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News

Welcome Night alcohol and health violations steadily decline

Daniel Park
Contributing Writer

On Aug. 30, potential new members of sororities were offered bids (invitations) to sororities. Bid day was the last recruitment event for fall recruitment and gave way to Saturday’s infamous welcome night.

Various socializing events were hosted on campus primarily by the fraternities and sororities. Though many students attended these events, the daily Crime & Fire Safety Log that Public Safety posts for any reported hazard and crime events, has been relatively unchanged from typical weeks. Several factors have been attributed to the success of the low number of alcoholic and health violations ranging from the various educational opportunities available to students on drinking safety, as well as the heightened awareness of Public Safety during that infamous welcome weekend.

“While it is difficult to say with any certainty why the numbers of violations have steadily decreased, it does coincide with some messaging we’ve shared and conversations we’ve had with students about making responsible decisions,” Dean of Students Susan Lantz said.

The emphasis the University places on drinking safely has been repeated to every student as soon as school began. Even on several bathroom doors, fliers entitled “Installments” encouraged students to “make the right choices.”

“Since the start of the semester, we have had some instances where students needed medical attention due to alcohol they consumed. Whether it be welcome night, or any other event, we are always concerned when students take part in risky behavior. We are encouraged, however, by the fact that many students have demonstrated very responsible decision making this semester, and have called for help when a fellow Bucknellian has had too much to drink,” Lantz said.

Due to the partial amnesty that the University offers to students when either calling Public Safety or 911 when intoxicated, students have been encouraged to call and make the right choices. Lantz credits students for keeping safety and health violations in check every year.

“It’s also worth mentioning that Bucknell is part of the Learning Collaborative on High-Risk Drinking (an effort of the National College Health Improvement Project),” Lantz said. 

Various websites such as www.bucknell.edu/playsmart and collaborative programs are available for students on campus in order to encourage students to lead a safe college career.

“Though the Greek system and partying are embedded in the culture here at Bucknell, it’s all about personal choices. It is mainly up to oneself to decide what is right and what is wrong. For the most part, I know what is best for me,” Justin Marinelli ’15 said.

Categories
News

Univ. welcomes new admin

Ally Boni | The Bucknellian
Lynn Breyfogle will replace Elaine Hopkins as the new Dean of Arts and Sciences. Breyfogle has previously taught at the University for 11 years.

Christian Limawan | The Bucknellian
Pictured from left to right: Director of Institutional Research and Planning Kevork Horissian, Assistant Provost for Research Carol Burdsal and Associate Provost for Diversity Bridget Newell.

Siobhan Murray
Staff Writer

A welcoming reception for new administrators Assistant Provost for Research Carol Burdsal, Associate Provost for Diversity Bridget Newell and Director of Institutional Research and Planning Kevork Horissian took place in the Arches Lounge of the Elaine Langone Center on Sept. 12. The event was attended by about 30 people and refreshments and appetizers were served. The welcoming of these new staff members signifies an unusual move for the University administration, making three new appointments in a single year.

“This is an unusual year for hiring because it reflects Bucknell’s expansion and the need for new roles, whether as a result of previous staff retiring or leaving,” Provost Mick Smyer said.

Burdsal’s new role was previously called the Director of the Office of Sponsored Research, held by Joanne Romagni. The Assistant Provost for Research will emphasize working with staff members more than the previous role did. Burdsal will help faculty find sources to fund their research and protect their intellectual property, as well as work with fellowship advisors to coordinate undergraduate competitive fellowships, such as the Fulbright Program.

“At Bucknell, our general model is that professors are teachers and researchers too,” Burdsal said at the welcoming reception. “We encourage professors to be asking their own questions as they work to foster a more engaging learning environment.”

Horissian will be filling the position of the retired Jerry Rackoff, the previous director of Institutional Research and Planning. His duties will relate to fulfilling the University’s need for data and data analysis, which will be used partly for admissions, but mainly to address students’ needs.

