April 14 Final:April 14.qxd
Transcription
April 14 Final:April 14.qxd
Technique in Moon CCC students travel to India with Dr. Allen Richardson, page 6 Senior dancers dazzle the audience with work they have been preparing all year, page 8 THURSDAY APRIL 14, 2011 Poet and Professor From Allentown to India Local poet, Javier Avila, shares his thoughts on literature and life, page 9 THE CRESTIAD ALLENTOWN, PA VOLUME 95 ISSUE 9 Cedar Crest College Glass proposes new group, ALANA Cherry Blossom Members of the Society of Asian Animation gather together for a photo during the Cherry Blossom Festival. .. l. a v i t s Fe with a martial arts flair STACEY STANGL Staff Writer Martial artist, Myko Wasko, entertains CCC students on the President’s Lawn during Cherry Blossom Festival. Again, Myko Wasko entertains an audience of CCC students during an intense martial arts demonstration. All photos courtesy of Stacey Stangl, Staff Writer Though the blossoms had hardly started blooming by the date of April 7, the Society for Asian Animation still enjoyed a good time at their annual Cherry Blossom Festival. At the Cherry Blossom Festival each year, the Society for Asian Animation (SAA) gathers to celebrate the Japanese tradition of gathering in honor of the beginning of springtime, which is signified by the opening of the cherry blossoms. They also bring to the event other aspects of Japanese culture, such as tea and delicious Japanese cookies. This year, a new aspect was focused on for the festival. The club reached out to Micah Sadigh, Associate Professor of Psychology, and asked him to give a small lecture on different ways to destress and feel more relaxed. “It was unfortunate that the blossoms have not opened yet, but we still had a wonderful time enjoying different aspects of Japanese culture,” Elizabeth Sterling, junior Art Therapy major, “and Micah gave a great speech.” Also new to the festival, a local martial artist gave a small demonstration of a form of “warrior arts” called Sogobujutsu. The martial artist, Myko Wasko appeared in a full judo gi, and showed the attendees of the festival a few techniques that he has learned, including a few with a wooden daito practice katana. “Coming to Cedar Crest events is always an enriching experience,” said martial artist Myko Wasko. “I very much enjoyed helping out with the festival.” Art theft on Cedar Crest campus VANESSA CHATELAIN Assistant News Editor Elect The painting is described as being roughly four feet by four feet in dimension. It was an abstract painting of an orchard that gave viewers a large scale with a somewhat zoomed look into the center of the flower. The colors that were used ranged from shades of black, red, and pink. Unlike the other galleries, which have monitors, awareness on how vulnerable students’ artwork is in the hallway. Odegaard also discusses the steps that her and other faculty members are takLast Saturday, a painting of an orchard creing to make students understand the risk of ated by Deidre A. Mashack, senior Art Therapy showing their art in public. major, was stolen from Alumnae Hall. “It will make us, the department, more acThe painting, along with other artwork, was tive in terms of not setting up contracts but idenbeing installed for the senior students’ art tifying a draft of exhibition protocol for therapy program. It is believed that during “...The painting was there on April 1 exhibiting in this gallery. [So] your name the installation over that weekend the paintbe listed, your title of the work, and asand then one of the art therapy students will ing was stolen. Jill Odegaard, Assistant Prosigned value to the work. It doesn’t mean fessor of Art, recalled the last night that she that was hanging [the] labels said that that it’s not vulnerable and really anytime saw the painting before it went missing. when she was here Friday night it was you show your work, even if it’s in a gallery “It was an ongoing installation maybe that has a monitor, there’s a vulnerability over [a] week’s time that they were in- gone...” your putting out into a public place. [Y]ou -Jill Odegaard, Assistant Professor of Art kind of always tak[e] that risk but when it stalling so things were being moved around and relocated, but I last saw the painting turns out unfavorable. It’s really too bad,” [when] I was here on Friday April 1. The paint- the artwork on display in Alumnae do not have Odegaard said. ing was there on April 1 and then one of the art monitors other than faculty and students who are Overall, Odegaard expressed her empathy therapy students that was hanging [the] labels present in the building throughout the day. for Mashack and that hopefully there will be a said that when she was here Friday night it was Once Mashack informed Odegaard that the positive outcome in the matter. gone and...the painting and the label both were painting was missing, Odegaard notified Cam“It’s really too bad. I mean, what do you tell taken. Pat Badt, Professor of Art, came in for an pus Police who came over and discussed the a student, “Sorry, your painting’s gone?” and open house admissions event on Saturday morn- matter with Odegaard. Although, Odegaard has that’s really ultimately all we can do, but it’s reing and it was gone. So, sometime between 7:00 not heard much on the theft, she discusses how ally not what she wants to hear. Of course noat night and Saturday it had been removed,” secure the hallway gallery is with Chief Mark body wants to hear that, but I don’t know what Odegaard said. Vitalos and that the incident has created more else we can do,” Odegaard said. ROXANNE ADDINO Staff Writer As a smaller campus community Cedar Crest College is able to offer more opportunities for students to really connect with one another and get to know each other on a deeper level than at other larger colleges and universities. ALANA stands for AfricanAmerican, Latino, Asian, and Native American, and has been organized by the Director of the Multicultural Center, Kenza Glass. Glass wants Cedar Crest students to gain a better understanding of what the group is really all about and all that ALANA will bring to the campus. ALANA is not a club, but a group created to support students from underrepresented groups. Glass also stated that ALANA is a working term until the shape of the group is finally determined. The group has met three times this semester, but next year they hope to set meeting times each week, and plan on hosting events that will occur every month to represent all of the different heritages, but this will depend upon the students willing to be a part of this new group. The students will be important and every student on campus is encouraged to take part in ALANA, because the more students that are able to get involved the more we can learn about one another’s cultures and heritages. Glass also wanted students to know that the Multicultural Center, which is also new and still developing, will be taking on a multifaceted approach to representing students of multiple cultures and heritages on campus, and ALANA is one of the initiatives to doing so. “It is important for the Multicultural Center to not only provide programs and support but also to draw on experiences and participation of ALANA students themselves so that it is their voice and not just the Multicultural Center or Cedar Crest,” said Glass. As the Multicultural Center grows it will hopefully gain more support from the campus as it gains an identity, but in order to grow more students will be needed to help get the word out about both the Multicultural Center and its great groups such as ALANA. Cedar Crest College has the ability to become an even closer knit family, so let’s come together and learn more about those around us. For more information about ALANA, contact Kenza Glass in Academic Services. 2 NEWS Morgan Keschl, Editor CAMPUS NEWS McDonough returns Project LEAD promotes from Florida art alcohol awareness presentations SAMANTHA E. BUKER Staff Writer Over the last two weeks, Casey McDonough, Assistant Professor of Art, traveled to Florida’s Tampa Bay area to exhibit his work and to present a paper at the 45th Annual Conference of the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts (NCECA). McDonough’s paper, entitled “Rationale for the Inclusion of Subversive and Non-commissioned Public Art Practices in the Development and Expansion of a Studio-based Teaching Pedagogy,” was presented as a part of Alternative and Forbidden Spaces, a topical panel discussion dealing with art created in and for public or “alternative” spaces. The questions that arise from the intersection between public art and street art, which some consider a great outlet for civic-expression, and others consider to be acts of vandalism. McDonough’s stance on the topic is “that students should, for their own benefit, be made aware of and engage with art in the commons, the public space we inhabit together.” Furthermore, he believes that “the benefit of making artwork to be exhibited outside and without permission boils down to the audience, which is greatly expanded when working in this way.” Regarding the issue of vandalism, McDonough asserts that while he would never encourage a student to “deface property or act irresponsibly, and in fact I prohibit this type of behavior within [his] own assignments,” he recognizes that “this venue is becoming an extremely important place for artists to exert their creativity and ideas…a pedagogy that doesn’t capitalize on this is in some way incomplete.” The panel was moderated by Frederick Bartolovic of SUNY Oswego, who visited Cedar Crest earlier this year, along with Shay Church of Virginia Commonwealth University and Brian Wiggins, Gallery Coordinator and Adjunct Professor at Cedar Crest. McDonough said of presenting his paper “this topic is considered controversial when framed in the context of NCECA, and our panel elicited several strongly opinionated questions. I find the opportunity to present my own research to be useful as I always return with new information and points of view.” During the last week of March, McDonough installed exhibits at the Museum of Science and Industry in Tampa, FL, and at three locations in St. Petersburg, Fl: the Morean Arts Center, Eckerd College and The St. Petersburg Clay Company. He said he was most interested in the work he shared at Eckerd College and his exhibition at the Morean Arts Center entitled Elastic Authenticity. The exhibition process in this case begins with McDonough shipping the small ceramic objects previously crafted, and arriving on site with “a duffel bag of additional materials” including pins, thread and adhesive vinyl. These installations also made use of “electric sound elements.” McDonough said he “approached each work with some plan in mind, though ultimately [he] had the opportunity to exert a great deal of intuitiveness in developing the compositions themselves.” He also expressed his enjoyment in having the opportunity to travel with his work, as when pieces are shipped to be set up by curators, they need to be easy to install. To see more of McDonough’s work, you can visit caseymcdonough.com. Correcons In the April 7 issue of The Crestiad, Stacy Williams compiled the Healthy Foods list on page 9. On page 11, Stacy Williams submitted the horoscopes, not Valayshia Brookins. Valayshia Brookins took the top two photos on page 16. VANESSA CHATELAIN Assistant News Editor Elect Leadership and Effective Alcohol Decisions (LEAD) is a project that centers on alcohol usage from a global