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Month: January 2021

SGA plans for end of this academic year

January 26, 2021
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| fpouqedt

first_imgKelly Deranek, Saint Mary’s senior, presented a proposal asking for funding for Dance Marathon. The event is in its fifth year at the College and raises money for the Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis. One of the final things SGA has done for the students of Saint Mary’s College is to help fund one of the bigger events on campus — Dance Marathon.  Chesley and Smith were shadowing the current president and vice president in preparation for their terms in office. They will continue to observe until they are sworn in to office and, after elections for the other offices this week, the new class officers will also be attending the SGA meetings.  “The event’s goal is to celebrate the hard work Dance Marathon has done all year to raise money for the hospital,” Deranek said. “It promotes awareness of the hospital but the Marathon night is all about fun.”  In preparation for their upcoming term as leaders of Saint Mary’s Student Government Association (SGA) beginning April 1, juniors Rachael Chesley and Laura Smith attended Wednesday’s meeting. Chesley and Smith were voted in as SGA president and vice president, respectively, for the 2010-11 academic year during the election Feb. 26. Dance marathon will be held in Angela Athletic Facility from 8 p.m. March 26 to 8 a.m. March 27. The event is for Saint Mary’s, Notre Dame and Holy Cross students. Deranek said they are expecting around 550 people, which is the largest attendance the event has ever had. The marathon is 12 hours of dancing with live entertainment and a DJ. It also includes food, games, last minute donations and a counting of how much money was raised. center_img Hoffman also said she and the current SGA vice president and junior, Megan Griffin, were attempting to initiate a Saint Mary’ s heritage course. The course would be one credit and would teach students about the origins and founding values of the College.  “The year is coming to a close very quickly and our term in office is almost over,” current SGA president and senior Jenny Hoffman said. “It’s time to think of what final things you would like to accomplish for the student body.”   The board members for the event have already begun fundraising, but because all the money has been donated to the hospital, they still needed funding for the event, Deranek said.  SGA has started to prepare for the end of the 2009-10 term and will meet only three more times before the newly elected officers are sworn in on April 1.    Some of the suggestions made by the SGA members included vending machines in the Student Center and new vacuums in the dorms. last_img read more

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Week highlights resources

January 26, 2021
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| fofabvlic

first_imgSupport a Belle, Love a Belle, a weeklong program dedicated to providing resources for girls struggling with depression and anxiety, begins today at Saint Mary’s. Senior Meghan Casey, vice president of Student Government Association (SGA), said Support a Belle, Love a Belle draws attention to a sensitive issue for college women. “It is a really important issue on our campus and even more important for us to let the students know that there is support for them,” Casey said. “This is a small campus, so it is so important for us, as student leaders, to promote our resources and promote our sisterhood.” Casey said her job includes making sure students know resources for girls who suffer from anxiety and depression are readily available, and support is always there when students need it. “The SGA door is always open as well,” Casey said. “We want students to know that we can provide a safe place for them.” Senior Maureen Parsons, president of SGA, said many girls are already struggling with depression and anxiety when they enter college, but they do not frequently voice their feelings. “Students don’t realize that they are not the only one suffering because they don’t talk about it,” she said. “We are highlighting these issues with events to show students that they are not alone.” Junior Kat Sullivan, SGA vice president of external affairs, said she hopes these events will encourage people on campus to be more open about these issues. “The big thing we want to emphasize with Support a Belle, Love a Belle week is that at Saint Mary’s, we are part of a sisterhood,” Sullivan said. “I wanted to be involved with these events because I have struggled with these issues myself.” Support a Belle, Love a Belle, which now has a committee of 20 members, has grown greatly since it began last year, Sullivan said. “We are really excited to see how everything falls into place,” she said. With such positive involvement from students, Casey said she hopes the program is able to create a club in the upcoming years. “So many girls are interested, so I think it would make a great organization for years to come,” she said. Having a great support system is key to making this week successful, Sullivan said. “This week will hopefully carry out as we continue the rest of our collegiate careers and even after we graduate,” she said. “It is truly important for girls to recognize that everyone struggles and we are here to support those who need it. We have wonderful resources on campus that everyone should be made aware of.”last_img read more

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Army veteran honored by National Science Foundation

January 26, 2021
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| ccomdbcb

first_imgThe National Science Foundation (NSF) recognized 11 United States military veterans for their contributions to the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields in Washington D.C., on Nov. 5. United States Army veteran and Notre Dame physics graduate student Luis Morales and 10 others were honored with NSF-funded Graduate Research Fellowships.“The ceremony in Washington was a Veteran’s Day event,” Morales said. “The NSF has never done anything like this before. They honored the veterans while also showing how they had contributed to—and made the transition from—the military to the STEM fields.”Morales said his trip to D.C. included a tour of the NSF headquarters and a poster session to present and discuss his personal research. The NSF expressed interest in helping veterans overcome any obstacles that may prevent them from pursuing a civilian career in STEM, Morales said.“Throughout the day, we [talked] about the relationship between veterans and the sciences,” he said. “We’re not traditional students. Many of us start schooling with families. It can be a struggle to manage this financially and time wise.”Morales said that he and the other NSF Fellows honored in D.C. were asked what could be done for veterans to help with the transition from the military to undergraduate or graduate education.“I wasn’t in a science field when I was in the military,” Morales said. “I just had this drive to do it. I followed my heart. I took all the opportunities that were given to me.”According to a press release from the College of Science, “the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship program provides three years of support for the graduate education of students who have demonstrated the potential for significant achievements in science and engineering research.”After more than five years of service in the Army, Morales moved to Elkhart, Indiana to pursue an undergraduate degree in physics and applied mathematics at Indiana University – South Bend in 2011. There, Morales collaborated with a group in the Nuclear Science Lab at Notre Dame to design a new detection system for the St. GEORGE Recoil Separator (Strong Gradient Electro-magnet Online Recoil separator for capture Gamma ray Experiments).“During my time as an undergrad, I spent about three summers on the St. GEORGE,” Morales said. “We ended up simulating and designing a new detection system, constructing this system and testing it to make sure it worked properly.”Morales said the coming stages of his research will work with the St. GEORGE accelerator to test chemical reactions and elements in stars.“We want to study the sun,” Morales said. “This system will help us study particular reactions in the sun. Right now, I’m working on putting all of the different parts of the system together and making sure they work right.”Morales said the financial support the NSF offers helps veterans integrate in civilian life on many levels.“The event in Washington was a pleasant experience overall,” Morales said. “It made me happy to see the NSF trying to reach out to veterans and relate to our struggles. It made me feel like they were genuinely interested in helping future veterans with interests in science pursue them.”Tags: National Science Foundation, NSF, Physics, St. GEORGE Recoil Separator, STEM, Veterans Daylast_img read more

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Group discusses Celtic Chant

January 26, 2021
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| latdmyse

first_imgStudent Senate had its last meeting of semester on Wednesday evening. Marisa Olsen and Louis Bertolotti, directors of the First Undergratuate Experience in Leadership (FUEL), presented their concerns about the new traditions associated with the Celtic chant during football games.According to Olsen, the freshmen on FUEL are concerned by the “negative representation” of Notre Dame when students chant expletives directed towards Zahm on national television.“The chant does not reflect well on the Catholic University and the strong tradition in faith that we have here,” Bertolotti said. “We are one family and this is something that we can change to better the University.”Olsen and Bertolotti suggested using Frosh-O as a way to change the cheer. FUEL suggests simply teaching different words to chant during the Celtic Chant to avoid cursing at football games.“This isn’t necessarily a tradition as it only began two or three years ago,” Bertolotti said. “But we most definitely want to keep it from becoming a tradition.”The group had mixed opinions about the issue at hand. Michael Wajda, co-chair of Hall President’s Council, said he was totally unaware of the chant and had never heard it been used before. Olsen and Bertolotti encouraged the group to step up and make this change happen.“We want you as student leaders to project the changes to the student body to bring us together as a family,” Bertolotti said.Senate also focused on the discussion of student safety on campus. Vidal said during his meeting with local law enforcement on Dec. 10 to discuss off campus safety, the police gave good tips for securing off campus homes during break.“We are going to post a webinar link soon so that students have the opportunity to ask the law enforcement questions live about campus safety,” Vidal said.As the meeting was the last of the semester, Senate plans to continue the 29 for 29 initiative and the discussion about campus safety during the spring semester.last_img read more

