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Monday, May 8, 2017 | Vol. XCI, Issue 28 | Binghamton University | bupipedream.com
SPRING FLING 2017 Raquel Panitz/Pipe Dream Photographer and Katherine Scott/Pipe Dream Photographer
Mac Miller and Ty Dolla $ign perform at this year’s Spring Fling concert on Saturday night.
School of Nursing to offer clinic for smokers Adam Wilkes Decker to provide services to students, faculty for transition to tobacco-free campus to represent students on BU Council Jillian Forstadt
Pipe Dream News
Starting on Aug. 1, Binghamton University’s campus will be tobacco-free. For the many students and faculty who will be affected by this change of policy, the Decker School of Nursing is providing a free and confidential clinic to accommodate those dealing with the symptoms of withdrawal. The ban, announced in May 2016, prohibits the use or sale of tobacco or tobacco-derived products on any University owned, operated or leased property, including cigarettes and electronic cigarettes. The policy states that it will serve as a means to promote the health, well-being and safety of students, faculty,
staff and visitors at the University. BU’s Healthy Practices Clinic, located in Academic Building B Room 331 and available for scheduled and walk-in appointments on Mondays and Thursdays, was derived from the Decker School of Nursing’s Interdisciplinary Tobacco Use Research Program (ITURP). Geraldine Britton, an assistant professor of nursing and the director of ITURP, said that the program aims to help decrease tobacco use, especially as the popularity of alternative forms is rising. “Our mission really is to empower individuals toward making informed health decisions, promote a healthier lifestyle, increase public awareness regarding
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Junior recieves 771 votes in election, will help oversee, govern University operations Orlaith McCaffrey Vera Wahlquist/Contributing Photographer Jae Chung, a junior double-majoring in nursing and psychology, attends to a patient while tabling for the Interdisciplinary Tobacco Use Research Program in the Marketplace on Thursday.
overall, 853 students voted for professors in three distinct categories: an instructor who taught larger undergraduate courses (more than 150 students), smaller undergraduate courses (fewer than 150 students) and graduate courses. Three hundred and eighty-four Harpur instructors were nominated, representing every department within Harpur College. Hua, who teaches an ecology course this semester, won the award for smaller undergraduate courses and said that research has informed her teaching style. In class, she breaks the information down, emphasizing why students should care
Adam Wilkes, a junior double-majoring in economics and sociology, was elected student representative of the Binghamton University Council on Thursday. The BU Council is a group of nine area professionals appointed by the New York state governor and one student elected by his peers. It is tasked with overseeing certain University operations, including reviewing student conduct regulations, approving budget requests and recommending candidates for University president to the SUNY Board of Trustees. In 2011, members of the council recommended three candidates, including BU President Harvey Stenger, from the five that had been chosen by the search committee, to SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher, who made the final decision. Council elections were conducted by email Thursday by the Planning, Research and Elections Committee of the Student Association (SA). The two candidates were Wilkes and Brian Garcia, a sophomore majoring in political science. Forty percent of the vote was required to win. Wilkes received 771 votes (45.9 percent) while Garcia garnered 583 (34.7 percent) and write-in candidates won
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Seniors showcase work in 2017 winners of Harpur Capstone Project course Teaching Awards named Over 100 students present research to friends, family, faculty before graduation
Jessica Hua, Qiusheng Wu, Samuel Elikem Kwame Nyamuame recognized
Alexandra Hupka
Stacey Blansky
News Intern
On Sunday, approximately 100 students gathered in the Innovative Technologies Complex to showcase their work in the Watson Capstone Projects, a class in which seniors majoring in mechanical, electrical and computer engineering work in interdisciplinary teams to find solutions to problems with real-world applications. The showcase gives students an opportunity to present their work before graduating. Melissa Simonik, a second-year graduate student studying mechanical engineering and the organizer of the showcase event, said that she was inspired to introduce a showcase event to
Binghamton University after she began her role as a teaching assistant (TA) for the Watson Capstone Project course. Looking back on her own undergraduate experience, she said the senior project was an important step in attaining a degree at a research university, and that it deserved to be celebrated. “During my undergrad at Union College, our senior project was such a big deal,” Simonik said. “When I started as a TA for this class, I was surprised that we didn’t have anything like that. They’re really cool projects, so they deserve to be shown off. I think it will give students more motivation to work on them if they
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ARTS & CULTURE
Pipe Dream News
Each year, students in Binghamton University’s Harpur College of Arts and Sciences nominate professors for Harpur College Teaching Awards, which recognize instructors who teach in a way that students find meaningful, challenging and enjoyable. Jessica Hua, an assistant professor of biology; Qiusheng Wu, an assistant professor of geography; and Samuel Elikem Kwame Nyamuame, a visiting assistant professor in the theatre and Africana studies departments, each received awards this past March. With 1,285 submissions received
Pipe Dream News
OPINIONS
SPORTS
Mac DeMarco offers up mature sound on “This Old Dog,”
“Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” kicks off the summer movie season,
Four seniors sign off in their final columns,
Baseball sweeps UMass Lowell and earns fifth straight victory,
Softball held to two runs in doubleheader against Stony Brook,
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