Categories
News

Campus rallies against sexual assault

By Nicki Briggs

Writer

Students, staff and administrators took a stand “for a better Bucknell” by participating in “Take Back the Night,” an effort to spread awareness of sexual assault and domestic violence, especially as it relates to improving the University’s campus climate.

Thursday Nov. 10 began with “The Double-Take Project,” a performance directed by Christina Cody ’12 that told personal stories from students who had approached her earlier in the semester. These students offered different perspectives of life at the University and of their experiences with sexual violence on campus. The room was somber when President John Bravman stepped up to the microphone after the last story was told.

“Look what’s happened just 70 miles from here, in the last 10 days,” Bravman said, referring to the recent incidents at Penn State and how they occurred as a result of powerful men choosing not to speak publicly of the mistakes made by their colleagues.

“[The truth] always comes out in the end,” he said.

Bravman made it very clear that he has no intention for the University to ignore its own issues. “There are only two types of schools in the country.  Those that have the issues we do and refuse to talk about them, and those that have the problems we do and will do their best to fix them and become stronger because it,” Bravman said.  “We will talk about this publicly for as long as it takes to fix it.”

Student leaders also gave speeches, including Interfraternity Council president Michael Higgins ’12, Panhallenic president Anna MacAlister ’12 and Bucknell Student Government president Phil Kim ’12. Each speaker sent a different message to the assembly, and each was met with silence as the power of their words settled.

“There are three things you can do,” Mollie Morris ’12 said, as she spoke about how small changes can help others to feel more comfortable on campus.  “You can listen, you can support, and you can believe.”

MacAlister spoke about sexual violence at the University. 

“We are all equally responsible to make sure that no one on campus feels unsafe,” she said.  She went on to share shocking statistics about sexual violence on campus and to provide examples that illustrated her message.

The night concluded in a silent walk down to Smith quad from the Weis Center for the Performing Arts. 

“We march now, so that we may not have to march again in the future,” Kim said.

Various campus a cappella groups were stationed at different spots along the walk. They sang as students walked until they reached the Academic Quad and formed a circle where they could see all of the other students who had chosen to walk “for a Better Bucknell.”

Categories
News

University receives KEEN grant to strengthen engineering

By Meghan Finlayson

Staff Writer

This past summer, the Kern Family Foundation gave the University a $75,000 grant to be used over two years. The grant was created for engineers to promote an action-oriented entrepreneurial mindset.

The Kern Family Foundation focuses its funding towards long-term programs that promote systemic change. The Foundation created the Kern Entrepreneurship Education Network (KEEN) in 2005 as a collegiate initiative to increase the quantity and quality of U.S. engineering talent. The longterm goal of the program is to help students learn how to contribute economic and technical commerce in their communities.

“[The grant] fundamentally provides support to the College of Engineering for introducing students to a more entrepreneurially-minded approach to their engineering education through course work, speakers and site visits,” Dean Keith Buffinton said.

The KEEN program supports select private U.S. colleges and universities that offer strong engineering programs. The University was one of five universities selected this year.

“We were selected to become part of the KEEN group through a competitive proposal process,” Buffinton said.

“Bucknell’s reputation in undergraduate engineering education certainly helped get the attention of the Kern Family Foundation. Also, many of our faculty in engineering are very active in sharing ideas through conference presentations and publishing their work in journals,” said David Foreman, Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations.

The College of Engineering has many plans to make the most of the funds from the grant.

“Our goal is to expose 100 percent of our engineering students to an entrepreneurial mindset,” Buffinton said.

There are plans underway for a program in January that will feature students coming together to work on a project related to one of the ‘grand challenges’ identified by the National Academy of Engineering.

“We’re planning on having a one and a half-week multidisciplinary design experience for freshmen and sophomores. The students will work in teams composed of peers in different disciplines in engineering to address a relevant problem that affects global society and create a proof-of-concept prototype [displaying their ideas],” said Charles Kim, assistant professor of mechanical engineering.

As a result of this program, “they will learn about major issues in technology and society that include innovation, sustainability, biotechnology, and energy,” he said.

The funding will also go towards courses such as ENGR 100, campus speakers on innovation and entrepreneurship and field trips to visit businesses and corporations.

“Faculty members will also have the opportunity to develop new teaching methods that they learn from workshops and collaborative activities with pedagogy experts and faculty at other institutions. This will improve courses with the infusion of new ideas,” Foreman said.

