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ESTABLISHED 1921
November 15, 2012
Volume 91, Issue 19
www.laloyolan.com
YOUR HOME. YOUR VOICE. YOUR NEWS. LOYOLA MARYMOUNT UNIVERSITY
Student actors portray oppression
Liana Bandziulis | Loyolan
LMU students took on various roles to present diverse forms of oppression, including negative body image (left), homophobia (top right)
and school shootings (bottom right). The event was intended to demonstrate the realities of such situations and prompt reflection.
FIRST-PERSON FEATURE
Students take interactive journey
through Malone to learn about
various forms of oppression.
By Jenna Abdou
News Intern
After waitingnearly an horn- to walkthrough
the “Tbnnel of Oppression” on Tuesday night,
I felt like I was ready for whatever oppression
issues were coming my way.
As I walked into the first scene with my
seven other group members, leaving behind a
large crowd in the living Room still waiting
their turns, I quickly realized that this would
be a much deeper experience than I had
expected.
All I knew about the event was that each
level of Malone would have LMU students
acting out scenes of oppression to expose
community members walking through
to important social issues and hopefully
encourage them to take action.
“What’s your password? Why did you
change it? What are you hiding from me?’
said the LMU student in the first scene as he
questioned his girlfriend about who she was
texting.
The first scene my group and I walked
through was designed to demonstrate the
harsh realities of domestic violence. As the
girl attempted to get her phone from her
boyfriend’s hands, he violently pulled her back
and slapped her across the face.
When she fell to the ground sobbing, my
group members and I stared wide-eyed at
the events unfolding before us and felt deeply
impacted.
The “TLrnnel of Oppression” event addressed
issues that are prominent in society and made
them tangible by having students act out
scenes ranging from a classroom shooting to
body image awareness.
Another scene featured an LMU student
talking on the phone with her friend as she
thanked her for letting her stay at her home.
The girl, who was in between homes, told her
friend that she hasn’t figured out what she’s
going to do yet since her dad is unable to find a
job, and she has nowhere to go.
The girl quickly dialed another friend to
asking to stay with them while she sorted
See Tunnel | Page 3
SAE focus
of Senate
debate
Greek Council visits ASLMU
Senate to participate in off-
campus fraternity SAE discussion.
By Kevin O'Keeffe
Managing Editor
The off-campus colonization of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon (SAE), first reported in the Nov. 12
Loyolan article ‘Unofficial fraternity colonizes
off campus,” was a big topic at yesterday’s
ASLMU Senate meeting. Introduced by
Speaker of the Senate Ceci Rangel-Gama,
a sophomore psychology major, the Senate
debated whether it was a student concern.
Two of the most vocal senator’s were
sophomore political science major Alex
Petosa and sophomore accounting major Roy
Dilekoglu. In accordance with Section 6 of the
ASLMU Bylaws, both declared their conflicts
of interest (Petosa is a member of Alpha Phi,
while Dilekoglu is in SAE), then argued the
issue’s potential significance to students.
Petosa said that it was the Senate’s job
to stand by the administration, and that
the Greek community’s response to SAE’s
colonization, signed by all 16 fraternity and
sorority presidents, was a clear indication of
the University’s decision. Dilekoglu disagreed,
comparing this situation to the debate over the
LGBT Student Services Office in Fall 2010. In
that situation, he said, the University wasn’t
entirely supportive of the office’s formation,
yet the Senate stood behind it.
Greek Council President Joe Dzida, a
senior marketing major, was in attendance
and stated that in the expansion process last
spring, when asked if they would continue
colonization off campus if denied, SAE
indicated that they would not,
ASLMU President and senior managemnt
major Bryan Ruiz, who is also the president of
SAE , was also present. When asked by senator
and junior political science and sociology
double major EJ de Lara to comment, Ruiz
said, ‘Tm just here to answer any and all
student concerns on behalf of ASLMU.”
Ultimately, no vote was held or decision
made regarding SAE.
Liana Bandziulis | Loyolan
White crosses draped in fabric are displayed across campus at various locations, including near
the U-Hall bridge (above) in memory of the six Jesuit martyrs. For photos of the candlelight
vigil held in honor of the martyrs last night, visit the Loyolan's Facebookpage.
LMU commemorates
anniversary of deaths
there in addition to a Salvadorian cook
and her 16-year-old daughter, according
to resident minister of McCarthy Hall,
Laura Martin. Taking place in the middle
of El Salvador’s civil war, Martin says
that the Jesuit community was outspoken
about the violence and injustice that was
occurring eveiy day in the community
around them. Receiving a significant
amount of aid and training from the U.S.,
the army “tried to silence the Jesuits and
then blame the murder on the guerrillas,”
Martin said.
The Jesuits were attempting to “work
toward the end of violence, oppression
and injustice,” and for that reason Martin
believes that even though they were
silenced for these attempts, they would
want to be remembered as “catalysts
for the many who have continued their
work.”
Junior civil engineering major Britney
Calucag visited the site of the murder
See Martyrs | Page 3
Crosses erected on campus
and Foley Pond dyed red in
honor of six Jesuit martyrs.
By Casey Kidwell
Asst.News Editor
Six lives were brutally taken and the
memory of the blood spilled runs in the
LMU fountain this week. Last Monday,
Nov. 12, Foley Pond was dyed blood red to
commemorate the lives of the six Jesuits
who were murdered at their residence at
the Jesuit university, the University of
Central America (UCA), in El Salvador.
In addition to the annual color change
of Foley Pond, this year there are six
white crosses placed across campus, four
of which feature a red priest stole.
It was Nov. 16, 1989, when the U.S.-
trained commanders of the Salvadorian
army entered the UCA campus and
brutally murdered the six Jesuits living
WORLDLY TRAVELS
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GO PLAY A VIDEO GAME
llic next issue of t lie Liyolan will lx: printed on Not-. 19, 2012.
A&E Editor Chris James
reports on a class that
trades in pencils for
Wiimotes.
A&E, Page 9