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P4 PharmD students showed off their work to fellow classmates, faculty and staff during a presentation event at the school.
Olivia Medeiros, MS ’25, studied business administration and hotel management as an undergraduate, but found she loved caring for people.
Binghamton University receives $312K in state funding for the restoration project
Title reserved for those who have achieved national or international prominence in their discipline
After leaving everything behind, Benazir Paikan found purpose and power through the Afghan Future Fund/IIE Qatar Scholarship and earned her master’s at Binghamton.
Growing up, Iris DeFino heard a lot about Binghamton University. After all, it’s where her parents met and her story began.
Sponsored by the Society for American Archaeology, the event showcases the importance of ethics in the discipline
Robel Kebede ‘25 made the most of academics and real-world experiences while at Binghamton.
Mo Walts’ devotion toward helping others is getting them recognized locally and statewide.
Bailey Fahnestock believes that meaningful change begins with collaboration — and she’s spent the last several years helping to bridge the gap between Binghamton University and the local community.
Ashley Dua is making changes – from Binghamton to Barcelona – but her journey didn’t start out easy.
To applaud and recognize just some of the outstanding students who contribute to Binghamton’s culture, the Division of Student Affairs hosted the annual Binghamton University Student Awards Gala May 7, at the Holiday Inn in downtown Binghamton.
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Binghamton In the News
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has announced plans to build a “disease registry” of autistic people. “Conceptually, registries can be great research tools and can really advance knowledge, but they come at great risk, and we have to be extremely careful,” says Raymond Romanczyk, co-director of the Institute for Child Development at Binghamton.
Insects are disappearing around the world, but why? Binghamton biologist Eliza Games recently published research showing that agriculture is a major driver of insect decline, but there are many more, interconnected factors. “The insect decline literature is really just focused on a few big stressors, as opposed to getting into the more specific ones, which are a lot more mechanistic," says Grames.