Every fall, Goergen 101 welcomes 100 or so bright first-years who all wear their lanyards around their necks and proudly tell everyone they meet that they’re majoring in Biomedical Engineering (BME). These students are about to take their first steps to completing a very interesting, very strenuous curriculum. They’ve gone on Better CDCS over a million times. They’ve heard Prof. Brown reassuring them that UR has this great “open-curriculum” system.

Then they hear him chuckle and say, mostly to himself, that this doesn’t apply to BME.

Yet, they confidently march toward their own misery. They have very solid reasons for their major choice. As a former BME survivor, I can share a few:

  • It’s everything their parents have dreamt of (aka medicine and engineering) in one major.
  • It’s the only major that can cure cancer.
  • It sounds cool.
  • You get the very exclusive right to complain for four years because “everyone else is doing nothing.”
  • $$$, no matter how hard STEM students try to deny it.
  • True passion, maybe. (Why else leave the warmth of the tunnel system for the Engineering Quad?)

And then, halfway through the semester, a midterm happens. It just happens. BMEs are people who plan their senior year spring semester schedules in the fall of their first year, and even they can’t prepare for this midterm. It doesn’t matter how hard you worked crafting the most comprehensive cheat sheet ever — chances are, you didn’t use it for anything besides wiping your tears on the way out. That midterm was the turning point for many ex-BMEs, they just didn’t know it yet.

Doubt starts to spread among the BMEs. Desperate for reassurance, they start seeking inspiration by asking other desperate students, which only makes things worse:

 A Sample Exchange Between Two Desparate BME Majors:
“Are you staying in BME?”
“HELL NO!”
“What are you switching to?”
“I don’t know…  anything… Computer Science!”

 So they switch to another “cool” STEM major. Most of these lost students, including yours truly, decide on CS using the process of elimination. It’s true. We have very solid reasons behind this decision:

  • All other majors suck.
  • “True passion” dating back to those two lines of code we wrote in high school, though we all know that this reason is one big lie.
  • Even the “passionate” CS students were already doing fine skipping their CSC 171 lectures.
  • $$$, no matter how hard CS students try to deny it.


The Clothesline Project gives a voice to the unheard

The Clothesline Project was started in 1990 when founder Carol Chichetto hung a clothesline with 31 shirts designed by survivors of domestic abuse, rape, and childhood sexual assault across the village green in Hyannis, Massachusetts.

Notes by Nadia: The myth of summer vacation

Summer vacation is no longer a vacation.

Dinner for Peace was an unconventional way of protesting for Palestine

The dinner showcased aspects of Palestinian culture. It was a unique way of protesting against the genocide, against the Israeli occupation, against the university’s involvement with the genocide.