“Basically, we want to go even farther than other higher education institutions, who haven’t done a good job of making decisions based on their data analysis. Our data focuses on students’ ‘life cycles’–tracking students as prospects to when they are alumni–to examine what characteristics data is telling us at each stage. The ultimate goal is to help students,” Horissian said.

Newell will occupy the newly created position of Associate Provost for Diversity, a role that reflects the University’s focus on diversity in the community. President John Bravman and Smyer made major steps in their goals for diversity last spring with the creation of the Diversity Council. Newell, along with Associate Dean of Students for Diversity Thomas Alexander (who was hired last spring), will be a member of the council.

Newell’s arrival aligns with the University’s goals to institutionalize focus on diversity and equity on campus.

“Since this is only my third day on the job, I can’t say that I have any ambitious plan, but I want to start with meeting and talking to students, faculty and staff to really learn and listen to what’s happening on campus. From there, I hope our diversity plan will pervade all of campus and reach as many people as possible, rather than occupy one corner of campus. The resonating goal within all this work is to prepare our students to live and work in a diverse world,” Newell said.

“I think the new administrators have the potential to make a change. I think everyone can bring in diversity, but only time will tell if this will work. I know on this campus they try to bring diversity through activities, but I think we have to wait later in the year or maybe even next year to see things change. I think it’s great, though, that they are doing this,” Donald Kaplan ’16 said.

“It’ll be a great undertaking trying to change the campus from the way things currently are. I am not saying it cannot be done, just that it’ll be probably be more work than any one person can handle. Everyone needs to be on board with this for things to head in the right direction,” Matt Reed ’14 said.

The addition of three new administrative roles is certainly ambitious, and the welcoming reception for Burdsal, Horissian and Newell set the tone for the change to come in the upcoming year.

 

Categories
News

Health center slows down

 

Dejda Collins | The Bucknellian
Student health services join forces with Geisinger. With this change comes initial longer wait times to see doctors.

Christina Oddo
Writer

Students across campus have been less than satisfied with the waiting time at the Ziegler Health Center since the start of the year. The Ziegler Health Center is currently asking students to be more patient as changes continue to occur in order to accumulate patient records electronically. Dr. Carolyn Houk ’88, medical director of Evangelical-Geisinger Health, LLC said that the changes may not be obvious to students at first because they are a work in progress. Electronic medical records will replace paper records, and the patients’ records will all be electronically filed at a central location.

Jacqueline Miller, Bucknell Student Health (BSH) operations manager, said these changes might take up to a few months.

“The first official visits will be longer; returning visits will be quicker,” Miller said.

Students complain that the wait is too long. 

“My visit lasted for an hour and forty-five minutes, of which only 5 minutes of that time I spent with a doctor,” Emily Heller ’15 said. “The rest of it I spent waiting–waiting to fill out paperwork, waiting to see the nurse, waiting to be put in a room and waiting to see the doctor and get my diagnosis … I expected that the Health Center would have appropriately organized itself and figured out how to minimize the amount of time students spend waiting. After all, why would they want all those sick people waiting around with each other?”

Other students believe the new system will bring many benefits to the University once established.

“It feels more like a real doctor’s office now, and on the first visit it takes a while to get seen, but it seems like the new system is going to have a lot of great advantages for the school,” Amanda Slaboden ’13 said.

Houk described Epic, a new electronic means of communication between hospitals and the Ziegler Health Center, as an easier means to relay information between nurses and doctors. Houk said that nurses can potentially send a message of the results of tests taken to the doctor before the doctor even sees the patients.

Houk gave another example: if a patient is very sick and needs to stay at Geisinger Medical Center, Houk could follow the patient’s course (x-rays, lab results, etc.) through electronic records. This communication between hospitals and the Ziegler Health Center continues to centralize records, making courses of tests and illnesses easier to track and follow. According to Miller, Epic is very confidential.

MyKeyCare, a private and secure online patient portal, is another new major change BSH has implemented, and students are encouraged to sign up. Students can request appointments with the Ziegler Health Center through MyKeyCare, message doctors and nurses, check lab test results and upload past medical history.

