9/11 Memorial: A Somber Remembrance and Noble Project

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Freshmen Duel It Out
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Knowing Your Letters
Volume LXXXVII, Issue 02
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Zombie Killing
With Magnitude and Direction Since 1924
9/11 Tribute | Page 16
We Will Always Remember
A depiction of the New York City skyline after the construction is completed. Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Photo Courtesy of Silverstein Properties
9/11 Memorial: A Somber Remembrance and Noble Project
A look at the 9/11 Memorial and the
work on One World Trade Center
John Fostek
Editor-In-Chief
With the opening of
the 9/11 Memorial this past
Sunday came an emotional
and solemn occasion to remember the tragic events
of ten years ago. So rarely
in a generation does such
a terrible event occur that
bonds a nation and still
leaves the feel of its pangs
ten years later. To also
honor the 9/11 Memorial,
the PBS program NOVA
aired the “Engineering
Ground Zero” documentary, sponsored by NJIT.
“Engineering Ground
Zero” first aired on PBS
on September 7th of last
week, and has since aired
two more times. The program took an emotional
and inventive look at
the work being done at
Ground Zero, and the engineering and design decisions being made on site.
After the presentation of
many different contending plans for Ground Zero
over the years, construction has begun and made
considerable
progress.
The
NOVA
video
mainly covers the construction of two of the major structures at Ground
Zero, the new tower being built to hold numerous
workers and visitors and
the 9/11 Memorial built
alongside it. The two archi-
tects behind each project
are David Childs, and Michael Arad, respectively.
David Childs, a consulting design partner at
Skidmore, Owings, and
Merill, is the lead architect
of the new tower being
built at Ground Zero, the
One World Trade Center.
Childs seeks in his design
to find a balance between
security and beauty in the
new tower while making
great use of common materials like concrete and
glass. In the NOVA program, specifics on the de-
sign of One World Trade
Center are covered, like
its 776 foot height and
concrete materials made
to withstand 14,000 psi.
NOVA clearly depicts the many difficult
decisions made in building the One World Trade
Center to be secure and
stunning by using great
visuals and interesting
concepts. While the tower is meant to be elegant
and stylish, it must be
tors and their professors.
Potential changes to students’ course placements
after the common will not
affect their scheduling. As
stated by Dr. Jonathan
Luke of the Mathematics Department, “The first
common exam will have no
effect on the course scheduling of students in Math
110, except some students
will be assigned a tutoring
group. The reorganization
of Math 111 will result in
a change in course section (into another Calculus class [Math 131]) and
instructor, with tutoring for
some students.
Class
times, however, will remain
the same in all cases.”
Though some say that fail-
ing the math common will
result in demotion to PreCalculus, this is entirely
untrue. “NJIT has never
had the intention of inhibiting a student’s ability,”
says Provost Dr. Ian Gatley, “we only intend to help
students further their education at their own pace.”
Dr. Gatley also mentioned
that a student must put
out the same effort to
succeed as they would
in any subject matter.
Homework can easily
put a student on the right
track, but this does not
mean hitting the books for
hours straight either. By
using the tutoring center,
Continued on Page 3
Hey NJIT! What’s the Deal With Math?
Changes in Math has students
arguing it’s benefits.
Danielle Judka
Contributing Writer
A heated debate has
recently arisen among
students and staff regarding how the math department is situating incoming
students into their introductory classes. The department has put forth a
number of changes in their
curriculum to satisfy the
requirements of most majors, in addition to evening
out the work load across
the
various
sections.
These changes are
meant to help students who
might be struggling and are
in need of a stronger foundation in mathematics. As
engineering is founded
on mathematics, building
these skills is the core to
most students’ success.
The basis of the curriculum
changes follows a detailed
set of guidelines to set students on the right path.
NJIT formerly had Pre-calculus courses below Math
110, which now have been
eliminated, with many adjustments being made to
the remaining courses.
Incoming freshmen are
now ranked into their math
classes according to their
placement test scores and
high school credentials;
they are placed either into
Math 111 or Math 110.
Math 111 students that
believe they escaped the
Pre-calculus requirement
are now hit with a new
task: the first common
exam. Those in Math 111
must pass this hurdle to
continue in the class; otherwise, they are put into
a three semester calculus
sequence. Students that
pass but are still performing poorly must take mandatory tutoring sessions,
where they must prove
they are making significant
progress to both their tu-
Freshmen Weekend and Highlander Games - More Pictures on Pages 8, 9 and the back cover!
Continued on Page 7
Page 2
Editorial
The Vector
Volume LXXXVII, Issue 01
The Vector is published weekly
during the Fall and Spring semesters by the students of New
Jersey Institute of Technology, 150
Bleeker Street, Newark, NJ 07102.
The Vector Office is located in
Room 466 of the Campus Center.
The Vector is dedicated to the
memory of Dr. Herman A. Estrin
and Roger Hernandez.
Executive Board
Editor in Chief
John Fostek
editor-in-chief@njitvector.com
Executive Editor
Romer Jed Medina
executive-editor@njitvector.com
Managing Editor
Monica Pajdak
managing-editor@njitvector.com
Business Manager
Lori-Ann Sciachitano
business-manager@njitvector.com
Senior Staff
Associate Editor
A.J. Polanco
Layout Associate
Nic Thibodeaux
Distribution Manager
Jon Kim
Staff
Charles Bell
Daniel Ovale
Louis Gonzalez
Marie Zoghbi
Photo Staff
Greg Wysoczanski
Leonard Angelo Valenzuela
Steven Resche
Distribution Staff
Dennis Moore
Michael Lipinski
Contributors
Danielle Judka
Philip Chen
Daniel-Peter Adjetey
Christopher Fowler
Andrew Harrison
Tom Devuono
Louise Pronstroller
Greg Brendlinger
Editorial
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
The Vector
meets every
Friday
at
11:30 AM to 1:00 PM
All students welcome!
The editorial board would
like to say Thank You
to
A.J. Polanco for
designing this issue’s
9/11 Section
and
Nic Thibodeaux for
designing this issue’s
Entertainment
Section
As the days steadily
move on from the September 11th Memorial, I
cannot help but think how
much time has passed
since I first heard the
tragic news, and felt the
painful misery everyone
did that day. As far as
current day tragedies go,
9/11 is among the worst
and most strikingly horrific. Not a soul in America,
and likely many citizens of
foreign nations, can forget how devastating an
impact that day has had.
I almost feel ashamed
to say that the story of my
day on September 11th
2001 is not nearly as odd,
sad, or unique as others. I was in sixth grade
at the time and may day
was surprisingly normal.
The only major difference
I noticed was the behavior
of the teachers for all of
my classes. It seemed as
if they had all gone into a
deep depression, and their
focus was not entirely on
the class. It wasn’t easily
noticed, but I caught on
to it after a while. It didn’t
change my day greatly
though; school went on
pretty much as usual.
Perhaps unlike the experience of kids in other
schools, not very many
students left school at their
parent’s behest, and there
was no announcement
made to the entire student body telling us what
happened. It wasn’t until I
was to get picked up from
school that day that I realized something was off.
Instead of my mom being
there as usual, my best
friend’s mom picked me.
My parents were out of
work and home that day,
so I went home with my
friend as I sometimes did.
But my friends mom told us
Weather with Ollie: It’s Crazy!
Operational Advisor
Robert J. D. Moran
Faculty Advisor
Miriam Ascarelli
Deadlines
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Friday prior to publication, 8 p.m.
articles@njitvector.com
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the news calmly as we listened on the radio to what
happened in New York.
Then my experience at
school made more sense
to me. That was why the
teachers seemed quiet
and perplexed. I then spent
a good portion of my day
over at my friend’s house
discussing what had happened, and having random
patriotic musings as to how
we could be helpful to others at this time. Yes, maybe that’s a little strange for
kids to be doing in sixth
grade, but we were a little
nerdy, and that’s why I
find myself at NJIT working on the newspaper now.
Truly, the most disturbing thought I had that
day was when I think back
to what I was doing the
exact moment the first
tower was hit. In my middle school, the first things
done in the day were attendance and the presentation of school news
to the students through
tv’s in every classroom.
The very moment the first
tower was hit, the class
and myself were saying
the pledge of allegiance.
I sometimes find myself worried by this, but at
the same time I can take
comfort in thinking that at
the very moment my country was at its most vulnerable, I was pledging my
commitment to it no matter
what. Everyday we would
say the pledge of allegiance, and it was more
of a chore than something
that had meaning. I’ve had
heated debates with others as to whether or not
the pledge should have to
be said, and none of them
have been very useful at
reaching a conclusion. But
one way or another, that
pledge reminds me how
important it is to respect,
honor, and take pride in
the country I have a part in.
Every citizen has a story to tell about that day, all
of them unique and eerily
familiar. September 11th
is a moment in history that
has tied the people of this
age together; a moment
that has shown us the value in working together for
peace and prosperity. Moment like it have come and
gone before; but this moment is ours to hold in our
hearts and minds forever.
The message sent by September is not to despise or
revile the path the world
has gone down since, but
to remember the lives lost
and continue to treasure
and protect our world.
Campus Life
Page 3
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
Campus Thoughts: Where Were You on 9/11?
Louie Carreiro
Freshmen
Chemical Engineering
3rd Grade Math Class
Danielle Quijano
Freshmen
Chemical Engineering
3rd Grade
Aarib Nebdugivub
Freshmen
Chemical Engineering
3rd Grade Math
Nida Riaz
Freshmen
Chemical Engineering
Elementary school in language
arts class
Christopher Sam
Senior
Industrial Engineering
8th Grade Chemistry in West
Orange, saw smoke out the window
Jakub Turon
Freshmen
Chemical Engineering
3rd Grade Math Class
Philip Silva
Freshmen
Undecided
3rd Grade
Erica Vigliorolo
Freshmen
Undecided
3rd Grade English
Continued from the Front
able to withstand weather and security risks, as
well as be functional for
the many people who
will pass through it daily.
Childs’s design of the
One World Trade Center
uses a unique manner to
give it a new shape not
common to skyscrapers.
At the base of the tower,
the structure remains
square, but as it rises, steel
beams are held together in
various different forms to
give the tower a twisting
shape that steadily turns
into an octagon. Once the
structure reaches its top, it
becomes a square again;
when looking at it from
ground level this gives it
a remarkable shape that
dominates the skyline.
In the video, Chris
Ward, Executive Director
of the Port Authority for
New York and New Jersey, and manager of the
site at Ground Zero, remarked “This is a once in a
lifetime, once in a generation, once in the history of
the United States project.
This is about fundamentally rebuilding an entire
downtown and creating
The 9/11 Memorial located in New York City.
a new city within a city.”
Next to the One
World Trade Center now
stands the 9/11 Memorial, its grand opening
having just passed last
Sunday. Designed by Michael Arad after winning
the contract for the project, the 9/11 Memorial
sits on the site where the
Twin Towers once stood.
In the exact footprints of
of the Twin Towers are
now two pools of flowing water contained in the
square frames where the
towers were. Each square
contains a smaller inner
square where the gentle
flow of water empties to
be recycled and reused.
Originally, the 9/11
Memorial was not expect-
ed to be completed until
2013, but this was unacceptable to those working
on the project, so the original plans were changed
and made for completion
in this year. The memorial
site also has 400 trees surrounding it, grown in New
York, Pennsylvania, and
Washington D.C., then replanted at the 9/11 Memo-
rial. 152 total bronze panels surround both pools
and are etched with the
names of the victims of
the attacks, encompassing
specifically the victims on
the planes, the victims in
the towers, and those who
died in the attacks of 1993.
As this week progresses, and the 10th anniversary of 9/11 has come and
gone, it is important that
we remember there is still
much work to be done at
Ground Zero. When fully
completed, there will be
six new towers that stand
along the 9/11 Memorial,
and a whole new city will
rise within to honor and
remember what the site
stands for. Ground Zero
is the site where our past
and present collide, and
where inevitably our future
will be realized, and it will
be with great pleasure that
we look upon the completed work now taking place.
John Fostek is a senior
majoring in Computer
Science and can be contacted
at editor-in-chief@njitvector.
com
Page 4
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
GREEK LIFE
Greek Life at NJIT
who get promoted quicker,
they are going to be the
ones who have people
underneath them quicker
and they are the one who
are going to rise to the
top faster. That is something we believe is very
invaluable to the fraternity
and sorority experience.”
Getting
involved
brings many new people
into your life. Each has
a different place or pur-
Grasping the idea behind
Fraternities and Sororities at NJIT
Marie Zoghbi
Staff Writer
What
does
it
mean to be Greek at
NJIT? By Marie Zoghbi
Clubs and organizations
at NJIT strive to improve
upon what they are already
excelling at. For Greeks
at NJIT, this is nothing unusual. Why should
students get involved
in Greek Life at NJIT?
NJIT’s Assistant Director
for Greek Life & Wellness,
Thea Shoenberg, answers
this question, saying much
about why our Greeks
are so valuable to NJIT.
“By getting involved in
a fraternity or sorority we
feel that the students are
getting an invaluable experience to help progress
them in their field; they
are going to have a leg up
on everyone else. Aside
from the obvious connec-
tions for networking and
internships, mentorships,
there’s the opportunity
to develop as a leader.
“Within the organization they learn how to:
supervise people, how to
work with people that are
a different leadership
style than they are, how
to work with a budget
and how to deal with a
crisis situation. These
are all things that are
going to set graduates
of NJIT who are also
members of a fraternity or sorority apart from
students who are just
graduating in their major,”
Schoenberg
continues, “We hope that
through these experiences
our students will go out
and be able to climb the
ladder within their professions faster because they
will already have these
skills developed. They
are going to be the ones
“...Getting involved
brings many new
people into your
life...”
pose, but ultimately they
help keep you on the right
path. “It helps that we really pay attention to these
students, so that when
someone may be having a
challenging time with their
academics, someone is
going to step in either call
attention to it or help them
out,” says Schoenberg.
Developing
new
skills
also
develops
your character. Being a
Greek also means giving
back to the community.
“We also hope develop students who are more
mindful to the community
around them by encouraging them to be involved
in philanthropy and community service. We produce better citizens of the
community. We hope to
have students who, when
they walk by someone
who needs help, to be
the one who helps out
and not the one to walk
by,” says Schoenberg.
In addition, being a
Greek also means developing lifelong friendships. “You’re in a really
unique experience with
people you’ve never met
before, and you find some
of your best friends by
joining a fraternity or sorority,” notes Schoenberg.
With the start of a new
academic year, the Office
of Greek Life and InterFraternity Sorority Council have set goals for its
Greek members. One of
the goals set for the organizations is to grow their
chapter sizes. In order to
help with this, the Campus
Center brought in recruitment experts from PHIRD
UP to speak to the current
members of our chapters.
