The Collegian – Sept. 25, 2020

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Lady legend

Remembering RBG

PERSPECTIVES

The

@Collegian_GCC @gcc.collegian The Collegian: The GCC Newspaper Friday, September 25, 2020

Gotta watch it twice

Got football?

ENTERTAINMENT

SPORTS

‘Tenet’ is first pandemic blockbuster

PAC announces spring schedule

Collegian

Missing The Award-Winning Grove City College Student Newspaper

Vol. 106, No. 4

2020 takes and takes and takes

@GCC_KITTYPURRY

Campus in mourning over loss of Kitty Purry Shelbi Henkle

Contributing Writer With the semester returning to full swing and a sense of normalcy returning, something appears to be missing despite the COVID-19 restrictions. To the upperclassmen, there seems to be an apparent lack of the beloved furry friend, the campus cat, the icon named Kitty Purry. She rose to fame around

2018 and gained a mass following of 1,660, including President McNulty, on her Instagram @gcc_kittypurry. But this semester there has been no sign of her. According to her owner, Campus Safety removed Kitty Purry from campus and turned her into an unknown animal shelter. Her owner said, “That is so wrong, though, because they knew she was my cat. They

brought her to my house in their truck multiple times. I even spoke with them and asked them to call me whenever, and I would come and get her.” Assistant Director of Campus Safety Kent McFadden disputed that claim. “Campus Safety did not have anything to do with the disappearance of Kitty Purry. We miss seeing the cat around,” McFadden said.

Judge deems Wolf ’s shutdown unconstitutional David Zimmermann News Editor

Last week, U.S. District Judge William Stickman IV, who presides in Pittsburgh, ruled against Pa. Governor Tom Wolf’s pandemic restriction orders, deeming his office’s COVID-19 response measures unconstitutional. The plaintiffs, which included seven businesses, four legislators and four Pa. counties, filed a complaint this past May arguing that Wolf’s statewide lockdown and business closures restricted Pennsylvanians’ constitutional rights. In response to the court order, Wolf’s office attempted to seek a stay of the court order while they also filed

an appeal of the judge’s decision. On Tuesday, Judge Stickman denied Wolf’s request to stay the order. The federal judge’s ruling eliminated the state’s limit on the number of people who can gather either indoors or outdoors. State Representative Tim Bonner, one of the plaintiffs in the case, said that Wolf was not acting within the provisions given by the Constitution. According to Chair and Professor of Political Science Dr. Michael Coulter, who teaches state and local politics, “The federal judge makes a strong case that the practices and orders of the Pennsylvania governor did not respect the First Amend-

ment’s protection for freedom of assembly and freedom of speech or the Due Process Clause and the general liberty protections in the Fourteenth Amendment.” Bonner said the business closure restrictions were arbitrarily established without any reasonable explanation as to why some businesses were allowed to operate yet similar businesses had to close. Bonner also disagreed with Wolf’s “one size fits all” approach to the state’s public health and safety order, noting that Mercer and Butler counties’ viral infection rate was below 1 percent of the population. WOLF 9

The owner said, “I tried everything I could to keep her home, but the college was her home.” Kitty Purry was not content to remain at home and was often seen stalking squirrels and entering dorms. Many students are missing her presence since it is one more college tradition that has slipped through their fingers this year. “It was a delight to see her

on campus, and I looked forward to seeing her around and getting pictures of her,” junior Margaret Roy said. Junior Micah Toney said, “There goes our chances of getting a statue of her,” when learning that Kitty Purry may not return to campus this year. Lauren Moneymaker, a junior, also made a thoughtful KITTY PURRY 3

COVID to NOVID Haley Greene

Contributing Writer Another school year has arrived, and millions of students and teachers are experiencing an unprecedented experience due to COVID-19. Nationwide, universities are enforcing strict masking and social distancing policies in efforts to stay open. In addition to these precautions, Grove City College partnered with a third-party contact tracing app called NOVID to aid in identifying COVID-19 cases and exposure. At Carnegie Mellon University, math professor PoShen Loh and his team produced the app, which allows contactless tracing of COVID-19. NOVID allows users to anonymously track their interactions with other people by using ultrasonic

technology. It senses how close individuals are to each other and for what length of time. It then builds and displays a social network based off these interactions, gauging the risk of getting COVID-19. “One of the parts of COVID-19 that’s so bad is it spreads before you know you have it. How do we find a way to reduce the spread if it’s spreading invisibly? That’s how the idea for building the network came in,” Po-Shen said in an interview with Johns Hopkins University News-Letter. At Grove City College, President McNulty strongly recommended students to download NOVID onto their cell phones in the college’s Fall 2020 Health and Safety Plan, disclosed in August. NOVID 3


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