Skip to main content

December 2, 2022

Page 1

December 2, 2022

Volume 91 • Issue 11

FSUgatepost.com

Hilltop’s ‘royal’ production takes the stage

Adrien Gobin / THE GATEPOST

( eft) Amanda dme, hristina hinetti, and Alex eBlanc performing at the Hilltop Player’s dress rehearsal of Once pon a Mattress” Nov. 0.

News SGA pg. 3 UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY CLUB pg. 4

Opinions SPRING TUITION BILL pg. 7

Sports

Adam Levine / THE GATEPOST MEN’S BASKETBALL pg. 9 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL pg. 10

Arts & Features

FSU looks beyond Native American Heritage Month

By Branden LaCroix News Editor While many students and administrators are pleased with the events held over Native American Heritage Month, some members of the FSU community believe more can be done, and not just during November. ric Nguyen, director of the enter for Inclusive Excellence (CIE), said the importance of Native American Heritage Month, like other months centered around identity and heritage, is it centers “the narratives and voices and experiences of people who have been historically marginalized and minoritized in our country.” Nguyen said the recognition of Native heritage should not be exclusive to November. It is meant to sort of create this upswelling of sharing knowledge -

of raising awareness - that we can then live, work, learn, and commune on is carry that momentum for the rest of the original homelands of the Nipmuc tribal nations. We acknowledge the the year. “Indigenous people inhabited this painful history of genocide and forced land before we were here. It’s a history removal from this territory, and we that we largely ignore. When we do talk honor and respect the many diverse about the history, it’s largely abridged - Indigenous peoples still connected to this land on which we gather.” inaccurate.” FSU’s Land Acknowledgment StateNguyen said throughout November, the CIE’s Instagram account created a ment was adapted from the American series of posts asking people to “go be- College Personnel Association’s website. yond land acknowledgement.” The land acknowledgement is also According to the FSU website, a land acknowledgement is “a formal state- posted in various buildings across ment that recognizes and respects In- campus, including the McCarthy Cendigenous Peoples as traditional stew- ter and the Whittemore Library. The CIE’s Instagram posts asked ards of this land and the enduring relationship that exists between In- various uestions related to Native digenous Peoples and their traditional American rights and history, such as a Nov. 1 post which asked, Are you territories.” The statement continues, “We would like to acknowledge that the land we See NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE page 6

‘Once Upon a Mattress’ - a fairy tale production By Raena Doty Asst. Arts & Features Editor

The Hilltop Players, Framingham State’s theater group, will perform “Once Upon a Mattress,” a ’50s musical adaptation of “The Princess and the Pea” on the weekend of Dec. 2. “Once Upon a Mattress” tells the story of Queen Aggravain who has decided to set the highest of standards for any potential wife for her son Prince Dauntless, which most princesses are unable to meet - except Princess WinRyan O’Connell / THE GATEPOST nifred, who is a bit different from the NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE pg. 11 other princesses. Elizabeth Walker, a senior English THE ONYX COVER CONTEST pg. 13 major, is directing the musical. She said

she’s been involved with The Hilltop Players since her freshman year but only ever as an actor, and this musical marks the first time she’s been on the production staff for a show. She said last semester she was asked to create a proposal for this semester’s musical show because no one else stepped up to propose a musical. “I’ve been doing theater since I was about 8 or so - just the acting side of it all,” Walker said. “I’m not exactly sure why I was [asked to propose a musical]. At first I was very much just like, No, no thank you, that is not something I am familiar with,’ and it’s very scary because it is very different than acting. You’re doing essentially everything else

as a director. I was a little nervous at first but then I started thinking about it, and I was like, I would always think, What if?’ if I didn’t do it,” she said. She said she thought the pandemic likely affected The Hilltop Players’ trajectory because fewer people joined when the meetings were virtual and the group wasn’t able to do shows like they had in years prior. However, she added “Once Upon a Mattress” is a sign that The Hilltop Players will be successful since it has a large cast and it’s going well. “We always tried our best to do the weekly meetings still and be engaged in

See HILLTOP page 12

INSIDE: OP/ED 7 • SPORTS 9 • ARTS & FEATURES 11


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
December 2, 2022 by The Gatepost - Issuu