Doctors and clinicians at the Ziegler Health Center encourage patients to make appointments so doctors can spend more time with each patient. Houk said there is a designated group at the Ziegler Health Center that checks these requests throughout the day.

Houk said MyKeyCare is run by the state. MyKeyCare links Evangelical Community Hospital, Geisinger Medical Center, and Geisinger-Bloomsburg Hospital, as well as other hospitals within the five counties. Houk hopes this program will cover all of Pennsylvania in the future. Although everything is online, transferred information still requires permission of the patient, continuing the protection rights of patients. MyKeyCare meets federal privacy regulations regarding student records and healthcare, so only the students and the doctors and nurses treating the patients can see the records.

Currently, MyKeyCare and Epic are separate, but ultimately the goal is to put them together, Houk said.

Since the Ziegler Health Center has never done this before, Houk and others are encouraging feedback. Houk hopes that maybe in future there will be a phone application for making appointments and viewing wait times, etc.

Since the records are now centralized, communication is made easier. Emails through the University could easily be lost, but with a centralized record system, if an antibiotic worked well for you or if you really liked a doctor and wanted to see him or her again, these records are more easily accessible for reference.

“[The most beneficial aspect of this project is that] even after they leave here, the electronic records will follow for the rest of life,” Miller said.

The Ziegler Health Center, despite the changes, is “still trying to provide the best for students,” Miller said.

 

Categories
Field Hockey Sports Women

Field hockey pulls out two close victories

Edward Louie | The Bucknellian
The field hockey team battles to defend their home turf.

Andrew Arnao
Senior Writer

The Bison field hockey team won their home opener against Lock Haven on Sunday as they defeated the Eagles 3-1. The Orange and the Blue then scored late to push past the Cornell Big Red 2-1 on Wednesday night, bringing their overall record to 3-1.

Against Lock Haven, the Bison got on top in the first half on a goal by forward Rachel Misko ’14, but the Lock Haven returned the favor on a penalty corner to make the score 1-1 going into the half. The Bison offense took control in the second half, and goals from midfielder Amie Pritchard ’15 and Kiersten Sydnor ’16 put the game away.

“I thought that the team played with a lot of control and composure all around the field, which allowed us to create many opportunities in the circle and to capitalize on our offensive penalty corners,” Emily Hitchings ’16 said.  “We were able to transfer the ball quickly and keep possession, helping us to maintain our lead and dominate the second half.”

“After a back and forth first half, the team came out with renewed vigor in the second 35 minutes,” assistant coach Jamie Montgomery said.  “Amie Pritchard knocked home the second goal with real force and the team’s confidence really skyrocketed.”

The penalty corners played a big part in the Bison’s success, with seven total in the game and five in the second half. The Bison also tallied a season high 11 shots on goal, while the defense held Lock Haven to only four shots.

Against Cornell, the Bison fell behind 1-0 but kept up their attack, and eventually went ahead late in the game behinds goals from Kelly Stefanowicz ’13 and Misko. The Orange and Blue offense finished with 26 shots and 19 penalty corners, compared to six shots and three corners for the Big Red.

The Bison will play a road game against Columbia on Saturday and then return home for a Sunday showing against Saint Francis.

Categories
Arts & Life Restaurants Review

Stay Sweet Cupcakery

 

Emily Guillen | The Bucknellian
White chocolate raspberry cupcake from the Stay Sweet Cupcakery.

Emily Guillen
Editor-in-Chief

With cupcakes being all the rage right now, I wanted to try Lewisburg’s latest foray into the fad: the Stay Sweet Cupcakery.

Located next to The Bull Run Inn at 611 Market St., the shop offers cupcakes, ice cream, Italian cream sodas and other sweet treats. There is also a shop located on S. Market Street in Selinsgrove.

I decided to test six cupcakes and an Italian cream soda. Among the many cupcake offerings, my dining partner and I chose to taste chocolate peanut butter swirl, white chocolate raspberry, chocolate with vanilla buttercream frosting, Boston cream, red velvet with cream cheese frosting and black and white.

