Cayuga Community College Auburn & Fulton, New York
Collegian cayugacollegian@gmail.com
VOL. 68 ISSUE 4 OCTOBER 12, 2021
CAYUGABRIEFS
CAYUGA - CC ENROLLMENT IN A DECLINE
LIBRARY WORKSHOP OCTOBER 13 AT 1:30
Everyone is invited to attend Cayuga Library’s hour-long workshop to build skills and confidence in research, Wednesday, October 13 beginning at 1:30 P.M. The topic for this workshop is ‘Info & Society Seminar: ALGORITHMS.’ Join the seminar on ZOOM @ https:// us06web.zoom.us/j/86181060366 There are six more Wednesday seminars planned for this semester. If you have questions, contact Holly Kuhl hkuhl@cayuga-cc.edu.
By Mason Schoenborn, contributing writer
The traffic in the hallways at Cayuga Community College is quite light compared to other semesters. It’s obvious the administration is focused on providing a safe learning environment. The students on campus generally seem happy to be back in person.
Mason Schoenborn
COLLEGE TRANSFER VISITS IN OCTOBER
VIRTUAL: 10/21 SUNY Geneseo 12:00 pm - 3:00 pm 10/26 Emerson ColIege 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm FULTON: 10/13 Cazenovia College 11:00 am - 2:00 pm 10/14 Keuka College 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
PLANTING PURPLE PINWHEELS FOR DOMESTIC VIOLENCE VICTIMS
WEAR PURPLE OCTOBER 21 Cayuga Honors’ students decorate the lawn of the Auburn campus with purple pinwheels to promote Domestic Violence Awareness Month. If you want to show your support, the Criminal Justice club is organizing a ‘Purple Day’ photo shoot on October 21st. STORY PAGE THREE
THE CURTAIN WILL GO UP ON CCC’S HARLEQUIN FALL SHOW By Laurel Elliott, contributing writer The show will go on! Theater Director Bob Frame says he is pleased with the turn-out for auditions and that there will be a Cayuga Harlequin Production show coming to the Irene A. Bisgrove Theater on the Auburn campus in two weeks.
CAYUGA BYTES
RECORDING TIME MOVED TO 4:30 PM ON WEDNESDAYS The independent student media production called Cayuga Bytes is a fun way for students to share information creating watchable content shared on the Cayuga Bytes YouTube Channel. All students majoring in any area of study are invited to join the production. SIGN IN WITH YOUR COLLEGE EMAIL ENDING IN CAYUGA-CC.EDU
ZOOM ID NUMBER
899 6977 5480 JOIN US ON WEDNESDAYS AT 4:30 PM!
TELL US YOUR NEWS EMAIL THE COLLEGIAN!
CAYUGACOLLEGIAN@GMAIL.COM
PHOTO BY DR. JERIMY BLOWERS
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
AUBURN: 10/13 SUNY Binghamton 9:30 am - 11:00 am 10/19 Keuka College 10:00 am - 1:00 pm 10/21 SUNY Oswego 9:00 am - 2:30 pm 10/28 SUNY Oneonta 10:00 am - 1: 00 pm
Laurel Elliott CONTRIBUTING WRITER Frame says he is pleased with the six people who answered the curtain call. “With classes being virtual last year, I was unsure if anyone would come to audition.” Frame says he chose one-act shows with minimal casting because of low turnout. “Now each of the six actors will have a chance to shine,” he said. The show will be five, one act plays, with the whole evening being called, “A Five Pack of Frivolity.” “It’s about little glitches people have, they get stuck and fixate on,” said Frame. “There’s ‘Kung Foolery,’ which is about a ninja, or a man who thinks he’s a ninja. We have ‘Pumps,’ where a woman is having fanatic feelings about a pair of shoes.” Among the five shows, Frame says he chose four of the acts from one playwright that he hasn’t produced and directed before. He says the remaining play is from a playwright that Frame is familiar with. As in the past, he says none of these plays
have been published, but this month’s production of each work is likely not their debut. Frame says the production will be lighthearted, and about frivolity and fun. It will be a quick evening, running for about an hour each show. The show will be running for four days, on October 21st, 22nd, and 23rd at 7:30 P.M., and for a matinee showing on Sunday, October 24th at 2 P.M., all of which will take place in the Irene A. Bisgrove Theatre on the Auburn Campus. If you missed the auditions, but still want to participate, Frame says he is currently looking for people to work on the technical aspects, such as Harlequin Productions with the sound and and Theater Director lights. Frame says Robert Frame trains that experience is a student to run not required; traina lighting board. ing will be a part of Frame says he is still the experience. looking for students to H a r l e q u i n technically assist the Productions is an upcoming production. A u b u r n - b a s e d drama group that has been around since the fifties. The current Director, Bob Frame, took over from his predecessor in the mid-eighties. They usually produce a production every semester, this year being no exception. In just a few weeks, they’ll be putting on their first show since the Spring of 2020 semester.
“I feel like being in the classroom, it is better than online,” said Cayuga Community College student Gordon Wu. “It’s great seeing students in the classrooms, all around campus, and seeing the parking lots fill up. Most of all, it’s good to know that we’re following the rules, we’re working hard to keep students and everyone else healthy and safe,” said Dr. Ron Cantor, Provost and Vice President of CCC. “We have students in the classroom, we have students online, and in every possible permutation of hybrid programs so we’ve worked hard to be able to meet a variety of formats and student needs.”
“We have a good handle on the direction or the trajectory of enrollment over multiple years. And we’re always looking years into the future and tracking where we’ve been. And every community college in the country has been experiencing declines since before the pandemic.”
— Cayuga Provost Dr. Ron Cantor
Although Dr. Cantor admits enrollment at the college has declined, the administration is working to adjust. “We have a good handle on the direction or the trajectory of enrollment over multiple years. And we’re always looking years into the future and tracking where we’ve been. And every community college in the country has been experiencing declines since before the pandemic. So we knew what we were up against and we’ve built our budgets realistically to account for the decrease that we’re seeing now,” said Dr. Cantor. From 2015 through 2020 CCC saw a decline of 9.03% in enrollment from 6,568 students in the 2015-16 class to 5,975 students enrolled in 2019-2020. Compared to the average of all New York State community colleges at 9.9%,1 CCC has maintained an above-average enrollment relatively speaking. And while the exact enrollment numbers have not come out for this semester, Dr.Cantor stated that it was nothing unexpected and that “the other point is, as a responsible institution, we’re here for the long term, not just the short term. So we build, through budgeting to absorb things like this… we’re not surprised, we knew this was coming and we prepared for it.” Source:1 :https://www.suny.edu/about/fast-facts/
THE OFFICIAL STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE