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October 11, 2024

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Volume 93 • Issue 4

October 11, 2024

FSUgatepost.com

Framingham firefighters assessing the damage from the electrical fire in the Henry Whittemore Library on Oct. 9.

Alexis Schlesinger / THE GATEPOST

Electrical fire in Whittemore Library results in evacuation By Dylan Pichnarcik News Editor The Henry Whittemore Library was evacuated on Wednesday, Oct. 9 after an electrical fire, according to Dan Giard, director of facilities. The Framingham State University Police Department (FSUPD) was the first to arrive on scene. The Framingham Fire Department (FFD) followed. According to Giard, the fire was caused by an overheated electrical ballast in a light fixture on the lower mezzanine of the library. Giard said throughout his tenure, he has not seen a ballast ignite. The building was closed for approximately one hour, according to Millie

Gonzalez, dean of the Henry Whittemore Library. She said, “We were told to move away from the entrance of the building. Most of us congregated on the benches and near the trees.” Notification from the University about the fire came via email from Meg Nowak Borrego, vice president for student affairs and dean of students, approximately 20 minutes after the incident. The email said, “Unfortunately, there was a minor fire in the library today caused by a light fixture. Due to the need to clear smoke from the building, the library will remain closed for approximately the next hour. We apologize for any inconvenience.”

According to Giard, Facilities will be installing two new light fixtures. Giard added Facilities handled cleanup from the fire and worked to remove the smell of smoke from the building. “The smell has kind of gone away because we brought in 100% outside air and we’ve had it now for 24 hours.” Most of the damage was sustained by the metal shelving, according to Gonzalez. “Thankfully, the metal shelving was exposed to the fire and not books. In a couple of days, after I get clearance from Facilities, I will be able to assess any smoke damage to the books. We will either replace the books or send them out to be cleaned,” she said.

News DALE HAMEL pg. 3 PINK PATCH PROJECT pg. 4

Opinions COUNTRY MUSIC pg. 6 BOREALIS pg. 8

Sports

See LIBRARY FIRE Page 4

Roopika Risam speaks on the importance of digital humanities By Raena Hunter Doty Arts & Features Editor Arts & Ideas hosted Roopika Risam, professor of digital humanities at Dartmouth College, who presented about the importance of integrating digital humanities (DH) into a humanities curriculum Oct. 8. Bart Brinkman, director of the Center for Digital Humanities at FSU and professor of English, introduced Risam as one of the “leading” figures in the DH field. He said she’s given many public lectures, written over 50 articles and essays, and authored several books about DH in education. Risam said she wants to share her

experiences teaching DH with the FSU community, and added most of her strategies for teaching DH were developed at Salem State University, where she became involved with the field. She said the goal of her talk was to inspire people - both faculty and students - to get involved with DH, and to answer questions about why DH is important in a curriculum. Risam said, “We are in the midst of yet another one of the unending crises of higher education and the humanities,” and added higher education is also grappling with the question of who belongs in its system. She added there are a lot of concerns about higher education, including how valuable it is, and because of this, stu-

Izabela Gage / THE GATEPOST dents tend to gravitate toward majors FOOTBALL pg. 9 with a “self-evident career attached to VOLLEYBALL pg. 10 them, where the name of the department, the name of the major, is the name of the career,” such as education, social work, and nursing. Risam said in her time as a professor of English at Salem State, she saw enrollment in the English major drop from 300 majors in a single year to 130. She added this is possibly because of the state of the economy - universities tend to see lower enrollment when the country isn’t in a recession - but that either way, the Northeast is seeing lower enrollment nationally than the rest Ryan O’Connell / THE GATEPOST of the country. GEN AI pg. 11 THE STITCH pg. 13

Arts & Features

See DIGITAL HUMANITIES Page 12

INSIDE: OP/ED 6 • SPORTS 9 • ARTS & FEATURES 11


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