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Student Senate reflects on inaugural Walk the Walk Week

January 26, 2021
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| yinayegl

first_imgNotre Dame’s Student Senate met Wednesday evening to exchange feedback pertaining to Notre Dame’s celebration of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy and the University’s inaugural Walk the Walk Week.Senators raised concerns about the effectiveness of this year’s scheduling and potential improvements for next year.Discussion lent itself to the possibility of a University-wide holiday without class.“One big concern was faculty — are they going to come in if if they don’t have a class to teach? Same thing with the students — if you get out of bed and go to a 9 a.m. [class], you might as well go to this [Celebration] Luncheon. As opposed to [thinking], ‘It’s a three-day weekend, I’m going to go out drinking on a Sunday night,’” student body president Bryan Ricketts said.In addition to discussion of Walk The Walk Week, the Senate approved the nomination of a new Director of Gender Issues, sophomore Alex Eisele.Ricketts said he nominated Eisele for the position after a thorough interview process.“Alex has been a good friend of many of the members of Student Government. … We talked to her about her experiences with the It’s On Us Campaign and GreenDot and her involvement with that,” Ricketts said. “We were very impressed with the way that, even though she wasn’t formerly involved in student government, she really took to heart the messages of the campaign.”Members of Senate proceeded to discuss and pass sophomore Sara Dugan, Parliamentarian, as an acting and non-voting member of Judicial Council’s election committee.This order was due to the fact that Ricketts and Zach Waterson, Judicial Council president, are currently searching for a new Director of Internal Affairs, a position previously held by sophomore student body vice-presidential candidate Rebecca Blais.Dugan’s role will include impartially advising the election committee on all constitutional matters, effective immediately, due to her extensive knowledge of the student government Constitution.Junior Isabel Fox, Ryan Hall Senator, expressed concern that Dugan is Blais’s roomate, sensing a possible conflict of interest.Waterson stated that Dugan will have a “fairly minor role” and will help the election committee understand the context of the Constitution’s clauses in the case that there is a violation of election rules and procedures.Tags: student senate, study body elections, Walk the Walk Weeklast_img read more

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Welcome Weekend activities orient new students to community, campus