perspective and ties into the strategic leadership initiatives of Cedar Crest College as well as the Pennsylvania Liquor Board Control (PLCB). The project examines the behavior, perceptions, and consequences of drug and alcohol use among college students 18-24 around the world. Cedar Crest College fielded primary research in India, China, Australia, Canada, and the U.S. An online survey taken by undergraduate women and men attending universities in those countries were then compared by country and gender. The sample used to conduct the research consisted of 2,932 college age students ranging from 18-24 in those countries. Marketing students Barbara Breisch, Jen Decky, Danielle Gosha, Mary Hentz, Xin Huang, and Jasmita Saini from Arlene Peltola’s, Assistant Professor of Business marketing courses 290 and 336, worked on this two semester long project. The students conducted secondary literature review and creating a campaign to show students on campus the importance of making the right decisions concerning alcohol. The study found that in today’s global society, we have become interconnected by social media networks such as Facebook, YouTube, or Twitter that can also be accessed through smart phones. The alcohol and drug consumption decisions being made by our youth has become increasingly influenced by their global peers. Using the information gathered from the literature and the role that media plays, the students created a campaign that would encourage college women 18-24 to make mindful decisions. In an article written by Peltola and Dr. James Scepansky, associate professor of Psychology, the professors identify the project’s main objectives as building awareness, promoting reflection, and encouraging personal responsibility. Further, the students created the campaign, “What was I thinking,” which focused on individual motivational enhancement instead of choosing an accusatory standpoint. Peltola and the marketing Cedar Crest College, 100 College Dr., Allentown, Pa. 18104 The Crestiad Spring 2011 Editor-in-Chief | Dannah Hartman Managing Editor | Alyssa Slinger Advertising Manager | Nicole Magloire Front Page Editor | Katey Dauble News Editor | Morgan Keschl Opinions Editor | Sarajane Sein Lifestyles Editor | Dannah Hartman Assistant Lifestyles Editor | Amy Palmisano Features Editor | Nicole Magloire Study Break Editor | Alyssa Slinger Photo Editor | Meghan Cronrath Photo Editor | Katey Dauble Arts Editor | Allie Scott Assistant Arts Editor | Rachel Morgandale Athletics Editor | Michelle Palmisano Assistant Athletics Editor | Stacy Williams students felt this approach was better suited for the campus community, because they felt it was appropriate for the educated women on campus. The campaign consisted of placing posters around the campus that highlighted the top four consequences women experience due to risky alcohol behavior. The students also utilized the media by creating a Facebook page that highlighted the campaign, an eight minute YouTube video that focused on the consequences of using simulated alcohol-impaired goggles while playing a game of “Perception Twister,” and a website called WWIT. The students also held events such as Perception Twister and Bingo to educate women about alcohol consumption in a fun atmosphere. In addition, party smart cards for women along with merchandise were passed out. The “What was I thinking” campaign ran for 12 weeks from March 2009 to May 2009. Prior to the campaign a survey was conducted on alcohol and drug use on campus. Before the campaign 17 percent of the students thought their campus had drug and alcohol policies and 66 percent believed their campus was concerned about the prevention of drug and alcohol use. After the campaign, the numbers increased with 77 percent believing the campus was concerned about the prevention of drug and alcohol use and 84 percent saw that their campus had drug and alcohol policies. They also saw a decrease in the amount of drinks students had over the last two weeks in one sitting from 9 to 5 percent. Peltola encourages all students to take the course regardless of their major interests and enjoyed knowing that the students on Project LEAD were able to walk away the ability to apply what they learned a scholarly identification that she abides by. “There was a phenomenal amount of work that went into this project and what makes me happy about it is the students leave with a depthful and genuine knowledge of not just the project, but how marketing research is so critical to the quality of the final presentation. It gave the students practice in presenting to a real world annual convention to a standing room only break out session” Peltola said. Phone 610-606-4666 Ext. 3331 Crestiad@cedarcrest.edu cedarcrest.edu/crestiad Faculty Adviser | Elizabeth Ortiz Copy Editors: Alyssa Slinger, Jessica Kuc, Sarajane Sein Staff Writers: Jade Abston, Roxanne Addino, Jess Bolluyt, Meg Borascius, Valayshia Brookins, Samantha E. Buker, Vanessa Chatelain, Danielle Freeman, Lakeema Jones, Stacey Stangl The Crestiad is a student run newspaper organization. It publishes one edition every week throughout the Fall and Spring semesters, available both in print and online at www.cedarcrest.edu/crestiad. Its primary goals are to keep students informed about events and issues of concern to the Cedar Crest community and to provide staff members with an on-campus internship-quality media experience. Students participating in The Crestiad may receive academic credit for their participation. The final responsibility for news content and decisions rests with the editorial staff. The Crestiad is the student-run newspaper of Cedar Crest College and every member of the community is entitled to one copy free of charge. Additional copies of the paper are $1.00. Questions or concerns? If you have any questions about The Crestiad or concerns regarding content, please call the editorial staff and leave a message by phone, fax, mail or e-mail. NEWS www.cedarcrest.edu/cresad April 14, 2011 | 3 CAMPUS NEWS Frey presents nutrion research on fiber-rich baking substitute MORGAN KESCHL Managing Editor Elect Denise Frey, senior Nutrition major, is presenting her paper on substituting high fiber cereal for all purpose flour in baked goods at the Pennsylvania Dietetic Association Conference on Friday, April 15 after the cake was a success at last year’s Health and Wellness Conference at Cedar Crest. Frey’s paper, entitled "Substitution of all-purpose flour with a high fiber cereal in a cake recipe results in an acceptable high fiber, reduced calorie, reduced carbohydrate baked product," began when she took an Experimental Foods class here at Cedar Crest, which required her to come up with a healthful kind of food. Her paper has been approved by the Institutional Review Board and the cake she made was tested for color of the crust surface, moistness of the interior, the texture and the cell size, the texture of the crust, the flavor and “if you would eat is again.” Her idea for substituting the cereal came from fiber being a less recognized vitamin important for health. Frey focused her research on substituting 3 1/2 cups of flour in a cake recipe, about 75 percent of the substituting the fiber-rich cereal into the cake recipe. While she had to balance the volume of the cake with the density of the pumpkin, apples, and cereal, it was a popular attraction at the Health and Wellness Conference at Cedar Crest in Spring 2010. Frey gave the recipe out to “I just think if people can improve the fiber in the diet, they can definitely contribute an important part of helping them maintain health or prevent some health issues.” - Denise Frey senior Nutrition major flour measure, with 2/3 cups Fiber One cereal to increase the nutrition. Upon her success with the cake, Frey realized that she increased the initial two grams of fiber per serving into seven grams per serving by those who taste-tested the cake. Not only did Frey create a more healthful recipe, but she also produced a research paper with more information about the importance of her health food topic. Frey found that regular consumption of fiber can lead to a reduced risk of coronary heart disease, type II diabetes, metabolic syndrome, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and general inflammation, as well as helping to combat high cholesterol, atherosclerosis, and obesity. In one source in her research, Frey observed a relationship between the amount of fiber and presence of disease that came from a lack of another vitamin associated with fiber, magnesium. Likewise, in another study cited in Frey’s research, nurses who were traced over eight years ended up having better health outcomes. “These women were followed for eight years and the women who consumed a high fiber diet were less likely to develop diabetes mellitus and these people were also less likely to smoke, and they reported less family history of diabetes, less hypertension, they were leaner, and they were more physically active,” Frey said. Frey feels that incorporating fiber into one’s diet can be beneficial in many ways, which she has learned through her research. “I just think that if people can improve the fiber in their diet, they can definitely contribute an important part of helping them maintain health or prevent some health issues,” Frey said. Frey received a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism from Temple University in 1992 and hopes to combine her background in journalism and nutrition in the future. Patti Reinhardt, senior Nutriton major, is also presenting her paper, “Use of tofu as a cream cheese replacement at two levels in a cheesecake bar," at the Pennsylvania Dietetic Association Conference on Friday. PRESS RELEASE Textbook Rental Program Coming to the Campus Bookstore Beginning in August 2011, Cedar Crest College will give students a new lease on their sometimes budget-focused, hectic lives by offering a new, multi-channel textbook rental program designed to deliver maximum savings and convenience. This innovative textbook rental program will allow students to rent their textbooks for less than 50 percent of the cost of purchasing a new printed textbook. Plus, as an added convenience, students will be able to rent their books either in the store or from the store’s website: http://cedarcrest.bncollege.com . This decision to offer a textbook rental program was a joint decision made by the Cedar Crest College and Barnes & Noble College Booksellers. “We are committed to pro- viding students with the widest range of content options and price points available,” said Hil Estock, Vice President at Barnes & Noble College Booksellers. “Whether students are interested in new books, used, digital, unbundled, or now rentals, they know they can find what they want at the Cedar Crest College bookstore.” Other program features include: - Students can pay the rental fees using any form of tender currently accepted by the bookstore (excluding PayPal) – including student financial aid and campus debit cards. (Note: For security purposes, a valid credit card must also be provided regardless of the tender used for the rental fee.) - Students can highlight or mark the rented books just as they would if they purchased a book and planned to sell it back to the bookstore. - Students can convert their rental to a purchase during the first two weeks of class. - The rental period is for the duration of the term/semester. Books are due back by the last day of finals. Students can return books in person