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Year: 2017

Manchester City 3-1 Hull City

City vs Hull

If this game was a song…

Sunny – Bobby Hebb

The sun brought absolute madness to fans and players alike on Saturday, as Manchester saw massive highs of 14 degrees!!!1!! We don’t get it often in Manchester, and when we do, it sends everybody absolutely bananas.

The fans sang songs for Benjani and Shaun Wright Phillips like it was 2008 all over again, and there was utter disrepute on the pitch. An own goal set off the match as Ahmed Elmohamady put the ball into his own net following a sublime Jesús Navas cross. The next goal was almost just comical bad but with an awful lot more beautiful thrown in too. From Claudio Bravo in net, up to Sergio Aguero, the ball touched every single Manchester City player’s foot on the pitch without interruption until Raheem Sterling wriggled into the box effortlessly to square the ball to Sergio Agüero to score. Absolute sublime but there was also a little bit of madness, as the show was initially saved but then crashed against two Hull City players to go over the line. It’ll go down as Sergio’s goal and a beautiful team effort.

And just for balance, Manchester City threw some madness in of their own also. Hull City’s goal in 85th minute was only a consolation, but Claudio Bravo made sure they took the title of funniest goal of the day. The Chilean was back in the team, starting before Willy Caballero, but the ball went right through the hole in his hand. It may have been baking hot, but for Bravo – when it rains, it pours.

Niasse and Easy does it

Jesús Navas has been with Manchester City for four seasons now but has fallen out of favour particularly this season on the wing, with the emergence of Raheem Sterling. That being said, Navas has been given a run in the team… at right back. After facing Eden Hazard and Alexis Sanchez in his last two games at right-back, Navas was given an easier job today against Hull – namely with Kamil Grosicki, but he occasionally came up against Oumar Niasse and I really wanted to use that pun as the subheading for this bit. Navas had a really good game, after being under some heavy criticism from fans throughout the season. He’s not the best right-back in the world but he filled in well, and when attacking, playing just behind the winger worked well for him, assisting the first goal.

Fab Delph

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Wednesday’s trip to Chelsea ended in misery for City as they lost 2-1 in a close encounter at Stamford Bridge. The most surprising bit of the game was not that David Luiz and Sergio Agüero

didn’t try to kill one another, but the fact that Fabian Delph started his first Premier League game of the season. The English midfielder’s energy worked well, especially up against N’Golo Kanté. Starting again for City against Hull, Delph had a great game and was all over the pitch, even getting a goal to his name. The goal came from Raheem Sterling – who was comfortably Man of the Match for me – as he ducked infield from the wing and opened up play, he played it across to Delph who was allowed space due to Leroy Sané making a run down the wing. Delph moved forward with the ball and as soon as he reached the edge of the area, he let off a rasper of a shot into the back of the net. With İlkay Gündoğan injured, and Yaya Touré lacking in energy at the moment, Delph may find himself playing more in the latter parts of this season.

Numbers

Everyone loves a good stat don’t they – and there were some beautiful round numbers after this match which everyone loves, right?

300: David Silva captained City in his 300th appearance for the Blues, and received a beautiful standing ovation when he was substituted for Kelechi Iheanacho on the 72nd minute.

100: Fernando made his 100th appearance for Manchester City in all competitions.

100: City scored their 100th goal of the season in all competitions… and then Fabian Delph ruined my stats section by scoring the 101st.

10: 10 goals in 10 games now for Sergio.

Princeton Citizen Scientists aim to renew civic engagement

By 1pm on Monday, March 6th, over 500 University affiliates had packed Frist Campus Center. By the end of the day, 64 teach-ins had occurred, 13 University and community organizations had promoted their respective causes, and nearly 1500 people had participated in the campus-wide Day of Action, according to organizer Sébastien Philippe. A fifth year Ph.D. candidate in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Philippe is also president and co-founder of Princeton Citizen Scientists, one of the two student groups who hosted the March 6th event.

The group banded together shortly after the November elections, when “it was pretty clear that there was a need for a renewed civic engagement,” Philippe said. The organization was “organic,” Philippe explained, because he and fellow students were looking for ways to process and move forward.

“People kind of came out of this election pretty shaken-up,” he said. Princeton Citizen Scientists is a group of about 40 science, engineering, and social science graduate students who aim to address the current political discourse with their expertise.

“We, as scientists, have important contributions to add to the public debate and the public discussion of scientific legislation,” Michael Hepler, a 4th year graduate student in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and another co-founder of Princeton Citizen Scientists, said.

In fact, there’s a very long tradition of that kind of contribution at the University. In 1946 the University started an organization called the Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists. The committee was founded by Albert Einstein and other scientists in the interest of warning the public about the dangers of nuclear weapons.

Today, Princeton Citizen Scientists seeks to raise awareness of those same nuclear security concerns, as well as issues like climate change. To that end, Hepler said their objectives are educating themselves as scientists on how to be better advocates, reaching out to policymakers, and finding ways to reach out to the general public.

The Day of Action addressed all three of those goals, with teach-ins on topics like “Science in the Public Sphere: How Can We Increase Non-Expert Engagement with the Knowledge and Values of Science?” and a Science communication and education workshop.

“In order to talk about science, we can’t just talk about it in a vacuum,” Hepler said. “We need to connect it to the other social issues that are dividing us as a nation and as an international community.”

Philippe agreed, noting: “We never really take the time to pause our daily activities and engage in meaningful discussions and learning experiences on subjects that are not necessarily the ones that we are most familiar with.”

“Everybody was listening,” said Robert Socolow, professor emeritus of mechanical and aerospace engineering. Socolow gave a talk, along with two other professors, entitled “Making Progress on Climate Change Policy in the Next Four Years.”

He celebrated the day as “sustaining University values in this country, which are under threat,” describing these values as a “complete search for truth and willingness to correct error, to listen to challenges.” Those values were not only the aim of the lecture, Socolow said, but were also embodied in the way people interacted afterward. “I think this was the goal of March 6th. We learned a lot from the other disciplines, and that’s really important as we move forward,” Philippe added.

Looking ahead, the scholars plan to travel to the March for Science in Washington, D.C., on April 22 to rally for, in part, the importance of evidence-based policy. Prior to that, they will host a teach-in on why scientists should be engaged in the policy process.

“One of the goals of Princeton Citizen Scientists is to kind of train young scholars and to kind of open paths for them to join government or NGOs,” Philippe said.

Michael Oppenheimer, professor of geosciences and international affairs, and another of the contributors to the “Making Progress on Climate Change Policy” discussion, emphasised the importance of students’ involvement.

“Despite the fact that, in some senses, the political atmosphere is grim, and there are indications that are explicit that the administration would like to reverse the environmental progress that’s been made over the last four to eight years, students have the opportunity to have their voices heard,” he said.

“It’s our responsibility as young scholars to rise up and start working, and use our knowledge… to reach the public ears,” Philippe said.

The Daily Princetonian

SafeSpace startup connects students experiencing mental health issues

UC Berkeley students are developing a website and mobile app to connect campus students experiencing mental health issues with other students who face similar experiences.

The startup, called SafeSpace, placed first in the Improving Student Life category of UC Berkeley’s 2016 Big Ideas contest, an annual competition aimed at providing students with startup ideas and resources to help turn ideas into realities. The team won $10,000 in the competition — money it has used to begin developing the app and website.

Over the course of the competition, the team decided to create a mobile app and website to foster communication and connection among students suffering from mental health problems. The project now partners with the University Health Services program Cal Bears Say Hi.

SafeSpace, the Cal Bears Say Hi program, works to foster peer-to-peer relationships to make students feel more comfortable and less isolated on campus.

Monica Casanova, a public health major who is minoring in public policy and political economy, came up with the idea for SafeSpace when she was working on a paper about mental health support systems on campus. She suffered from severe depression her freshman year and said she wanted her paper to reflect her personal experiences of trying to navigate the resources on campus — she felt they were lacking.

After working on the project, Casanova decided she wanted to find a way to improve communication among students and lessen the sense of loneliness she felt while experiencing depression.

“When I tried to seek out care, it didn’t seem to work out for me,” Casanova said. “I really didn’t want that to happen [to anyone else].”

After Casanova applied for the Big Ideas competition, she posted on Facebook groups looking for other students to join her team. Ann Nguyen, a campus senior and a co-founder of SafeSpace, said she got involved because she felt the campus didn’t prioritize mental health. She wanted to help provide additional resources to students experiencing mental illnesses such as depression and eating disorders.

Nguyen added that as an Asian American, her culture does not weigh mental health as highly as physical health, which can require medical interventions. She said SafeSpace aims to fight against such stigmas and normalize mental health disorders. She hopes SafeSpace will encourage people to reach out when they are experiencing poor mental health before they break down.

“Usually, it’s at the point when it’s too late when they start talking about it,” Nguyen said. “We really want to try to get people to reach out for help before they reach that breaking point.”