The College of Engineering is brainstorming ideas on how it can continue to make the most of the grant.

“The staff at the Kern Family Foundation wants to work with us and develop ideas and programs that fit our needs … [it] also provides us access to a network of diverse institutions. We can share ideas and both teach and learn from innovators in engineering education,” Foreman said.

“There were a lot of great ideas that came out of the summer institute in the College of Engineering that are still under development,” Kim said.

The grant is not only a great achievement for the College of Engineering, but for the University as a whole. 

“Bucknell is well known for innovative, active and collaborative teaching and learning. We are using our strength in those areas and working with the KFF to continue to build ourselves as educators,” Buffington said.

Categories
News

Pompliano ’12 launches The Community Corkboard

By Alexander Slavitz

Contributing Writer

For many students, the thought of graduating brings a lot of fear. Questions like, “What if I can’t get a job when I graduate?” or “What if the best job I can get isn’t good enough?” become constant obsessions. For Anthony Pompliano ’12, these thoughts are irrelevant. As of Nov. 1, Pompliano and three friends have launched a company called The Community Corkboard. Instead of looking for a job, he has created one.

“[The Community Corkboard] brings the face to face interaction people have into an online community,” Pompliano said.

The Community Corkboard is an online business that compiles an index of students, alumni and university supporters. It allows private schools to sign up for free and the Corkboard will build the directory themselves. Parents, alumni and other supporters can join this community by paying a monthly fee and a majority of the profits are then donated back to the school. The community also has a job board where the school and supporters can post new work opportunities.

To many students, the idea of creating a business might seem a bit daunting, but to Pompliano, this should not be a concern.

“I wish more students took the time to try to start a business. People have good ideas. You never know unless you try. When I started out, I had no idea how to run a business, but I’ve learned more in the past seven months than I have in any classroom,” Pompliano said.

Pompliano admitted that starting a business does require certain “life skills.” For him, serving in the military for two years between his sophomore and junior years led him to develop those qualities. He said his important skills are “leadership management skills, the ability to think outside the box, and not second guessing [my]self.”
“Students learn the same things on campus. All you have to do is take what you know and do it. The best way is to learn by doing it. The worst-case scenario, you fail miserably. Then, you can try again or apply the knowledge you gained from your experience to your future job,” Pompliano said.

Creating a business doesn’t always have to take a long time. In May, Pompliano and his three friends realized they were going to need jobs, so they began to look into a variety of industries with the question of how to raise money while also ensuring business in their minds. As of Nov. 1, 2011, the site is up and running.

Pompliano attributes the idea of The Community Corkboard to identifying a problem that they wanted to solve.

“A lot of people are part of a community and they’re proud of it. This community fosters unity [with its members], who might begin to do business together. It allows people to market themselves in this way,” Pompliano said.

Categories
News

Local businesses collaborate with student organizations

By Jen Lassen

Assistant News Editor

This past week, Pizza Phi and the Bull Run Inn collaborated with Management 100 Company A and Alpha Delta Pi sorority, respectively, to support University students in their philanthropic endeavors.

On Wednesday, Nov. 9, Management 100 Company A sponsored their “A Perfect Pair for Foster Care” night with Pizza Phi. Students were able to dine at Pizza Phi from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. and order pizza until 4 a.m. for delivery. Ten percent of all funds raised during these hours went toward the company’s service project with Concern, a local foster care agency.

“We advertised all week and had an amazing turnout,” Haley Thomas ’14 said.

“The event was such an overwhelming success; we were able to give over a $200 donation,” said Rick Thomas, co-owner of Pizza Phi.

Last Friday, Alpha Delta Pi sorority held a “Dining for a Difference” night at the Bull Run Inn from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. All proceeds during that time went to the Shining Stars Adapted Dance Camp created by Alpha Delta Pi sister Lindsay Zajac.

“It was great working with Bull Run. It was so busy that around 6:00 Bull Run was turning groups away saying that they couldn’t seat them until 8:00 or 8:30 pm,” Melissa Fox ’13 said.

The purpose of these events was to raise money for charity organizations while simultaneously advertising some of Lewisburg’s downtown businesses. The events were a win-win for the local businesses and the student groups who co-sponsored the events.