or mail them to the bookstore. - Courtesy emails will go out as the end of the term/semester approaches reminding students to return their books. Books not returned (or returned in unusable condition) will be subject to replacement and processing fees. Beginning in Fall 2010 more than 300 college and university bookstores began offering textbook rental programs through the campus bookstore. In a follow up survey more than 90% of the stu- dents said they would rent from the bookstore again. Watch for more details about the rental program in the coming weeks. For more information about Cedar Crest College Bookstore, visit http://cedarcrest.bncollege.com . About Barnes & Noble, Inc. Barnes & Noble, Inc. (NYSE: BKS), the world’s largest bookseller and a Fortune 500 company, operates 775 bookstores in 50 states. Barnes & Noble College Booksellers, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Barnes & Noble, also operates 639 college bookstores serving nearly 4 million students and over 250,000 faculty members at colleges and universities across the United States. For more information, please visit www.bncollege.com. In the News Nicole Magloire Chicago public school bans school lunches The Chicago Tribune reports that the Little Village Academy, a public school, has banned lunches brought from home. They say that the new rule is all in the name of good health. The principal of the school created the rule after she observed students bringing chips and sodas to school in their lunches. Unless the students have a medical excuse, they have to eat the cafeteria food and that is the only food options available. Source: Today.com Boy named honorary NJ governor A New Jersey boy who cried after he realized that he was too young to be governor was named honorary governor chief executive of the state. Gov. Chris Christie signed a proclamation making 5-year-old Jesse Koczon honorary governor of the day and his fraternal twin brother was made honorary lieutenant governor. The video that featured Koczon crying was made in 2009 and won an award on the television show America’s Funniest Home videos. The video resurfaced recently and after going viral was brought to the attention of Gov. C h r i s t i e . Source: msnbc.com Maine legalizing switchblades for one armed people Maine lawmakers recently approved legalizing the use of switchblades for people with one arm. Voters behind the law say that it would avoid the hassle and danger behind someone with one arm trying to open a blade with their mouth. Until this law was passed Maine banned the use of switchblades by anyone. In many states, carrying a switchblade is illegal though owning the knives is allowed in many places. The bill restrictions include that the blade on the knife must be three inches or shorter. Source: msnbc.com New bacon scented cologne A Chicago man has created a new cologne that features a bacon scented fragrance. The cologne which is pronounce “Bay-cone” sells for $36 and can be ordered on the products website fargginay.com. Though it is marketed as being cologne it is actually a unisex scent and the creator bottled it in a Gold and white casing to make it more appealing to women. The creator of the scent John Leydon hopes that the scent will one day be sold in department stores. Source: aolnews.com 4 OPINIONS Sarajane Sein, Editor A person is a person - unless they do drugs? SARAJANE SEIN Opinions Editor I remember being at a party at the house of a friend this summer, when some sobering news cut through the celebration. The body of 23 year old Jenna Lord had been found in a vacant lot in Camden, NJ. Jenna had come from Collingdale, PA., our small town outside of Philadelphia, even though I never knew her personally, and she had been missing for several days. She had traveled to Collingswood, NJ, to visit family, and had attempted to return home through the Walter Rand Transportation Center in Camden, after which she was never seen alive again. Despite the fact that her disappearance had many indications of being an abduction, the local media chose to fill its pages with tales of Jenna’s past drug use and a short stint in juvenile hall. People left online comments declaring that Jenna had simply run off in order to get out of upcoming court dates, or ran off in order to get drugs. They neglected to remember that she had a three year old son who was left behind. Even after her death, comments still drew upon nasty assumptions. “I guess she went looking for drugs in all the wrong places, she took chances each time you do drugs DRUGS KILL HELLO [sic]?” reads one comment on an ABC news report, which relayed that her autopsy was inconclusive. Her past drug use and “reputation” may have also influenced police to treat her disappear- ance less seriously and to assume that she had “run off”; thus wasting precious days that could have been spent finding her, potentially alive. Why is it that knowledge of a person’s past or current drug use allows many to view that person as unworthy of sympathy or compassion? There appears to be a cultural tendency towards assuming that a person who does drugs and suffers a tragic death, whether an overdose or even murder, “deserves what they got”. Perhaps it is reflective of certain people’s tendencies to subscribe to a “Belief in a Just World”, a concept often explored in Psychology. A person who highly believes that the world is just may be more likely to blame a victim of a crime for what has happened to them; if a victim was undeserving of the tragedy that befell them, the belief that the world is just is therefore threatened. Another factor that seems to come into play in an case such as Jenna’s is an off-shoot of the phenomenon of “Missing White Woman Syndrome”. As Dennis Romero points out in an article for LA Weekly, “Good looking women of a certain educational attainment and class get more attention -- certainly more than, say, a missing, working-class black man, which you almost never hear about.” By the same token, if Jenna had been an honor student instead of a working-class young woman with a former drug problem, there would have been oftcovered vigils and very favorable coverage. It appears that society only seems to care about those with drug addictions when they provide entertainment to the masses. Consider the recent coverage of Charlie Sheen and Lindsay Lohan – both of whom are not only people with drug addictions but, seemingly, walking train wrecks who are constantly reported on for the crazy antics that they tend to engage in. But where are the ordinary people who are struggling with addictions in this coverage? Why are they mocked by online comments instead of being told to rest in peace? “Jenna was a human being. Yet when she went missing, no one besides her family and friends looked for her.” - Frances Caruso The fact that people jump to conclusions and label people without knowing them can not only affect commentary about the missing or deceased; it can sometimes even influence whether justice is served in a case. Frances Caruso, one of Jenna Lord’s relatives, wrote in to the Philadelphia Inquirer shortly after her autopsy report was released. “The coroner's report did not emphatically state that the cause of death was an overdose, but the report implies such a conclusion, and so have the media reports. But the family's photo supports another conclusion: The body seems to have been deliberately arranged there.” Caruso goes on to point out that the Camden Police Department may not have performed their duties effectively at all, mentioning the fact that Jenna’s body was located only after her family members and friends searched the streets and vacant lots of Camden for her. “Throughout this entire ordeal, there has been a gross misrepresentation of Jenna by the media, under the shadow of drug usage. Jenna was a human being. Yet when she went missing, no one besides her family and friends looked for her.” In this country, people feel that they can rely on being treated equally, no matter what their past mistakes may have been. This does not seem to be the case, and it is a sad reflection of how biases can affect values that are held to a high esteem. No one is perfect. By the same account, no one deserves to be treated less fairly because of what they may have done or not done in the past. It can only be hoped that when Jenna Lord’s son grows up, he can know that people did care about his mother, including many who didn’t know her, despite the fact that the local media completely turned their back on an innocent person in need of as much attention as any other missing person. Celeb fodder endangers current events’ visability MORGAN KESCHL Managing Editor Elect What was once hot off the presses is now what’s hot in fashion for spring. With the onset of tabloid journalism since the 1980s and news organizations’ focus on “infotainment” rather than current events, it seems that the legitimate news media of the past is fading. This demise is also accelerated by recent government talk on cutting funding to National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). While criticism of tabloid journalism is not new, it has been accelerated by the advent of media technology, from an increase in TV channels to the Web. However, those who follow tabloid journalism on celebrities’ lives rather than current events may have little awareness or care for the decline of unbiased, relevant news. According to Erin Meyer, the author of “‘Can You Handle My Truth?’: Authenticity and the Celebrity Star Image,” the tabloids “serve up a mixture of celebrity gossip, human-interest features, usually with a 'sensational' twist, stories about occult and psychic phenomena, UFOs and so on, and large doses of advice, self-help tips, and medical news." Meyers also explains that a celebrity’s image is created from multiple outlets reporting different views of the celebrity, from interviews directly from the source to fanzines and blogs, which eerily reflect how hard news is currently distributed and littered with opinions rather than with neutral facts. These images can be seen anywhere from the supermarket to virtual space. An article entitled “Learning to Love the (Shallow, Divisive, Unreliable) New Media” written by James Fallow, an Atlantic Monthly national correspondent, expresses the demise of traditional journalism and current event exposure. In this article, Fallow includes an interview with Nick Denton, founder, owner, and CEO of Gawker Media. Denton emphasizes this type of apathy when he gives an explanation for the content on his website. The content on Gawker, according to Fallow, involves topics on “gossip, technology, and sex talk,” and as Denton explains, "But not the worthy topics. Nobody wants to eat the boring vegetables. Nor does anyone want to pay [via advertising] to encourage people to eat their vegetables," Denton said, as well as that, "Just good, juicy, scurrilous gossip stories about nepotism and corruption and mistresses and Swiss bank accounts [and] [p]ictures of their houses!” are also popular topics the site thrives on. Instead of publishing on current events, as some blogs have opinionated content on current events, which is excusable in this case, Denton makes a point to say that there are more important topics to focus attention on: "I just try to figure out, if I were to go to a party, what would everyone want to talk about? And that is what I'd want to write about." However, whether the public wants to know about certain topics is separate from the fact