The chocolate peanut butter swirl was definitely the favorite of the six. The chocolate cake was moist with a creamy peanut butter and fudge swirled icing. The taste resembled a really creamy Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup.

Unfortunately, our second pick in the cupcake draft turned out to be a disappointment.  The white chocolate raspberry’s pink icing looked amazing but fell flat. It was way too sweet and neither the cake nor the icing had a strong enough raspberry flavor.

To make it worse, we found the chocolate with vanilla buttercream frosting to be a bit of a disappointment with bland flavor and overly sweet icing.

I didn’t particularly care for the Boston cream cupcake, but my partner in food review crime enjoyed it, except for the slightly stale cake portion.

The red velvet cupcake brought the Stay Sweet Cupcakery back into my good graces.  With red velvet cake and cream cheese icing as one of my favorite combinations, I was pleased to find the cake moist and the icing fluffy.

 

Emily Guillen | The Bucknellian
Black & white cupcake from the Stay Sweet Cupcakery.

The black and white, while fairly traditional (chocolate cupcake, vanilla icing with a small shot of chocolate icing in the middle), kept me interested. The little shot of chocolate gave a nice kick to the classic.

After seeing the Italian cream sodas on the menu, I decided to top off my cupcake meal with a raspberry soda. While delicious, it was a little sweet and its creaminess left me feeling a little heavy.

Overall, the bakery had some highs and some lows, but I recommend you check it out. The only things to note are the prices. For a small, rural town like Lewisburg, $2.55 per cupcake seems a little high. At least the slightly discounted prices of $15 for six and $28 for a dozen are a little more reasonable.

Hours: Tuesday through Saturday, 12 to 8 p.m.

Categories
Arts & Life

Sweet & Savory

 

Emily Guillen | The Bucknellian

Emily Guillen | The Bucknellian

Jen Lassen
Arts & Life Editor

Sick of the Bostwick Marketplace Cafeteria or the Bison? Want a way to spice up your Friday evening dining plans? Look no further than Downtown Lewisburg!

Recently, some quality eateries have been added to Lewisburg’s restaurant roster. These include: Siam Cafe, Sushi Hanna and Bella’s Bliss Bakery. Also, a fourth dining option will soon join this exciting trifecta: Mercado Burrito will open soon in the much-missed Market Street Deli storefront.

Food trucks are also springing up on Market Street and on our very own campus. The addition of the Flying Bison food truck to the University last semester has given students a quick way to get tasty and quality foods (think spring rolls and turkey pretzel sandwiches) right outside of the engineering buildings on weekdays or Vedder Hall on weekend evenings. Downtown, a Thai food truck has made weekly appearances to offer students and town members food with international flair right in the heart of Pennsylvania.

With all of these new dining options on and around campus, Lewisburg is starting to feel as metropolitan as ever. Seemingly, our little “bubble” is bursting with not only national and international food phenomena, but tons of flavor, too!

 

Categories
Editorial Opinion

Editorial: Univ. working with students to start the year off right

While The Bucknellian editorial board often points out flaws students see in the administration and campus organizations’ decisions, we also recognize when positive efforts are made to listen to and accommodate the student voice.

With the introduction of the Humanities Carnivale di Bucknell, the University is recognizing the effort students in the College of Arts & Sciences put in on a daily basis. Up until this year, only the College of Engineering had an event to showcase talents from individuals. Engineering Week, while providing a positive and competitive outlet to engineers, often came under fire from liberal arts majors for not recognizing the achievements of all students.

Now the Carnivale di Bucknell will do just that. Students will have the opportunity to enter into art and humanity based competitions with a focus on creativity rather than science.

Through the two-day event, the University is even offering monetary rewards to those students who produce exceptional entries. We applaud the University, and specifically the University Arts Council for recognizing students as the main population on campus.

In addition to promoting the arts through the Carnivale, the University has also recently added the Catherine Payn Scholarship Fund to award to students in music, specifically those specializing in opera.  Providing one more opportunity for talented students to join the University family will only improve the attitudes and climate of campus.

