Fall 2016 Issue 16

Page 1

Students flock to fall concert for Tuesday, October 25, 2016 | Vol. XC, Issue 16 | Binghamton University | bupipedream.com

see page 8

Celebrating 70 Years as the Free Word on Campus

Issues of race on campus explored

Students protest Fetty Wap Concert

Groups examine state of racial tensions in higher education across the country

BSU organizes protest against fall concert headliner after violent video surfaces in 2015

Samuel Abaev & Joseph Cunningham

Amy Donovan Staff Writer

Contributing Writers

Over 30 students gathered outside the Events Center on Friday evening in protest of the fall concert headliner, Fetty Wap, who was recorded on video last year threatening the life of the mother of his child. In November 2015, a video surfaced of Fetty Wap threatening the woman, Lezhae Zeona. No charges were filed, but a video of the incident circulated on social media. Monet Schultz, the president of the Black Student Union (BSU) and a junior majoring in sociology, said that she and other students were protesting Fetty Wap because of his violent actions against the woman and the implications that brings to Binghamton University. “Fetty Wap is a perpetuator of violence against women, specifically the mother of his child,” Schultz said. “We’re here to

SEE WAP PAGE 2

didn’t really care where they went; they just needed to go where everyone else was going to be.” Appelbaum excelled in his ventures by acting as an intermediary between customers and companies. The dry cleaning delivery business, Cleaner Options, provided a service that benefitted dry cleaning businesses as well as customers, as he would take care of transportation between the two. “Through the genesis of a lot of these ideas, it was ‘how do I come up with an

In an attempt to identify and analyze race-related issues at Binghamton University, three administrative organizations hosted over 30 students and faculty in the Old University Union on Thursday night to discuss race relations in higher education. The public deliberation, titled “The State of Race at Binghamton University,” was a collaborative effort by the Division of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI), the Office of the Dean of Students and SUNY Broome’s President’s Task Force, who sought to further understand and publicize the issues of racism and incivility which have plagued college campuses in recent years. In her introduction to the program, Lea Webb, event organizer and DEI diversity specialist, explained why she believes addressing racism and incivility

SEE AA PAGE 2

SEE STATE PAGE 2

Pelle Waldron/Assistant News Editor Students from the entrepreneurship learning community in Johnson Hall of Dickinson Community engage with technology at Uncubed, a digital skills and job conference in New York City.

Seamless founder gives talk in NYC Andy Appelbaum, '88, spoke with students about his various start ups Pelle Waldron Assistant News Editor

After graduating from Binghamton University, Andy Appelbaum, ‘88, enrolled at New York University School of Law and went on to work at a law firm called Latham and Watkins. However, just one year into his professional career, Appelbaum left the firm to start a dry cleaning delivery service. His subsequent string of entrepreneurial endeavors included founding Seamless, the nation’s largest online and mobile food ordering

company. Now, he is a venture capitalist for RiverPark Ventures. Applebaum spoke to a group of 30 BU students on Tuesday in New York City, as a part of a full-day trip in which they attended a job fair and heard from various innovators and entrepreneurs. Thinking back to his days at BU, Appelbaum said he always had a mind for innovation despite his pre-law track. “I think that deep somewhere down in my heart I was always sort of a version of an entrepreneur,” Appelbaum said. “I used to promote bars in Binghamton. I would hire underclassmen, and people

Visiting professor talks about making math accessible Co-host of Steven Strogatz explores benefits of applying mathematics to everyday life and experiences Sarah Rahman Contributing Writer

Steven Strogatz, the Jacob Gould Schurman professor of applied mathematics at Cornell University, spoke about communicating math to the general public on Friday in the Science I Building. His talk, “Doing Math in Public,” was the first in a series of lectures organized by the Binghamton University Writing Initiative and BU’s department of biological sciences that deal with scientific writing. The talks are open to any student who is interested in attending and are spread throughout the academic year. Strogatz’s has written a number of books such as “The Joy of x: A Guided Tour of Math, from One to Infinity,” “Sync,” “The Calculus of Friendship: What a Teacher and a Student Learned about Life while Corresponding

about Math” and others, which help communicate mathematic ideas to non-scientists. Writing these books led him to be acquainted with David Shipley, an editor working at the New York Times at the time, who asked him to write a series of columns in 2010. The aim of these columns was to bring an appreciation for math to people who never understood math or who missed out on all of its uses. “That was the pitch,” Strogatz said. “Could I write something, not to teach people how to do algebra, but to show them why algebra is worth knowing in the first place.” In the process of writing these columns, Strogatz learned through trial-and-error which communication tactics were effective and which weren’t. These lessons were the main topic of his talk at BU. The first thing he talked about was humor and how it

