September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

14
Vol. XCV No. 5 U unewsonline.com Thursday, September 27, 2012 University News the A student voice of SLU since 1919 NEWS >> Meet SLU’s head wizard 2 INSIDE: OPINION >> City sights to see 4 ARTS >> Forest Park’s Jazzfest 9 SPORTS 11 50 of 57 cast ‘yay’ vote on No Confidence This week’s Student Government Association meeting was highlighted by appearances from Vice President of Academic Af- fairs Manoj Patankar and Faculty Senate President Mark Knuepfer concerning the recent controversy sur- rounding Patankar’s faculty review policy draft. Patankar and Knuepfer presented their respective sides of the story and field- ed questions from students. Patankar consistently emphasized issues with communication as the source of most of the con- troversy between the fac- ulty and administration at Saint Louis University. Patan- kar talked about vari- ous oppor- tunities and initia- tives that had taken place over the last year to en- sure SLU faculty was engaged in the process of drafting an evaluation policy focused on improving the perfor- mance of SLU professors in educational effective- ness and research. There were multiple open forums held in the spring of 2012. Three faculty-administrator committees were formed and worked over multiple months on recommenda- tions for a new policy. He also pointed out that post-tenure review is not a new concept, citing top-50 schools with similar poli- cies: the list included Wash- ington University, Rice Uni- versity and Vanderbilt. According to Patankar, he asked for feedback about his review policy from the Faculty Senate Executive Committee (FSEC) by Sept. 30. The Senate planned for the Faculty Academic Af- fairs Committee to hold two meetings in September to go over the policy and recommended he release a draft to university deans By WOLF HOWARD Associate News Editor See “SGA” on Page 2 John Schuler/ Photo Editor Quarter century of progress Biondi’s record: buildings,campus beautification By KRISTEN MIANO New Editor TJ KEELEY Managing Editor Faculty senate head, VP, field questions By KRISTEN MIANO News Editor SGA, administration tackles mailroom boondoggle and chairs so they might also give feedback, Patan- kar said. The FSEC labeled the draft policy “irremediably flawed.” The SLU adminis- tration withdrew the review proposal on Sept. 17 due to the harsh criticism it faced from various sources. Patankar announced that a blue ribbon commit- tee was being formed, at the behest of the Board of Trustees, with the intention of “developing better poli- cies and, more importantly, communication processes.” The blue ribbon committee is to include nominations from students, faculty and administrators. When queried by stu- dents as to why there was such backlash concerning the review process pro- posed, Pa- tankar called it an issue of “operating from differ- ent mental models” in terms of what is im- portant and how to com- municate. He also at- tributed some of the backlash to hysteria. Knuepfer apparently agreed, and opened his pre- sentation by saying, “On al- most everything we have a different point of view.” He defended the FSEC claim of fundamental changes in the policy be- tween their conversations with Patankar and its pre- sentation to the faculty by pointing out that they were discussing proposals until the committee voted to re- move them entirely. “I don’t think the admin- istration has shown that our system has failed,” Knuep- fer said. He pointed out that there are already policies in place that allow the admin- istration to remove faculty that are severely underper- forming. “If anybody isn’t doing their job, they’re supposed to be fired,” Knuepfer said. Knuepfer also stated that Mark Kneupher (left) and Blake Exline (right) field s questions during the Student Governement meeting on Sept. 26 Bri Radici/ Design Director Lawrence Biondi S.J. through the years. Biondi has been president of Saint Louis University for the last 25 years, making his tenure as president on of the longest in history. On Sept. 30, 1987, repre- sentatives from Saint Louis University and numerous other American institutions of higher education gath- ered in Powell Symphony Hall to attend the inaugura- tion of SLU’s 31 st president. When Lawrence Bion- di, S.J., began his time as SLU’s president, he was 48 years old and had formerly been the Dean of Arts and Sciences at Loyola Univer- sity Chicago. He opened his inaugural address not by speaking about his new position, but by disclosing his dream of being an opera singer. “No one named Biondi could stand spotlighted here at Centerstage in one of our nation’s premiere concert halls without be- coming an Italian Walter Mitty, imagining you are all assembled in trembling expectation of hearing me sing an aria from Il Trova- tore or, better yet, La Tra- viata,” Biondi said. “For me, a lover of opera in particular and music in general, such is the stuff that dreams are made of.” “But then,” he contin- ued. “So is becoming the President of Saint Louis University.” Twenty-five years later, Biondi is still living that dream. By the time Biondi suc- ceeded Thomas Fitzgerald, S.J. as the University’s pres- ident, he had already built a resume in academia ap- proximately 15 years long. After receiving his Ph.D. in Socio-linguistics from Georgetown University in 1975, this Chicago native went on to become the chair of the Modern Language Department at Loyola Uni- versity Chicago. Four years later, he became the dean of Loyola Chicago’s College of By KATHERINE KELLIHER Staff Writer Long lines outside of the mailroom are now a thing of the past. Due to technical difficul- ties, the Saint Louis Uni- versity mail services was severely behind for the first few weeks of classes, also known as the ‘peak’ mail time as students are receiv- ing textbooks and school supplies. These issues were then reported to Dr. Mona Hicks, dean of students. By Sept. 14, however, the management staff and Student Development were made aware of the dilem- ma and, by the following Monday, mail services was caught up to speed. In an e-mail sent to students on Sept. 17, the Dean’s office reported: “Due to the recent increase in mail and packages at this time of year, as well as tech- nical issues, we recognize that students may have ex- perienced a delay in receiv- ing their mail. Please know that the Busch Student Cen- ter Student Mail Services is committed to getting mail to students in a timely manner. We are working diligently to address this is- sue.” According to Blake Ex- line, Student Government Association president, the See “Mail” on Page 3 John Schuler/ Photo Editor Students wait for packages in the Busch Student Center Mailroom In the Faculty Senate Meeting on Sept. 25, the Senate took a vote on their confidence in the ability of Manoj Patankar, Vice Presi- dent of Academic Affairs, to serve in his role. By a vote of 50 to 3, with four sena- tors abstaining, the Senate took a vote of no confidence against Patankar. “After careful delibera- tion and with full under- standing of the gravity of its actions, the Faculty Senate has voted no confidence in the leadership of the cur- rent Vice President for Aca- demic Affairs and requests that the President begin the process of selecting a successor and carrying out an orderly transition in that position, “the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate stated in a letter sent to Saint Louis University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J. on Sept. 26. The primary reasons cit- ed by the Faculty Senate for the vote of no confidence included the proposed fac- ulty review policies which violated the Faculty Man- ual; the evaluation proce- dures used to evaluate the College of Education and Public Service; inadequate response and leadership to issues remaining after the reorganization of the Grad- uate School; the complex procedures to gain approval for administrative activities such as hiring and sabbati- cals; and a lack of consider- ation for faculty input and poor collaboration on vari- ous matters, including the role and the goals of the Strategic Plan. The letter also said that should the University begin a search for a new leader for the Office of Academic Affairs, the Faculty Senate would be willing to work in collaboration to achieve the best possible outcome in an effort to promote the suc- cess of the University. During the Faculty Senate meeting, senators voiced their concerns with Patankar’s leadership and his collaboration with the faculty. Senators also wor- ried about possible damage not only to faculty morale but the ability of the Univer- sity to attract and retain ef- fective professors. This vote comes after the College of Arts and Sciences Council voted no confidence in Patankar on Sept. 18. The council then brought the vote to the Faculty Senate, which con- ducted the vote after some deliberation. The council also sent some comments and feedback to the Office of the President, expressing their concerns and reasons for their actions. On Sept. 24, the Chair- man of the Board of Trust- ees, Thomas Brouster, re- leased a letter to all faculty, staff and students stating that at the Sept. 22 meet- ing of the Board, the Trust- ees unanimously affirmed their confidence not only in the President and his Vice Presidents, but also af- firmed their approval of the University’s strategic plan- ning efforts and its goal to See “Vote” on Page 3 See “Biondi” on Page 3 >> Graydon’s American dream I don’t think the ad- ministration has shown that our system has failed... If anyone isn’t doing their job, they’re supposed to be fired. -Mark Kneupfer

description

The fifth edition of The University News, 2012-13.

Transcript of September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

Page 1: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

Vol. XCV No. 5

Uunewsonline.com

Thursday, September 27, 2012

University Newsthe

A student voice of SLU since 1919

NEWS

>> Meet SLU’s head wizard

2

INSI

DE: OPINION

>> City sights to see

4 ARTS

>> Forest Park’s Jazzfest

9 SPORTS 11

50 of 57 cast ‘yay’ vote on No Confidence

This week’s Student Government Association meeting was highlighted by appearances from Vice President of Academic Af-fairs Manoj Patankar and Faculty Senate President Mark Knuepfer concerning the recent controversy sur-rounding Patankar’s faculty review policy draft.

Patankar and Knuepfer presented their respective sides of the story and field-ed questions from students.

Patankar consistently emphasized issues with communication as the source of most of the con-troversy between the fac-ulty and administration at Saint Louis University.

P a t a n -kar talked about vari-ous oppor-t u n i t i e s and initia-tives that had taken place over the last year to en-sure SLU faculty was engaged in the process of drafting an evaluation policy focused on improving the perfor-mance of SLU professors in educational effective-ness and research. There were multiple open forums held in the spring of 2012.Three faculty-administrator committees were formed and worked over multiple months on recommenda-tions for a new policy.

He also pointed out that post-tenure review is not a new concept, citing top-50 schools with similar poli-cies: the list included Wash-ington University, Rice Uni-versity and Vanderbilt.

According to Patankar, he asked for feedback about his review policy from the Faculty Senate Executive Committee (FSEC) by Sept. 30. The Senate planned for the Faculty Academic Af-fairs Committee to hold two meetings in September to go over the policy and recommended he release a draft to university deans

By WOLF HOWARDAssociate News Editor

See “SGA” on Page 2

John Schuler/ Photo Editor

Quarter century of progressBiondi’s record: buildings,campus beautification

By KRISTEN MIANO New Editor

TJ KEELEY Managing Editor

Faculty senate head, VP, field questions

By KRISTEN MIANONews Editor

SGA, administration tackles mailroom boondoggle

and chairs so they might also give feedback, Patan-kar said.

The FSEC labeled the draft policy “irremediably flawed.” The SLU adminis-tration withdrew the review proposal on Sept. 17 due to the harsh criticism it faced from various sources.

Patankar announced that a blue ribbon commit-tee was being formed, at the behest of the Board of Trustees, with the intention of “developing better poli-cies and, more importantly, communication processes.” The blue ribbon committee is to include nominations from students, faculty and administrators.

When queried by stu-dents as to why there was such backlash concerning

the review process pro-posed, Pa-tankar called it an issue of “opera t ing from differ-ent mental models” in terms of what is im-portant and how to com-m u n i c a t e . He also at-t r i b u t e d

some of the backlash to hysteria.

Knuepfer apparently agreed, and opened his pre-sentation by saying, “On al-most everything we have a different point of view.”

He defended the FSEC claim of fundamental changes in the policy be-tween their conversations with Patankar and its pre-sentation to the faculty by pointing out that they were discussing proposals until the committee voted to re-move them entirely.

“I don’t think the admin-istration has shown that our system has failed,” Knuep-fer said. He pointed out that there are already policies in place that allow the admin-istration to remove faculty that are severely underper-forming.

“If anybody isn’t doing their job, they’re supposed to be fired,” Knuepfer said.

Knuepfer also stated that

Mark Kneupher (left) and Blake Exline (right) field s questions during the Student Governement meeting on Sept. 26

Bri Radici/ Design Director

Lawrence Biondi S.J. through the years. Biondi has been president of Saint Louis University for the last 25 years, making his tenure as president on of the longest in history.

On Sept. 30, 1987, repre-sentatives from Saint Louis University and numerous other American institutions of higher education gath-ered in Powell Symphony Hall to attend the inaugura-tion of SLU’s 31st president.

When Lawrence Bion-di, S.J., began his time as SLU’s president, he was 48 years old and had formerly been the Dean of Arts and

Sciences at Loyola Univer-sity Chicago. He opened his inaugural address not by speaking about his new position, but by disclosing his dream of being an opera singer.

“No one named Biondi could stand spotlighted here at Centerstage in one of our nation’s premiere concert halls without be-coming an Italian Walter Mitty, imagining you are all assembled in trembling expectation of hearing me

sing an aria from Il Trova-tore or, better yet, La Tra-viata,” Biondi said. “For me, a lover of opera in particular and music in general, such is the stuff that dreams are made of.”

“But then,” he contin-ued. “So is becoming the President of Saint Louis University.”

Twenty-five years later, Biondi is still living that dream.

By the time Biondi suc-ceeded Thomas Fitzgerald,

S.J. as the University’s pres-ident, he had already built a resume in academia ap-proximately 15 years long. After receiving his Ph.D. in Socio-linguistics from Georgetown University in 1975, this Chicago native went on to become the chair of the Modern Language Department at Loyola Uni-versity Chicago. Four years later, he became the dean of Loyola Chicago’s College of

By KATHERINE KELLIHERStaff Writer

Long lines outside of the mailroom are now a thing of the past.

Due to technical difficul-ties, the Saint Louis Uni-versity mail services was severely behind for the first few weeks of classes, also known as the ‘peak’ mail time as students are receiv-ing textbooks and school supplies. These issues were then reported to Dr. Mona Hicks, dean of students.

By Sept. 14, however, the management staff and Student Development were made aware of the dilem-ma and, by the following Monday, mail services was

caught up to speed. In an e-mail sent to

students on Sept. 17, the Dean’s office reported: “Due to the recent increase in mail and packages at this time of year, as well as tech-nical issues, we recognize that students may have ex-perienced a delay in receiv-ing their mail. Please know that the Busch Student Cen-ter Student Mail Services is committed to getting mail to students in a timely manner. We are working diligently to address this is-sue.”

According to Blake Ex-line, Student Government Association president, the

See “Mail” on Page 3

John Schuler/ Photo Editor

Students wait for packages in the Busch Student Center Mailroom

In the Faculty Senate Meeting on Sept. 25, the Senate took a vote on their confidence in the ability of Manoj Patankar, Vice Presi-dent of Academic Affairs, to serve in his role. By a vote of 50 to 3, with four sena-tors abstaining, the Senate took a vote of no confidence against Patankar.

