November 15, 2019

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THE GATEPOST Framingham State’s award-winning independent student newspaper since 1932

Volume 88 • Issue 10

FSUgatepost.com

November 15, 2019

FSU dedicates Veterans Services Center to University alumnus Capt. Michael Haskell

Donald Halsing / THE GATEPOST Administrators and and community members, including Board of Trustees Chair and FSU alumnus Kevin Foley (left), U.S. Marine and FSU alumnus Warren Griffin (second from right), and FSU President F. Javier Cevallos (right) cut the ribbon outside of the new Veterans Services Center in Dwight Hall 113 Nov. 12.

News SGA pg. 4 FUNDRAISING pg. 5

Opinions

GATEPOST ARCHIVES WINTER WEATHER ADVICE pg. 7 HOLOCAUST pg. 8

Arts & Features “THE PARASITE” REVIEW pg. 11 KAITLYN’S KOSMETICS pg. 13

Sports FOOTBALL pg. 16 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL pg. 18

GATEPOST ARCHIVES

By Soren Colstrup Staff Writer FSU dedicated the Michael Haskell Veterans Services Center in Dwight Hall in room 113 Nov.12. Many current and former service members were in attendance for the event. The ceremony began with an introduction from FSU President F. Javier Cevallos, who spoke about the life of Capt. Haskell. Haskell, a Massachusetts native, enlisted in the Marine Corps after he graduated from Westborough High School. His first assignment was as a rifleman and radioman with Lima Compa-

ny, 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines. In 1969, he was transferred to the 3rd Marine Division, serving in Vietnam as a mortar section leader, platoon sergeant, and platoon commander with 1st Battalion, 9th Marines. In April 1971, Haskell attended drill instructor school, graduating with honors. Nine months later, he was meritoriously promoted to Staff Sergeant. He served as ADI for four platoons, and SDI for seven platoons. When he left the service in 1973, Haskell returned home to attend Framingham State, where he played varsity hockey. Haskell graduated summa cum laude from Framingham State in

1976 and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant. In December, he entered the basic school at Quantico, Virginia, and graduated 6th out of 235 students. He also received the Marine Corps Association’s Leadership Award. Haskell was later assigned to 1st Battalion, 8th Marines Barracks in Washington D.C., where he completed a master’s degree at Georgetown University. On Oct. 23, 1983, Haskell was killed in the Marine barracks bombing in Beirut, Lebanon. He was later awarded the Purple Heart and was buried in Quantico National Cemetery.

See VETERANS CENTER page 3

Memory and children’s literature intersect in the Swiacki Children’s Literature Festival By Robert Johnson Jr. Arts & Features Editor

The McCarthy Center was a mecca for activities and events involving the future of children’s literature during this year’s Swiacki Children’s Literature Festival, Nov. 7. Writer Nikki Grimes and artist David Wiesner were the featured authors for the day’s events. Wiesner also had a complementary exhibition in the Mazmanian Art Gallery, that coincided with his appearance. While one event was focused on the sale and signing of their books, there were also lectures and keynotes from respected names in the realm of children’s literature.

The first lecture, “What’s New in Children’s Literature?,” held in the McCarthy Center Forum, was given by Cathryn Mercier, a professor at Simmons University who is chair of the children’s literature department. As the lecture was part of the Pat Keogh Memorial Workshop, Mercier talked about Keogh, the person for whom the workshop is named, in her opening remarks. “I met Pat very early in my career in children’s literature studies, where she was my student in a number of classes,” Mercier said. “Now, I’m sure that Pat learned some critical theory and probably a whole lot of critical jargon from me, and I know that she considered young adult novels a

unique engagement with subjectivity and identity.” “As much as Pat was my student, I was really her student,” she added. In her 40-minute talk, Mercier informed the audience about picture books - within the graphic novel, young adult, and the children’s book form - released throughout 2019, providing her thoughts on what was innovative and how children’s literature is evolving in terms of representation and art styles. Mercier said, “2019 saw over 52,000 books published for children and young adults. We can talk about them if we had all night, and all week, and all month, and all year, but there’s

See SWIACKI page 12

INSIDE: OP/ED 7 • ARTS & FEATURES 11 • SPORTS 14


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