could lighten up the topic and make it seem less intimidating. He also spoke about the importance of empathy and being compassionate toward the reader or audience. “One way to do that, to empathize, is to put yourself in the place of the confused person and be a little confused yourself,” Strogatz said. “Show that it’s okay to be mixed up and that mistakes are instructive, and you can learn a lot by making mistakes. Then get past it and learn.” The single most effective technique Strogatz said he found, however, was to give his readers a sense of wonder. “Give them a flash of illumination, if you can,” Strogatz said. “Do not teach. Teaching works if the person wants to learn, but this is a possibly hostile audience — they’re seeing math in the paper. Why are they going to read this? Because you’re going to delight them. You’re going to give them an ‘aha!’

moment.” Some other techniques mentioned were relating math to familiar experiences and using visual aids. For example, while explaining the concept of Bayes’ theorum, a difficult part of probability theory, he spoke about the chances of a woman having breast cancer, which group she fell in — most likely or least likely — and the overall accuracy of the test that delivered the results. By relating math to a problem everyone is concerned with, it added relevance to the information provided. Nick Gardner, a first-year graduate student studying math, said the talk was helpful for him as he is always looking for ways to communicate ideas. “I help teach Math 148, which is statistics for biology majors, and so it’s kind of the perfect math class for making math accessible to people,”

SEE MATH PAGE 4

BU Council hears from athletics, admissions

University governing body recieves updates on vision for future from departments on campus Allison Detzel Contributing Writer

The Binghamton University Council met Friday morning in the Couper Administration Building to discuss current events and plans for the upcoming school year. The state of the athletic department and admissions were among the topics discussed, along with reports from BU President Harvey Stenger and BU Council student representative Ryan Sheppard, a first-year graduate student in accounting. Stenger began his remarks with news of record-breaking Family Weekend and Homecoming Weekend

registration numbers. Family Weekend had 5,000 people registered to return to campus, 400 of which were alumni and parents of current students, while Homecoming Weekend had 1,400 alumni registered. Stenger also focused on a visit from one alum in particular, Sierra Club President Aaron Mair. “[Mair] was also an EOP student here,” Stenger said. “[He is] an outstanding speaker, very passionate person about the environment and gave a very good presentation.” He also discussed the BU Excellence Awards, the WHRW anniversary, the Zurak Family High-Technology Collaboration Center, the anonymous baseball donation and funding for the

ARTS & CULTURE

The Black Dance Repertoire hosted its “Circus: Freak Show” dance competition on Saturday afternoon,

See page 9

alumni lounge. Stenger closed his remarks with mention of Terrell Strayhorn, a professor at The Ohio State University. Strayhorn spoke at resident assistant training over the summer, as well as to faculty, about a sense of belonging on a college campus. Stenger said he appreciated Strayhorn’s emphasis on belonging and said he believes a focus on this connection will improve life for students at BU. “[We want to] kind of understand how this sense of belonging, which is really the connection between students, but also between students and faculty,

SEE COUNCIL PAGE 4

Katherine Scott/Photography Editor BU Director of Athletics Patrick Elliott delivers the annual athletics report in the Couper Administration Building. The Binghamton University Council met to discuss future and current events.

OPINIONS

Student-owned yoga studio caters to community members and students alike,

See page 9

Contributing columnist Hooman Ibrahim advocates for recognition of a Kurdish nation,

See page 10

'The View' discusses career path Sunny Hostin, '90, went from career as lawyer to working at CNN, Fox and ABC Andrea Papp Contributing Writer

Students gathered in the Fleishman Center for Career and Professional Development to listen to Binghamton University alumna Sunny Hostin speak as part of Harpur Edge’s Cool Connections/Hot Alumni series. On Wednesday afternoon Hostin, ’90, discussed her career path of becoming a co-host of “The View,” a multi-platform journalist and a lawyer. She said students should relate her story to their lives and encouraged questions. As a native New Yorker, Hostin grew up in the Bronx with what she said was a supportive family. Her first career steps began when she was accepted to the EOP program and received a scholarship to attend BU at the age of 16. She said she enjoyed learning and was capable of taking an accelerated route because of her determination, having skipped fourth grade. A year into her biology major, Hostin said she realized that science was not her true passion. She said she had a strong affinity for reading, writing and telling people’s stories, and subsequently decided to change

SEE SH PAGE 4

SPORTS

Men’s soccer falls to Vermont, loses ground in playoff race,

Volleyball sweeps Albany for second straight victory,

See page 11

See page 11


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.