“After careful delibera-tion and with full under-standing of the gravity of its actions, the Faculty Senate has voted no confidence in the leadership of the cur-rent Vice President for Aca-demic Affairs and requests that the President begin the process of selecting a successor and carrying out

an orderly transition in that position, “the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate stated in a letter sent to Saint Louis University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J. on Sept. 26.

The primary reasons cit-ed by the Faculty Senate for the vote of no confidence included the proposed fac-ulty review policies which violated the Faculty Man-ual; the evaluation proce-dures used to evaluate the College of Education and Public Service; inadequate response and leadership to issues remaining after the reorganization of the Grad-uate School; the complex procedures to gain approval for administrative activities such as hiring and sabbati-cals; and a lack of consider-ation for faculty input and poor collaboration on vari-

ous matters, including the role and the goals of the Strategic Plan.

The letter also said that should the University begin a search for a new leader for the Office of Academic Affairs, the Faculty Senate would be willing to work in collaboration to achieve the best possible outcome in an effort to promote the suc-cess of the University.

During the Faculty Senate meeting, senators voiced their concerns with Patankar’s leadership and his collaboration with the faculty. Senators also wor-ried about possible damage not only to faculty morale but the ability of the Univer-sity to attract and retain ef-fective professors.

This vote comes after the College of Arts and Sciences Council voted no

confidence in Patankar on Sept. 18. The council then brought the vote to the Faculty Senate, which con-ducted the vote after some deliberation. The council also sent some comments and feedback to the Office of the President, expressing their concerns and reasons for their actions.

On Sept. 24, the Chair-man of the Board of Trust-ees, Thomas Brouster, re-leased a letter to all faculty, staff and students stating that at the Sept. 22 meet-ing of the Board, the Trust-ees unanimously affirmed their confidence not only in the President and his Vice Presidents, but also af-firmed their approval of the University’s strategic plan-ning efforts and its goal to

See “Vote” on Page 3

See “Biondi” on Page 3

>> Graydon’s American dream

I don’t think the ad-ministration has shown that our system has failed... If anyone isn’t doing their job, they’re supposed to be fired.

“”

-Mark Kneupfer

Page 2: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012unewsonline.com2 NEWS

Be a Responsible BillikenSTOP. CALL. REPORT.

314-977-3000witness.slu.edu

dps.slu.edu

All Information Provided by Department of Public Safety

and Emergency Preparedness

Monday, Sept. 248:05 p.m. - SUPPLEMENTAL

A RA contacted DPSEP in regards to a harassment complaint from a previous incident. Officers were informed that a student that was involved in a room search for pos-sible marijuana was harassing other students by way of Facebook.

8:06 p.m. - SICK CASE A DPSEP officer responded to a call at Walsh Hall in regards to a student who was ill. Upon arrival of the officers, the student was alert, conscious and breathing. EMS was contacted. The student was transported to the SLUH ER. Pro Staff is aware.

Tuesday, Sept. 253:44 a.m. - PROPERTY DAMAGE

A student drove into the gate arm on the Seattle lot breaking off the bolt that holds it on. DPSEP responded to take the necessary information

for a report. The student had minor damage to her vehicle.

6:19 .m. - PROPERTY DAMAGEDuring the storm, two window panes in the Salus lobby were blownout and water began running in the lobby area near the fountain. Maintenance was notified and re-sponded. Maintenance notified a company to board up the win-dows.

THE SLU SCOOP

Let Us Introduce You: Molly CarrollStudent brings magic to campus with Dumbledore’s Army

By HANNAH WILEYStaff Writer

“Report a crime by texting a summary to 274637 (CRIMES). Text STOP to 274637 to cancel. Text HELP to 274637 for help. Message and data rates may apply.”

Dumbledore’s Army stands 300 strong. At least that’s how many names have been added to the club’s mailing list, some-thing President and found-er, sophomore Molly Car-roll is humbly proud of.

What was originally an idea posted on the Saint Louis University’s Class of 2015’s Facebook page last year has rapidly grown into one of the largest student organizations on campus.

Carroll, an English ma-jor, has had a deep relation-ship with the Harry Potter books since an early age.

In 1997, at the age of five years old, Caroll laid hands on her first Harry Potter book. She said she remem-bers her mom bringing home a book with a cover picturing a boy flying on a broom for her to read.

“I remember thinking ‘Why does that boy get to ride on a broomstick? I want to do that. It’s not fair!’” Carroll said. Her de-vout loyalty to the series and her tendency toward leadership lead Carroll to begin Dumbledore’s Army when she was only a fresh-man at SLU. The one and only Harry Potter-centric club on campus quickly at-tracted memebers. Now that the fan club has fin-ished the probationary pe-riod mandated for all new student groups, the newly chartered organization is beginning to plan their events for the year.

Carroll and her “team” are working to plan Wiz-ard Rock (or Wrock) con-certs, Harry Potter movie showings, trivia nights and a spring Yule Ball. The Dumbledore’s Army Quid-ditch Team is already gear-ing up to compete against the Quidditch teams at Web-ster, Fontbonne, Mizzou and Washington University. The team is also aspiring to play in the Midwest Tour-nament of the International Quidditch Association.

Though the events are aimed at the big Potter fans

on campus, Carroll wants to cater to the less enthusiastic as well. Membership in the group is not mandatory and all are welcome at Dumb-ledore’s Army meetings and events. Carroll said her reasoning for this is that she wants to exude the core val-ues of Harry Potter in her leadership position: loyalty and acceptance. When one takes into account Carroll’s emphasis on these two vir-tues, it is not surprising that her favorite character from the series is Severus Snape, the potions master at Hog-warts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

“I identified with him a lot in the fifth book; he was picked on a lot,” Carroll said. “And I think that he would be one of my friends. I loved his story with Lily; I actually had to put the book down and cry when he died.”

Carroll said Snape is easy to relate to because he was bullied, something many people have dealt with in their lives. It is because of this that Carroll wants Dumbledore’s Army to be a very welcoming group. It

is also not much of a sur-prise that Carroll’s favorite book was “The Order of the Phoenix”, the fifth book in the overall series, as it is in this book when Dumb-ledore’s Army formed and fought against the injustice of the new headmistress.

“There’s a certain spirit of rebellion when they all go against establishment. And that’s kind of what stu-dent organizations are all about” Caroll said.

In everything that Car-roll has accomplished thus far in her time as Dumb-ledore’s Army president, she has used the passion she discovered in J.K. Row-ling’s writing.

With a keen interest in fantasy and Sci-Fi writing, Carroll wants to eventu-ally use media in the same way she believes Rowling to have done. She wants to make the world a better place.

As the might of Dumb-ledore’s Army saved the day in the beloved story, the SLU chapter of Dumb-ledore’s Army is well on its way to bringing some much needed magic to campus.

SGA: Blue Ribbon Committee discussedContinued from Page 1

John Schuler/ Photo Editor

the evaluation system the FSEC proposed to Patan-kar was not present in his draft policy. He stated that the FSEC is in support of a post-tenure review process that’s focused on develop-ment. An example he men-tioned wassending profes-sors to centers focused on improving educators’ per-formance.

Knuepfer said the policy was shared with SLU Fac-ulty due to the controversial nature of the proposal. The Faculty Senate’s vote of no confidence in Patankar on Tuesday night cited his fail-ure to provide leadership on issues concerning fac-ulty performance amongst others.

Knuepfer stated that his greatest concern with the drafted policy was that, de-

spite the potentially positive effects of a post-tenure re-view process, the final deci-sion of employment fell in the hands of Patankar.

Another big concern for Knuepfer has been the lack of communication between President Lawrence Biondi and the faculty.

“I know people at other Jesuit universities that sit down with their president quite often and discuss matters,” Knuepfer said, whereas he finds it hard to get in contact with Biondi. SLU faculty is also left out of budgetary talks, one reason Knuepfer believes that the faculty at SLU is the most underpaid of any American Catholic university.

In the debate following the presentations, some students wanted SGA to rail against Patankar and pass their own vote of no confi-dence due to the constant

controversy and perceived failures resulting from his time in his position.

Other students denied a call for no confidence, argu-ing that removing Patankar would only create more un-certainty and turmoil. No vote was taken.

The assembly concluded with a bill introducing five new senators.

Another bill proposing an amendment to allow SGA to call a special meet-ing at the end of a school year was brought up. The amendment is a response to the pocket veto SGA Presi-dent Emeritus Matt Ryan used at the end of the last school year.

Despite the senate’s pas-sage of a bill banning tickets in SGA executive elections, Ryan vetoed the bill before the end of the school year, effectively making the sen-ate’s votes null.

Page 3: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

NEWS 3unewsonline.comSEPTEMBER 27, 2012

Arts and Science, where he remained until 1987.

Though Biondi had his beginnings at Loyola Chi-cago, his involvement at SLU began even before he became president. Begin-ning in 1982, he served as a member of the SLU Board of Trustees and his promo-tion was met with approval by the chair of the Board at the time, William Bush.

“We are vey enthusiastic about Fr. Biondi’s appoint-ment and feel that he will be a very capable leader for this fine and versatile uni-versity,” Bush said.

When Biondi first took office, his main goal was to improve the academic standing of SLU.

“The building boom of the eighties is all but con-cluded,” Biondi said in his address, “And our aim now must be to fill them with the very best professors and the most gifted and profes-sional students.”

Keeping his promise, Biondi wasted no time in creating a platform for

Biondi: President aims to improve SLU’s ranking

mail services should be up to date. Exline also noted, “[there are] still improve-ments to be made.”

The mail dilemma has had a grave effect on stu-dents. Sophomore Shannon Doherty waited a month be-fore she received important packages such as medicine and her drivers’ license.

Another sophomore Katie Maslar, agreed with Exline on the need for im-provement.

“I wish I could get my packages much faster.” Maslar said.

Sophomore Joseph Dubuque said he under-stood why the delay in mail happened, but would like to see a faster turnover time from the mailroom signing for the package to the stu-dent being notified and be-ing able to pick up package.

“I understand the mail-room has times when a lot of packages come in at once and it takes an extra day or two for the packages to be processed, but that hasn’t

Mail: Package delivery delay resolved

Biondi fields questions from Greek community

Kristen Miano / News Editor

Lawrence Biondi S.J., the president of Saint Louis University, meet and answered the questions of represenatives from the different fraternities and sororities of SLU’s Greek Life on Sept. 26 at 7 pm in the Multi-Purpose Room in Demattis Hall.

Group fights hunger in El Salvador By WOLF HOWARDAssociate News Editor

SLU academics to improve. In January 1989, he an-nounced the creation of a strategic planning commit-tee to develop goals that would guide the university into the next century.

Based on a survey sent to students, faculty and staff, Biondi laid out eleven goals for the strategic plan-ning committee in an inter-view with Joe Muelenkamp of The University News, including commitments to academic quality, the Jesuit mission, student success, financial responsibility and continued communication and planning.

After 25 years in office, it is undeniable that Biondi has improved the Univer-sity. As of 2012, the Uni-versity is ranked 92nd in the country. SLU is the only Je-suit institution with a school of Public Health and boasts a Health Law Program ranked number one in the county. The average ACT score of incoming freshmen is a 27, and over 90 percent of students receive some form of financial or merit-based aid. The number of

been the case,” Dubuque commented. “For those of us who ordered text books or perishable goods, a wait that long is unacceptable.”

According to Exline, dis-cussion to solve the mail room dilemma has been ongoing since last school year when the Residential Affairs Committee in SGA brought the matter to light. The RAC did research on why mail was not reaching SLU from the U.S. postal of-fice in a timely fashion.

This past summer, Ex-line spent time with the management of mail servic-es and researched the pro-cess of how mail goes from the U.S. postal office to SLU’s mail services. During this process, inefficiencies were found and progress was made in the processing procedure, but not as much as he had hoped.

“SGA will be pursuing any and all avenues to re-pair and advocate for a bet-ter mail system,” Exline said, “We encourage any-one and everyone to email SGA with any feedback and suggested improvements.”

Tortillas for Tepecoyo works to fight hunger in and form relationships with the rural community of Te-pecoyo, El Salvador.

The newly formed group hopes to help support the comedor, similar to a soup kitchen, in La Javia, Tepe-coyo through communica-tion and donations. The comedor in Tepecoyo was created and is maintained by a local woman named Angelica Portillo.

“’Tortillas is an opportu-nity not only to make sure mouths are fed but to make a real connection between two vastly different reali-ties,” Lindsay Noeson said.

Portillo decided to try to open a comedor in order to help children get proper nutrition and continue to develop and grow healthily.

La Javia is a small com-munity in El Salvador which used relied heavily on its agriculture. Bad weather and overuse of the land has destroyed the agricultural options for the community in recent years.

This left many of the fam-ilies of Tepecoyo without a steady form of income, and as a result it became harder and harder for parents to feed their children regu-larly. This in turn meant that children weren’t eating properly, if at all, and thus struggling both in terms of health and education, un-

able to learn and develop properly in school.

Portillo’s kitchen serves as a place where parents can send their children when they are struggling to pay for food and support their families.

According to Alexa Phil-lips, the group’s vice presi-dent, Portillo thought it would be impossible to suc-cessfully open a comedor. Even now, she struggles to keep her service running. Students that were in the community with the Casa de la Solidaridad have done their best to help support Portillo’s work.

Casa de la Solidaridad is a study abroad program based in El Salvador that brings together Salvadoran and American students at the university level to live in community with each other. The program focuses on ac-companiment, spirituality and relationship.

The comedor has been supported by various groups since it was opened 13 years ago, but never has enough funding to remain open indefinitely. There have been multiple occa-sions when Portillo had to shut the program down en-tirely.

Portillo’s kitchen now serves roughly 26 young people, ranging from ages five to 18, and functions solely on donations, most of which come from students interested in helping the community succeed.

Lindsey Weston, a se-

nior in the School of Social Work, with the help of Ella Guimond of University of San Diego and Katie Long of Marquette University started Tortillas for Tepe-coyo in an attempt to fur-ther support the commu-nity of Tepecoyo.

Weston created a web-site for the program in January of 2012 to try to gather donations. The orga-nization was based at Saint Louis University and began last Spring when Weston applied for a Bright Ideas Grant through the school.

