Emerson College’s student newspaper since 1947 • berkeleybeacon.com
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Thursday, February 23, 2022 • Volume 75, Issue 21
Plexiglass shields to be removed from classrooms upon faculty request
Emerson graduate student Carlie Brainard is set to run this year’s Boston Marathon. / Courtesy Carlie Brainard
Emerson graduate student to run Boston Marathon Vivi Smilgius Beacon Staff When Emerson graduate student Carlie Brainard finished her undergraduate degree at Iona College last May, she decided it was time for a new challenge. “It’s as simple as one night, I decided I wanted to run the Boston Marathon,” she said. Brainard returned to her home state of Massachusetts to attend graduate school as a writing, literature and publishing student and work at Beacon Press, a non-profit book publisher headquartered in Boston. In her search for something more, she combined aspects of home, physical fitness, and community outreach to make a decision. She adopted a 16-week training program that includes stretching, running, cross-training, recovery, and rest— albeit not very much. She begins with weekly “foundation runs,” which she completes in variations of speeds,
and tacks on days of hill training. Brainard also intersperses shorter races, like 5ks, into her training to help create the “race day atmosphere.” She’s also gotten help from her cousin Jeff Cahill, who ran throughout high school, college, and beyond. Cahill, who has completed seven marathons, said he was happy to help Brainard when he found out she planned to run one. “At first when I heard she was running Boston, I was a little bit shocked,” Cahill said. “But I can tell you one thing: Carlie is very motivated and determined to not only run Boston but to finish. Some people training for Boston feel like they have to run. But one good thing about Carlie is she wants to run and she wants to do her best.” Brainard reached out to local charities in hopes of getting a sponsor for the marathon since she doesn’t meet the qualifying race times. Her calls were answered when Community Rowing Inc., Boston Marathon, Pg. 2
Emerson classroom with plexiglass dividers installed. / Beacon Archives
Vivi Smilgius Beacon Staff
Emerson will remove plexiglass dividers installed in classrooms preceding the Fall 2021 semester. According to Emerson’s assistant vice president of facilities and campus services Duncan Pollock, the dividers will be removed upon professor request but mobile units will be available. Pollock also noted that plexiglass in computer labs will “most likely remain” until the end of the 2021-22 academic year. “I’m thrilled that we’re getting rid of it and counting down the days until it actually happens,” said Cindy Rodriguez, senior Journalist-in-Residence and instructor at Emerson. “Plexiglass makes classroom discussion hard because half the time people can’t really hear unless you’re really projecting your voice.” Rodriguez is one of many faculty members who are glad to see the plexiglass go. Emerson’s decision follows a request from faculty, who filed a petition-like request to remove the plexiglass shields, according to Douglas Struck, a journalism professor and Senior Journalist-in-Residence at the college. Struck seconded Rodriguez’s sentiments, also citing difficulty hearing students. “Communicating in a classroom is pretty important,” he said. “I want to be able to listen to [students] and I would like to think they want to listen to me. Those plexiglass shields made it practically impossible Plexiglass, Pg. 2
Women’s basketball team knocked out of first-round playoff Tyler Foy Beacon Staff
. / Courtesy Xinyan Fu
“Arts in Chinatown” documentary to be screened in Student Performance Center Abigail Lee Beacon Staff A new student documentary focuses on Boston’s Chinatown, a community that many Emerson students are familiar with, but do not fully know. Senior journalism major Xinyan Fu’s short documentary Arts in Chinatown brings attention to artists in the neighborhood whose work challenges mainstream narratives about Asian immigrants. Originally a project for Fu’s Multimedia Capstone class in the fall,
the documentary will be screened on Monday, Feb. 28 at 7 p.m. in the Student Performance Center. The screening is co-sponsored by the Office of International Student Affairs (OISA) and Asian Students in Alliance (ASIA). Food from local Chinatown restaurants will be provided for the audience. The screening is part of an initiative to showcase the work of international students, according to Andrea Popa, Director of OISA. “[Xinyan’s] project was exactly the Student documentary, Pg. 7
Emerson’s women’s basketball lost 73-49 against second-seed Babson College in the New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference quarterfinals, ending the Lions’ season 8-16. The Lions reached the playoffs for four straight seasons— five times since joining the NEWMAC in the 2013-14 season— but were eliminated in the first round each year. The past two postseasons, they were beaten by the eventual NEWMAC Champions. Emerson’s regular season ended with an 84-61 loss to Coast Guard Academy—their third consecutive loss by more than 20 points. The Lions squeezed into the NEWMAC playoffs, securing the seventh and final spot in the conference with a 4-6 record. According to D3Hoops, the women’s basketball team had the 23rd toughest schedule out of 427 teams. Coach Bill Gould said the team performed well with the hand they were dealt. “My freshmen and sophomores had never played and not one of my kids had ever started a college basketball game,” he said. “We’re probably going to end up with the 23rd toughest schedule in the country out of 427. That’s not nothing. Then some people say ‘look at your record, you didn’t do well,’ That’s crap. I think we did really well.” The first encounter between Babson and Emerson took place on Feb. 2 in the Bobbi Brown and Steven Plofker gym and ended with the Beavers winning 6932. Of the 13 games the colleges have played against each other, Babson has won 12. Their motto, “Defend the Dam,” was in full effect as they were also 7-0 Women’s Basketball, Pg. 8
INSIDE THIS EDITION COVID Update Pg. 3 Difficulties securing on-campus jobs Pg. 3 Opinion: Ukraine crisis Pg. 4 Opinion: Domincan Republic/Haiti border wall Pg. 5 Berklee showcases Black artists Pg. 6 EmStage’s ‘As You Like It’ Review Pg. 7 Men’s Lacrosse return with win against Nichols Pg. 8
481
positive COVID-19 tests
1.41% positivity rate
34,000+ tests completed
*Accumulated from Spring 2022 Semester