Nguyen and her team initially approached Big Ideas as just a funding source, but over time, she realized it was much more than that. She said the competition provided her team with connections to experts in the field, helped them clarify their vision and inspired them to continue with the process.

Big Ideas program manager Adrienne Chuck said SafeSpace was one of Big Idea’s “greatest projects”. For a student body of about 36,000, the campus has only about 50 counselors, which she called a “ridiculous ratio”.

Chuck said that the team’s approach of creating a peer-to-peer platform was incredibly innovative and that she believes the project will have a wide-reaching effect on UC Berkeley.

Chuck added that the team underwent extraordinary growth as entrepreneurs during the nine-month competition.

“The growth that we saw in this team over the course of nine months was incredible — they were so focused on making the Cal environment better,” Chuck said. “I was so inspired watching them dedicate themselves to solving this problem.”

The Daily Californian

Impact Journalism Day

The Mancunion is taking part in Impact Journalism Day Universities (IJD-U), taking place across the world on April 10th 2017, which aims to bring student newspapers together to highlight the work of student journalists and shine a spotlight on positive innovation by students in universities around the world.

By writing high quality, in-depth articles, all published on the 10th of April, the alliance of newspapers will collectively open the eyes of their generation to positive action they can take right now.

Impact Journalism Day Universities (IJD-U) is a replication of Sparknews’ international solutions journalism events—Impact Journalism Day and Solutions&Co. These events bring together an alliance of 80 international newspapers to report on innovative solutions to problems.

Below is an editorial from the IJD-U team about why this project is so important.

Students are Fighting for the Future

For many university students and young people around the world, the 2016/2017 academic year has not been very hopeful. There is a sense that world leaders are shying away from addressing global problems such as climate change and forced migration, yet, as the generation with the greatest level of higher education, we are acutely aware of how seriously these problems threaten our future.

For this reason, we have realized the need to take action.

On April 10th, as part of Impact Journalism Day Universities (IJD-U), student newspapers from 20 renowned universities, united by Sparknews, are collectively sharing stories about 30 student initiatives that aim to address serious social and environmental problems.

By writing about these innovative projects, the 20 participating student newspapers show the collective force that the media has to catalyze change. From teaching each other how to use computer science for social good, to creating platforms that crowdfund for university fees, to providing peer support for mental health, to sharing education with refugees, these stories show that students are actively challenging the notion that nothing can be done.

Additionally, by each newspaper sharing their articles with each other, student journalists are given broad visibility and the individual actions of young people will be seen around the world, offering these initiatives the chance to grow and be replicated. One fortunate student will also be invited to attend the One Young World conference in Bogotá to meet with other pioneering young leaders.

IJD-U is inspired by Impact Journalism Day and Solutions&Co, two events created by Sparknews which bring together more than 80 of the world’s leading newspapers including The Financial Times (UK), USA Today, The China Daily, Die Welt (Germany), Le Figaro (France), El País (Spain), and Asahi Shimbun (Japan), and many others, to bring awareness to social innovation.

To read their stories visit impactjournalismday-universities.com/read-our-stories

IJD-U will also be celebrated on April 24th in New York as part of a Sparknews sustainability event hosted by BNP Paribas, IJD-U’s sponsor.

Louis Slade, Manager, Impact Journalism Day Universities

Christian de Boisredon, Founder, Sparknews

For more information, contact [email protected]

The Mancunion has published two of our own articles about the work of students at The University of Manchester:

‘How intergenerational projects are tackling the loneliness crisis’: Jacob Nicholas, The Mancunion

‘Students try and make a difference to the lives of Manchester’s homeless’: Emma Shanks,  The Mancunion 

The Mancunion has also published six further articles from the alliance of newspapers that showcase students creating an impact in their community across the world:  

‘Pitt Pantry addresses rising food insecurity’: Janine Faust, The Pitt News

‘Going Cold: Students investigated unsolved homicides in Pitt club’: Janine Faust, The Pitt News

‘Sciences Po Refugee Help’: Melissa Godin, The Paris Globalist 

‘SafeSpace startup connects students experiencing mental health issues’: Pressly Pratt, The Daily Californian

‘Blast off: Oxford startup seeks to address shortcomings in student funding’: Chris Allnutt, Oxford Student

‘Princeton Citizen Scientists aim to renew civic engagement’: Katie Petersen, The Daily Princetonian

Impact Journalism Day Universities (IJD-U) is sponsored by BNP Paribas

Students try and make a difference to the lives of Manchester’s homeless

The latest figures reveal that rough sleeping in Greater Manchester has risen by 41 per cent in the last year, and quadrupled since 2010, not to mention the soaring scale of sofa surfing and tenants in temporary accommodation omitted from government statistics.

There has never been a more vital time to volunteer to support the most vulnerable in our society, so who better for the job than us students? We’re full of energy, innovative ideas, ample spare time (and always desperate to improve our employability).

We spoke with Hannah Featherstone, Student Coordinator for the Homeless Outreach Project, to find out more about the opportunities on offer at the University of Manchester to help reduce the problem.

As one of the first and most long-term projects run through Student Action, the volunteering society for the university, dating all the way back to the 1960s, its aim is to provide something as simple as a hot drink and friendly face in times of trouble for the community.

“Most people I come across haven’t spoken to someone all day because we just have our blinkers on when we’re going to work, we don’t notice people sat down on the floor, and I think that can get quite demoralizing,” says Hannah.

The team of eighteen split a series of two shifts per day, bar the weekends, which usually last around two to three hours. To try and cover as much of the city centre as possible, they go their separate ways at the top of Oxford Road, half heading to Piccadilly, the others to Deansgate.

Each volunteer is trained to signpost using the Street Support application so, though not equipped themselves to transfer those from the streets into housing, the volunteers are experts in directing people to the services available, whether it be clean clothes, a shower, or a hot meal.

The project has, in this respect, significantly changed since last year, when volunteers would give out food on their rounds. Student Action’s latest move to go into partnership with Coalition Relief means that all the charities are collectively working together towards the same shared goal to achieve better results. Rather than taking the resources directly to rough sleepers, referrals are now made to centres, where it is hoped they will encounter other services that help them get out of the cycle of homelessness.

It is a scheme which prides itself on sustainability, so throughout each semester the project leader trains up a volunteer to succeed them the following year. The idea behind this continuity of the group is to carry on conversations, to recognise regulars and thus build long-lasting bonds.

“I’ve seen the same guy a few times now and it turns out that a couple of weeks ago he managed to get a house. It was one of the best shifts I’ve had because he was so happy; it’s nice to see people being given the chance to move on.”

When asked what led her to the role, Hannah explained how it had been a longtime ambition: “Since I was little I struggled to understand why people were there. Now Manchester’s homelessness problem is escalating day by day, even just from last year I notice the difference massively.

“I think it’s really important that they realise that they are still cared for so getting students involved is great because we have so much time to give, I think more than any other group of people — let’s be honest!”

All too often homeless people are met with the misconception that they only have themselves to blame, by way of drink, drugs or delinquency. The reality is that there is a huge variety of factors contributing to the situation, some of which are beyond the person’s control. Hannah thinks that the student body brings something fresh to this mentality.

“People of our generation are a bit more accepting of things, whereas the older generations can be quite deterministic in believing that if they’re out there it must be for a reason, our generation are generally more willing to give them time and listen.”

Those recruiting therefore look for the most confident and committed of applicants to take on the task. Certainly, the role isn’t always plain sailing and volunteers are constantly coming into contact with people who’ve suffered more hardship than they have: “You feel like anything you would say isn’t going to compare to what they must be feeling, you don’t want to diminish it or make it sound like you would ever understand it.”

But, for Hannah, the rewards outweigh this. Taking that break from the library to give something back to the local community is worth it — when she sees the smile on someone’s face after taking the time to stop and sit with them, she feels like she’s “gone out and made a difference”.

Having met some great people in her time with Homeless Outreach, on the streets as well as her fellow volunteers, she highly recommends anyone looking to get involved in volunteering to “100 per cent do it — it’s definitely the best thing I’ve got involved with since I’ve been at university!”

How intergenerational projects are tackling the loneliness crisis

As the UK’s population ages, loneliness amongst the elderly is quickly becoming an epidemic.

According to the latest research by the Campaign to End Loneliness, 17 per cent of older people have contact with family, friends or neighbours less than once a week, and 11 per cent have contact less than once a month. Over half of those aged over 75 live alone.

Loneliness and isolation are bad for our health too, with a lack of social interaction being as harmful as smoking 15 cigarettes a day — more dangerous than obesity or not exercising.

Clearly, the problem is an important one, and it needs tackling. With this in mind, the Intergenerational Projects group at the University of Manchester Students’ Union set out to get elderly people in the local area together for parties, film afternoons, and a whole host of other activities.

“People forget what difficulty people can face just by being older,” said Charlie Spargo, one of the group’s project leaders. “I think it’s important to help out people, especially those who are often alone — living alone or having lost a spouse — to give them a chance to have a more normal experience by mixing with friends, making new friends and keeping active and engaged in society.

“We’re all volunteers who work with elderly people in the local area. We invite them to normally four parties a year in the Students’ Union, where we put on entertainment and food and a few drinks for them, and give them a nice afternoon of time with their friends, who they’ve met normally through the parties, and a chance to socialise with people.”

Tackling loneliness is hugely important to the group. “A lot of them are inside all day, and both the parties and film afternoons are to hinder isolation and make sure they get something out of their time,” said Lise Albertsen, the group’s co-ordinator and general leader.

“It gets them out of the house if they’re at risk of isolation,” agreed Charlie. However, the group do not settle with just providing a chance for people to socialise. “We don’t just put them in a room and have a party, we always make sure that they’re doing something”, Charlie emphasised, “like bingo or a quiz or listening to music put on by student groups, and try and give them as good a time as we can.” The group even hosted a recent cheese and wine party — though they received some complaints about the cholesterol levels.

These events are popular too, with numbers increasing all the time — there are now a total of 148 now on the invitation list, and their last party brought together around 70 attendees.

The group are extremely keen to improve the relationship between students and the wider community. “It’s of massive importance,” Lise told me, “especially when you’re a student you kind of get locked into the campus — the campus and your home, and you don’t really see the rest of Manchester.”

“It can be a bit sad when you see someone who’s just done their university degree and never gone off the beaten track — never met anyone who wasn’t a student, and then they leave and never come back,” said Charlie. “I think that’s sad.”

The intergenerational events highlight just how easy it is to fall into this idea of a student bubble. According to Charlie, “a lot of the guests to the intergenerational parties are from the areas that we associate as just students, but actually there’s a little community of their own that they get involved with”, demonstrating not just how noisy and obnoxious students can be, but how easy it is for them to ignore the rest of the community, particularly the elderly.

Intergenerational projects do not just help the elderly, however: “It’s very much a two-way connection — they gain from us and we gain from them,” Charlie explained.

“You see it with the volunteers,” Lise elaborated. “Most of them have never worked with the elderly, and then they come out of their first volunteering session or film afternoon or party, and they’re so excited and they’re so happy and they’ve spoken to people and got to know stories — they just love it.”

“We’re not just volunteering out of duty,” replied Charlie, “we also really do enjoy it because they’re just a great bunch of people to spend an afternoon with.”

“They’re so kind, and funny, and sassy,” Lise said, beaming. “Some of them have definitely got an attitude,” Charlie admitted, “but they just want to have a bit of fun, make a bit of trouble sometimes.”

Loneliness amongst the elderly is a serious problem — the UK is a country where two-fifths of older people say that their main source of company is their television. “In Britain especially, we have a tendency to leave behind people over a certain age,” said Charlie. “It’s easy to forget about groups of people like that, and I don’t blame anyone for doing it.”

The group may not blame anyone for failing to include the elderly, but that does not mean they are happy about it. “They’re so smart and clever and funny, and I think they’re being forgotten in society,” Lise complained. The group accept that they do not know “what the solution is” on a national level, but their efforts certainly make a difference here in Manchester.

Blast off: Oxford startup ‘Silo’ seeks to address shortcomings in student funding

Few students are happy with their finances, but the ramifications of a lack of funding amount to more than the occasional own-brand product or night in. A 2015 survey by Future Finance found that 24 per cent of students gamble to supplement their earnings, nearly 13 per cent have taken part in clinical trials and a quarter owe money from payday loans.

The venture of one group of Oxford undergraduates is attempting to change this, however. Launched this year, Silo (silofunds.com) is a funding platform aimed at university students struggling to find funding for their course. The result of a year’s work funded by St Anne’s Incubator Projects, it now boasts more than 2,000 users and is setting its sights on academic institutions across the UK.

Co-founder Andros Wong, a fourth year Engineering and Economics and Management student at New College, spoke to The Oxford Student about the community’s aims:

“Users can search the largest, most up to date database for grants, scholarships and bursaries for free. This can run in parallel with a crowdfunding campaign, where we connect students not only with their friends and families, but with those interested in their research or cause.”

Wong tells me that 700 grant applications have been made this year, with three students already successfully crowdfunded.

Crowdfunding is an increasingly popular form of raising revenue, both for individuals and businesses, funding an enterprise through the smaller donations of many contributors: Kickstarter and GoFundMe are two of the most prominent platforms. Wong hopes that this functionality will help students succeed where traditional funding institutions have failed, finding inspiration in personal experience:

“It began because my girlfriend was looking for funding to get her masters place in Hebrew studies at Oxford,” he says. “I tried to help her by searching online and it was incredibly difficult — most of the funds I found were outdated and irrelevant. She also tried crowdfunding but only reached 10% of her goal — it was only [through] a family friend’s help that she managed to take up her place.”

Silo is open to both undergraduates and postgraduates, but is targeted particularly towards those applying for MSt or DPhil courses, or those looking to finish their degrees. Wong hopes that a dedicated crowdfunding platform for higher education will more easily match students with like-minded companies and philanthropists, allowing them to hit their targets.

“We’re trying to change the game in that we’re trying to connect the students with companies and individuals interested in research. We want to make this true for more subjects. Especially if they’re supporting a certain cause, as it’ll help with their own brand proliferation. We want to make it as easy as possible.”

With this in mind, Silo is reaching out to Oxford colleges to locate alumni interested in helping fund future students. Wong says that Silo are already in discussion with three or four colleges about helping redirect alumni to fund prospective applicants. For the three students successfully funded this year, moreover, 35 per cent of the money has come from alumni.

“You’re seeing a person’s story, understanding why they need funding and why you want to invest in them. The nature of the alumni depends on the student: we helped ten refugee applications for the Oxford Student Refugee Campaign (OXSRC), reaching out to people who work in human rights law, at UNESCO and non-profits, and they were very helpful — it really depends on the students in question.”

“Silo has enabled our scholarship fund to access fundraising resources in an entirely new way,” OXSRC said. “The opportunity to crowdfund represents a huge potential for our fund. We were able to successfully raise money for the application fees of ten refugee students in only six days. The work of Silo to publish our campaign in social media and to extended networks was incredibly dedicated. I am sure we will continue to work closely with this service in future.”

Indeed, after MPs recently rejected an amendment to guarantee the rights of EU nationals in the country before Brexit, Silo looks to be aiming to help at least ensure financial stability for international students.

“That’s exactly what we’re trying to do,” Wong explains. “Some EU students may have to start paying international fees, so we want to position ourselves for students looking at UK universities, no matter where they’re from.”

Recent affiliation with TheFamily, one of the largest business accelerators in Europe, and a shortlisting for the Oxford Emerge Pitch Competition will no doubt help spread the word. However, it hasn’t all been plain sailing.

“There’s a lot of glamorisation in being an entrepreneur,” Wong explains. “I’d encourage people to go into it, but the lows are low and the highs are high. Balancing academic work and startup work is very difficult.”

Nevertheless, Wong has high hopes for Silo. Collaboration with OxFund, the Oxford Crowdfunding and Fundraising Society, culminated last Wednesday in one of the first University-wide information sessions for students looking to pursue a further degree. And with input from the University Careers Service and Oxford Entrepreneurship, he is confident in the long-term potential of the service:

“I’m hoping to work on this next year after I graduate. The vision is to become the primary source for undergraduate graduate funding, and students will be more and more reliant on these kinds of sources. The vision is absolutely to be on the level of GoFundMe and Kickstarter.”

Journalist  – Chris Allnutt ([email protected])

Project leader – Andros Wong ([email protected])

Oxford Student 

Going Cold: Students investigated unsolved homicides in Pitt club

On a Wednesday night in February, Rachel Feil stands at a whiteboard in room 232 of David Lawrence Hall, tapping a red Expo marker on her chin as she studies what she’s scribbled on the surface.

“I don’t know,” she tells the man standing next to her. “I don’t think that works. We need more information.”

Behind her, five groups of four to six University of Pittsburgh students on laptops are laser-focused on their research. Some skim online news articles while others bounce theories off each other, fingers flying over the keyboard when it seems that somebody’s voiced a thought worth recording.

They’re trying to answer a question — not to an essay prompt or a physics problem, but to a puzzle left unsolved for more than 20 years: Who murdered Stephanie Coyle?

The students, most of whom are planning a career in fields such as law, law enforcement or forensics, are members of Pitt’s Conquering Cold Cases Club.

“Our main focus is trying to help the victims’ loved ones find some answers for the questions they have, so that they can finally have some closure,” sophomore club President Alex Morgan said.

It sounds like the setup for an amateur homicide investigation show, and it might be. The club has attracted attention since seniors Nicole Coons and Hannah Eisenhart founded it in 2015. A film crew even spent some time in February with the members to see if their work was worthy of a TV show — the club hasn’t heard back yet.

