Spring 2016 Issue 8

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Friday, February 19, 2016 | Vol. LXXXIX, Issue 8 | Binghamton University | bupipedream.com

Celebrating 70 Years as the Free Word on Campus

EDITORIAL

STUDENT ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT DILLON SCHADE MUST RESIGN In his public apology for the racist language found on his Tinder profile, Student Association President Dillon Schade urged the student body to work with him to fight against racial inequality on our campus. He could better show his commitment to the cause by resigning the presidency. The series of events that unfolded over the past week were hard to believe. The student body watched as Schade’s Tinder account was revealed to contain a joke using the N-word. Initially, he claimed that the profile was not his, and later said that he had fallen victim to a malicious prank. Student groups reacted, with the Latin American Student Union, Women’s Student Union and Hillel — among others — signing on to a letter from the Black Student Union (BSU) calling for Schade’s immediate resignation, a formal apology and a dire need for change on Binghamton University’s campus. On Thursday, BSU hosted an open town hall meeting that also featured additional cultural groups and minority organizations, where many students publicly voiced their issues with Schade and their dissatisfaction with the current campus climate. Though the meeting was not open to the press, Pipe Dream received word from attendees that Schade plans to formally resign at Monday’s Congress meeting. However, until there is public confirmation, this information is only heresay. If indeed Schade intends to resign, the Editorial Board encourages him to do so with haste. The fact of the matter is that students do not feel comfortable with Schade as their president — and rightly so. Whether or not Schade is responsible for the language that appeared on his Tinder profile is not yet clear, but what is clear is that he is an elected representative who has lost the trust of a large segment of the students he represents. Every day that Schade remains president is a day that the Student Association cannot effectively do its job. He can no longer serve as the voice of the students to the administration and beyond when so many view his voice as tainted and not representative of their own. His presence in the SA is now a distraction and a hindrance, rather than a driving force. When Schade ran for his position last year, he made it clear his intentions were to do right by the student body both as a leader and a representative. There is certainly no doubt that he was committed to his job, but it is now completely clear that he is no longer fit for it. Schade must leave office for the same reason he took it — to help move Binghamton University forward.

The Editorial Board is composed of the Editor-in-Chief, News Editor, Opinions Editor, Arts & Culture Editor and Sports Editor.

Pharmacy dean hosts first town hall Groups call Gloria Meredith updates local community on plans for Johnson City health sciences complex

Gabriella Weick Assistant News Editor

Founding Dean Gloria Meredith presented the progress of the upcoming Binghamton University School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences in a town hall meeting on Tuesday. Administration, media and community members gathered in the Old University Union Hall to ask questions and learn about the new graduate school. Meredith said the school will welcome its first class in fall 2017, pending the award of pre-candidate status from the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education later this year. “When we first heard about the project, we thought, ‘oh, 2017, that’s so far away,’” she said. “And now we’re talking about possibly recruiting students this summer. So it grows fast, and the whole area will grow around it.” Each class in the four-year

pharmaceutical doctorate program will hold 85 to 90 students. In addition, there will be 30 to 50 Ph.D. candidates in pharmaceutical sciences and 32 full-time faculty and additional adjunct faculty. In-state tuition is set to be $24,400 each year. The new school, which will be located on Corliss Avenue in Johnson City, will be across the street from UHS Wilson Medical Center and close to Lourdes Hospital, which Meredith said will be beneficial for clinical practice and residencies. In addition, due to the Southern Tier’s Upstate Revitalization Initiative win, the Decker School of Nursing will be relocating to the former Endicott-Johnson Shoe Company factory building on the Pharmacy School property. Meredith, who was hired in April 2015, said she and her team have been hard at work, and construction and hirings are ahead of schedule. She said

she will continue to hold town halls to update the community and clear up any misconceptions. “People on campus and in the community hear things about a new school … the information isn’t always correct,” she said. “People can come to a meeting like a town hall and learn more about the reality of the school and what the school is really going to be.” The curriculum for the Pharmacy School will feature classes in pharmaceutical management, hospital practice and pharmacoeconomics. The new health sciences complex will include a simulation lab to practice administering medication to responsive electronic mannequins, mock community pharmacies and mock hospital pharmacies. The school, Meredith said, will not require a bachelor’s degree for admission, but will require scores from the Pharmacy College Admissions Test (PCAT) and

prerequisite classes. A pathways program will also be created between Harpur College and the Pharmacy School, creating six- and seven-year undergraduate-to-pharmaceuticaldoctorate programs. Meredith also stressed the importance of the intra-school research and relations the new school will have with not only the Decker School of Nursing, but with schools across BU. “I’m excited for what this is going to do for biomedical research on campus; I think this is going to create an exponential increase,” said Donald Nieman, the provost of academic affairs. “There’s a lot of excitement and interest from faculty across [schools] about the potential research synergies with the School of Pharmacy.” Attendees like Ron Goodwin, a community member, said they appreciated