Weston’s application for a grant highlighted the importance of nutrition in academic success, and the grant was written with the intention of heightening cultural awareness at SLU. Weston hopes that by get-ting involved with Tortillas for Tepecoyo, students can have valuable experiences with people from an entirely different culture.

“I believe there is an entirely different type of learning that can be gained through living, through conversations with peo-ple you’ve never met and through the exploration of other cultures,” Weston said. “Our goal is to share the knowledge we gained in El Salvador with as many people we can.”

Tortillas held their first meeting on Sept. 24.

“We did not want to come in as outsiders with the mentality that with our money, we could do any-

thing,” said Weston. “[We] did not want to simply ask for donations.”

Tortillas for Tepecoyo wants to focus on form-ing relationships between American students and the community of Tepecoyo first and foremost.

They hope to do this through a pen pal program where students correspond with children that benefit from the comedor.

Those currently involved in the program are all deep-ly attached to Tepecoyo, having already spent time there through the Casa pro-gram.

“The days I spent with the moms cooking and feed-ing the kids were some of the best experiences I had during my time [in El Salva-dor],” said Lindsay Noesen, a Casa alumnus and Physi-cal Therapy student at SLU.

“We want members who are invested in making re-lationships,” Weston said. “We want people to write letters and to be open to sharing and to be open to listening.”

A long-term goal of the group is to generate dona-tions for the comedor to re-main open for as long as the people of Tepecoyo need it. According to Weston, Tor-tillas plans to hold small funding events throughout the fall semester.

There is also a Night of Solidarity planned for the spring, an event including food, music, speakers and dances.

faculty on campus has in-creased significantly in the last 25 years and SLU now features and approximate 13-1 student to faculty ratio.

Beyond academics, Bion-di has also made strides in the University decision-m a k i n g pr ocess . Early in his ten-ure, he c r e a t e d the Presi-dent’s Co-o r d i n a t -ing Coun-cil, which came to be a con-s u l t i n g body com-prised of s t u d e n t , faculty and staff represen-tatives who serve to advise decision making as a means of shared governance.

During his time as presi-dent, Biondi has also over-seen some defining chang-es to SLU’s campus and surrounding Midtown area. The completion of Chaifetz Arena in 2008 not only gave

the Billiken Basketball pro-gram a permanent home, but also brought a new business venture into the area. The construction Ho-tel Ignacio, an upscale ho-tel located on Olive St., can also be attributed to Biondi.

The hotel has been a note-worthy part of the revi-talization of the Midtown area.

The mod-ern campus in nearly unrecogniz-able from the campus of 25 years ago thanks to numerous building and

renovation projects, which took place during Biondi’s term. He has worked to create an “urban” campus, an endeavor that has in-cluded the creation of malls on both the Frost and the Medical campuses, lined with trees, flowers and sculptures. He also oversaw the renovations of the John

Cook School of Business, the Pius Memorial Library and the Simon Recreation Center. Biondi also added parking lots to the area and integrated Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology with the Frost Campus.

Despite the accomplish-ments he has achieved, Biondi’s term has not been without controversy. In 1998, he came under fire for selling SLU teaching hospital for $330 million. In 1999, the Student Govern-ment Association voted ‘No Confidence’ on his admin-istration after parking rates increased by approximately 65 percent.

The effectiveness of shared governance at the University has been called to question several times over the years, resulting in some tension between the faculty, administration and students.

Biondi’s lawsuit against Communication profes-sor and former adviser of The University News, Avis Meyer, in 2007 over his use of SLU’s copyrighted name

when he tried to create an option for the student news-paper to move off campus drew fire from some stu-dents, faculty and other groups. The suit was settled in 2009, according to report-ing by the Post-Dispatch.

In recent months, Biondi was criticized when Annette Clark, former dean of the Law School, resigned her position. Clark alleged the Biondi had wrongly trans-ferred funds from the Law School to the President’s Opportunity Fund and had neglected to consult her on the decision to relocate the Law School to a downtown location.

After 25 years as presi-dent, Biondi is tied with Paul Reinert S.J. for the lon-gest tenure as SLU’s presi-dent. Biondi has no known plans to retire and will con-tinue to work to improve the University.

In the future, Biondi has plans to see SLU become the best Catholic institution in the nation break into the top 50 universities on the US News and World Report rankings.

Vote: Senate awaits response

Continued from Page 1

Continued from Page 1

Continued from Page 1

The building boom of the eighties is all but concluded, and our aim no must be to fill them with the very best pro-fessors and the most gifted and professional students

“”

-Lawrence Biondi

become a top-50 school.“In advancing the Univer-

sity’s efforts for excellence, the Board of Trustees fur-ther stated its support of the September 14, 2012 agreement of the Execu-tive Committee of the Fac-ulty Senate, the Academic Deans, the Vice Presidents and the President to pro-ceed with meaningful and continuous faculty develop-ment within the context of a collaborative process and implementation in order to continue to advance the University,” the letter from Brouster stated.

According to Clayton Berry, Assistant Vice Presi-dent for Communications, the administration was dis-appointed by the vote. 

“We believe we have act-ed reasonably and collabor-

atively in responding to the faculty’s concerns,” Berry said. “We don’t believe the vote was warranted.” 

Berry further noted that the University’s Board of Trustees has expressed its support for Biondi and all of SLU’s vice presidents. He added that Patankar will continue to work on the University’s strategic plan-ning process, while seeking ongoing collaboration with deans, academic depart-ment chairs and members of the faculty. 

“I don’t think you can doubt Dr. Patankar’s com-mitment to the institution and to moving the univer-sity forward,” Berry said. “He remains committed to working with the faculty and the Faculty Senate in a col-laborative way.”

The Faculty Senate asked that Biondi respond to their letter by Oct. 2.

John Schuler/ Photo Editor

Manoj Patanker answers questions from students at Wednesday’s SGA meeting.

Page 4: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

unewsonline.com

UOPINION

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012

Editorials are opinion pieces written by the Editorial Board of The University News. The editorials printed in this space represent the opinion of The University News. Commentaries and Letters to the Editor represent the opinions of the signed authors but do not necessarily represent the opinions of The University News.

EditorialsThe University News reserves the right not to publish any letters that are deemed intentionally and/or inappropriately inflammatory, more than the 300-word limit or unsigned by the original author. The following are letters and/or website comments. Because the identities of website posters cannot be verified, all website comments should be treated as anonymous. Actual letters to the editor may be submitted online at unewsonline.com or e-mailed to [email protected]. Please include your cell phone number.

Lettersto the editor

Quotesof the week

“I tried out in England but all I heard was, ‘you’re too small, you won’t make it because of your height and lack of strength.

”-David Graydon, freshman midfielder

See Page 11.

“Thre’s a certain spirit of rebellion when they all go against the establishment. And that’s kind of what student organizations are all about.

”-Molly Carroll, Dumbledore’s Army President

See Page 2.

Erika Klotz / Chief Illustrator

During SLU’s upcoming family weekend, many students will take their families on campus tours. A dorm or apartment building, College Church, the Busch Student Center, Simon Rec and Chaifetz will likely all be featured. Every need, physical, social or spiritual, seems to be provided for within these few city blocks, each one lined with blue SLU banners, bright flowerbeds and black metal arches with “Saint Louis University” in gold lettering.

SLU’s campus is undeniably beautiful, especially when the fountains are flowing and the flowers are in bloom. The facilities also leave little to be desired. Yet to remain within the box made by Compton, Laclede, Vandeventer and Lindell is to miss out on one of the principal benefits of attending SLU: its urban loca-tion.

Many universities, though they may have larger campuses or nicer amenities than SLU, are limited by their location. Oftentimes where the campus ends, the cornfield begins, and there is little to do off the campus. Not so with SLU; located in a vibrant and historic city, there are more things to do and places to visit than anyone could fit in a lifetime, let alone in four short years.

With the Grand Metrolink station open once again, car-free students can explore St. Louis with ease. Ju-niors and seniors may remember taking trips to the Loop or to a Cardinals or Blues game on the metro in their younger days. For SLU’s two newest classes, however, the new station offers up opportunities that they may have never even considered.

So this year, make a resolution to acquaint yourself with St. Louis. Enjoy the beautiful fall weather in For-est Park. Leaf through books in one of the Central

West End’s shops. See a concert in the Loop and grab some Froyo on the way out. Give your taste buds a multicultural experience in one of the many excellent restaurants on South Grand, or enjoy world-class art in Grand Center, just a block north of SLU. The Hill is a short taxi ride away, and the Italian fare offered there ranges from college-affordable (for that date you’re planning) to higher-end (for when the parents are in town).

For those who are of age, there are more nightlife options in St. Louis than just Humps and the Library Annex. Have a pint at one of Soulard’s many bars, or head to Laclede’s Landing for happening nightlife in a historic setting. St. Louis is also home to a number of excellent microbreweries, with Urban Chestnut and Six Row Brewing Company within walking distance of SLU.

Of course, as in all cities, it’s important to be aware of your surroundings in order to stay safe. Travel in groups and make sure you know where you’re going. A few precautions go a long way, and while there are risks associated with traveling through the city, they are often worth taking in order to get the most out of your college experience. And as always, drinking and driving is never acceptable; call a cab and you will never regret it.

So enjoy SLU. College is too brief not to make the most of it. But also broaden your horizons and take time to explore and enjoy the city. They say most learning occurs outside the classroom; it may be that your most valuable learning experiences occur outside the campus. Then, when the family comes in from out of town, you can show them more than just a campus. You can show them a city.

Short on cash and even shorter on time, most col-lege students treat meals like a NASCAR driver treats a pit stop. Eating is an act of necessity focused more on refueling than on relaxation.

Perhaps this tendency is not limited to college campuses. How many families still sit down on a regu-lar basis and eat a meal together? When they do, how often did they cook that meal themselves? The time-honored tradition of family mealtime has had its foun-dations shaken by demographic and social changes, as well as by the generally faster pace of contempo-rary life.

How have these changes affected us? The impact may be greater than most people realize.

First, the move towards quick meals and fast food has resulted in a decline in appreciation for food as an art form. Sure, frozen pizza makes a good dinner in a pinch, but do you spend time savoring it? Is the flavor at all memorable? Most quick meals serve as a sort of “human chow,” low in flavor and mostly just filler.

Second, not paying attention to what you eat can have serious health consequences. When you take time to prepare a meal, you are more aware of what goes into it. Who knows what comes in that micro-waveable box you bought at Schnucks? Take a look at the back and you’ll likely find that one cannot survive on cheesy bread alone. It’s a lot easier to get nutrients from fresh food, even if it takes longer to prepare and requires more frequent trips to the grocery store.

Yet perhaps the most harmful effects of the demise of the dinner are the indirect ones. Sitting down with friends or family for a meal is a socially cohesive ex-perience. It blocks off a period of time in which peo-ple can communicate and form bonds, and even on a college campus few things are more certain to bring people together than food. When people work togeth-er to prepare a meal it provides even more time in which to build relationships. The social experience of a community meal is hard to reproduce in any other setting; mostly everyone eats dinner, but beyond that people’s schedules tend to vary wildly.

Many people turn to restaurants to address these needs. St. Louis is full of great eateries, and it isn’t hard to find a place with tasty, healthy food that a group of friends can share together. Even on-campus dining works for the college student on a budget; many a freshman friendship has been forged over the ritual of Sunday brunch in Gries cafeteria.

Ultimately, however, it is important that we don’t totally give up on the old-fashioned home cooked meal. Try it sometime; it’s a fun learning experience to cook a meal with your roommates or friends, even if the results are underwhelming.

Moreover, there is no better way to get to know your friends than to share stories over a meal. We’re all pressed for time in the rat-race of college life, but every once in a while be sure to take a moment to stop and smell the risotto.

Break out of the “SLU bubble”

Making the most of your meals in college

“Freedom of the press—print, online and broadcast—is a basic

right in a democratic society and is valuable in promoting

the development of students as socially responsible persons ...

The University News is a student voice, not the student voice. The views of The University News are the expressions of the students

involved ... If [The University News] can represent a point of view around which discussion may develop, it serves a legiti-mate and needed purpose.”- From The University News’

Charter

The University News is a member of the Associated

Collegiate Press, the Student Press Law Center, the College

Media Advisers and the Missouri College Media Association, a division of the Missouri Press

Association.

First copy, free. Each additional copy, $1.00.

Unews

editor-in-chiefBrian [email protected]

managing editorTJ Keeley [email protected]

news editorKrisTen [email protected]

assoc. news editorwolf [email protected]

enterPrise editorderriCK [email protected]

design directorBrianna [email protected]

oPinion editormiChael [email protected]

sPorts editorCharles [email protected]

assoc. sPorts editorTony [email protected]

arts editoralanah [email protected]

assoc. arts editormaGGie [email protected]

online editorChrisTopher [email protected]

multimedia directoremily [email protected]

PhotograPhY editorJohn [email protected]

chief coPY editorhilary [email protected]

coPY editorhallie [email protected]

coPY editorlizzie [email protected]

fashion editorJUlia [email protected]

science editorGaBriele [email protected]

religion editoradnan [email protected]

general managerConnor [email protected]

account executivesraChel CamBellnaTalie GrassoniCK sTeinaUer

advisorslaUra Thomsondon [email protected]

the editorial board of the university news recognizes avis meyer, ph.d. as the newsPaPer’s facultY mentor.

2012-13 ediTorial Board

Founded by Claude Heithaus, S.J.

Busch Student CenterSuite 354

20 N. Grand Blvd. St. Louis, MO 63103

Newsroom: (314) [email protected]

Advertising: (314) [email protected]

unewsonline.comfacebook.com/theunews

twitter.com/theunews

“It felt awesome. We were pretty intimidated, but it went really well.

”-Christine Couch, hot air balloon crew member

See Page 7.

“By understanding each other, we can begin to erase the misunderstanding and stereotyping between many Jews and Christians

”-Amy-Jill Levine, professor at Vanderbilt Divinity School

See Page 9.

Erika Klotz/ Chief Illustrator

Page 5: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

Only an extremist would say summer or winter is the best season. It’s too much

of one t h i n g —which can never end well. Ev-er ything in moder-ation is a good rule of thumb: too much f o o d ? O b e s i t y. Too much sunlight?

Skin cancer.Okay, maybe I’m

being a little too d r a m a t i c . But autumn is the absolute perfect combination of the best parts of the other seasons, and, of course, boasts its own unique charm, as well.

When I imagine my ideal morning, it’s fall. I wake up and feel warm between my covers, but am greeted by cool air when I hop out of bed. (Yes, I hop out of bed. I’m a morning person.) I drink coffee outside, where I can almost see my breath, but don’t feel cold because the blazing sun still warms my skin. It’s absolutely di-vine.

Fall at SLU fits my bill. Most obviously, the change of season provides respite from the humidity that characterizes and curses, St. Louis summers. Being able to take a deep breath of fresh air without feeling like I am drowning is pref-erable.

I am about to divulge a best-kept secret to you. To the few of you who have

When my dad was grow-ing up on the north side of Chicago, he lived in a pre-

dominant-ly Polish n e i g h -borhood, w h i c h was filled with im-m i g r a n t f a m i l i e s and first-g e n e r a -tion U.S. c i t izens. T h e h o u s e

he was raised in was the house his father, my grand-pa, was born in, and my great-grandparents lived on the first floor while my dad’s family lived upstairs. Great-grandpa Valentine and Great-grandma Anna had come from Poland to escape from poverty and build a better life for them-selves and their children — to chase the “American Dream”, like many immi-grant families.

My great-grandpa was a tailor and never went to college and my grandpa earned a bachelor’s degree in Accounting. Then my dad was the first in his fam-ily to get a master’s degree,

OPINION 5unewsonline.comSEPTEMBER 27, 2012

Why fall is the best season of them all

Commentary

martina Boyter

There’s a doorway ahead of me blocked by a dense haze, and I don’t know

what’s on the other side, but it seems like it keeps get-ting clos-er and closer to me, even t h o u g h I’m not moving. It makes me anxious ,

but at the same time I have this need to go rushing through it, as I always do when something challenges my courage.

There’s been a lot on my mind lately. It seems like there’s always a lot on my mind, but there’s some-thing different about it now.

I just turned 20, I’m work-ing steadily for the first time and I have actually allowed a schedule to dictate how I go about my day. I’ve been filling out W-4s and taking leadership roles and plan-ning my life a year ahead of time.

That last point blows me away: I have actually begun to look at scholarships and applications for this sum-mer, right now instead of in mid-January when half the deadlines have already passed. Perhaps you know those nifty sheets your ma-jor director hands out with all the credits you need to take and where you have time for what: I actually went through one of those to lay out my class sched-ule for the next two years! I can’t name the last time I took a faculty handout seri-ously.

It’s a peculiar thing. I don’t have time to think about how much I have to do and when I have to do it while going through hours of photos on the internet and articles full of facts I’ll never remember. I actually have to start things, or they won’t get done so long as 24 hours make up a day.

I’m already more than halfway to adult life out-side of academia (unless, of course, grad school is on the horizon, but god help me if I spend another 2 years pur-suing a graduate degree in environmental physics for the sake of a job).

Soon I won’t be sur-rounded by a community of friends and classmates to grow closer to on a week-end night on the fringes of sleep and the sunrise.

It will be me, and maybe another roommate or two. We’ll live together and go to work separately, talking about our goofy co-workers or what project is coming up. We’ll meet up with a few of our other older friends at the bars and shoot the breeze, drink a bit too much before work the next morn-ing. There will be trips to Vegas and job promotions to consider. Taxes and bills and bank accounts; new cars, suits, computers.

I’m putting a lot of faith

Commentary

Hilary KoraBiK

Creating communities after the American Dream

Most of my TV watch-ing isn’t done on a TV at all. There aren’t that many

s h o w s that I want to w a t c h , I don’t h a v e m u c h time to w a t c h them and the net-works in-consider-ately re-fuse to air

new episodes based on my schedule. So when I want to turn my brain to mush, the laptop is typically my glow-ing rectangle of choice.

But every now and then my laziness reaches such heights that I can’t be both-ered to find shows online. There’s something to be said for walking in the apart-ment after a long day, flop-ping on the couch, pressing a button and simply vegetat-ing. Perhaps because I feel guilty about zombifying my-self when I should be doing homework, or perhaps be-

cause I’m a nerd, I have his-torically turned to The His-tory Channel as my favorite inactive entertainment (get it? historically?).

Lately, though, I’ve been severely disappointed with the programming on my preferred educational-ish cable channel. See, The History Channel, or just History as it is now called, just doesn’t have any… well, history.

Gone are the days when shows about Nazis stood at attention at nearly all hours. For a while there was a phase where nearly every show was based on the latest movie fad; at least those contained plenty of bad battle dramatizations and animated maps. I liked the historical analysis of “Valkyrie,” even though I already knew the ending (Spoiler alert: Hitler gets away). But even Spartans are sparse on History nowa-days, when just a few years ago there was a daily mara-thon of shows about Mara-thon followed by lengthy lessons on Leonidas.

If you went on one of

the same treasured study spot as me, I apologize for perhaps ruining the peace and quiet. The best place to study on all of SLU’s cam-pus is the Cupples’ patio. It has a romantic air about it that motivates me to read Victorian literature. The flora is exquisite, but not over the top, and for most of the day, half of the patio is shaded and the other half is under the sun, so I stay comfortable.

No season compares to fall in the number of dis-tinctive pastimes perfect for family or friends. Every year, I look forward to apple picking, carving pumpkins and corn mazes. I cannot explain the thrill of walking in circles through a corn maze for hours, but I love it. And it’s the best when the farm creates a cool design, like the Boy Scout logo or Abraham Lincoln’s profile! No other season has such fun activities for everyone exclusive to that season.

I can’t forget the autumn holidays: Halloween and Thanksgiving. They are two of the best holidays for very different reasons. The excitement of Halloween comes with the anticipation: the costume, strategic plan-ning to get the most and best candy (chocolate rath-er than raw sugar), watch-ing scary movies or Hocus Pocus in your best friend’s basement and attending costume parties.

Thanksgiving is my fa-vorite holiday because of the tradition. I run the 5K Turkey Trot with my fam-ily, listen to “Alice’s Res-taurant” and eat obscene

amounts of stuffing with the people I love most. Now, arguing against fall makes you seem like a jerk.

Another great part of fall is the freedom I have in choosing an outfit. Unless you are an indecisive per-son who feels overwhelmed by the notion of having more choices, you will agree with me. In the fall, you can wear shorts and a sweatshirt. You can wear jeans and a short-sleeved T-shirt. If you are one of those people who has poor circu-lation, wearing jeans and a jacket is finally acceptable! Or, if you’re into this sort of thing, you can wear shorts and Uggs. My point is that all combinations of cloth-ing pieces have free reign in fall.

Another enticement of fall is the Bath & Body Works fall product line. Hear me out! This fall, Bath & Body works released five

different collections. The “Cider Lane” collection has five scents that appeal to the homemaker that wants home to smell like the out-doors. The “Halloween Boo-tique” collection (so cute!) includes scents like “Vam-pire Blood” and “Bat Bite.” This line caters to mothers teaching their 10-year-old sons to wash their hands “because it’s fun!” It also finds customer loyalty in those boys 10 years down the road, when they know they need to buy soap, and were dragged into the store by a female, but would nev-er be caught dead buying “Cashmere Glow.”

Fall is the best because of its authenticity. Enjoy nature, be with those you care about, wear whatever the heck you want and don’t freak out when you have to stick your hand inside your pumpkin to pull out the pumpkin guts.

History’s shows today and asked the subjects, “What is your profession?!” they wouldn’t answer astronaut, aviator, sailor or “SPAR-TAN!” They’d probably say something like… trucker. Now I’ve driven down plenty of highways in my time and it’s never exciting. “But wait, Mike!” History fanboys say, “The highway is made of ice!” Fascinat-ing. My interest has been piqued sufficiently to last me through one episode. Seriously, though, unless you’re Napoleon or Jon Snow, I don’t have any inter-est in hearing tales of how you traveled for miles over a frigid, featureless tundra.

Then there’s the ever-present “Pawn Stars.” At first I thought the only thing keeping this show on the air was a steady stream of male viewers who misheard the title. By now, though, it seems to have displaced even the classic “Modern Marvels” as the flagship of History, now more aptly called the Home Shopping Network for Men. Grant-ed, the show was fun for a

while, and it might make history more interesting for the weird people who don’t like endless reenactments of Gettysburg. After a few episodes, though, you real-ize how repetitive it is:

Seller: “Hey I’ve got this (old thing) and I want to sell it.”

Rick: “Wow that’s cool! Here’s some facts about (old thing) that I apparently have stored in my balding database of a head” (wheez-ing).

Meanwhile, Chumlee has bought something and is playing with it in the store.

Rick: “So how much do you want for it?”

Seller: “A lot of money.”Rick: “How about a little

money.”Seller: “Ok.” (Alternate

ending: “No.”)Congratulations, you

have now watched every ep-isode ever of “Pawn Stars.”

I could make an incisive social critique about how Americans have become such consumerists that we are now entertained by watching people buy things.

Commentary

miKe Hogan

From the Parthenon to ‘Pawn Stars’: The decline of a television empire

Doorway to adulthoodin the fact that my friends and I will be prosperous. Perhaps we won’t be, and all of this will change to looking for jobs, scraping together rent and playing in bands because we’ve run out of ways to salvage our sanity. Regardless, that mo-ment is coming.

That moment where you look around and realize your parents aren’t watch-ing over you constantly. They don’t linger over your shoulder like an over-zealous editor checking for typos. You aren’t doing their work anymore, you’re doing your own. They are beside you, and their most important project is done.

Slowly but surely, I, and all of those around me, are claiming our lives. All of our mix-ups and mess-ups will be left to us to solve. There will be dates and dates with friends and dates with par-ents. Talks of moving in and blending spaces. Talks of furniture and neighbor-hoods. Slowly, we’ll become the ones getting ready to stumble about trying to raise our own children.

I’ve gone a little far, per-haps. Let’s scale back.

I’m just settling in to the groove of my third year of college and as I said, I’ve been considering a lot of things. About my future and about my past and how ev-erything’s coming together to be such a constant pres-ent. About who I am and what I aim to become.

I’ve been considering how all of us are what’s coming next to this world. We are truly the future teachers and doctors and leaders. It’s not so distant and strange to think of as when they told it to me in high school. I can see how things might actually end up that way.

All those people that I used to see bustling about me, taking lunch breaks in suits when I went to down-town Chicago --- we are go-ing to be them.

Some might feel anxiety at the prospect, unable to face the end of the fun that is college life. Others might be ready and rearing to dive head-on into money work instead of school work. It seems like these emotions are a function of age, with those closer to the end yearning for a restart at the beginning.

In all honesty, I don’t think any of us are truly pre-pared for what lies ahead of us. I mean mentally: I don’t think we realize what adult life is actually like, just like we never realized what high school was like in grade school nor college in high school. We have ideas, glimpses, but the re-ality always has so much more depth than our hopes, dreams and fears.

The real world is just on the other side, as all my ad-visers and uncles have told me, and the doorway is cov-ered in a fog. But I believe it’s far better to charge in headlong than to keep fret-ting about the inevitable.

Commentary

Wolf HoWard

But I’m not going to. Frank-ly, I don’t really care. I just want History to bring back the Nazis, dinosaurs and Spartans. I want to watch a show about the Pyramids of Giza that doesn’t have aliens in it. I want to sit on my couch and passively learn about history, not hy-pothetical future scenarios or half-baked conspiracy theories. I’m told that the old shows air on History’s auxiliary channel, H2, but I’ll travel to Egypt and see the Sphinx myself before

I’ll pay to see it on an extra channel.

I haven’t given up hope on the old gold H yet. The “Hatfields and McCoys” miniseries was pretty good, and there’s a new show coming out about the American “Robber Barons” that looks intriguing. But if those fall through, I won’t have much use for my TV besides watching sports.

So if the Cardinals don’t do well next season, come watch me sell my TV at a local pawn shop. I’m sure it

and in May I will be the first woman on my dad’s side of the family to get a four-year college degree. With each generation, my family has gained more opportunities for growth and experience and a higher quality of liv-ing. Check. Done. Ameri-can Dream? Achieved.

My family’s story is nothing unique; many im-migrant families have had similar stories of success. We’ve definitely gained a lot — but have we lost some-thing, too?

The journey of my family parallels that of our society from a community-based culture to one very much focused on the individual. Not that family isn’t impor-tant anymore. In fact, quite the contrary. But I grew up on the other side of the city from most of my extended family. It was a big deal to go to an aunt or uncle’s house because they weren’t part of our everyday lives. We saw them regularly, but not in the capacity that my dad saw his grandparents, aunts and uncles.

I recently saw a birthday card that read something along the lines of, “Hap-piness is a close-knit fam-ily that lives in different

zip codes.” Funny, at first. Whose family doesn’t drive them crazy once in a while? But after a little contempla-tion, it’s actually a bit sad. My cousins in Ireland all live within a few minutes of each other and, undeni-ably, they get on each oth-er’s nerves sometimes. But they also help babysit, drive each other’s kids around, visit each other for a cup of tea. As a culture, we’ve lost the art of being together.

They say it takes a vil-lage to raise a child. There’s no question that friends are the family we choose for ourselves, and our friends can be extremely positive influences on our lives. But wouldn’t it be nice if more of that village were filled with people who are related to us? Who have to love us, regardless of whether or not they like us at any given time? Alternatively, it’s still important to recognize that some of the most influential people in our lives are not in our family — they are our friends, our teachers, our random acquaintances, our role models.

My grandparents and great-grandparents were motivated to work hard and improve their quality

of life because every day was a struggle to make ends meet. Now, here I am, a senior at Saint Louis University, privileged more than I can understand. I’ve been told my entire college career that this time is for me, a time for me to better myself, to learn about who I am, to get a degree and get a good job. But there are many people who don’t have the privileges I do. And at some point, my qual-ity of life will stop improving — but the privilege I have been given doesn’t have to stop with me.

Our culture has become all about me, me, me. More, more, more. We’ve lost our concept of community. We are striving to improve ourselves, to improve our lives, to make things easier for ourselves. What are we working toward as a human collective? What are we go-ing to do that is not for our-selves, that contributes to the greater good, to a bet-ter world? No matter our individual backgrounds, we as SLU students are all privileged to be here, to be getting a college degree, to be learning every day. We can all afford to give a little something back.

