The Signal
Vol. LIII, No. 8
https://www.tcnjsignalnews.com/
February 2, 2024
Serving The College of New Jersey since 1885
Mice make themselves at home in residence halls
Photo by Elizabeth Gladstone
The rodent issue has unsettled students across the affected residence halls. By Matthew Kaufman Managing Editor Emily Delmonaco came back from winter break and decided to take a quick nap in her New Residence Hall dorm room before class. When she woke up, she found an unpleasant surprise under her pillow. Mouse droppings and urine. “I was so disgusted and didn’t know what to do,” said Delmonaco, a sophomore elementary education and sociology major. “My roommate and I ended up sleeping at our friends’ places for the night while we figured things out.” It seems that more than just students have moved into the College’s residence halls this semester, as mice have been reported in several dorms across campus,
forcing several students to move rooms or buildings after just a week on campus. Students living in New Residence, Eickhoff, Cromwell and Wolfe halls, along with Townhouses East, have all reported sightings or evidence of rodents in their rooms or common areas, according to Luke Sacks, the College’s head of media relations. Five rooms in New Residence Hall were affected by mice, with nine students requesting to be moved to other residence halls. Community Advisors in these buildings have been advising their residents to avoid leaving food out and to place towels on the floor to prevent mice from slipping under doors. But Annabelle Mason, a resident of Eickhoff Hall, said that she has taken
numerous precautions and has still encountered mice. Her room is next to the trash room on her floor, and Mason said that Facilities workers have installed a door draft stopper to block the area underneath the door and have come in multiple times to seal around the air vent. “We’ve put down four traps and [the mouse] keeps eating the bait off of it and not actually getting trapped,” said Mason, a sophomore secondary education and history major. Mason said that she caught eight mice in her room last semester. Facilities provided her with glue traps, but she elected to install lethal traps because she did not want to see the mouse struggle. Sacks said that the administration has been actively working with an
exterminator to resolve the issue. “Facilities continue to work with our exterminator to do walkthroughs and inspections to find and correct any building issues that could allow the mice to enter any building,” Sacks said in an email. “The exterminator deploys an aggressive program of trapping and removing mice from all buildings.” The rodent issue has unsettled students across the affected residence halls, even those who have not personally witnessed one of the critters. Haylee Schmick, another resident of New Residence Hall, said that she and her roommate have also had to take inconvenient precautions, such as buying and installing a door draft blocker, along with placing all snacks in bins above their wardrobes. “I pay thousands of dollars to go here and dorm and can’t even live without fearing rodents are going to eat all of my stuff,” said Schmick, a sophomore elementary education major. Sacks said that any student who sees evidence of mice in their room should submit a facilities ticket and continue to take precautions. “We also encourage the entire campus community to clean up thoroughly when preparing food in kitchens, to promptly dispose of food waste and not to leave food out,” Sacks said. Delmonaco and her roommate have decided to extend their stay in Eickhoff, hoping to avoid any future encounters with the tiny residents. They were unaware that mice had already made themselves at home in their new residence hall as well.
Suzanne McCotter to begin Interim President Bernstein breaks 18-month tenure as provost down LIONS initative in interview By Rebecca Heath News Editor Dr. Suzanne McCotter has been selected to serve as the College’s interim provost for an 18-month term beginning Feb. 5, according to an email sent to the campus community by Interim President Michael Bernstein on Tuesday. McCotter joined the College’s administration in 2017 as a professor and Dean of the School of Education. In 2022, she transitioned to the role of Dean of Graduate and Continuing Education. “Dr. McCotter has been an outstanding leader for TCNJ and has demonstrated a commitment to advancing initiatives which support our students, faculty, and staff — and which have consistently worked to advance and refine the college’s mission,” Bernstein wrote. “Dr. McCotter’s efforts in building a foundation for our work in continuing, graduate, and professional studies are critical to the future successes we will realize in this area.” The appointment comes days after Jeffrey Osborn, who had served as provost since 2020, officially stepped down from the role. In an email sent to the campus community on Dec. 13, Bernstein
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announced he and Osborn “mutually agreed he will conclude his responsibilities as provost and vice president for academic affairs on Jan. 22.” “Jeff’s many accomplishments as provost serve as a strong foundation for our work ahead,” Bernstein wrote. In the Jan. 30 email, Bernstein shared that there will be further communication with the campus regarding new leadership in the Graduate and Continuing Education division “in due course.”
Photo by Elizabeth Gladstone
McCotter’s term begins Feb. 5.
Student parking
page 2
This semester, many commuter students have raised concerns about a lack of available student parking on campus.
OPINIONS
By Victoria Gladstone Editor-in-Chief By Matthew Kaufman Managing Editor When Interim President Michael Bernstein sent out a campus-wide email on Dec. 6 listing his vision for ensuring the College’s future success, the reaction among students, faculty and staff was a mix of cautious optimism and outright worry. In addition to several initiatives aimed to grow revenue, the email detailed several “efficiencies” that Bernstein would like to seek — ways to conserve funds in an era where the College faces significant fiscal uncertainty. These plans are collectively known as LIONS, which stands for “Linking Innovation with Operational Nimbleness and Sustainability.” In another campus-wide email sent on Jan. 22, Bernstein said that his administration will begin the process of researching and implementing the initiatives listed in the December message. “The groups I have mentioned will meet in earnest over the coming weeks to develop blueprints and clear timelines
Joel Embiid’s scoring
page 5
Joel Embiid’s historic scoring season may not lead to all of the success that people may think.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
and metrics for the achievement of our budgetary and operational targets,” Bernstein wrote in the email. In an interview with The Signal in December, Bernstein emphasized that most of what he outlined in the email are ideas that should be further examined— not concrete actions that will take effect immediately. “My message to all of these constituencies has been to say…‘Here’s generally what I’m seeing and here are what I think are some of the opportunities,’” Bernstein said, adding that all of his ideas are made in collaboration with other members of the administration. “I’d be more than happy to hear alternative ideas.” The interim president, who holds a doctorate in economics, said that his shortterm objective is to reduce the deficits currently plaguing the budget, while his long-term goals are to raise revenue to a point that allows the College to “rebuild.” “The first step is to make the budget stable, which is to say, balance it and reduce the bleeding,” Bernstein said. “And then, how do we make it sustainable? How do we eliminate these structural deficits?” see LIONS page 2 page 9
Reneé Rapp’s evolution
At just 19 years old, one East Coast native transformed from idolizing Broadway actors as god-like beings to becoming one herself.
SPORTS
page 12
Swimming, Diving teams victory
The men’s team walked away with a 181114 win over the Red Hawks to bring their regular season record to 7-2.