that providing what the audience needs, despite what they want to hear, is important to news media. Still, "The job of journalism is to provide surprise," in Denton’s world. Not only is Denton a media owner who focuses on profits, as his writers get bonuses for the more new people they lead to Gawker, but media focus in general is on tabloid journalism with celebrities and soft news topics comprising most of media attention, and celebrities bring in the dough in new ways separate from advertising. Media focus on celebrities also diverts attention away from current events, and as Meyer asserts, “The celebrity is not a real person, but merely a commodity, an image without substance, used to control the consciousnesses of a malleable public.” “The idea that so much energy is taken up to report on celebrities and their private life is not only public voyeurism, but also a waste of useful resources.” On Friday, Apr. 8, I went to my MSN homepage and saw the photos of three women’s stomachs with the title “Who Owns This Baby Bump?” The idea of celebrity women “owning” a baby bump seems to be a twisted product endorsement rather than a characteristic of motherhood. Then again, celebrities put the “industry” in “industry culture.” This is only one example of how the focus on celebrities manifests on webpages and magazines in the same realm of breaking news on the government’s possible shutdown. While motherhood should be more than a spectacle, so should news about our own government. The idea that so much energy is taken up to report on celebrities and their private life is not only public voyeurism, but also a waste of useful resources. The PBS documentary, What’s Happening to the News, as well as Fallow both relay that there are few U.S. news organizations stationed in other countries to report on international news, which may reflect a lack of demand for current events. If the American public can’t even focus on their own national news, the idea that they would have interests in Japan, Egypt, and Israel is even more minimal. Instead, there are stories of “Officer Pepper Sprays Squirrel” and “10 Tips for Calming Your Inner Worrywart” that are more popular. As mentioned in What’s Happening to the News?, with Wall Street’s aversion for newspapers as revenue providers (the Los Angeles Times’ billion dollar profit isn’t enough for its owner, The Tribune Company), there may be even less quality reporting in general, let alone with hard news stories. Since websites like Google and MSN rely on newspaper reporting for their news, the budget cuts in print media will trickle down effect to other “news” media. It could possibly be the end of news as we know it if newspapers are belittled further. With the decline of legitimate stories and reporting due to the increase in profit-driven and celeb-based media, the attention on current events also declines with the lack of demand. While sites such as Gawker.com focus on odd stories to attract shock and profits, and newspapers are being progressively pushed into the shadows by Wall Street, it seems that the celebrities are winning most people’s focus. Our country’s reputation as the world’s spectacle is an increasing truth as the respectable aspects of our news are ever more overshadowed by trash. However, there are a mass of people who can reverse the news’ endangerment in the media. While it can be a treat to relax with a blog and see what your favorite celebrity is doing, it is key not to forget the main attractions of the news. www.cedarcrest.edu/cresad OPINIONS April 14, 2011 | 5 “BTW ILY”: The texts of modern fairy tales JESS BOLLUYT Assistant Arts Editor Elect If Cinderella were powdering her nose, tucked away in a corner of the ballroom, during the last fifteen minutes of the ball, would the prince ever have danced with her? Would he have ever fallen in love with her? Would the magic have gone to waste? Fortunately for Cinderella, the fairygodmother's magic worked. Cinderella and Prince Charming shared a single dance and enough time to exchange a few words before the clock struck midnight and she had to run home, leaving the glass slipper behind. An alliance of magic and luck led to that single dance, but something else entirely led to the love story that followed the untimely approach of midnight. This love story was a direct result of the decree where Prince Charming ordered every girl to try on the glass slipper. Having penned that royal declaration and searched the countryside, the prince found his princess and everyone lived happily ever after. Though a large measure of romance then and now may originate in sheer dumb luck, those romances depend on the texts of our relationships, like the prince's royal word. Unlike that decree, however, these modern texts – scribbled notes and IM messages – attest to the very un-magical ways that those of us lacking fairy godmothers and midsummer balls manage to fall in love. The first time I talked to Ryan was when he approached me in the cafeteria asking to share my table. Twin grilled cheese sandwiches and a week later, we were chatting on Facebook. Text messages followed, and before the month was out we were dating. We would continue to date for almost two years. Though it was a different breed of romance than those packaged with fairy dust and glass slippers, it did come with one traditional, fairy tale touch: love letters. Love letters? Don't let the phrase deceive you - the texts of our relationships are no longer stacks of artistically handwritten messages. And increasingly often, they also aren’t the small white cards embossed with a florist’s name, or Hallmark cards in candycolored envelopes. Our love letters are brief sequences of words stored untouchably on morning Prince Charming would have left a tiny memory cards in our phones. They are post on the Missed Connections section of the the exchanged slips of paper from inside the Craigslist page for “A Land Far, Far Away.” fortune cookies from a corner Chinese restaurant. Love in 140 Cinderella and her Prince Charming as they may appear in today’s characters and adoration in- tech savvy world. scribed in chat abbreviations. “Tell me a story,” I would ask Ryan, a few months into our relationship when we sat studying at a table in the library or reading in the corner of a noisy Starbucks. He'd recount shared memories – a date with the zebras and pigeons at the Philadelphia Zoo, an excursion to the ballet, obligatory misadventures running to catch a train. With each month that passed I archived emails, saved text messages, kept the notes scribbled on random pages of class notes or concert programs. Though as an English student, I regret that we've lost the exact breed of eloquence of Shakespearean sonnets and articulate love letters, I've found that there is an enig- Illustraon | Skye Bolluyt, Cresad Special matic poeticism in our minimalistic notes. (Two people meet and don't exchange contact As in the conversations I had with my information, and one sends a brief post out boyfriend, love, interest, and attraction are re- into cyberspace, hoping that the other will membered as a series of vignettes. I remem- find it and respond). The entire act is a prober Ryan through a series of pictures:places, fession of faith in the ethereal power of gestures, and faces set to each of the mes- Craigslist. sages I've saved. And interestingly enough, The dubious matter of the might of cypictures are the way I remember not just my berspace aside, Missed Connections posts own relationships, but also those of others. form another text that influence our relationThere was something particularly memorable ships. Some of these posts have an uncanny about the dark hair of a girl in a New York eloquence and cryptic beauty, and the records City coffee shop window as she rose on her of first meetings and aspirations to second toes for a kiss. The soft spaces between the first meetings are engaging because they are fingers of a university student as he gently an intimate record of the small experiences embraced his boyfriend on a Princeton street and finite moments that define modern relacorner. The quiet holding of hands beneath tionships and love. The texts we create everythe yellow leaves falling in a Philadelphia day form a record of the way that we look for public garden. love or stumble into it, find it or fall out of it. We participate in each other's love sto- The impermanence of these texts underscores ries in strange ways. Someone at the ball may the idea that permanence is impossible, not have seen Cinderella and Prince Charming because love cannot last, but because love and known they were falling in love. No one and our idea of it is always changing. The insaid anything about it. If the ball were held visible fingerprints of the possibility of love tonight, then by three o'clock tomorrow are all over our lives, and love itself is color- less, weightless, evidently waiting to materialize at any moment. Fortune favors the bold. When I would call Ryan's house from mine, the miles of telephone wires would warm and hum with the sound of our voices. You could have followed them, walking beneath them, watching them vibrate like the proverbial string between two tin cans. Those conversations are untraceable, the words lost. And now, a year after I stopped dating Ryan, I still have a few handwritten notes, a book he bought me, an archive of email messages that I have never reread. I remember the blue light of his name on my cellphone: “Hahaha, i love you very much.” Would Cinderella have saved a text message as lovingly as she kept the memory of her second meeting with Prince Charming, the words he spoke as he returned the glass slipper? The texts we create are as much fiction as fact, equal parts minimalistic poetry and disposable sequences of simple words. In a real love story, we can only hope that the permanence of the sentiment will outweigh the impermanence of the medium. 