“This year we are
basing fraternity recruitment loosely on our sorority recruitment model.
We found that it was very
effective for any woman
on this campus interested
in a sorority to get basic
information about all the
groups in one place. We
are going to be doing the
same thing for our fraternities,” states Schoenberg.
Male
recruitment
chair of the IFSC, Nick
Caravella, is working on
a passport program. This
passport is given to any
potential member interested in joining a fraternity
or sorority. On one side is
a listing of discounts that
they can get at local businesses by presenting the
passport. This passport
is exclusive to potential
members who are drawn
to the idea of possibly joining a fraternity or sorority.
Schoenberg
gave
Meet The Greeks Block Party
Grasping the idea behind
Fraternities and Sororities at NJIT
Marie Zoghbi
Staff Writer
A new academic year
at NJIT has begun, and
so have many campus
wide events. Organizations on the campus start
the year off strong in welcoming the freshman class
to their new home. One
of the largest and most
active of these student
groups are the fraternities and sororities at NJIT.
The Inter-Fraternity Sorority Council, better known
as the IFSC, played a
big role in organizing this
year’s Meet the Greeks
Block Party. On Wednesday September 7th, NJIT’s
18 fraternities and sororities gathered in the campus center atrium and
lobby to introduce themselves to the new students.
The annual event featured games, music, prizes, free food, jousts and
step and stroll performances. Some organizations
held their own activities
at their respective tables.
NJIT also welcomed a
new colony to the campus, the brothers of Delta
Greek Life
Epsilon Psi, who made
their debut with a step
and stroll performance.
Some students may
ask why events like these
are so important. Steven
Tran, a junior studying
Electrical Engineering and
brother of Pi Kappa Phi
Fraternity responded with
“It was a fun event held on
campus. It gave students
on campus time to relax
and just have fun. This
event helped students understand Greek life from
all organizations. This is
effective for recruitment as
well because it encourages students to walk around
and meet each Greek before playing the game that
Students and greek life members enjoyed themselves by learning about the history of different greek organizations and relaxing with friends.
Greek Life
Page 5
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
more in depth details about
the passport program.
“Within the passport
are opportunities to get
stamps from our different chapters because in
the end those who have
completed their passport
will be entered in to win
a prize; not sure what the
prize will be at this time.”
Furthermore,
to add to the traditional
programs
which have become
signature
events,
Greek Life is adopting the HERO campaign. The office of Greek
Life is joining forces with
other clubs and offices on
campus help promote the
idea of the HERO campaign designed to spread
the message about being the designated driver.
With
improvement,
come many changes.
First, we have welcomed
a new colony to NJIT. A
Culturally based South
East Asian Fraternity, the
men of Delta Epsilon Psi.
“They had to go
through a rigorous process to be selected to
come to campus. They
have been working on getting oriented this summer
and they are ready to hit
the ground running this
fall,” remarks Schoenberg.
“We unfortunately had
to close a chapter due
to membership; Sigma
Lambda Beta is no longer
recognized on this campus. We hope that in the
future they are able to reorganize, that they could
come back with better num-
bers,” says Schoenberg.
Something new for
the Greek community is a
shared standards agreement. This document is
designed to allow chapters to: enhance their operations, allow them to
take responsibility for their
own organizations and responsibilities, and to give
them an opportunity to go
above and beyond what is
expected of the chapters.
“It is divided up into
different sections: academic, chapter management, new member education, etc., and within each
section there is a listing of
everything that is expected
of the chapter, namely a
award,” says Schoenberg.
This new agreement
will be rolled out this fall
semester and fully implemented this spring. Once
the organizations submit
their shared standards
agreement to the office
every semester, they will
be reviewed, and meetings with the leadership of
each organization will follow to let the organization
know where they stand.
There have been
some other changes on
campus that impact our
new students and Greeks
as well. The Office of Greek
Life has been given new
opportunities, courtesy of
Dean Gentul and Director
they know the value that
Greek Life brings to this
campus and also what
it does for our students.
Plenty of students will say
to me, Thea, I would have
transferred if I wasn’t in
my fraternity, or, Thea,
my sorority is the only
reason why I stayed here.
It’s remarkable what
an impact our groups
have on our students.
“We want to be able
to spread the word about
fraternity and sorority life
to as many as we can.
With this spotlight in the
freshman seminar class,
with a homework assignment, which is to watch
this commercial and
each organization hosted.”
Others
also
see
this as an opportunity
to highlight the positive
aspects of Greek Life.
“I think the event is
important for everyone
because it shows a social
side of Greek life outside of
the realm of parties. I think
it definitely helps to alleviate some of the negative
stereotypes of Greek life
when everyone on campus is able to see the community as a whole working
together and sharing a
good time together while
inviting others to learn
more about each organi-
zation and join in on the
fun,” said Kristina Ippolito
a senior studying Civil
Engineering and sister of
Delta Phi Epsilon Sorority.
Without these events,
many facets of Greek
life would go unnoticed.
“Every fall NJIT hosts
the “Greek Block Party”,
an on-campus event focused on getting students
interested in Greek Life.
In the first week of the semester kick-off, freshmen
with an inclined interest
will typically find an organization that expresses their
desired character. However, those students make
up a miniscule percentage of the student body.
“The event is hosted
in hopes of attracting
those students who either
have not had the chance
to travel up and down
Greek row or lacked interest in doing so. To most
students of which Greek
Life remains relatively
unknown, events like this
are important to let them
know that there’s more to
Greek Life than partying.
“With this event, students have the ability to
gain insight about organization’s achievements,
heritage, history, benefits
and values - most of which
are sadly overlooked,”
said Evan N Rekiec a
brother of Kappa Xi Kappa Fraternity who is a senior studying Architecture
and minoring in Business
Overall the event is
held to benefit the campus and student body as
a whole by showing that
there is more to a college education than just
classes and exams. NJIT
has a lot to offer its students, but it is up to the
individual to grasp the
life-changing opportunities that come their way.
list of merits. Chapters
who wish to go above and
beyond can start to check
off some of those things
so that they know they are
going above and beyond.
Doing so will make them
eligible to win a Highlander Student Achievement
Award or a Fraternity or
Sorority
Achievement
of Residence Life, Lynn
Riker, who revamped
the freshman seminar
program
to
highlight
Greek Life. An integral
part of the new program
is to encourage freshman students to really
get involved on campus.
“Even up to the
president of the college,
have discussion about it in
the next class, we are really hoping that it shows
the freshman the wonderful things our groups
do,” says Schoenberg.
Many future changes are in store for the
Greeks at NJIT specifically, the Greek Village.
“Many organizations
have signed on to rent
or lease in the Greek
Village. A lot has been
accomplished
this
summer and everyone is excited. These
buildings will be the
premiere housing on campus, with prices comparable to living in the residence
halls,” states Schoenberg.
A state of mind that driven NJIT students have is
to strive for success no
matter what changes occur, such an outlook is
present with some of our
most involved students.
Thea
Schoenberg
is
the Assistant Director
for Greek Life & Wellness at NJIT; she can be
reached at thea@njit.edu.
“...Plenty of students will say to me “Thea, I would have
transfered if I wasn’t in my fraternity” or “Thea, my
sorority was the only reason why I stayed here...”
A group shot of a large portion of Greek Life members at NJIT campus.
Marie Zoghbi is a senior
majoring in Communication and Media and can be
reached at mzoghbi@njitvector.com
Photos Courtesy of Greg Wysoczanski
Page 6
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
NEWARK
Welcome to Newark!
Adventuring out into the streets of
Newark for the first time?
Charles Bell
Staff Writer
Welcome to the city
of Newark, New Jersey,
where you will find a lot to
do if you only keep your
mind open and choose to
explore the vast history
that it holds. Staying safe
within the borders of campus is easy, but it can be
exhilarating to find out what
your new home is all about.
You are very lucky in
having a chance to see a
city in its developmental
stages, where many buildings will be built, many
people will move in, and
many businesses will enter. Invite your friends to
enjoy the city with you,
learn about the Newark
Riots that took place just
some forty years ago,
or about our energetic
Mayor Cory Booker and
his plans to bring safety and education back.
You can learn about
how our school is expand-
ing at an ever greater
speed. Did you know that
King Building was once
a Central High School,
which had a championship basketball team? Did
you know that the building
has a pool and a magnificent auditorium? What do
you think NJIT will use
these spaces and the
rest of the building for?
The City of Newark
is broken down into five
wards: The North Ward,
East Ward, West Ward,
South Ward and Central
Ward. The New Jersey
Institute of Technology
is located in the Central
Ward along with most of
the city’s other universities. Essex County Community College is located
just down the street from
NJIT, on the corner of
Market and MLK. Many
NJIT students elect to
take some of their General
University Requirements
(GUR) there for transfer
credit. A new addition,
Berkeley College, is locat-
Do You Hookah?
Visiting one of University Heights
most prominent cafes, Intrinsic
Greg Brendlinger
Contributing Writer
Do
you
Hookah?
When asked this question, most people respond
“What’s a Hookah?” A
mundane answer would be
“A Middle Eastern tobacco
pipe in which the smoke
is drawn through water
before reaching the lips;
hookah” (Dictionary.com).
And in fact, on Friday September 9th, many people
indeed asked that very
question, but instead of
receiving the generic answer, all one had to do
was look around at the
crowds of students engaging in what seemed to be
a sea of young minds en-
ed on Broad Street in the
bustling Downtown area.
Rutgers Newark is
located across Martin Luther King Boulevard, formerly called High Street.
Their Law School, one of
the best in the nation, is
down the road on Washington Street, and Seton
Hall Law School is located nearby on Raymond
Blvd. near Penn Station.
The University of
Medicine and Dentistry of
New Jersey, which houses the local medical and
dental schools, is located
on the corner of Bergen
Street and South Orange
Avenue. Many NJIT students will embark on a
challenging accelerated
road, by which they will enroll in medical school, dental school, or other health
related professions after
their third year of college.
The Central ward is
home to the Prudential
Center, known as “The
Rock”, which the NBA’s
New Jersey Nets and
NHL’s New Jersey Devils
call home. The WMBA’s
New York Liberty team is
also temporarily using this
as their home court. Central ward also has a minor
league baseball team, the
Newark Bears, located at
River Front stadium, which
is just a light rail ride away.
The light rail system
can help you access many
of the adventures you will
find in Newark. The closest station, NJIT’s Warren Street Station, is located next to the soccer
field on Lock St. The light
rail ‘s “underground fare”
will cost students $0.70
cents, allowing students
to ride between Penn Station and Warren Street for
one hour, except between
4:00PM and 6:00PM when
fares are increased to
$1.50. Students often take
the light rail from Penn
Station when commuting from home to school
or from school into NYC.
The average commuting time from NJIT to
NYC’s is about 30 minutes
via the World Trade Center PATH stop, or about
45 minutes if one goes into
the heart of the city at 33rd
and Sixth Avenue using the
Port Authority Transportation Hub or PATH. The
path charges $1.75 per
ride, which is $0.50 cents
cheaper then the $2.25 it
will cost you in NYC MTA
Newark
transportation
system.
Central Ward is also
home to some of the best
arts and free education
databases in New Jersey, such as, Newark
Symphony Hall, Newark Library, Newark Museum and New Jersey
Performing Arts Center.
I haven’t named everything that you can do here
in Newark, but I challenge
you to find things that are
not listed above by not
sheltering yourself within
the invisible walls of NJIT.
I challenge you to
mentor at a local school,
or to volunteer at the
Museum
or
Library.
I challenge you to make
friends not just inside
our college but also outside our campus and
at different universities.
I challenge you to see
the real beauty of Newark
and not let the outside media tell you what it is about.
I challenge you to love
Newark, because like it or
not, it will be your home
for quite a while. So live
up your years in college,
and let Newark have an
impact on them as well!
gaged in conversation with
anyone and everyone.
Last Friday night, Intrinsic
Café in conjunction with
Green House Chimney
held a free hookah night
sponsored by Theta Chi
Fraternity.
Normally, a
mere eleven dollars would
grant you a hookah session which generally lasts
anywhere from forty five
minutes to an hour and a
half, and sometimes even
longer. Though, free hookah wasn’t the only deal
going on that night, Intrinsic Café jumped on
Theta Chi accentuated the event with good music and dubstep
Intrinsic Cafe’s Greenhouse Chimney outdoor haven.
Photos Courtesy of Jed Medina
the event wagon and offered a combo of any two
bubble teas for five dollars
(normally $3.50 each).
Throughout the night,
board games such as
Scrabble and card games
like Zombie Flux started
to emerge, and people
started to realize that hookah is much more than a
smoking activity – it’s a
catalyst for social interaction beyond the confines of the “dorm world”.
As people made their pilgrimage across Central
Avenue, the excitement
only intensified! Strang-
ers met other strangers
and soon were pitched
in epic word battles or
simply talking about the
day’s events. It’s amazing
what some music, a board
game and a tradition nearly 470 years in the making can do to normally reserved college community.
Intrinsic Café and Green
House Chimney are located at 5 Sussex Avenue (Next to King Wok).
For more info on Intrinsic
Café and Green House
Chimney, visit www.intrinsiccafe.com or simply stop in and say hi!
Campus Life
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
CAMPUS LIFE
Continued from the Front
making study groups, and
asking classmates and
professors questions, all
studentscan easilysucceed.
All departments have
made adjustments to help
out a student in any way,
including the CAPE and the
now formed Mathematical
Sciences Tutoring Center
(located in Cullimore 214)
Many students took Precalculus during the summer at NJIT. By taking
such courses, these students prepared directly
for their upcoming Calculus courses and received
the credit they needed
to meet the Pre-calculus
requirements. For many
students it was the edge
they needed to get on the
right track for their majors.
“It was my best bet,” said
one student, “not to mention the class was free for
the most part, so it made
even more sense to take
up the offer. Better to be
ahead than three steps
behind all the time.” Cer-
tainly, for those who could
not commute to NJIT for
these classes, NJIT will
credit courses taken at local community colleges.
Now is taking a different
math course a bad thing?
Not necessarily, claim the
math department and the
Stressing out? Who’s fault is it for all
this stress.
College life at NJIT
is a real pressure cooker.
The NJIT curriculum features highly demanding
courses with professors
who look to get the most
out of every student. For
many reasons that is a
good thing, as it should actually be students’ prerogative to get the most out
of their tuition payments,
and not earn some lackadaisical degree that other
colleges may handout.
If a student attends
NJIT they must be ready
study long hours. However, I have grown increasingly disturbed at the lack
of study space NJIT has
to offer to its students.
By
now
students
should have noticed that
the Campus Center no
longer remains open until 1am, it now closes at
11pm. A reduction in Campus Center hours means
less available space for
students who are hitting
the books late night. More
than any other building,
the Campus Center was
introduction may build
them a better and faster
foundation for the future.
What is Math 131, and
how will this three semester course assist students?
Dr. Jonathan Luke, Chairman of the Department of
Mathematical
Sciences,
Students spend large amount of times trying to understand the mathematical concepts.
NJIT: The Pressure Cooker
Luis Gonzales
Staff Writer
Provost. The students’ academic success if the key
goal for all departments
involved in these changes,
thus changes must happen for both the departments and the students to
make it work. Allowing a
student to get the proper
the perfect solution for
students who emerged
from night classes and
had an exam or paper
due the next morning.
NJIT students outwardly boasted about its
1:00 A.M. Campus Center closing time, as a sign
that their University cared
about what their students
wanted. With that gone,
NJIT falls short of Campus
Center equivalents at other colleges, which enjoy
later closing times, such
as TCNJ and Kean, which
feature 12:00 A.M. closing
times on most weekdays.
The expansion that
NJIT has gone through
the past number of years
has made life increasingly difficult for students
who will not have the opportunity to experience
the finished product. This
may come off as selfishness, but because NJIT
spends so much time
looking to the future (as
any credible university
should), the students of
today can feel overlooked.
In no way am I suggesting that NJIT should
halt expansion; after all,
it was expansion that
brought us our beautiful
Campus Center. Other
students and I just wish
it felt like NJIT is trying to
make students feel comfortable rather then a
spoke on the wheel. That
feeling could very well be
far from the truth; however,
if students don’t feel their
importance (which is hard
to sense after a visit to the
Student Mall), then they
will believe their campus
does not care about them.
Now consider that
The NJIT Van Houten
Library closes at 7pm
Monday-Thursday,
and
at 6pm on Friday. That’s
right, NJIT, our Holy Grail
in academic & studying
resources closes before
night classes end. During
a 7 day week the NJIT Library will be open an average of 7.2 hours a day,
a shame compared to
other colleges which are
open until the A.M. hours.
As a student who has
enjoyed his time here at
NJIT such hours really
do make this campus feel
like less of a real college.
I dislike the idea of students being kicked out of
the library when the sun
is still out, or being forced
to leave the Campus Center events unusually early
due to their new hours. It’s
almost like students are
being told: “Get Out! But
remember to finish all your
homework and pay your
bills to the college since
you love us so much.”
Writing this article
without including NJIT’s
side of the story, however, would make this a
serious journalism farce,
since there are always two
sides to a story. Like all
other colleges across the
state (except Princeton),
NJIT is bleeding money.
The economic downtown
has removed a lot of stateaid NJIT once received,
while alumni donations are
down. Each department
has had to make their own
share of sacrifices in order
to keep this campus running, including the Campus Center and library.
What tends to be unfortunate at times is how a
student will very rarely notice positive adjustments
to NJIT, but immediately
identify negative changes
at NJIT and harp on them.
In an era where education matters and money
is tight, people will not
hesitate to criticize whatever investment appears
to not be delivering all
that has been promised,
and the university will always be made out to be
worse than it actually is.
NJIT is still supplying
students with an education, but it has been made
more difficult with reduced
access to facilities. Dur-
Page 7
Provost Dr. Gatley, and
the Center for Academic
and Personal Enrichment
(CAPE) clarify the answer.
Math 131 is a course
that meets the requirements of both Calculus
1 and Calculus 2 in three
semesters, allowing a
student to proceed at a
pace he or she can handle. It will give students a
slower-paced
schedule
by which they can truly
master Calculus, which
provides the critical foundation for any engineering or math based major.
With the support of
the NJIT community, any
questions can be directed to the Math Department, the Provost, advisers, or even a professor.
Dr. Gately and Dr. Luke
both agree that “students
should take a positive approach” and every student
has the ability to succeed
in any course they are
placed into. Now is the
time to work and strive
harder for your goals! NJIT
has your back all the way!
ing the day time hours,
both buildings appear to
be close to capacity, so
simply suggesting to students to study earlier is
not a great solution. As a
member of the NJIT community I envy those college students who attend
universities that have their
libraries and Student Centers open in to the A.M.
hours or even all night.
Then again, I would
ask people to look at the
tuition costs of those colleges before passing judgment on NJIT. Many students who came to NJIT
are here because of its affordability, which at the time
seemed like a great bargain when considering the
degrees this college hands
down and their facilities.
Yet once those facilities become unavailable
and other perks begin to
be removed…NJIT begins
to lose its appeal. Money
is the issue, but to the student who is paying tuition,
they still expect their college to supply them with
the very best higher learning experience. It may
just seem like a two-hour
reduction to administration, but it is a direct hit
to studying and even student activities. With events
and study time seemingly cut short, NJIT has
become a bit unhappier.
Page 8
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
Entertainment
ENTERTAINMENT
Game Review: Dead Island
There’s a zombie. On me.
Andrew Harrison
Contributing Writer
In any video game there
are certain elements you will
have to suspend your disbelief of to enjoy. Dead Island
however has a few too many
of those moments. I suppose
I shouldn’t be surprised, for
on the short list of “amazing” features used as promotional hooks for the uneducated, is “first-person melee
combat”.
Fine, make a zombie
game about melee combat.
Unfortunately this superior
melee combat where you
imagine bludgeoning zombies to death with a pipe
and slicing them up with a
katana is limited by three
distinct flaws.
Flaw one is the stamina
system. After exerting yourself by jumping, running, or
swinging your heavy object
of choice, your stamina is
quickly depleted and can
only be regained by standing still or walking around
while zombies chase after
you in an attempt to rip you
to pieces.
You can attempt to
exert yourself by swinging
your weapon, and the game
does a good job at mimicking how difficult it would be
to slice through a horde of
zombies with a pipe. After
the tenth one, your arms
would fall off from sheer exhaustion. But the game deals
with not wanting to animate
someone’s arms falling off by
simply making your weapon
do minimal damage and not
knocking the zombies away
from you. A realistic stamina
system is a refreshing change
of pace for realism in a
game, but it feels unnatural.
Flaw two is the durability of your weapons. It is
another attempt at making
the game more realistic, but
at the same time it takes
some enjoyment out of the
game. Your weapons degrade
as you use them to defeat
the armies of the dead.
Unfortunately your weapon
is almost completely useless
after about the fifth or sixth
zombie you hack to pieces.
This type of system encourages you to throw away
weapons that are no longer
in good shape for ones that
have some life left in them.
In a typical RPG, there’s
some benefit associated with
gaining a new weapon and
keeping it to defeat your enemies. In Dead Island, once
your rusty homemade meat
cleaver is out of juice, you
have little to no incentive to
keep it. Sure there are spots
where you can repair your
weapons, but who wants to
keep doing that when there
derful. Unfortunately, this
means that anyone who
doesn’t have any friends and
plays alone loses out on an
enjoyable experience. All the
NPC’s greet you as a team.
There are no individual
greetings for your character
by name or even by sex; just
“you and your mates”, even
when you aren’t playing with
any “mates”. It’s a great way
to remind myself exactly
how many friends I have.
One of the features on
this list was actually one I
was looking forward to. The
game is “set on a gorgeous
open world tropical island”.
Well the island is gorgeous.
For those of you that get to
play the PC version, you’re
able to fly around the island
and really take in how much
time they spent making it
look visually stunning. There
are a few details left out as
to how practical this island
are weapons to pick up everywhere you go?
Flaw three is the ability to kick zombies. Not
that kicking zombies in the
face is bad or not cool, but
the melee combat I had in
mind did not involve kicking
zombies, knocking them to
the ground, and then kicking them in the face until
they die.
Zombies in this game
are incapable of standing
back up and fighting while
you are kicking them. There
is no downside to doing
it, and you can save some
durability on your weapons.
Many times while playing
I’ve thought, it would be really cool if I actually had to
use my weapons, but I’ll just
kick them to death instead.
Next up on the list of
characteristics that are used
to promote Dead Island
is four-player co-op. Won-
Much in the same way
that Borderlands (2010’s
game of the year) is more
fun when played cooperatively, Dead Island is more
fun when you play with
more people. Most of the
fun comes from watching
your friends screw up, or
screwing them up. Luckily Dead Island makes it
fairly easy to join games
with random people that are
at the level and part of the
story you are; one of its few
redeeming features.
Next on the list is weapon customization, a feature
plagued by the durability
system. You may have just
put nails in your brand new
baseball bat, but in about
five minutes it’s going to
look like you pushed it into
a garbage disposal, and there
is not much incentive to
clean the blood off and put a
new coat of paint on it.
resort actually is, given that
in my time of wandering
the island I have yet to find
a single bathroom. Maybe
they just all use the pools, I
don’t know.
Unfortunately the
second part of this feature,
the so called “open world”
style of the game, is simply
another way of saying you
are allowed to go outside.
I was optimistic in exploring the island for new ways
to decapitate zombies, but
that ended quickly as soon
as I realized around 95% of
the doors in the game can’t
be opened. The open world
gimmick vanished from my
mind when I swam out into
the ocean in an attempt to
kill myself because I had
lost the capability of opening doors, but then the
game abruptly told me I was
“leaving the playable area”
and promptly “teleported”
me back to the closest
shoreline. It didn’t kill me
or even put an invisible wall
there, this open world game,
focused so much on realism,
simply teleported me away
from where I wasn’t supposed to be.
I chose to start with
the PC version of Dead
Island, which now seems a
poor choice since the developers made the mistake of
releasing the wrong version
of the game to customers.
I got to choose from four
different characters, which
is the traditional number of
characters for any console
game converted to the PC.
I chose Purna, the firearms
expert, and silly me, I actually thought I would get to
use firearms. Well, as it turns
out, guns are a scarcity on
the remote, tropical, and fictional island of Banoi. And
if finding guns wasn’t hard
enough, finding ammo is
even tougher. I was slightly
confused by this since Purna
actually has a handgun
strapped to her hip at all
times.
Dead Island is labeled
as a zombie action RPG. A
more accurate description
would be a hack and slash
zombie game with RPG elements. If you are looking for
that, then Dead Island fits
that description perfectly.
It does have a lot of entertainment value, and I would
definitely recommend buying it, especially if you have
a few friends to play it with.
If you are looking for a cool
RPG to play though, it isn’t
worth your time.
Andrew Harrison is a Senior Information Technology
major and can be contacted at
ah56@njit.edu
Entertainment
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
Page 9
Restaurant Review: Empanadas and Red Chips
Daniel Ovale
Staff Writer
Completely
knowing
that this place is a bit far
from campus, I decided to
go anyway since everyone
talks about how amazing the
empanadas are here. Just hop
on the path at Penn station,
transfer to Journal Square
and hop on the Path train to
33rd street.
It’ll probably be a 10
minute walk, the best part
of which is passing through
Times Square. Total travel
time is probably 40-50 minutes, but it’s worth it to look
at the scenery.
This is more of a place to
go at night if you’ve got nothing to do and you’re feeling a
bit spontaneous. But beware
though, if you’re not into
small, homey, fun, delicious
restaurants that are open
24/7, it might not be for you.
People weren’t kidding when
they said this place was small.
I went on Monday evening
around 7 and it was packed.
There was already a line. The
room was just big enough for
me to spread my arms twice.
TINY. And your neighbors
are literally 2 inches away
from you.
Me and my friend managed a table but decided to
leave because it was just way
too uncomfortable. It wasn’t
a bad idea at all. It’s the type
of food that won’t taste bad if
you order out. The best part
is? You can just walk a few
blocks down and go to the
Red Steps at Time Square.
If you do go to the Red
Steps, just make sure you
plantain chips and guacamole, and an arepa (I could’ve
gotten 3 more empanadas as
a substitute for this).
My friend paid for
drinks but they weren’t really
to accommodate everyone?
Well, not here. Even the guacamole was nice and spicy
like it should be (you can ask
for non-spicy though).
The plantain chips were
The Always-Popular Empenada.
snag a corner seat. You don’t
want people stomping over
your empanadas if you already hadn’t eaten them on
your way to Times Square.
However, if you’re feeling
lazy and don’t want to walk,
head over the red steps, and
order for delivery (best idea
ever!). They have a menu online.
For 35 bucks, we got so
much food. We placed an order of arroz con pollo (chicken & rice), 3 empanadas,
good. He had iced tea and
I had the salpicon (I’ve had
way better, just get water).
Oh well, I came here for epic
empanadas and boy did I get
some! Since everyone recommended the spicy chicken, I
got that, as well as the Cuban
and Reggaeton empanadas.
The spicy chicken and the
Cuban were AMAZING.
My favorite was the spicy
chicken. You know how some
dishes are labeled spicy but
they’re dulled down in order
also really good. Perfectly
thin, but miraculously not
greasy either, That’s the one
thing I hate about chips—
the grease factor.
Though the empanadas
were smaller than what I’m
used to, I felt as though it
was perfectly sized. Loved
the dough, it was so perfect. Perfect crunch and NO
grease, these empanadas
were all gorgeous and disappeared within seconds.
There were also two
sauces that came along with
the food, one was green (salsa
verde) and the other one was
red (just spicy salsa I guess).
I loved the green sauce, the
empanadas were fine without them but they’re so awesome dipped. The arroz con
pollo was great, too, and the
huge portion, is more than
enough for one person. I
was a bit disappointed that
they shredded the chicken
though.
This is probably the
cheapest meal I’ve had in
NY (next to the dollar slice
of pizza). I honestly couldn’t
finish the food. It was
enough to feed 3-4 people.
We were way too full. I had
it the next day, but arepas
aren’t something you can eat
the day after; it was way too
stale. You can probably toast
the empanadas the next day,
but not microwave an arepa
(don’t do it!)
This really is more of a
take-out place; it’s way too
tiny to eat in if you want to
have a conversation with a
friend. But anyway, it’s fun
food to share and a good
place to try a bunch of empanadas since they really are
dirt cheap. Give this place a
shot—they’re the best empanadas I’ve ever had.
Bored? Anime is your solution!
Philip Chen
Contributing Writer
Ever wonder what to
do on those dreary days in
which you and your friends
have absolutely nothing
to do besides vegetate on
the computer – those days
where the only option is to
play the same dusty games,
or watch the same repetitive
TV series for the umpteenth
time?
Whether you dorm
at NJIT or commute back
home, I am positive that all
of you fellow readers have
experienced the wonderment of complete and utter
boredom. It’s a shame to
waste such valuable time doing things you would consider monotonous when you
could be experiencing the
pleasures life has to offer,
one of those pleasures being
a type of Japanese animated
cartoons called Anime.
Anime is suited
for bored college
students because
there is such a massive variety of genres
to watch. Whether
your interests lie
in extremely flashy
swordfights that
bedazzle your mind,
romances that
literally drive you
to tears, or comedy
that will make you
laugh your head off,
Anime has it all and
more.
Anime is much more
than just a simple animation
with a standardized plot and
un-relatable characters. As
educated individuals (college
students), you can appreciate the mind-blowing twists,
along with the elegant
plotline, as well as the ever-
increasing quality of animation that intends to astonish
year after year with A+ rated
masterpieces.
However! Japan easily spits out 20+ new series
each semester, and it is easy
to say that many of them
fail to meet my expectation
of what would be a mas-
terful Anime containing a
riveting plotline, engaging
characters, and excellent
animation. Many are actually far from masterpieces,
and maybe 20% of them,
if anything, might qualify
as interesting work that is
worth keeping up with.
But do not fret because
help is indeed on the way!
It will be my job to inform
and rate the very best Anime
for your benefit, because as
we all know, not everything
in the world is perfect, but
some things are pretty damn
close. I have 8+ years of Anime experience, as well as, 3+
years of experience on the
NJIT Anime E-board so I
hope to be able to guide you
all through some of the best
must see Animes. Starting
next week I will be reviewing one series per week, and
I guarantee it will be worth
your while so stay informed!
I’ll see you next week!
Philip Chen is a senior
majoring in mechanical engineering and can be reached at
Pc62@njit.edu
Page 10
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
FRESHMEN
Campus Life
Popular renditions of songs were sang, including “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go”
A race to fill the cups with plastic tubes...
Much trash talking, swagger, and competition was built as teams outperformed each other.
Using knowledge to build up a tower...
Freshmen teams competed with each other in multiple songs to impress the judges and the crowds!
The Karaoke Night was successful thanks to the efforts of Alpha Sigma Tau sorority.
And reaching for the skies with the Vector!
Campus Life
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
WEEKEND
Page 11
Tug-Of-War was waged by all teams as they were able to show off their physical strength!
Intense games of Volleyball were played...
Pie-Eating. ‘Nough said.
,,, and many people were served.
The centipede race was dominated by the Red3 Pirates.
Photos Courtesy of Romer Jed Medina
Freshmen were all Dizzy Izzy? Izzy Dizzy?
Page 12
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
Campus Life
Game Review: Dead Island
There’s a zombie. On me.
Monica Pajdak
Managing Editor
Director Steven Soderbergh’s new film Contagion
wastes no time in establishing the central plot of the
story, which follows a set of
characters affected by and
trying to beat a novel and
very deadly virus, MEV-1.
The story begins with “Day
2” in which the obviously ill
Beth Emhoff (Gwyneth Paltrow) has returned home to
Minnesota from a business
trip in Hong Kong.
Within the next few
minutes of the film, the virus takes the life of not only
Emhoff but also her young
son, leaving her apparently
immune husband Mitch
(Matt Damon) alone to care
for the couple’s teenage
daughter. Not only is he in
the process of grieving for
his lost wife and child, he is
also policing his daughter
in an effort to keep safe the
only person he has left a she
puts herself at risk for infection, regularly interacting
with and even trying to kiss
her boyfriend.
Meanwhile, Dr. Ellis
Cheever (Laurence Fishburne) leads a team of scientists working for the Center
of Disease Control and
Prevention as they attempt
to understand the novel virus and develop a vaccine to
beat it. As the CDC scientists struggle to understand
the virus in the laboratory,
World Health Organization scientist Dr. Leonora
Orantes (Marion Cotillard)
embarks on a mission to
understand the contagion
ecologically, by travelling to
Hong Kong in an attempt to
identify patient zero.
As the race progresses,
freelance journalist Alan
Krumwiede (Jude Law)
embarks on a mission to
undercut the efforts of these
organizations by actively
blogging about how the
government is withholding
vaccinations, or sneaking
doses to loved ones before
it is their turn to receive
it. Additionally, he tries to
convince his followers not to
be vaccinated, promoting instead a homeopathic remedy
called Forsythia.
Krumwiede and newscasters in the film illustrate
the kind social difficulties
that the agencies portrayed
can face in producing and
distributing solutions to
problems like the MEV-1
outbreak. Once being accused of withholding products, and another time being
accused of over-reacting
as they did with the H1N1
virus the previous year,
Cheever and his team of
scientists face a great deal of
social stigma as they struggle
intellectually to stop the
virus while they struggle personally to keep their loved
ones safe.
Overall, Contagion
paints an interesting, and
at times disturbing, picture
of how slow science can be
in responding to nature. As
CDC researcher Dr. Erin
Mears (Kate Winslet) explains the complexity behind
tracking the virus, audiences
are forced to contemplate
just how difficult disease
control can be. While the
team of scientists is stuck
estimating the number of
patients infected, the number of subjects susceptible,
or the transmission rate
between these populations,
the virus is spreads as fast as
polio in the 1940s, and the
researchers lag behind.
Contagion is also incredibly successful in instilling
a sort of paranoia in the
viewers. In the words of Dr.
Mears, “The average person
touches their face three
to five times every minute, and in between we’re
touching doorknobs, water
fountains, and each other.”
With countless close-ups of
people sneezing then handling the same objects or
shaking hands immediately
afterwards, it is near impossible to leave the theater
willing to put your hands on
any sort of surface!
On a more human note,
the film portrays ideas
both troubling and inspirational. As the severity of the
pandemic sets in to public’s
mind, looting and rioting
scenes appear on screen,
which are disturbingly
reminiscent of news footage
from the aftermath of Katrina, making the scenes not
only frightening of their own
right but also shudderingly
realistic. However, there
is the occasional uplifting
scene, in which someone
altruistically gives up their
dose or otherwise puts himself or herself in harm’s way
for the sake of another.
In any event, whether
scary or motivating, this is
most definitely an engaging
film, and leaves the viewer
with much to think about
long after the credits finish
rolling. With a high-profile
cast to deliver such a suspenseful, dramatic plot,
this film is most definitely a
worthy watch!
Campus Life
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
Weekly Horoscopes of Awesomeness
Aries - (March
21-April 20)
Yay Aries! Remember that cliff
I told you to hide
on last week?
Well you can come down
now! No one’s hunting you
for that crazy thing you did
two weeks ago. In fact, I believe someone from the IRS
is coming to tell you that in
fact, the government owes
you money. Exactly how
much they owe you though,
the stars will not say. But I can
drop a hint or two. It would
seem that a long lost relative
of yours was once an ambassador who incurred injuries
in a foreign country, but was
never paid the money he was
due! Yay for dues! Let’s hope
you can prove you’re a descendent of this ambassador.
Taurus – (April
21-May 20)
It has been said
Taurus that this
week you will
have an intense
urge to play Dungeons and
Dragons this week. You’re
not normally the kind of person to take part in this kind
of game, but you are feeling
adventurous, and want to
experience what it’s like to
sit in a dark room for hours
on end with four to six other
people. Take care to stock the
fridge and have money for
takeout, cause once you enter
that room you’re not likely
to emerge for quite a while.
Mountain Dew and Hot Pockets will sustain you I’m sure.
Also, BEWARE, you are
likely to be eaten by a grue.
Gemini – (May
21-June 20)
Have you ever
ever ever in your
long legged life
met a long legged sailor and
his long legged wife? I don’t
know where that came from,
but it’s plainly written in
the stars this week for you.
I’m gonna take a guess and
say that if you know anyone
who’s a regular seafarer, or
have never met a person who
frequents the sea, you are
about to meet one. Whether
they are an old friend or new
acquaintance, they are going to ask you out on a voyage. Best take some time to
learn how to fish and fend
off pirates, the high seas are
still a very dangerous place!.
Cancer – (June
21-July 22)
Well gee Cancer,
aren’t you just
prone to heroics this week. I
mean, I know you’re a swell
person and all, but damn!
You’ve been saving so many
people recently you can’t
even count them all! Keep
at it Cancer, cause there may
be a damsel in distress one of
these days, and she’s bound to
be grateful. Whoops! I forgot
about all the lady Cancer’s
out there. But don’t worry,
the stars don’t discriminate…often. There’s bound
to be a strapping young lad
in danger for you as well.
Leo – (July
23-August 22)
You Leo, in
your past life,
were a serf for
a European lord. But now
it’s time to strike back. It’s
time to start your own royal
house and create a lineage
that will be the envy of all
lesser peoples! Do not fear
the other houses that will rise
to contest your greatness.
They are weak, and you will
emerge victorious! But you
should probably prepare for
a huge and lengthy war that
will span the ages. Greatness
comes at a price Leo; do not
let that price be your head.
Virgo – (August
23-September 22)
Always use protection.
Don’t
play a football
game without proper padding.
Don’t ride a bike without a
helmet. Don’t jump out of a
plane without a parachute.
You get the idea. I don’t mean
to scare you, but when you go
about things unprotected, bad
stuff happens. You’re a smart
person, and I know you’ll
take my advice. But this isn’t
just advice – it’s astrologically preordained this week!
Don’t you dare leave your
protection behind this week!
Bad stuff will happen…
Libra – (September 23-October
22)
Lady Justice is
blind, or blindfolded in the
very least. But guess what?
She’s taking that blindfold
off this week for you Libra,
and dishing out a whole ton
of justice with her own two
eyes this week. Look out
evildoers and lawbreakers!
You’re not going to court if
you’re caught this week. You
get to skip that part and get
stuck with the pointy end of
Lady Justice’s sharp blade.
But if you haven’t wronged
a Libra recently, you should
still expect to go to court.
Scorpio – (October 23-November
21)
My stinger is
ready! Watch out
for people who
make you angry this week
Scorpio. You’re gonna be in
a foul mood for a good part
of it, and for no good reason
either. Why is that? Well, I’m
gonna tell you a little secret…
the sun is trying to kill you. I
mean, the sun is trying to kill
everyone this week, but it really has it out for you Scorpio’s, hence your foul mood.
Stay inside whenever you
feel angry because of this,
and don’t look directly at the
sun. At least the Moon says
you’re cool with him this
week. Can’t say for the rest of
the planets thought, but don’t
make them angry either. Especially Jupiter, that guy’s
got a pretty nasty big red eye.
Sagittarius –
(November
22-December
21)
I’m watch’n you! Don’t think
I don’t know what you’re up
to this week, what with all
your sleuthing and sneaking about. That big heist just
isn’t gonna happen for you
though. The sun is keeping
an eye on you before you
pick anyone’s pockets this
week, and he’s shining especially bright (which is making all the Scorpio’s angry
by the way). But if you do
manage to snag that big jewel
you’ve been eyeing, bear in
mind that those bear-loving
Cancer folks are liable to tear
you limb from limb for it.
Capricorn – (December 22-January 20)
Would you like
an apple pie
with that? What?
No, I do not work at Burger
King and I do not wear paper
hats! And it’s called the BK
Lounge just so you know.
You have a serious taste for
sweets this week and I was
just curious to know if you
wanted an apple pie with that
fifth serving of croissants you
have on your plate. Don’t
you lick your lips at me! I’m
not made of sugar, and I’m
certainly not a confectioner!
Aquarius – (January 21-February
19)
Put your pants back
on for the love of
god, please! I know you have
the urge to go about your
week in the nude, but this is
just unseemly and disgusting.
Page 13
Nobody wants to see what
you’ve got going on down
there, and the stars aren’t very
impressed with it anyways.
The sun might even give you
some burns for making such
a crazy decision this week.
Pisces – (February 20-March 20)
I know how you
like to keep things
brief Pisces, so
I’ll be short and
sweet with you. This week
will be sticky for you, and I
mean that literally. Think of
all the sticky things you can
think of and put them together. Taffy, Duct Tape, regular
tape, gum, syrup, you name
it. Things may be a slow
go for you unfortunately.
Page 14
Campus Life
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
COMICS
Random Musings
(At 3 A.M.)
Musing #1
“I don’t care if it’s danger, I’ll accept all cookies.”
Musing #2
“Thank you backpack of aweomeness, you’re better than Dora’s
backpack.”
Musing #3
“How exactly does one join the lolipop guild?”
Musing #4
“Sometimes I look at a can of
spam and for some reason I think
of Papa Smurf.”
Musing #5
“Has the Highlander ever thought
of riding a pony?”
Campus Life
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
PUZZLES
28. Pie ___ mode
31. Rant
35. Common arthroscopic
surgery target, for short
36. Gathering place for butterflies?
38. Stair part
39. Robert Frost poem
42. WordPerfect producer
43. Women, to Sam Spade
44. ___ and outs
45. Threw a party
47. Buddhist sect
48. Biol. subject
49. Exclude
51. Facing: Abbr.
53. In close pursuit
61. Airline to Israel
62. Goose egg
63. "Cool!"
64. White House staffer
65. Zatopek who said, "I was
not talented enough to run
and smile at the same time."
66. Integra maker
67. Frog kin
68. Fax, say
69. Finisher's reward, often
Across
1. Runner Nermi, "The Flying Finn"
6. Kisser
10. Burn a bit
14. Lamprey fisherman
15. Tennis great who said, "Success is
a journey, not a destination."
16. Fix, as after a false start
17. Wanamaker Mile structure
18. Dinghy or dory
19. Muslim leader
20. Absent-mindedly got off-schedule
23. Wide shoe width
24. Christmas season
25. Magician prop
Down
1. Bell tower emanation
2. Prefix with -nautics
3. Bridge to Brews draw
4. Like much running gear
5. Take to the soapbox
6. Sunscreen ingredient
7. Supporting org. for Goucher and
Rupp
8. Like legs after speedwork, perhaps
9. Leave the house, as for a run
Page 15
10. Boston qualifying times, e.g.
11. Half: Prefix
12. Kara's hubby
Scratching the Surface
by Dave Bell
13. Site of Bikila's barefoot Olympic
marathon win
21. Lariat
22. Seductive sorts
25. Garmin product
26. Allergy season sound
27. Milwaukie Brewers, since 1998
29. Fawcett's "Charlie's Angels" successor
30. Desilu co-founder
32. Invite to enter
33. First name in American marathoning
34. Young's partner in accounting
36. Like some oaths or vows
37. Weighty book
40. Updated, as a factory
41. Pavarotti, e.g.
46. Scatterbrains
48. For each
50. Motif
52. ___ Games (Summer Olympics
preview)
53. Meet prelim
54. Assortment
55. "I did it!"
56. Land of Coghlan and Treacy
57. Spilled the beans
58. Sing the praises of
59. Mexico City "other"
60. Young zebra
Page 16
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
Campus Life
REMEMBERING 9/11
On September 11th, 2001, I was in second period social studies at
Roosevelt Middle School in Westfield, New Jersey when the plane hit the
first tower. My teacher was called out of the room, leaving us on our own
for a few moments. The room erupted with chatter. When she returned,
she had a grave look on her face, but said nothing. The room turned
quiet.
When 9/11 occurred I was in the fourth grade and had just turned nine
the month before school started. I still believed in Santa Claus and I was
missing a bunch of teeth that I was certain belonged to the tooth fairy.
I was in Mrs. Bond’s fourth grade homeroom and her southern accent
always made me warm and relaxed inside, even though in my first weeks
of school, nerves were at their highest.
After a few long moments, she resumed teaching. As the day progressed,
I could detect the change in mood that enveloped the adults in the
school, but I was 11 years old, and didn’t understand it. I went along
with my day.
At recess I played Four Square with my girlfriends and giggled at the
boys playing wiffle ball across the yard. When school let out I jumped
into my friend Christie’s car and headed to her house for our long overdue
play date. We ran around outside and explored the woods in her backyard until it was time for me to go home. I remember Christie’s mom
bringing out snack and seeming distracted when she was talking to us.
When school was out, I saw my dad waiting for me in the car. I asked
him, “Is it okay ifI invite my friend Danielle to come over tonight?”
“I don’t think that that’s going to happen today, sweetie,” he replied.
“Why not?” I asked.
“Didn’t they tell you at school what happened today?”
“No …”
I wasn’t sure what he was talking about. He then explained to me that
a commercial jet had crashed into the North tower of the World Trade
Center that morning and that soon after, a second one had followed,
crashing into the South tower.
As we drove home, I was unsure what to think. New York City seemed
so far away from our suburban New Jersey town.
When we got home, my mom was already there; she had left work early.
The television was on and I could see videos being looped of two airliners crashing into the twin towers over and over again. They showed clips
of suffocating amounts of dust and debris enveloping the streets of New
York and frightened people running from Ground Zero. I watched my
parents’ faces staring at the television screen, silent and grave.
In the days that followed, I discovered that there were kids that I went
to school with who lost their parents in the towers. Teachers lost their
kids; friends and family members were gone forever. The cloud of dust
and smoke was visible, hanging above our house miles and miles away
from the financial district of New York. It was a constant reminder of
those that were lost and the changing times to come.
-- Allison Land, a junior Communications and Media student.
When my mom came to pick me up, Christie’s mom stood by the car
talking with her. They obviously did not want us to hear what they
were saying because they told us to go in the house.
I remember sitting in the front seat on the way home. I thought I was so
cool to be up there, because my mom made the rule that you must be in
middle school to sit in the front seat; I was finally old enough.
My mom’s eyes were extra glassy and looked like the water when we
went to Mexico the year before. I knew she must have been crying
because her eyes get extra blue and vibrant when she cries. All around
her eyes were red and puffy, but she tried to cover the redness with her
bangs. I know I didn’t ask her if she was okay because I could tell she
did not want to talk about it.
She kept on asking about my day, and if people were called out of class
to be taken home by their parents. When we pulled into the driveway
she looked at me very serious and I felt a pit in my stomach, like the time
I got in trouble for stealing my sister Riley’s lollipop she got from Hershey Park. But I knew I didn’t do anything wrong, and this must have
been something serious.
She told me that some people had flown a plane into two very tall buildings in New York City, and how many people were hurt and missing in
the damage. She reassured me no one in my family was hurt and everyone was safe, but that many people in my class had parents who worked
in the city and to keep them in our prayers.
I know I didn’t fully understand what had happened until that night, sitting in front of the television. The news was on and, for the first time, I
saw the footage of the planes flying into the World Trade Center. Watching these two massive buildings fall to the ground knowing that people
were still in them made puddles of tears form under my eyes. I remember my family sitting there in silence, crying as we watched the clip play
over and over again.
-- Erin Schmitt, a sophomore Communication and Media student.
In Memoriam
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
I was 15-years-old, sitting in my second period class as a sophomore at
Watchung Hills Regional High School when the intercom came on and the
principal announced that two planes had hit both towers of the World Trade
Center. Details were vague, but I could hear the anxiety his voice. The classroom went into an uproar of panic, and we were instructed to call home.
Many students were picked up by their families, but most stayed in school.
Every subsequent class period was focused on the terrorist attacks. Televisions
and radios were tuned in, and we watched the scarring images of the plane
crashes over and over again. Chaos, confusion and fear consumed our school.
That day, we learned that the Islamic militant group Al- Qaeda was believed to be responsible for the attack. This was dreadful news for me as
a Muslim and a Palestinian American. I hoped and prayed that it was
not Arabs or Muslims that coordinated the attacks. If that was true, I
knew that I would be the target of a lot of undeserved hate and anger.
I recall crying that night for the lost souls of the attack, and also pitying
myself and my family. I didn’t want there to be another negative stigma
toward Arabs. I even called in z100, a tri-state FM radio station, to tell the
world that if Arabs really did it, than Arab-Americans had no idea. I worried that my family would be sent to some sort of an internment camp, the
way the Japanese were sent during World War II after the attacks on Pearl
Harbor. My family is proud to be American. We were caught in the middle.
After the attacks, life really changed. Freshmen year of high school,
I was the lead in my school musical, and I was active in other extra-curricular activities like cheerleading and choir.
Sophomore
year was completely different. I stopped receiving invites to parties, and a lot of my white friends stopped calling and hanging out.
I felt like I didn’t fit in at school anymore. I would get dirty looks and sometimes
I would even get screamed at in the hallways. It was pretty crazy. I remember
once during a political conversation in class, a girl said something REALLY
racist. I can’t even remember what it was now, but I left the classroom in tears.
I tried out for the school play, didn’t make it, not even as a nonspeaking role.
I tried out for the talent show, didn’t make it.
Cheerleading try outs came around…and I didn’t make the
team. It was pretty clear that I was being discriminated against.
Page 17
My memory of September 11th, 2001 started off in school. At first
it felt like any other Tuesday. Classes took place on time, and it
seemed as if nothing was happening. I started to realize that something was wrong when my classmates began being called into the office.
First only one student was called home, then another, and another. After a while the day just seemed off. One person going to the office and
not coming back was one thing, but as more and more students went
without returning, it became clear that something was happening.
Around midday the school finally made the decision to inform us of
what happened, but by the time they gathered the entire 7th grade together, you could just tell that we all knew. We were no longer the same
7th grade students, talkative and excited to be getting out of class.
We were quiet, waiting, wanting an explanation for all the odd occurrences
throughout the day. My math teacher, Mr. Solomon, began addressing us calmly, without emotion. “On this morning of September 11, 2001 something very
tragic has happened. The World Trade Center, the Twin Towers have fallen.”
At first I felt nothing; it was too much to handle, I think. At that time
I was unaware that I had any family in the towers at all. (As it turned
out, my aunt was on the 72nd floor of the second tower but managed to
safely escape.) But at that moment I was focused on Mr. Solomon. He told
us that the remainder of the day would be left for studying and activity,
and that class would not resume. He apologized for not being allowed to
tell us more; it would be up to our parents to decide what to say, he said.
Today I understand why that decision was made, but that day I was upset; I
wanted to know more about what was happening in my country. The catastrophe made time feel slower, and I was trapped in school hoping for the final bell
so that I could run to my closest friend’s house and see what was happening.
Eventually the day came to an end and I saw the news. I must have
fallen asleep to the television because it is the last thing I remember. Just watching the same report over and over again, wanting
more information, wanting to know everything was going to be okay.
-- Nicholas Caravella, a fifth year Architecture student.
By junior year, it got better. My old friends started talking to me again.
I was cast in the plays, talent shows, cheerleading and what not. However, I didn’t forget my sophomore year of high school. I never will.
-- Hala Taha, a senior Communication and Media student.
NEVER FORGET
Page 18
Gordon M. Aamoth, Jr.
Edelmiro Abad
Maria Rose Abad
Andrew Anthony Abate
Vincent Abate
Laurence Christopher Abel
William F. Abrahamson
Richard Anthony Aceto
Jesus Acevedo Rescand
Heinrich Bernhard Ackermann
Paul Acquaviva
Donald LaRoy Adams
Patrick Adams
Shannon Lewis Adams
Stephen George Adams
Ignatius Udo Adanga
Christy A. Addamo
Terence E. Adderley, Jr.
Sophia Buruwad Addo
Lee Allan Adler
Daniel Thomas Afflitto
Emmanuel Akwasi Afuakwah
Alok Agarwal
Mukul Kumar Agarwala
Joseph Agnello
David Scott Agnes
Brian G. Ahearn
Jeremiah Joseph Ahern
Joanne Marie Ahladiotis
Shabbir Ahmed
Terrance Andre Aiken
Godwin Ajala
Gertrude M. Alagero
Andrew Alameno
Margaret Ann Alario
Gary M. Albero
Jon Leslie Albert
Peter Alderman
Jacquelyn Delaine Aldridge
David D. Alger
Sarah Ali-Escarcega
Ernest Alikakos
Edward L. Allegretto
Eric Allen
Joseph Ryan Allen
Richard Dennis Allen
Richard Lanard Allen
Christopher E. Allingham
Janet M. Alonso
Arturo Alva-Moreno
Anthony Alvarado
Antonio Javier Alvarez
Victoria Alvarez-Brito
Telmo E. Alvear
Cesar Amoranto Alviar
Tariq Amanullah
Angelo Amaranto
James M. Amato Joseph
Amatuccio
Christopher Charles Amoroso
Kazuhiro Anai
Calixto Anaya, Jr.
Joseph Anchundia
Kermit Charles Anderson
Yvette Constance Anderson
John Andreacchio
Michael Rourke Andrews
Jean Ann Andrucki
Siew-Nya Ang
Joseph Angelini, Jr.
Joseph Angelini, Sr.
Laura Angilletta
Doreen J. Angrisani
Lorraine Antigua
Peter Paul Apollo
Faustino Apostol, Jr.
Frank Thomas Aquilino
Patrick Michael Aranyos
David Arce
Michael George Arczynski
Louis Arena
Adam P. Arias
Michael Armstrong
Jack Charles Aron
Joshua Aron
Richard Avery Aronow
Japhet Jesse Aryee
Patrick Asante
Carl Asaro
Michael Asciak
Michael Edward Asher
Janice Marie Ashley
Thomas J. Ashton
Manuel O. Asitimbay
Gregg Arthur Atlas
Gerald T. Atwood
James Audiffred
Louis Frank Aversano, Jr.
Ezra Aviles
Sandy Ayala
Arlene T. Babakitis
Eustace P. Bacchus
John J. Badagliacca
Jane Ellen Baeszler
Robert J. Baierwalter
Andrew J. Bailey
Brett T. Bailey
Tatyana Bakalinskaya
Michael S. Baksh
Sharon M. Balkcom
Michael Andrew Bane
Katherine Bantis
Gerard Baptiste
Walter Baran
Gerard A. Barbara
Paul Vincent Barbaro
James William Barbella
Ivan Kyrillos F. Barbosa
Victor Daniel Barbosa
Colleen Ann Barkow
David Michael Barkway
Matthew Barnes
Sheila Patricia Barnes
Evan J. Baron
Renee Barrett-Arjune
Nathaly Barrios La Cruz
Arthur Thaddeus Barry
Diane G. Barry
Maurice Vincent Barry
Scott D. Bart
Carlton W. Bartels
Guy Barzvi
Inna B. Basina
Alysia Basmajian
Kenneth William Basnicki
Steven Bates
Paul James Battaglia
Walter David Bauer, Jr.
Marlyn Capito Bautista
Jasper Baxter
Michele Beale
Paul Frederick Beatini
Jane S. Beatty
Lawrence Ira Beck
Manette Marie Beckles
Carl John Bedigian
Michael Earnest Beekman
Maria A. Behr
Yelena Belilovsky
Nina Patrice Bell
Debbie Bellows
Stephen Elliot Belson
Paul M. Benedetti
Denise Lenore Benedetto
Maria Bengochea
Bryan Craig Bennett
Eric L. Bennett
Oliver Duncan Bennett
Margaret L. Benson
Dominick J. Berardi
James Patrick Berger
Steven Howard Berger
John P. Bergin
Alvin Bergsohn
Daniel Bergstein
Michael J. Berkeley
Donna M. Bernaerts
List of World Trade Center Victims (not including plane crews or passengers)
David W. Bernard
William Bernstein
David M. Berray
David S. Berry
Joseph J. Berry
William Reed Bethke
Timothy Betterly
Edward Frank Beyea
Paul Beyer
Anil Tahilram Bharvaney
Bella J. Bhukhan
Shimmy D. Biegeleisen
Peter Alexander Bielfeld
William G. Biggart
Brian Bilcher
Carl Vincent Bini
Gary Eugene Bird
Joshua David Birnbaum
George John Bishop
Jeffrey Donald Bittner
Albert Balewa Blackman, Jr.
Christopher Joseph Blackwell
Susan Leigh Blair
Harry Blanding, Jr.
Janice Lee Blaney
Craig Michael Blass
Rita Blau
Richard Middleton Blood, Jr.
Michael Andrew Boccardi
John P. Bocchi
Michael Leopoldo Bocchino
Susan M. Bochino
Bruce D. Boehm
Mary Catherine Boffa
Nicholas Andrew Bogdan
Darren Christopher Bohan
Lawrence Francis Boisseau
Vincent M. Boland, Jr.
Alan Bondarenko
Andre Bonheur, Jr.
Colin Arthur Bonnett
Frank Bonomo
Yvonne Lucia Bonomo
Genieve Bonsignore, 3
Seaon Booker
Sherry Ann Bordeaux
Krystine Bordenabe
Martin Boryczewski
Richard Edward Bosco
John H. Boulton
Francisco Eligio Bourdier
Thomas Harold Bowden, Jr.
Kimberly S. Bowers
Veronique Nicole Bowers
Larry Bowman
Shawn Edward Bowman, Jr.
Kevin L. Bowser
Gary R. Box
Gennady Boyarsky
Pamela Boyce
Michael Boyle
Alfred Braca
Kevin Bracken
David Brian Brady
Alexander Braginsky
Nicholas W. Brandemarti
Michelle Renee Bratton
Patrice Braut
Lydia E. Bravo
Ronald Michael Breitweiser
Edward A. Brennan III
Francis Henry Brennan
Michael E. Brennan
Peter Brennan
Thomas M. Brennan
Daniel J. Brethel
Gary Lee Bright
Jonathan Briley
Mark A. Brisman
Paul Gary Bristow
Mark Francis Broderick
Herman Charles Broghammer
Keith A. Broomfield
Ethel Brown Janice
Juloise Brown
Lloyd Stanford Brown
Patrick J. Brown
Bettina Browne
Mark Bruce
Richard George Bruehert
Andrew Brunn
Vincent Brunton
Ronald Paul Bucca
Brandon J. Buchanan
Gregory Joseph Buck
Dennis Buckley
Nancy Clare Bueche
Patrick Joseph Buhse
John Edwards Bulaga, Jr.
