Mount Holyoke Students Share Their Quarantine Projects

By Woodlief McCabe ’23

Staff Writer

This summer and fall looked different for all of us. The time when we would normally be going out and enjoying the company of others was transformed into a time of solitude and anxiety. Mount Holyoke students, just like people all around the world, have found ways to deal with feelings of isolation via the power of creation. Here, students share their work from various media and styles, reminding us that art and creation haven’t gone anywhere. 

Gina Pasciuto ’23 has spent quarantine making embroidery art that she showcases on her Instagram @cursedembroidery. “I’ve been working on embroidery as a way to keep my hands and mind busy since Christmas, and the skills I’m picking up have been very useful during the pandemic,” she said. Her commissions are currently open.

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Cadence Cordell ’23 has spent quarantine with a needle and thread. “Sewing has really helped me keep calm during quarantine, and, during Zoom classes, helps me stay focused on the lesson at hand,” she said. “I hand sew the stuffed animals and, with my new sewing machine, have recently started making clothes as well.”

Maggie Kamb ’22 shares her “gay vampire art.” These two characters have been featured in her art before. She describes the first piece as “before quarantine” and the second two as “after quarantine.”

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During quarantine, Autumn Lee ’24 opened an Etsy store named SoleilTies where she makes and sells bandanas for dogs. “I pretty much decided to do this because I have recently gotten back into sewing and I have been spending a lot of time with dogs lately,” Lee said. “This seemed like a sensible thing to do.”

Emily Eayrs ’23 has been sketching over quarantine. 

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Phoebe Murtagh ’21 has been working on this skull afghan for eight years, but has been especially productive since the end of last semester. “I was working on it in between finishing the semester and finding an internship. At the time my city was pretty much shut down, so audiobooks and crafts occupied a fair amount of my time,” she said. She spent this summer piecing together the hand-crocheted skulls and attaching the long strips of the skulls together in an offset pattern. “The multi-step process and the sheer size of the project is why I've been taking so long at it,” Murtagh said.

In August, Jalia Nazerali-Ruddy ’24 created these two drawings, one of Harry Potter (right) and one of a tiger (left). 

Tory Halsey ’23 has made these oil pastel pieces of natural scenes. Halsey attempts to give Mount Holyoke students a little bit of MoHome sickness with her portrait of Jorge. She has also been constructing a tank for her aquascape where she keeps aquatic snails and plants. 

Students Living on Campus This Fall Share Experiences

Graphic by Trinity Kendrick ‘22

Graphic by Trinity Kendrick ‘22

By Rebecca Gagnon ’23

Staff Writer

On Aug. 7, Mount Holyoke announced that it would not be allowing the vast majority of students to live on campus during the pandemic. The only students who were permitted to remain were those who had applied to live on campus under circumstances that could not be resolved. According to Vice President for Student Life and Dean of Students Marcella Runell Hall, as of Aug. 13, there were about 180 students on campus. 

“It’s really sad around here,” Samira Khan ’22, who currently lives on campus, said. “It just feels like you are living in a zombie land.” 

Khan, who is from Bangladesh, describes herself as a semi-domestic and international student. She spent part of the summer in Bangladesh and then applied to stay on campus for the school year. When she was approved, she went to spend a week with family near Mount Holyoke. “I was already in this county and I was staying with my relatives [on] just a temporary basis and then, just a week later, [Mount Holyoke administration] said we [were] going online,” Khan said. “I didn’t have a place because it was just a one-week [plan] and this was my only option.” 

This story resonated with others who are staying on campus. Parikshita Gya ’22 is another international student living on campus who was afraid to go home. Gya described not living in good studying conditions back home, a large reason for staying on campus. Additionally, Gya mentioned being “very afraid of [President Donald] Trump pulling one of his cards again and barring us entry.”

Although there are some people who are still on campus on a regular basis, both faculty and students feel that there has been an unwelcome change this semester. 

“It’s just really isolating,” Emily Jones ’23, another student living on campus, stated. “I don’t know, I just think that everyone is trying to get through it.”

“My impression from my horror movie background,” Professor of Biological Sciences Gary Gillis said, “is it just feels like a zombie apocalypse about to start and I am sad that so many people are missing out on this amazing opportunity in this cool space.” Gillis is an associate dean of faculty, the director of the Science Center and a professor in the biological sciences department who is currently working from home.

