DONOR NEWS

Thank you for your generous support!

Donors EXCELERATE Binghamton

Pioneering cancer research

From left: Biomedical Engineering Department Chair Kaiming Ye; Watson College Dean Krishnaswami 鈥淗ari鈥 Srihari; Connie Wong; Gary Kunis 鈥73, LHD 鈥02; and University President Harvey Stenger at the Douglas Hsu Research Laboratory dedication Oct. 16.
From left: Biomedical Engineering Department Chair Kaiming Ye; Watson College Dean Krishnaswami 鈥淗ari鈥 Srihari; Connie Wong; Gary Kunis 鈥73, LHD 鈥02; and University President Harvey Stenger at the Douglas Hsu Research Laboratory dedication Oct. 16.
Through the Gary and Connie Kunis Foundation, Gary Kunis 鈥73, LHD 鈥02, and Connie Wong are advancing pathbreaking cancer research at 黑料视频.

Their son, who graduated with a bioengineering degree from University of Rochester, died of brain cancer at age 33. In 2018, Kunis and Wong established the Douglas Hsu Memorial Scholarship in Biomedical Engineering to support first-year students in the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science. Recently, they expanded their support to further honor their son鈥檚 memory and foster biomedical engineering research that could help combat the disease.

In recognition of their generosity, Binghamton has named a lab in its Biotechnology Building the Douglas Hsu Research Laboratory. A dedication was held Oct. 16.

Their support provides for the purchase of crucial equipment and other items related to the research conducted in the lab, which includes developing therapeutic cancer vaccines through a genome-editing technology that converts a patient鈥檚 cancer cells into vaccines that mobilize their own immune systems to eliminate tumors.

鈥淏iotechnology was something so dear to his heart, and that鈥檚 why we鈥檙e very lucky to have this opportunity to dedicate this lab to our son,鈥 Wong said at the event.

Binghamton President Harvey Stenger thanked Kunis and Wong for their extensive support of the University over the years. He said with this latest gift, faculty and graduate students will be able to pursue 鈥渢he most innovative research in this field and, more importantly, add to people鈥檚 health and well-being for generations to come.鈥

鈥淓very single trip when I come back to Binghamton, I see progress, I see more faculty, I see more students, and they鈥檙e so energetic,鈥 Wong said. 鈥淭his school is part of our family.鈥


Exceptional learning environments

Andrew Bonzani 鈥86; his wife, Marie Christine; and daughter Claire converse with student Galileo Savage (far right) after the Sept. 21 dedication of the Bonzani & Cantu Family Classroom in Room 108 of the Classroom Wing of the Lecture Hall. The Bonzanis established the Bonzani Law Internship and the John and Lawrence Bonzani Memorial Scholarship and have enhanced opportunities at Binghamton in many other ways.
Andrew Bonzani 鈥86; his wife, Marie Christine; and daughter Claire converse with student Galileo Savage (far right) after the Sept. 21 dedication of the Bonzani & Cantu Family Classroom in Room 108 of the Classroom Wing of the Lecture Hall. The Bonzanis established the Bonzani Law Internship and the John and Lawrence Bonzani Memorial Scholarship and have enhanced opportunities at Binghamton in many other ways.

Unrivaled opportunities

From left: Michael J. Starke, who coached men鈥檚 tennis at Binghamton and owned the Binghamton Tennis Center, with tennis alumnus Michael F. Lane 鈥89 at the Sept. 21 dedication of the Lane - Starke Tennis Center in Binghamton. Lisa Marie Lane 鈥89, MA 鈥92 and her husband, Michael, support Binghamton athletics, including men鈥檚 tennis; Harpur College of Arts and Sciences; and much more.
From left: Michael J. Starke, who coached men鈥檚 tennis at Binghamton and owned the Binghamton Tennis Center, with tennis alumnus Michael F. Lane 鈥89 at the Sept. 21 dedication of the Lane - Starke Tennis Center in Binghamton. Lisa Marie Lane 鈥89, MA 鈥92 and her husband, Michael, support Binghamton athletics, including men鈥檚 tennis; Harpur College of Arts and Sciences; and much more.

Lifechanging impact

University President Harvey Stenger (left) with David Hubbard, son of Anne A. Hubbard and the late Thomas J. Hubbard, whose gift helped make possible the Ford Family Wellness Center for Seniors. The newly constructed facility in Johnson City 鈥 diagonally across from Binghamton鈥檚 Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences on the University鈥檚 Health Sciences Campus 鈥 opened its doors in July. The center expands geriatric healthcare in the region and provides experiential learning opportunities for students.
University President Harvey Stenger (left) with David Hubbard, son of Anne A. Hubbard and the late Thomas J. Hubbard, whose gift helped make possible the Ford Family Wellness Center for Seniors. The newly constructed facility in Johnson City 鈥 diagonally across from Binghamton鈥檚 Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences on the University鈥檚 Health Sciences Campus 鈥 opened its doors in July. The center expands geriatric healthcare in the region and provides experiential learning opportunities for students.