“Because of [Alpha Delta Pi’s] advertising and their promotions, the number of people eating in our restaurant increased,” said Lois Purcell, manager of the Bull Run Inn.

“From events like these, we always get new costumers and exposure to Bucknell students that are willing to try our products,” Rick Thomas said.

Despite the extra work and time required to put on these events, both Pizza Phi and the Bull Run Inn gladly accepted the invitation to co-sponsor these events.

“The benefits of helping the community and Bucknell students certainly outweighs the small loss of revenue our business experiences from one night; it makes me feel good hosting an event like this,” Rick Thomas said.

“I’m always happy to support Bucknell in a philanthropic way, and it was a pleasure getting to work with the students from Bucknell,” Purcell said.

Categories
Headline News

Faculty, students, and local residents run in support of Bucknell Brigade

By Christina Oddo

Writer

University faculty and staff, as well as Lewisburg residents, gathered to collectively “travel the distance”–2,073 miles– from Lewisburg to a health clinic in Nueva Vida, Nicaragua in the University’s annual “Making it to Managua” 5K run.

The run supported the Bucknell Brigade and was held last Sunday, November 13. Participants could also support the cause at home by choosing to run, walk or use the elliptical to complete a 5K.

“The 5K went very well,” Lauren Rambo ’12 said. “There was a small- to medium-sized crowd with runners, walkers, friend groups [and] a couple father/daughter pairs, myself included.”

The course wrapped around downtown Lewisburg and up through campus.

“The hill running up Seventh Street to Fraternity Road was a lot steeper than I remembered,” Rambo said.

The Bucknell Brigade provided refreshments before and after the race and also sold hand-made Nicaraguan crafts and organic coffee during the race to raise money.

“I hadn’t run a 5K in a little while and was excited to participate in this event sponsored by the Bucknell Brigade. It was a great cause and a great way to get myself going on a Sunday morning! And I was definitely feeling it days later,” Jake Bellucci ’12 said.

The event organizers were encouraging to runners and were generally enthusiastic throughout the whole race.

“At the end of the race, members of the Brigade were cheering everyone on through the finish line. I liked how members of the Brigade were also holding arrows marking the route and were really supportive,” Rambo said.

The Bucknell Brigade put on a successful event that was enjoyable for both University students and members of the greater Lewisburg community.

“It was nice to see both students and faculty at the 5K.  Knowing that everyone can rally around a great cause like the Bucknell Brigade is encouraging.  I’m glad to be a part of the bubble,” Brian Shoener ’13 said.

Categories
News

Campus promotes greater concern for food waste

By Daniel Park

Contributing Writer

After a recent lecture and the efforts of University staff, particularly professor of economics Nancy White, the University has placed a greater emphasis on the implications of food waste.

On Oct. 26, University students as well as Lewisburg locals, farmers in particular, attended a lecture by Jonathan Bloom, a journalist and food waste expert who received his masters degree from UNC Chapel Hill. The event was strongly advocated by White, who also has a deep compassion for and understanding of  the concept of food waste.

Bloom became a strong advocate for preventing food waste after a volunteer experience with DC Central Kitchens, where he saw plenty of remaining pasta thrown out. This led him to create a blog known as “Wasted Food” and then publish a book entitled “American Wasteland” a few years later.

“Everyone knows about the three R’s: reduce, reuse and recycle. However, we’ve made progress in only the recycling but have yet to emphasize reducing and reusing,” Bloom said. 

He reinforces the idea that while not recycling is intolerable, food waste is commonly ignored and often accepted within communities.

“The United States, by far, is the largest food-wasting country in the world, in which 40 percent raised or grown in America isn’t consumed, which accumulates to about 160 billion pounds per annum,” Bloom said.

He believes the source of this immeasurable amount of food wasting traces back to farms that throw out slightly obscure looking produce because of consumer pickiness as well as supermarkets having to throw out expired goods.

“Listen to your instinct, not the dates on goods; if you think it looks good and smells good than it’s perfectly edible,” Bloom said. 

White also has much to say on this topic. She believes that wasting food is a cultural rather than an individual problem and there are various ways to tackle this problem. One method that she believes will make people more cognizant of the food they waste is encouraging them to grow their own food.

“Go home and plant a garden at home. When Bucknell students are at home during summer break, growing their own food will not only bring a sense of elatedness but also achievement and affection towards food,” White said.

