Volume 91 • Issue 13
January 27, 2023
A snowy start to the spring semester
Leighah Beausoleil / THE GATEPOST
Sam the Ram braces the cold in Crocker Grove amid the snow storm Jan. 23.
Trustees approve sports management major, discuss FY24 budget By Emily Rosenberg Associate Editor
The Board of Trustees approved a new major in sports management under the College of Business at the Jan. 25 meeting, which was held remotely due to inclement weather. The major is an upgrade to the sports management concentration, which has 24 participating students and is expecting to add up to 122 in the ne t five years, Trustee Nancy Budwig said. The major will not require additional faculty and requires only “modest marketing.” Budwig said since 2014, there has been a “dramatic increase” in the num-
ber of students attracted to the sports management concentration. She said conversations with the Admissions Department and Athletic Department coaches indicated the addition of the sports management major may help with both recruitment and retention. She added that according to a report by the Department of Higher Education, the new major will be the only Sports Management program in the New England area for “this price point.” Vice President of Academic Affairs and Provost Kristen Porter-Utley said the major may be implemented as soon as Fall 2023. uring the finance report, E ecutive Vice President Dale Hamel provided a
The Mazmanian Art Gallery’s annual juried student exhibition showcased the work of 17 students from across the University, Jan. 24. Submissions included charcoal drawings, ceramics, sculpture, and even fashion design from students in a range of majors. The juried show’s exhibits and three winners were picked by guest juror Soe Lin Post, the director of design at Wellesley College. Of the three announced prizes, second-place winner Julia Parabicoli was awarded for “Book of B’s,” a mixed-me-
dia book, due to its content and tactile cover, according to Ellie Krakow, director of the Mazmanian Gallery. Charlotte Jondrow also won a specialty award for her charcoal drawing “Chan-Fheidh’s Forest,” due to it aligning most closely with the yearly Arts & Ideas theme of “sustaining life, sustaining joy.” Bella Ramirez, a freshman studio art major with a concentration in graphic design, submitted both “Breakfast” and “The View,” a charcoal on paper and line-art drawing respectively. She said “Breakfast” was drawn to satisfy an assignment in her drawing fundamentals class.
News
preview of what is expected to be proposed in the FY24 budget. He said it is expected that tuition and fees will increase 2.2% or $250. The cost of room and board may also increase 2.5% and 5.6%, respectively, leading to an overall addition of $720 Adam Levine / THE GATEPOST to a student’s bill. “Building off of two years of main- SGA pg. 3 taining level academic fees, without CIE DIRECTOR SEARCH pg. 4 additional fair share funding, you know, bills have to be paid,” Hamel said. In addition, Hamel said they may schedule $2 million in reserves to be used toward general operations in HOUSE SPEAKER ELECTION pg. 6 FY24. “One of the reasons you build up J-TERM INDIA TRIP pg. 7
Opinions
See BOARD OF TRUSTEES page 5
Mazmanian Gallery exhibits student work in annual juried show
By Ryan O’Connell Arts & Features Editor
FSUgatepost.com
Sports
“I really had a fun time doing it,” she said. Ramirez added she enjoyed the assignment due to the requirement of taking an image and making it “really really big,” requiring her to focus on the details. She said she was initially having The Gatepost Archives trouble choosing a subject, but made MEN’S BASKETBALL pg. 9 the decision to adapt the black and white photo of her breakfast. “I zoomed it in and I thought it captured daily life,” she said. Ramirez said she loves to cook at home, and the drawing is a reflection of ‘PUSS IN BOOTS: THE LAST WISH’ pg. 11 everyday life for her. She added she See MAZMANIAN GALLERY page 10 BEST OF 2022 pg. 12
Arts & Features
INSIDE: OP/ED 6 • SPORTS 9 • ARTS & FEATURES 10