Volume 91 • Issue 22
April 14, 2023
FSUgatepost.com
The ‘golden’ days of learning (Left) Mikayla Wooding, Peyton Paradis, Sophia Morreti, and Jaslyne Lemus sitting on the lawn outside Miles Bibb Hall.
FSU celebrates Mancuso Center at grand opening By Branden LaCroix News Editor The Mancuso Humanities Workforce Preparation Center (MHWPC), which was established in 2020, held an official “grand opening” April 10. Local business leaders and FSU faculty and administrators were in attendance. State Rep. Jack Lewis (D-Framingham/Ashland) also attended. Halcyon Mancuso, founder and executive director of the MHWPC, said the center’s opening was originally supposed to be held in 2020, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was postponed. The MHWPC’s goals are to raise awareness of the value humanities studies can offer to both students and
employers, aid students majoring in the humanities to prepare for and gain employment, and help Framingham State increase enrollment in humanities majors, according to the FSU website. The center also helps FSU faculty in the humanities develop semester-long programs and internships through its Faculty Fellowship Program. President Nancy Niemi said, “I am honored to be here as a president whose career began and continues via my own work in the humanities. “I am delighted to be here to help everybody to see how it enriches all of our lives,” she said. Niemi said, “All of our majors and minors - languages, world history, American studies, English, literature, philosophy, art, religion - were woven
as they always have been into aspects of everything we do, and it’s our job to help people see that they’re inseparable from the rest of our lives.” She added, “We’re humans, so we can’t have the humanities not be a part of our work outside the University itself.” Paula Krebs, executive director of the Modern Language Association (MLA) and honorary advisory board member of the Mancuso Center, was invited to the opening as the keynote speaker. Bridgette Sheridan, history professor, introduced Krebs and spoke about meeting Krebs at the National Humanities Alliance conference in Salt Lake City, UT in 2016.
See MANCUSO page 5
Malia’s Crystals jewelry is a gem
Leighah Beausoleil / THE GATEPOST
News
Emily Rosenberg / THE GATEPOST SGA pg. 3 SCULPTURE pg. 4
Opinions THE TRUTH ABOUT WDJM pg. 8 BENCH’S COMIC pg. 9
Sports
How one student turned a passion into a successful small business By Sophia Harris News Editor Malia Shields, an FSU junior, said she fell in love with jewelry at a young age “ever since I was a child.” She said college gave her the tools to open her own small business creating and selling jewelry. But, what she loves about running her own business is “it doesn’t feel like a job,” she said. Being able to make jewelry “wherever and whenever” she wants gives her the freedom to be her own boss, she said. Shields said she often makes jewelry
in places where if she had a typical job, she would not be able to work, such as in a park, on a bus, or in her dorm. She said she launched Malia’s Crystals in July 2021 first on Snapchat to assess interest and demand. Then she created a web page and Instagram account that have been the vehicles for her sales since. Her jewelry includes handmade crystal earrings, bracelets, necklaces, and pendants. She said she plans to expand to fullbody pieces as her business grows. These are pieces that hang around the neck and drop across the chest and waist.
She added she is also looking to incorporate leg chains as part of her fullbody piece collection. Shields said she sources her gems and stones from trusted Etsy sellers, gem shows, and crystal stores. She also bought various gemstones Adrien Gobin / THE GATEPOST for her collection in India on the recent BASEBALL pg. 11 J-term trip, coordinated by FSU’s study abroad office, she said. SOFTBALL pg. 12 Shields said she values the “uniqueness” of her jewelry which features authentic stones and crystals encompassed in non-tarnish hardware. The design and materials make the pieces not only practical, but beautiful, as the MOTHERSCHOLAR pg. 17
Arts & Features
See MALIA’S CRYSTALS page 16
SUPER MARIO pg. 18
INSIDE: OP/ED 7 • SPORTS 11 • ARTS & FEATURES 13