The ET staff and friends celebrated the fall issue at our launch party Thursday December 8!
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Founded in 1981, Equal Time Magazine cover six sections: front-of-book (short, fun pieces), health, entertainment, beauty/fashion, and sports.
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The ET staff and friends celebrated the fall issue at our launch party Thursday December 8!
Can’t wait for our fall 2011 issue, out December 8? Check out these shots from our fashion shoot. We went to an abandoned cement factory in Jamesville, NY and showed off our fearless fashion sense.
Photos by: Rachel Thalia Fisher
Styled by: Sola Ayodej
If you can’t get your hands on a copy on campus, have a flip through the spring 2011 issue online here: http://issuu.com/equaltimemagazine/docs/equaltimespring2011
SU seniors Derek Charles, Dom Denaro, Chris Hornstein, and Adam Piskin start their engines for the road trip of a lifetime.




Shot? No thanks, I’ll PASS!
This is typically the route that Boston Celtics point guard Rajon Rondo takes on the basketball court. Day by day, Rondo is establishing himself as the leader of the Celtics. His 29 points, 18 rebounds and 13 assists set him aside Wilt Chamberlain and Oscar Robertson for such triple double numbers in NBA playoff history. One of his assists, as seen in the video, was a sick behind the back pass to Tony Allen in their 97-87 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers Sunday afternoon. The C’s were once a team led by Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen, aka the BIG 3 aka “The three amigos”. Now, you should change it to the BIG 4 because without Rondo, the C’s wouldn’t be as dynamic, granted many of their stars are getting old. Rondo proved he’s an elite point guard in the NBA with his performance versus LeBron James and the Cavaliers. If Rondo keeps up these numbers, the Celtics have a chance to send LeBron, the Leauge MVP, home early.
-Winton Brown
I grew up essentially in a baseball-oriented home. I donned a Yankees onesie at the prime age of four months. Tee ball was the first sport I learned how to play. I knew who Mickey Mantle was before I entered kindergarten. When I began using the “I’m 18 and legally an adult,” card in my arguments my dad would reply “You live in my ballpark, you play by my rules.” And so, it has always been hard for me to understand a person who has no connection to baseball. Still, I run into these types every day.
But whether you realize it or not, baseball—or at least some of it—is a part of your life. Take for example, Yogi Berra, a Hall of Fame player who caught for the New York Yankees for his entire baseball career. Yogi is a player who has managed to weasel his way into all of America’s lives. How? The Yogiism.
Has anyone ever told you, “It ain’t over, ‘til it’s over?” Probably. Ever actually taken the time to think about that phrase? It has the amazing power to make absolutely no sense and all the sense in the world…at the same time. That is the mystique of the Yogiism.
Even if you’d never heard of Yogi Berra (and you should…because he was a terrific asset to the game), you have most likely listened to and perhaps said some of his most famous “isms.” They include sound explanations: “Nobody goes there anymore, it’s too crowded.” They consist of valuable advice: “When you come to a fork in the road, take it.” They illustrate universal experiences: “It’s deja vu all over again.” They administer honest opinions: “You can observe a lot by watching.”
So you see, even if you’re a not a baseball fan, the sport has produced American tradition that can be seen all over the country. And while Yogi Berra may disregard the impact of his sayings (“I didn’t really say everything I said.”), it is hard to ignore the sense in his senselessness.
“If you don’t know where you’re going, you will wind up somewhere else.” - Yogi Berra
-Megan Griffo