4-15-22 Print Edition

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Sunshine. Sustainability. Slippery Rock.

the rocket

Friday April 15, 2022 • Volume 105, Issue Number 9 • An Independent, Student-Run Newspaper

www.theonlinerocket.com

Abbey who?

By Joe Wells News Editor

It won’t matter who you talk to throughout the halls of Old Main, if you ask whether Abbey Zink is still employed at the university, the answer is, “That’s a personnel matter.” The phrase has become the standard answer from the university’s human resources office, Communication Officer Robert King and the president’s chief of staff since April 7 – three days after her announced replacement. While Pennsylvania’s Right-to-Know Law does provide numerous exemptions to what is public record, state employee information including name, job title and salary is not exempt. And despite its claims that the university cannot share any information about personnel matters, the university publishes a quarterly document that lists all hirings, retirements, resignations and terminations to the Council of Trustees that is made available to everyone. The university has yet to say why this time, talk of employee status is handled differently than before. A year ago, when a Slippery Rock University custodial worker was charged with assaulting another employee, not only did King confirm the employee was still working for the university, but that it was conducting a personnel investigation as well. With a feeling the university is lacking transparency surrounding how Zink was replaced, along with equity concerns at SRU, some faculty are speaking up, voicing their concerns to the university’s president and Trustees in a letter sent last week.

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PHOTO COURTESY OF SLIPPERY ROCK UNIVERSITY

Flurry of accidents hit community By Joe Wells News Editor

Mac Bell Assistant News Editor

Tyler Howe Sports Editor

A series of accidents over the weekend prompted Slippery Rock University to reach out to students and offer support services. The chain of events began Fr i d a y e v e n i n g w h e n University Police received a call for assistance at Mihalik-Thompson

"The university would like to remind everyone to gather responsibly and to look out for one another." – Karla Fonner, dean of students

Stadium just after 6 p.m. Over at the stadium, a SRU student-athlete was injured during a throwing competition. The co-hosted event by SRU and Westminster College was part of the t w o - d a y We s t m i n s t e r College Track and Field Invitational. That student was flown t o t h e Un i ve r s i t y o f Pittsburgh Medical Center ( U P M C ) Pre s b y t e r i a n Hospital with non-lifethreatening injuries, according to Jon Holtz, director of athletic communication at SRU. The university did not release the name of the student-athlete but did say they were in stable condition Sunday. The student is expected to make a full recovery, Holtz said. A little over an hour later, University Police received a call for a person who fell in the Student Union Commuter Lot and possibly broke their ankle. Emergency medical services were called to the area and transported the person to a nearby hospital. Then around midnight on Saturday, University Police were notified of another accident involving an SRU student at an offcampus housing complex. S RU St u d e n t G a g e Brain fell from a railing at The Grove Apartments onto the concrete below. University Police helped assist with that call as well, which resulted in Brain

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being taken by helicopter to a nearby hospital. Days after the accident, friends of Brain established a GoFundMe campaign to help the student with their medical bills. As of Thursday night, the campaign has raised more than $8,600. Around the same time police were responding to

The Grove, Butler County 911 services notified University Police that a person was hit by a car near the Lower Stadium C Lot. That person was also life-flighted to UPMC Presbyterian Hospital. W h i l e t h e p e r s o n’s condition is still unknown, SRU Police Chief Kevin

Sharkey said he could not release any details about what happened as the case is still under investigation. That investigation could lead to charges being filed by police, Sharkey said. By noon Saturday, Karla Fonner, dean of students sent an email out to the campus community about

RAYNI SHIRING / THE ROCKET

Slippery Rock area emergency medical services dealt with a busy 24 hours after three students were lifeflighted to Pittsburgh hospitals, all seperate incidents, beginning April 8, 2022. The university reached out to students the following day to offer services and ask them to look out for one another.

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Sports

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the unusually high level of serious accidents that took place. “SRU is a caring c o m m u n i t y w h e re we hope students make life-long connections,” Fonner said in the email. “A s we m ove f u r t h e r into a spring semester where larger gatherings are likely to occur, the university would like to remind everyone to gather responsibly and to look out for one another.” The university asked students who wanted to talk with someone about the events to reach out to the SRU Counseling Center at 724.738.2034 or submit a Care Referral. Faculty and staff members needing assistance can reach out through the State Employee Assistance Program at 800.692.7459. The email encouraged students to assist those who may be intoxicated and in need of medical attention by calling Student Health Services, which is located in Rhodes Hall, at 724.738.2052. Fo r a n o n - c a m p u s e m e r g e n c y, s t u d e n t s should call University Police at 724.738.3333, or if off-campus, call 911. S a t u rd a y n i g h t i n t o Su n d a y, o f f i c e r s w i t h the Pennsylvania Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement were in the Slippery Rock area. On Wednesday, they charged six people with underage possession of alcohol and one other with public drunkenness.

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