The Statesman informing stony brook university for more than 50 years Monday, November 25, 2013
Volume LVII, Issue 13
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Stony Brook fires Jim Fiore By Mike Daniello Sports Editor
Stony Brook Athletic Director Jim Fiore is leaving the university, according to a release from the school Tuesday night. The statement also related that Senior Associate Athletic Director Donna Woodruff will serve as the Interim Athletic Director as they look for a replacement. Fiore has been bought out by the university. They will be paying his contractual salary of nearly $800,000 for next 31 months through June 30, 2016, according to an emailed statement from Fiore. According to Fiore’s personal public relations representative Mike Conte, the buyout was not a mutual decision. Conte also says that Fiore has not been informed of any disciplinary action. “I have had nearly 11 wonderful years at Stony Brook and I am incredibly proud for all of the experiences I have had in building the University and our emerging Division 1 program. Facilities have been modernized, recruiting has been professionalized, and prospective student-athletes now see Stony Brook as an enviable destination and the University’s brand is nationally recognized,” according to Fiore’s statement. Fiore’s name has been removed from the athletic site, Goseawolves. org, and his Wikipedia page has been updated. It comes as an odd time for Fiore to leave, as the men and women’s basketball teams just started their seasons. Rumors floated around previously about Fiore moving to a bigger school, like Rutgers University, but nothing came of it. He is credited with growing the program and has upgraded the facilities as well. Fiore upgraded Pritchard Gymnasium along with the University Track and University Tennis Courts. He also redid the baseball field and renamed it after Joe Nathan after receiving a donation from the All-Star closer. Fiore was named Athletic Director on July 23, 2003, after previously holding the title of Senior Associate Director of Athletics at Princeton University. He graduated from Long Beach High School and earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from Hofstra University, where he also played for the football team. When asked about the matter, Lauren Sheprow responded with “It is University policy not to comment on personnel matters.” Joe Galotti contributed reporting to this story.
NINA LIN / THE STATESMAN
Stony Brook University is looking nationwide for a new athletic director after Jim Fiore was abruptly relieved of his duties on Tuesday, Nov. 19. For more information on Fiore's influence on Stony Brook Athletics, see page 16.
Stony Brook unites multiple disciplinaries for new NASA project By Chris Woods Staff Writer
NASA chose Stony Brook University to lead one of nine new Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI) teams, which are set to virtually explore the final frontier through multiple systems of earth, planetary and space research.
ultimately enable human space exploration, primarily investigate questions relating to the Moon, near-earth asteroids and the Martian moons Phobos and Deimos. While the project primarily involves geological research, Glotch is excited for the multidisciplinary contributions it will incorporate. “At the very top level what we
PHOTO CREDIT: STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY
Timothy Glotch is a professor in the Department of Geosciences the principal investigator for the RIS4E project at Stony Brook. Timothy Glotch, associate professor in the Department of Geosciences, will be leading Stony Brook’s $5.5 million, five-year NASA-funded project “Remote, In Situ and Synchrotron Studies for Science and Exploration” (RIS4E). RIS4E will consist of scientists from 13 international institutions, and, in an effort to
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want to do is do some basic science that will help us understand more about the formation and evolution of the Moon, the moons of Mars, Phobos and Deimos, and asteroids,” Glotch said. “Within the university we have folks from pharmacology, working with geology professor Martin A.A. Schoonen on a
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medical geology aspect; we have a professor at physics who's a laser physicist, to make sure we don't shoot our eyes out." RIS4E will be split into four different components, beginning with remote sensing, or interpreting information from space probes and spacecrafts, training astronauts as geologists through simulated human space exploration, research in medical geology, like the short and long-term health effects of space dust on astronauts and finally, using Brookhaven National Laboratory’s National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II). This is one of the brightest x-ray beam sources in the world, and will be used to research issues like space weathering when the laser goes online in 2015. Glotch believes that by training in simulated conditions like Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano, astronauts will acquire geological skills necessary for human space exploration. “If you look at the make-up of a typical astronaut class, some are medical doctors, some have some sort of scientific training, but a huge percentage of them are military test pilots, and they don't really have much geological field training,” Glotch said. “One thing that [we’ve done and will do] in the upcoming SSERVI project is make traverse plans.” The scientists intend to have a
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map of the terrain and a list of the equipment, allowing them to plan for the number of samples from a certain area space able to be collected. “If we're in Hawaii we have a week to do all this stuff, we'll get all the samples and data we'll need, but if we're sending an astronaut to the moon or an asteroid, you've got to plan things out very, very particularly, down to the minute or down to the second, so that you don't waste any time,” Glotch said. Glotch also believes that medical geology, while not an obvious combination of fields, is necessary because of the often unknown consequences of breathing in minerals, as in the case of coal miners and the black lung. One aspect of this program then, according to Glotch, is to figure out how that dust may affect the health of astronauts. “Anytime you go out of a spacecraft and go back in there's the possibility of dust getting back into the spacecraft and eventually into the air and into the astronaut's lungs,” Glotch said. “If you ever get a chance, go down to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, they have some of the old Apollo astronaut flightsuits and they're filthy, they're disgusting, they're just covered with this grey sooty dust.” Dr Stella Tsirka will work with Continued on page 5 Sports
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