools’ “Green Ratings” into its annual list of the “Best 368 Colleges,” after a survey conducted by the test-prep agency found that 63% of respondents said they’d like to know about environmentalism on campus. With private, university- and studentled initiatives, green may just be the new fashion of 2008. to be the motto shared by everyone from politicians to movie stars. Everybody is going green these days, and in a world with depleting resources and slow-to-act political agendas, even we lowly college students must do our part. Here’s what you can do: Recycle, duh. College students probably generate the highest rates of cans and bottles of any demographic. So toss those empties in the green bins! Putting a container in your room specifically set aside for recyclables will help you remember to separate them before visiting the trash chute. Conserve energy. You know the drill: turn off the lights, unplug appliances and shut down laptops when not in use. Skimp on the AC and open windows instead. Take the stairs instead of elevators, and purchase compact fluorescent light bulbs that minimize electricity output. Clothes dryers are another big energy eater; try air-drying on a clothing rack, which also makes clothes last longer. Save the whales. Or just the water. Only use dishwashers and washing machines when you have full loads (not that anyone does laundry more than they have to). Wash clothes on the cold cycle. Avoid hour-long showers and, like mom always said, shut off the faucet when brushing. Reuse, reuse, reuse. Carry reusable water bottles. Print on scrap paper if possible and print double-sided. Bring reusable bags for grocery shopping, available cheap at most supermarkets, or ask for paper instead of plastic. Bring your own mug to your favorite coffee shop—some even offer discounts for cup-saving customers. Join the green machine. Most universities have environmental activism organizations. Get involved in go-green groups and encourage the clubs you’re already in to implement green policies. Bug your roommates about shutting off lights, share your tips on Tell us what your campus is doing to protect our world at collegemagazine.com. environmental responsibility, and of course, share your College Magazine! WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 9 GOING UP IN SMOKE What Happens When You Get Caught By Benjamin Valine > Senior > linguistics BOTTOM PHOTO CHRIS GREGORY > SOPHMORE > GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY TOP PHOTO AMY BREESMAN The glove compartment, center console, and the space below the passenger’s seat were decorated with incriminating paraphernalia. The cloud of smoke had not distilled. A blue and red merry-go-round of lights bounced off the rearview mirror into my eyes. My heart fled my chest and hid in my throat. Rigor mortis. The only senses I had connected to the real world thought, ‘Oh my God. I’m in handcuffs?’ The officer tapped on my window with his nightstick and asked me to step out and face the car. I complied. My kneecaps felt disconnected, like they had begun bouncing from my thighs to my ankles and back. “Clink!” Handcuffs? Handcuffs! The only senses I had connected to the real world thought, “Oh my God. I’m in handcuffs? Handcuffs!” My wrists were sore. Handcuffs hurt. Seconds later I was looking at my friend’s panic-stricken face as he too was in handcuffs. My knees bounced with hyperferocity, but the officer’s words came out in real time, with an authoritative tone and slightly southern tinge: “We don’t want you runnin’ away. Some kids er dumb enough to run.” The officer re-acquainted me with the hood of my car. My body was a perfect ninetydegree angle. The hood chilled my cheek. My legs were spread for me. I was frisked. Poking and groping weren’t spared. The contents of my pockets lay on the hood, within eyesight. Now there were four officers surrounding us. They sneered, and barked probing questions. They knew there was marijuana in the car, they just didn’t know where. Do we answer them? Should we remain silent? God, I hope they don’t know we’re high. Wait. Do they know we’re high? Maybe if I keep my head down they’ll just go away, right? I could hear the car being ransacked: the sounds of seats being carelessly reclined, compartments opened and slammed shut, doors opened and rammed shut. As their search continued to be fruitless, their questions became more fierce and threatening. “Do you boys realize that if you don’t tell us where the marijuana is, you’ll be thrown off campus—could be expelled—we could even arrest you. WHERE is the marijuana?” Should marijuana be legalized? Read about what students have to say on collegemagazine.com 10 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 “Glove compartment! Glove compartment!” I stammered. My friend remained silent. A “baggy of marijuana,” they called it. Luckily, there wasn’t enough to charge us with possession. As a compromise, we were issued citations and a verbal notice of a pending court summons in the mail. The officers collected our information, released us from the handcuffs, and told us we were free to go. So, What Happened Next? 1. One meeting with my parents and a campus student conduct officer. 2. Two years of probation. If I violate any school codes during this period, I am subject to immediate expulsion. 3. Forty hours of community service. 4. One year of drug testing. Upon completion, I can petition to have the second year waived by submitting several essays addressing my integrity, character and lessons learned from the experience. 5. Documentation of the incident on my permanent record for three years. 6. Enrollment in a campus-sponsored intervention program, which includes: • Meeting with a drug counselor. • Attending Marijuana Anonymous chat room sessions and responding to my experience in multiple essays. How can marijuana possession affect you at your campus? By Jaren Love > Junior > Government and Politics > University of Maryland, College Park • Amounts less than 25 to 50 grams can earn prison sentences up to one year and fines ranging from $100-$1000. • Possession of smaller amounts often only results in fines between $500-$1000. • In the most lenient states, possession of very small amounts (less than one ounce) earns only probation. • First time offenders sentenced to prison terms are often eligible for immediate parole. • A law passed in 1998 authorizes the federal government to revoke financial aid given to any student convicted because for a drug-related offence until they have taken a rehabilitation program for one year. • Penalties for the cultivation and sale of marijuana range from small fines to ten years in prison, based on the amount cultivated or sold. • In general, five plants or five kilograms constitutes the threshold between misdemeanor and felony cultivation charges, though many states have legislated mandatory minimum jail time for those who cultivate or sell any amount of marijuana. • Those convicted of the possession or sale of “paraphernalia” face fines starting at $2,500. * Please note that drug and marijuana laws vary widely state-to-state. campus nudists in... By Brock Snyder > Senior George > Biology Washingt > on University PHOTO C HRIS GRE GORY > George Washingt on University Imagine, if you will, a utopia: an easy-going place in the tropics, where the sun is always shining, the ocean is always waiting, and crime is virtually nonexistent. Now, imagine you’re naked. S: The thing about a nudist resort that shocks most is the blatant sense of community that the close-knit atmosphere welcomes you into. People around here don’t even have to lock the doors to their house or car because there’s just no crime. Brock: B: That is both quite interesting and frightening—because personally I don’t know if I’d be up for playing badminton with naked grandma. OK, let’s get down to the nitty gritty…you’re a nudist. Why the unique lifestyle? What is it about being in the nude that rocks? STEVE VICKERS Steve: Hey, let’s go back to the nudist resort later and hook up 12 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com But before you imagine covering up the physiologically perfect body parts we came into this world with, imagine looking at the sign to this Edenic paradise. This isn’t a dream, it’s a NUDIST RESORT! Come take a walk on the naked side with College Mag correspondent Brock Snyder for a “revealing” interview with Steve Vickers, a senior communications and public relations major at the University of Central Florida—a devout nudist. WINTER 2008 Well, it’s all I’ve ever really known and wanted. The thing about being a nudist that I enjoy most is that it’s just so relaxing. Most people don’t even carry around their wallet or cell phone at the resorts— can you imagine how stress-free you would be when all your time is yours? B: What makes a nudist resort more relaxing than a regular resort? Is it just the clothes…or the lack thereof? B: Were your parents nudists? S: Yes they were. I’m actually a third generation nudist. S: You get over it. B: So, tell me about your job working for the AANR (American Association for Nude Recreation)? S: Well, I did a few interviews in high school for the local news about my nude recreation and one thing led to the other and now I work for AANR Public Relations. B: Can you be nude at work? S: No. Adam & Eve B: Do you have a special little naked lady waiting for you back at your resort? The Nudist College Couple S: Well I do have a special lady, but no, she’s not a nudist. Ah, young love. Young, naked love. Go to CollegeMagazine.com to read Brock’s interview with Robbe White, 23, and Kim Hamley, 19, a devoted college nudist couple. B: How did you meet and what did she do when she found out the naked truth? S: She was actually not all that phased by it. We met at martial arts class when we were given nicknames. My nickname meant “to peal” or “naked” in slang and she asked why, so I told her. She was interested like most people are when you tell them. B: Have you ever used your nudist lifestyle as a pick-up line? Here’s a sneak peak: Brock: Have you guys ever roll-played and pretended to be not nudists—so you put on clothes though you end up taking them off again anyway? S: You mean like, “Hey, let’s go back to the nudist resort later and hook up?” No, but it’s not the worst idea. Robbe: No. Never done that but I guess it would be kind of kinky and funny. Kim, write that down. B: Which activities are best avoided when nude, like riding a bike or frying bacon? B: H ow do you deal with the fabled inadvertent male arousal in the nudist culture? I ask only because I can identify—I had an awkwardly unfortunate physical exam once that I still have nightmares about. S: If activities are not enjoyable or appropriate to do without clothing then I just opt not to be nude…I probably wouldn’t fry bacon. In fact, I wouldn’t recommend frying anything at all in the nude—or playing paintball, sky diving, riding a bike, or doing martial arts. R: S orry to hear about that. That is actually the golden question that everyone asks us first. The usual nudist etiquette is to cover up with a towel… B: Are there any people out there that should never be a nudist? S: People at nudist resorts are generally a very open and accepting bunch. It doesn’t matter how you look or smell, as long as you can relax and get along with those in your surroundings. B: If you could convert anyone to the nudist culture, who would it be and why? S: Definitely Meghan Fox. You know—the girl from Transformers. Why? Just look at her. She’s a fox. B: What do you usually pack for a vacation? Do you have clothes for every day? S: I’ll usually just pack a few towels, sunscreen, one formal outfit, and two sets of street clothes. What’s really great about vacationing for a nudist is that twice a year whole cruise ships are bought and booked up all by nudists on vacation. And since I work for AANR, there are usually conferences in the Caribbean that I get to go to for free. In fact, in February I’ll be in Jamaica for a conference. B: How do you express yourself with the same variety that those with clothes are able to do? S: I’ve got a funny story actually—not too long ago I was out at a popular resort and had made some friends with these two other guys there on vacation. We all decided to go into town and hit up some bars, so we parted to go change into some clothes. When we met at the gate shortly after, it was so interesting to see what the other two guys were wearing. I was in a vintage t-shirt and khaki shorts, another was in torn up jeans and a “Get ‘er Done” shirt, and the third guy was in slacks and a collared shirt with a pen in his front pocket, I kid you not. What I found so funny was that judging by the clothes we were all wearing, we all realized that in any other place we would have never met up and become friends. WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 13 students behind THE Political Scenes By Evan Garcia > senior > english > george washington university / PHOTOS RYDER HASKE Joe Biden & Brendan Ullman, Courtesy of Brendan Ullman O ver the last year, Barack Obama and John McCain have had every medium on lockdown, from newspapers to Big Gulps. This makes it easy to forget the thousands of supporters who did much of the work of behind the scenes, including those on campus. Student volunteers have played a major role in this election. For these students, this election was more than just wearing a button, watching SNL, and tracking politics blogs. It was their life. And it wasn’t easy. Brendan Ullman, a sophomore at Johns Hopkins University, ran the Johns Hopkins University’s chapter of Students for Barack Obama. He was responsible for setting up “phonebanks,” where a pack of students would gather in a single location to make mass campaign calls, one state at a time. Initially focused on swing states like Pennsylvania and Ohio, the phonebanks did everything from trying to persuade voters to support Obama, to recruiting volunteers, to just reminding people to vote. Ullman estimates his group called more than 20,000 this campaign season. Meanwhile, he organized massive voter registration drives on campus. He first gravitated to Obama after hearing the candidate’s keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic convention, when the man who would become the first black presidential candidate from a major party was only a state senator. After watching the speech, Ullman researched Obama’s conservative campus, so disagreements definitely occur.” Regardless of the outcome of this election, Ullman stresses the abdication of partisan-based politics. “This is not a game,” he says. “We are in too much trouble to allow partisan squabbling after the election to derail this country’s future.” Georgetown junior Ellen Dargie sees an intimate connection between politics and her everyday life. She has watched her grandparents and her parents build small businesses and become very successful pursuing the American dream. She credits much of that success to policies of the U.S. government that call for less taxes—policies she most identified with the McCain-Palin ticket. As Chair of Georgetown’s College Republicans, Dargie encouraged other students to get involved in the McCain campaign, whether through a semester long internship or just weekly phone banking. For her, going to school in the district provides a unique opportunity to get involved in political life: “At Georgetown and in D.C., we have so many opportunities to get out membership volunteer jobs or internships with the campaign.” And of course, Dargie faced added pressure from the seemingly much greater support for the Obama-Biden ticket on college campuses. Dargie comments, “Obama has the rhetorical genius that few Ellen Dargie candidates do, and I believe that young people are attracted to that,” but she worries that students didn’t know his stance on the issues, particularly economic issues, well enough. Dargie’s post in the College Republicans kept life hectic, but also fused together several parts of her life. “Georgetown is a political campus, and volunteering, campaigning, or attending political events is almost a norm,” says Dargie. “It’s something groups of people do together.” While fighting for her beliefs, she met students with similar political stances and formed lasting friendships. She also met students with different beliefs; those interactions gave way to civilized, intellectual conversations on the issues. For Dargie, however, the most rewarding part was changing someone’s mind. “We’ve had students who have been undecided and decided to support McCain after attending our events or talking to our members,” she proclaims. For her, knowing she made such a difference to push her candidate’s campaign forward was worth all the effort. The American public has an obligation to come together and unite behind the winning ticket. —Brendan Ullman positions on the issues and found many parallels to his own ideas. When Obama began campaigning for president, the Illinois senator’s pledge to refrain from excessively negative campaign tactics especially interested Ullman. That same civility and moderation are lessons that he’s been careful to implement in his own campaigning. Ullman explains that although arguments are bound to arise when you’re campaigning for a candidate, he takes this stance seriously. He adds, “Hopkins is a relatively moderate to 14 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 rush week Raiders By Nick Mercurio > Junior > English > University of Maryland, College Park PHOTO ALEX ELLIS > SENIOR > GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY L ife at school means no parents, no rules…and no food. Mom’s home cooking is gone, replaced by the impending indigestion known as the campus diner. But fear not, you can postpone the inevitable. Play your cards right, and fraternities will pick up your food tab for the five glorious days known as “Rush Week.” It’s hard to wrap your mind—and your stomach—around, a whole week of people throwing you all the beer and buffalo wings you can handle. But these the best eats and plan your attack, but if you’re looking to avoid a bid (an