“I’m sorry, but this isn’t real history... I’ll give you 10 cents for it.”

Mike Hogan/ Opinion Editor

Mike Hogan / Opinion Editor

Page 6: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012unewsonline.com6 GAMES

CROSSWORD

WORD SEARCH

SUDOKU

LAST WEEK’S SOLUTIONS

LAST WEEK’S SOLUTIONS

Page 7: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012U unewsonline.com

ARTSJunior Andrew Long fronts band “Once Upon a Time”

Photo courtesy of Once Upon a Time

By TONY TRAINAAssociate Sports Editor

SLU student’s band plays at Firebird

SLU junior Andrew Long performs as part of his pop-rock band “Once Upon a Time.”

It’s arduous work avoid-ing the obligatory pun that effortlessly surfaces when writing about a band that calls itself Once Upon a Time, but here it goes.

Like the band name, the band itself is a bit of a child-hood cliché, harkening fans back to the simpler days of falling in love with the girl at the rock show or along Ocean Avenue.

The band, led by SLU ju-nior Andrew Long, an Arizo-na native, played their first out-of-state show this past weekend at the Firebird, opening for The Hollywood Ending and The After Party.

“It felt awesome. We were pretty intimidated, but it went really well,” said Long.

It didn’t take long to rec-ognize the band’s audience, my elbows unkindly intro-ducing themselves to the faces of a few avid pre-teen fans as I walked through the Firebird’s doors.

Indeed, the band makes no apologizes for its musi-cal sound, playing covers of the 2001 boy band hit “Hey Juliet” and current overplayed humdinger “Call Me Maybe.” On this night, though, teenagers were out-numbered as SLU students showed up in mass.

“Our goal is simply to make catchy songs with lyr-ical substance,” said Long, the voice and pen behind the band’s lyrics.

It’s this simple strategy that has propelled Long and his five-piece pop-rock band to success; the boys released an EP on iTunes in February of this year, pro-pelling them to seemingly overnight popularity in their home state of Arizona.

Bolstered by the EP re-lease and subsequent sum-mer shows on the West Coast, the band’s Facebook page jumped from a paltry 5,000 “likes” to more than 16,000.

Of course, the success was not overnight. The EP was over two years in the making and the band landed opening gigs for the likes of Allstar Weekend and The Rocket Summer before coming to St. Louis and leaving a footprint on the national stage.

One listen to Long’s lyr-ics leaves no doubt that Long has accomplished at least one of his goals. He writes about the elementa-ry emotions every teenager experiences: hate, loneli-ness and, of course, love.

“Baby, open your eyes/ maybe you will realize that your Mr. Right/ is in plain sight,” he sings on “Open Your Eyes,” the title track of the eponymously named EP.

And what teenage girl with elbows in her face can’t relate to that simplicity? The band performed this song and two other origi-nals in their Firebird set, along with well-known cov-ers, leaving the audience with enough catchy and cli-chéd couplets to sing all the way home.

“We understand that our music typically caters to a younger audience,” Long said, adding that the band “hopes to keep developing a more mature pop-rock sound with [their] next re-cord.”

The next album is still in the process of being writ-ten, but the band and fans alike are excited about what the future will bring. As for now, though, the band heads back home to Phoe-nix to open for The Holly-

wood Ending again on Oct. 5.

The band’s sound is a welcome relief for the teen-ager in all of us, providing a chance to sing along and play our air guitar as the in-strument inevitably comes crashing in for the hook

while Long sends his vo-cals soaring higher. In fact, college students could be seen around the Firebird doing all of this while Long and his band mates enjoyed themselves on stage.

“I know that there has to be/ something else out

there for me/ but will I find it?” Long asks on another track, “What Am I Looking For.”

Well, once upon a time, he found what he was look-ing for in the form of a vast-ly popular pop-punk band. And there’s our pun.

The wait is over: Mumford & Sons

returnsBy STEPHANIE

MUELLERStaff Writer

They are the beautiful median between hipster and mainstream; the unex-pected lull between power and calm; the musical ho-rizon between a banjo in a forgotten barn and a full-stage production. Welcome to Mumford and Sons.

“Babel” is the newest re-lease from the quartet and only their second studio album. Not like you could know that from their ever-growing fan base, seamless transition onto the musical A-List and an unprecedent-ed six Grammy nomina-tions.

Mumford and Sons had an innate, incomprehensi-ble power to, at risk of being unnecessarily cliché, awake the soul in their freshmen release “Sigh No More.” They had a power to drive emotions from their collec-tive listeners with simple and beautiful lyricism, a tal-ent that, when juxtaposed with such lyrical genius as, “We are never, ever, ever getting back together,” tru-ly shines.

But “Babel” is not the diabolical experience that “Sigh No More” provided. “I Will Wait,” released prior to the rest of the album, drew faithful Mumford fans in, hoping that this album would be as earth-shattering as the first. Their wait might have been in vain, though, if they were in search of the Mumford sound with a new, matured twist.

The title track, “Babel” is remarkably similar to past Mumford gems, a downfall on the creativity front. From a commercial-ization standpoint, why fix something that isn’t bro-ken, right? Someday, many years from now, the main-streamed world will hear the token Mumford and

Sons song reincarnated for the umpteenth time and decide it’s time for a change. Today is probably not that day, a reassurance the band will need as the term “sophomore slump” is thrown around in the com-ing weeks.

In the wake of Mumford and Sons’ first release, a plethora of bands followed suit in their pursuit of Mum-ford-esque popularity. Popu-larizing the formerly hid-den folk-sound, Mumford now finds themselves in the company of up-and-com-ers like The Head and the Heart and Imagine Drag-ons, all of which are tapping into the unprecedented realm of the coveted and genuine “unique.” Mum-ford and Sons needs more than this fallback sound to stay relevant. The true stars of this album come in the bonus tracks, particularly “Where Are You Now?” and the cover of a Simon and Garfunkel hit, “The Boxer.”

Inserting their trade-mark soul to the latter, the fact that a cover can out-shine the original work of the album is a testament to the room to grow that Mumford has left.

“Where Are You Now?” has the classic narrative, if sometimes repetitive, style that Mumford has worked to perfect without incor-porating the ingrained for-mula of the rising pluck of a banjo leading up to the admittedly cohesive harmo-ny, eventually culminating with a raspy and bold high note of some songs on the album.

In my eyes, Mumford and Sons can do no harm. “Babel” is, more or less, “Sigh No More: Part 2.” But I, along with the mil-lions that bought that first release, loved it because of that classic sound. “Babel” is not different or innova-tive but it is soul-rousing, ear-pleasing good.

September 29

Steve VaiThe Pagaent8 p.m.$30

OUTOn The

TOWnArTs ediTOr’s Picks

Music

Other

September 27Anthony HamiltonFox Theatre7:30 p.m.from $40

September 29The Fab FourSheldon Concert Hall7:30 p.m.$35

September 28-30St. louis Symphony Opening Weekend: Pines of RomePowell Symphony HallFri: 10:30 a.m., Sat: 8 p.m., Sun: 3 p.m.from $30

September 28-

Midsummer Night’s DreamGrandel TheatreFri and Sat: 8 p.m., Sun: 2 p.m., Thurs: 7:30 p.m.$15

September 28-29St. Louis Scottish Games and Cultural FestivalForest ParkFri: 5-10 p.m.Sat: 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.$10-20

September 296th Annual Dancing in the StreetGrand Center Arts and Entertainment District1-8 p.m.free

Theatre

September 28-29The Improvised Shake-spear ComedyTouhill Performing Arts Center at UMSLFri: 8 p.m., Sat: 5 p.m. & 9 p.m.$30

September 28-30Charter Taste of St. LouisSoldier’s MemorialFri: 4-11 p.m., Sat: 11 a.m.-11p.m., Sun: 11 a.m.-9 p.m.free

October 7

64th Emmy AwardsSunday, Sept. 23rd

WINNERS:Drama Series:

Homeland

Comedy Series: Modern Family

Miniseries or Movie: Game Change

Variety, Comedy or Musical Series: The Daily Show With Jon Stewart

Reality-Competition Program: The Amazing Race

Lead Actor, Comedy: Jon Cryer, Two and a Half Men

Lead Actress, Comedy: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Veep

Lead Actor and Actress, Drama: Damian Lewis and Claire Danes of Homeland

Modern Family took home five Emmy’s (of the 14 nomina-tions) and the top awards in their category. Homeland was nominated for nine Emmy’s and took home six. Those two

shows were the big winners this year.

Design by Bri Radici / Design Director

Page 8: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

SEPTEMBER 27, 20128 ARTS unewsonline.com

cert, EOTO (EE-oh-toh) is improvised every night on tour. Some tours have last-ed as long as 200 days.

According to vocalist and drummer Jason Hann, EOTO uses “a spiderweb of cables, live instruments, computers, touch screens and MIDI controllers...helping us do our thing all improvised— no songs, no set lists—and to do it live in front of the audience.”

After a short break, Hann went back to experi-ence what he described as the “jumping off the cliff feeling” of improvisation with Michael Travis (bass, guitar, keys).

Travis plucked out a bass rhythm that looped over and over as the lotus sculp-ture came to life. The petals transformed from white pet-als to leaves, circuit boards

Festival celebrates the ‘Second City of Jazz’By SARAH MALLICK

Staff Writer

Photos by:Sarah Mallick / Staff Writer

A crowd gathers this past weekend to watch Tracer ft. Ptah Williams perform at the Jazz Festival in Herman Park, organized by Mike and Rob Silverman.

Last Saturday was cool, crisp and windy in Herman Park, as the earthy tones of a tenor saxophone followed the trills of a piano during the second annual Univer-sity City Jazz festival.

The festival was a pleas-ant opportunity for people in the area to come and ap-preciate a truly American style of music.

It included groups such as Tracer and St. Louis Me-trobones.

The festival attracted more than 1,500 specta-tors last year, thanks to the diligent efforts of Mike and Rob Silverman. This year, the Silverman brothers pre-dicted twice that amount, and many people of all ages were able to attend.

According to Mike Sil-verman, the mission of the festival is “to bring free jazz to the community and educate the younger gen-erations about traditional music.”

The festival has certainly revived traditional music in University City, where blues and jazz have a strong presence. In fact, St. Louis itself is known as the “Sec-ond City of Jazz,” New Or-leans being the first.

Rob Silverman says “jazz traveled up the river,” and it has proven true as many prominent jazz artists, such as Miles Davis and Chuck Berry, hail from St. Louis.

What really spawned the jazz movement, and what makes this style of music wildly popular even today, is what Diane Davenport terms the “freedom within the music.”

Davenport, who helped organize the festival, aptly describes how jazz is “char-acterized by harmony and improvisation where the actual melodic lines are not planned.”

Like many other art forms, jazz stresses the composition of the overall

piece rather than the indi-vidual parts. A jazz piece comes together beautifully in the end and is more spon-taneous than a traditional, structured piece of music.

One could definitely hear the harmonizing of various instruments in “Caribbean Nights” by Bob James. Jazz

music is more free-flowing than other types of music; it’s almost as if the musi-cians are playing with the instruments and stumble upon something wonderful overall.

The Silverman brothers had their own contribution to the festival, with “Bach

to the Future.” Other art-ists included Dawn Weber and the Naked Rock Fight, a tribute to Miles Davis, and Trio Trés Bien.

The festival itself had many sponsors, including, but not limited to, St. Louis Public Radio 90.7 KWMU, Steinway and Sons, Vin-

EOTO: improvised electronica

Photo courtesy of B. Hockensmith Photography

Band gives unique concert experience

As the car rolled to a stop at 2720 Cherokee, a unique music and arts venue, the bass was audible even with the windows rolled up.

The dreadlocked, tutu- clad, tattooed masses raged to Spankalicious’ steel drum in the re-purposed and graffitied store front. The artist’s repetitive motto echoed through the space—”it feels good to feel good.” Not a single soul was in disagreement.

While Spankalicious was worthy of attendance, he was not the main attrac-tion. EOTO’s pulsing elec-tronic gear was nested in a huge, white Odyssean lotus flower. Unlike almost ev-ery other electronica con-

and psychedelic fractals. While Travis played im-

provised guitar and key-board, Hann laid down an-other loop with the hi-hat and sang. The poi- spinning, hula-turning crowd writhed like a tumultuous sea of white capped waves.

Without songs, EOTO did not stop playing ex-cept for a short intermis-sion. The 2 1/2 hour set had crests and valleys, as Travis and Hann reacted to the crowd and their own whims. Late in the night, Hann decided on a whim to sing “Roxanne,” originally by the Police, with Travis acting as a strange electron-ic backup band.

The concert ended with signature jam band solos, and the swarm of florescent fans walked out a bit more deaf than before.

Mike Travis and Jason Hann perform a completely improvised set as a part of the electronica band EOTO in front of a lotus flower that forms their set.

By JASON MCCOY Staff Writer

tage Vinyl, 88.1 KDHX, 88.7 WSIE the Jazz Station and Autumn Hill music produc-tions.

The festival was a fan-tastic success that allowed people in the area to enjoy jazz, which is a quintes-sential characteristic of St. Louis.

Less than Jake brings audience back to the 90s

By JASON MCCOY Staff Writer

There is nothing like a sleepy Wednesday night in St. Louis to go out and rock to some classic nine-ties nostalgia. I don’t mean Nirvana and Madonna, but something all together more angsty: hardcore and ska.

If your high school’s brass section had a nerdy child with the punk band who won battle of the bands, it would be ska. If those two divorced and punk went on to have a child with the long-haired metal-heads who wore T-shirts with lo-gos you couldn’t read, it would be hardcore.

This particular day, Sept. 19, A Wilhelm Scream and Less Than Jake rolled up to The Firebird in a huge

silver tour bus. Both bands are usually more at home playing in larger venues, but you wouldn’t know it watching the ferocity they stirred up in the crowd.

A Wilhelm Scream punc-tuated every song with a Sports Center-like blast of sports banter or praise for Pappy’s barbeque that clashed oddly with the style of music they played.

After a short but energet-ic set, Less Than Jake took the stage. Chris Demakes (lead guitar, vocals) and Roger Manganelli (bass, vocals) shot insults back and forth about being old or not singing enough. The Firebird experienced one of the greatest Wednesday crowds in recent memory, as uncoordinated fans were lifted up to surf and came crashing back to earth.

