Stephanie Klenotich Class: 2007Sport: SoccerMAJOR: Brain and Cognitive Sciences

high school: Glenbard East High School, Lombard, Ill.ideal day off: Spending time with my best friends.

Favorite OTHER sport: RunningFavorite food: Thai foodfavorite movie: Not surePlans after college: Attend graduate school and participate in research of mental disorders.expectations for the season: Win the ECAC championship.

Favorite athletic memory: Beating Brandeis University this year in UAA competition.

Why Stephanie is the athlete of the Week: She netted two goals in UR’s 3-0 shutout over Case Western Reserve University.

Kevin Toolan Class: 2005Sport: FootballMAJOR: Economics

high school: Liverpool High School, Liverpool, N.Y. ideal day off: Hanging out with my dad.

Favorite OTHER sport: BasketballFavorite food: Turkey pot piefavorite movie: “Braveheart”Plans after college: Business management or graduate school.expectations for the season: To finish the season out with a big win against Hobart.

Favorite athletic memory: Beating the No. 2-ranked state high school football team on my homecoming day as a senior.

Why Kevin is the athlete of the Week: Kevin had a career-high six catches for 95 yards and a touchdown in his Senior Day game.



Athletes of the week

The first realization of my own age hit me in the months before I started college. I was helping my dad clean the small office he’d occupied in Rush Rhees longer than I’d been alive. The walls of which boasted childhood drawings that my sister and I had crayoned. Even though I was looking at my distant past, I realized I would soon be starting a new page of my future. Read More

Athletes of the week

President and senior Mennatallah “Mennah” Mohamed shared that this dinner was a “time to highlight how Arab culture is so interconnected.” Read More

Athletes of the week

However, recent student protests are considerably less effective than they used to be. According to The American Prospect, there were far fewer young attendees to the most recent round of No Kings marches in proportion to the attendance of older generations. Read More