As a member of the College’s administration, Gillis said, “It was kind of my job to convey to the faculty that this last spring and summer we were really trying to de-densify the campus. … The easiest thing for me in deciding to work from home was kind of just abiding by the philosophy I was telling everyone else.”  

Other professors decided to work from home as well, for the safety of co-workers and students. “The best part [of working from home],” Morena Svaldi, lecturer in Italian and the faculty director of the Language Assistant program, said, “is that I can switch my roles very quickly. The difficult part, I think, is that there is no separation between your personal life, personal space and professional space.”

This is a difficulty faced by students who are still living on campus as well. “Normally I would go to classes,” Khan said. “But now it’s just like, wake up, go to your desk, study and then whenever your lunch or dinner time is, you go out for just that. It’s sad.”  

The rules that are being enforced now are the same rules that all students who were previously planning to live on campus would have to abide by. The only difference is that it is now embedded in the community compact for Mount Holyoke to maintain safety on campus. 

“There are several restrictions and the community compact was [originally] so vague that you didn’t even know when you might breach it,” Gya recalled. 

At the beginning of the new year, there was a miscommunication between Dining Services and Residential Life that resulted in some students unintentionally breaking the community compact by sitting and eating in the Dining Commons. There had previously been no signs or notices about whether that was allowed or not. 

“Trying to have a good day and just having food and then out of the blue someone comes up to you and tells you, ‘Oh, you breached the law on campus, we need to take your name and report you,’ is, in itself, very scary,” Gya said. “Especially for us international students; we have nowhere else to go.” 

After this incident, the students did not get penalized for eating in the Dining Commons, since there was a miscommunication. Signs were put up soon after around the Dining Commons so students would know that they are not allowed to eat there. Students are only allowed to eat outside or in their rooms.

Some dorm kitchenettes are open for students to cook their own food if they want to, which helps offset Dining Services’ limited hours. “Their lunch and breakfast times clash with most class times,” Bineeta Debnath ’23 said.

“As the weather is on our side right now, it is better that we get to go outside and have dinner with our friends who are living in other dorms, but I don’t know what is going to happen during wintertime,” Khan said. “We will be staying in our rooms the whole time; even if we are getting our food, we are coming back to our rooms and we are eating in the same space, so it is going to get toxic.”

Other students such as Jones, Debnath and Gya shared this concern for the mental and physical health of the students living on campus. Students can currently spend time with friends from other dorms by going outside because they are not allowed to enter any dorm that is not their own. They may spend time together in Blanchard Hall, but it has to be socially distanced with masks on.

“We don’t really have a social life,” Gya said. “It is just us in one room and I think [for] people struggling with mental illness, this is going to be really harsh on them.”

According to students living on campus, Residential Life is holding some online events and putting on small get-togethers in dorms to help them feel less isolated. Along with this, according to the students interviewed, those permanently residing on campus are allowed to spend time with people who are in their dorm as well. 

Professors also shared this concern for students’ mental and physical health and are continuing to check in with their students. 

“I really care a lot about how my students are processing this because I know that some students have different situations,” Svaldi said. “This has impacted the way that we learn and recharge ourselves, so my message is to be nice to ourselves and be supportive to those around us.”

Although there are a lot of negative feelings, some students have been able to find the silver linings.

“It’s hard,” Khan said. “Especially the two [COVID-19] tests per week, but it is helping to keep us on track, like ‘Okay I’m safe, my friends are safe, the people I’m sharing the bathroom with are safe.’ … [COVID-19]-wise, the campus is safe and they are taking good care of us in that way.”  

“I am really grateful for the people around me,” Gya said. “As in ResLife people, the professors, people in the Dining Services — I feel like they worked really, really hard. … They are amazing. They are doing so much for us, they don’t even know us and they are so nice. Although they are struggling, they are trying to make your day better. … I think we should all feel really special that they care about us that much.”

MoHome Sickness: A Walk Through the Community Center

Photo by Ali Meizels ‘23

Photo by Ali Meizels ‘23

By Tishya Khanna ’23

Features Editor

It’s a fall afternoon. You’re wearing a light sweater, cool breeze blowing through your hair. Your classes have ended and now you have a day to yourself. You’re tired but you have time on your hands, so you lie on the Skinner Green for a while and read your favorite book. But it’s fall, and now it starts to get dark at 4:30 p.m., so you relish the short hour you had outside on the grass and decide to go to the Community Center. Let’s take a walk through Blanch together.