Saxophonist Peter “JR” Wasilewski was absent from this tour and Chris Rhodes from The Mighty Mighty Bosstones took his place with no ill effect on the sound. Somewhere dur-ing the tail end of the act, Demakes made it very obvi-ous that the show was being broadcast live to the Inter-net and asked everyone to moon the camera. Thank-fully, the crowd refused.

During the glorious final circle pit, Less Than Jake fired a barrage of confetti cannons from the port side of the stage and exited af-ter an encore or two. After the lights came up, Joseph Carufel, a junior commu-nication major at SLU, re-marked, “It was their 20th anniversary tour, but they played as if they were 20 years younger.”

Page 9: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

URELIGION

Sept. 28

Meskel - Ethiopian Orthodox Christian

Sept. 29

Michael and All Angels - Christian

Sept. 30

Full Moon

Oct. 1-7

Sukkot – Jewish

Oct. 2

Feast of the Guardian Angels –

Christian

Oct. 4

St. Francis Day – Christian

Oct. 7

Hoshanah Rabbah – Jewish

Oct. 9

Simchat Torah – Jewish

Oct. 13

St. Edwards Day – Christian

Oct. 15

New Moon

Oct. 16-23

Navratri – Hindu

Oct. 24

Dussera – Hindu

Oct. 25Waqf al Arafa –

Islam

Oct. 26-29

Eid Ul Adha – Islam

unewsonline.com SEPTEMBER 27, 2012

Calendarof

Observances

Hindu students observe Ganesh Chaturithi

On Sunday, Sept. 23, Saint Louis University’s Museum of Contemporary Religious Art (MOCRA) opened its exhibit, “Patrick Graham: Thirty Years – The Silence Becomes the Paint-ing.”

Patrick Graham is fre-quently noted as Ireland’s most important contempo-rary artist. His retrospec-tive of work, including paint-ings, collages and drawings, offers a unique glimpse into the 30-year window that marks Graham’s psycholog-ically charged explorations.

A well-attended, free public opening reception was held from 2-4 p.m. on Sunday. While the exhibit itself tackles controversial, difficult material, the re-sponse was generally posi-tive.

“This is one of the more challenging exhibits I’ve at-tended,” John Lamb, SLU Box Office Manager, said. “Your understanding of the pieces is dependent on knowing Irish history, so it’s challenging just trying to relate to the painting.”

Graham was born in Mullingar, County West-meath, Ireland in 1943, and he went on to study at the National College of Art in Dublin. His art been exhib-ited in Ireland and inter-nationally since 1966. Gra-ham’s work is represented in major public and private collections throughout the world.

Critics and historians have credited Graham with changing the face of paint-ing in Ireland. Already, crit-ics are praising this newest exhibit at MOCRA.

“[Graham] confronts the viewer with drawings and paintings of shattering force,” exhibition curator and renowned historian, Pe-ter Selz, said. “[He] makes us aware that great paint-ing has a presence and a future.”

Art historian John Hand-ley also noted that Gra-ham’s work “addresses the timelessness of time, the repetition of history and the continuous cyclical nature of silence, abandonment and redemption in the cre-ative process.”

The artist’s own words reveal what the creative pro-

cess means to him. Graham said, “The silence becomes the painting, the painting comes from silence. It is the moment when painting is no longer an act of doing or making but of receiving.”

The exhibition reveals great insight into the Gra-ham’s personal life.

“He’s really letting you into his soul,” David Brink-er, Assistant Director of MOCRA, said. “Graham grew up in a time of trans-formation where some Irish towns weren’t getting electricity until 1950’s. He’s battled alcoholism, and he’s lived through a per-sonal journey that he really brings to life.”

Brinker goes on to ex-plain that the exhibit is a “transformative experi-ence.”

The exhibit will be fea-tured until Dec. 16. Regular museum hours are Tuesday through Sunday, 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Admission is free.

MOCRA is the world’s first interfaith museum of contemporary religious and spiritual art. Officially opened in 1993, MOCRA is dedicated to the ongoing di-alogue between contempo-rary artists and the world’s faith traditions.

For more information, visit mocra.slu.edu.

Adnan Syed / Religion Editor

Aerial view from the inside of Saint Louis University’s Museum of Contemporary Religious Art, featuring the Patrick Graham Exhibit. The exhibit will last until December 16.

By SARA RAHIMStaff Writer

MOCRA presents retrospective of celebrated Irish painter

Courtesy of Jack Rutberg Fine Arts.

A typical piece of art work by Patrick Graham, depicting two embracing figures at a window.

Ganesh Chaturithi is a religious holiday in Hindu-ism. It is a celebration of the birth or rebirth of Lord Ga-nesh, a Hindu deity widely depicted in pictures as the elephant-headed god. The day usually falls between the end of August and mid-September. It was observed on Sept. 19 this year.

The story behind the fes-tival, as told by Hindu Stu-dents Community’s presi-dent Deval Patel, is about a boy, Ganesh, who was created by his mother Par-vati, a Hindu goddess and

By ADNAN SYEDReligion Editor

Faiths gather near SLU campus

See “Annotations” on Page 10

Vandy professor discusses ‘New’ Testament

Amy-Jill Levine, Ph.D, a New Testament profes-sor at Vanderbilt Divinity School, spoke for over an hour on Sunday at the Aqui-nas Institute of Theology.

Levine, a practicing Or-thodox Jew, discussed a new version of the New Testament, which she co-edited. Levine’s new ver-sion differs from other versions already available because it was edited and footnoted by leading Jewish scholars.

Levine began her speech on Sunday talking about the book, The Jewish Anno-tated New Testament, but

she finished with an exhor-tation to Christians, Jews and other faiths to keep up an interfaith dialogue with those around them.

Levine noted that the New Testament tells a story that appeals to Jews about people who were primarily Jewish. This fact allows it to be helpful in interfaith dia-logue.

Christians can look at the Jewish annotations to un-derstand the way in which many of their customs and beliefs follow directly from Jewish tradition. Modern Jews can read the New Tes-tament as a historical text to gain insight on how some of their traditions were prac-ticed at that time.

“From this new dialogue

can come understanding,” Levine said. “By under-standing each other, we can begin to erase the mis-understanding and stereo-typing between many Jews and Christians. After all, Jews and Christians did not become separate until 200 years later.”

Levine said that one thing Christians can learn from Jews is how they view inclusion into their faith and disagreements within members. She mentioned that one becomes Jewish by blood, not by choice. If a Jew disagrees with a Jewish practice, she can disagree with it her whole life, but

By DJ BARGERStaff Writer

wife of Shiva, out of sandal-wood. Parvati puts her son to guard the door while she bathes. During that time, Shiva comes from some-where and sees a stranger at his wife’s door. The two fight, ending with Shiva sev-ering Ganesh’s head.

Parvati becomes very upset and vows to destroy the universe. In an effort to calm her, Shiva searches the woods and finds a young dead elephant. He consoles its mother and affixes the head of the elephant onto Ganesh’s body.

“Symbolism is very im-portant in Hinduism, and

Photo Courtesy of Joe Mabel

Lord Ganesh portrayed at the end of the 2008 Summer Solstice Parade at the Fremont Fair in Seattle, Wash.

See “Ganesh” on Page 10

Adnan Syed / Religion Editor

Members of different faiths gather every Wednesday to study Jewish, Christian and Muslim holy books at Aquinas Institute of Theology, located at 23 S Spring Ave., St. Louis, MO.

Page 10: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

RELIGION 10unewsonline.comSEPTEMBER 27, 2012

InterFaith Alliance: Arts and Religion

Continued from Page 9

Just last month there was a burning of a mosque in Jo-plin, Mo., and at the same

t i m e , t h e r e were a s e r i e s of at-tacks on mosques through the U.S., and six S i k h s w e r e m u r -dered in what po-

lice described as a domes-tic terrorist-type incident. These events sadden and give us all pause.

Of course, insofar as Western cultures have been more heavily influenced by the Judeo-Christian tradition, one of our most cherished beliefs, deeply cemented in our minds and hearts and deriving from the Jewish tradition, is that we ought to care for the widow, the orphan and the stranger.

All three of these types of persons are often the most vulnerable among us; the ones who are different from most of us in that they do not have a husband, parents or loving family and friends surrounding them. They are the ones, who by their very condition, invite us to be concerned for them, and the invitation is always

there, however much the majority of us may not be sensitive to their plight or responsive.

The religious traditions most influencing the West require, then, that we re-spond to those who are most vulnerable among us, and this would, by exten-sion, include all sorts of minorities, those who are different from us, especially those who might be victims of violence springing from distorted understandings of Judeo-Christianity.

Indeed, one does not have to be religious in order that that the vulnerability of our neighbors might make its claim on us. History is filled with examples of non-believers who have heeded the summons of our neigh-bors, defended their rights, and even given up life itself for them.

Of course, in a danger-ous world, it is always possi-ble that one’s first approach to the other person might be one of fear and anxiety that this other who is so dif-ferent from me might harm me, might take away from me what is mine or might endanger my beliefs, faith or religious community. Those who burn mosques or murder Sikhs are captive to such fear.

But the Jewish tradition of ethics that has shaped Western culture, points to another possibility: the oth-

Last Wednesday, Saint Louis University students were invited to speak about their experiences with The President’s Interfaith and Community Service Cam-pus Challenge as a whole for its first year, at Harris-Stowe  State  University, as part of the launch for year two. The U.S. Department of Education chose SLU, along with several other in-stitutions of higher educa-tion, from the St. Louis area, to be part of the launch.

The challenge, known as “Interfaith Challenge” for

Commentary

miChael BarBer, S.J.

short, is led by the White House and supported by the Department of Educa-tion and the Corporation for National and Community Service.

President Barack Obama introduced the Interfaith Challenge in March of 2011. It asked institutions of higher education nation-wide to commit to a year of “interfaith service” pro-gramming. Campuses were encouraged to tackle com-munity challenges while engaging the tradition of those who were serving.

Sara Rahim, a junior spearheading this initia-tive, along with InterFaith Alliance, said that the Presi-

dent’s Challenge provided something that SLU had been lacking from years be-fore.

“Although we had a stu-dent group on campus for interfaith programming, there was always a certain degree of complacency within our campus culture,” said Rahim. “The Presi-dent’s Challenge allowed our campus to centralize our interfaith efforts and create an inclusive sense of community that we were unable to achieve years be-fore.”

“We also networked with schools that were past par-ticipants and schools that were just signing on, but

the event was primarily to recognize our efforts and Kick Off year two,” said Ra-him.

The Center for Service and Community and En-gagement (CSCE) has as-sisted in organizing and keeping track of the chal-lenge on campus this past year. It actually approached Rahim to lead the challenge on campus.

“The CSCE is here to support and help co-ordinate these efforts, and especially to build unity through service,” the director, Bryan Sokol, Ph.D said.

“Multiple seed grants were requested through the center to fund new op-portunities,” said Sokol. “In the first year of the challenge, SLU sponsored nearly 50 interfaith events and activities on campus, with more than 7,000 partic-ipants. This made SLU one of the biggest and most ac-tive campuses in the region to participate.”

Sean Worley, the Student Government Association Vice President of Diver-sity and Social Justice, said about the challenge: “As a Saint Louis University student, being part of an institution focused on ser-vice and mutual respect, I thought it was appropriate to have here. I am exter-emly excited for the second year of the challenge.”

Officials from the De-partment of Education were present at the launch, along with faculty and administra-tion from schools in the St. Louis Area, including Uni-

By ADNAN SYEDReligion Editor

versity of Missouri St. Lou-is, Fontbonne and smaller schools

Rev. Brenda Girton-Mitchell, director of the Department of Education’s Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partner-ships, also present there, recognized Saint Louis Uni-versity’s efforts to expand interfaith programming on campus this past year.

Examples of major events held for this chal-lenge included Muslim Student Association Fast-A-Thon, which will be held again this year on Nov. 19, this event saw over 600 stu-dents pledge to a day of fast-ing. The event culminated in an informative and fun din-ner in which  people broke their fast while engaging in interfaith dialogue.

Another was Interfaith Prayer and Worship Ser-vice. The culminating event to SLU’s Challenge, this featured  student and adult representatives from the Muslim, Jewish, Bahai, Jain, Sikh, Hindu, Coptic and  Christian faiths. There was a student processional followed by songs, scrip-ture and verses that shared the call to social justice from the various traditions. An international dinner fol-lowed the service, in which further participants were given the chance to  reflect on the experience. Almost 200 people were in atten-dance.

“We are hoping to make the InterFaith Prayer Ser-vice a signature event to kick off Atlas Week every year,” Rahim said.

President’s Interfaith Challenge: Year Two

On Thursday, Oct. 11, at St. Francis Xavier College Church, the third annual Newman Convocation will take place. At this event, which is free and open to all students as well as the public, theologians from St. Louis will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Coun-cil.

The main speaker is Catherine Vincie, R.S.H.M , of Aquinas Institute of The-ology; others include Dan-iel Finucane Ph.D, of Saint Louis University, and Fr. Jason Schumer, S.T.L., of Kenrick-Glennon Seminary.

In 1962, on Oct. 11, the Second Vatican Council was opened, called by Pope John XXIII at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. This council of the Catholic Church was a very extraordinary gathering; only twenty-one councils had ever been called in the two thousand years that the church has existed.

The first document of the Council was called “Sac-rosanctum Concilum”, also known as “the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy”. In this document, the church elaborated on the worship of God.

Other chapters explain about the most sacred mys-tery of the Eucharist, the divine office, and the litur-gical year.

The story of the Consti-tution on the Sacred Liturgy is the topic of the coming event.

It will be sponsored by the Marchetti Jesuit En-dowment and the Dept. of Theological Studies at Saint Louis University, Aqui-nas Institute of Theology, Fontbonne University, and Kenrick-Glennon Seminary. The Newman Convocation will be an amazing oppor-tunity for students to learn more about the Constitu-tion on the Sacred Liturgy and Second Vatican Coun-cil.

The power of solidarity trumps fear

White House invites SLU to kick off year two in St. Louis area

Courtesy of US Department of Education

From left, Leah Sweetman; Ken Bedell; Brenda Girton-Mitchell; Bryan Sokol, director of the CSCE; and Sara Rahim, junior and member of Interfaith Alliance.

many different [symbols] exist in Ganesh’s body,” said Patel. “Ganesh has a very large belly, which sig-nifies how he ‘swallows’ the sorrows of the world. His big head symbolizes wisdom, and his large ears the ability to hear every-thing. The actual idol of Ganesh portrays symbols of ani-mals, depicting his unity with nature.”

Kavita Darji, a psychol-ogy major at the College of Arts and Sciences and HSC member said about the day: “ To me, it represents a way for everybody to come to-gether and celebrate this wonderful day as a cohesive

Annotations: Christianity in Judaism

Continued from Page 9

Third annualNewman Convocation

By SARAH MALLICKStaff Writer

er invites us first to be re-sponsible for and to her and to act in solidarity with or for her. Indeed, think of the many common and every-day instances when solidar-ity trumps fear, for instance, when we give directions to the stranger who is lost, when we respond to the beggar requesting money from us (even if we politely state that we do not have money on us), or when we simply allow the other per-son to proceed before us through the doorway.

Of course, so powerful is the hold of the other upon us that parents can give their lives without reserve for a vulnerable child and moral heroes like Oscar Romero or Martin Luther King care about those are vulnerable more than they do about protecting their own lives. To be sure, it would be unrealistic for us not to care for ourselves and to protect ourselves against violence. But, if the murder of Sikhs or burning of mosques represents the basest possibilities of the human spirit, moral heroes reveal to us our highest pos-sibilities, the triumph of the human spirit, the victory of solidarity over fear.

The spirit of solidarity lies deep within Western culture, presses us to be hospitable, and appears in the least gesture of polite-ness we show to another.

unit, almost as a new begin-ning.”

Patel said some people celebrate simply by wishing “Happy Ganesh Chaturithi” to each other while others go to temple. Darji said the celebration for this holiday usually lasts ten days.

“We celebrate it at home by singing bhajans (holy hymns) and going to the temple,” said Darji. “It is celebrated by making mod-els of Ganesh, decorating them, clothing them and placing them in temples. Pujas (religious rituals) are conducted with bhajans and chanting of mantras in or-der to provide worship to Lord Ganesh.”

Puja is modeled on the idea of giving a gift or offer-ing to a deity and receiving

their blessing, according to Hindu tradition.

“Whenever I begin something new in my life, such as a new school year or a new job, I always pray to Lord Ganesh for prosper-ity in my life,” said Darji. “To me, Ganesh represents good luck when starting new beginnings and also wisdom.”

HSC celebrated with an information session and ice cream last year, but was un-able to organize something on campus this year.

HSC’s next event will be Gandhi Service Day, in remembrance of Mahatma Gandhi, on Oct. 2. Patel said it is a celebration of Gandhi’s life. “We carry his life mission, by planting and cleaning up roadsides,”

Ganesh: Lord of Beginnings, Obstacles

Shabnam Majidi shown painting artwork at an Interfaith Alliance event this past Monday.

A close up view of a henna tattoo at an Interfaith Alli-ance event this past Monday.

Aroona Toor (Left) putting henna on a fellow student at an Interfaith Alliance event this past Monday.

John Schuler/ Photo Editor

John Schuler/ Photo Editor

John Schuler / Photo Editor

in the end, she will still be a Jew.

One becomes a Christian by belief. If one disagrees then one is discounted as a Christian. Levine said she saw this as a weakness in the Christian faith.

“It could be better, and Christians would have more freedom to argue safely. If Christians took Baptism more seriously,” she said.

After speaking, Levine took questions from the audience. The topics of the questions ranged from the Jewish perspective of the Eucharist, to current Jew-ish eschatology, a branch of theology concerning the end of the world.

A diverse crowd of ap-proximately 150 people at-tended the event, which was co-sponsored by the Aqui-nas Institute of Theology, Eden Theological Seminary and the Jewish Community Relations Council. The at-tendees consisted of many who identified as Catholic, Jewish or Protestant.

Levine is a nationally recognized author and New Testament and Jew-ish Studies professor. She described herself academi-cally as combining “histor-ical-critical rigor, literary-critical sensitivity and a fre-quent dash of humor with a commitment to eliminate anti-Jewish, sexist and ho-mophobic theologies.”

The Jewish Annotated New Testament and many other books by Dr. Levine are available from Amazon.com in paperback, hardcov-er or e-book formats.

Page 11: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

Jim Platt named assistant hoops coach

By MARCO DIROMAStaff Writer

Hailing from Ireland, Saint Louis University mid-fielder David Graydon’s skills and tenacity on the soccer pitch are fueled by his doubters.

“I tried out in England but all I heard was, ‘You’re too small, you won’t make it because of your height and lack of strength,’” Graydon said when asked why he chose to play in America over Europe.

Comments like these are what give 5-foot-5-inch attacking midfielder Gray-don the strength and de-termination he has on the training grounds and in ev-ery game he plays. Unlike other sports, soccer does not require you to be a cer-tain height in order for an athlete to flourish; case in point, Graydon.

Graydon’s journey on American soil began at Montverde Academy in Montverde, Fla. where he made an immediate im-

By BRIAN HAENCHENStaff Writer

Jim Platt has been named an assistant coach for Saint Louis University’s men’s basketball team.

Platt, who was director of basketball operations at Liberty University last sea-son, will fill the spot left by Jim Crews who was named interim head coach after Rick Majerus took a leave of absence due to health concerns. Platt brings with him 32 years of NCAA Divi-sion I coaching experience, including five years as an assistant coach at Army, four of which were under Crews.

“Jim has a great passion for coaching and the stu-dent-athletes,” Crews said in a press release. “He is a strong recruiter and is ex-cellent at coaching the fun-damentals and the details of the game. I’ve known Jim for more than 30 years and we were on staff together at Army, so that familiarity helps.”

Platt’s resume features nine years of head coaching experience and 12 postsea-son appearances, including 10 trips to the NCAA Tour-nament and a pair of NIT bids. He served as head coach at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock from 1990-94 and Charles-ton Southern University from 2000-05.

This will be the fourth different school in four years for Platt, who said he is excited for the chance to work with Crews again.

“I’m thankful to have the opportunity to join coach Crews, the coaching staff and the great student-ath-letes here at SLU,” Platt

said. “Jim has been a great mentor for me during my career. I believe that under Jim’s leadership, experi-ence and value system, the basketball program is going to be represented in a man-ner that emulates the values of Saint Louis University and Billiken athletics.”

Platt spent five seasons as head coach of Illinois’ Luther High School North before transitioning to the collegiate level as an assis-tant at Illinois State.

After a six-year stint at ISU, he returned to the Chi-cago area, this time as an assistant coach at DePaul University.

He helped lead the Blue Devils to six consecutive NCAA Tournament appear-

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012

Brian Haenchen / Staff Writer

ances, including back-to-back trips to the Sweet Six-teen from 1985-87. Platt’s success at DePaul earned him his first head-coach position in 1990 with Arkan-sas-Little Rock. He spent four years as the Trojans’ head coach, accruing a re-cord of 56-59.

After two three-year stints as an assistant at Tul-sa and Florida State, Platt was named head coach at Charleston Southern, where he earned Big South Conference Coach of the Year Honors after he led the Buccaneers to the Big South Tournament finals in his first season at the helm.

In 2005, Platt resigned to join Crews’s staff at Army. He was 55-89 over five sea-

See “Graydon” on Page 13

Number 19 David Graydon, midfielder, has been a key part of this year’s men soccer team. Graydon, a native of Ireland, hopes to return to Europe to play in the English Premier League.

Courtesy of Billiken Media Relations

David Graydon: Silencing his critics

sons as Charleston’s head coach.Platt, who was among the potential candidates to replace Crews as Army’s head coach upon his ter-mination in 2009, spent one more season with the Black Knights before returning to the state of Illinois as an as-sistant coach with Bradley. He spent a season on the sidelines with the Braves before accepting a position as the director of basketball operations at Liberty.

“SLU represents the very best in collegiate athletics,” Platt said. “It’s a school with tremendous academics and one that is competing at the highest level of college bas-ketball. It’s the best combi-nation to represent as a col-lege coach.”

SLU upsets No.7Creighton

By MARCO DIROMAStaff Writer

Raymond Lee netted his first two goals of the 2012 soccer season as the Billik-ens collected their fifth vic-tory of the season against No. 7 University of Creigh-ton Blue Jays. This marks the Bills’ second victory over a nationally-ranked op-ponent.

SLU travelled to Omaha, Nebraska Friday afternoon to take on the Creighton Blue Jays. This was the Bills’ second match against a nationally-ranked oppo-nent, after previously de-feating the University of Louisville Cardinals 1-0 ear-lier in the season.

“It was key for us to come out really aggressive and not let their crowd into the game,” said Coach Mc-Ginty.

The plan to play with ag-gression was in full effect at the Bills applied constant pressure and prevented the Blue Jays from mount-ing a serious attack. The Bills’ fire and determina-tion eventually paid off in the 38th minute when sub-stitute Lee earned his first goal of the season.

“It was a relief, but I felt like I was back,” Lee said.

The Bills proceeded to take a 1-0 lead at halftime.

BILLIKEN BRIEFS

USPORTS

unewsonline.com

Men’s Soccer

Sophomore Ray-mond Lee was named to College Soccer News’ Na-tional Team of the Week after his per-formance against No. 7 Creighton. Lee scored the Billikens’ first two goals, leading them to a 3-1 vic-tory.

Homecoming

2012 Homecom-ing Weekend is upon us! See the Billiken men’s soccer team play Central Arkansas on Saturday night, highlighted by the annual fireworks show at halftime.

BILLIKEN SCOREBOARD

L 1-3

Volleyball

L 0-3

Men’s Soccer

W 3-1

5-foot 5-inch midfielder playing to make his family proud

Hometown: Kildare, Ireland

Position: Midfielder

High School: Monteverde Academy

ESPN Rise 150 Recruit

1 goal, 0 assists

David Graydon

Men’s Basketball

Interim head coach Jim Crews filled out his coaching staff this week, naming Jim Platt an assistant coach. See story for more cover-age.

Follow us @TheUNewsSports for the latest Billikens sports coverage

See “Men’s Soc” on Page 13

pact. While at Montverde Academy, Graydon notched 10 goals, 18 assists and amassed numerous acco-lades, such as: ESPN Rise All-American, top 150 re-cruit, ESPN Player of the Week and league MVP. With his help, the Mont-verde Academy finished their season with a stellar 23-0-4 record.

After compiling a season like this, Graydon’s talents were highly sought after from several NCAA pro-grams across the nation. The list of schools ranged from the University of North Carolina, University of Clemson and University of North Carolina at Wilm-ington.

Although these schools were all highly touted, Graydon always knew that he wanted to attend SLU.

“I wanted to be a part of a re-building program, not a program that’s already at the top,” said Graydon. He went on to add, “It was Coach McGinty’s overall at-titude and track record that helped make my decision.”

Coach McGinty’s friend-ship with the Montverde Academy’s men’s soccer coach and former Univer-sity of Clemson head coach, Mike Potempa, is what led him to recruit Graydon. Mc-Ginty sent assistant coach Jason O’Keefe to Florida to have a look at Graydon and O’Keefe came back with high praise for the Irish midfielder.

“We were looking for a player that thinks out of the box,” McGinty said, “David was just a little bit differ-ent.”

The difference in Gray-don could be his ability to see the whole field, and de-liver precise through balls that carve up the opposi-tion’s defense.

Graydon’s transition from the European game of football to the North Ameri-can style of soccer has been relatively smooth and seem-ingly effortless. However, this is not the case. Ameri-can soccer players are no-ticeably larger and stronger compared to the players Graydon grew up compet-

ing against in Ireland.Graydon said that was

the most difficult transition in playing amongst Ameri-can players for the past year, and that it was the sheer power, size are some elements of the game that he never came across in Europe. Although the tran-sition has been challenging, it has not seemed to have had much effect on Gray-don’s exceptional offensive abilities.

The Bills have played in seven matches this season. As a freshman, Graydon has started all seven of the Bills’ matches and has been an integral part of his team’s success thus far. His role as an attacking center mid-fielder requires him to be the center piece of the Bills’ offensive attack. Graydon said that he loves it because he loves to have the ball on his foot. His crafty footwork and playmaking ability have helped the Bills get off to an early 5-2 start.

Crafty footwork and unique playmaking ability aside, Graydon’s hard work

off the field, as a student-athlete, was another chal-lenge he has had to adapt to coming over from Ireland. Being a college preparatory school, Montverde Acad-emy played a crucial role in Graydon’s academic transi-tion to the U.S. Graydon was taught to understand the importance of time management and organi-zation; two essential tools in order to be a successful student-athlete at SLU.

As the Bills embark on their third season under McGinty, expectations are high and Graydon is fully confident in their ability.

“I want to win a national championship,” Graydon said, when asked what his team goal is for the 2012 season.

Graydon feels as though the Bills have to adjust to teams that play a “kick-and-run” style of soccer. The kick-and-run style is when a team elects to send more long passes as opposed to numerous short, quick

Page 12: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012unewsonline.com12 SPORTS

Lance EasleyReplacement

Official

WHO TO

FEAR

WHO TO

CHEER

Easley, who never worked a game above Division III, literally handed the sea pi-geons a 14-12 vic-tory over the Packers with his controversial touchdown call as time expired. While his ruling was incor-rect, it put even more pressure on Roger Goodell to end this ri-diculous referee lock-out. Plus, for those who dislike Green Bay, anytime they lose is worth cheer-ing.

WHO TO

JEER

Courtesy of nytimes.com

Bill Belichick

Savannah State Tigers

Just days after NFL vice president of football operations, Ray Anderson, said the league would not tolerate disrespect toward replacement officials, Belichick grabbed a ref by the arm while verbally berating him after New England’s 31-30 loss to Baltimore. Ac-cording to Belichick, he wasn’t trying to “abuse or be disre-spectful” to the offi-cials. He just wanted an explanation.

Beware the Tigers. After lying dormant through the first two games of the season, the Tigers’ offense sprung to life versus North Carolina Cen-tral, racking up a whopping 33 points, that’s right, 33. The Tigers actually lost the game 45-33 and have now been out-scored 184-33. On a side note, people should probably be more afraid of the Cornhuskers than the Tigers as Nebraska scored 35 points in a single quarter.

