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Spring 2024 Issue 19

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Tuesday, March 26, 2024 | Vol. CII, Issue 19 | Binghamton University | bupipedream.com

The Free Word on Campus Since 1946

Anne Bailey shares background, research at SAPB Professor Spotlight Speakers share voyages at Odyssey-themed conference event

See sPeaKer Q&as page 2

Her accomplished career has included extensive research, several published books and a United Nations speech. Nuala Kappel

news contributor

To celebrate both Black History Month and Women’s History Month, the Student Association Programming Board (SAPB) hosted the latest event in its Professor Spotlight series. Held on Thursday in the Lecture Hall, the event featured Anne Bailey, a professor of history and accomplished author who has spoken at the United Nations. Bailey’s distinguished

academic career has included extensive research in African, AfricanAmerican and Caribbean Studies, and members of the campus community listened to her speak about her youth, background and published works. Chelsea Kaden, the SAPB’s insights chair and a senior majoring in integrative neuroscience, described her goals of promoting diversity and inclusion. “I hope to give [Bailey] a platform to speak not only about the content of her work, but her passion for it,” Kaden wrote in an email. “Understanding how our professor[s] found their appreciation for their field of study can expand our appreciation for it as well.”

See bailey page 3

The conference’s speakers described fundamental changes they made in their academic pursuits, careers and lives. Tyler Brechner

news contributor

TEDxBinghamtonUniversity held its 14th-annual conference, themed “Odyssey,” on Sunday in the Fine Arts Building’s Chamber Hall. This year’s speakers sought to center their talks around “breaking barriers and trailblazing forward toward a new

future,” and audience members were given the opportunity to network with them following the event. Each speaker made fundamental changes in their careers, academic pursuits or lives that can inspire attendees, according to Jay Yong, TEDxBinghamtonUniversity’s vice president and director of sponsorship and a sophomore double-majoring in accounting and psychology. TEDxBinghamtonUniversity, an independent affiliate of TED — an international nonprofit organization that hosts speakers and creates online video programs about various scientific, political and cultural topics has organized

conferences at BU since 2014, booking both student and professional speakers. This year, the organization showcased six speakers, including three current students and an alumna. “As they explore the uncharted territories in their lives and careers, we wish to inspire, enlighten and motivate our audience and spread the message of perseverance and courage,” the TEDx website said.

See odyssey page 3

Dynamic choreography takes center stage The two dance performances were inspired by “Oedipus Rex” and Dante’s “Inferno.” Deborah Sridhar

arts & cuLture writer

blake derossi contributing photographer The event featured two dance performances, one of which was inspired by “Oedipus Rex” and the other by Dante Alighieri’s “Inferno.”

The department of theatre at Binghamton University showcased one of its spring studio projects, In The Works - Choreography, producing two captivating performances — “Andha - The Blind” and “Pandemonium.” Performed in Studio A at BU’s Fine Arts Building from March 21 to March 23 at 8 p.m. and March 24 at 2 p.m., the ushers welcomed the eager audience half an hour before the curtains went up, with dim lights and silence creating an air of anticipation. The production began with the choreography of “Andha - The Blind,” a dance drama inspired by Sophocles’ “Oedipus Rex,” in which the protagonist, Oedipus,

is prophesied to kill his father and marry his own mother. Departing from the Greek influences of the play, director and choreographer Jithendra Vidyapathy, a first-year graduate student in the theatre program, experimented with the performance by including influences from South Asian culture. “To bring this production to life, I have incorporated both dance and vocal dialogues,” Vidyapathy wrote in an email. “The choreography is a blend of Sri Lankan classical Kandyan dance form, contemporary dance, Indian dance and freestyle dance with gestures to convey the story. However, in some scenes, I have used text to help the audience understand the story.”

See stage page 6

HPC presents ‘Radium Girls’

Wrestling finishes season at NCAA Championships

The production leaned into important themes of worker rights while depicting 1920s music and clothes.

DePrez, Day, Cassella, record two wins each to cap off 2023-24 season.

Grace Flandreau

arts & cuLture writer

Over the weekend, Hinman Production Company (HPC) put on “Radium Girls,” a play about the girls who worked with paint containing radium in the 1920s. The production included themes such as workers’ rights, scientific discovery and moral shortcomings. The play follows a girl named Grace Fryer as she struggles to

fight for justice after discovering that the radium paint she had used to paint clocks for the United States Radium Corporation was harming both her and her fellow workers. It was not known at the time, but radium is extremely dangerous, despite having positive results when treating cancer. Grace Fryer was portrayed by Jessica Knaster, a sophomore majoring in psychology. Knaster explained how she was able to bring her character to life over the run of the show.

See HPC page 6

ARTS & CULTURE

Luca Carrese

sports contributor

The Binghamton men’s wrestling team finished its 2023-2024 season at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Championships with junior Brevin Cassella, graduate student Jacob Nolan, graduate student Lou DePrez and graduate student Cory Day representing the Bearcats. Cassella, DePrez and Day picked up two wins each, the first time since 2012 that Binghamton has had three wrestlers win two

matches at the NCAAs. “It’s always an amazing experience,” said Binghamton head coach Kyle Borshoff. “Hopefully for our guys we have left, it drives them to be more successful in the future. It is the best wrestling event in the world, hands down. I’m proud and thankful for [Cassella, Nolan, DePrez and Day] to have all gotten back there again this season.” With two wins, Cassella became the first Bearcat with 30 wins in a season since DePrez won 33 matches during the 2018-2019 season. Cassella shut out his opponent from Virginia Tech 5-0 before suffering an 11-3 loss by major decision against his Penn State opponent,

OPINIONS

the eventual NCAA runner-up. In the consolation bracket, Cassella narrowly defeated his Indiana opponent 1-0 before a loss to his Oklahoma State opponent ended his season. “[Cassella] had a great year,” Borshoff said. “I think he made a lot of improvements. Notably, beating the Virginia Tech guy in the first round at nationals this year, that was the guy who knocked us out of the tournament last year and tightened the match up with the Penn State guy from earlier in the season. It was overall a really nice season with a number of really good wins over nationally ranked opponents.”

See wrestling page 10

SPORTS

“Dune: Part Two” is an absolute treat to catch in theaters,

BU alumna Angie Cruz discusses her novel “How Not to Drown in a Glass of Water,”

Read about nuclear war and voting,

Men’s lacrosse defeats NJIT on the road,

Women’s lacrosse completes comback against UMass Lowell,

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