SEE DEAN PAGE 2

Residence halls to close over '17 Parade Day weekend

New mid-semester break prompts students to circulate a petition to keep dorms open Pelle Waldron Assistant News Editor

Every March, thousands of Binghamton University students pack the streets of Downtown for Parade Day. In 2017, this might not be the case. The University released the academic calendar for spring 2017, in which an early mid-semester break is scheduled from March 3-8. Parade Day will be on March 4, but because BU has a break, all residence halls will be closed, meaning that students living on campus will not have a place to stay if they choose to remain in Binghamton for Parade Day. Although many students living on campus are under drinking age,

this will inconvenience all those who live on University grounds and wish to attend. One BU junior, who requested anonymity because he feared being directly associated with the petition, started a petition on the website Change.org that calls for BU president Harvey Stenger and the University administration to keep residence halls open over that weekend. Over 45 people had signed the petition as of Thursday night. “President Stenger, with all [due] respect we as a student body strongly protest you closing campus during the weekend of 3/3/17-3/5/17, and hereby request that you allow students the choice to decide how and what they do

ARTS & CULTURE

CollegeHumor Live performs stand-up and sketch comedy at the Osterhout Concert Theater,

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with their personal lives,” the petition reads. Donald Nieman, the BU provost, chaired the committee responsible for the calendar. According to him, breaks were added in order to ease student workloads throughout the semester, but he did not clarify whether Parade Day was considered. “For years, we have heard from both students and parents that the academic calendar interferes with holidays and that spring break falls too late in the semester to provide the break from academic pressures that students — and faculty — need,” Nieman wrote in an email. “The new calendar will remedy that and help students succeed academically — the overriding goal of

the committee.” The petition states that students do believe the dates of Parade Day were taken into account. According to the student who wrote the petition, students will be missing out on a signature aspect of BU culture. “I think Parade Day is a huge part of the Binghamton community,” the student said. “Part of the appeal is that everybody is everywhere, you walk down the street, you see hundreds of people you know; it would be really unfortunate I think if something was done that stopped that.” Larry Shea, the owner of State Street bar Tom and Marty’s, said that while

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SA President faces backlash for language found on Tinder profile Alexandra Mackof News Editor

The Black Student Union (BSU) hosted an open town hall meeting on Thursday evening to further its call for Student Association (SA) President Dillon Schade’s resignation. Pipe Dream was prohibited from covering the meeting. However, in an email sent to student organizations — including Pipe Dream — BSU announced the intention of the meeting and requested that groups send information to their Listservs. “The climate on this campus continues to be hostile towards minority groups, and as the President of the Student Association, Dillon sets the example for what is representative of, and acceptable from a Binghamton University student,” BSU wrote in the email. “As such, we feel it’s important that we collectively discuss a course of action to take in regards to the situation, as well as discussing prospects for candidacy for the Student Association and Congress in the 2016-2017 year.” BSU posted a letter on its Facebook page Tuesday night, calling for a formal apology and Schade’s resignation. The request came after the discovery of a Tinder profile appearing to belong to Schade, on which the phrase “if you’re a nigga, then I’m a nigga” was written in the description. The letter was initially supported by the Men of Color Scholastic Society, Haitian Student Association, Juvenile Urban Multicultural Program Nation and the Latin American Student Union, and

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OPINIONS

Check out Pipe Dream’s coverage of the 58th annual Grammy Awards,

for Schade's resignation

SEE SA PAGE 2

SPORTS

A guest columnist discusses the need to change the conversation around sexual assault,

Men’s basketball fails to sustain momentum in second half against Vermont,

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Men’s lacrosse set to open 2016 on Saturday at Colgate,

See bupipedream.com/sports


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