2 NEWS
6 ARTS
Protestors Say ‘Hell No’ to the Anti-Trans Memo
The Million Dollar Story of Faraday Okoro
4 CULTURE
9 OPINION
How to Eat With Zero Waste
Our Failed Attempts to Reach the Board of Trustees
VOLUME LI | ISSUE 9
MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2018
What Did NYU Look Like 25 Years Ago?
Left: Trudy Rudnick, president of Union Lcal 3882, was amoung three people arrested during a union rally on Oct. 4, 1993.
NYU in 1993 wasn’t all that different from NYU today. By PAMELA JEW and JEMIMA MCEVOY Under the Arch Managing Editor and Editor-in-Chief Twenty-five years ago, it was 1993. Bill Clinton was president of the United States, blockbuster “Jurassic Park” had just been released and most importantly, people still thought patchwork pullovers were acceptable to wear in public. Pouring through WSN’s archives, we found that history does in fact repeat itself. Protests, unions, politics, tragedies — there are almost eerie similarities between NYU then and NYU now. That’s not to say this university hasn’t changed. It certainly has. But some traditions live on while some problems remain unresolved; and no, the subway wasn’t working then either. Here is a look at NYU in 1993.
GABRIELLE THORNE | WSN FILE PHOTO
Right: RepublicanLiberal Rudolph W. Giuliani defeated Democratic incumbent David N. Dinkins in a narrow 50-to-48 percent win.
GABRIELLE THORNE | WSN FILE PHOTO
Dining Halls Before the days of Michelle Obama’s healthy-schoollunch program and the Kimmel pasta bar’s green Mediterranean facelift, the university and its food provider, ARA — now known as Aramark — rolled out Burger King and Taco Bell Express stands. The two fast-food chains were the newest additions to the food court located in the basement of the Loeb Student Center, which has since been demolished and replaced with the Kimmel Center for University Life. Students’ main complaints included the university’s prioritization of corporations over student’s health and diets.
Left: Local 3882 union members carried signs on Oct. 4, 1993 protesting what they call discrimination on the part of NYU against their predominantly female- and minority-based workers pool. CHARLES DHARAPAK | WSN FILE PHOTO
ARTS
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SPORTS
The Cast of ‘Mid90s’ Talks Jonah Hill’s Directorial Debut By TAYLOR STOUT Staff Writer Jonah Hill’s directorial debut “Mid90s” opens on a long shot of a hallway. The frame is still and grainy, giving the viewer a moment to adapt to the tight, square-like 4:3 shooting ratio that immediately imbues the f ilm with a classic, vintage feel reminiscent of the 1990s. Then, with no warning, Stevie (Sunny Suljic) flies out of a room and slams into a wall as his brother Ian (Lucas Hedges) rushes
out, tumbles on top of Stevie and starts punching him. The scene is raw, striking, and intrapersonal — all sentiments that def ine this f ilm. Set in 1990s Los Angeles, the film follows Stevie as he is introduced to the world of skate punks through a group of older boys that he befriends in a skate shop. He becomes almost inseparable from them — they skate together, party together, drink together — despite his mother’s pleaful protests and the painful wounds he incurs while testing the limits of his skills.
Throughout the film, Wu-Tang Clan posters elaborately decorate bedroom walls, a Morrissey song roars to life as boys skate down a Los Angeles street and characters wear T-shirts emblazoned with logos of iconic skate brands. The film is imbued in the iconography of a subculture that took 1990s America by storm. However, its most poignant moments aren’t about skating culture so much as they’re about interpersonal adolescent relationships. CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
SAM KLEIN | WSN
Conquering Collegiate Hockey Against All Odds
ON PAGE 10