Beyond just the arts, the University has also listened to the students’ concern regarding Pennsylvania’s new voter ID law. Under the new law, University IDs will no longer be valid for students to use as identification in the state of Pennsylvania without expiration dates.

The University listened to students’ upset in the spring and for the fall semester are giving out expiration stickers to validate the IDs for voting. They have plans to further the expiration date inclusion on the cards issued next year.

Activities and Campus Events (ACE) and the Campus Activities & Programs (CAP) Center are doing their part in listening to the student voice as well by changing up the musical genres performing this fall. With hip hop as the only genre represented in last year’s concerts, Fall Fest: Countrified and Avicii are welcome changes, and students are recognizing the Concert Committee’s efforts to please them.

With the University actively accommodating students’ needs and wishes, a new precedent is being set with the student as the primary customer. The University is recognizing this and taking to heart the saying, “the customer is always right.”

Categories
Arts & Life

WVBU to showcase student talent

 

The Bucknellian Archives
WVBU student participants spend time each week DJing or producing live shows on-air in the radio studio in Roberts Hall. At Uptown this Friday, the WVBU staff will showcase some of the top student talents on campus.

Alex Alam
Contributing Writer

For the first time in 16 years the University’s radio station WVBU, is kicking off the school year the way they feel a radio station ought to: by organizing a “mini-festival,” featuring a few of the school’s many student artists.

The First Annual WVBU Student Music Showcase will be tonight at Uptown. This is the first of a series of hopefully many events that will introduce student musicians to the rest of the school.

After last semester’s overhaul of the station’s programming and campus involvement and the complete physical transformation of WVBU’s control room, the station’s board members decided it was finally time to shift their focus back to the most important part of campus: the students.

“It was all of a sudden,” Christos Schrader ’14 said, “But we realized that there’s all of these crazy talented people around campus, and we hadn’t done anything to celebrate that.”

Tonight’s showcase aims to change that. Featuring talented performers in a wide range of genres, styles and backgrounds, the event was planned so people with all types of tastes can find a group they like that may have otherwise gone unnoticed. Performers include folk/punk outfit Those Damn Jackalopes and popular alt-rock group The Wingmen. In between bands, singer-songwriter Colin Hassell ’15 will show off his vocal skills with acoustic sets. Closing out the party will be the underground and experimental rap/electronic music collective known as The Banquet.

“I wanted to put on a show that I would enjoy going to from start to end, and I think we did that, because there’s such a cool variety,” Charlie Geitz ’15 said.

The show will be nearly non-stop, with members of the radio station working closely with Uptown staff to keep the party going.

The results “will be crazier than any register, because it’s not just live music, but the people going nuts on stage are in your classes too,” Geitz ’15 said.

“I think that people think there’s always been a pretty good music scene here, but you had to look closely for it. Hopefully, we can be a kind of weird metaphorical magnifying glass,” Duke Wellington ’15 said.

The WVBU Student Music Showcase will be at Uptown tonight, with doors opening at 8:30 p.m. and the show starting at 9 p.m.

Categories
Arts & Life Campus Events Review

Naomi Shihab Nye uncovers poetic “appetite for language”

Christina Oddo
Assistant Arts & Life Editor

In all the images that surround us, there is poetic possibility. For writer and poet Naomi Shihab Nye, she finds inspiration in both the seen and unseen.

Nye spoke of the apparent appetite for language across the globe, as well as the poetic possibility embedded in the images that surround us, in her Q&A session on Sept. 4 in the Willard Smith Library.

Nye spent 37 years traveling around the world and has written and/or edited more than 30 volumes.

Born to a Palestinian father and an American mother, Nye additionally held a poetry reading in Bucknell Hall about her family history as well as how her memories and knowledge of this history shape her work and are translated through her poetry.

Nye’s work is guided by a sort of hope, as she described during the session, in a way that she is able to abandon some work and move on, viewing half-baked texts as part of a bigger project. She believes the text is ultimately working to find us.