You climb the brick stairs and enter the building from the main entrance — suddenly the cool breeze has disappeared and you’re engulfed with warmth and chatter of a Great Room event.  You peek in from the second floor and head right back on your way. There’s a new exhibition at the Art Gallery — new students showcasing their wonderful art. You recognize the names of the artists mentioned from classes you’ve taken and the meetings you’ve attended and savor the sweet surprise of finding out their talents. 

You want to get some work done, so you decide to go upstairs to the third floor, home to the rooms of various student organizations and departments. There are people all over — some intently working on their assignments, some lying with their heads down on the table, some goofing off in the study rooms, some drawing and writing all kinds of things on the whiteboards.

You bump into familiar faces and sit down for a light chat until everyone has to tend to their million deadlines. You find a comfortable spot and get to work. There’s a certain quietude around — the particular taste of the 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. hour at Blanch when the Dining Commons is closed. At 4:50 p.m., there’s inevitably a long line to get dinner tables. Friends are gathering around, calling each other to come over, saving spots for one another. All the while, you’re on the third floor, immersed in an assignment that just won’t end. 

After a while, you decide to go downstairs to eat and call your friends to ask if they want to have dinner together. You go to the first floor, which is glimmering with lively chatter. There are people sitting around the Scrabble boards. One group is actually playing it! The other board has the tiles arranged in curse words — you can hear the giggles, see the mischievous smiles of the people passing by. The event in the Great Room has ended and a new one is being set up. You notice that the Cochary Pub & Kitchen is playing some good music and your friend is sitting in one of the booths, equally frustrated with assignments. The familiarity dissolves the tension into easy smiles and warm, tight hugs. You spend some time in the cuddle puddle and both decide to finally grab some food together. You gather your things and walk into the Dining Commons. You grab a booth, browse through the hundreds of rotating menu options and then sit for a good meal to end the day over the usual banter. 

Arriving at Mount Holyoke is incomplete without visiting the beloved Community Center. The three floors hold the essence of the community — all kinds of people coming together to do all kinds of things. From random whiteboards where people leave lists of their favorite LGBTQ+ movies to the colorful couches that are good for naps no matter how loud it gets, Blanch is often what keeps all of us together — holding us on tired days, offering junk food and giving us a space to show all our wild colors.

College Announces Virtual Mountain Day in the Module Break

College Announces Virtual Mountain Day in the Module Break

As Mount Holyoke traditions began to stray far from traditional, the suspicion of a reimagined remote Mountain Day arised. On Sept. 30, an “MHC This Week” update email was sent to students with a memo about Mountain Day 2020. Within the Mount Holyoke community, students had already begun making their own plans, creating Facebook events and listing their Mountain Day ideas in shared Google Sheets. Now, students are also able to share an official Mount Holyoke Mountain Day virtually with other students.

The Module System Receives Mixed Responses From Students

The Module System Receives Mixed Responses From Students

For students around the globe, this academic year is proving to be one like no other. For Mount Holyoke students, not only are all classes online this fall, but the entire academic structure has been reimagined. As previously reported by the Mount Holyoke News, on May 14, 2020, former Dean of Faculty Jon Western shared a letter to the Mount Holyoke community outlining the seven-and-a-half-week semester system now used today.

Pandemica

Edition #2

By Woodlief McCabe ’23

Staff Writer

Pandemica is an advice column for anyone struggling to make life function normally in isolation. I’ll address different challenges we are all facing, and give you some tips that will ease the stress. 

Lists

Without the change of scenery that normally comes with going between classes, you might be finding that certain assignments or tasks are slipping through the cracks. With less visual and sensory variety, we have fewer unique cues in our memories to help us remember that our World Politics professor assigned an essay or that we need to change our car’s oil. Having a notebook or digital checklist is a great way to organize your thoughts. And it’s not just for assignments! Make a list of things you want to buy, long-term goals or skills you want to learn. Checking something off a list is a hell of a release and can become its own motivator. When you make a list, include a few simple things that you can do right away to get your productivity flowing. For a particularly long task or something with multiple parts, use multiple checkboxes so you can get that sweet, sweet crossing-off feeling throughout the task. Really, it’s all about maximizing the number of times you get to use a nice pen and cross something off. 