invitation to join the fraternity), remember: DON’T GO TO THE SAME FRAT TWICE. The better you know the guys, the more likely you are to get a bid, and the messier the ensuing break up. Unfortunately, you can’t just eat and run. That’s a dead giveaway you’re a mooch, so be sociable. Go in, talk, play some Super Smash Brothers and above all, EAT, EAT, EAT! Another rule for Rush Week: don’t waste it. Come starving, leave ready to puke. Lastly, have an exit strategy. If you’ve done your job, these guys will think you’re an eager rush, not a hungry mooch. They might invite you back for the rest of the week’s events, or even offer you a bid. But these guys are going to throw some of the best parties on campus, so don’t just blow them off. Give them a real phone number and a convincing excuse. They’ve heard it all and they’re prepared. Crappy grades last semester? They have notes from every class. Not into the whole “fraternity thing?” Don’t worry, they’re not like other fraternities. Don’t forget the valuable skills you’ve learned from years of dodging tests and turning in late papers: “family issues” still sound important and are still too private to talk about. And that’s it. Eat, drink, be merry… and be gone. Go home, sober up, work up an appetite again. Who knows? You might even end up pledging. Bite-Sized Mooching frat guys are looking for pledges to abuse, not hungry kids to feed, and they’ve got their eyes out for moochers. First, get a handle on the scene. Flyers in the dorms will have all the info you’ll need—the meal schedules. See who’s got You live on the 3rd floor, but you’re building has eight. No reason not to hit ‘em all. And isn’t your friend’s building doing something tomorrow night? After all, it’s about building a sense of community, right? For more bite-sized mooching, visit us online at collegemagazine.com The College Magazine Mom Says… Unfortunately for the hungry ladies, sorority rush is considerably more sophisticated, as in mocktails and dainty finger food…not worth faking to fill up. Do-It-Yourself Dorm Room Gifts By Janeane Lage > Junior > English > William Jewell College TOP PHOTO ANNE WERNIKOFF > SOPHMORE > GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY / GLASSWARE PHOTO LINDSAY CHESTER > JUNIOR > FINE ART MAJOR > GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY D-I-Y for the Ambitious Gifter: Drinking in Style This gift is great for your #1 party animal friend. Include a favorite drink to add some personal flair. Materials: Glass barware/stemware (e.g., beer mug, martini glass), acrylic enamel paints, small paintbrushes, travel-sized liquor, gift bag and tissue paper Steps: 1. Paint designs on your glassware customized for your friend. Sports fan? Add football images or team logos. 2. Let the paint dry for at least 24 hours. 3. Then put it in the oven and bake at 325 degrees for 30 to 40 minutes. 4. Once it cools, place the glass in a bag with travel-sized liquor, appropriate accessories (olives, salt or cherries) and tissue paper to protect your glass. D-I-Y if You’re REALLY S-O-L: Shoddy Sled What’s that you say? Paint and brushes still beyond your budget? Well, College Magazine has you covered too. Here’s a gift for the friend you never really liked. Materials: Cafeteria tray, black permanent marker Steps: 1. Come up with an overly elaborate plan to distract the cafeteria workers while you nick a tray. 2. Write or draw whatever sort of special message you would like to send to your gift recipient on the stolen tray. 3. Attach the following warning notice: When sledding down very steep and dangerous hill, be aware of jealous glances from onlookers. For more D-I-Y and S-O-L gifts, visit collegemagazine.com, Photo: Andrew Churchill Get more MOM advice at collegemagazine.com where you can share your own gift ideas. WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 15 Mike Gvozden: Big Man on the Field, the Campus Not So Much By Amanda Nachman PHOTOS RYDER HASKE Hometown: Baltimore, Maryland NATIONALITY: Brazilian School: Johns Hopkins University Year: Junior Major: Psychology Favorite Themed Party: The 80’s Party Fun Fact: One of his roommates walks around shirtless and checks himself out all the time College athletes are campus celebrities. Seeing your favorite 7-foot-1-inch basketball player in the dining hall can leave you starstruck, like you’ve just spotted Ashton Kutcher from across the quad. He stands out. People stare. He’s the highlight of every party he visits. He’s your Big Man on Campus (BMOC). WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 17 When I was a fan ten years ago, if I was able to get in touch with my Hopkins goalie and he blew me off, I would think, ‘What a jerk!’ Michael Gvozden, the starting goalie for one of our nation’s top Division I lacrosse teams and No. 1 goalie in the 2008 NCAA tournament, isn’t your ordinary BMOC. Not only has his university won nine lacrosse championships, most recently in 2007, but it has also been recognized as one of the country’s most prestigious academic institutions: Johns Hopkins University. The upshot? While Saturdays may mean a big game for Gvozden and his team, the students at Johns Hopkins are packing it in at the library. Off-Campus Fame “I have certainly heard stories or dropped down to the library Friday or Saturday night and there are people all over there,” says Gvozden. On game day, that leaves the lacrosse bleachers to the local fans and the university’s supportive alumni. “I don’t think the average student is overly concerned; they’re more concerned about their GPA,” he says. But that’s to be expected if these students are going to be the next generation of doctors. So don’t look out for students streaking across the field covered in body paint that reads Gvozden’s name. In fact, don’t assume the general on-campus population even knows his name. More people outside of the school probably recognize the goalie and his teammates 18 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 than on his own campus. Being a Baltimore native, Gvozden already has a local fan base from his high school lacrosse years, which is not surprising since he was a top 10 recruit going into college. “After the Final Four it was nice to go out and see everyone who knew me. I’ve certainly had a rep as a lax-rat my whole life,” Gvozden says. Now some of his biggest fans are lax-rats; that is, kids who grow up playing and following the sport. Gvozden gets Facebook messages from them. “Right after we beat Duke, it was 55 text messages from my friends at home, and all these messages from these kids.” They ask about everything from his routine before a game to what color socks he wears. Gvozden replies to all of them. “When I was a fan ten years ago, if I was able to get in touch with my Hopkins goalie and he blew me off, I would think, ‘What a jerk!’” Gvozden knows that he’s looked up to, which of course means “no [Facebook] pictures of me being a fool.” Competing at the #1 Dream School Similar to many lax-rats, Hopkins was Gvozden’s number one choice. “[I] wanted to come here since I was 8 years old…Hopkins is like the premiere lax school. It’s a dream come true to play here,” he says. And with Hopkins lacrosse, Gvozden’s life is, well, lacrosse. Spring break plans? “We play lax.” Fall break? Lacrosse scrimmage vs. Navy. He and his teammates are at their athletic center and field about five hours each day. “We do about three-hour practices and then work on our stick skills. You get there at 2:30, and you probably leave there at 7:30.” He stays after practice too. “Our coach likes to stick around and talk to us. I’ve been called in there just talking to our coach ‘til 10 p.m.,” he says. But practice can easily get cut short when Gvozden’s not playing his best. “I’ve gotten kicked out of practice countless times. Throwing a bad pass. Making a bad call. Our coach loves to hit the eject button on me.” And that’s not the only penalty Gvozden risks out there. When two players fought, they had to run laps—with their arms locked together. “It was hysterical,” says Gvozden. Of course, it’s on film. Lacrosse is only one part of the competition at Hopkins. As a psychology major, Gvozden takes his classes among students who have all graduated at the top of their high school classes, many of whom are fighting for a spot in med school. It’s an academic race that Gvozden isn’t looking to join. “Not right now,” Gvozden says, “Don’t have time for med school right now. Barely have time to go grocery shopping.” And after he graduates, he plans to stick with the sport he loves. “[I want to] keep playing, and make it a career somehow. Whether it’s coaching or marketing, I don’t exactly know. But I do know that I want to stay involved with the sport.” He chose psychology his freshman year after testing the waters with a variety of classes. “I loved psychology class. I really enjoy learning about people and the way the mind works.” His favorite class so far is Anthology of Mental Illness. “It’s hard but it’s cool. It’s a lot of memoirs of people losing their minds.” No matter how passionate