“The club’s still a work in progress, but it’s growing rapidly and is way more structured than when we first started it last year,” said Coons, an administration of justice and political science major.

Coons got the idea when she saw a flyer at a country club in her hometown in July 2014 asking for help locating Kortnee Stouffer, who was 21 when she disappeared two years prior. After talking with an attendant at the club and an old friend of Stouffer’s, she was inspired to enlist Pitt students to help track similar cases.

“Police departments always have a lot going on, and they can’t usually focus on just one specific case,” Coons said. “I thought that getting a bunch of Pitt students with a passion for criminal justice to hone in on a couple of cases in particular would be a great way to give back to the community and help some people out.”

The club now has roughly 30 members, all of whom skip around between examining the Coyle case, the Stouffer case and the 2005 murder of 94-year-old Beaver County resident Anna Rocknick. Students interested in participating in CCC have to sign a privacy contract and undergo an interview process with club leaders to make prove they’re serious.

Photo: Elaina Zachos. Club President Alex Morgan (center) taking notes at a club meeting as Webber speaks. Morgan, like many members, plans to enter a career related to her work with CCC.

“It’s not all about having fun or sharpening their detective skills,” Eisenhart said. “It’s about seeking justice.”

Pennsylvania has one of the highest clearance rates for solving murders and homicides, according to Project Cold Case — a national project aimed at tracking the number of unsolved murders nationwide — but still, more than 20 percent go unsolved.

Stephanie Coyle’s case is one that has gone without justice or answers for more than two decades, stumping investigators in western Pennsylvania.

Police found the 74-year-old woman on the floor of her bedroom apartment the morning of July 16, 1993, in the small town of Arnold, Pennsylvania. She died from a stab wound to her throat. A design was carved into her back after death, and her corpse had been sexually assaulted.

CCC has been working on this case since September, after finding it with a Google search for “local cold cases”.  The web is full of reports on the unsolved Coyle case — her grisly death rocked the Alle Kiski suburb where she lived. Her long-suffering son has since posted hefty rewards for anyone with information that could crack the case.

This is how CCC typically operates — tracking down information and related names through online news articles, and then using social media to find possible witnesses, family members and involved law enforcement.

This is the one edge they have over the police, said junior Zach Bruce.

“We’re a lot more tech-savvy than them, probably because we’re younger,” Bruce, an economics and business major, said. “They may have more information than we do, but we’ve got Google and more time.”

CCC has interviewed an EMT who responded to Coyle’s murder, one of her children and the Arnold chief of police.

“It’s pretty chilling,” Feil, an undeclared first-year student, said. “This isn’t CSI. This is real stuff that’s happened to real people.”

Asking the right questions

Feil eventually sketched out the layout of Coyle’s house and the surrounding area on the whiteboard that Wednesday, recreating the scene based on research she did using Google Maps and news clippings from the time of the murder.

Feil is trying to determine a possible entrance to the house with what little information she’s been able to glean from the internet. While she studies the board, her peers pick each others’ brains about what they know — and still don’t know — about the Coyle case.

“We need to figure out if this guy has left the area or not.”

“Since it was in the neck, she was probably unable to move. That paralyzes the spine.”

Law enforcement in general can be tight-lipped about sharing information with the group, and witnesses and family members are often skeptical about what a bunch of college kids can do.

“If it’s a family member of the victim, it can get pretty emotional, and you have to be tactful and patient,” Bruce said. “Also, you have to be prepared to get conflicting information. The policeman you talk to has probably seen several autopsy pictures in his lifetime. He or she may not correctly remember the one you’re asking about.”

Luckily, the club has retired Pittsburgh police commander and adjunct law professor Ronald Freeman to help. He agreed to serve as CCC’s adviser after Coons, a former student of his, approached him in 2014. He’s connected the club with former colleagues and friends — including a handwriting expert and a medical examiner — from his 37 years with the city police.

“This club is an excellent opportunity for law students still studying in the classroom to get some hands-on experience,” Freeman said. “[The students are] invested and they’re focused in the cases they’re working on.”

It was Freeman who put the students in contact with William Webber, Arnold’s former chief of police. He responded to Coyle’s death as a patrolman and has kept up with it even after his retirement in 2015.

“It’s kept me up at night sometimes,” Webber said of the case. “This isn’t something I want to have to take to my grave unsolved.”

Facing Facts

The Wednesday after Feil sketched Coyle’s house onto the whiteboard, CCC’s room was devoid of the usual animated chatter about suspects and speculations. Instead, only Webber’s deep voice echoed as he clicked through a slideshow of evidence and case files.

A graying man with a confident bearing, he rattled off details about the case without glancing at his PowerPoint, recounting what happened the night of Coyle’s death for the 100th time. The students stared unflinchingly at the screen, even when grisly autopsy pictures slid by.

“The reason I’m showing you this,” Webber told the students, “is because you might see something I don’t. I’d really like to find out who did this, so that I can punch a guy in the face.”

Almost as soon the last slide ends, members started firing off questions.

“Did it look like any article of clothing had been ripped off?”

“Which suspect stands out the most to you?”

“Was there an area where there was a majority of blood, or was it all just drops?”

This is the kind of unbridled access that makes the club one of a kind, members say.

“We toured a medical examiner’s place once in my criminalistics class, but we’ve never done anything like speak with a cop about the details of a case,” said Nihita Manhem, a junior neuroscience major, after Webber’s visit. “We get to see stuff even the media isn’t allowed to see.”

Three weeks later — as March rolls in — the club moves on to its next step in the Coyle case, researching names on a suspect list from Webber. The students go through the usual routine of breaking off into groups, and immediately start combing the internet for contact information.

“I found a guy with that name in his late 60s who lives in New Jersey as a preacher!”

“Yeah, and I found one with the same name that’s white and proudly German.”

“Dude, this one hasn’t updated his profile since 2012.”

Eisenhart said working with loved ones of victims is the hardest but most rewarding part about trying to solve cold cases. Besides Coyle’s son, Dan, the club has also spoken with the people who had close relationships with the victims in the Stouffer and Rodnick cases.

“It really puts it into perspective. This is what I might be dealing with someday, considering what I want to do,” she said. “It’s heartbreaking, but it’s good to know that the work I’m doing is giving them hope.”

By mid-March, CCC hasn’t solved Coyle’s case, but they’ve gotten some — currently confidential — new leads and plan on sticking with the investigation. Mark Safarik, a former FBI profiler whose job is to psychologically analyze a criminal’s behavior in the hopes of catching them, has even agreed to profile the Coyle case for the club.

Megan Hixon, an undeclared first-year student thinking about going into forensics, is hopeful that Safarik will help CCC members narrow down the information they’ve gathered so far. With any luck, they might be able to finally bring a sliver of peace to Coyle’s family.

“Who knows, maybe 30-some college students are going to be able to spot something new,” she said.

The Pitt News

Sciences Po Refugee Help

Though rising populist leaders, spreading islamophobia, and isolationist tendencies have threatened the future of refugees around the world, students at the leading French university, Sciences Po, have created an organization called Sciences Po Refugee Help which aims to provide emergency and integration aid to asylum seekers in France.

Sciences Po Refugee Help’s main objective is to materially and immaterially improve the living conditions of refugees. The organization brings together asylum seekers with students who are passionate about helping refugees in an effort to, in their own words, “bridge the gap between those in need and those willing to act”.

Founded in 2015, Sciences Po Refugee Help has adopted an apolitical rights-based approach which involves them being present on the ground as well as using their volunteers’ political knowledge to lobby at a state and UN level. Though the organization is based in Paris, their services extend beyond the nation’s capital.

The organization is exclusively made up of students.

“Created after a call for help in September 2015, we now have the highest number of active volunteers [of any] association at Sciences Po,” said President of Sciences Po Refugee Help, Yann Lebec.

But make no mistake, this is not your typical university club. Sciences Po Refugee Help is a certified 1901 law association which allows its members to operate within a legal framework.

“I am so happy that students from Sciences Po have founded Sciences Po Refugee Help,” said the Director of Sciences Po, Frédéric Mion: “What they are doing is an honour to Sciences Po, and goes towards supporting the values in which we believe, of openness and generosity.”

So how does the organization assist refugees?

Sciences Po Refugee Help functions at many levels. The organisation provides basic material needs to asylum seekers. However, rather than making assumptions about what the refugees may need, the organization conducts needs assessments in migrant camps and housing centers. Last year for instance, the organisation provided running shoes to asylum seekers who were wearing flip-flops during the cold Paris winter.

They also provide French lessons in four different locations throughout Paris and organize social activities which they believe are “essential to the maintenance of a humane quality of life for refugees”.

Last October, Sciences Po Refugee Help brought 20 residents of the Loiret center to the Grande Mosquée of Paris.

The organisation’s ‘Asylum Aid Team’ assists asylum seekers in their application process for refugee status. Because of their understanding of the French and EU asylum system as well as their capacity to translate from Farsi and Arabic to French, the team is able to advise on “the asylum procedure, help explain asylum seeker’s rights, accompany asylum seekers to medical visits, check over necessary forms, and redirect applicants to the appropriate organizations when necessary.”

With a series of terrorist attacks throughout the nation over the past few years, islamophobia has been on the rise in France. The extreme right wing, anti-refugee presidential candidate Marine Le Pen — famous for villainising asylum seekers — has gained an alarming amount of support. Her victory would intensify an already dire crisis and would institutionalise islamophobia as a legitimate foreign policy.

Many media outlets and academics have maintained that rising islamophobia will only increase the likelihood of radicalisation and terrorist attacks on French soil.

Organisations like Sciences Po Refugee Help remind us that we are all humans capable of empathy and respect, and deserving of a chance for a decent life. Though the organisation is still in its infancy, by bridging the gap between communities that are increasingly being pegged against one another, Sciences Po Refugee Help reminds us of a need for a humane approach to refugee and development policies.

The Paris Globalist

Pitt Pantry addresses rising food insecurity

After finishing a shift at Market Central, Alexandria Dsouza usually swings by the Pitt Pantry to pick up her groceries for the week.

“I come here primarily for toiletries, like toothpaste and toilet paper, and breakfast foods like bagels and cereal,” Dsouza said, leaning comfortably against the pantry door frame, a bag of bagels firmly cradled in the crook of her elbow. “And beans. Beans are great.”

Dsouza, an international student from India, lives off-campus in the Shadyside neighborhood. Since getting to the University of Pittsburgh in August 2016, she’s been visiting the pantry to save her wages for rent, tuition and additional costs that inevitably crop up.

“Every little bit helps… Most of the money I make working at Market Central goes toward my rent and other expenses,” Dsouza said. “Any chance to save cash makes a difference to me because I’ve taken on a lot since arriving here.”

The Office of PittServes — which connects students with service opportunities — facilitates the non-profit, volunteer-run Pitt Pantry. The Pantry takes donations from individuals, food drives and food recovered from businesses including Starbucks and Einstein Bros. Bagels. It also receives cheap and healthy recipes from the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank.

Since the pantry opened nearly two years ago, its monthly visitors have more than doubled. Students who qualify as independent and make less than a certain amount of money yearly can stop by the Pitt Pantry twice per month.

“We’ve had tremendous support from the local community,” Smith said. “Sometimes we’ll get food from drives we didn’t even know were held.”

Tucked away in a corner room of the Bellefield Presbyterian Church’s basement, the pantry is not a permanent structure and is only open Wednesdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Thursdays from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. and Fridays by appointment. Colorful paper decorations hang from the ceiling and brush shoppers’ heads as they follow their pantry guide — a student volunteer — to the beat of pop music playing in the background.

Photo: Kyleen Considine. 

Healthy, easy recipe ideas dangle over collapsible shelves housing perishable items. Next to a refrigerator stocked with yogurt and salads is a folding wall, decorated with tacked-on coupons.

Junior Madoc Smith — one of three or four student volunteer workers on duty at all times — escorts individual shopper through the pantry during a shift in February, asking about their allergies and diet and if they own a can opener or microwave. If needed, the mathematical biology, computer science and urban studies major directs them to the vegetarian or gluten-free sections.

“The people who come in here, they’re just kids trying to eat,” Smith said. “We try to make it as welcoming an experience as possible.”

As Smith guides a shopper through the pantry, he tells them how much food they’re allowed to take. Pantry customers are allowed to make two visits a month and must fall under the United States Department of Agriculture’s federal income eligibility guidelines. The income limit is $17,820 for an independent individual, $24,030 for a couple and $36,450 for a family of four. The amount of food a customer is permitted to take depends on how many people they’re shopping for. For instance, a person shopping for just themselves may take one can of soup, but a person shopping for three people may take two.

“We try to supply students with aid beyond just giving them food,” Smith said. “We’ll also hold home winterizing workshops and do stuff like send them information about stores holding sales.”

At a university that costs upwards of $17,000 a year, or more than $28,000 for out of state residents, a food pantry seems like an ironic necessity. But it might be the high — and still rising — cost of college, along with all the added costs of living, that make it so necessary.

Photo: Kyleen Considine. Rosemary Holtz, a sophomore nutrition and dietetics major, sorts coupons at the Pitt food pantry.

The Pitt Pantry’s customers are only a handful of the thousands of college students who visit campus food pantries across the U.S., a number that has ballooned in recent years. The College and University Food Alliance welcomed its 400th food pantry in December 2016, a large increase from its original 13 college pantries in March 2012.

“Food insecurity has increasingly become an issue on college and university campuses and can pose a significant barrier to student success,” CUFBA’s website reads. “Addressing it serves both a human service and educational need.”

By food insecurity, CUFBA means lacking access to adequate food due to a shortage of money or other resources. Hunger is more common among college students than the U.S. population as a whole, according to the October 2016 report Hunger on Campus.

The report surveyed more than 3,000 students at a mix of 34 community and four-year colleges, and found that 48 percent of recipients experienced food insecurity in the past month, having to skip meals or decrease meal sizes because they lacked funds.

Of the food insecure students in the study, 32 percent said that hunger problems had an impact on their education — 53 percent of those respondents reported missing a class, and 25 percent reported dropping a class due to food insecurity.

Erika Ninos, the sustainability program coordinator for PittServes, said alumni feedback revealed that there were times in many Pitt students’ collegiate careers when they were unable to purchase nutritious food or were forced to cut back on meals to save costs. This information led to the pantry’s creation.

“After benchmarking other institutions and researching what is available locally for students, a cohort of students came together with the Office of PittServes to create the Pitt Pantry,” Ninos said.

During its first month, 23 people visited the Pitt Pantry. Now nearly two years old, the pantry serves between 50 to 100 members of Pitt’s faculty, staff and student body a month.

Pitt is not the only Pittsburgh-area college to start a food pantry. The Community College of Allegheny County (CCAC) started its own in April 2015.

The CCAC’s pantry, called the Campus Cupboard, follows the same federal income guidelines as the Pitt Pantry. It is open two hours a day, four days a week, and customers are allowed to visit once per month. Kelli Maxwell, dean of student development of CCAC’s south campus, said that its visitors come from all demographics and socioeconomic statuses.

“We’ve got a lot of young people, but we also have older people going back to school to get a degree,” Maxwell said. “We also have students that are parents or full-time workers.”

Neither lack of employment, a lack of access to college meal plans or financial aid have been found to be contributing factors to food insecurity among students. The Hunger on Campus report found that of the food insecure students surveyed, 56 percent reported having a paying job, with 38 percent of them working 20 hours or more per week.

Photo: Kyleen Considine.

Among the respondents from four-year colleges, 43 percent of meal plan enrollees still experienced food insecurity, and three in four food insecure students received some form of financial aid. More than half — 52 percent — received Pell Grants, and 37 percent took out student loans during the current academic year.

More students are going hungry simply because students are spending more money to cover the rising cost of tuition. According to a 2015 report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, tuition at public four-year colleges has gone up $2,068 on average since the 2007-08 academic year. Simultaneously, state spending on higher education nationwide is down an average of $1,805 per student since the Great Recession.

Furthermore, more and more people are feeling pressured to attend college even if it’s unaffordable. A 2013 study by Georgetown University predicts that almost two-thirds of open jobs on the American market will require higher education beyond high school by 2020.

The burden of covering college expenses often falls solely on students, with family members less capable than before the recession to help cover costs. According to College Board’s 2016 report, the average total cost of tuition, fee and room and board rose 10 percent from 2010 to 2015 at public colleges while median family income rose just 7 percent over the same time period.

An undergraduate Pitt student and visitor to the Pitt Pantry who wished to remain anonymous said she attends the pantry because she can’t risk asking relatives for spare funds, and what money she makes must be put towards other expenses.

“I don’t want to bother [my mom] for cash for food while she’s got her own expenses to cover,” the student said. “All the cash I make over the summer I use to pay my rent.”

The student said she doesn’t think people realize just how many people benefit from the Pitt Pantry’s presence on campus and how much its services mean to many students.

“It’s definitely the best program Pitt has to offer — after all, everyone needs to eat dinner,” the student said.

The Pitt News

Review: The Commitments

The musical The Commitments is based on Roddy Doyle’s book of the same name and directed by Caroline Jay Ranger. The musical set in Dublin follows Jimmy as he seeks to form a successful soul band.  The musical centred around the working class life of 1986 in Dublin Northside has hints of political rhetoric, but mostly simply delivers on its feel good nature.

Jimmy manages to gather a group of musicians who all want to escape the dreariness of their daily lives. The band form to create the soul group The Commitments. You have lead singer Deco, whose cockiness is a major struggle for the band. However, his talent is undeniable. Brian Gilligan who plays Deco certainly delivers on vocal talent and energy. His performance is electrifying.