“Perhaps more than anything I remembered the necessity of remaining hopeful,” Professor Shara McCallum said. “Ms. Nye is one of the most optimistic people I’ve ever encountered.  I think for anyone who attended her events yesterday, some of the radiance of being in her presence is still with us.”

As Nye traveled through Pennsylvania on her way to the University, she wrote down road signs that, to her, seemed unordinary. Lines and names, she explained, are full of poetic possibility and are given to us in our surroundings. Details fill many places and create a rich environment. Nye finds these opportunities to soak in this richness and later display it through language to be imperative.

Nye, in her attempt to encompass and answer the question, in poetry, described poetry as a voice through which meaning is transported with care. We should see our lives as stories, and that the narrative has a sort of preciousness linked to it. In fact, life is a continuous text, and we should work to find and evoke images.

For Nye, writing specific lines feels like a confession, a relief from pressure. Also, a poet need not know exactly where a piece is going because language is a process of speaking, creating and solving.

Nye’s poetry reading in Bucknell Hall was well attended. Nye spoke of her experience of taking a tour of the Poetry Path and how she enjoyed being featured as part of this “generous gift to the pedestrians” of Lewisburg. Nye was humble and grateful, repeating several times that speaking at the University was not an opportunity she would take for granted.

“Ms. Nye’s humour, honesty, and warmth in her delivery–as well as her poems themselves, which carry such wisdom–together made for an extraordinary reading,” Professor Shara McCallum said.

Throughout her talk, Nye spoke of her son, about mistakes, about her father and more. Nye also recited a brand new poem and poems regarding situations in which people are suffering more than you are.

Moreover, Nye emphasized the importance of note keeping. This importance was made apparent through her final story, a prose-based poem full of detail and humor.

“I really liked Nye’s advice about taking notes throughout your life,” Jennifer Fish ’14 said. “Notes would not only bring clarity to numerous old memories, but she suggested that memories make great triggering subjects for poems.”

 

Categories
Opinion

Indifference haunts current generation

 

Mary Helen Schwartz, The Bucknellian

Sara Blair Matthews
Opinions Editor

I frequently hear that our generation has the shortest attention span. Although I would love to deny this, I’m starting to believe there is some truth to this claim. From cheating, to the ups and downs of the entertainment business, to all the new forms of Facebook, it seems like our generation is plagued by a perpetually short capacity to concentrate.

Let’s start off with relationships. It is hard to ignore all the headlines involving some form of cheating that seem to be consuming the media today. The Kristen Stewart/Rob Pattinson fiasco is likely the one that comes to mind as of late. Yes, it’s horrible she cheated on the vampire dreamboat with a married father of two who is nearly double her age, but I’m more interested in why.

Why is it that she and so many other men and women alike lose interest in their relationships and feel the need to cheat? In my opinion, it all goes back to society’s short attention span. It seems we have a constant need to move on to the next bigger and better thing. Our lives are becoming more and more like races, where finishing second, third or even fourth place is seen as unacceptable.

Also, do you ever get annoyed with Facebook’s constant change of format? I do. It seems like they are changing up the layout, privacy settings or notification process every week. Every time I get used to the new format, it changes. I’ve learned to never get to attached to any particular setting because I know it will change whether I’m ready for it or not.

I’m aware that I just spent five sentences lamenting about Facebook’s frivolity, but if I’m willing to give up trying to appreciate Facebook’s functionality, what will I give up on next? Will I give up reading actual books because I know they will die out eventually? Will I give up watching a TV series because it requires my attention for one hour each week? Will I stop following the proposed tenants of our country’s health care plan because they change too often? Not likely, but it seems like society is slowly ceasing to foster an environment where people can grow to care about its components because they are always changing.

Maybe all the changes on Facebook or the rise of cheating in relationships is not just the creator the partaker’s fault, but rather we are to blame for accepting their outcomes as if we were drones. Our stand does not need to occur overnight, but I think it can be strengthened in small victories.

Sit still for an hour every now and then to read a book or watch a movie. Go a whole class or meeting without checking your phone or Facebook and see what happens. Perhaps you’ll retain the material better, and be more well-rounded in all the facets of your life.