White addresses other countries such as those in Asia like Japan and Korea.

“These countries learned how to be creative with food preservation,” White said. “It was a necessary skill to have because of their long-standing history over time, which required ways in preserving food for their own people due to war and lack of land when in contrast America is a young country which is abundant in land resources as well as extreme fast paced growth.”

Japan and Korea have mastered the art of food preservation through fermentation, such as kimchi, that allows food to stay edible for much longer periods of time.

The University with the strong aid of Janice Butler, director of civic engagement and service learning, and Rabbi Serena Fujita, have currently made plans on making a community garden downtown for University students and community members to experience the art of producing food. The garden will also aid the Lewisburg area by teaching residents how to grow their own food and prepare it as a meal. Though a small change, it is one step closer to preventing food waste in the Lewisburg area.

Categories
News

Noted alumni share careers in creativity forum

By Alexander Slavitz

Contributing Writer

Four University graduates embraced limitless exploration of one’s passions in a lecture that was part of the Bucknell Forum Series “Creativity: Beyond the Box.”

Each alumnus discussed their experiences upon graduating the University and relayed essential life advice to current students.

Nyambi Nyambi ’01, actor and former guard for the Bison men’s basketball team, shared his experiences of success with current University students.

“If you celebrate the other people around you and their successes, you can’t help but be successful yourself,” he said.

Justin Schwartz ’04, a roller coaster engineer for Universal Studios, also spoke about his success.  He explained that, in his experiences, the most difficult part of thinking of new ideas is applying logistical constraints while simultaneously using creativity.

Matt Hawley ’03, Senior Game Producer at Blizzard Entertainment, the creator of games such as World of Warcraft and StarCraft, echoed Schwartz’s advice.  

“Putting constraints on the beginning prevents further creativity,” Hawley said. “Sometimes you throw something away just to see it come back a year or two later.”

All four presenters agreed that to be successful in any career, one must have a true passion for whatever the project entails.

“At Blizzard, everyone is a hardcore gamer at their core, so they want to play [Blizzard’s] games. A lot,” Hawley said.

Innovative Projects Manager, Martine Worrall Stillman ’04, who works for Nike at Synapse Product Development, highlighted that passion was one of her virtues, as well. As innovative projects manager, Stillman tests Nike’s products so that she can understand the venture from the perspective of her target market.

“We try to understand the audience from the deepest level we can,” Stillman said.

To show how this goal is accomplished, Stillman explained that everyone at Nike wears Nike shoe products in order to better understand the needs and desires of consumers.

Nyambi viewed this idea of listening to the target audience quite differently. 

“The audience can make you feel great or it can make you feel horrible,” Nyambi said.  

He admitted that although he pays attention to the producers, he tries not to get caught up judging his quality of performance through customer reviews. Out of 100 positive reviews, Nyambi claims that he will distinctly remember the one negative one.

Although Schwartz agreed with Nyambi’s explanation, he felt that his career involves listening to the creator of the idea for the product he is working on. Schwartz said that in the construction of the Harry Potter ride at Universal Studios, for example, the biggest concern for the engineers was upholding J.K. Rowling’s vision of Harry Potter within the ride.

The final topic of the series focused on the idea of failure. Each alumnus remarkably emphasized the advantages of failure.

Each speaker provided a different twist on their reasoning for viewing failure as a benefit. Together, they cited the importance of learning from one’s individual mistakes in the pursuit of success. 

“Failure is a wonderful gift. You have to risk failure in order to receive benefits from it. When you give yourself over to the idea of not worrying about failing, amazing things will happen,” Nyambi said.

Additionally, while many students worry that their undergraduate major will dictate their work for the rest of their lives, the four alumni presenters emphasized that this is not always the case. Nyambi serves as living proof.

“[Nyambi’s life] was very interesting because it showed that even though he didn’t study his actual career in college, Bucknell still provided him with an opportunity to find what he actually loved to do,” Taylor Sisti ’15 said.

Students who attended the forum believed that the lecture was both an informative and worthwhile experience.  

“It was insightful and inspiring. [The speakers] are a testament to Bucknell’s amazing alumni who are great at what they do,” Matt Terry ’15 said.

Categories
News

Author’s photobook memorializes the Holocaust

By Sara Blair Matthews

Writer

Ann Weiss, author of personal photograph collection “The Last Album,” drew from her experiences researching the Holocaust to demonstrate the importance of Kristallnacht. Her lecture, “The Last Album: Eyes from the Ashes of Auschwitz-Birkenau”, occurred Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Trout Auditorium of the Vaughan Literature Building.

On Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass, the Nazisdestroyed over 7,000 businesses and burned over 200 synagogues, ultimately killing 91 Jews and deporting over 30,000. Kristallnacht was only one of many horrendous incidents that occurred during the Holocaust.

Weiss began her discussion by talking about her first trip to Auschwitz, a part of a diplomatic mission to Eastern Europe she took approximately 25 years ago. She was chosen based on her investigative journalism work on the Holocaust.

“When I got to Poland, I saw evidence of what once existed: the culture and the absence of people,”Weiss said.

The most horrifying thing Weiss saw was a pile of thousands of shoes that were holed, dirty and broken in places. It upset her that these shoes were all the people had to help them survive the harsh Polish winters. These shoes were the only remnants of the people exterminated during the Holocaust, and it was the first truly tragic thing Weiss encountered on her trip.

While she was staring at this pile of shoes, Weiss recounted becoming separated from her group. She ran around an abandoned Auschwitz frantically because she did not want to be left behind. In the process, a man beckoned her to follow him into a closed off room. There she saw pictures that changed her life and motivated her to become what she is today.

“They were beautiful photos. The pictures that the Jews brought with them before they thought they were going to be worked,” Weiss said.

There was a secret Nazi edict which ruled that all the photos people brought with them to the concentration camps had to be destroyed. Weiss saw only a few of the 2400 photos that were saved by the Jewish Underground.

When Weiss returned home to America, she could not get her mind off the photos. She hatched an idea to make a deal with the German government to give her the photos so she could make a montage and share them with the world. The government refused to give her the photos, but allowed Weiss to restore them and print them in her book.

“Unfortunately, they will never part with these photos,” Weiss said. “They are too precious to them.”
Before showing the film, Weiss told the audience stories she had learned about a few of the people in the photos. One was a story of a man named Ben Hirsch, who identified his baby brother and sister from a photo in the film. He told Weiss his own story and how he was shipped on the last Kindertransport to leave Germany.  His mother stayed behind with his two youngest siblings and continued to write him letters until she died.

She also told the audience a story of a husband and wife holding a baby in their arms. They both volunteered at an orphanage because they loved kids but could not have any of their own.

Her photos represented the positive nature of human love even in the worst of conditions.

“I believe goodness lives far beyond the life of the individual,” Weiss said.

Categories
News

“Breaking the Bubble” – Some top national and international headlines for this week

National:

– The sex abuse scandal continues to rock Penn State, as former defense coordinator Jerry Sandusky was charged with 40 counts of sexually abusing boys. Head coach Joe Paterno was not charged but was fired on Wednesday night.

– NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey shows that about 75 percent of respondents don’t like Obama’s economic policies and fear the country is headed in the wrong direction. In hypothetical match-ups, Obama leads Mitt Romney by six points and Herman Cain by 15 points.

– Dr. Conrad Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter for administering the drug that helped kill Michael Jackson in the summer of 2009.

-Voters across the country turned a skeptical eye toward conservative-backed measures across the country Tuesday, rejecting an anti-labor law in Ohio, an anti-abortion measure in Mississippi and a crackdown on voting rights in Maine. Even in Arizona, voters turned the chief architect of Arizona’s anti-immigration law out of office.

-Herman Cain held a news conference Tuesday to again deny sexual assault accusations, even as a another woman put her name to allegations that the candidate had approached her inappropriately.

-A powerful storm with hurricane-force winds slammed into western Alaska on Wednesday, causing widespread power failures in tiny coastal villages and warnings that the area could suffer major flooding. The National Weather Service described the storm as “extremely dangerous and life-threatening” and of “an epic magnitude rarely experienced.”

-A federal appeals court in Washington upheld the Obama administration’s health care law on Tuesday in a decision written by a prominent conservative jurist.

International:

– Greek leaders are still struggling to form a new government. Prime Minister George Papandreou and his chief rival agreed to create a new government, under a new prime minister, but have not yet disclosed a lineup.

– Iran is close to nuclear capability. Intelligence provided to U.N. nuclear officials shows Iran’s government has mastered the critical steps needed to build a nuclear weapon.

-Despite Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s pledge to resign, Italy’s borrowing costs crossed a key financial and psychological threshold of 7 percent, close to levels that have required other euro zone countries to seek bailouts. Italian lawmakers were frantically negotiating a way forward, while European leaders scrambled to forge a backup plan for a country too big to bail out.

-An Indian court found 31 people guilty on Wednesday of killing 33 Muslims during riots in Gujarat state in 2002. They were convicted of murder, arson, rioting and criminal conspiracy.

-Chinese solar panel manufacturers, which had virtually no presence in the U.S. market three years ago, now hold control of more than half of the market. Meanwhile, a new American trade group was formed this week, representing buyers and installers of solar-energy systems.

-Georgia and Russia signed an agreement on Wednesday that clears the path for Russia to join the World Trade Organization. This ended nine months of often rocky negotiations between the two countries on monitoring trade flows over the Georgian-Russian border.

Categories
Featured News

WVBU participates in first nationwide EAS test

By Amanda Ayers

News Editor

The University’s own radio station, WVBU, participated in the first nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System (EAS).

The test was conducted by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in partnership with the Federal Communciations Commission (FCC) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) on Wednesday, Nov. 9 at 2 p.m.

The EAS is designed to function as an efficient means of nationwide communication. The system exists to theoretically ensure the safety of the public by informing them of vital information quickly and efficiently in the event of any type of hazard.

Weekly and monthly tests of the system have been carried out before, but have only been on the local or regional levels in the past, typically to report on telephone outages and hazardous weather. There was a lot of activity, for example, during the intense flooding that affected Lewisburg in September, but the warning signal only affected stations in the Susquehanna Valley.

Wednesday’s test was different because nothing has been done on quite so large a scale before. This is the first time that the test was administered nationally. In the future, the EAS system will be used to communicate with the American public during emergency situations. The President will have the power to send out a special signal that will, theoretically, automatically switch every station to broadcast his public address.

“I believe that the EAS is a very effective way to reach people in the case of an emergency. It is commonly used during local weather emergencies. I feel that EAS is the most efficient system we have in place for communicating emergency information. It encompasses radio, broadcast television and cable TV providers and a web presence. There is no other system that contains the wide combination of media resources that EAS does and can coordinate them all to disperse urgent information,” said Senior Technology Support Specialist, Todd Fogle.

Similar to local emergency alert system tests that most people are already familiar with, an audio message interrupted television and radio programming at 2 p.m. stating: “This is a test.” As planned, regular programming resumed after the test was over.

The signal was transmitted via television and radio stations within the U.S., including Alaska and Hawaii, as well as the territories of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and American Samoa, through a system of rebroadcasting. There are 36 locations throughout the country that were intended to receive the message directly from FEMA. From there, the message was rebroadcast to smaller stations, like the University’s, that picked up the signal from WQKX. While every station in the country was intended to receive the test message on Wednesday, this was most likely not a reality.

“The problem with the FCC is that it’s terribly inefficient,” WVBU production manager Alex Alam ’13 said.

An executive order by former President George W. Bush mandated that a new EAS system be implemented five years ago, but the system has not been entirely set up. 

“Legally, we’re required to have a system that doesn’t exist,” Alam said prior of the test. “Organizationally they are a nightmare.”

While each station originally was legally required by the FCC to have their system perfectly execute the EAS test, they are now only required to report whether or not it worked after the fact. Ultimately, WVBU was able to receive the signal successfully despite hectic preparation.

“Since it’s difficult to pick up even our own signal down in the basement, it took us several hours to be able to pick up WQKX. Finally, we got an old radio out of Todd’s truck, which was able to pick up the signal, though only in the opposite corner of the other room. So what we have in place to make it work is actually this really old radio with a wire sticking out the back that runs through the wall and to the station. After we got it all set up, the test came through today as planned, without a hitch,” Alam said.

The FCC, FEMA and NOAA, as well as the University administration, made it very clear that this was indeed just a warning and a test of the EAS system; there was no real hazard.

“As we get close to the test, the FCC and all of our many partners are working together to spread the word to as many members of the public as possible–-so people know what to expect when the test takes place, and no one is caught off guard. We’re asking everyone to join us by spreading the word to your neighbors, co-workers, friends and family,” the FEMA website said.