January 26, 2021
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| ylbqizfy

first_imgOver the past three days, Notre Dame welcomed first year and transfer students to the University over its annual Welcome Weekend. The weekend, which includes both University-wide events and dorm-specific programming, offers new students a chance to get oriented and acclimated to life at Notre Dame.Maggie O’Connor, a first year in Pasquerilla West Hall, said she enjoyed meeting people during Welcome Weekend, including people in both her dorm and her classes. Photo courtesy of Chris Hayden Dunne Hall residents pose with candles before the Class of 2022 visited the Grotto for the first time. The Grotto visit concluded Welcome Weekend, when first year and transfer students are welcomed to campus.“I’d feel lost if I didn’t know anyone in my classes because that’s what I was worried about,” she said.As part of the Pasquerilla West Welcome Weekend activities, O’Connor said she participated in a pancake breakfast, crafts and ice skating with other dorms. Her favorite activity was karaoke with Keenan Hall, and she also enjoyed serenading other dorms.“I really liked all the activities, especially learning all the songs and traditions,” she said. “I think it’s really fun to serenade people.”Keegan O’Toole, a sophomore transfer student, hasn’t been assigned a dorm yet but still enjoyed participating in the welcome activities.“I didn’t do anything dorm-related, but it was still good in terms of knowing the traditions of Notre Dame,” she said.Some of the activities O’Toole participated in included DomerFest, a stadium tour, registering for classes, a bonfire, a scavenger hunt and an engineering information session.“For transfers, we do pretty much every event the freshmen do,” she said.O’Toole said her favorite part of Welcome Weekend was meeting people, but she would want to be able to participate more with something dorm-related, even though she does not currently live on-campus.“I know dorm life is a really big thing here, and I know I’m not on campus, but I’d like to do more associated with that,” she said.For the Welcome Weekend captains and ambassadors, the three days present an opportunity to start to form the first-year community, sophomore and Howard Hall Welcome Weekend ambassador Mary Lynn Dekold said.“When I was a first year, I loved Welcome Weekend,” she said. “I thought it was a great way to introduce me to the Notre Dame community, get me acclimated to campus — I met tons of good people. Now working it, you see if from a whole different perspective.”Dekold said planning for Welcome Weekend started during spring semester last year.“It takes a lot of work, but it’s totally worth it,” she said.Howard Hall‘s programming included events with other dorms, such as a cookout with Sorin College, Siegfried Hall and Farley Hall and a scavenger hunt with Carroll Hall. The ambassadors also hosted small group discussion time.Junior Chris Hayden, a captain from Dunne Hall, said his planning involved coordinating with other dorms as well as general brainstorming. He said Dunne used lots of small groups so students could get to know each other.“We were trying to really think about how we could create an experience for freshmen to interact with one another in a comfortable, non-awkward way,” he said.Hayden said the Dunne Welcome Weekend team was very enthusiastic and wanted to make sure the first-year students felt at home, even when moving in.“Whenever a new car would pull up, we had guys banging on the moving bins, we had yelling, and whenever the first years came out we would have guys go up and introduce themselves,” he said. “They really took the words to heart that we were told in our training. They said, ‘it’s not about you, it’s about the first years.’”Tags: Transfer welcome weekend, Welcome Weekend, Welcome Weekend 2018, Welcome Weekend activitieslast_img read more

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Former Dalloway’s Coffeehouse operations manager comments on past relationship with Sodexo