1 New Message: “BTW, I love you.” You don’t have to be one to support one ALYSSA SLINGER Study Break Editor For the past few years now, the gay community has endured a lot of scrutiny, even at times being physically harmed for their lifestyle; however more recent reports of hate crimes are surfacing. The difference between these newer hate crimes and previous ones are that gay supporters are also being targeted. These people are being attacked for their beliefs and for whom they support, even if they are not gay themselves. I am an active supporter of same sex couple’s rights and for equality for gays. While I may not have been physically attacked, I know that I have had people question my “loyalty” to the gay community. I have a few shirts that I have bought from websites which donate to anti-bullying foundations with every purchase. The sayings on each shirt vary, but my two favorite say “Some kids are gay. That’s ok.” and “Don’t B H8ing on the Homos.” I get the weirdest looks from people when I’m walking in a public venue, such as the mall, in one of these shirts. The looks are even greater when I’m walking hand in hand with my boyfriend. I’ve been placed in an awkward situation now and then when people decide to confront me regarding my shirt. One person that I see on a pretty regular basis noticed that I wear my “gay” shirts out in public and flat out asked me, “Why do you wear those shirts? Are you gay?” Meanwhile, my boyfriend was sitting right next to me. Typically, I will make a joke about it, and be like, “Oh yeah, he’s my cover-up.” In all reality, it makes me wonder why people think I can’t just support the gay community openly. In more recent headlines has been the attack of a straight George Washington University student in early March. There was also the report of a straight 18 year old that was beat to death because he was hanging out with a group of gay men. Both of these cases bear the question: is it worse that they were beat to death because they support gay rights, or because it was a “straight on straight” crime? Charlie Watson, on the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance (GLAA) website, stated that “While anti-gay violence is run of the mill, mistaken attacks on straight people are often considered newsworthy because of the 'man bites dog' aspect of the crime." “While I may not have been physically attacked, I know that I have had people question my “loyalty” to the gay community.” There may be some good that can come out of these attacks on straight people who support gay rights. The attacks on straight people help to illustrate that gender and sexuality can be condemned in a variety of ways. These crimes reveal a culture of homophobia where it's not enough that a person be notgay. He must be not-anything-like-gay. Ideally, he must be anti-gay. This kind of mindset will set the gay community back decades, especially if the attacks such as the one on the George Washington University student keep occurring. So what can straight people who want to support gay people do to help join in the fight for equality? Well, one of the misconceptions first off is the wearing of “gay paraphernalia.” This can include shirts like the ones I wear, or basically anything with a rainbow on it. There are also other outlets where straights can support. One big uniting group for gays and straights is a Gay Straight Alliance (GSA). Our school’s GSA is known as OutThere. Their meetings are open to everyone, not just those who identify themselves as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender. Many schools have a GSA of some sort. The benefits of these groups are evident through research and studies that have been compiled. According to research done by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, the presence of a GSA at schools help to make schools safer by sending a message that biased language and harassment will not be tolerated. 57 percent of schools with GSAs will deal with homophobic remarks on a daily basis, as compared to 75 percent at a school with no support system. It boils down to the fact that you do not have to be gay to support gay rights and equality for all. If wearing an article of clothing with a rainbow on it makes you gay, and vulnerable to attack, then there is something really wrong in this world. Hopefully we can move forward and support the gay community, regardless of sexual orientation, without fear of being abused or physically harmed. 6 LIFESTYLES Dannah Hartman, Editor A journey to the east Dr. Allen Richardson reflects on trip to New Delhi Devan Turcotte, Dr. Alan Hale, Ananda Weaver, Dr. Allen Richardson and Katherine Ogletree, stand in front of the Taj Mahal during their trip. Courtesy | Allen Richardson India changes you. Most persons who take the 13 to 15 hour journey to South Asia and spend time there find this out. On March 5, five persons left the Cedar Crest College campus bound for New Delhi. We took a direct flight from Newark in the latter stages of winter. Thirteen hours later we landed in India where it was the beginning of summer. On our first day, we found ourselves in the ancient section of Delhi, home to the Red Fort built by the great Mughals in the Seventeenth Century. But, it was not the tourist sites that caught our attention as much as it was the people. Moving through the jam packed streets of Old Delhi is like being in Times Square on New Year’s Eve. There are people everywhere and the only way to get anyplace is to look for holes in the phalanx of shoppers and dive for them. But, unlike American crowds, where people are often irritable as they try to stay immune from physical contact, in India there is more acceptance. Gentle nudging is the order of the day but unlike the U.S. there is no assumption of malevolence when you do bump into another person. I noticed our guide stopping to talk to people – he looked as if he had Courtesy | Allen Richardson known them for years. But, in fact, they had just met. We tried it too and it changed the way that we interact with other people. In Agra at the old fort in the heart of the city we stopped to talk with Indian tourists. The conversations became so warm that they posed for pictures with us, and we with them. We learned that India is a land of over a billion people. But within that incredible population the majority of persons frequently assume trust before mistrust. Most people are glad to take the time to talk with you. We also learned that despite the poverty and disease, people seem content. Ananda Weaver noticed this and wrote, The thing that most captured me about India was the sense of happiness and peace in a place that has such a wide range of lifestyle. From the poorest to the richest there is a happiness and unity among the parts s of the country we visited. The sense of tranquility that we felt was not the result of a starry eyed view of South Asia or denial of the sights and sounds of poverty. But it was an acknowledgement that this incredibly diverse society of 1.2 billion people often exhibits a level of gentleness and contentment that has so often eluded us in the West. We also learned how welcoming India could be. I found that out while checking out of our hotel in New Delhi. Business transactions for foreigners are always tense. India inherited an incredible bureaucracy from the British and, as a result, any transaction can take a long time. There is paperwork for everything. Even a simple thing like ordering a soda with dinner (that is not covered by the tour) resulted in our room numbers being taken and a visit from a hotel employee to obtain a signature. All of that paper from all of those sodas is compiled when checking out. In the middle of the check out and these bureaucratic concerns I looked at the young woman who was totaling my bill and initiated a conversation in Hindi. Instantly, her entire demeanor changed – she came alive and from that point on was welcoming and warm. A week later when we checked into the same hotel again she remembered me and smiled warmly. We discovered that in India religion is personal and public, and occupies a mainstream position in society. The presence of a Hindu holy man dressed in bright saffron dhoti is ubiquitous. We saw them in Old Delhi, in shops in New Delhi along with Tibetan monks and in the middle of a bird sanctuary in Bharatpur near a small temple. Two years ago when taking business students to a school in New Delhi we experienced much the same thing when, engaged in a tour of a business school, we found ourselves in a conversation with the Principal about Hinduism. Religion was the priority – business came later. Similarly, when we visited a call center, with four clocks on the wall corresponding to the for U.S. mainland time zones, there was a large relief of Ganesh, the elephant headed god of auspicious beginnings. Inside one worker’s carrel there was a picture of her god and the implements of Hindu worship. Religion is everywhere and so are the pressing questions of life and death. Dr. Alan Hale summed it up this way, “The streets tell it all: cars, oxen, camels, rickshaws, beggars, polio, leprosy, and women in beautiful saris riding sidesaddle on the backs of serving motorcycles. So much diversity, so much poverty; something an individual could not possibly experience within the classroom.” There is a rhythm to life in India – a cadence that every Indian fully participates in and understands. Maybe it stems from the belief in reincarnation. Perhaps it is a product of the perception of gods who regularly appear within human society and speak to us on multiple occasions. But it is there. It is a rhythm not unlike that of life itself. But in India people are aware of it. When five of us took our journey to the East over spring break we found ourselves acknowledging this rhythm. It appeared in many places. It was the twinkle in the eye of a holy man. It was the bright eyes of a girl hoping to sell wary foreigners 20 necklaces for 250 rupees (about $5) in New Delhi. Her name was Bindia – much like the Bindu that women wear at the center of their foreheads which has roots in the Hindu/Buddhist understanding of the third eye. Bindia captivated us all. We all bought necklaces from her. She posed for photographs with us. She danced! Bindia did not just understand the rhythm of life - she participated in it. And in India, with her, so did we! Courtesy | Allen Richardson Courtesy | Katherine Ogletree Courtesy | Allen Richardson Courtesy | Allen Richardson www.cedarcrest.edu/crestiad LIFESTYLES April 14, 2011 | 7 Fair Trade event brings awareness to campus Live long and prosper Stacey Stangl | Staff Writer Being frugal On Tuesday, April 12 Residence Life Diversity Programs teamed up with College Dining Services to draw attention to Fair Trade products. The event, which was held in the TCC Cyber Coffee Cafe, focused on educating participants about Fair Trade products via a variety of displays that included teas, chocolate bars, and honey. Each display noted the benefits of the featured Fair Trade items and how they impacted world-wide agriculture, attendees even received a raffle ticket to win some of these items on display. In addition to the raffle ticket, everyone who stopped by the Fair Trade event enjoyed a free small hot coffee. Though there were tea and honey displays, the Fair Trade Coffee was the emphasis of the event due to Dining Services’ use of Sun Coffee Roasters, which is a Fair Trade coffee supplier. Fair Trade coffee is available for $7.99 per bag in the Falcon’s Nest. All photos by Meghan Cronrath, Photo Editor The Culinary Classmate English Muffin Pizza Ingredients: English muffins Tomato Sauce Shredded Cheese Pepperoni Directions: 1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 2. Spread desired amount of pizza sauce on muffins, sprinkle cheese over sauce. 3. Add oregano or any other desired spices. 4. Put muffins into oven after it’s done preheating and bake for 3 minutes or until cheese has melted. Recipe and photo submitted by Dannah Hartman, Editor-in-Chief What’s cooking in your kitchen? Submit your recipes to Assistant Lifestyles Editor Amy Palmisano at alpalmis@cedarcrest.edu Teen birth rate drops in the U.S. ROXANNE ADDINO Staff Writer Teens nowadays are getting pregnant at a much younger age than before, which brings with it the responsibility of taking care of another life while still trying to be a teenager and/or high school student. Everywhere teenagers turn, they see pregnancy depicted as praiseworthy. From television shows, to the internet, to practically every other source of media, teen pregnancy is constantly publicized. Although teen pregnancy is glamorized by the media, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention has put out a new report stating that the teen birthrate has decreased by 40 percent in the past two decades. Even with the decrease, there are still 400,000 female teens getting pregnant every year. This number is still very large even though is it 40 percent less than the previous decades. Still, the United States teenage birth rates are, in many cases, up to nine times higher when compared to other well developed countries in the world. Every year there are 4 million babies born in the United States and 10 percent of those babies are the result of a teenage pregnancy. So four percent of all teenage girls in the U.S. are getting pregnant and having a baby each and every year. Teenage girls all over the world are having children at such a young age. When Medical News Today compared African-American and Hispanic teens to Caucasian teens, they found that the African-American and Hispanic teens had double the chance over the Caucasian female of getting pregnant, and this all goes back to the fact that more African-American teens, both male and female, were found to be more sexually active than Hispanics and Caucasians. With so many teen girls getting pregnant every year, it’s no wonder so many girls that are from a mother who had a teen pregnancy end up getting pregnant as a teenager as well. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention found that 33 percent of all female babies resulting from a teen pregnancy become teen moms themselves. The CDC describes this repeated trend as “continuing the cycle of teen pregnancy.” Once a female teen is pregnant, life becomes so much more difficult and only 50 percent of female teens who have a baby end up receiving their high school diploma by the time they reach the age of 22 years old. Apart from a new responsibility of caring for a baby, teen pregnancies cost the average American taxpayer $9 billion every single year. Although teen pregnancies will not be stopped entirely, there some things that can be done to help prevent teen pregnancies from occurring, such as parents talking to their children about abstinence and birth control. Only around 27 percent of teenage boys and 44 percent of teenage girls have talked with their parents about waiting to have sex or being on birth control. Teens need to be aware of the responsibilities of having a child in order to prevent teens from making the decision that could possibly change their lives forever. For more information about the teen birth rate, visit the Medical News Today website at: medicalnewstoday.com Oftentimes, it is the stereotype that college students are poor, and that all we live off of is Ramen noodles, Easy Mac, and soda. Sometimes, this is true – but it doesn’t have to be! Creating a budget may not be at the top of your priority list with all of the exams, homework, and extra-curriculars already on your plate. However, saving money is really easy when you learn the ins-and-outs of doing it. The major cost a college student needs to worry about is their textbooks. You can easily buy books from a college book store for the full list price, and sometimes score a great deal if you can find used books. But there are also wonderful websites out there like half.com where you can buy used textbooks, as well as chegg.com where you can rent textbooks. I also created a Facebook group a few semesters ago in order to help students at Cedar Crest save money on their textbooks – a group called “Cedar Crest Book Swap.” Here students can post what books they are looking to buy or sell, and they may negotiate with other Facebook users from Cedar Crest on a fair price that they would like to sell their books for, then meet in person to complete the transaction. With all the money you’ll be saving on textbooks, you can treat yourself to steak dinner! I’m not done yet, though. The next thing I want to tackle: coupons. Your grandma uses them, your mom uses them, and it’s about time you use them too. Some treat the line at the grocery store like it’s a walk of shame – that is, if you’re holding coupons in your hand. Coupons, however, are a great way to save money! Typically every Spring semester, a representative from the Morning Call visits Cedar Crest and allows them a subscription to the Sunday paper (containing 100+ valuable coupons for great items) for only a penny. I watched one woman at the grocery store take her bill down from over $300, down to about $200 because of the amount of coupons she had. Hopefully this column will help you save some money in the future. Don’t forget to look up “Cedar Crest Book Swap” when you’ve finished reading to save on your next textbook purchase and possibly help out a fellow classmate at the same time! Do you have a question you would like to ask me? Your name will be kept completely confidential. Send an e-mail to smstangl@cedarcrest.edu and your question just may be covered in my next column! 8 ARTS Allie Sco, Editor In the spotlight: Senior Dance Concert shines Meghan Cronrath | Photo Editor Lilac Fairy Variaon Titleless Immortality - Timeless Identy Graduang seniors Carole Ann Danner, Kaitlin Swisher, Cinthia Marino, Leigh Anne Ehnot, and Meegan Schuckers. Absence of Light Then and Now Wandering the Path Choreographers prepare for Student DanceWorks JESS BOLLUYT Assistant Arts Editor Elect On April 7, Cedar Crest dancers and choreographers rehearsed original choreography for an upcoming performance, Student DanceWorks. The production, which will run April 15-17, has been months in the making, and as they neared the end of the process, the choreographers reflected on the inspiration in which their pieces originated. Kimberly McCormick explained the idea behind her piece, Dance Macabre. “I’ve been really afraid of getting older lately, like I’m deathly afraid to turn twenty.” Exploring the idea, she created choreography to express the sentiment that “everybody’s afraid of death.” Like many of the other choreographers, McCormick took inspiration from the movement of modern dance, but describes the style of her piece as unique and personal in nature. “It’s modern-ish, but it’s more my style of dance than anything else,” McCormick said. Nicole Magloire also began her piece with an idea to express. “My piece is inspired by friendship and the idea that friendships don't always last,” Magloire said. “I think the beauty of friendship is that you allow someone to come into your life, and there is no guarantee that they will always be around, and that's okay.” The piece, called Broken Promises, is Magloire’s first piece of choreography, and the process of creating the movement held many challenges. “It's modern in the way that I pulled very heavily from that style, but there are so many quirky gestures and movements that aren't modern, so I can't really define it. I didn't use any music, so the movement had to be strong enough to stand on its own, and I think it is.” Personal experience influenced the way that many students approached their choreography. Hannah Walters created Nicole Magloire’s piece, Broken Promises. a piece called Pearls in honor of her grandfather, who passed away a year and a half ago. Walters said that pearls represent lung cancer awareness. “It’s very pedestrian, with a modern feel to it. It’s in silence, and the only thing you hear is the one dancer breathing. It’s kind of like a story, kind of the relationship between me and my grandfather before he passed away.” The piece required a depth of emotional investment of each dancer involved. “I kept telling them think of something – an emotional experience that you had, a tragic experience. Because you can’t experience what I’m going through, you can only do it for yourself.” Collaboration supported the creation of each piece. In working on Courage, Coleen Spease wanted to express the emotions she felt during important life experiences. “Last year I went through pretty rough times and dealt with a lot of different emotions, so I kind of took those emotions and put them into dance, and kind of told the story of what I went through, through the dance.” The support of her dancers has been integral to the process of putting the piece together. “It’s been really amazing. I have four amazing dancers who come in, and not only will do whatever I tell them to do, but will also help me out, and work through the stuff along with me if I’m stuck.” The process of choreography and rehearsal has been different for every student. Carly Wolfe, choreographer of Creation, began with the idea of the four elements of nature. The idea evolved into a piece featuring sixteen dancers. “It has been a very crazy process. I have sixteen dancers that I’m working with, so they’re all in small groups – they’re in four groups of four – but at the end of rehearsals when they all come together, it’s been very crazy to get them all in one studio and just get through everything.” Wolfe explained that she personally gravitates toward modern and lyrical dancing, so Creation was an opportunity to challenge herself to create a piece without an underlying storyline. Kaitlin Swisher also created her piece with more of an aesthetic idea than a specific storyline. Swisher wanted to choreograph a piece that was “pretty much a horror movie.” The result is Evil Wakes in Vengeance. Swisher said, “I really like horror movies, so it was cool to just make a really creepy dance.” Speaking of the relationship between technique and emotion which is inherent in every piece of choreography, Swisher explained her own view of the balance between the two. “I really wanted to make an impact. My dancers have great technique, and they do the choreography very well, but overall it’s about the emotion.” During the long process of preparation for Student DanceWorks, Cedar Crest student choreographers have created eight original pieces. The complexity of preparations behind the scenes is evidence of the deep thought and hard work that has gone in to each piece. The production is directed by Michelle Munno Jacobs, and will be presented in the Samuels Theatre on April 15 and 16 at 8 p.m. and April 17 at 2 p.m. For more information or to reserve tickets, contact the Performing Arts Department. All photos by Jess Bolluyt, Assistant Arts Editor Elect H a n n a h Wa l t e r s ’s p i e c e , Pe a r l s . T h e g r o u p o f d a n c e r s a n d c h o r e o g r a p h e r s w a t c h e s a s K i m b e r l y M c C o r m i c k ’s p i e c e , D a n c e M a c a b r e , i s r e h e a r s e d . ARTS www.cedarcrest.edu/crestiad April 14, 2011 | 9 Celebrating The 3rd Birthday STACEY STANGL Staff Writer The 3rd Birthday is the third release in the Parasite Eve game series. Since the initial game in 1997, long pauses have elapsed between sequels, and The 3rd Birthday was released for the Playstation Portable gaming system (PSP) on March 29. The game continues the plot established by its predecessors, and brings the setting back to Manhattan. The gameplay of The 3rd Birthday is similar to that of earlier games in the series in that it is an action role-playing game, in which players acquire new weapons and level up. One big difference is that The 3rd Birthday is a full-fledged action game. Battles occur in real time and require quick responses. The game is played entirely with guns but is not reminiscent of a “shooter” type game. Instead, it plays somewhat like the game Crisis Core for the PSP, or Dirge of Cerberus for the Playstation 2. At times the controls feel clunky, and targeting the enemy is frustrating, even with a “lock on” feature. This is the first game in the series to introduce selectable difficulty levels. New players can get through the game with ease while veteran players can be challenged. The game also presents a challenge with the new ability to transfer between characters. This is necessary because of how difficult it is to dodge enemy attacks. While one character heals, a quick transfer to