Free Time

Planning out your day is a good way to stay on task. Calendar apps let you designate time for your hobbies and errands. Not only is it a good idea to prioritize having free time during the day, but so is putting it in your calendar. Don’t let other people eat into your time for yourself. Get comfortable with the idea of time when you have nothing planned. As soon as 2:30 hits, you do whatever you want. Video games? Art? Goose-spotting? Just don’t make a hard-and-fast plan. It’s also important to forgive yourself if you go a little over into your free time zone or if you forget. Don’t throw away your whole system if you can’t get it right away. 

Date Night 

Whether or not you have a significant other, “date nights” are always on the table. We all have a person or a group of people we miss. When meeting in person isn’t possible, it’s quite easy to turn to online conferencing. Zoom and Discord both allow screen sharing, which makes it possible to watch YouTube and Netflix (via the Netflix Party extension) with anyone you want. Watch something scary or romantic, or grab a drink (of water if you’re under 21!) and watch a telenovela. Get on Steam and find some games you can play together. There are also plenty of online alternatives to card or board games like Cards Against Humanity (online as Pretend You’re Xyzzy), Uno, Scrabble and more. Ultimately, it doesn’t matter what you’re doing, but that you’re with someone else and enjoying their company. Sometimes when we become isolated, we forget how much we really do need company, and it’s an excellent excuse to watch the movie or TV show you’ve been putting off.

Clubs and Organizations Adapt To the Remote Semester

The majority of Mount Holyoke students are living off campus this academic year, including first-years and transfer students who have yet to experience Mount Holyoke in person. Methods of finding community have evolved and look radically different from years past. Despite the online format, many Mount Holyoke clubs and organizations are still up and running.

MoHome-Sickness: 10 Things We Miss About Mount Holyoke

Being away from campus is difficult and isolating. In this column, we’ll talk about everything we miss, big and little, about campus: your weekly hub of togetherness in bittersweet nostalgia. For the first edition, here’s a list of 10 things dearly missed about our campus.

Virtual M&CS Hint at the Future of Online Mount Holyoke Traditions

Virtual M&CS Hint at the Future of Online Mount Holyoke Traditions

An essential part of the Mount Holyoke experience is the traditions, from Milk and Cookies in residence halls to Convocation and “Dirty Dancing.” It may be harder to create a sense of community through the pandemic; however, Mount Holyoke College is attempting to keep the connection intact by continuing some beloved traditions online.

Professors Share Their Experiences From the Start of the Module

Across departments, professors have expressed that they have been feeling stress, anxiety and confusion, but also immense sympathy, for their students this module. Cramming what should have been a semester’s worth of information and growth into seven weeks is a challenge on both sides of the teaching and learning experience.

Five College Dance Away Instagram challenge creates community amongst consortium dancers

Members of the Five College Consortium dance program are addressing the isolation associated with social distancing through the Five College Dance Away challenge. The programs decided to create a hashtag that would keep the members of the community connected through dance — #fivecollegedanceaway.

Open Call Magazine announces “quarantine issue” for second publication

Open Call Magazine announces “quarantine issue” for second publication

Mount Holyoke’s student-run art and literary magazine, Open Call, is taking advantage of the current circumstances of the Coronavirus crisis and the creative output it will inspire, putting together what they call a “quarantine issue” for their sophomore publication.

Artist Bisa Butler discusses recent Mount Holyoke Art Museum acquisition “Broom Jumpers”

Image courtesy of Laura Shea and Mount Holyoke College Art Museum

Image courtesy of Laura Shea and Mount Holyoke College Art Museum

By Rebecca Gangon ’23

American artist Bisa Butlers’ 2019 quilt ‘Broom Jumpers’ was displayed in Mount Holyoke’s art museum in March, drawing substantial interest from the College community. Butler gave a talk at Mount Holyoke on March 5, during which she talked about her past and what inspired her to be an artist.

Butler graduated from Howard University with her bachelor’s degree in fine art before pursuing a master’s degree. While in college, she took a fiber art class and fell in love with the medium. She taught art at her old high school and, while doing so, continued creating her own pieces. In 2018, Butler became a full-time artist and has been creating pieces ever since. Since 2003, her artwork has been in group and solo presentations.