January 26, 2021
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| bxluziaf

first_imgSaint Mary’s Student Government Association announced it will be working on re-opening Clarissa Dalloway’s Coffeehouse sometime in the near future, potentially collaborating with Sodexo, the food service company at the College. As part of the long-standing contractual agreement with the College, Sodexo, formerly Sodexho Alliance, is the sole food provider allowed on campus.“Sodexho is the exclusive food provider for Saint Mary’s College,” the Catering and Food Services Policy from the Saint Mary’s Employee Handbook states. “Sodexho assumes responsibility for feeding students and catering College events. Sodexho also assumes the liability for providing this service.”According to the handbook, “Food may be brought to an event by a college employee or student for an internal event … if that event is strictly for College employees and/or students. Internal clients, external clients and outside caterers will not be permitted to use kitchen facilities in the Clubhouse, CYBER Café, Haggar Center, Stapleton Lounge/Conference Room, Spes Unica, or in the Dining Hall.”During her years as the operations manager at Dalloway’s, Katie White (’07) said she and the rest of the student board struggled to maintain a working relationship with Sodexo.“We were constantly battling with Sodexo,” White said. “And that was a really difficult relationship to manage because Sodexo would not allow student workers to serve food or coffee.”White said this dynamic was introduced when Dalloway’s moved from its original spot near the Church of Our Lady of Loretto and Holy Cross Hall to its current location on the Avenue. During construction, a full kitchen was included in the new Dalloway’s.“They built a whole kitchen because they’re like, ‘Oh, well, now we can have food here,’” White said. “But because we could have food there, we had to have it staffed by a Sodexo person instead of just student staffers. That was a big problem, and it was something that was constantly a source of friction.”Upon the opening of Cyber Cafe, now called 1844 Grill, Sodexo stopped sending workers who previously staffed Dalloway’s to the coffeehouse, White said.“They didn’t want to have to staff it every single night,” she said. “So while it was open every night my freshman and sophomore years, by junior and senior year, when the new student center came on and Cyber opened, Sodexo basically stopped staffing it except for Wednesday nights, and then whenever we could beg them to open it. So that was a big problem.”This dynamic possibly contributed to the phasing out of Dalloway’s in the years after her graduation, White said.“And I wish we had had more support from administration in kind of talking with Sodexo about this,” she said. “We were kind of left to our own devices negotiating with Sodexo. So we obviously have no good negotiating power, and then as soon as we leave, [Sodexo] then can change whatever they want for the people that are in those positions after us. So I think that was a really big problem.”Jim Risacher was officially named the interim general manager of Sodexo at Saint Mary’s Sept. 23, after former general manager Kenneth Acosta resigned due to health reasons.Risacher said the exclusivity clause that exists within the contract between Sodexo and Saint Mary’s was put in place as an insurance measure and to save the College money.“Number one, the vendor they’ve secured has liability insurance for the food they serve on campus,” Risacher said. “Number two, they know the expectations of the University better normally than an outside vendor. The exclusivity clause is there because what normally happens is [the College] gets a better deal price-wise, and depending on the contract, [the College] may share in those profits from the catering, as opposed to if you go to an outside caterer which is not recognized on campus, you lose that ability to make some money from them to help pay for other things.”Risacher, who has 40 years of experience in the service industry, said he has worked with student organizations in the past to operate on-campus coffee shops.“It’s a mixed bag,” Risacher said. “My understanding here that [Dalloway’s] was closed because it had low sales, and wasn’t supporting the cost that was being put into it, including the labor and food costs and things of that nature. And that’s why it was closed. That’s what I was told.”Running a coffeehouse incurs a considerable cost, Risacher said.“In my experiences, I know the students want someplace on campus to hang out,” he said. “You know, a lot of times it just — you want someplace that you have internet access, you can plug in, and you can talk to your friends, or you can study. When you start adding food to those venues, then you have additional costs. First question is who’s going to pay for that cost?”While Risacher said Sodexo works at the will of the College to provide financial advice and fill food services, the company is always open to conversation with student organizations.“We’re here to serve the students,” Risacher said. “I tell my employees we only have one goal here — it’s a simple mission to improve the food experience for the student. That’s all we’re going to do. So everything we do supports that. And that means working with student groups. We are engaged with SGA on a weekly basis. We’re committed to working with [the College] and the student groups on any project they want on campus and use our expertise to make it happen.”In the past, Risacher said he has seen student governments take over and run their own coffee shops.“You have to have the participation to make it work,” Risacher said. “So you have to see who actually has some skin in the game when it’s all said and done. The problem is that you have students coming and going — they’re here for four years at the most. … If you have a business entrepreneur, they’re going to push it, but when they graduate what happens?”However, Risacher said Sodexo will work with Saint Mary’s SGA in reinstalling Clarissa Dalloway’s Coffeehouse.“In every case I know of, we will work with whatever group to be available to them with the resources that they need,” Risacher said.Tags: Clarissa Dalloway’s Coffeehouse, Sodexo, Student Government Associationlast_img read more

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Saint Mary’s president-elect Katie Conboy invites students into connection, commitment and change