another party member allows players to continue attacking and redirecting damage. To take down enemies’ rapid attacks, players need to be highly focused and constantly planning ahead. The 3rd Birthday also brings back the integration of a sciencebased plot through abilities that utilize the main character, Aya Brea’s, unique malleable genetic makeup. The plot once again centers around creatures that have taken over Manhattan, this time called the “Twisted.” Aya is recruited by the “Counter Twister Investigation Team” to take down these creatures, through a new system called the “Overdrive” system. In this system, Aya’s psyche is sent into the past, where she can change what happens, recreating the future. While the concept is interesting, the plot once again takes its audience to a place of confusion. To those who played through the first two games of the series, it would seem that the creatures being manipulated by their rampant mitochondrial makeup (i.e. Eve) had been destroyed and that the plot would be laid to rest. However, Eve reappears in the game in confusing scenes and flashbacks that make this subplot of the game entirely too complex to understand. The rest of the plot is engaging and draws from interesting subjects such as philosophy, existentialism, and genetics. The details may not be medically accurate, but the plot introduces the thought-provoking concept of humanity’s ability to adapt and evolve in the future. The most redeeming feature of the game is its graphics. The 3rd Birthday has spectacular cutscenes that do not disappoint, and could be counted among the best seen on the PSP in general. The 3rd Birthday is a great title. Though it is unfortunate that a series which was seen in the “Greatest Hits” of the Playstation console has released the sequel only for its handheld counterpart, the amazing graphics and sci-fi storyline will leave both its long-devoted fans, as well as newcomers of the series, in awe. W E E K LY W E B WONDER ROXANNE ADDINO Staff Writer 2011 has been a great year for music lovers everywhere. Many new artists have come to fame this year, and one in particular has sung her way into the hearts of many in the UK, and will soon be dropping her latest album in the U.S. Tove Styrke is a Swedish born superstar! After Styrke placed within the top 4 on Sweden’s “X Factor,” Sony wasted no time in snatching her off the market. Her latest single “White Light Moment” is without a doubt a huge success and has dominated European radio. Her fun, upbeat sound could make any dance party come to life! By 2012 we will be welcoming this young artist into our lives and America will be hooked! What makes Styrke’s sound so different is that she draws inspiration from a broad range of artists such as The Rolling Stones, Elvis, and even Johnny Cash. Check her out on YouTube now and see for yourself why so many are in love with your unique sound. Join Student Faculty Rock Band CCC Radio & CAB for Another Great Dance Party Lees Hall April 16 8 p.m. Photo |www. eurogamer.net Ávila translates truth into poetry Courtesy |Javier Ávila JESS BOLLUYT Assistant Arts Editor Elect Large photographs of grand architecture and a blue sky fill a white wall of the windowless office of Dr. Javier Ávila, associate professor of English at Northampton Community College. “Let's pretend that we're in a train station. Waiting for a train on the way to Madrid.” Though the small room on the comfortable English suite sees far less traffic than a Spanish train station, the stories told there carry a similar tone of motion and migration. A poet, novelist, and a native of Puerto Rico, Ávila has made a career of writing books and teaching English. Growing up in Puerto Rico, he was taught the English language from a young age. Ávila explains that it has been a journey to define himself as a writer familiar with two languages, two cultures, and two literary traditions. “I'm not writing on typical Puerto Rican or Puerto RicanAmerican themes – someone looking back on the homeland with nostalgia, even though they were never there, a Puerto Rican writing about a plate of rice and beans.” The complexity of the Puerto Rican cultural identity, a product of the island's turbulent history as a colony and territory of other countries, makes it difficult to articulate exactly how that cultural identity defines a Puerto Rican writer. Ávila chooses to describe his writing in terms of language. Puerto Rican poetry written in Spanish uses ornate expressions, and that tradition contrasts strongly with the directness characteristic of American poetry. Ávila's own poetry draws deeply from American poetry in its use of language, and with another nod toward the Photo |www. eurogamer.net Email CCCRadio@cedarcrest.edu for informaon canon of American literature, Ávila crafts his poems from the things that he observes and the experiences that he has collected Tracing the origin of his career back to his childhood, Ávila cites the influence of his family upon what he has chosen to do. “My mother was a teacher in the public school in a very tough part of town – the ghetto – it was a very difficult job.” He attributes his affinity for teaching to what he learned from her each day of his childhood. “Teachers aren't made, they're born. I didn't want to become a teacher. I tried to be an architect, to become a man of the sciences, but I ended up in a classroom. It was inevitable.” At the same time, he fell naturally into a career as a writer. Despite the success of early publications, Ávila says that he did not take his writing seriously until the year that his father died. “I realized the urgency of life, the need to put full effort into what you are doing.” He explains that he began to re-evaluate his work and the motivation behind it. Driven by that insight and experience, Ávila developed the disciplined approach to fiction and poetry that has helped him create books which have won awards such as the Olga Nolla Poetry Award and the Outstanding Latino Cultural Arts, Literary Arts, and Publications Award. “Because of my mother I am a teacher, because of my father I am a writer.” “In a poem, if you lose that truth for a moment, you’ve lost the poem.” -Javier Ávila, Poet The influence of family extends throughout Ávila's work. “Write the book you want to read, not the book you want to write,” he told the students in a creative writing class at Northampton. When he met the woman who would become his wife, he wrote poems about their long-distance relationship. When they married, he wrote about marriage. Ávila has recently taken on another role: father. On his desk is a photograph of his wife and son. Though his son is still very young, Ávila has already been affected immeasurably by the change of lifestyle and perspective. Joking about the long hours of the new job, he says that before his son was born, he made the choice to work late into the night to complete his writing. “It was self-imposed insomnia, and now it's self-imposed and the boy,” he says. Ávila also observes that he has become more empathetic, and says that his priorities in the classroom have shifted. Teaching has always been a performance, and the birth of his son has only further reinforced the division between home and classroom. Ávila is known at Northampton as a professor who teaches enjoyable classes, conducts humorous discussions, and tells the occasional insightfully irreverent story. “Half of the stories that I tell aren't true, but I believe that they're true when I'm telling them. Teaching is a mask, a performance.” Though the character that Ávila creates at the front of his classroom is understandably different from the person that he is in quieter moments, his daily consciousness of his origin in Puerto Rico has made his teaching career an act in another way. Through his life in the classroom, Avila still thinks of speaking English as a mask. He describes the feeling as one that he is “getting away” with the disguise. “When I get agitated, an accent creeps in. If I hurt myself, I curse in Spanish, even if I haven't spoken any Spanish all day. It's more natural.” The sentiment extends to his writing as well. He has written his fiction in English, but all of his poetry in Spanish. He cites the intimacy of the Spanish language, and his ability to use it to capture truth more faithfully than with English, as the necessity behind the choice. “In a poem if you lose that truth for a moment, you've lost the poem. A novel is more about a story – you have two or three hundred pages to do that.” For Ávila, truth is, ultimately, essential to good writing. Returning to the idea of writing from personal experience, he points to the element of reality or insight that underscores each of his works, even those which bear little resemblance to his personal life. “It is easiest to plagiarize from yourself. I don't write fantastical stories.” Ávila's own view of the world and of how he will present that world to his son seems to play a part in his estimation of his own work. Speaking of the novels that he has written, he says, “Why do they kill? Why is there so much violence? I have to fix that.” The statement seems a wish less for his writing and more for the reality which it reflects. Ávila's explanation of his career is an interesting study in progress, and in the direction that a few good, bold choices is able to lend to a life. Change is the only constant. “Should I take them down?” he asks, looking at the rows of photographs on the wall in a quiet moment. The corner of a photograph is peeling from the pale wall. “Should I put up something different?” At the suggestion that he hang up a photograph of his son, Ávila jokes that it would humanize him too much. His ability to carefully curate the truth that he presents to the world seems a product of both experience and insight. Ávila on paper and Ávila in person displays an acute awareness of the world and of his own life in it, which seems the most human and the most poetic quality of all. 10 STUDY BREAK Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20) Social invitations or opportunities to participate in group activities should come your way for a few weeks. Relations with others should be war.m Submied by: Alyssa Slinger tango macarena limbo foxtrot electric slide hockey Dances golf football basketball Selena Raul Javier Jaden Anastasia curling Sports First Names 8:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Times Aries (March 21 – April 19) You're thinking about your future career development and you aren't happy with your current situation. Advancement is on your mind. Perhaps you want a promotion, another job, or to change careers entirely. Taurus (April 20 – May 20) Today is a good day to take time out for the small, sensual pleasures. Perhaps this is a day for dessert. Don't forget about the pleasures that nature can bring. Gemini (May 21 – June 20) Some time alone with a special person is definitely called for today. The social whirl of recent weeks has put you in touch with a lot of old friends and enabled you to make new ones. Now it's time to relax at home. Cancer (June 21 – July 22) The possibility of moving out of your neighborhood may have occurred to you before, but events today might have you finally making up your mind to do it. Perhaps too many good neighbors have moved away. Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22) Today you might be pleasantly surprised to realize that you're in far better financial shape than you thought. You could discover a hidden talent for money management that you didn't think you had. Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sep. 22) Today you might decide to sequester yourself at home, catch your breath, get your thoughts together, and recall the events of the past several days. Libra (Sep. 23 – Oct. 22) Taking care of chores around the house might bring some home matters to your attention that need to be taken care of. Maybe you need a new piece of equipment or furniture. Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) A group you're associated with may be on your mind today. You might want to fulfill your obligations to it. You could also consider completing a long-term project that was put on hold over the past week or so. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) Money may be coming your way through a contract of some kind. This is a good time to ask for a loan or fill out paperwork regarding scholarships, grants, or other forms of financial support. Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) Are you sometimes afraid of appearing silly in front of people? The fear of failing in the eyes of others might be holding you back from real progress. The celestial energies are asking you to think about this carefully today. Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) You usually like to think of yourself as being a scientific, logical person, but today you may think more like a mystic. Logic Puzzle 3:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Clues electric slide 1. The person who arrived at 8:30 a.m. doesn't know how to do the tango. 2. The person who dances the electric slide is not Jaden. 3. The person who dances the tango is the basketball star. 4. The person who arrived at 10:30 p.m. loves to dance the electric slide. 5. The person who dances the foxtrot is not the golf star. foxtrot Dances Submied by: Alyssa Slinger limbo macarena tango basketball 6. The person who dances the macarena is Anastasia. 7. Anastasia arrived earlier than Javier. 8. The person who dances the macarena is not the football star. 9. The football star arrived earlier than Selena. 10. Jaden arrived later than the hockey star. 11. The person who dances the limbo is not the golf star. 12. The person who dances the limbo is not Javier. 13. The 5 people were the person who dances the macarena, the person who arrived at 10:30 p.m., the basketball star, Selena, and the person who dances the limbo. 14. The person who arrived at 3:30 p.m. is the golf star. curling Sports Horoscopes Alyssa Slinger, Editor football golf hockey Sudoku Submied by: Alyssa Slinger Spring Scramble Submied by: Alyssa Slinger Unscramble the following words and use the bolded letters to unscramble a spring phase. mlosbos rsteae belramlu nair otsob cpohno nrdgea dudmy psyrlpie gfsro mwsro etw __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ BASKET BINGO!!! Sunday, April 17, 2011 in HBB Rooms 6-9 Doors open at noon; games begin at 1 p.m. Contact forensic@cedarcrest.edu with any questions. www.cedarcrest.edu/crestiad April 14, 2011 | 11 ATHLETICS Website encourages diversity of gives LGBT community a place athletes and fans Outsports.com to give commentary and support JESS BOLLUYT Assistant Arts Editor Elect In November of 2000, Jim Buzinski and Cyd Zeigler, Jr. founded Outsports, a website they created with the mission to provide a forum and a community for gay and lesbian athletes and their fans in the LGBT community. At the time of its founding, nothing like Outsports existed. There is still no other site that features broad coverage, insightful commentary, and engaging features for the members of the gay sports community. In the years since they founded the website, Buzinski and Zeigler have become recognized as trusted sources in the athletics community and have been featured countless times in mainstream media. One of the recent stories featured by Outsports is an essay by Mari Burningham, head volleyball coach at the University of Redlands in Southern California, on the difficult choices she made to leave the Mormon church and Mormon-affiliated university where she studied and coached. In finding an environment where her ability mattered more than her sexual orientation, Burningham has been empowered to face the challenges inherent in being a gay coach. Other stories speak to the challenges that gay athletes still face. An article on a Brazilian pro volleyball player “Michael” focuses on a recent incident when the athlete was taunted by 3,000 fans for his sexuality following a match. An article profiling athlete Greg Congdon tells the story of how his entire high school found out he was gay before he had publicly come out. He was antagonized and harassed by the entire student body and forced to stop wrestling and playing football. Though the profile focuses on how Congdon recovered from the difficult spiral of events that followed, the story is an important reminder that gay athletes very often still face the ignorance, homophobia, and discrimination that challenge homosexuals in every walk of life. The site's mission is to support gay athletes, and over the years has been the forum for athletes to speak out about both struggles and triumphs. The blog posts, discussion boards, athlete profiles, personal essays, and sport-specific news coverage at Outsports attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors each month. “We’re a small niche,” Buzinski said in a recent interview with The New April ZUMBA! MONDAY SUNDAY WEDNESDAY TUESDAY THURSDAY SATURDAY FRIDAY York Times. “But we’re a niche with a megaphone.” Buzinski and Zeigler founded the site simply because they were two gay men who loved sports and found no existing athletics website that engaged their interest. Buzinski's skills in journalism and Zeigler's experience in organization and entertainment helped them put the site together. The audience for what began as a small project turned out to be much larger than either of them could have guessed. Outsports has proved important to a large number of athletes, and a major benefit of the site is the hope that it gives to thousands of young, homosexual athletes who have not yet come out. Outsports monitors the slow but constant progress of tolerance toward homosexuality, and will continue to report on that progress in the future. Buzinski, speaking of the changes that he has seen in the decade since he and Zeigler founded the site, told The New York Times that the progress of gay athletes in sports has been “two steps forward, one and a half steps back. It’s like a zigzag, but it’s going forward.” The growing recognition and appreciation of homosexual athletes is a sign that the next step may be in the right direction. Soball on four game streak 9:30 a.m. 10:00 a.m. 14 15 16 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. 12:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 17 18 19 20 21 7:00 p.m. 12:00 p.m 7:00 p.m. 24 25 26 27 22 23 9:30 p.m. 10:00 a.m. 28 29 DANIELLE FREEMAN Athlecs Editor Elect The Cedar Crest softball team (75) picked up four wins in their last two days of play against Philadelphia Biblical University and Keystone College. Both teams they faced are members of the Colonial States Athletic Conference Courtesy|Alyson Mason (CSAC). These four wins place the Falcons in 7th place out of 12 teams within their conference. In the last four games, Cedar Crest has scored a total of 38 runs, more than they have scored in their previous games combined. If the Falcons continue on this path they will find themselves in a playoff position. Meghan Cronrath|Photo Editor 30 Top Le: Natalia Dial, one of the Falcon pitchers, throws a strike. Top Right: Alyson Mason, Cedar Crest ouielder runs from third base to home. Below: The Falcons huddle for an inspiraonal cheer. Meghan Cronrath|Photo Editor 12 ATHLETICS Cut m e out! Cedar Crest Athlecs Upcoming Games Michelle Palmisano, Editor Superson: noun 1. A belief or noon, not based on reason or knowledge, in or of the ominous significance of a parcular thing, circumstance, occurrence, proceeding, or the like. Most athletes parcipate in supersons in addion to athlecs. Cedar Crest athletes are no different... find out what they do and why they do it Michelle Palmisano|Athletic Editor LACROSSE 4/16 vs. Immaculata University 1:00 p.m. ` Michelle Palmisano|Athletic Editor “The only one I have is the bounce before I serve in volleyball. I do the same ritual every time: a spin bounce, then six bounces close to the ground. I do that twice.” - Danielle Niles, Volleyball & Lacrosse “The softball team likes to run a pen along the fence. We named it our "rally pen" and it comes out when we're up to bat. We believe that when that pen is making noise we'll start a batting rally. Also, we don't step on the white lines anytime during our warm-up; we think it'll cause us bad luck. Not stepping on the newly painted lines has always just been for softball players, many teams also do this. The rally pen started one day when I picked up the pen and started making noise with it and we ended up hitting really well and it just sort of stuck.” - Alyson Mason, Softball “So, I know this is super weird, but I'm almost convinced that the color belly button ring I have in affects the kind of game I have. The two worst games that I have played, I've had my black one in. That little guy is bad news. But other than that little sneaking suspicion, I can't say that I place my game performance too much in the hands of luck.” - Kimberly Katsigianis , Lacrosse “I eat a cheeseburger on game day. Have for four years while here. Well I love cheeseburgers and ate them a lot freshmen year, and whenever I ate them on game days I seemed to play better so I stuck with it.” - Leann Wallower, Basketball Michelle Palmisano|Athletic Editor be the judge, do these things really maer? All information compiled by Vanessa Chatelain, Assistant News Editor Elect 4/21 vs. Wilson College 4:30 p.m. SOFTBALL 4/15 vs. Neumann University 3:00 p.m. 4/16 Bapst Bible College TBA Michelle Palmisano|Athletic Editor 4/19 @ Cabrini College 4:00 p.m. Michelle Palmisano|Athletic Editor Michelle Palmisano|Athletic Editor 2011 HALL OLYMPICS Above: The Butz Bears flag football team poses for a picture. Left: A heated floor hockey battle ensues in Lees Gym. Current Standings: Courtesy|Athletics 1st Place: Butz Bears 2nd Place: Moortis Tortis 3rd Place: Steinbright Stallions You can participate, help out, or just be a fan! The next Hall olympics events are Thursday: WACKY GAMES @ 12 noon on the Soccer Field & BADMINTON @ 7 p.m. in Lees Hall Gym Friday: TUG OF WAR AND RELAY GAMES @ 12 noon on the Soccer Field B O X S SOFTBALL runs: Gruzdis 1, Swanhall 1, Wenner 1, Salge 1, Mason 1. / Gruzdis 2, Swanhall 2, Palmisano 1, Touhsaent 1, Wenner 1, Dial 1, Salge 1, Mason 1. 4/11 vs. Keystone -- W 15-14/ W 8-7 runs: Touhsaent 4, Wenner 4, Gruzdis 3, Dial 2, Palmisano 1, Salge 1./ Wenner 3, Touhsaent 2, Dial 1, Palmisano 1, Nasinka 1. Below: Members of the Butz Bears flag football team get ready to receive from quarterback Lauren Salge. Courtesy|Athletics 4/9 vs. Philadelphia Biblical -- W 5-3/ W 10-2 4/25 Marywood University TBA Courtesy|Athletics Right: Kelly Oakes tries to scramble past Cassie Bejar during flag football on Monday afternoon on the soccer field C O Courtesy|Athletics R E S LAX 4/7 vs. Lancaster Bible: L -- 16-6 goals: Fikes, 3; Manning, 1; Epstein, 1; Malysza, 1. 4/9 vs. Neumann U: L -- 21-4 goals: Fikes, 2; Manning, 1; Malysza, 1.
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