“As an artist or people who love art, you don’t have a set path,” Butler said. “A career in the arts is very passionate. If you have the stamina that supports you to have a career in the arts, it is not something that you are going to regret later. It might take you longer to get there but it is worthwhile..” 

Butler continued about how she chose what kind of quilts to make and fabrics to use. “I was starting to think of my identity as a black woman,” Butler said. “My father was from Ghana, West Africa, so that is one half of my background. My mother grew up in Morocco but now lives in New Orleans, Louisiana, so I have an interesting cultural mix between the African side of my father’s family and my mother’s family.”

“My father’s father died of appendicitis. They lived in the country and they didn’t have money, so if you had appendicitis you were going to die,” Butler revealed. “That death had catastrophic effects on my father’s life.”  

Butler’s father grew up without his father. Due to this loss, his family had to split up and grew apart from each other. Butler reveals that there is only one picture of her father’s side of the family, taken before they split up. Her father, by an anonymous donation from someone in his village who thought he was bright, was able to go to Catholic school. Butlers’ father eventually became a college president and continued to tell her that, if she worked hard, she could do anything. 

“I made a portrait for my father when he retired and I used fabric from everyone in the family. I tried to get a little bit of everyone in that portrait,” Butler said. “He was so happy because that was the only picture he had of his family.”  When observing the reference photo, Butler discovered that her grandmother had scarification on her skin. “Those were thought of as marks of beauty … where she is from,” Butler said. “That became an exploration of who this woman was that I never got to meet. I liked to look back to the past.”

Butler tries not to make quilts of well-known figures in Black History. “I feel like we need to recognize the regular folks,” she said. “I really pay attention to their face, their expression, their eyes, so that I can capture what they really look like.”

The name of the piece is an allusion to the practice of jumping the broom, a type of unofficial wedding ceremony done by slaves who were not legally allowed to be married. During these weddings, couples would jump together over a broom. Though it began as a forced practice, jumping the broom continues as a part of weddings in some African American communities. 

Butler finished the talk by discussing the symbolism of the hat worn by the woman in the quilt. “They are a couple so she has the lovebirds on her hat,” Butler explained. “It is not just that though, it's the caged bird in ‘I know why the caged bird sings.’ It’s not just a title but what that means as caged bird syndrome in African people or anybody who has been oppressed.”

Mount Holyoke students take action before Democratic primaries

Canvassing for Democratic presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) has become routine for Ella White ’22 over the past few months. She spent this semester talking to voters for the senator in New Hampshire and Massachusetts.

No Waste, No Problem

No Waste, No Problem

Should you bag it in plastic? It’s a bit more complicated than you may think. Recently, New York state has enacted a plastic bag ban. New York news stations such as CBS have since been showing local frustrations with the ban. When faced with climate change, also known as the end of humanity as we know it, the fragility of paper bags should be the least of our concerns.

Students prepare for “The Big Broadcast!”

Students prepare for “The Big Broadcast!”

“The Big Broadcast!,” an annual variety show based on commercials, radio stories and music from the 1940s, has been bringing Mount Holyoke back to the age of swing for over a decade. Mark Gionfriddo, director and founder of the Mount Holyoke Jazz Ensemble and creator of “The Big Broadcast!,” worked with his student production team (Chris Cassidy ’20, Megan Ferrara ’20, Mara Kleinberg ’22, Anna Morris ’20 and Julia Sienkiewicz ’20) to bring this year’s show to life.

Nate Therien runs write-in Planning Board campaign

Nate Therien runs write-in Planning Board campaign

South Hadley’s Nate Therien has been an academic his entire life. But, after recent retirement, he has decided to try his hand at an elected position on the town’s Planning Board. He is running unopposed as a write-in, and exudes the confidence that one might expect from someone nearly guaranteed a position. Nevertheless, he continues to drive home his goals and plans for the town.

New LLC announced for 2020-2021 academic year

New LLC announced for 2020-2021 academic year

Learning Living Communities (LLCs) are a unique asset to Mount Holyoke residential life, and aim to provide support and community bonding between students on campus. They “provide opportunities for students who share common educational, social or co-curricular interests to live together in residence halls ... [and] explore their passions with a cohort of students,” according to the Mount Holyoke College website.