January 26, 2021
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| bzcrfnyl

first_imgKatie Conboy, the newly announced 14th president of Saint Mary’s, began her pursuit of a sense of “belonging” as a young girl growing up on army bases around the world. Conboy, who previously served as provost and senior vice president at Simmons University, as well as a professor of English literature and provost at Stonehill College, will take office this summer. Courtesy of Saint Mary’s College President-elect Katie Conboy, who previously served as provost and senior vice president for seven years at Simmons University, addressed a large crowd gathered for her official introduction in Spes Unica Hall.“As an army brat, I grew up moving every couple of years, and sometimes every year,” Conboy said. “I found that you sort of have to bring your belonging with you wherever you go because you can’t go out in the world looking to have somebody tell you that you don’t belong. You need to arrive with a sense that you belong somewhere.”Conboy said she feels like she belongs at Saint Mary’s, addressing a crowd of students, faculty, trustees and Sisters of the Holy Cross — as well as alumnae and students studying abroad via livestream — in the atrium of Spes Unica Hall.After 13 years at Stonehill College, a Holy Cross institution in North Easton, Massachusetts, Conboy’s career took her to Simmons Universty, a private women’s college in Boston. Conboy said she felt the same sense of belonging during her years at these institutions, though it’s a feeling she said she carries with her as she moves from place to place.“Seven years ago, I left Stonehill for Simmons University in Boston, and I did that because I could see there a very different but equally compelling mission: women’s education as the engine of social and economic empowerment,” she said in her address. “And now, Saint Mary’s offers the opportunity for me to combine my commitments to Holy Cross education and to women’s education in my new academic home. Home is not a word I use lightly.”Her new start in South Bend is essentially a “return home,” Conboy said, as she and her husband Tom met while attending graduate school at Notre Dame. They were married in the Basilica, and both took courses at Saint Mary’s before graduating. They now have three grown daughters: Mairéad, Caitríona and Siobhán.Growing up, Conboy’s family maintained a loose definition of home, relocating about two dozen times to accommodate her father’s military assignments. She elaborated on this traveling lifestyle in her official introduction to the campus community.“I might start a school grade in Fort Dix, New Jersey and finish it in Charlottesville, Virginia, or attend a year of college in Kansas and go home for the summer to Heidelberg, Germany,” Conboy said. “I often think that my own adaptable spirit was forged in the life of an army brat. I tried to bring a sense of belonging with me wherever I go.”Cultivating this sense of belonging is a priority Conboy said she holds not only for herself, but also for the entire Saint Mary’s community.“I’ve spent my career thinking about the ways that a small college like ours with a robust mission can become a true home for its students, faculty and staff — a place where everyone with all their differences intact still belongs,” she said.Today, Conboy said, such spaces are essential and sacred, as well as integral to her vision for the College.“I ask you, three-and-a-half months before I actually arrive on campus, what kind of home do we want to build together? What kind of community do we want to be with and for each other, and also, how can we be open to change even as we maintain our solid foundation?” she said.While these questions could not be answered today, Conboy said, the answers will be more fully realized through her work within the College.In an interview with The Observer, Conboy said she feels a natural alignment between the institutional DNA of Saint Mary’s and her own personal double helix, informed by a life spent surrounded by influential women.“I am one of a family of four daughters, I have three daughters and I think a lot on behalf of women your age and about the world you’re going to inherit,” she said. “Personally, I care about the world I’m leaving to my three daughters, but on a professional basis, I think it’s an incredible privilege to work at a place where I’ll have the opportunity to think about the issues that are most important to women today.”Having witnessed growth at both of her previous institutions, Conboy said she hopes to see Saint Mary’s expand its reach to students from regionally diverse areas, potentially through online access.“I want Saint Mary’s to be seen as a very serious place out there in the world,” she said. “I want students to be seen as serious students and to be taken seriously as students and as people who are contributors to this society. I’m not interested in any fluffy images of women’s colleges or girly images of women’s colleges. Saint Mary’s is a place that began in order to give women access to higher education, and it continues to this very day to do that — but it does that here on a campus that’s bound by who can come and pay tuition.”By pushing beyond this campus-based experience, Conboy said, Saint Mary’s will become recognized nationwide.“I want Saint Mary’s’ name to be spoken in places where it isn’t being spoken right now,” she said.In her address, Conboy offered three hopes for the student body to contemplate in the months before she takes office.“First, I hope we will foster a spirit of togetherness and belonging,” she said. “Second, I hope that our community continues to be one of moral imagination, one that can take its powerful and positive community commitments and model them outside the walls of the College. And finally, I hope we can also work up an appetite for change that we can approach renewing and renovating our Saint Mary’s home with excitement and openness.”Conboy concluded her introduction by reading “The Skylight” by Irish poet Seamus Heaney, which describes a man who has since lived under the claustrophobic confines of his wooden roof, but is soon set free by the installation of a skylight, opening his world up to a brilliant blue sky.Heaney’s poem reminds readers that it’s easy to settle into the familiar, and prefer the arrangements we’ve always known, Conboy said. The speaker resists putting in a skylight for fear that his house will no longer feel like the same home; however, when the slates come off, he experiences a sense of wonder.“[The speaker] recalls the Gospel of Luke, where a paralytic man is lowered through the roof by his friends, to be healed by Jesus, and the feeling among all present is one of one,” Conboy said. “And that’s what I wish for all of us — that we foster a spirit of togetherness and belonging under our Saint Mary’s roof, that we make our walls permeable and share that spirit with the broader community. And that we’d be willing to change to cut a hole in the roof if necessary. To invite wonder and surprise into our midst, and perhaps, to find ourselves transformed in the process.”Tags: 14th president, Board of Trustees, Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, Interim President Nancy Nekvasil, Katie Conboy, Seamus Heaney, Simmons University, Stonehill Collegelast_img read more

