Volume 91 • Issue 16
February 17, 2023
FSUgatepost.com
‘Survey says SGA wins!’
(Left) SGA Members Dara Barros, Evelyn Campbell, Mark Haskell, and Sam Houle are victorious in FSAB’s “FRAMILY FEUD.” [Editor’s Note: Mark Haskell is a staff writer for The Gatepost.]
Leighah Beausoleil / THE GATEPOST
SGA allocates $363,600 for FY24
News
Organizations asked to make cuts for the third consecutive year
GATEPOST INTERVIEW pg. 3
By Sophia Harris News Editor
ALL UNIVERSITY pg. 5
By Raena Doty Editorial Staff SGA allocated $363,600 in funding for the organization’s Fiscal Year 2024 (FY24) budgets during its annual “Big Budget” meeting on Feb. 10. This allocated amount is down approximately 1.6% from the FY23 allocation of $369,642. A total of $12,303 was left in unallocated funds. Each organization is separated into a group, making for a total of six groups.
Group One consists of four organizations: The Gatepost, SGA, Framingham State Activities Board (FSAB), and WDJM Radio 91.3. Group Two consists of seven organizations: the Afro-Caribbean Dance Group (ACDG), Black Student Union, Brother 2 Brother, Dance Club, The Hilltop Players, Motivation. Intersectionality. Solidarity. Sisterhood. (M.I.S.S.), and Ski & Snowboard Club. Group Three consists of seven organizations: ASL Club, Comic Book Club, Fashion Club, Gaming Club, History Club, The Onyx, and Outing Club. Group Four consists of 13 groups: Anime Club, Art Club, Christian Fel-
lowship, Commuter Student Club, CompSci Club, Education Club, English Club, Green Initiative, LUNA, Math Club, Psychology Club, Students of Caribbean Ancestry (SOCA), and Wildlife Club. Group Five consists of four groups: Aspiring Health Pros, Active Minds, Nutrition Club, and Political Science Club. Group Six consists of six groups: Engineering Club, IGNITE, Pride Alliance, tudent ets, The 8 Club, and the Web & App Development Club. Organizations in Group One met with SGA to present their requests and
The Center for Inclusive Excellence (CIE) and the Henry Whittemore Library partnered to facilitate a book discussion on the impact of “March,” a graphic novel series by John Lewis and Andrew Aydin and illustrated by Nate Powell, on Feb. 13. The event, hosted by Emma Laurie, program coordinator for the CIE, and Kathleen Barnard, student engagement coordinator of the library, allowed attendees to reflect on what they learned and enjoyed about the three-book graphic novel series, “March.” This series follows the teenage years
of the late Congressman Lewis during the Civil Rights Movement. Barnard asked, “What do we get out of the story? How does this affect and make us think about history today?” She then gave a brief synopsis of Lewis’ life, beginning with his birth in Troy, Alabama and his college years in Nashville, Tennessee. Barnard said Lewis began organizing for Black civil rights in 1959 by performing sit-ins at segregated lunch counters, and he maintained his spirit of activism until his death in 2020. She added Lewis volunteered to participate in the Freedom Rides of 1961, was a chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee from
HARRY POTTER LEGACY pg. 7 COMICS pg. 8
Sports
See BIG BUDGET page 4
Whittemore library and CIE discuss ‘March’ By Ryan O’Connell Arts & Features Editor
Opinions
HOCKEY pg. 9
1963 to 1966, and was an organizer and speaker at the March on Washington, MEET THE PLAYERS pg. 10 best known for Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech. Lewis also organized voter registration across the South, helped lead the Selma to Montgomery March in 1965, and continued to be a civil rights activist throughout his career, Barnard said. She said Lewis was appointed in 1977 by former President Jimmy Carter as associate director of ACTION, the federal domestic volunteer agency, and was first elected to public office in 1981 as a member of the Atlanta City Council. Courtesy of VOX
Arts & Features
See JOHN LEWIS page 11
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP pg. 12 25 YEARS OF ‘TITANIC’ pg. 13
INSIDE: OP/ED 7 • SPORTS 9 • ARTS & FEATURES 11