The Statesman: Volume 57 Issue 9

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The Statesman informing stony brook university for more than 50 years Monday, October 28, 2013

Volume LVII, Issue 9

sbstatesman.com

Student arrested after driving into H Quad bushes By Hanaa’ Tameez Assistant News Editor

ANUSHA MOOKHERJEE / THE STATESMAN

The student power and CleanTech seminar brought together both students and New York State leaders within the field of energy to help grow and develop business, government, academia, trade and professional society organizations.

New curbing, sidewalks and guardrails to improve safety

Green energy conference

Staff Writer

Lyrics like “keep on rocking in the carbon free world, keep on rocking in a green world” performed during a musical act by New York Sea Grant’s Communications Manager Barbara Branca comprised of the fifth-annual Energy & Environmental Conference’s main ideas. Friday’s event, hosted by Hauppauge Industrial Association of Long Island and held at the Wang Center, was moderated by David Winchester, Chief Learning Officer of CleanTech Rocks, and featured a panel of experts in the Clean Energy community. Winchester said every job is connected to the clean energy field. “Solar is a whole supply chain” he said. “It is not just solar panels and installation, there is engineering, there is components, there are all kinds of things that make solar power possible.” Panelist James Smith, assistant vice president of Economic Development at the Advanced Energy Research Center, agreed with Winchester, saying that “everything is energy, in a manufacturing domain, it takes energy to make a product and energy to transport a product,

By Kelly Zegers

Suffolk County completed installation of curbing, sidewalks and guardrails along Nicolls Road (County 97), from the North Entrance of the university to Route 25A last week, according to a press release. Hahn (District 5) worked to have the project included in the 2013-2015 Capital Budget under Suffolk County Capital Project 5497. “This project will protect pedestrians utilizing Nicolls Road and link the Stony Brook Univeristy campus to the greater community," Hahn said in the

press release. "By providing sidewalks here, pedestrians will no longer have to walk in a vehicle travel lane, which threatens their safety and impedes the flow of traffic.” The project was completed a year early. Civil Engineer for Suffolk County Department of Public Works Victor Keneiby said that the funds were made available for Project 5497 and the initiative’s timetable moved up as a priority. Legislator Hahn explained that she advocated for the project due to what she noticed during her time as President Continued on page 2

PHOTO CREDIT: LONGISLAND.COM

Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn said the new sidewalks will protect students walking on Nicolls road.

By Ryan Wolf Staff Writer

energy is in every form.” In the panel’s opinion, the conference’s focus on environmental problems has its origins in previous generations, and its solution’s only hope is in the younger generation. Between 1900 and 1970, nitrogen oxide emissions increased a total of 690 percent, and many other types of emissions increased similarly due to technological advances. Despite the efforts of environmental legislation like the 1970 Clean Air Act, reducing the damage has not totally solved the problem created in the last century. “You have to change the world. The world as we know it, we can no longer sustain,” Smith said. “My generation and the previous generation before me were highly inefficient. We used up most of your energy.” Sharing this hope in the “millennial generation” and looking at the environment’s current situation, panelist David Scheren, CEO of Empower Solar, noted “our political system is failing us, our leadership is failing us. We need to work a lot harder. It is up to this generation of students.” Speaking to the many students still considering their future,

Stony Brook University student Christopher Pimental was arrested early Friday morning for driving while intoxicated after police found his car in a bush in the H Quad parking lot, according to University Chief of Police Robert J. Lenahan. Lenahan said university police responded to a phone call about a car driving down the wrong side of the road without any lights near the athletic fields at approximately 12:10 a.m. The officers found Pimental attempting to remove his car from the bushes next to Benedict College. They asked him to roll down his window. Based on the initial conversation Pimental had with the officers, they asked him to step out of his vehicle. He complied and the officers came to the conclusion that he was under the influence of alcohol. Pimental was arrested but did not take a breathalyzer test at the scene of the accident. The Stony Brook Volunteer Ambulance Corps transported Pimental to Stony Brook University Hospital to be treated for intoxication. He was released back into university police custody sometime today and was later transferred to the Suffolk County criminal courts. SBVAC Vice President Max McDonnell said the organization is not able to make a comment on the accident at this time. Pimental is also a staff photographer for The Statesman.

HANAA' TAMEEZ/ THE STATESMAN

A white car crashes into the Continued on page 2 bushes behind H Quad.

News

Arts & Entertainment

Opinions

Sports

NASA plans to land another rover on the Red planet.

The Liar premieres on Nov. 14 at the Staller Center.

Pool denied to Seawolves swimming team.

Team drops third straight conference game.

MORE ON PAGE 4

MORE ON PAGE 7

Potential for former life on Mars

Play aims to bring laughs to Staller

Popularity of sports influence funding MORE ON PAGE 11

Football loses to UNH MORE ON PAGE 16


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