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America’s most notorious megastore infiltrates Manhattan. PAGE 9
the observer www.fordhamobserver.com
Q&A
February 3, 2011 Volume XXVIII, Issue 1
Photo Feature
Tunisia From Students’ Perspectives By Christina Frasca News Co-Editor
Meriam Sassi, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’11 and Lindsay Novis, FCLC ’10, studied in Tunisia in 2009. Because of their experiences, they were able to become acquainted with life in Tunisia prior to the recent revolts by citizens demanding a coup of the Zine El Abidine Ben Ali regime. What started out as a peaceful protest quickly turned into a bloody revolution, leaving the future of the state indeterminable. Tunisians have ignited a domino effect among Arab nations, prompting revolts in neighboring Egypt and Jordan. The Observer: During your time
in Tunisia, did you think that something like this would happen now?
Meriam Sassi: We did know
that [Ben Ali] was no longer going to be in power relatively soon. [We] didn’t know a revolution of the people would bring it so soon. Can we imagine this happening a year ago? No, not in this way, but were there seeds planted? Yes.
Lindsay Novis: I never would
have thought when I was there that [the revolution] would be so soon. You always hope, but it really happened quite fast. The president was getting old so I think maybe everything just came together at the right time. When I was there, I remember talking to one of my teachers, asking “What do you think is going to happen when Ben Ali gets too old?” He thought he would nurture one of his lower officials. A lot of Tunisians two years ago didn’t see an end, but then this happened and it’s amazing. see TUNISIA pg. 4
Lucy Sutton/The Observer
New York Snowscapes
Central Park rests under a 15-inch blanket of snow during New York City’s snowiest January in its history.
Students Discuss Catholic Identity Conference Aims to Determine Why Church Lacks Youth Involvement By Helen Lee Staff Writer
Students and faculty gathered to examine the shrinking number of 20-somethings identifying with the Catholic Church during a two-day conference titled, “Lost? Twenty-Somethings and the Church.” The conference was held on Jan. 28 and 29, hosted by Fordham’s Francis and Ann Cur-
ran Center for American Catholic Studies, and examined “the lives of young adults and their relationship to the Catholic Church— or lack thereof.” James Davidson, professor emeritus of sociology at Purdue University, identified the amount of youth in the Church as a top concern, saying it is “hemorrhaging members” and lacking involvement. “They distinguish between the
Catholic faith, which they identify with, and the Catholic Church, which they are less attached to,” Davidson said. He suggested that social factors that encourage religious involvement, like marriage, have decreased since the first half of the 20th century. He also pointed out that Catholics in the early 1900s viewed the Church as a refuge. Rev. James Martin, S.J., cul-
Fordham Alum Takes Alternate Reality Gaming to the Next Level By matt surrusco Arts Co-Editor
The stereotypical online game enthusiast is viewed by most as a disengaged loner with little to offer the real world. But Jane McGonigal, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’99 and former Observer news editor, sees potential where most see none. In her new book “Reality Is Broken: Why Games Make Us Better and How They Can Change the World,” McGonigal offers an innovative, arguably more accurate, conception of a gamer. When we play games, she said, “we rise to the occasion; we’re more optimistic; we’re more curious; we set higher goals for ourselves; we’re more
resilient in the face of failure; we’re more likely to cooperate with others to achieve a common goal.” As the director of game research and development at the Institute for the Future, a nonprofit think-tank based in Palo Alto, Cal., she should know. McGonigal, 33, counts herself among the ever-growing ranks of worldwide gamers, plus she develops alternate reality games (ARGs) for a living. As McGonigal wrote recently in the Wall Street Journal, “Collectively, we spend three billion hours a week gaming. In the United States, where there are 183 million active gamers, videogames took in about $15.5 billion last year.” In the op-ed, which
was adapted from “Reality Is Broken,” she argued that harnessing gamer strengths, including “blissful productivity,” “urgent optimism,” and “extreme cooperation,” has the potential to solve daunting social issues, from depression to global poverty. McGonigal, the featured lecturer at FCLC’s Industry Leadership Series on Feb. 2, has the utmost faith in the power of ARGs and the people who play them. As a life goal, she hopes to see a game designer win a Nobel Peace Prize. Working in a cuttingedge profession that joins social psychology and technology research with Silicon Valley commercial enterprise, see Gaming pg. 12
The Student Voice of Fordham College at Lincoln Center
ture editor of America Magazine, stressed the voluntary attitude among young people, saying, “20somethings may find [Catholicism] useful, but only to the extent that it makes them feel closer to God.” Others thought that shrinking numbers might be caused by a see Church pg. 4
Inside SPORTS
patriots no more? Fordham demoted in Patriot League due to athletic scholarships. u PAGE 26
LITERARY
love in new york Short fiction explores the complexities of infidelity.
u PAGE 25
ARTS
our Grammy Picks
An arts editor breaks down his list of who should vs. who will win.
u PAGE 16