Volume 93 • Issue 3
October 4, 2024
FSUgatepost.com
Embracing accolades
Izabela Gage / THE GATEPOST
The women’s soccer team celebrates a 2-1 win after their game against Salem State Sept. 30.
State of the University address focuses on strategic plan implementation By Dylan Pichnarcik News Editor President Nancy Niemi delivered her second annual State of the University address on Monday, Sept. 30. Niemi’s address focused on the AY 2024-25 Strategic Plan as well as enrollment and retention. Niemi also introduced new members of the Board of Trustees and Robert Totino, executive vice president of finance, technology, and administration. T. Stores, dean of the College of Arts and Humanities, gave a presentation about a new committee focused on changes in AI. Niemi began her speech by an-
nouncing that on Friday, Sept. 27 the New England Commission of Higher Education (NECHE) officially re-accredited Framingham State. NECHE is a “non-governmental membership organization. It relies on its members’ self-regulation, voluntary compliance with the Standards for Accreditation and a system of ongoing evaluation by peers. The Commission’s goal is to promote institutional improvement and public assurance of quality,” according to the NECHE website. Niemi said NECHE “started every couple of years asking institutions to just check in, in our case particularly about enrollment and about strategic planning, since at the time the visiting committee came, that plan wasn’t
ready yet.” Niemi then outlined the University’s “First-year Strategic Priorities 2024-2025.” According to Niemi, the priorities include adapting programs to meet the needs of students and the MetroWest community and workforce, creating a framework to coordinate and assess diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives on campus, improving enrollment through services and peda gogical practices, and diversifying and investing in strategic priorities. She said, “We have been through two out of three Board of Higher Education touchpoints. We presented our plan to the Board of Trustees last Wednesday. They approved it as well.”
News AWARD pg. 3 5K pg. 5
Opinions BOSTON AO pg. 8 PANDEMIC pg. 9
Sports
See SOTU Page 4
‘Contemporary Monuments to the Slave Past’ hosted by Arts & Ideas By Francisco Omar Fernandez Rodriguez Arts & Features Editor On Sept. 30, Arts & Ideas hosted “Contemporary Monuments to the Slave Past” in the McCarthy Center’s Alumni Room. The speaker was Renée Ater, a visiting associate professor from Brown University. She coordinates the “Contemporary Monuments to the Slave Past” database, which is a digital humanities project. She said it’s a “digital repository and archive.” At the beginning of the lecture, she said that she recently “lost about a third of the data in the database.” She added she had uninstalled something
improperly. “It was amazing how one plugin could actually impact a project on that level,” she said. Ater said she started the research for this project in 2010, and the database was put together in 2018. But the COVID-19 pandemic put the project on hold, she added. She said, “The project really was stopped, and we’ve restarted it with the team at Brown, and with hiring.” She used to be an assistant curator at Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., before it went defunct and closed, she said. She used to “walk by culture every day,” she added. After finishing her dissertation she
Adrien Gobin / THE GATEPOST left the job and decided to focus more WOMEN’S SOCCER pg. 10 on scholarly work, Ater said. FIELD HOCKEY pg. 11 The dissertation was on Meta Mark Fuller, she added. She couldn’t figure out one of Fuller’s sculptures, “Ethiopia,” she said. It was unclear why Fuller made the sculpture, she said. During her research she found an old source that discussed what public monuments do, she added. “This book was written in 1916 but it is clear that [the author] really had the long view about public space and public monuments,” she said. The author contemplates how Black Maddison Behringer / THE GATEPOST people had been represented since emancipation, especially in sculptures, JESSE OWENS pg. 14 OWEN’S OLDIES pg. 16
Arts & Features
See MONUMENTS Page 15
INSIDE: OP/ED 8 • SPORTS 10 • ARTS & FEATURES 14