Also delivering on the vocal side are Amy Penston as Natalie, Leah Penston as Imelda and Christina Tedders as Bernie. All three add a touch of glamour to an otherwise firmly male band. The entire cast are sensational and all deliver excellent performances, but a special mention to Sam Fordham as Mickah.

Fordham plays the skinhead security guard and is simultaneously hilarious and scary, with his eccentric aggressive mannerism. Importantly he directly addresses the audience, getting us to cheer and clap along, which means we aren’t simply a passive audience watching a musical, but are really there, watching The Commitments perform live at one of their gigs. It really made you want to get up and dance and sing along.

The show isn’t all happy go lucky — like any good soul song it is based on struggle and hard work.  The Commitments like so many bands are filled with in-fighting with so many different personalities it’s hardly surprising. Deco manages to annoy and irritate the entire band, but he is needed for his undeniable talent, so Jimmy feels he can’t kick him out the band despite his constant lateness.

Natalie has captured the hearts of nearly the entire band, as most of the males lust after the beautiful singer. Jimmy even goes so far as say the only reason the band has stuck together is because the men want a chance to hang out with Natalie. Not to mention the older gentleman of the group Joey the Lips, played by Alex McMorran, and his innate ability to woo the ladies.

The music is incredible. Hearing renditions of ‘Think’, ‘Try a Little Tenderness’, ‘Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours’ and ‘I Heard it Through the Grapevine’ to name but a few. The self-titled “hardest working band in the world” certainly don’t hold back on their vocal prowess. If nothing else you are guaranteed to have a fun night watching this musical, although it does feel more like a gig at times, but who is complaining when you get to hear Aretha Franklin and James Brown’s hits.

The Commitments is playing at the Palace Theatre until the 8th of April. Don’t miss it — get your soul tickets here.

Nominations open for the Celebrate Week awards

The University of Manchester Student’ Union annual Celebrate Week awards are still open for nominations. Every year students who campaign, volunteer, fund raise or are part of a society within the Union are recognised with a variety of awards ranging from Outstanding contribution to the Students’ Union to Project Leader of the Year, with thirty-three award categories in total.

All students who have been involved with a society or a campaign within the Student Union are eligible to nominate themselves for the work they have done, or someone else they believe has made a difference within the Union, and you have until the 7th of April to put your nominations forward.

There will be two awards nights: one for the ‘Teaching, Community and Fundraising Awards’ on Tuesday 9 May from 19:00 – 22:00, and another for the Societies and Media Awards’ on Wednesday 10 May from 19:00 – 23:00.

It is free to attend the awards night, and all attendees are treated to dinner and some free drinks, but keep an eye out for the ticket link when it goes live as there is limited capacity.

Speaking about Celebrate Week a spokesperson for the University of Manchester Students’ Union said: “Every year, our members do some incredible things.

“Whether it’s campaigning for change, leading a successful society or hall, organising a great event, raising money for charity or just contributing your time to the Students’ Union; every minute you put in makes the student experience even greater. We wouldn’t be the Union we are without you.

“So with that in mind, we’re holding our annual Celebrate Week, on the 9 and 10 May in Academy 1, to celebrate all the wonderful and amazing things you do. Everyone shortlisted for the awards are chosen by you.”

To nominate for the awards simply complete the form here 

Album: Mount Eerie — A Crow Looked at Me

Released 24th March via P.W. Elverum & Sun

9/10

In his twenty years making music, first as The Microphones until 2002 and now as Mount Eerie, Phil Elverum has cultivated the image of a man of mystery. His music conjures up whole worlds replete with natural imagery illustrating more personal revelations, obscuring our understanding of the man himself. Instead, there is a tendency to view him as a somewhat mystical figure existing somewhere between human society and the natural environment. This is bolstered, no doubt, by the fact that he lives on an island in the Pacific Northwest that is overlooked by the real Mount Eerie.

Relatively publicity-shy, for a six-month period in early 2016 he communicated almost exclusively via haikus on Twitter (one typical example: ‘Pacific Northwest/pothead in a Subaru/with humungous shorts’). He spoke little of his personal life, and the biography on his website reads: “Possibly sociopathic, I personally don’t care that much about people and wish that everyone else was a little more focussed on the song, not the singer”.

Last June, Elverum lost his luxury of privacy in a big and real way: no longer a mystic, it turns out he’s just a man. We found out his wife Geneviève Castrée Elverum, who recorded under the names Woelv and Ô PAON, had been diagnosed with advanced pancreatic cancer shortly after the birth of their daughter, and the financial burden was so great that the couple had to resort to crowdfunding. Geneviève died just over a month afterwards. Suddenly, one haiku from seven months earlier reading, “when you hear about/what’s happening in my life/you’ll think ‘Why’d he tweet?'” became less whimsical and more crushing.

Recorded in his late wife’s workspace and predominantly using her instruments, Elverum’s new album A Crow Looked at Me is the product of this turmoil, and is like little he has previously recorded. What is initially striking is how sonically distinct it is from his recent albums: where 2012’s twin albums Clear Moon and Ocean Roar and 2015’s Sauna were droning, foggy and vague, the songs on A Crow Looked At Me are direct and stripped down to their bare bones.

No longer the expansive wash of sounds Elverum has employed before, here the music trails his voice: he is accompanied by quiet acoustic strumming and infrequent swells of pianos and electric guitars. Softly in the background, we hear drum machines that are uncomfortably evocative of hospital machinery. Melodies are scarce and, in their absence, the length of most lines is dictated by how much Elverum has to say. Now more than any other time, he has a lot to say.

While Elverum has previously spoken of pursuing a more direct writing approach — “Dense with easy words. Say everything as it is. Resist big-picture reflections” — it is hard or even cruel to imagine this is what he had in mind. A Crow Looked at Me is a grief diary set to music, wandering through time from the immediate aftermath of Geneviève’s death to the moment the two met, and back through the midst of her illness.

The album is lacking the epiphanic observations that we see in the rest of his work, where personal realisations are blown up to cosmic proportions. Instead, Elverum is preoccupied with in-the-moment ruminations; one moment he celebrates the small victory of finally throwing away Geneviève’s toothbrush, the next he is overcome as he checks the post a week after her death to discover a package she had ordered for their daughter. The album’s emotional potency lies in the small details that leave songs distinguished more by the lyrical content than the music, and each has at least one line which hits you unexpectedly hard.

It is perhaps inaccurate though to interpret this devastating directness as a stylistic choice to articulate grief, rather than a product of grief itself. In ‘Seaweed’, he searches for symbolism in his surroundings to process his loss: “I can’t remember, were you into Canada Geese?/Is it significant, these hundreds on the beach?/What about Foxgloves — is that a flower you liked?” He finds no meaning or solace, and it is only in this context that he numbly declares on the opening track “it’s not for singing about/it’s not for making into art/when real death comes to the house, all poetry is dumb”. This is a significant and devastating mission statement for an artist who has written about concepts of life and death for most of his career, but now surmises “conceptual emptiness was cool to talk about, back before I knew my way around these hospitals”.

All of this makes for an album that is exceptionally difficult to review. I spent a lot of time banging my head against a wall when writing this, wondering whether it was appropriate to review A Crow Looked at Me and how I would go about doing so. After all, Elverum could be forgiven for having the key qualities of music criticism — recording integrity, melody, instrumentation, lyrics — a long way from the front of his mind when creating this work. Rather, his intention, detailed when announcing the album, is simple: “I make these songs and put them out into the world just to multiply my voice saying that I love her. I want it known”. More than an artistic work, this album is a simple expression of love for his wife, and an epigraph for Elverum’s life with her. The album is defined by her absence, yet at the same time sees her looming over every word.

In the end, I decided to review this for two reasons. First, it deserves publicity for the most basic of reasons: human empathy. Simply put, it feels appropriate to amplify this declaration of love and grief. Secondly, more directly, A Crow Looked at Me has lingered on my mind more than any recent album I can recall: it is one of the best creative works Elverum has put out to date, even though we probably both wish it never needed to exist.

Needless to say, it’s a tough listen. The gaps between the songs are mercilessly short, leaving little time to process the difficult emotions communicated within each song until the end of the album. Moreover, its nonlinear nature is exhausting and disorienting, likely purposefully so. It sounds creaking and cold, with little of the warm sonic expanses of previous albums that allowed the listener to get lost within; now there are only Elverum’s words. Finally, and obviously, this is a hard listen because it’s just so sad: this is Music To Cry To if I’ve ever heard it. Luckily, Elverum’s lyricism is so well-crafted that, despite how painful and dense it is, you can’t help but dig deep and hold on. Moreover, there are more emotions than sadness here, and the album serves as a tribute to Geneviève and Elverum’s relationship with her as much as it resembles a memorial.

