March 2, 2018

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THE GATEPOST Framingham State’s independent student newspaper

Volume 86 • Issue 18

FSUgatepost.com

March 2, 2018

Shanleigh Reardon / THE GATEPOST

Students in the Introduction to Wildlife Biology class learn how to properly climb a tree.

Food Recovery Network feeds Framingham families By Shanleigh Reardon Editorial Staff It’s 9 o’clock on a Saturday morning. Metal shutters are drawn across the entrances to the Dining Commons and very few students can be found in the McCarthy Center. At one table in the commuter caf, three students meet up and make their way through a heavy metal door into the kitchen and behind the scenes of the dining hall. These students belong to Framingham State’s

chapter of the Food Recovery Network (FRN). College students at the University of Maryland started the network in 2011 to reduce waste and fight hunger. According to its website, FRN is now a professional nonprofit and the “largest student movement against food waste and hunger in America.” Framingham State’s chapter began in 2015 and meets every Saturday at 9 a.m. to collect the frozen food set aside for them by Sodexo. Club President Danielle Allen said the club typically collects and delivers 120 - 140

pounds of food each week to local shelters. She said Sodexo freezes the trays to keep the food fresh and safe to eat. On Saturday, Feb. 24, Allen, along with sophomore Taylor Brogan and junior Robert Brown, unload two trays of food from Allen’s red Honda Civic coupe at the Sage House in Framingham. Across the front lawn of the large, green, multi-family home, a man calls out, “What have you got for us today?” Allen and Brown respond, telling him they

See FOOD RECOVERY NETWORK page 10

Chlamydia rates rise on campus Health Center encourages STI testing By Nadira Wicaksana Asst. News Editor SGA has co-sponsored initiatives with the Health Center and Residence Life to respond to the increased rate of reported cases of chlamydia on campus during the spring 2018 semester. Of the 80 students who have visited the Health Center this semester for STI testing, 24 percent tested positive for chlamydia, ac-

News

cording to Ilene Hofrenning, director of the Health Center. In the fall semester, there were 5,997 students enrolled at Framingham State. Six weeks into the spring 2018 semester, the number is already higher than previous semesters, said Hofrenning. In fall 2017, the rate was 16 percent of students tested. In spring 2017, the rate was 22 percent. In fall 2016, the rate was nine percent. Hofrenning said, “Chlamydia, I think, is the most common bacterial infection, especially

Opinions

among young people - and that’s certainly the most common infection that we see here.” Other reported cases of STIs on campus include “some herpes” and “occasionally gonorrhea,” according to Hofrenning. Hofrenning added a lack of regular condom usage or STI testing from the Health Center are the greatest contributors to the transmission of STIs.

Arts & Features

See STIs page 4

Sports

ROBERT DONOHUE pg. 2

DRY CAMPUS pg. 5

MAZGAL pg. 7

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL pg. 12

BIOTECHNOLOGY 4+1 PROGRAM pg. 3

THE HATEFUL EIGHT pg. 6

COLTON’S COUTURE pg. 8

WOMEN’S LACROSSE pg. 15

INSIDE: OP/ED 5 ARTS & FEATURES 7 SPORTS 12


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