Alumni Connect – SEPTEMBER 2019
The biggest party in Bing Homecoming 2019
Celebrate fall, Upstate NY's most beautiful season, on campus at Homecoming! Come back Friday−Sunday, Sept. 20−22 for a celebration unlike any other. Experience our first-ever block party downtown as we kick off a weekend of Bing pride. Then enjoy a few of the 92 events we're planning, including anniversary celebrations for the School of Management, Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences and Harpur College!
How ý improved over the summer
If you're coming back to campus for Homecoming you'll see the big changes made all over campus. ý has a fresher look, and there are still some projects underway. See the full list of changes coming to ý over the next year!
Sharing the ý bond
Brooke Holmberg ’23 was no stranger to ý before she started freshman year just a few weeks ago. She grew up less than a mile from campus and both her parents — Eric ’99 and Jennifer ’06 Holmberg — are alumni. Brooke is part of a special group of legacy students; in fact, she’s one of nearly 200 freshmen with a parent, aunt, uncle or grandparent who graduated from the University.
Alumna documents bygone era of moviegoing
If you remember seeing movies in ornate theaters and don’t care for today’s cookie-cutter structures, you’re probably like the people Haeyong Moon ’99 interviewed for Broadway Treasures. Her documentary recounts when going to a movie in Los Angeles was worthy of getting dressed up for, and she tells what has happened to the historic downtown theaters now that they no longer serve their original purpose.
Alumnus wants to inspire love of art
John Copoulos ’73 credits his time at ý and instructors including Ferdinand “Fred” DeVito for fostering his lifelong love of art. DeVito advised Copoulos and other students to get a steady job because there was no money to be made as a painter. Copoulos took the advice and made his art while working as a legal secretary in the San Francisco area. Now retired, Copoulos gives to ý in a way he hopes will increase students' appreciation for art.
All you need is love
For Stephen McKiernan ’70, the initiative to create the Center for the Study of the 1960s did not happen overnight. He has been deeply connected his entire life with the decade he grew up in, and this connection includes trying to better understand his generation, the personalities that helped shape those times, who he is and why he needs to know more about his growing-up years.