By Brian HaenchenStaff Writer

Courtesy of USA Today

Courtesy of teamlogos.com

Inconsistency in NCAA academic standards

Volleyball’s win streak comes to a screeching haltBy NATE CREECH

Staff Writer

The women’s volley-ball team has dropped five straight matches in the past two weeks to make it a six-match losing streak.

Two weeks ago, the Bil-likens traveled to North-western University to play in the Wildcat Challenge. Last Friday, Saint Louis Uni-versity opened up A-10 play in Cincinnati, Ohio against the Xavier Musketeers and followed with a game in Dayton, Ohio against the Flyers on Saturday. After two weeks on the road, SLU is in need of a home court advantage.

The Wildcat Classic fea-tured Western Michigan, Northwestern and Dela-ware. SLU played a hard contest against the Broncos of WMU on Sept. 14 at 10 a.m. but fell in three sets 15-25, 24-26, 26-28. Later that night, the Billikens faced the host team, North-western University, and dropped three sets 15-25, 15-25, 12-25.

The Bills went on to play the University of Delaware Blue Hens on Saturday, Sept. 15. After a 0-2 start in the tournament, SLU, despite losing the match, played their greatest match of the year. The Billikens fell behind the Hens 0-2, but climbed back and forced a fifth set, falling by two points in a five set finale of 21-25, 11-25, 25-21, 25-11, 15-17.

A-10 play opened on an easier note for SLU, claim-ing a quick 25-15 first set victory over the Muske-teers. However, the Bills were unable to claim the match victory and fell 25-15, 20-25, 18-25, 15-25 in four sets. Grace Bonoma led the defense again with 25 digs, while Lauren Baumet and Lindsay Dinkelacker man-aged the offense with 12 and 10 kills, respectively. Cassie Clarke registered 28 assists.

Saturday featured a hard slate for the Bills, playing the Flyers at Dayton. The Flyers, ranked 22nd nation-ally, swept the Billikens in three sets, going 25-14, 25-18, 25-11. Megan Gilbert and Carly Marcum had 8 and 6 kills, respectively, to lead the Billikens offense.

Gilbert owns the team’s third highest kill total on the year at 108. Clarke controls the assist column, collect-ing 470 on the year. Bono-ma leads the team’s defense with 231 digs and leads the team at the service line with 15 aces, followed closely by Anna Church with 13.

Courtesy of Billikens Media Relationsi

The A-10 preseason rank-ings once again suggested a strong Dayton team and a strong Xavier squad, claim-ing the first and second place rankings. SLU, picked for the third spot, will need to make up some ground after a 0-2 start in A-10 play.

George Washington was selected for the fourth spot with Duquesne round-ing out the top 5. VCU and Butler, newcomers to the A-10, finished right behind in sixth and seventh places. Rhode Island, Charlotte and Fordham rounded out the top 10 in the conference, with Temple and La Salle

taking the last two spots. One sleeper team this

year, Temple University, has taken hold of the top spot this weekend with a 12-4 re-cord overall and a 2-0 A-10 record. With Dayton and Xavier right behind Temple at 2-0 also, Duquesne holds the fourth spot at 1-0. SLU will need to recover fast if they want a shot at the title while holding a 0-2 record in conference.

The Billikens (5-10 and 0-2) look ahead to opening A-10 home play, hosting Duquesne (12-5 and 1-0) on Friday at 7 p.m. in Chaifetz Arena.

Megan Gilbert (left) and Carly Marcum (right) celebrating after winning a point in a volleyball match. The volleyball lost 6 straight matches after a 5 match winning streak. The team opened their Atlantic 10 season with two losses.

Smoothie Fields Forever and Ever

Tony Traina / Associate Sports Editori

A student worker pouring a scrumptuous straweberries ‘n banana smoothie at the Simon Recreation Center at Saint Louis University on Wednesday, Sept. 26.

By TONY TRAINAAssociate Sports Editor

In those dog days of summer far from Saint Louis University, it’s not the monotonous organic chem-istry lectures or late nights at Pius Library that most students thirst for; rather, it’s the famous smoothies of the Simon Recreation Cen-ter they crave.

One of the most welcome additions of the 2006-2007 renovation and expansion of Simon Recreation Center was the Juice Bar and sur-rounding lounge area. It gives students a place to re-lax after a strenuous work-out before returning to the grind of college.

It gives them a place to slowly sip the picayune par-cels of pleasure doled out to loyal customers.

“I remember my first smoothie at Simon Rec Center. It was ‘Midnight at the Rec’, [and] they had free smoothies. I got coco-nut banana. From that mo-ment on, I knew I belonged at SLU,” junior Maureen Brady said.

Of course, every campus tour makes the prescribed stop at the Juice Bar as student ambassadors gush over the succulent morsels to drooling prospective stu-dents.

To be a juicer, one must complete a few hours of intense training and shad-owing shifts in which the trades’ deeply guarded se-crets are transmitted.

The job is a “level 2” position that SRC workers reach after striving at vari-ous level 1 positions in the center.

It’s not all berries and bananas at the Juice Bar though; workers seldom have a free moment be-tween serving up their famous smoothies and keeping the bar clean and stocked.

Many students complain about the high price points: four dollars for a smoothie, another 75 cents for a scoop of protein. You get what you

pay for; in this case, it’s 20 ounces of pure jubilation. More than a few students have been heard on campus uttering various budgeting strategies so they can af-ford more of these scrump-tious treats.

“I’ve passed on more than a few Fusz wraps to have another strawberries ‘n cream smoothie,” junior Karena Nguyen said, ex-pressing the sentiments of many a student.

The Juice Bar is open from 12:30 to 9:30 p.m. on weekdays, and until 7:30 p.m. on weekends. Peak hours are from 5 p.m.

to close. Students circle around the bar from open to close, waiting patiently for their own personal sip of heaven.

The Juice Bar serves a variety of purees and smoothies; the purees lean-ing toward the healthy and less caloric side of the spec-trum.

Some of the smoothies do top out at over 400 calo-ries. Looking for a health-ier option? Try the intense green apple, which is just 300 calories, the fewest on the menu.

According to juicers, strawberry banana is the

most popular flavor. Person-al favorites among juicers vary, from peachy banana to green tea honeydew. For those who walk to Simon Rec. with no intention of pumping iron, no judgment is passed, the juicers say, just a wink and a nod of un-derstanding.

So enjoy that smoothie while you can, SLU, be-cause before you know it, you’ll be sitting at home far away, licking your lips and wondering how long until that familiar tang comes screaming up the straw again, zeroing in on your taste buds.

Think back to when you were in high school. Think about how hard you worked

to get t h a t s c h o l -a r s h i p , athletic or aca-d e m i c , to the s c h o o l of your cho ice . N o w , i m a g -ine it’s the first

week of August, and amid packing your clothes and shopping for your dorm room, you are informed that your scholarship will no longer be honored be-cause “the powers that be” have decided that the class-es you took your senior year are invalid.

This is the exact night-mare scenario that Univer-sity of Maryland recruit Sam Cassell Jr. and Xavier recruit Myles Davis are living through. The NCAA revoked their basketball scholarships and denied the boys’ appeals last week. Both Cassell and Davis have been labeled “non-qualifiers,” meaning they don’t meet the require-ments for eligibility, set by the NCAA, for classes that they took while attending Notre Dame Preparatory School in Massachusetts during the 2011-2012 school year.

The irony of this situ-ation is that Notre Dame Prep wasn’t on the NCAA watch list or even under re-view, until after both players had finished their classes. Eight other players who took the exact same classes the previous year were al-lowed to play as freshmen this past season because they were already enrolled at their universities. Cassell and Davis weren’t as lucky.

This latest controversy is yet another example of the selective enforcement the NCAA has come to prac-tice. So why does the NCAA time and again punish ath-letes for circumstances that are not under their control?

It’s not as if Cassell and Davis decided they were going to take these classes because they were the easi-est classes at the school. These were the classes that their advisers told them they needed to take to graduate. Yet, because the NCAA cannot punish Notre Dame Prep, they are going after the student-athletes who are supposedly the “lifeblood” of the NCAA.

Sam Cassell Sr., former NBA player and current Washington Wizards as-sistant coach, echoed this sentiment to CBS Sports calling the NCAA “neigh-borhood bullies” who “just want kids to fail.”

I wouldn’t go so far as to say that the NCAA wants kids to fail, but more and more it seems as though they are more interested in puffing out their chest and showing everyone who’s in charge, than in actually put-ting students first and mak-ing sure that they are in the best position to succeed not only on the court but in the classroom.

Punishing these stu-dents not only hurts them and their new teammates but also affects their par-ents. Both students were given full athletic scholar-ships covering room and board, tuition, books and fees. Now that these schol-arships have been taken away, parents will have to cover their son’s costs on their own.

For some, this may not be as big of a problem, but for Davis and other students victimized by the NCAA, it is a sentence to years of student debt. Davis’ dad has said he will have to take out a five-figure loan to pay for his son’s first year at Xavier because he still wants his son to get a good

Commentary

alex KoziCh

See “NCAA” on Page 13

Page 13: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

Men’s soccer upsets Creighton on the road

Continued from Page 11

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012 unewsonline.com SPORTS 13

They had been successful in silencing the Blue Jay faithful just as Coach Mc-Ginty had hoped.

Heading into the second half, the Bills remained on point. They continued to a play as a cohesive unit, leading them to score a vital insurance goal.

In the 48th minute, Lee notched his second goal of the contest off a rebound from the Blue Jays goal-keeper Alex Bolowich, giv-ing the Bills a 2-0 lead.

Lee’s insurance goal proved to loom large for the Bills. In the 61st minute, the Blue Jays answered with one goal of their own from forward Timo Pitter, mak-

ing it a one-goal game. However, with strong de-

fensive efforts from the Bil-likens’ back four, the team was able to hold off the Blue Jays from scoring an equalizer, and Rob-bie Kristo put the game out of reach in the 82nd m i n u t e with his s e c o n d goal of the season.

Kristo played all 90 min-utes of the game and was a key figure in the Bills’ 3-1 win. He recorded 3 shots

on goal, 1 assist and was a dominant force throughout the 90 minutes of play.

“Robbie was fantastic.It was the best game I have ever seen him play.

He was p l a y i n g at such a high level, we couldn’t take him off,” Mc-Ginty said.

Lee’s ef-forts were a pleasant addition to

the Bills’ offense, as injuries had formerly set him back from where he could be. McGinty was delighted to

Graydon: Wants to win a national championship

Courtesy of Billiken Media Relations

Raymond Lee scored 2 goals to help the Billikens defeated No. 7 Creighton on Saturday Sept. 22, 2012. Lee had his first 2 goals of the season at Creighton.

Continued from Page 11

Continued from Page 12

NCAA: Inconsistent enforcement of academic standards

see Lee come out and have a great performance, as Lee had been fighting to stay fit and increase his minutes on the pitch.

Lee also added, with confidence, that there was more of this to come.

After successfully beat-ing their second nationally-ranked opponent, the Bills have earned some of their own national attention.

As of Sept. 24, 2012 the Saint Louis Billikens are ranked 22nd in the nation by Soccer America, their first ranking of the 2012 season.

SLU will look to keep up their winning ways as they take on the University of Central Arkansas at Robert Hermann Stadium on Sept. 29 at 7:30 p.m.

Robbie was fantastic. It was the best game I have ever seen him play. He was playing at such a high level, we couldn’t take him out.

“”

-Mike McGinty

I just want to make my fam-ily proud because they have given up so much for me.

“”

-David Graydon

Help fill our issues. [email protected]

ones to make their way up the field. Teams such as Denver and Drake, who de-feated the Billikens earlier in the year, were effective in executing the kick-and-run game plan.

Besides having high e x p e c t a -tions for his team, Gray-don has set a personal goal that he would like achieve at the end of the season.

“I want to be an All-Amer ican . W i t h o u t a doubt,” G r a y d o n said. Graydon added, “I just want to make my fam-ily proud because they have given up so much for me.”

These goals and expecta-tions are a prime example of Graydon’s hard-nose, gritty and competitive nature.

His tenacity on the pitch stems from idealizing his favorite soccer players Andres Iniesta and Lionel

Messi of Spain’s profes-sional club soccer team FC Barcelona.

In 2012, Iniesta, Gray-don’s favorite footballer, won the award for Europe’s best player.

Iniesta stands 5 foot 7 inches tall, which is char-acteristic Graydon deeply admires since he stands

at 5 foot 5 inches.

The c o m b i n a -tion of si-lencing crit-ics, making his fam-ily proud and play-ers such as Iniesta and Messi standing at the top of the football

world gives Graydon the confidence and poise to at-tain his dream.

His dream is playing in the English Premier League for a professional soccer club, and with his “never say never” attitude, it seems like that dream may come true and he will be able to silence his critics once and for all.

education regardless of whether plays basketball or not.

This may not seem like a big deal, as many students, including many at SLU, have to take out loans to pay for c o l l e g e . But these a t h l e t e s were told they had received a scholar-ship covering most of their expenses, only to have it taken away for something out of their control by the very institution in charge of “student-athlete well-being and protection.”

To their credit, the NCAA

should be applauded for going after some of these prep schools that have be-come basketball “factories,” churning out top college re-cruits year after year while putting academics on the

back burn-er.

The way they went about pun-ishing these two athletes, h o w e v e r , reeks of se-lective en-fo r cement and punish-ing the vic-tims.

T h e N C A A

needs to figure out a way to enforce their bylaws so that those who are at fault are the ones who are pun-ished, not the innocent ath-letes who are a by-product of a system the NCAA has helped perpetuate.

The way they went about punishing these two athletes, however, reeks of selective en-forcement

“”

Page 14: September 27, 2012 (No. 5)

SEPTEMBER 27, 2012unewsonline.com14 ADVERTISEMENT

First-Year Summer Reading

PRIZES:Free use of your Spring Textbooks!

Dinner with the author of Enrique’s Journey, Sonia Nazario, on Tuesday, November 6, 2012.

Essays are due, through SLU Groups, by Sunday, September 30, 2012.

For more information visit: www.slu.edu/first-year-experience/first-year-summer-reading

Essay Contest

For more elections events and information, visitslu.edu/election2012