Stephen Bunin
Matthew J. Burke
Thomas Daniel Burke
William Francis Burke, Jr.
Donald J. Burns
Kathleen Anne Burns
Keith James Burns
John Patrick Burnside
Irina Buslo
Milton G. Bustillo
Thomas M. Butler
Patrick Byrne
Timothy G. Byrne
Jesus Neptali Cabezas
Lillian Caceres
Brian Joseph Cachia
Steven Dennis Cafiero, Jr.
Richard M. Caggiano
Cecile Marella Caguicla
Michael John Cahill
Scott Walter Cahill
Thomas Joseph Cahill
George Cain
Salvatore B. Calabro
Joseph Calandrillo
Philip V. Calcagno
Edward Calderon
Kenneth Marcus Caldwell
Dominick Enrico Calia
Felix Calixte
Frank Callahan
Liam Callahan
Luigi Calvi
Roko Camaj
Michael F. Cammarata
David Otey Campbell
Geoffrey Thomas Campbell
Jill Marie Campbell
Robert Arthur Campbell
Sandra Patricia Campbell
Sean Thomas Canavan
John A. Candela
Vincent Cangelosi
Stephen J. Cangialosi
Lisa Bella Cannava
Brian Cannizzaro
Michael Canty
Louis Anthony Caporicci
Jonathan Neff Cappello
James Christopher Cappers
Richard Michael Caproni
Jose Manuel Cardona
Dennis M. Carey
Steve Carey
Edward Carlino
Michael Scott Carlo
David G. Carlone
Rosemarie C. Carlson
Mark Stephen Carney
Joyce Ann Carpeneto
Ivhan Luis Carpio Bautista
Jeremy M. Carrington
Michael Carroll
Peter Carroll
James Joseph Carson, Jr.
Marcia Cecil Carter
James Marcel Cartier
Vivian Casalduc
John Francis Casazza
Paul R. Cascio
Margarito Casillas
Thomas Anthony Casoria
William Otto Caspar
Alejandro Castano
Arcelia Castillo
Germaan Castillo Garcia
Leonard M. Castrianno
Jose Ramon Castro
Richard G. Catarelli
Christopher Sean Caton
Robert John Caufield
Mary Teresa Caulfield
Judson Cavalier
Michael Joseph Cawley
Jason David Cayne
Juan Armando Ceballos
Jason Michael Cefalu
Thomas Joseph Celic
Ana Mercedes Centeno
Joni Cesta
Jeffrey Marc Chairnoff
Swarna Chalasani
William Chalcoff
Eli Chalouh
Charles Lawrence Chan
Mandy Chang
Mark Lawrence Charette
Gregorio Manuel Chavez
Delrose E. Cheatham
Pedro Francisco Checo
Douglas MacMillan Cherry
Stephen Patrick Cherry
Vernon Paul Cherry
Nester Julio Chevalier
Swede Chevalier
Alexander H. Chiang
Dorothy J. Chiarchiaro
Luis Alfonso Chimbo
Robert Chin
Wing Wai Ching
Nicholas Paul Chiofalo
John Chipura
Peter A. Chirchirillo
Catherine Chirls
Kyung Hee Cho
Abul K. Chowdhury
Mohammad Salahuddin
Chowdhury
Kirsten L. Christophe
Pamela Chu
Steven Chucknick
Wai Chung
Christopher Ciafardini
Alex F. Ciccone
Frances Ann Cilente
Elaine Cillo
Edna Cintron
Nestor Andre Cintron III
Robert Dominick Cirri
Juan Pablo Cisneros-Alvarez
Benjamin Keefe Clark
Eugene Clark
Gregory Alan Clark
Mannie Leroy Clark
Thomas R. Clark
Christopher Robert Clarke
Donna Marie Clarke
Michael J. Clarke
Suria Rachel Emma Clarke
Kevin Francis Cleary
James D. Cleere
Geoffrey W. Cloud
Susan Marie Clyne
Steven Coakley
Jeffrey Alan Coale
Patricia A. Cody
Daniel Michael Coffey
Jason M. Coffey
Florence G. Cohen
Kevin Sanford Cohen
Anthony Joseph Coladonato
Mark Joseph Colaio
Stephen Colaio
Christopher M. Colasanti
Kevin Nathaniel Colbert
Michel P. Colbert
Keith E. Coleman
Scott Thomas Coleman
Tarel Coleman
Liam Joseph Colhoun
Robert D. Colin
Robert J. Coll
Jean Collin
John Michael Collins
Michael L. Collins
Thomas J. Collins
Joseph Collison
Patricia Malia Colodner
Linda M. Colon
Sol E. Colon
Ronald Edward Comer
Sandra Jolane Conaty Brace
Jaime Concepcion
Albert Conde
Denease Conley
Susan P. Conlon
Margaret Mary Conner
Cynthia Marie Lise Connolly
John E. Connolly, Jr.
James Lee Connor
Jonathan M. Connors
Kevin Patrick Connors
Kevin F. Conroy
Jose Manuel Contreras-Fernandez
Brenda E. Conway
Dennis Michael Cook
Helen D. Cook
John A. Cooper
Joseph John Coppo, Jr.
Gerard J. Coppola
Joseph Albert Corbett
Alejandro Cordero
Robert Cordice
Ruben D. Correa
Danny A. Correa-Gutierrez
James J. Corrigan
Carlos Cortes
Kevin Cosgrove
Dolores Marie Costa
Digna Alexandra Costanza
Charles Gregory Costello, Jr.
Michael S. Costello
Conrod K. Cottoy
Martin John Coughlan
John Gerard Coughlin
Timothy J. Coughlin
James E. Cove
Andre Cox
Frederick John Cox
James Raymond Coyle
Michele Coyle-Eulau
Anne Marie Cramer
Christopher S. Cramer
Denise Elizabeth Crant
James Leslie Crawford, Jr.
Robert James Crawford
Joanne Mary Cregan
Lucy Crifasi
John A. Crisci
Daniel Hal Crisman
Dennis Cross
Kevin Raymond Crotty
Thomas G. Crotty
John Crowe
Welles Remy Crowther
Robert L. Cruikshank
John Robert Cruz
Grace Yu Cua
Kenneth John Cubas
Francisco Cruz Cubero
Richard J. Cudina
Neil James Cudmore
Thomas Patrick Cullen lll
Joyce Cummings
Brian Thomas Cummins
Michael Cunningham
Robert Curatolo
Laurence Damian Curia
Paul Dario Curioli
Beverly Curry
Michael S. Curtin
Gavin Cushny
John D’Allara
Vincent Gerard D’Amadeo
Jack D’Ambrosi
Mary D’Antonio
Edward A. D’Atri
Michael D. D’Auria
Michael Jude D’Esposito
Manuel John Da Mota
Caleb Arron Dack
Carlos S. DaCosta
Joao Alberto DaFonseca Aguiar,
Jr.
Thomas A. Damaskinos
Jeannine Marie Damiani-Jones
Patrick W. Danahy
Nana Danso
Vincent Danz
Dwight Donald Darcy
Elizabeth Ann Darling
Annette Andrea Dataram
Lawrence Davidson
Michael Allen Davidson
Scott Matthew Davidson
Titus Davidson
Niurka Davila
Clinton Davis
Wayne Terrial Davis
Anthony Richard Dawson
Calvin Dawson
Edward James Day
Jayceryll de Chavez
Jennifer De Jesus
Monique E. De Jesus
Nereida De Jesus
Emerita De La Pena
Azucena Maria de la Torre
David Paul De Rubbio
Jemal Legesse De Santis
Christian Louis De Simone
Melanie Louise De Vere
William Thomas Dean
Robert J. DeAngelis, Jr.
Thomas Patrick DeAngelis
Tara E. Debek
Anna Marjia DeBin
James V. Deblase
Paul DeCola
Simon Marash Dedvukaj
Jason Defazio
David A. DeFeo
Manuel Del Valle, Jr.
Donald Arthur Delapenha
Vito Joseph DeLeo
Danielle Anne Delie
Joseph A. Della Pietra
Andrea DellaBella
Palmina DelliGatti
Colleen Ann Deloughery
Francis Albert DeMartini
Anthony Demas
Martin N. DeMeo
Francis Deming
Carol K. Demitz
Kevin Dennis
Thomas F. Dennis
Jean DePalma
Jose Depena
Robert John Deraney
Michael DeRienzo
Edward DeSimone III
Andrew Desperito
Cindy Ann Deuel
Jerry DeVito
Robert P. Devitt, Jr.
Dennis Lawrence Devlin
Gerard Dewan
Sulemanali Kassamali Dhanani
Patricia Florence Di Chiaro
Debra Ann Di Martino
Michael Louis Diagostino
Matthew Diaz
Nancy Diaz
Rafael Arturo Diaz
Michael A. Diaz-Piedra III
Judith Berquis Diaz-Sierra
Joseph Dermot Dickey, Jr.
Lawrence Patrick Dickinson
Michael D. Diehl
John Difato
Vincent Difazio
Carl Anthony DiFranco
Donald Difranco
Stephen Patrick Dimino
William John Dimmling
Marisa DiNardo Schorpp
Christopher M. Dincuff
Jeffrey Mark Dingle
Anthony Dionisio
George DiPasquale
Joseph Dipilato
Douglas Frank DiStefano
Ramzi A. Doany
John Joseph Doherty
Melissa C. Doi
Brendan Dolan
Neil Matthew Dollard
James Joseph Domanico
Benilda Pascua Domingo
Carlos Dominguez
Jerome Mark Patrick Dominguez
Kevin W. Donnelly
Jacqueline Donovan
Stephen Scott Dorf
Thomas Dowd
Kevin Dowdell
Mary Yolanda Dowling
Raymond Mathew Downey
Frank Joseph Doyle
Joseph Michael Doyle
Stephen Patrick Driscoll
Mirna A. Duarte
Michelle Beale Duberry
Luke A. Dudek
Christopher Michael Duffy
Gerard Duffy
Michael Joseph Duffy
Thomas W. Duffy
Antoinette Duger
Sareve Dukat
Christopher Joseph Dunne
Richard Anthony Dunstan
Patrick Thomas Dwyer
Joseph Anthony Eacobacci
John Bruce Eagleson
Robert Douglas Eaton
Dean Phillip Eberling
Margaret Ruth Echtermann
Paul Robert Eckna
Constantine Economos
Dennis Michael Edwards
Michael Hardy Edwards
Christine Egan
Lisa Egan
Martin J. Egan, Jr.
Michael Egan
Samantha Martin Egan
Carole Eggert
Lisa Caren Ehrlich
John Ernst Eichler
Eric Adam Eisenberg
Daphne Ferlinda Elder
Michael J. Elferis
Mark Joseph Ellis
Valerie Silver Ellis
Albert Alfy William Elmarry
Edgar Hendricks Emery, Jr.
Doris Suk-Yuen Eng
Christopher Epps
Ulf Ramm Ericson
Erwin L. Erker
William John Erwin
Jose Espinal
Fanny Espinoza
Bridget Ann Esposito
Francis Esposito
Michael Esposito
William Esposito
Ruben Esquilin, Jr.
Sadie Ette
Barbara G. Etzold
Eric Brian Evans
Robert Evans
Meredith Emily June Ewart
Catherine K. Fagan
Patricia Mary Fagan
Keith George Fairben
Sandra Fajardo-Smith
William F. Fallon
William Lawrence Fallon, Jr.
Anthony J. Fallone, Jr.
Dolores Brigitte Fanelli
John Joseph Fanning
Kathleen Anne Faragher
Thomas Farino
Nancy Carole Farley
Elizabeth Ann Farmer
Douglas Jon Farnum
John G. Farrell
John W. Farrell
Terrence Patrick Farrell
Joseph D. Farrelly
Thomas Patrick Farrelly
Syed Abdul Fatha
Christopher Edward Faughnan
Wendy R. Faulkner
Shannon Marie Fava
Bernard D. Favuzza
Robert Fazio, Jr.
Ronald Carl Fazio
William Feehan
Francis Jude Feely
Garth Erin Feeney
Sean B. Fegan
Lee S. Fehling
Peter Adam Feidelberg
Alan D. Feinberg
Rosa Maria Feliciano
Edward Thomas Fergus, Jr.
George Ferguson
Henry Fernandez
Judy Hazel Fernandez
Julio Fernandez
Elisa Giselle Ferraina
Anne Marie Sallerin Ferreira
Robert John Ferris
David Francis Ferrugio
Louis V. Fersini
Michael David Ferugio
Bradley James Fetchet
Jennifer Louise Fialko
Kristen Nicole Fiedel
Samuel Fields
Michael Bradley Finnegan
Timothy J. Finnerty
Michael Curtis Fiore
Stephen S R Fiorelli, Sr.
Paul M. Fiori
John B. Fiorito
John R. Fischer
Andrew Fisher
Bennett Lawson Fisher
John Roger Fisher
Thomas J. Fisher
Lucy A. Fishman
Ryan D. Fitzgerald
Thomas James Fitzpatrick
Richard P. Fitzsimons
Salvatore Fiumefreddo
Christina Donovan Flannery
Eileen Flecha
Andre G. Fletcher
Carl M. Flickinger
John Joseph Florio
Joseph Walken Flounders
David Fodor
Michael N. Fodor
Stephen Mark Fogel
Thomas Foley
David J. Fontana
Chih Min Foo
Godwin Forde
Donald A. Foreman
Christopher Hugh Forsythe
Claudia Alicia Foster
Noel John Foster
Ana Fosteris
Robert Joseph Foti
Jeffrey Fox
Virginia Fox
Pauline Francis
Virgin Francis
Gary Jay Frank
Morton H. Frank
Peter Christopher Frank
Richard K. Fraser
Kevin J. Frawley
Clyde Frazier, Jr.
Lillian Inez Frederick
Andrew Fredricks
Tamitha Freeman
Brett Owen Freiman
Peter L. Freund
Arlene Eva Fried
Alan Wayne Friedlander
Andrew Keith Friedman
Gregg J. Froehner
Peter Christian Fry
Clement A. Fumando
Steven Elliot Furman
Paul Furmato
Fredric Neal Gabler
Richard Samuel Federick
Gabrielle
James Andrew Gadiel
Pamela Lee Gaff
Ervin Vincent Gailliard
Deanna Lynn Galante
Grace Catherine Galante
Anthony Edward Gallagher
Daniel James Gallagher
John Patrick Gallagher
Lourdes Galletti
Cono E. Gallo
Vincenzo Gallucci
Thomas E. Galvin
Giovanna Galletta Gambale
Thomas Gambino, Jr.
