4 CULTURE
9 OPINION
Sex, Sorrow and Substances: The Pillars of Roommate Horror
Hurricane Florence Got the Support Maria Deserved 10 SPORTS
7 ARTS
Race Seen Through Three Lenses
Sports Analytics Seeps Into NYU Locker Rooms
VOLUME LI | ISSUE 4
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2018
NYU Bets You Would Text a Therapist The Wellness Center rolled out text-based therapy, but its efficacy is still unproven. By ALEX DOMB News Editor American college students are at the forefront of a national crisis; in the past two decades, the prevalence of mental health issues has skyrocketed among young people. Students born in the 1990s and 2000s are lonelier, sadder and more anxious than their older counterparts. NYU is by no means immune — at least 18 students have committed suicide since 1990, including two medical school students within the span of five days last spring. The NYU Wellness Exchange hotline was established in 2004 to provide a 24/7 resource to students in need of immediate mental health support. As of this year, the Wellness Exchange offers a new service: an app allowing NYU students to chat with a therapist at any time of day or night. According to Zoe Ragouzeos, director of NYU’s Counseling and Wellness Services, the service is intended to cater to a demographic that prefers to communicate over text. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
TONY WU | WSN
CULTURE
Trans Women Find Their Pitch By KRISTINA HAYHURST News Editor
VIA NYUAD.NYU.EDU
Plant Parenthood: Starting a Green Family ON PAGE 4
As a child, Micah Prussack used to sing all the time. Her passion died after she transitioned. “I went out for karaoke night once with my friends and I realized for the first time, I can’t sing anymore. It’s really the moment when my voice no longer matches my body. Hormones didn’t change that.” Prussack, a 2018 Gallatin alumna, values her voice as an essential part of her
identity. Not being comfortable with her voice during her transition was a main source of anxiety. “In the beginning and middle of my transition, I never wanted to speak,” Prussack said. “I was a very talkative person before, and I kept asking myself, do I really have to sacrifice the essential nature of my being to also be myself?” This sort of disembodiment was one of the motivations for Deanna Kawitzky, alumna of Steinhardt’s Ph.D. program in Communication Sciences and Disorders and lead
author of a study that explored how trans women could reach a more authentic voice. Kawitzky collaborated with NYU Linguistics Professor Tara McAllister during her master’s program in Steinhardt’s Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders. The study began in fall 2013 and finished in summer 2016. The research, published in the latest issue of the Journal of Voice, aimed to find a viable technique to help trans women get their vocal resonant quality to be perceived as more feminine. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2