February 2, 2018

Page 1

THE GATEPOST Framingham State’s independent student newspaper

Volume 86 • Issue 14

FSUgatepost.com

February 2, 2018

Samantha Cruz / THE GATEPOST

The “super blue blood moon” was visible from campus on Jan. 31.

News ETHAN FEUER pg. 2 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION pg. 5

Opinions DRY CAMPUS pg. 8 LOGAN PAUL AWARENESS pg. 9

Gatepost survey finds opioid crisis has impacted one in three students Students unaware of on-campus resources for those struggling with addiction

An unscientific survey of 500 students conducted by The Gatepost found 187 respondents, or 37.4 percent, know someone who has struggled with an opioid addiction. The survey was administered from Nov. 6 to Nov. 20. Sixteen respondents, or 3.2 percent, said they have struggled with an opioid addiction themselves. Of the 500 students who responded, 167, or 33.4 percent, said they know someone who has died as a result of an opioid overdose. The Gatepost survey results align with those of a survey conducted by FSU administrators. Every three years, FSU asks students to complete The Core Alcohol and Drug Survey or The American College Health Survey, both of which ask questions about drug and alcohol use and health behaviors.

See OPIOID SURVEY page 3

See FBI page 5

By Tessa Jillson Editorial Staff

By Shanleigh Reardon News Editor

“WHOSE STREETS” DOCUMENTARY pg. 11 BEAUTY BY BAILEY pg. 11

Sports MENS HOCKEY FALLS 2-10 IN THE MASCAC pg. 15 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL HOPES FOR CONFERENCE TITLE STILL ALIVE pg. 17

By Shanleigh Reardon News Editor The FBI provided no assistance to FSUPD’s investigation into the hate crimes that occurred on campus last semester, according to FSUPD Sgt. Martin Laughlin. The agency was contacted to assist with handwriting analysis after the first three hate crimes occurred in October 2017. President F. Javier Cevallos announced the request for assistance in a campus-wide email on Nov. 1, 2017. “University Police have requested the assistance of the FBI to further evaluate the racist messages and handwriting. Currently ongoing,” read the email. Laughlin said the request for assistance, which included the handwriting samples, was denied because the FBI prioritized other investigations. “We’re still actively working. We’re still talking to anyone under the sun, anyone we possibly can, that might have an inkling of what happened. We are working with another agency doing handwriting samples, and we are working with the State Police for fingerprint analysis,” said Laughlin. He added the pace of the investigation is not the fault of FSUPD or “any other agency on campus,” as they’re working with a limited amount of information. “Someone knows something,” said Laughlin. “You may have a crime and it may be solvable, but if you don’t have enough to support the crime, you don’t have much. But if you go off of statements, witness statements, on top of fingerprint samples, then you build a stronger case, but right now, we don’t have a lot.”

By Bailey Morrison Associate Editor

Arts & Features

FBI denies FSU’s inquiry regarding hate crimes

INSIDE: OP/ED 8• ARTS & FEATURES 10 • SPORTS 14


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