Giann Franco Gamboa
Peter Ganci
Ladkat K. Ganesh
Claude Michael Gann
Osseni Garba
Charles William Garbarini
Ceasar Garcia
David Garcia
Juan Garcia
Marlyn Del Carmen Garcia
Christopher S. Gardner
Douglas Benjamin Gardner
Harvey J. Gardner III
Jeffrey Brian Gardner
Thomas Gardner
William Arthur Gardner
Francesco Garfi
Rocco Nino Gargano
James M. Gartenberg
Matthew David Garvey
Bruce Gary
Boyd Alan Gatton
Donald Richard Gavagan, Jr.
Terence D. Gazzani
Gary Geidel
Paul Hamilton Geier
Julie M. Geis
Peter G. Gelinas
Steven Paul Geller
Howard G. Gelling
Peter Victor Genco, Jr.
Steven Gregory Genovese
Alayne Gentul
Edward F. Geraghty
Suzanne Geraty
Ralph Gerhardt
Robert Gerlich
Denis P. Germain
Marina Romanovna Gertsberg
Susan M. Getzendanner
James G. Geyer
Joseph M. Giaccone
Vincent Francis Giammona
Debra Lynn Gibbon
James Andrew Giberson
Craig Neil Gibson
Ronnie E. Gies
Laura A. Giglio
Andrew Clive Gilbert
Timothy Paul Gilbert
Paul Stuart Gilbey
Paul John Gill
Mark Y. Gilles
Evan Gillette
Ronald Lawrence Gilligan
Rodney C. Gillis
Laura Gilly
John F. Ginley
Donna Marie Giordano
Jeffrey John Giordano
John Giordano
Steven A. Giorgetti
Martin Giovinazzo
Kum-Kum Girolamo
Salvatore Gitto
Cynthia Giugliano
Mon Gjonbalaj
Dianne Gladstone
Keith Glascoe
Thomas Irwin Glasser
Harry Glenn
Barry H. Glick
Steven Glick
John T. Gnazzo
William Robert Godshalk
Michael Gogliormella
Brian Fredric Goldberg
Jeffrey Grant Goldflam
Michelle Goldstein
Monica Goldstein
Steven Goldstein
Andrew H. Golkin
Dennis James Gomes
Enrique Antonio Gomez
Jose Bienvenido Gomez
Manuel Gomez, Jr.
Wilder Alfredo Gomez
Jenine Nicole Gonzalez
Mauricio Gonzalez
Rosa Gonzalez
Calvin J. Gooding
Harry Goody
Kiran Reddy Gopu
Catherine C. Gorayeb
Kerene Gordon
Sebastian Gorki
Kieran Joseph Gorman
Thomas Edward Gorman
Michael Edward Gould
Yuji Goya
Jon Richard Grabowski
Christopher Michael Grady
Edwin J. Graf III
David Martin Graifman
Gilbert Franco Granados
Elvira Granitto
Winston Arthur Grant
Christopher S. Gray
James Michael Gray
Tara McCloud Gray
Linda Catherine Grayling
John M. Grazioso
Timothy George Grazioso
Derrick Auther Green
Wade B. Green
Elaine Myra Greenberg
Gayle R. Greene
James Arthur Greenleaf, Jr.
Eileen Marsha Greenstein
Elizabeth Martin Gregg
Denise Gregory
Donald H. Gregory
Florence Moran Gregory
Pedro Grehan
John Michael Griffin
Tawanna Sherry Griffin
Joan Donna Griffith
Warren Grifka
Ramon Grijalvo
Joseph F. Grillo
David Joseph Grimner
Kenneth George Grouzalis
Joseph Grzelak
Matthew James Grzymalski
Robert Joseph Gschaar
Liming Gu
Jose Guadalupe
Cindy Yan Zhu Guan
Joel Guevara Gonzalez
Geoffrey E. Guja
Joseph Gullickson
Babita Girjamatie Guman
Douglas Brian Gurian
Janet Ruth Gustafson
Philip T. Guza
Barbara Guzzardo
Peter M. Gyulavary
Gary Robert Haag
Andrea Lyn Haberman
Barbara Mary Habib
Philip Haentzler
Nezam A. Hafiz
Karen Elizabeth Hagerty
Steven Michael Hagis
Mary Lou Hague
David Halderman
Maile Rachel Hale
Richard B. Hall
Vaswald George Hall
Robert J. Halligan
Vincent Gerard Halloran
James Douglas Halvorson
Mohammad Salman Hamdani
Felicia Hamilton
Robert Hamilton
Frederic K. Han
Christopher J. Hanley
Sean S. Hanley
Valerie Joan Hanna
Thomas Hannafin
Kevin James Hannaford
Michael Lawrence Hannan
Dana R Hannon
Vassilios G. Haramis
James A. Haran
Jeffrey Pike Hardy
Timothy John Hargrave
Daniel Edward Harlin
Frances Haros
Harvey Harrell
Stephen G. Harrell
Melissa Marie Harrington
Aisha Anne Harris
Stewart Dennis Harris
John Patrick Hart
John Clinton Hartz
Emeric Harvey
Thomas Theodore Haskell, Jr.
Timothy Haskell
Joseph John Hasson III
Leonard W. Hatton
Terence S. Hatton
Michael Haub
Timothy Aaron Haviland
Donald G. Havlish, Jr.
Anthony Hawkins
Nobuhiro Hayatsu
Philip Hayes
William Ward Haynes
Scott Jordan Hazelcorn
Michael K. Healey
Roberta B. Heber
Charles Francis Xavier Heeran
John F. Heffernan
H. Joseph Heller, Jr.
Joann L. Heltibridle
Mark F. Hemschoot
Ronnie Lee Henderson
Brian Hennessey
Michelle Marie Henrique
Joseph Henry
William Henry
John Christopher Henwood
Robert Allan Hepburn
Mary Herencia
Lindsay C. Herkness III
Harvey Robert Hermer
Claribel Hernandez
Eduardo Hernandez
Nuberto Hernandez
Raul Hernandez
Gary Herold
Jeffrey A. Hersch
Thomas Hetzel
Brian Hickey
Ysidro Hidalgo
Timothy Higgins
Robert D. W. Higley II
Todd Russell Hill
Clara Victorine Hinds
Neal O. Hinds
Mark D. Hindy
Katsuyuki Hirai
Heather Malia Ho
Tara Yvette Hobbs
Thomas Anderson Hobbs
James J. Hobin
Robert Wayne Hobson
DaJuan Hodges
Ronald George Hoerner
Patrick A. Hoey
Marcia Hoffman
Stephen G. Hoffman
Frederick Joseph Hoffmann
Michele L. Hoffmann
Judith Florence Hofmiller
Thomas Warren Hohlweck, Jr.
Jonathan R. Hohmann
John Holland
Joseph F. Holland
Elizabeth Holmes
Thomas Holohan
Bradley Hoorn
James P. Hopper
Montgomery McCullough Hord
Michael Horn
Matthew Douglas Horning
Robert L. Horohoe, Jr.
Aaron Horwitz
Charles Houston
Uhuru G. Houston
George Howard
Michael C. Howell
Steven Leon Howell
Jennifer L. Howley
Milagros Hromada
Marian R. Hrycak
Stephen Huczko, Jr.
Kris Robert Hughes
Paul Rexford Hughes
Robert Thomas Hughes
Thomas Hughes
Timothy Robert Hughes
Susan Huie
Lamar Hulse
William Christopher Hunt
Kathleen Anne Hunt-Casey
Joseph Hunter
Robert R. Hussa
Abid Hussain
Thomas Edward Hynes
Walter G. Hynes
Joseph Anthony Ianelli
Zuhtu Ibis
Jonathan Lee Ielpi
Michael Iken
Daniel Ilkanayev
Frederick Ill, Jr.
Abraham Nethanel Ilowitz
Anthony P. Infante, Jr.
Louis S. Inghilterra, Jr.
Christopher Noble Ingrassia
Paul Innella
Stephanie Veronica Irby
Douglas Irgang
Kristin A. Irvine Ryan
Todd Antione Isaac
Erik Isbrandtsen
Taizo Ishikawa
Aram Iskenderian, Jr.
John F. Iskyan
Kazushige Ito
Aleksandr Valeryevich Ivantsov
Virginia May Jablonski
Brooke Alexandra Jackman
Aaron Jeremy Jacobs
Ariel Louis Jacobs
Jason Kyle Jacobs
Michael Grady Jacobs
Steven A. Jacobson
Ricknauth Jaggernauth
Jake Denis Jagoda
Yudh Vir Singh Jain
Maria Jakubiak
Ernest James
Gricelda E. James
Priscilla James
Mark Steven Jardim
Muhammadou Jawara
Francois Jean-Pierre
Maxima Jean-Pierre
Paul Edward Jeffers
Alva Cynthia Jeffries Sanchez
Joseph Jenkins, Jr.
Alan Keith Jensen
Prem N. Jerath
Farah Jeudy
Hweidar Jian
Eliezer Jimenez, Jr.
Luis Jimenez, Jr.
Fernando Jimenez-Molina
Charles Gregory John
Nicholas John
LaShawna Johnson
Scott Michael Johnson
William R. Johnston
Allison Horstmann Jones
Arthur Joseph Jones
Brian Leander Jones
Christopher D. Jones
Donald T. Jones
Donald W. Jones
Linda Jones
Mary S. Jones
Andrew Jordan
Robert Thomas Jordan
Albert Gunnia Joseph
Guylene Joseph
Ingeborg Joseph
Karl Henry Joseph
Stephen Joseph
Jane Eileen Josiah
Anthony Jovic
Angel L. Juarbe, Jr.
Karen Sue Juday
Mychal F. Judge
Paul William Jurgens
Thomas Edward Jurgens
Kacinga Kabeya
Shashikiran Lakshmikantha
Kadaba
Gavkharoy Kamardinova
Shari Kandell
Howard Lee Kane
Jennifer Lynn Kane
Vincent D. Kane
Joon Koo Kang
Sheldon Robert Kanter
Deborah H. Kaplan
Alvin Peter Kappelmann, Jr.
Charles Karczewski
William A. Karnes
Douglas Gene Karpiloff
Charles L. Kasper
Andrew K. Kates
John Katsimatides
Robert Michael Kaulfers
Don Jerome Kauth, Jr.
Hideya Kawauchi
Edward T. Keane
Richard M. Keane
Lisa Yvonne Kearney-Griffin
Karol Ann Keasler
Paul Hanlon Keating
Leo Russell Keene III
Joseph John Keller
Peter R. Kellerman
Joseph P. Kellett
Frederick H. Kelley, Jr.
James Joseph Kelly
Joseph A. Kelly
Maurice P. Kelly
Richard John Kelly, Jr.
Thomas Michael Kelly
Thomas Richard Kelly
Thomas W. Kelly
Timothy Colin Kelly
William Hill Kelly, Jr.
Robert Clinton Kennedy
Thomas J. Kennedy
John R. Keohane
Ronald T. Kerwin
Howard L. Kestenbaum
Douglas D. Ketcham
Ruth Ellen Ketler
Boris Khalif
Sarah Khan
Taimour Firaz Khan
Rajesh Khandelwal
Oliva Khemrat
SeiLai Khoo
Michael Kiefer
Satoshi Kikuchihara
Andrew Jay-Hoon Kim
Lawrence D. Kim
Mary Jo Kimelman
Andrew M. King
Lucille Teresa King
Robert King, Jr.
Lisa King-Johnson
Takashi Kinoshita
Chris Michael Kirby
Howard Barry Kirschbaum
Glenn Davis Kirwin
Helen Crossin Kittle
Richard Joseph Klares
Peter Anton Klein
Alan David Kleinberg
Karen Joyce Klitzman
Ronald Philip Kloepfer
Evgueni Kniazev
Andrew Knox
Thomas Patrick Knox
Rebecca Lee Koborie
Deborah A. Kobus
Gary Edward Koecheler
Frank J. Koestner
Ryan Kohart
Vanessa Kolpak
Irina Kolpakova
Suzanne Kondratenko
Abdoulaye Kone
Bon-Seok Koo
Dorota Kopiczko
Scott Kopytko
Bojan Kostic
Danielle Kousoulis
John J. Kren
William E. Krukowski
Lyudmila Ksido
Shekhar Kumar
Kenneth Kumpel
Frederick Kuo, Jr.
Patricia Kuras
Nauka Kushitani
Thomas Kuveikis
Victor Kwarkye
Kui Fai Kwok
Angela Reed Kyte
Andrew La Corte
Amarnauth Lachhman
James Patrick Ladley
Joseph A. LaFalce
Jeanette Louise Lafond-Menichino
David Laforge
Michael Laforte
Alan Charles LaFrance
Juan Lafuente
Neil Kwong-Wah Lai
Vincent Anthony Laieta
William David Lake
Franco Lalama
Chow Kwan Lam
Stephen LaMantia
Amy Hope Lamonsoff
Nickola Lampley
Robert Lane
Brendan Mark Lang
Rosanne P. Lang
Vanessa Langer
Mary Louise Langley
Peter J. Langone
Thomas Michael Langone
Michele Bernadette Lanza
Ruth Sheila Lapin
Carol Ann LaPlante
Ingeborg Lariby
Robin Blair Larkey
Christopher Randall Larrabee
Hamidou S. Larry
Scott Larsen
John Adam Larson
Gary Edward Lasko
Nicholas Craig Lassman
Paul Laszczynski
Jeffrey G. LaTouche
Charles Laurencin
Stephen James Lauria
Maria LaVache
Denis Francis Lavelle
Jeannine Mary LaVerde
Anna A. Laverty
Steven Lawn
Robert Lawrence
Nathaniel Lawson
Eugen Gabriel Lazar
James Patrick Leahy
Joseph Gerard Leavey
Neil Joseph Leavy
Leon Lebor
Kenneth Charles Ledee
Alan J. Lederman
Elena F. Ledesma
Alexis Leduc
David S. Lee
Gary H. Lee
Hyun Joon Lee
Juanita Lee
Kathryn Blair Lee
Linda C. Lee
Lorraine Mary Lee
Myoung Woo Lee
Richard Y. Lee
Stuart Soo-Jin Lee
Yang Der Lee
Stephen Paul Lefkowitz
Adriana Legro
Edward Joseph Lehman
Eric Andrew Lehrfeld
David Leistman
David Prudencio Lemagne
9.11.
We will always
For the complete list: http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2001/memorial/
Joseph Anthony Lenihan
John Joseph Lennon, Jr.
John Robinson Lenoir
Jorge Luis Leon
Matthew Gerard Leonard
Michael Lepore
Charles A. Lesperance
Jeff Leveen
John Dennis Levi
Alisha Caren Levin
Neil David Levin
Robert Levine
Robert Michael Levine
Shai Levinhar
Adam Jay Lewis
Margaret Susan Lewis
Ye Wei Liang
Orasri Liangthanasarn
Daniel F. Libretti
Ralph Licciardi
Edward Lichtschein
Steven Barry Lillianthal
Carlos R. Lillo
Craig Damian Lilore
Arnold A. Lim
Darya Lin
Wei Rong Lin
Nickie L. Lindo
Thomas V. Linehan, Jr.
Robert Thomas Linnane
Alan P. Linton, Jr.
Diane Theresa Lipari
Kenneth Lira
Francisco Alberto Liriano
Lorraine Lisi
Paul Lisson
Vincent M. Litto
Ming-Hao Liu
Nancy Liz
Harold Lizcano
Martin Lizzul
George A. Llanes
Elizabeth C. Logler
Catherine Lisa Loguidice
Jerome Robert Lohez
Michael William Lomax
Laura Maria Longing
Salvatore Lopes
Daniel Lopez
George Lopez
Luis Manuel Lopez
Manuel L. Lopez
Joseph Lostrangio
Chet Dek Louie
Stuart Seid Louis
Joseph Lovero
Jenny Seu Kueng Low Wong
Michael W. Lowe
Garry W. Lozier
John Peter Lozowsky
Charles Peter Lucania
Edward Hobbs Luckett
Mark Gavin Ludvigsen
Lee Charles Ludwig
Sean Thomas Lugano
Daniel Lugo
Marie Lukas
William Lum, Jr.
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Robert Henry Lynch, Jr.
Sean P. Lynch
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Patrick Lyons
Robert Francis Mace
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Jay Robert Magazine
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Charles Wilson Magee
Joseph V. Maggitti
Ronald Magnuson
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Michael P. McDonnell
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Eamon J. McEneaney
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William McGovern
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Gloria Nieves
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Troy Edward Nilsen
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Curtis Terrance Noel
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Soichi Numata
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Michael P. O’Brien
Scott J. O’Brien
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Diana J. O’Connor
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Gerald O’leary
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Patrick J. O’Shea
Robert William O’Shea
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James A. Oakley
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Sonia Ortiz
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James R. Ostrowski
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Michael Otten
Isidro D. Ottenwalder
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Todd Joseph Ouida
Jesus Ovalles
Peter J. Owens, Jr.
Adianes Oyola
Angel M. Pabon
Israel Pabon, Jr.
Roland Pacheco
Michael Benjamin Packer
Rene Padilla-Chavarria
Deepa Pakkala
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Thomas Palazzo
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Orio J. Palmer
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John M. Paolillo
Edward Joseph Papa
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Nitin Parandkar
Hardai Parbhu
James Wendell Parham
Debra Marie Paris
George Paris
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Hashmukhrai C. Parmar
Robert Parro
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Richard Al Penny
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Carl Peralta
Robert David Peraza
Jon A. Perconti
Alejo Perez
Angel Perez, Jr.
Angela Susan Perez
Anthony Perez
Ivan Perez
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Edward J. Perrotta
Emelda H. Perry
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Davin Peterson
William Russell Peterson
Mark Petrocelli
Philip Scott Petti
Glen Kerrin Pettit
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Kaleen Elizabeth Pezzuti
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Catherina Robinson
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John Rodak
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Matthew Rogan
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Scott Williams Rohner
Keith Roma
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Orozco James A. Romito
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Mark Rosen
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Paul G. Ruback
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Susan A. Ruggiero
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Jonathan Stephan Ryan
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Neeraha Sadaranghgani
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Edward Saiya
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Juan G. Salas
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Wayne John Saloman
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Rena Sam-Dinnoo
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Erick Sanchez
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Ayleen J. Santiago
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Mario L. Santoro
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Kalyan Sarkar
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Clarin Shellie Schwartz
John Burkhart Schwartz
Mark Schwartz
Adriane Victoria Scibetta
Raphael Scorca
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Sheila Scott
Christopher Jay Scudder
Arthur Warren Scullin
Michael Herman Seaman
Margaret M. Seeliger
Anthony Segarra
Carlos Segarra
Jason Sekzer
Matthew Carmen Sellitto
Howard Selwyn
Larry John Senko
Arturo Angelo Sereno
Frankie Serrano
Alena Sesinova
Adele Christine Sessa
Sita Nermalla Sewnarine
Karen Lynn Seymour
Davis Sezna
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Mohammed Shajahan
Gary Shamay
Earl Richard Shanahan
Neil Shastri
Kathryn Anne Shatzoff
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Robert John Shay, Jr.
Daniel James Shea
Joseph Patrick Shea
Linda Sheehan
Hagay Shefi
John Anthony Sherry
Atsushi Shiratori
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Mark Shulman
See Wong Shum
Allan Abraham Shwartzstein
Johanna Sigmund
Dianne T. Signer
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David Silver
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Arthur Simon
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Jeff Lyal Simpson
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Kulwant Singh
Roshan Ramesh Singh
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Joseph Michael Sisolak
John P. Skala
Francis Joseph Skidmore, Jr.
Toyena Skinner
Paul A. Skrzypek
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Vincent Robert Slavin
Robert F. Sliwak
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Daniel Laurence Smith
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James Gregory Smith
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Karl T. Smith
Keisha Smith
Kevin Joseph Smith
Leon Smith, Jr.
Moira Ann Smith
Rosemary A. Smith
Bonnie Jeanne Smithwick
Rochelle Monique Snell
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Astrid Elizabeth Sohan
Sushil S. Solanki
Ruben Solares
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Daniel W. Song
Michael Charles Sorresse
Fabian Soto
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Gregory Spagnoletti
Donald F. Spampinato, Jr.
Thomas Sparacio
John Anthony Spataro
Robert W. Spear, Jr.
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George Edward Spencer III
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Eric Thomas Steen
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Alexander Steinman
Andrew Stergiopoulos
Andrew Stern
Martha Stevens
Michael James Stewart
Richard H. Stewart, Jr.
Page 19
Sanford M. Stoller
Lonny Jay Stone
Jimmy Nevill Storey
Timothy Stout
Thomas Strada
James J. Straine, Jr.
Edward W. Straub
George J. Strauch, Jr.
Edward T. Strauss
Steven R. Strauss
Steven F. Strobert
Walwyn W. Stuart, Jr.
Benjamin Suarez
David Scott Suarez
Ramon Suarez
Yoichi Sugiyama
William Christopher Sugra
Daniel Suhr
David Marc Sullins
Christopher P. Sullivan
Patrick Sullivan
Thomas Sullivan
Hilario Soriano Sumaya, Jr.
James Joseph Suozzo
Colleen Supinski
Robert Sutcliffe
Seline Sutter
Claudia Suzette Sutton
John Francis Swaine
Kristine M. Swearson
Brian Edward Sweeney
Kenneth J. Swenson
Thomas Swift
Derek Ogilvie Sword
Kevin Thomas Szocik
Gina Sztejnberg
Norbert P. Szurkowski
Harry Taback
Joann Tabeek
Norma C. Taddei
Michael Taddonio
Keiichiro Takahashi
Keiji Takahashi
Phyllis Gail Talbot
Robert Talhami
Sean Patrick Tallon
Paul Talty
Maurita Tam
Rachel Tamares
Hector Tamayo
Michael Andrew Tamuccio
Kenichiro Tanaka
Rhondelle Cheri Tankard
Michael Anthony Tanner
Dennis Gerard Taormina, Jr.
Kenneth Joseph Tarantino
Allan Tarasiewicz
Ronald Tartaro
Darryl Anthony Taylor
Donnie Brooks Taylor
Lorisa Ceylon Taylor
Michael Morgan Taylor
Paul A. Tegtmeier
Yeshauant Tembe
Anthony Tempesta
Dorothy Pearl Temple
Stanley Temple
David Tengelin
Brian John Terrenzi
Lisa M. Terry
Shell Tester
Goumatie T. Thackurdeen
Sumati Thakur
Harshad Sham Thatte
Thomas F. Theurkauf, Jr.
Lesley Anne Thomas
Brian Thomas Thompson
Clive Thompson
Glenn Thompson
Nigel Bruce Thompson
Perry A. Thompson
Vanavah Alexei Thompson
William H. Thompson
Eric Raymond Thorpe
Nichola Angela Thorpe
Sal Edward Tieri, Jr.
John p Tierney
Mary Ellen Tiesi
William R. Tieste
Kenneth Francis Tietjen
Stephen Edward Tighe
Scott Charles Timmes
Michael E. Tinley
Jennifer M. Tino
Robert Frank Tipaldi
John James Tipping II
David Tirado
Hector Luis Tirado, Jr.
Michelle Lee Titolo
John J. Tobin
Richard Todisco
Vladimir Tomasevic
Stephen Kevin Tompsett
Thomas Tong
Doris Torres
Luis Eduardo Torres
Amy Elizabeth Toyen
Christopher Michael Traina
Daniel Patrick Trant
Abdoul Karim Traore
Glenn J. Travers
Walter Philip Travers
Felicia Y. Traylor-Bass
Lisa L. Trerotola
Karamo Trerra
Michael Angel Trinidad
Francis Joseph Trombino
Gregory James Trost
William P. Tselepis
Zhanetta Valentinovna Tsoy
Michael Tucker
Lance Richard Tumulty
Ching Ping Tung
Simon James Turner
Donald Joseph Tuzio
Robert T. Twomey
Jennifer Tzemis
John G. Ueltzhoeffer
Tyler V. Ugolyn
Michael A. Uliano
Jonathan J. Uman
Anil Shivhari Umarkar
Allen V. Upton
Diane Marie Urban
John Damien Vaccacio
Bradley Hodges Vadas
Renuta Vaidea
William Valcarcel
Felix Antonio Vale
Ivan Vale
Benito Valentin
Santos Valentin, Jr.
Carlton Francis Valvo II
Erica H. Van Acker
Kenneth W. Van Auken
Richard B. Van Hine
Daniel M. Van Laere
Edward Raymond Vanacore
Jon C. Vandevander
Barrett Vanvelzer, 4
Edward Vanvelzer
Paul Herman Vanvelzer
Frederick Thomas Varacchi
Gopalakrishnan Varadhan
David Vargas
Scott C. Vasel
Azael Ismael Vasquez
Arcangel Vazquez
Santos Vazquez
Peter Anthony Vega
Sankara S. Velamuri
Jorge Velazquez
Lawrence G. Veling
Anthony Mark Ventura
David Vera
Loretta Ann Vero
Christopher James Vialonga
Matthew Gilbert Vianna
Robert Anthony Vicario
Celeste Torres Victoria
Joanna Vidal
John T. Vigiano II
Joseph Vincent Vigiano
Frank J. Vignola, Jr.
Joseph Barry Vilardo
Sergio Villanueva
Chantal Vincelli
Melissa Vincent
Francine Ann Virgilio
Lawrence Virgilio
Joseph Gerard Visciano
Joshua S. Vitale
Maria Percoco Vola
Lynette D. Vosges
Garo H. Voskerijian
Alfred Vukosa
Gregory Kamal Bruno Wachtler
Gabriela Waisman
Courtney Wainsworth Walcott
Victor Wald
Benjamin James Walker
Glen Wall
Mitchel Scott Wallace
Peter Guyder Wallace
Robert Francis Wallace
Roy Michael Wallace
Jeanmarie Wallendorf
Matthew Blake Wallens
John Wallice, Jr.
Barbara P. Walsh
James Henry Walsh
Jeffrey P. Walz
Ching Wang
Weibin Wang
Michael Warchola
Stephen Gordon Ward
James Arthur Waring
Brian G. Warner
Derrick Washington
Charles Waters
James Thomas Waters, Jr.
Patrick J. Waters
Kenneth Thomas Watson
Michael Henry Waye
Todd Christopher Weaver
Walter Edward Weaver
Nathaniel Webb
Dinah Webster
Joanne Flora Weil
Michael T. Weinberg
Steven Weinberg
Scott Jeffrey Weingard
Steven George Weinstein
Simon Weiser
David M. Weiss
David Thomas Weiss
Vincent Michael Wells
Timothy Matthew Welty
Christian Hans Rudolf Wemmers
Ssu-Hui Wen
Oleh D. Wengerchuk
Peter M. West
Whitfield West, Jr.
Meredith Lynn Whalen
Eugene Whelan
Adam S. White
Edward James White III
James Patrick White
John Sylvester White
Kenneth Wilburn White, Jr.
Leonard Anthony White
Malissa Y. White
Wayne White
Leanne Marie Whiteside
Mark P. Whitford
Michael T. Wholey
Mary Catherine Wieman
Jeffrey David Wiener
Wilham J. Wik
Alison Marie Wildman
Glenn E. Wilkenson
John C. Willett
Brian Patrick Williams
Crossley Richard Williams, Jr.
David J. Williams
Deborah Lynn Williams
Kevin Michael Williams
Louie Anthony Williams
Louis Calvin Williams III
John P. Williamson
Donna Ann Wilson
William Wilson
David Harold Winton
Glenn J. Winuk
Thomas Francis Wise
Alan L. Wisniewski
Frank Thomas Wisniewski
David Wiswall
Sigrid Wiswe
Michael Wittenstein
Christopher W. Wodenshek
Martin P. Wohlforth
Katherine Susan Wolf
Jennifer Yen Wong
Siu Cheung Wong
Yin Ping Wong
Yuk Ping Wong
Brent James Woodall
James John Woods
Patrick J. Woods
Richard Herron Woodwell
David Terence Wooley
John Bentley Works
Martin Michael Wortley
Rodney James Wotton
William Wren
John Wayne Wright
Neil Robin Wright
Sandra Lee Wright
Jupiter Yambem
Suresh Yanamadala
Matthew David Yarnell
Myrna Yaskulka
Shakila Yasmin
Olabisi Shadie Layeni Yee
William Yemele
Edward P. York
Kevin Patrick York
Raymond R. York
Suzanne Youmans
Barrington Young
Jacqueline Young
Elkin Yuen
Joseph C. Zaccoli
Adel Agayby Zakhary
Arkady Zaltsman
Edwin J. Zambrana, Jr.
Robert Alan Zampieri
Mark Zangrilli
Ira Zaslow
Kenneth Albert Zelman
Abraham J. Zelmanowitz
Martin Morales Zempoaltecatl
Zhe Zeng
Marc Scott Zeplin
Jie Yao Justin Zhao
Ivelin Ziminski
Michael Joseph Zinzi
Charles A. Zion
Julie Lynne Zipper
Salvatore Zisa
Prokopios Paul Zois
Joseph J. Zuccala
Andrew S. Zucker
Igor Zukelma
2001
remember
Page 20
NJIT’s Newspaper, The Vector
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