In this sense, the album’s final three songs make some headway towards a conclusion. In ‘Toothbrush/Trash’, Elverum sings “the echo of you in the house dies down”, and observes haunting memories becoming replaced by sanitised photographs. Though “it does not feel good”, it’s a necessary part of the grieving process. The album’s beating heart ‘Soria Moria’ traces the longing that has followed Elverum from his childhood through his transformation from artist to caregiver in Geneviève’s final months, contextualising the album among Elverum’s other works. On the way, he lifts the melody from 2001 song ‘The Moon’, references the creative process behind 2008’s Dawn, borrows the pitch-black, crackling feedback from 2007’s black metal-influenced Wind’s Poem and returns briefly to the elemental imagery he is associated with. For the first time on the album, Geneviève is not the overarching focus.

As ‘Crow’ ends the album on a quiet, intimate note, the transition is complete: unlike every previous song, it isn’t sung to Geneviève, and she shifts from being referred to in the second person to third person. She’s replaced by their unnamed daughter as Elverum reflects on a November morning’s walk with her and ponders about the world she will grow up in. In an album characterised by harrowing intimacy, it is comforting to see Elverum released, somewhat, from his grief. As the poem by Joanne Kyger on the album’s cover reads: “the best thing about the past is that it’s over”.

Elverum once described the song as “a beautiful deep spring that somehow cuts through all layers of complication and can hold permanent and true wisdom in a few simple words or sounds”. To a great degree this explains why A Crow Looked at Me is such a satisfying and accomplished album: by singing as directly as he can about emotions he is still very much in thrall to, Elverum has created an honest and lingering tribute to his wife that is as loving as it is catatonic. This is one of the most powerful pieces of art that Elverum has created, and will rightly linger in the minds of everyone who listens to it, but to score this album out of ten will always feel more than a little graceless.

To understand this album you need to hear it: for yourself, for Phil Elverum, and for Geneviève.

Inspiring Women at The University of Manchester

‘Celebrating Inspiring Women at Manchester’ was an event held for International Women’s Day, the event celebrated University of Manchester alumni in healthcare and looked into the challenges that still exist.

Vice-chancellor Dame Nancy Rothwell opened the event by saying “we are one of the most diverse Universities in the United Kingdom in the most diverse city … that’s extremely important to us and it’s also a source of pride and strength”.

Dr Dawn Edge, Senior Lecturer in the School of Health Sciences and the University’s Academic Lead for Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, led the questions and was joined by Dr Sheena Cruickshank, Senior Lecturer in Immunology and the University Academic Lead for Public Engagement, Ms Anya Golder who is currently undertaking a PhD specialising in cancer research, and Dr Patricia Troop CBE who was awarded an Outstanding Alumni Award in 2007.

Women now make up around a third of consultants and half of GPs and the panel talked about the need to change the way healthcare is practiced to reflect this, as oppose to having a rigid system and expecting to simply “squeeze people in”.

In addition to this, the hour and a half discussion covered a wide range of topics such as health literacy, the role of social media and the internet, the success and challenges surrounding vaccinations and the benefits of having an open conversation about both mental and physical health.

Dr Troop emphasised the need to engage with areas outside of healthcare such as manufacturers and supermarkets saying that “the message alone is not enough”. She went on to say that “you’ve got to work with all sorts of sectors to try and enable somebody to make good lifestyle choices … [while being] very careful not to be judgemental”.

Dr Cruickshank talked about the importance of citizen science and said: “Science is affecting all of our lives, all of the time … being aware of what’s going on, being able to take part in it and make decisions is really critical”.

Cruickshank’s been involved in the Britain Breathing project which developed an app for people to use to learn about allergies with the help of asthma sufferers. This aim of this approach is to ensure that users needs are being met at an integral level.

The event ended with the whole panel being asked: ‘What would Manchester’s inspiring women say to their younger selves?’ Dr Troop said: “Be kinder to yourself”, Dr Cruickshank said: “You’re better than you think you are”, Ms Golder said: “Mum’s right, sweets are bad for you”, and Dr Edge said “Don’t take no for an answer”.

Retrospective: Sex Week 2017

From the 20th to the 24th of March, Sexpression Manchester hosted Sex Week at the University of Manchester Students’ Union. Sex Week, which is now in its third year, was set up in 2015 with the aim of creating an open and inclusive space in which students can gather to discuss anything from gender and sexuality to sex work.

This year, Sex Week featured a huge range of events, with something for everyone to get involved in, from a Sexual Pleasure workshop to a chance at winning a £50 bar tab at the sex-themed pub quiz! Several of the talks provided an opportunity for medics and other health care students to learn more about issues that they may encounter in their future careers: Action for Trans* Health and the LGBT Foundation discussed LGBTQ+ issues in healthcare, whilst representatives from the George House Trust spoke about their experiences of living with HIV.

However, the highlight of the week for me was a discussion on sex work. This featured John Goldring and Adam Westall from Manchester Metropolitan University, National Ugly Mugs (who seek greater access to justice for sex workers), the English Collective of Prostitutes (who campaign for the decriminalisation and safety of sex workers) and the Sex Workers Open University (a sex worker-led collective fighting criminalisation and providing support for sex workers).

Sex work can be a divisive topic, and it was fascinating to hear a point of view that can very often be overlooked. A large focus of the talk was the impact of austerity measures on people who sell sex. One of the main concerns regarding austerity is that it can force people into sex work, which can be seen as degrading and exploitative.

Laura, from the English Collective of Prostitutes, disputed this and argued that, “austerity means that people have less choice generally… not being able to feed your children is degrading. [Sex work] is a survival strategy, it’s financial independence from men, partners, the state… it’s often a route out of degrading treatment.” The guest speakers argued that decriminalising sex work and treating it like any other job would lead to improved standards and safety for sex workers.

Additionally, with more and more students turning to sex work to subsidise their living costs and escape the ever-increasing weight of student debt, it was interesting to hear firsthand what needs to be done to protect and support student sex workers. Alex from National Ugly Mugs stressed that “it should be considered discrimination” when universities suspend students on the grounds of sex work, and argued that every university should protect student sex workers from this. Laura also argued that universities should provide counselling and support services for student sex workers, and urged students to campaign for the decriminalisation of sex work.

As well as organising Sex Week, Sexpression Manchester also promotes safe sex and healthy relationships on campus and in the local community. For many students, moving to a new city can be daunting, and it can be difficult to find and access local sexual health services. Sexpression Manchester aims to break down the secrecy and stigma surrounding STI testing by running free chlamydia and gonorrhoea testing stalls on campus several times per semester.

Additionally, the Advice Service in the SU offers a huge range of sexual health services, from free condoms, female condoms and dental dams to STI and pregnancy testing. The Hathersage Centre (on Upper Brook Street, just a short walk from campus) also provides contraception, pregnancy testing and a range of other specialist services including psychosexual counselling.

Sexpression is a national charity that aims to empower young people to make informed decisions about their relationships and sexual health. They run informal workshops in the community, hold talks and events at the university and run STI testing stalls on campus. If you’re interested in getting involved, or maybe even organising an event for Sex Week 2018, visit our Facebook page to keep up to date with our volunteering opportunities and work on campus.

Review: The Pasta Factory

As a student, pasta is a reoccurring theme in my dinners, so I wouldn’t normally choose to eat pasta out at a restaurant. However, a menu teeming with fresh ingredients, vegetarian options, and meat delights had me sold. I thought The Pasta Factory would surely be able to beat my simplistic dried pasta dishes which always involve a heavy after-kick of garlic.

Walking into the restaurant left me feeling underwhelmed. The décor could definitely do with a revamp. The floor was a cream, plasticky, tile effect and the tables were laid with logo paper sheets instead of table cloths – something I really don’t like. Yes, I understand the ease, but the feeling it gives to a restaurant isn’t shabby chic but more ‘can’t be bothered’.

After the initial visual disappointment, we were met with a beaming Italian-accented waiter who was keen to walk us through the menu. He eagerly pointed out and described the daily specials and with that information, left us to deliberate.

As we conversed over the menu options, I overheard numerous nearby tables speaking Italian, surely a good sign I thought. If the pasta brings in its native makers, then surely it’ll be good enough for me. Finally, we decided on ordering, one mixed antipasti and one vegetarian antipasti to start, one special spinach and cheese ravioli served with a tomato sauce and fresh tomatoes, and one ravioli filled with ham and topped with hazelnuts.

We waited contently with a glass of red wine each — the cheapest being £5 for a small glass — and looked up keenly when our waiter brought over our antipastis. The meat option was instantly more pleasing to the eye due to the variety of colour and textures included, however, the vegetarian board was more intriguing due to the assortment of interesting ingredients that were dotted across the wooden board. The different parts of the antipasti were explained to us in detail so we should happily dive in knowing exactly what we were tasting.

