Collegian Cayuga Community College Auburn & Fulton, New York
cayugacollegian@gmail.com
Vol. 66 Issue 19
April 21, 2020
CAYUGABRIEFS
COLLEGE OFFICIALS ANNOUNCE SUMMER 2020 COURSES WILL BE TAUGHT ON-LINE
ONONDAGA-CC COMMENCEMENT RE-SCHEDULED FOR AUGUST
After discussions with faculty and department leaders, the College will offer all summer 2020 courses in a distance learning format. While it’s possible employees could return to campus before summer courses begin, announcing this decision now ensures our students and employees can properly prepare for the continued reliance on distance learning courses and remote support services. I want to thank the faculty and department leaders whose input was invaluable in helping us decide this was the best course of action for our college community. Further updates on plans for summer will be provided as more information becomes available. —Andrew Poole on behalf of CCC President Brian Durant
CCC STUDENTS QUESTION WHY THEIR COMMENCEMENT ISN’T PLANNED FOR AUGUST By Emma Tavener, Editor-in-chief
CCC ‘06 alum and former editor-in-chief of The Cayuga Collegian, Josh Cradduck, originally from Olean, NY, recently announced he is leaving after 12 years at Spectrum News in Syracuse for an assignment desk job at NBC in New York City.
NEW EPISODE OF CAYUGA BYTES NOW ON YOUTUBE The remote staff of The Cayuga Collegian recorded another in a series of off-campus episodes of The Collegian’s new media show called CAYUGA BYTES via Skype. Episode 12 is now available on CAYUGA BYTES YouTube Channel and on the CAYUGA BYTES Facebook page. CAYUGA BYTES is about ANYTHING and EVERYTHING CAYUGA! Send us your videos of how you’re coping staying at home and doing course work. Have an opinion? Record it and email it to use at cayugabytes@gmail.com.
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COLLEGIAN FORMER EDITOR-IN-CHIEF SELECTED FOR HIS DREAM JOB AT NBC In the fall of 2004, a first year Telcom student answered an ad to become a staff member for CCC’s student-run publication, The Cayuga Collegian. Faculty advisor to The Collegian, Assistant Professor Mary Merritt, needed a full regiment of employees and volunteers to staff the newspaper created by faculty and staff soon after Cayuga Community College’s Founding to be the voice of the students who attend the college. Knowing it is difficult for students attending a traditionally ‘commuter’ college to commit time beyond class times, Merritt quickly assessed Cradduck’s writing ability and was able to ‘talk’ Cradduck into taking the role as the paper’s editor-in-chief. “I recall he came in the door saying he was only interested in sports reporting,” explained Merritt. “He went out the door four semesters later what we call in the industry—a news ‘junky.’” Merritt says Cradduck’s reign as editor-in-chief was especially difficult because in the fall of 2004, Merritt CCC ‘06 alum and was diagnosed with Stage former editor-in3 Colon Cancer. Unable to chief of The Cayuga teach on-campus classes Collegian, Josh while undergoing radiation, Cradduck, has surgery, and chemotherapy, appeared many Merritt continued to work times in the paper on The Collegian despite since his departure. her illness. This is from when “We continued to publish he landed his first the paper by keeping in con- job after earning a tact by phone and email,” degree at Ithaca said Merritt. “He could have College.
easily walked away, but he stuck with it, so the newspaper never missed a beat.” By fall semester 2005, Merritt was back on campus and was able to supplement Cradduck’s journalism education by traveling with him to College News Media conferences in Kansas City, MO and New York City. “I believe it was on the train ride home from New York City when Josh revealed to me his dream job of someday working for NBC in New York City,” said Merritt. “Then he proceeded to read to me his broadcast news assignments in a tone mimicking NBC’s celebrated main anchor, Tom Brokaw.” Merritt and Cradduck continue to reminisce and laugh about their history to this day. “We have remained friends over the years. It is always a treat for me to see my former students move forward with their careers,” said Merritt. Cradduck broke the news of his new career in an email: “Hi Mary! Hope all is well! I wanted to pass along some news to you before it hit my Facebook. I am leaving Spectrum News after 12 years. I have accepted an offer to become an assignment editor at NBC News at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in NYC! As you know, probably more than others, working for NBC had been a dream for a while. I remember imitating Brokaw for my CCC radio newscasts and I even remember taping some in our coach seat on our way back from NYC (“too much puffery!”). Cradduck wrote referring to the only criticism Merritt bestowed on him after his Brokaw performance. “The Cayuga Collegian really got me launched into the real-world of journalism. It was my first real experience with deadlines, interviews and news writing. I learned so much under Mary’s tutelage,” Cradduck said. “I have fond memories of working at The Collegian late at night, right up to deadline for the next issue. This was my first foray into the news business. This was real. What I wrote up and edited got printed. People read it. You can’t beat it, even at the college level.”
“A postponed Commencement is better than no Commencement at all.” This message is being communicated by Cayuga Community College graduating 2020 sophomores repeatedly in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic which closed the college in March along with an announcement that the May 2020 Commencement ceremony was also canceled. Now that Onondaga Community College has announced their plans to re-schedule their ceremony outdoors in August, Cayuga students are asking why CCC can’t come up with a similar solution. “I understand this is a very tough and scary time, but at the same time, me and my fellow classmates have worked very hard to get to where we are. To just cancel our ceremony instead of postponing it makes me very angry,” wrote CCC sophomore Lauren Murphy. “I got word from the bookstore that they aren’t even bothering to order our graduation regalia which hurt all that much more. I was hopeful that even though I might not have a ceremony this year, I could at least dress in my regalia and have a few pictures taken. At the very least, I would’ve liked to have received my graduation tassel, because next year all the tassels will say 2021.” OCC announced it is erecting an outdoor stage and encouraging friends and families to bring blankets and lawn chairs. “The very least they could do is give us a reason why they decided to cancel it so soon in the crisis,” expressed a CCC student. The Cayuga Collegian staff echoes the call for a postponement instead of a cancellation. They’re encouraging students to reach out to the paper to express their views. You can email your opinions to cayugacollegian@gmail.com. “People have worked very hard to be able to cross that stage, if it means so much to the students, it should mean as much to the administration,” wrote MORE OPINIONS PAGE 2 a CCC sophomore.
INSIDE: • LETTERS TO THE COLLEGIAN FROM STUDENTS & STAFF
• AWARD FOR HARLEQUIN STAGE PERFORMER • LIFE AS AN ORGAN RECIPIENT DURING A PANDEMIC • POETRY CONTEST WINNERS AND THEIR POEMS
• HOW I SEE IT: MANDATORY MASKS
THE OFFICIAL STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER OF CAYUGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE