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The Slate 11-7-23

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Campus celebrities, B1

Hippo’s first homecoming, C1

Nutcracker performs with locals, D1

Cross country success at regionals, E1

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Volume 67 No. 9

Reporting truth. Serving our community.

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Allyson Ritchey and Morgan Brumbaugh crowned 2023 SU Homecoming Royalty Elizabeth Peters Editor-in-Chief

Elizabeth Peters / The Slate Allyson Ritchey (left) and Morgan Brumbaugh (right) were crowned 2023 Homecoming Royalty on Nov. 4.

Allyson Ritchey and Morgan Brumbaugh were crowned 2023 Shippensburg Homecoming Royalty on the field of Seth Grove Stadium Saturday. Out of the 12 members of the 2023 Homecoming Court, Ritchey and Brumbaugh were crowned based on the percentage of votes they received, their answers in a personal interview and the amount of money they raised for a selected charity. This year, the entire Homecoming Court raised $9,150 for the SU Student Emergency Fund. The SU Student Emergency fund offers money and resources to students experiencing financial stresses. “Almost 75% of college students have experienced financial insecurity and stress, and one-third have considered dropping out because of their finances,” Ritchey said. “I think it was great because a lot of people did not know that we had the fund,” Brumbaugh said. “As someone funding her entire undergrad by herself, this is important to me because I know I am not alone and that it is being talked about,” Ritchey added. Ritchey and Brumbaugh were sponsored by The Slate and the Student Athlete Advisory Committee,

Elizabeth Peters / The Slate Photo Courtesy of @shipuraiders on Olivia Faenza, 2022 SU Homecoming Instagram Royalty, embracing Allyson Ritchey Morgan Brumbaugh holding a phoafter she was crowned. to of her childhood self after being crowned. respectively. Ritchey is a senior sociology and communication, Shippensburg that we are all one.” Ritchey decided to run for journalism and media major and has been a part of The Slate since 2021. She Homecoming because she did not in high is currently the multimedia director. school, and she liked that the process at Brumbaugh is a junior early childhood SU is merit based. “It allows for students education major, and she is a catcher of less advantaged backgrounds to stand up and do something for a public and utility player for the softball team. As an athlete, Brumbaugh said that university in a way that is not afforded sometimes athletes feel separated from to many individuals,” Ritchey said. Congratulations to both Ritchey and their peers because of their schedules, practices and stresses. In running Brumbaugh for the work they have done for Homecoming, Brumbaugh said and will continue to do for the campus “I want to be the representation for and community.

Fresh Check Day raises mental health awareness Mason Flowers Asst. Sports Editor

Shippensburg University hosted its annual Fresh Check Day in the CUB Great Hall this past Tuesday, featuring many booths where students could learn about mental health topics. The event featured over 20 tables, along with food and drink, therapy dogs and giveaways. Fresh Check Day is a national program from the Jordan Porco Foundation aimed at promoting mental health and suicide prevention in an approachable atmosphere for college students. Both university staff and campus clubs came together to help make the event a success. Shippensburg University Director of Wellness Kurt Dunkel was the leader in putting this together, and this event has been a successful one on campus for many years. Dunkel noticed the success, saying “We do more booths than most schools. We bring in off-campus resources, and we also work with different faculty members.”

The event covered topics such as positive affirmations, speaking out for others, recognizing drug use, healthy living, exercise and more. Multiple groups from outside the university also had tables, including the Drew Michael Taylor Foundation and the Mental Health Association of Franklin and Fulton Counties. Multiple clubs on campus had tables at the event, including Multicultural Student Affairs, the Military Science department and the PAGE Center. Other campus organizations were also present, such as the counseling center and the first-year experience program. Most of the stations were student-led, with Dunkel commending all involved and noted psychology professor Amber Norwood’s group by saying, “Dr. Norwood’s class has six different tables that are all staffed by her students, and they put together the messaging, the resources, the takeaways. That’s a great partnership between academic affairs and student affairs”.

A majority of the tables were interactive for students, and notable booths included making handprints to symbolize reaching out for those in need, as well as students writing negative thoughts and affirmations on paper before immediately putting them in a shredder. Students could also sign up to enter prize giveaways by visiting five interactive booths. Dunkel believed the theme of the event was working together in a community. “Mental health is best addressed as a community,” he said. “We should take the time throughout the day to actually check in on ourselves and our mental health and to check in on other folks as well.” The event will continue annually on campus in the future, with Dunkel seeing room to grow. Speaking about current students, he said, “Your generation is more open to talking about mental health. Our campus is more accepting about it and more open, and we have a tightknit campus where folks work on this topic in different ways.”

Adam Beam & Allyson Ritchey / The Slate A variety of dogs for students to pet at Fresh Check Day.


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