The stand out flavours on the vegetarian option included the fresh, bursting bruschetta and the richness of the earthy cheese. However, I would have preferred another slice of toasted bread rather than the thin, crispy flatbread-esque item that was included. I also found the lettuce leaves that were included, as kind of pots for the cheese, were strange and unnecessary and the addition of a spoonful of tart hummus was confusing. The price of £7 was steep for the amount included, I understand The Pasta Factory has an ethos of supporting small suppliers, something I admire, but a slightly larger portion wouldn’t hurt anyone, especially not the customer.

Feeling somewhat dampened by the starter, we tried to remain positive, as the fresh pasta was why we were both really there. When our mains were brought out, we knew we had made the right menu decisions. My dish was vibrant and fresh looking, a mix of fresh baby tomatoes and a blended tomato sauce surrounded a hearty pile of delicate squares of filled ravioli. I’ve always loved the idea of ravioli, the satisfaction of biting into fresh pasta encasing my chosen fillings never lets me down. I can safely say I felt that way with this dish. The spinach and ricotta inside to my perfectly formed ravioli worked extremely well with the slightly sweet tomato sauce that they were paired with. I could almost certainly see the waiters glancing at me as I wiped my bowl clean.

My partner exclaimed his pasta was a delight too. The salty ham inside this ravioli combined with the rich cheese fondue sauce created a truly lavish experience, and, the crunchiness of the crushed hazelnuts on top gave the dish an added texture that was more than welcome.

We paid and I thought about a closing sentence for this article, but I couldn’t come up with much more than avoid the pricey, unsatisfying starters, but the pasta is a winner — it’s all in the name.

Interview: MCR Live

MCR Live is a brand new radio, podcast and content network. It is based in Manchester and is a platform for the city’s musicians, DJs, thinkers, and influencers. I spoke to Rhys Hancock, co-founder of MCR Live and alumnus of University of Manchester and Fuse FM, about the project and his more general involvement with music and radio.

MCR Live was the idea of Radio.co, an ‘all-in-one radio platform for today’s broadcaster’. Initially, Radio.co was trialling a smaller network called ‘Northern Quarter Radio’, but after a six-month test transmission, they decided to make it bigger and to encompass Manchester as a whole. It was when Rhys joined the process that the project began to move away from the traditional radio format.

Rather than traditional advertising, MCR Live relies on partnerships and branded content with big names such as Skiddle, Funkademia and Percolate. What this essentially does is combine modern radio with social media campaigns. “It’s like a more cultural version of LadBible”, Rhys explained.

This forward thinking makes perfect sense, and it is a wonder that MCR Live are the first to do it. Rhys put the network’s innovation forward succinctly: “There are other people doing aspects of what we’re doing, but no-one is combining these aspects together under one platform and brand.”

The network is aptly named, for Rhys collaborates with names from across the city. Residents include not only bigger players and city legends such as Below the Surface, Funkademia and Percolate, but also up-and-coming collectives such as OfftheRecord, which is currently run by Manchester students. “We want to provide a platform for all kinds of creatives, influencers and DJs across the city and beyond. Some have larger followings than others. As long as they are providing quality content and mixes, then we are willing to open our platform up.”

Aside from DJs, MCR Live is also close to local bands: “Rob Paterson, who was on my course at uni (and a former Mancunion music editor) is in a band called The Vanity Project and they have a show with us on a Saturday that is well worth checking out.” And the web of connections has yet to finish expanding: Rhys tells me that he’s in talks with the likes of Duncan Wallis from Dutch Uncles. “He’s a top guy and a big name in the Manchester music scene.”

Regarding the Manchester music scene, as a University of Manchester alumnus, Rhys shared his thoughts on the interaction between the students and the nightlife. “My general music tastes have always been fairly constant. I’ve always listened to electronic/alternative and dance music. However, through going to the University of Manchester, I definitely started go to more disco, funk and house nights. I guess that’s part of the university experience in a place such as Manchester, being able to discover different genres and nights.”

In his time at Manchester, Rhys was Station Manager of Fuse FM. Prior to university, he didn’t have any training in radio other than a few “awful” teenage podcasts with his mates, so he seemed grateful for his experiences with it. “Fuse FM will always have a place in my heart for what we did, the friends I made, and the opportunities that came as a result.”

Although Fuse FM gave him the opportunity, Rhys’ involvement in MCR Live was one of luck: “By chance, I went along to a Northern Quarter Radio meeting and met the guys from Radio.co and from then I had a few meetings. I was doing my dissertation at the time and I seemed to be in the right place at the right time.” For anyone hoping to crack their way into the media industry, Rhys offered an insightful comment: “It’s important for anyone to get out there and network; you don’t know who you’ll meet and where it’ll take you.”

And just because it’s becoming a killer part of the industry doesn’t mean that MCR Live ignores the larger issues in media. Rhys took the time to speak out on the representation of women in the media: “I think it’s clear more needs to be done. As a start-up, we need to get fully up and running before we can truly help the cause, but we have more full-time female employees than male ones at MCR Live, so it’s a good start.”

He also detailed his connection to the recent Women in Media conference, in which successful and influential women from the industry conducted panel discussions, workshops and keynotes. “I’m friends with the guys who run Women in Media, and they’ve done a great job”. Rhys has intentions to work towards contributing to their cause: “Over the coming months and more, I hope we can do our bit to get fair and equal representation for all.”

On the topic of development, MCR Live holds high hopes to become more than just radio and podcasts: “We want to evolve into a lifestyle brand, with the expected rise in city centre residents due over the next few years — it’s important to create a central point of contact for music, arts and culture. Social media campaigns, live events, video and more. We want to become a new style of local multi-platform media company that has not been seen before.”

At this point it only seems fair to end this brief glimpse into MCR Live with Rhys’ own summing up. When asked to describe MCR Live in three words beginning with M, C and R, I was once again met with the true potential of the platform: “Manchester Creative Revolution”.

With philosophical podcasts like Manchester Conversations and The Book of Future Podcast already running, and with more in the pipeline spanning comedy, health, art, sport and more, if you were to ask me if MCR Live is capable of a creative revolution, I would answer that it will fall nothing short.

Sparking Debate at the People’s History Museum

The People’s History Museum’s intimate performance space was recently packed out for a performance of Strike A Light, with the audience transported to Victorian London to hear the story of Maggie McCallow (played by Paulette Lemard), a charismatic match girl who was part of the 1888 factory strike against the appalling working conditions of the time.

Set in a matchmaking factory and then on streets of London at a protest, Maggie McCallow described Phossy Jaw, a painful and disfiguring disease caused by working with Phosphorous and the frequent and unfair fines that were given out to workers. She then talked about how social campaigner and women’s rights activist Annie Besant helped to galvanize the workers to bring about change in the factories.

Annie Besant famously said: “Better remain silent, better not even think, if you are not prepared to act.”

Actor Paulette told The Mancunion: “I thoroughly enjoyed it, I think for me when you’ve got a good audience, that makes a big difference.”

In addition to Strike a Light she has also performed No Bed of Roses at the museum, which is based on the life of three women who came to Manchester from the Caribbean in the fifties.

Learning Officer Andy Hoyle, talked to The Mancunion about the museum’s ethos and goals: “Although we look at case studies of famous female led protests or famous female thinkers, we’ve also got to bear in mind that these struggles still very much continue today, although not to the same extent. We want to engender some discussion and some debate within the visitors to get them thinking about contemporary issues and to realise that what was worth fighting for yesterday is also worth fighting for today.”

Tied in with International Women’s day, the museum has been working with Creative Tourist and Manchester City Council throughout the 2017 Wonder Women countdown which leads up to the 100th anniversary (in 2018) of when women partially gained the right to vote.

Funding provided by MCC has allowed the museum to put on free events like the Strike a Light performance and run guided tours in the museum and guided trails around the city.

Creative Tourist and PHM describe the festival as “the artistic response of the birth city of the suffragette movement, celebrating those who won the fight for votes for women nearly a century ago, and the activism that continues to underpin the feminist issues of our time.”

19-year-old sexually assaulted in Fallowfield

Police are investigating a sexual assault that took place early on the morning of Sunday 26th of March on Mauldeth Road in Fallowfield.

The victim, a 19-year-old woman, was travelling back home by bus from the city centre at around 5:15am.

Greater Manchester Police say she saw a man standing by the side of the road when she exited the bus.

He started to follow and tried to talk to the her when she crossed the street, after which he sexually assaulted her.

The woman managed to get away and call the police.

The identity of the offender is unknown, although he was described as being around 5ft 7in tall with a light-brown skin tone, dark hair, and clean shaven face.

He is described to have been wearing dark jeans and a black top with an orange and brown print on it.

The assailant spoke with an Eastern European accent and is around 30 years old.

Detective Constable Chris Henderson of the Greater Manchester Police stated: “This incident has had a substantial impact on the victim who was understandably left extremely scared and upset by what happened. She is now receiving support from specially trained police officers.”

Police are requesting that anyone with any information that could assist the investigation come forward as soon as they can. You can contact the police on 0161 856 6198 or by dialling 101.

Alternatively, you can call the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.