Gvozden is about his studies, being an athlete ultimately puts him at a disadvantage. “In the classroom, it’s very tough. They have six more hours a day to do more than we can do. When we’re practicing or watching film, they have time to relax,” Gvozden says. But he quickly adds, “I wouldn’t sacrifice lax practice to have extra hours to hang out.” Goalie on Game Day But being a BMOC at an academically focused campus all seems worth it when Saturdays in the spring roll around. “Saturdays are pretty special here…It’s really pretty thrilling,” Gvozden says. “Everyone gets jacked up and ready to go.” The team prepares two hours before the game, listening to music while getting dressed and then warming up together. “We go into the locker room 15 minutes before the game, we put our actual jerseys on, then our coach gives a speech, probably throws something at the wall, gets everyone fired up. It’s great walking out; everyone goes nuts. It’s really a cool, cool experience.” own fraternity in itself. We’re 50 guys, we do everything together.” He lives with three other lacrosse players, who all study, cook, and like in any good fraternity, watch Entourage together. But unlike your average BMOC, there’s no special attention from the girls. “I WISH!” he says, “It’s kinda hard to have time for [girls]. It’s hard to have time to watch my favorite TV show.” Which, if you were wondering, is in fact The OC. He watches “religiously,” he says, and again like in any good fraternity, his roommates mock him for it nearly as often. For unrelated reasons, Gvozden wants to move out west after graduation. “I love California. I love the beaches. That’s pretty much my attitude, laid back. I think I’d fit in well there.” He admits that being so laid back is unusual for a lacrosse player at such a competitive university. “But it helps me with school and lax and being really stressed, having a nonchalant attitude. It’s a game, relax, have fun with it. I have to sit back and take in the big picture. It keeps me sane day in and day out,” he explains. Maybe he’s not a BMOC at his campus, but he doesn’t mind. “I like being a campus apart because I think it allows us to get extraordinarily close,” he says. “We’re making friends that are going to be the friends for the rest of our lives. Getting to hang out with my buddies all day—I’m definitely going to miss that.” In the fall when [I’m] watching a college football game, I think it would be so much fun— all the tailgates, wild parties... And the Parties? “You just decide to put your social life on hold until the weekend. All day you’re going to class, doing homework, trying to get ahead— but that’s why we all came here,” explains Gvozden. When he does go out, you won’t find him at dorm parties at Hopkins. “Loyola and Towson are very close so we hang out there. I have a very good friend at Towson. There’s not much of a social life here, we kind of have to make one.” Getting together with teammates is another release from the stresses of school. He and the team regularly meet up at one of the lacrosse houses for college and pro football games. Gvozden sees how different it would be at a school with a fanatic student body. “In the fall when [I’m] watching a college football game, I think it would be so much fun—all the tailgates, wild parties …” Gvozden takes the field in his uniform with pride—and a personal twist, sweatpants. They’re navy, baggy and worn out. “That’s like my trademark,” he says, “keeps me warm all game, so I don’t loose a beat.” Gvozden stands in the goal with a helmet and pads that only go from the chest up, trying to stop balls pelted at him as fast as 90 mph. “Last year we had a kid who could bring the ball 105,” Gvozden says, and he would know—he got in the way once. “It literally looked like someone shot me in the leg. It was the most disgusting thing I’ve ever seen.” His hands take a beating too—he can think of at least four lax-related hand injuries—but Gvozden’s at home in the crease. “I don’t like running at all. I had really bad asthma my whole life. The goal kinda solved all those problems.” A Campus Apart When he’s not on the field, Gvozden’s hanging out with the team. “I think we’re our WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 19 parkour: No Limits By Brian Cognato > Senior > English and Government and Politics > University of Maryland, College Park PHOTOS RYDER HASKE Take a good long look at the pictures surrounding this article. No Photoshop was used in their production, no special effects, wire or green screens. The only “special effect” is parkour. “Stretching your body to its absolute limit and just being the best you can be, that’s parkour,” says Binny Seth, the founder of the George Washington University’s parkour Binny Seth leaps through an architectural detail in a small park during a GWPK Jam session. Mark Toorock, the unofficial leader of the American parkour community, prefers “a training methodology using overcoming physical obstacles to improve both physically and mentally.” The essence is the same. Move. As quickly as possible. And don’t let anything get in your way. Practitioners of parkour, who refer to themselves as traceurs (like most parkour jargon, it’s French), run through cities, through parks, even just through the woods, with the goal of overcoming every obstacle in their path with as much speed and power as possible. If that means jumping from one rooftop to another, so be it. If it means leaping over a mid-sized sedan, so be it. If it means climbing the face of an apartment complex, well, so be it. Every feature of everything around you becomes another aspect of your own personal jungle gym. Most traceurs especially enjoy densely populated, urban areas because they’re thick with potential obstacles, each one a potential achievement. Seth’s favorite place to run is New York City. “It’s no limits,” he says. He especially recommends the scaffolding. But what looks like random thrill-seeking actually carries with it a welldeveloped philosophy that emphasizes discipline and self-control as much as freedom. Traceurs practice the same drills over and over again, hundreds of times, so that they master all their moves before risking them in real life. Safety first: there’s nothing “efficient” about cracking your skull. “You don’t try something until you know you can do it,” says Seth. “So you want to jump over a six-foot fence? You start with maybe a threefoot fence, and practice that a few hundred times. Then you move to a four-foot fence, and do that a few hundred times. Then a five-foot fence. Then you go for the six-foot fence.” This semester, Seth, a senior international relations and criminal justice double major aiming for a career in law, is taking his LSATS. He’s prepared like a true traceur, examining the results of each practice test as thoroughly and repetitiously as he would one of his breathtaking jumps. The diligence breeds not only skill, but confidence, as essential 20 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 club. Purists define it as “moving from Point A to Point B as efficiently as possible.” to confronting a test that will determine your life’s future as it is a gap between buildings high over New York City. Ilan Bouchard, a junior international relations major and vice president of GW’s club*, says that as much as discipline, parkour has encouraged his creativity. “In parkour, you go out and interact with everything you go through in your daily life without thinking about how you’re going through it,” he says. “Now, I try to see the boundaries I can break to get to where I want to go.” Case in point: Bouchard thinks the key to GW Parkour’s continued success is actually strengthening its presence outside the university. “[The club] is a nice way to get the name out and be certified,” he explains, “but we’ve found that there’s just not much structure to accommodate parkour at GW.” College traceurs nationwide sympathize; schools are understandably hesitant to open facilities to teams of amateur stuntmen. Campus police wrote up the GW club at its first session. A lengthy safety audit followed, and now the club can only have official events at Primal Fitness, a private gym operated by Toorock. Still, Seth thinks that establishing more “official” campus groups is key to “bringing [parkour] in from the underground” in the United States. Toorock adds that the expansion of campus parkour groups can add a “structure without structure,” infusing the movement with talented, openminded young leaders who can develop parkour’s infrastructure while still preserving its ethos of freedom and creativity. Seth and Bouchard have both previously jumped off a highway overpass, 20-feet high. They landed it. Obstacles–athletic, academic or bureaucratic–turned into achievements. That’s parkour. Maybe it’s as simple as that. “When you hit that jump, do that flip, climb that wall, the feeling is amazing,” Seth says. “Why wouldn’t I want that in every aspect of my life?” *College Magazine’s photo-editor, Ryder Haske frequently collaborates with GW’s Parkour club. If that means jumping