Issue 13 • Volume 125 Thursday, Jan. 31, 2019 www.thesandspur.org
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A promise kept: Woman rushes fraternities in friend’s honor After the death of her best friend, Bethany England becomes first female to rush Rollins fraternities By Zoe Pearson
zpearson@rollins.edu
Content warning: This article discusses suicide.
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Curtis Shaffer
Bethany England enjoys a cigar on Park Avenue, something she and Samuel Morse used to do together weekly.
Softball wins locker room after years of requests Having faced crime and vandalism, now the team feels heard and has a safer space to convene By Henri Balla
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hballa@rollins.edu
fter 23 years as head coach of the Rollins softball program, Michelle Frew will finally get to gather her team in its own locker room facility. The City of Winter Park leased a building to Rollins located behind Martin Luther King, Jr. Field, where the softball team plays and practices. Over winter break, the College transformed the unused space into a sports clubhouse filled with personalized wooden lockers, leather couches, a conference table, and a television. “What our athletic director and president did was amazing,
coming through with this,” said Frew. “For years, we’ve always said, ‘Why can’t we get that building out there? They don’t really use it for much.’ No one really made it happen, but they did and we’re thrilled.” The team received the facility after a long fight led by members who pointed out the safety threats and disadvantages they faced without one. “We’ve had people break into our cars or the field and steal our bags. Base paint was used to vandalize our dugout,” Erin Crawford (‘20) said. “People have hopped the fence and there were no security cameras, so having a building where we know that we can go in and be ‣ See SOFTBALL Page 8
t started with a conversation over cigars last year. Bethany England (‘21) told her close friend, Samuel Morse, that she had always wanted to join a fraternity. To Morse, that was that—he was set on the two of them going through recruitment as a pair one day. But then Morse, a rising sophomore at Rollins at the time, died by suicide in July 2018. “In whatever I wanted to do, even if it was outside the box for a female, even if I wasn’t good at it or I was probably going to fail, he still supported whatever I was interested in,” said England. England took their promise to heart, and decided to go through fraternity recruitment two weeks ago in Morse’s honor. “At first it was a joke between the two of us, but after Sam [Morse] died, I realized the importance of community. The importance of having people
there for you, to have your back, and having people to reach out to. That’s something that a fraternity and sorority offer. Rushing is an opportunity that he lost. I did this for him,” England said. Once the first night of recruitment rolled around on Wednesday, Jan. 16, England dolled herself up in a sharply ironed pink pantsuit paired with the perfect bright red lipstick and loosely curled hair. “I knew I was going to be the only female in the room, so why try to hide it?” she said. She was not nervous heading into a male-dominated setting. “I spent most of my childhood and teenage years hanging with guys and doing ‘masculine activities.’ I’m a total girlie girl when it comes to fashion and style, but interest-wise, I align closer with men,” England said. She walked out of her dorm room confidently, interested in sparking discussions about suicide awareness. “I wasn’t intimidated going into it because of the fact that I found strength in the reason why I was rushing. And because of the opportunity to
start the conversation about suicide awareness,” England said. She was very serious about joining a fraternity, though, and went through the process in hopes that she could find the sense of community that Morse had found through his friends in Lambda Chi Alpha and X Club. She also went into the experience open to becoming the first woman to join a fraternity at Rollins, as Morse’s words of encouragement still rang in her ears. “You never can let your fear get in the way of your purpose,” England said. Once she arrived at the event, England mingled with the fraternities, taking special interest in the Rollins chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha. She went over to X Club, the College’s local fraternity, when she heard that they had someone rolling cigars. She said that it felt like everything was coming full circle. Since she and Morse smoked cigars every week, experiencing this as a part of the recruitment process was fitting. England said that she had a ‣ See RECRUITMENT Page 4
Upcoming Campus Center renovations look to enhace dining experience Layout changes aim to maximize space and dining options for students By Caroline Klouse
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cklouse@rollins.edu
killman Dining Hall, which is the main dining hall in the Cornell Campus Center, will undergo a $2.1 million renovation from early May through mid-August of this year. With new serving stations, tables, seating, and flooring, the renovation will completely reshape the center and its functionality. Cristina Cabanilla, director of Dining Services, highlighted the “showcase cooking experience, where students can actually watch the food be cooked right in front of them and have a prop-
er dining experience.” In addition to the current pasta, all-day breakfast, entree, international, and deli stations, there will be a vegan station added where students will be able to access a guaranteed vegan option at each meal. Other vegetar-
Photos Page 4 ‣ Potential dining hall plans ian and gluten-free options will also be provided. Additionally, students can have their own salad made at a new salad toss station. “A key eye-catcher will be the new brick oven in the cen-
ter of Skillman, where students can have a versatility of things cooked right in front of them, like pizza, casseroles, rotisseries, and more,” said Cabanilla. To avoid the morning and afternoon rushes where students are huddled behind one another in line, “there will be two check-in stations at the entrance of Skillman Dining Hall where students can swipe into [the] dining hall, in order to avoid a long line,” said Bill Short, associate vice president for finance & assistant treasurer. Though the layout of the Cornell Campus Center is changing for the next semester, the dining plan will not be changed. ‣ See DINING Page 4