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THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF MANHATTAN COLLEGE | SINCE 1924
Volume CV, Issue 3
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NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 8, 2022
Shared Governance Open Forum Prompts Questions of Representation from Faculty Kyla Guilfoil Editor-in-Chief
Winter Weather Persists on Campus Students expereince frigid conditions after Punxsutawney Phil predicts six more weeks of winter. JOCELYN VISNOV / THE QUADRANGLE
Jaspers Return To Surveillance Testing
A One Manhattan email to the Manhattan College Community on Feb. 4 announced that surveillance testing will now be resumed for the 2022 spring semester. The new protocols are different from the previous semester, when students were not required to test periodically. “Now that we have completed the pre-arrival testing, surveillance testing will resume on Monday, Feb. 7. Employees and students who have not tested positive within the preceding 90 days will be required to test periodically,” the email stated. “If you receive a notice asking you to be tested, you will
have seven (7) days to submit a PCR test before you receive an orange pass.” For those who need a COVID-19 test or are experiencing symptoms, testing is available on campus in Smith Auditorium. “COVID-19 testing will be available for surveillance testing, exempt employees and students, and anyone who would like to be tested in Smith Auditorium on the following dates over the next week,” the email stated. Those individuals with exemptions to the vaccine requirement must still test every 7 days, as previously protocols indicated. Pete McHugh, director of media relations & strategic communications, clarified the new protocols of the spring 2022 semester.
IN NEWS:
IN FEATURES:
Lauren Raziano Asst. Sports Editor & Web Editor
Talks of Spring Madness on pg. 4
Kairos Retreat to return on pg. 5
“All employees and students regardless of vaccination status will have to submit a test within the designated time period,” McHugh wrote. The email disclosed that there are still 24 active COVID-19 cases among the community, and encouraged students to get the booster to increase safety on campus. The One Manhattan update also included a link to an article posted by ABC News to incentivize Manhattan Community members to get the vaccine and the booster. “A recent study shows that individuals who are vaccinated, especially those who have received a booster, are far more likely to avoid severe illness, hospitalization and death after __________________________ CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
Manhattan College faculty called for more representation in decision making at an open forum hosted by the MC Shared Governance Working Group on Feb. 2. Faculty, along with a handful of students and administrators, raised concerns about the lack of communication between high-level administrators and other MC personnel when it comes to decision making. Further, there was an emphasis in their concerns to make the process of implementing change more efficient. Ira Gerhardt, Ph.D., associate professor of mathematics, approached the microphone at the forum to draw attention to the lack of faculty representation in the final steps of decision making. “It seems like there’s some immediate action that could move things forward,” Gerhardt said at the forum. “[President O’Donnell] holds a presidential cabinet that has no faculty representation. Right now, Dr. O’Donnell could invite faculty members to be a representative to the cabinet to be involved in all aspects of college making decisions. We have a college Senate that has five stakeholder groups come together to pass good things, but again, when they hit the President’s desk, the President has the authority to knock them down. We don’t have a veto override in our Senate. There are actions and steps that we could be taking immediately, not with surveys and forums, but tomorrow morning that goes out and it moves forward.” O’Donnell neglected to
IN A&E:
Getting to Know @hyllbraidedme on pg. 7
respond directly to the proposition of a faculty member joining his cabinet, but did offer a statement following the open forum. “The forum was an opportunity for the working group to listen to as many perspectives as possible as they move forward on their charge,” he wrote to The Quadrangle via email. “They are taking a comprehensive approach, assessing our current structures in light of our mission and principles and informed by best practices. All ideas are welcome and I’m sure will be taken seriously as the group works to formulate their recommendations.” Jeff Horn, Ph.D., professor of history, emphasized the need for more communication and transparency with his own comment at the forum. “I’m glad that [the Shared Governance Working Group] has a broad charge, because I do believe that our structures are broken,” Horn said. “But one of the points that I really want to make is I want to in some ways add to the charge. I would really like to see the working group also document, I think that we need to kind of have a snapshot of where we are. I do believe that the materials need to be put together so that we’ve seen where we are, so that we have a baseline to see where we need to go. So I would just like to add that as part of what I would recommend to your group.” Steven Schreiner, provost of the college and member of the Share Governance Working Group, did share that there has been a Moodle page established to better distribute information to the community. It can be found at this link: https:// __________________________ CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
IN SPORTS:
Women’s Swim Breaks Record on pg. 12