from one rooftop to another, leaping over a mid-sized sedan, climbing the face of an apartment complex, well, so be it. To learn more about parkour or start your own campus club, email Binny Seth at Bseth@gwmail.gwu.edu WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 21 Student artists move into the world of professional art { J OEY M ANGO } By Gabe Seder > Junior > George Washington University > history & international affairs PHOTOS FOR MANGO & JACKSON RYDER HASKE / PHOTO FOR ACEVEDO DAVID WEBSTER > JUNIOR > UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK Theses three juniors balance schoolwork with professional projects as they try to get noticed in the competitive Art World. Because none are pursuing Fine Art majors, they bring elements of their studies into their work as they begin creating careers as artists. The Painter “People think of artists as like Zen, and all this crap,” Joey Mango says. “It’s a painful process for me. When I think of the word painting, the word ‘pain’ is in there, you know?” He says he often feels like throwing all his work away, but admits he would never give up painting. Despite his passion, Mango is content with a peripheral role he plays among student artists. A Communication Design junior at the New School in New York City, Mango devotes his free time to painting. “It’s what I do,” he says simply. His workspace is in his family’s loft behind his father’s TriBeCa paint-ing gallery. Although Mango only started painting a few years ago, canvasses are stacked against walls and piled on the floor. 22 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 Mango admits that he has little contact with other student artists. He’s never taken an art class, instead learning the basics from his father. Mango is struggling to get noticed in New York. He explains, “People who own galleries…I walk in there and they say, ‘We’re booked until 2010’… It’s all about how many shows you’ve had.” He doesn’t see himself staying in the city much longer. If it were up to him, he’d be “in the woods, with a trailer and a big barn on some land.” “It’s not about the money for me,” he says. “I just want to be out there painting.” The Slam Poet Elizabeth Acevedo, a junior at the George Washington University, was dissatisfied with her school’s art department. She created a new major— Performance Art—to combine poetry, theater and dance with sociology, anthropology and other social sciences. Her purpose: “[To] incorporate every element of creativity, but also make me think analytically,” she says. Combining traditional poetry, rap, dance, and a distinctly Latino influence, Acevedo’s performances confront anger, frustration, self-respect and identity–the difficulties faced by the daughter of Dominican immigrants in New York City. Her poem “She” tells the story of a girl defining womanhood. At some point in our lives we find ourselves stuck between what is known, what is comfortable, and what is unknown, something greater. In a bilingual piece, Acevedo pounds her chest, concluding: “To know where you’re going, you must know where you come from/I am Dominican.” Acevedo has been writing poetry, she explains, since her “ABC days,” and she even performed in New York before she began college. For the past two years, she has appeared at local venues and supported herself with paid performances at area universities. She has also organized workshops to teach community women to write poetry and worked with university multi-cultural organizations to promote the arts. She recently co-founded GW Grios, a student spoken-word group, which she hopes will bring her into the artistic mainstream. Elizabeth Acevedo says that her experience performing in the area is preparing her for the future. “When I perform, I like to ask for payment just because I try to be professional. I want to be a poet professionally and be my own business manager.” For now, “an album would be the desired thing, to go in the studio and bang out nine, ten tracks.” { The Filmmaker “At some point in our lives we find ourselves stuck between what is known, what is comfortable, and what is unknown, something greater.” So starts Hollow, University of Maryland junior Laurence Jackson’s first featurelength film. The movie depicts how the poor choices made by a group of college students come back to haunt them in the form of substance abuse, eating disorders, depression, and so on. Jackson had already made several short films and even launched his own production company in high school, but he was disappointed to find that Maryland offered no filmmaking program. Rather than give up the hobby, he immediately began production on Hollow and jumpstarted UMD Films, a student organization dedicated to making different forms of film including documentaries, mini-series, and shorts. Two years later, UMD Films boasts almost 60 members, two finished films, and four more in progress. “I’m pretty spiritual, and so a lot of my films reflect that,” Jackson says, a promotional poster from his latest work, the miniseries “Etiology,” tacked behind his desk. “I try real hard not E LI Z A BE TH ACE V E DO } to impose meaning, but I want people to see it and to think about choices they make.” Jackson says that his participation with student ministries and missions has influenced his art. Jackson studies business. He hopes the major will help him expand his production company when he graduates. In the meantime, he continues to write, direct, and produce through UMD Films. He is considering studying film in graduate school in New York City, but admits that he prefers developing independently. “I’m not much of a follower—I mean, I don’t always follow the rules,” he told me. “I’m much more like, ‘Let’s just go do it. Let’s go play.’” { L AURENCE JAC K S ON } WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 23 major Inspirations By Janeane Lage > Junior > English > William Jewell College John Sloan Dickey, a former president of Dartmouth College, once said, “The college undergraduate is a lot of things—many of them as familiar, predictable and responsible as the bounce of a basketball, and others as startling (and occasionally disastrous) as the bounce of a football.” College is our time to explore, learn from those around us, and redefine ourselves over and over again. The freedom and range of options can be intimidating, but as these five students show, you can take any number of paths to the end. Kevin Kirk, University of Maryland Sophomore Kevin Kirk is an inspiration to undecided majors everywhere, actively pursuing a career despite having yet to declare a major. Instead, he’s pursuing life outside the classroom by participating in four business-related clubs including Hinman CEOS and the Maryland Undergraduate Society of Entrepreneurs. He even runs his own retail company, A Slice of Paradise, which sells fashionable accessories at women’s sporting events. He started the company in high school selling hemp bracelets at his sister’s lacrosse tournaments; it has now grown to a 20×10 booth setup with four product lines. After Kirk won the most popular business vote at a contest for young entrepreneurs sponsored by Under Armor CEO Kevin Plank, Plank personally offered Kirk an internship—one of 50 positions among a field of 2,500 applicants—because he was so impressed with Kirk’s passion and business model. “I was going to inquire about interning anyway,” Kirk explains, “because I had looked into the summer internship online, but it said that only rising juniors, seniors and graduates would be accepted—no exceptions. So he simply asked me to intern for UA before I could ask him.” Kirk’s initiative earned him more than just an internship. It earned him a mentor. “I definitely look up to Kevin because, beyond having a lot in common, he simply has created an incredible business, and I hope to aspire to do the same in my future.” Allison Fox, Indiana University If you met Allison Fox today, you would be surprised to find this senior was once a shy and unpopular teen from the small town of Sarasota, FL. It wasn’t until she entered college that Fox found her niche and broke out of her shell by taking on a major leadership position. She began her college career wanting to explore her options, but after taking some business courses that she wasn’t fond of, she rediscovered her roots: retail—her family’s business for generations. It looks like the tradition won’t stop with her. Now majoring in apparel merchandising and minoring in business, Fox has channeled her passion for retail to help her grow in ways that she never would have expected. The shy outsider is now a community leader, the vice president of Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE), a service learning club where students form teams on their campuses and develop community outreach projects. Says Fox, “Being in SIFE has made me a very good leader, and a lot stronger person than I used to be… passion is the key to all I do. Passion for what I study, for what I do, and the community I give back to.” Eleanor Seavey, George Washington University While many of us spend our first years in college floundering from department to department, Eleanor Seavey knew her calling as early as high school. After spending her junior year studying in Reggio Emilia, Italy, immersed in the local high school, rich Italian culture, and fabulous food, she emerged with a thirst for the exotic. “I met people in my program from all over the world,” Seavey says, “and the political, historical, and cultural knowledge that I gained upon those meetings compelled me to search for a major that included those disciplines.” She settled on combining an international affairs major with a concentration on Europe and Eurasia with a minor in Italian literature for good measure. Outside the classroom, she’s worked as a research and administrative assistant for Pulitzer Prize-nominee and human rights advocate Kevin Bales, one of the world’s leading experts on modern slavery and the president of Free the Slaves, an American nonprofit. Seavey states that her major encompasses a variety of subjects, including anthropology, geography, political science, statistics, history and economics. “That flexibility allows my ideas to change as I grow more as a student and a citizen of the world.” 24 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 from the field to fashion fame Let’s Go Back to College with Under Armour’s CEO, Kevin Plank By Scott Kaptur > Senior > Journalism > University of Maryland, College Park PHOTO COURTESY OF KEVIN PLANK I was just a football player who never liked the weight of my cotton t-shirt that I was issued by the equipment manager. So the idea was, “What if someone made a t-shirt that was a synthetic-like material, that wouldn’t hold the moisture, but more importantly wouldn’t hold the moisture’s weight? WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 25 Back to College with Kevin Plank An entrepreneur long before he had even heard the word, Kevin Plank was shoveling snow while other kids his age had snowball fights, and selling bracelets at concerts while others got wasted and played air guitar. This year, his sports apparel company, Under Armour, which he founded his senior year at the University of Maryland, is expected to make $800 million. The idea stemmed from playing football for the Terrapins. The t-shirt he wore under his pads would get soaked with sweat and the water he poured over his head during the game. Plank knew there had to be a better way. College Magazine spoke with this student-to-CEO success story about college, crab cakes, and football. Q&A College Magazine: What do you remember most about college? What did you enjoy? Kevin Plank: Oddly enough I enjoyed going to class. I guess something I enjoyed about Maryland is that it’s such a diverse group of people. There’s nothing better than having class on one side of the quad then walking across to the student union; people are out smiling, playing Frisbee. CM: That’s what you miss the most about college? KP: There’s lots of things—it’s college for crying out loud! You have no responsibilities, no work. Figuring out what you’re doing Saturday night is probably the most important topic you have outside of your studies and economics and grades… CM: How did you settle on your major? KP: I always loved business, and it was important for me to get into business school. From the time I was seven or eight years old I was shoveling snow whenever there was snow outside and they cancelled school, or mowing lawns in the summer. And starting my own company was something I had always envisioned I was going to do. There were actually three things I was thinking about doing: I was thinking about the rose business, and I was also thinking about doing this crab cake business that would travel with the PGA tour, or doing this t-shirt thing. CM: The rose business? KP: They said [a student-athlete] couldn’t have a job, but they didn’t say anything about not having your own business. So I grabbed the yellow pages and found a wholesaler up in Baltimore, [and] I found out that I could get flowers at 25 cents a 26 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 stem. And I could basically build a dozen flowers for five or six bucks. I set out to sell 100 dozen flowers my freshman year. So I got the Visa machine running through the dorm room, myself and my girlfriend at the time, who is now my wife. She helped me with customer service and answering phones and taking orders. My freshman year we delivered 100 dozen flowers…my senior year we had four phone lines, 12 people selling the flowers, 15 drivers, and we delivered nearly 1,200 dozen flowers. And the problem with that is that we set out to deliver 1,500 flowers. And I lost a ton of money that year too. But I learned some pretty valuable lessons. CM: How did you balance the rose business, being an athlete and your schoolwork? KP: I used to not sleep much. In fact, when I would do the roses I would stay up anywhere from two to three days straight. It wasn’t healthy, don’t get me wrong. CM: So how did you come up with the idea for Under Armour? KP: I was just a football player who never liked the weight of my cotton t-shirt that I was issued by the equipment manager. A cotton t-shirt dry weighs about six ounces, when it’s wet it can weigh up to three pounds. So the idea was, “What if someone made a t-shirt that was a synthetic-like material, that wouldn’t hold the moisture, but more importantly wouldn’t hold the moisture’s weight?” CM: How did you go about finding a fabric that would do what you wanted it to do? KP: I didn’t. I just started out with the concept of a fabric, which was similar to what I wore in my compression shorts…I went to Jo-Ann’s fabrics and I bought as much fabric as they had. I took that fabric to a local tailor, and brought him a tight little white t-shirt and said, “can you make me as many t-shirts that look like this, but made out of this material.” CM: What advice would you offer to students who want to start their own business? KP: Probably the best advice that I ever heard was from friend of mine’s father who owned the patent on the twenty-five-year light bulb…[He] said, “Kid, do yourself a favor, and find out if your product can sell. And if it can sell, do it faster, do it better than anyone else and the rest will always take care of itself.” CM: Did you intern anywhere while you were in college? KP: My internships were things like the rose business. And I used to sell t-shirts at concerts when they came through town. CM: So you sold shirts at Greadful Dead and Rolling Stones concerts—were you a big fan? KP: I think I sold at 15 or 20 Grateful Dead shows, I went inside one concert. I like them, it was good, but that was probably enough. But the Rolling Stones, sure, of course. CM: Who do you listen to now? KP: I’m a little old school. I love U2, probably my favorite band to see live. I like the new guys too; I like Green Day and Matchbox 20. And I like O.A.R; O.A.R is a good group of guys from Maryland. I played golf with the lead singer; he’s a really good guy. He’s a hell of a golfer too. CM: Marc Roberge? What’s he shoot? KP: He’s probably a 12 handicap. Probably a little better, maybe a 10. CM: Aside from golf, what else does a young CEO do in his downtime? KP: I like thoroughbred horses a lot so I’ve got a horse farm. We’ve got some horses and we’re gonna win the Triple Crown here some day. CM: Does the horse wear Under Armour? KP: We haven’t made a shirt for a horse yet, but it’s definitely on my list of things to do. We have to make one for a dog first. CM: What are your personal goals? KP: Being a good man, being a good father, being a good husband. All those things play into just being a good guy. I think the ability to leave a legacy in a brand that has the potential to live for generations, that’s exciting to me. CM: What do you attribute your success to? KP: One question I always get is, “Did you ever think this could happen?”… I always answer the same way. I never believed that it couldn’t happen. I was always smart enough to be naïve enough to not know what we could not accomplish. the sports Careers Playbook By Scott Kaptur > Senior > Journalism > University of Maryland, College Park / PHOTO RYDER HASKE N ot everyone can make a living as a professional athlete or self-made mogul like Kevin Plank from Under Armour, but fields like sports representation and management, sports medicine, and sports journalism all put you right in the middle of the action. Competition for the jobs off the field, however, is as fierce as the battles on it. “The sports world is growing, and every day more people are applying,” says Matt Ritchie, a senior sports management major at Oklahoma State University. The key to standing out in a job market saturated with applicants, he says, is getting an early start. Ritchie is a veteran intern of four very different sports settings; his resume includes internships with D.C. United, Washington D.C.’s professional soccer team, as well as the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas. While he’s now actually turning down internships with pro teams he would have killed for previously, Ritchie says it wasn’t long ago that he was spending hours each day applying. He sent out 60 applications and was rejected 59 times before getting a call from D.C. United. Sue Frentz, a senior journalism major at the University of Maryland, spent the summer interning with ESPN. Like Ritchie, she had solid experience before moving up to the big show, but, while an encyclopedic knowledge of sports stats might impress your friends, Frentz says that if you want to stand out in Bristol, you need a strong work ethic. “I’ve never seen so much ‘I’m-so-happy-to-come-in-even-thoughI’m-going-to-work-until-4a.m.’ They really love what they do,” Frentz says of her coworkers. And it’s ultimately that passion, combined with a competitive attitude, that you need to make it in the sports world. “I’m a go-getter,” Frentz says, “I want to reach as high as possible.” Ritchie, who hopes to be general manager of a pro team someday, believes himself to be the most motivated person he’s ever encountered. Just like on the field, you’ve got to give it your all and never give up. “Even after the fifty-ninth rejection letter,” Ritchie says, “that sixtieth one could be an acceptance.” I’ve never seen so much ‘I’m-so-happy-tocome-in-even-though-I’m-going-to-workuntil-4a.m.’ They really love what they do. Sports After Graduation Interested in a career in sports? Check out these options to see what’s right for you. Sports Marketing Connecting sports fans’ wallets with the advertisers who love them. Daily Tasks: Talk on the phone. A lot. Brainstorm and coordinate promotions and events. Negotiate. Close. Requires: Charisma. Determination. The Catch: Ten no’s for every yes. Sports Management and Representation Sports Medicine/ Physical Therapy Helping athletes and teams navigate the legal world. Maximizing the abilities of the human body. Daily Tasks: Negotiate. Also, read and understand contracts—hideously complicated contracts. Make other people lots of money. Daily Tasks: Help others exercise—from pros to children and the elderly. Convince people to do painful and uncomfortable things. Requires: A J.D. or an M.B.A. Preferably both. Requires: Experience. Patience. Eventually, a license. The Catch: You probably are not evil, and you probably never will be. Good luck convincing someone else of that once you’re an “agent.” The Catch: Smelly people need exercise too. Sports Outreach Sports Journalism Using sports to make the world a better place. Telling people what’s happening and why they should care. Daily Tasks: Remain upbeat, at all times. Play with kids. Convince people, even people with millions and millions of dollars, to care. Ask for money. Requires: Energy. Determination. Charisma. The Catch: Kids can be fun. They can also be irresponsible, temperamental and immature—just like professional athletes. Daily Tasks: Write. Speak. Ask questions. Never sleep. Requires: An eye for detail. An ear for a good quote. The ability to at least look trustworthy. The Catch: Steroids. Point shaving. “Spygate.” Actually, Bill Belicheck in general. Labor disputes. Guns, stripclubs and other things that should never mix. WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 27 By Dan Morrison > Senior > Journalism > University of Maryland, College Park don’t freak out They’re Just Finals PHOTO REBECCA DEPREY > SENIOR > BUSINESS, MARKETING > UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND F inals can creep up on you. Sure it feels like the semester has just begun, but before you know it, you’re halfway through your classes and not nearly halfway through your studying. Feeling stressed out and overmatched is normal, but the key is to relax, take a deep breath and focus. It’s time to learn over two months’ worth of material in two weeks. Dr. Michael Dougherty, an Associate Professor of Cognitive Psychology at the University of Maryland, lays down the law on how to crack your finals by advocating the method of “distributive practice,” which calls for spreading out your studying material over time. So, if you have a ton of reading to catch up on, make a list of chapters you want to cover and assign one each day. “Cramming just gives you a momentary boost and you’re unlikely to retain that information for very long. Learning the material over a long period of time results in better retrieval of information,” Dougherty says. And don’t be afraid to take note of your surroundings while studying, too. According to Dougherty, “contextual information,” like the location and time of day you study, can help your recall. If it’s a subject you can discuss, like a theory or historical topic, try explaining the concept to a friend from class. Teaching the material will reinforce your own understanding of it. But be sure to study by yourself first and only then join in study groups so you’re not the weak link. You want to be the one that can answer others’ questions. Dougherty also suggests finding a quiet place to study. “Most students think that listening to music while studying helps them focus,” he explains, “while it’s actually distracting their mind away from the material.” If you utilize these tips and stay focused for the next couple weeks, you might just be able to save a lost semester or even polish off that 4.0. By Jaren Love > Junior > Government and Politics > University of Maryland, College Park the local SCRATCH Are you tired of listening to that same mediocre, scratched-up mix CD that your ex-girlfriend’s sister accidentally left in your car? Then consider a few of these up and coming regional musical selections to make your life a little more interesting. DELETED SCENES JOEL SEPHY Originally from Washington, D.C., Deleted Scenes is an indie rock quartet that now has members located in both Brooklyn and the district. The group has a Modest Mouse and Built to Spill feel, with that certain, inevitable D.C. punk quality too. The recordings can be mellow and dreamy, but expect an intense and electrifying live show, complete with guitar pedal hopping and nearly spontaneous instrument switching (even mid-song). myspace.com/deletedscenes Joel Sephy is a piano player and singer/songwriter based out of both Williamsburg, Virginia, and College Park, Maryland. With a style reminiscent of Ben Folds, Joel has just put out a new record entitled Everyday Asshole. Lyrics touch on subjects as diverse as Henry Kissinger and Mary Jane from Spiderman. He’s built a fine collection of songs with great pop hooks and harmonies. myspace.com/joelsephy TRUE WOMANHOOD According to this one-year-old band’s website, True Womanhood has already received what may be indie-rock’s highest honor: Sonic Youth frontman Thurston Moore owns one of their stickers. Not to mention, they’re armed with a live show that includes a straight up challenge to conventional rock-and-roll percussion—no standard drum kit here, friend. True Womanhood maintains broad credibility in its songs, with an electric guitar bowed with an acoustic guitar, and some strange metal object that resembles a funnel. If you like the poppier moments of Sonic Youth and Deerhunter, this band is for you. myspace.com/truewomanhood THE DEMON BEAT Straight out of the West Virginia panhandle, The Demon Beat is a three-piece rock band from the quaint college town of Shepherdstown. The band members mix the White Stripes, AC/DC, and The Pixies to put on a live show as powerful as any you’ll ever see, highlighted by the group’s intense stage presence, guitar chops and vocal delivery of frontman Adam Meisterhans and the sophisticated rhythms of bassist Tucker Riggleman and drummer Jordan Hudkins. The Demon Beat has a new EP coming out this fall and plays in the Baltimore area. myspace.com/thedemonbeat { DELE TED SCENES } Photo courtesy of Deletec Scenes PLAYGROUND ETIQUETTE By Jenny Poist > Senior > Architecture > University of Maryland, College Park This four-member ensemble formed out of a common goal, “to come together and have people enjoy the music and themselves.” Playground Etiquette’s powerful female vocals leave them reminiscent of bands like Evanescence, adding a different flavor to the more grungy sound the group otherwise seeks to embody. This past spring, the group earned a live appearance on 98 Rock’s Local Licks, a weekly radio spot for up-and-coming artists. If the big shots know what they’re doing, these guys might be refining your jungle-gym manners for a while. myspace.com/playgroundetiquette Heavy D Trades Hip-Hop for Hemp Why a giant (literally) of the rap game in the early 90’s turned to reggae. And the interview where he convinces us that students will dig his new stuff. By Brian Cognato > Senior > English and Government > University of Maryland, College Park / PHOTO COURTESY OF HEAVY D When Heavy D first approached us about his new album Vibes, we were a little skeptical. After all, when Heavy first cracked the Billboard Top 100, the oldest member of our staff was two years old. But then he sent us his new album—for free. “Hm,” we thought. “Maybe this guy really does understand the college music fan.” We listened, and we liked. Not only had “Hev” crafted a thoroughly chillable reggae album, but it was unlike anything of his we had heard before. Twenty years after the “The Overweight Lover” entered the pop culture world, he had thrown caution to the wind and reinvented himself. “I wanted to challenge myself and do things that people won’t expect,” says Heavy. The campus community, we trust, can relate. Check out the interview, tracks and videos online at collegemagazine.com. WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 29 STUDENT Column By Alyssa Walker >Junior > Journalism > Towson University PHOTOS COURTESY OF ALYSSA WALKER I traded in the lace socks and frilly dresses early in life. My sports experiences started with ballet around age three, but I was bored with tutu’s and drag-queen makeup by five. Figure skating came next, but honestly, I was more interested in the hockey lessons going on down the rink. From there, all was lost and a little girl never turned back. Around eight or nine, I put on my first pair of hockey skates—CCM Supertacks, which to this day are still the best skates I ever had. It was love; I felt like Cinderella putting on the glass slipper, only a little more kickass. I spent the next seven years being the only girl on my hockey team, followed by a three year stint in girls AAA, leading the league in penalty minutes my last three years. I was actually cut in my freshman year of college solely for being too physical. Bollocks. It’s not my fault that when I come charging at you, you stand there and let me knock you on your ass and off the puck, and it’s not my fault that while playing lacrosse in high school, I was forced to play in goal because I got carded twice in my first game for illegal body checking. When my time in the girl’s AAA league ended, I signed a lifetime contract with the local “beer league.” Negotiations are still up in the air for this coming season—I’m holding out for four beers per game, unlimited use of everyone else’s clear sock tape and help skate-tying whenever I ask. I was recently informed by my captain that my contract is voided once I hit 100 penalty minutes for the season; then it is back to buying my own tape and playing hockey sober. Again, it’s not my fault I can make grown men cry. Since being drafted to the beer leagues for the rest of my life, watching, reading, writing and following sports in general has helped me keep my competitive edge (read: I may or may not be wearing eye black right now). I spent my sophomore year at the University of Maine, and the best part of that was Division I hockey. Maine is to Black Bear hockey as Ohio State is to Buckeye football. I spent most of my Friday and Saturday nights standing in line with 6,000 fellow “Maine-iacs” in below-freezing weather, often paired with snow and winds sweeping down from Canada, just to see if we could get in to watch the Black Bears do battle. It was strange being at a school where football and basketball were second rate sports, after growing up in an area where those were the only sports. Maine’s teams weren’t bad, they just weren’t National Champions and frequenters of the Frozen Four (hockey’s equivalent to the Final Four), but so far, no sport-watching experience has been better than a Maine hockey game. The intensity watching and waiting for the pep band to come in playing our fight song, the techno music during warm-ups, cheering “Big Ben Bishop” when the announcer introduced our fearless goalie, that first drop of the puck on the clean smooth ice: it gave me chills every time. And it was not just because it was -3 outside. After earning more penalty minutes than anyone you’ll ever meet, hitting the ice until my knees completely deteriorate away, and just being a fan, I don’t think anything can sum up my college sports career up better than a quote I read a long time ago but can’t quite place anymore: “Behind the athlete you’ve become, the hours of practice, the coaches who pushed you, the teammates who believed in you, and the fans who cheered for you, is the little girl who picked up a stick, who fell in love with the game, and never looked back.” HOW TO PLAY: Each row, column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition. Check your answers at collegemagazine.com. ©JFS/KF – Dist. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 30 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com WINTER 2008 with the Sexy Professor… We Mean Sex Professor By Matthew Castner Adventures in Dorm Room Dating By Ashley Nolan > Journalism > Senior > University of Maryland, College Park PHOTO RYDER HASKE S neaking out the second floor of your parents’ house on a Saturday night to meet up with a potential fling “is like, so high school.” This is college: the place for convenient, high-rise romances. From the moment your teary-eyed parents pull away from the parking lot, you’re basically at the helm of your own ship, and in a place like College Park, this ship happens to be inhabited by 30,000 or so undergraduate students who are potential mates in the dating pool. Take Brittany, a 19-year-old freshman journalism major who has been hooking up with someone from her floor since week one. Snuggled in a pink University of Maryland throw blanket with a stylish white headband to pull back her hair, she recounted the past month as if she had been dating her beau for years. “We met at the end of the first week of classes after a loud, Thursday night of drinking in the dorm and going to the ERC for late night indoor swimming,” she said. “We had our first kiss a little after that,” she added with a grin, “It’s convenient… I’m not gonna lie.” Since their first meeting in the dorm, the pair has traveled to his Delaware beach house and even met one another’s families. They’ve agreed to a non-exclusive relationship for the time being, but she admits he is afraid of commitment. Apparently, he’s scared of “establishing titles” in their relationship, “but so am I,” Brittany quickly adds. “We figured we can live near each other in the dorm and know that the person will always be there regardless if we stop hooking up or not. For now, it’s just really fun and very convenient.” Most dorm dwellers were hesitant to disclose their identities, but they unanimously agreed that convenience was their main motivation, and, not surprisingly, that can sometimes lead to misunderstandings…A freshman from Manhattan explains, “A friend of mine was hooking up with a guy on our floor and initially thought it was more serious and exclusive. It turns out, he was super flirty at the bar and never wanted a relationship at all.” Sarah, a senior biology major, began dating a fellow on-campus apartment resident in January 2007 after living in the same building as friends for two previous semesters. “The guy I dated was fun to be around, and dating was safe and convenient. Instead of walking around College Park to meet up, I’d just get some exercise using the stairs,” she said. The pair was inseparable for a year and a half before they broke up in January 2008 after she caught him with another girl. “Living so close had its drawbacks, we’d bump into each other when bringing other people back from the bars. Of course, it became awkward to visit his apartment and hang out as a group like we used to. After we broke up, it felt like I had lost my whole network of friends in the building,” she said. The pair eventually mended their differences. No male students were willing to contribute to this article. I have no idea why. Dr. Robin Sawyer is a professor of health and human sexuality at the University of Maryland, the author of Sexpertise: Real Answers to Real Questions About Sex, and the writer and producer of four films on human sexuality. Bow-chicka-wow-wow. He’s also College Magazine’s go-to answer man for all those questions we like to pretend we know the answers to. Girls were on top last issue, but now Dr. Sawyer takes a look at some, um, harder questions. Q: How many times can a guy climax in one go? A: I think the most I’ve heard of is 30 times in one day, but that would kill a man. It’s really an equation of age, how much you’ve been drinking, the attractiveness of your partner [and] physical fitness. Q: Can men masturbate too much? A: [Laughs] Men can never masturbate too much. I think it might be too much if it gets in the way of your job or your studies. Q: What’s the most unique sex-related injury you’ve heard of? A: Wayne Bobbit. The removal of a man’s penis is pretty hard to top. Q: How can drugs affect men’s sex drive? A: Many of the illicit drugs seem to have a placebo effect with regard to sex; i.e., if you think or believe the sex will be better, it could be. It’s less about the pharmacological content of the drug and more about the self-fulfilling prophecy. Some folks think sex on marijuana is great, while others fall asleep! More Sex Questions? Do you have a question for College Mag’s sex professor? Send it to us at tellus@ collegemagazine.com and we’ll do our best to expose the answer. Unless it’s about our own sex lives…in which case the answer is yes. WINTER 2008 cOLLEGEMAGAZINE.com 31