The Collegian – Feb. 5, 2021

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After the beep

Build relationships outside your circle

PERSPECTIVES

The

@Collegian_GCC @gcc.collegian The Collegian: The GCC Newspaper Friday, February 5, 2021

I was there...

Student recounts Capitol rally

COMMUNITY

Sports are back! And ‘it’s a big deal’

SPORTS

Collegian The Award-Winning Grove City College Student Newspaper

Vol. 106, No. 12

2021 turns tides David Zimmermann News Editor

CALEB WEST

The “Orchesis Together” show will be performed today and tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Crawford Auditorium. Due to COVID-19, the dancers will be masked and attendance limited.

GCC returns, COVID stays College springs new safety rules

Ashley Ostrowski Copy Editor

After a long winter break, Grove City students packed up their bags, sent in their negative COVID-19 test results and drove back to the snowy campus where they were met with news about changes in the COVID-19 regulations. Overall, there has been some confusion about the new language and rumored crackdown. “I haven’t really seen the new crackdown being enforced, although, people do seem to be wearing masks more often. The new language confuses me person-

ally. I don’t really know why they changed it,” sophomore Laura Hamilton said. President Paul J. McNulty ’80 explained the changes and cleared up the confusion. One new change is the meaning of the terms “quarantine” and “isolation.” This was made to match the Center for Disease Control’s language regarding the terms. Last semester, quarantine included students who either tested positive or had symptoms of COVID-19 and were moved to a college house, an extra dorm on campus, a hotel room or chose to go home. Those students were put into what is now being called isolation.

“We used the word selfisolation so much last semester that self-isolation became associated with that secondary exposure category. But in the CDC language, isolation is referred or used to refer to the COVID positive person who is in quarantine because of that,” McNulty said. Students who have experienced secondary exposure to COVID-19 are now being called Q-2. “The direct contacts of those who are in quarantine are secondaries and they will just stay in their room, go to class, get a meal and bring it back to their room, and just lay low and wait until the primary contact has tested neg-

ative, which is typically only two to three days,” McNulty said. Sophomore Simon Steward found the change in language understandable yet annoying. “I just finished explaining the old language to my parents, and now I have to do it all over again,” he said. The fall policies have also been reviewed and adjusted to fit new findings. The isolation period has shortened to 10 days as opposed to 14 days to match CDC guidelines, and there is a shift in focus regarding travel. Last semester, students RULES 3

Streaming for Spirit and soul Laura Hamilton Contributing Writer

After a long break and an unusual fall semester, Grove City students have returned to campus and face the start of a new semester. While some students will continue to attend online church, some students plan to return to their local churches since some have reopened in-person services. Last semester, students were discouraged from attending in-person services due to COVID-19 risks. Some churches only streamed services, while others held hybrid gatherings or modified their in-person meetings to follow COVID-19 guidelines. Grove City College’s policies remain the same this semester, recommending that students “do everything that you can to limit contact with people from beyond the campus community,” according to an email sent to the student body from Chaplain Donald Opitz. Church attendance is left to student discretion which has led to a va-

MATTHEW SCHOONOVER

Junior Nicholas Sparks watches Grove City Alliance Church from the comfort of his dorm room. riety of responses and church plans. Freshman Abigail Henricksen remains cautious for the time being as she searches for a home church in Grove City. “I’m planning on watching my church from home over livestream for the first couple weeks,” she said. “After then, I’ll consider trying to find a home church here.

I just want to be careful because I don’t want to spread COVID-19 to any church that I would visit.” Other students have not changed their plans from last semester, continuing to attend local, beloved church services in person. “COVID-19 has limited my ability to get to know the congregation of Covenant OPC, something I especially feel

aware of during announcements pertaining to congregational life,” freshman Jacob Feiser said. “However, that has not stopped me entirely from the arduous process of integrating into a new church family.” Sophomore Elanor Lambert said, “I go to Christ Presbyterian usually, and CHURCH 3

Once the clock struck midnight on New Year’s Day, many thought, or at least hoped, 2021 would be a fresh start — an opportunity to look past the chaos of 2020 and look toward the future. However, the new year so far seems more like a continuation of 2020 than a new beginning. In fact, January has proven to be a full month with events ranging from the Capitol riot at the beginning of the year to the recent surge in GameStop’s stock last week — and everything in between. After two months of former President Donald Trump’s legal battle with the election results, Congress convened on Jan. 6 to finalize the electoral votes. What followed was the storming of the Capitol. Dr. Carl Trueman, a biblical & religious studies professor, gave his thoughts on the matter. “We are fortunate to live in a country with significant freedoms and civil rights for which we should be thankful and which we should use,” he said. “But those rights do not include rioting and attacking the very seat of the nation’s legally constituted government.” Although what happened on that day was tragic, Trueman said he was also concerned with the political ramifications that ensued after the riot. These included the challenges against First Amendment protections, such as freedom of speech and religion, and the response from multi-billiondollar technology companies to censor conservatives on social media platforms. “We could be witnessing the end of democratic modernity and the emergence of something new and far more authoritarian in its place. It will be fascinating, and likely worrying, to watch how this develops,” Trueman said. Although he believed there was justification for Trump’s ban on social media, computer science professor Dr. Brian Dellinger ’07 said that it was alarming to see the massive influence tech companies have over speech. “The synchronized action taken by Apple, Google and Amazon to eliminate Parler was shocking in its efficiency. Even if that action was fairly motivated, the same thing could be done to any number of targets without any clear recourse,” he said. Sophomore William Rosenberger, who is the vice president of the college’s Young Americans for Free2021 3


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