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Students to complete COVID-19 home testing prior to return on campus

January 26, 2021
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| yinayegl

first_imgBefore arriving on campus, Notre Dame students will be required to provide a specimen for a COVID-19 PCR test, the coronavirus response unit said in an email Wednesday.Students will be mailed a home collection kit to their current place of residence by LabCorp, who will process the results. Specimen collection will be staggered depending on when students plan to arrive on campus, and by July 15, all students will be notified by when they must complete their test.“The kit package will include a set of instructions for how to collect a home specimen from the anterior nasal passage and how to send it back to LabCorp for processing,” Christine Caron Gebhardt, assistant vice president for student services and Tracy Skibins, senior director of emergency management, said in the email.The specimen must be returned to a FedEx Drop Box on the same day as collection. Otherwise, it cannot be processed and students will be charged a $75 replacement fee.LabCorp will provide University Health Services (UHS) with the results, and once they are confirmed, students will receive an email to view the test results. Students who test negative will be cleared to return to campus.“UHS will let Residential Life know the on-campus students who are cleared to return to campus, though test results will not be shared,” the email said. “Students moving on-campus will receive a confirmation email from Residential Life confirming their move-in appointment.”Students who test positive may not return to campus even if they are asymptomatic, and UHS will contact these students for clearance.“If you become ill with symptoms of COVID-19 or are exposed to someone with COVID-19 between the time of your test and your arrival, you must delay travel and contact your health care provider for evaluation,” the email said.Tags: coronavirus response unit, COVID-19, pre matriculationlast_img read more

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Mrs. Thatcher and The Queen Tricycle to London’s West End in Handbagged

January 18, 2021
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| wzcnwxdq

first_img The monarch—Liz.
 Her most powerful subject—Maggie. Two enduring icons born six months apart. One destined to rule, the other elected to lead. But when the stiff upper lip softened and the gloves came off, which one had the upper hand? Handbagged is the new comedy that opens the clasp on the relationship between two giants of the 20th Century. Buffini’s play speculates on that most provocative of questions: What did the world’s most powerful women talk about behind closed doors? Marion Bailey (“Q,” an older Queen Elizabeth II), Stella Gonet (“T,” an older Margaret Thatcher), Fenella Woolgar (Mags), Neet Mohan (Nancy Reagan/Neil Kinnock/Kenneth Kaunda/Robert Runcie) and Jeff Rawle (Ronald Reagan/Denis Thatcher/Peter Carrington/Geoffrey Howe) will reprise their original roles. They will be joined by Lucy Robinson (Liz) to complete the company. Two completely different worlds, one forced weekly meeting. Endless cups of tea. The Tricycle Theatre’s sold-out production of Moira Buffini’s Handbagged is set to transfer to the West End with a limited engagement April 3 through August 2 at the Vaudeville Theatre. Directed by Tricycle’s Artistic Director Indhu Rubasingham, opening night is set for April 10. Buffini’s plays include Women, Power & Politics, Welcome To Thebes, Dinner, Dying For It and Marianne Dreams. Her screenplays include Tamara Drewe, Jane Eyre and Byzantium. She recently directed her first short film, Father. The production will feature set design by Richard Kent, lighting design by Oliver Fenwick, and sound design by Carolyn Downing. center_img View Comments Londonlast_img read more

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