FIRST PLACE AWARD WINNERS
FROM THE
NEW YORK PRESS ASSOCIATION & AMERICAN SCHOLASTIC PRESS ASSOCIATION
Pace Chronicle The
VOLUME IV, ISSUE XI
PACE UNIVERSITY, PLEASANTVILLE/BRIARCLIFF MANOR, NY
WWW.PACECHRONICLE.COM
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
Pace Joins National “Stop Slut” Movement
Photo from gratewire.com
TAYLOR LONGENBERGER NEWS EDITOR Pace organizations are joining the 15-school coalition to produce the play Stop Slut with The Arts Effect and The Feminist Press this spring. Rachel Simon, the Assistant Director of Multicultural Affairs and Diversity Programs (MADP) and LGBTQ Coordinator, has brought together many students and organizations, with the goal of creating a production of the play that brings light to a topic very prominent on college cam-
puses today, “slut shaming.” Amherst College, Barnard College, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, North Dakota State University, Rutgers University, St. Cloud State University, and University of Montana have all performed the play that has led to a movement across the country. “Due to the National move to bring sexual awareness to college campuses, I thought that bringing Slut, the play to Pace would be a great addition to the campus,” Simon said. Stop Slut was written by a
group of high school students that hoped to engage the country in activism in order to end slut shaming and transform the rape culture of today. The play represents a student-led movement using cultural expression in order to make a change to the perception of the word slut. Current groups that are committed partners for the production of the play are the Sigma Lambda Upsilon Señoritas Latinas Unidas Sorority Incorporated (SLU), the Sexual Assault committee, MADP, and Residential Life. “I feel like this play can really
make a difference. It’s not like other forms of raising awareness that present facts and don’t really provide a visual way to know what slut shaming is like,” Pace student and member of the Sexual Assualt Committee Jordan White said. “I like this idea because actors can show the audience that being ‘slutty’ is not a reason to be treated a certain way and it is definitely not a reason to be raped, ever.” Rehearsals have begun for the production that will be performed in late March and early April on the Briarcliff Campus in Wood-
ward Hall. Students have come together to use their skills as actors, costume designers, stagehands, and directors. The play has 11 student women characters and there are many male students participating in non-acting roles. “I am excited that the Pleasantville campus is taking the initiative to show their acting skills for such a good cause,” SLU sister Iqra Mir said. “I am happy to be a part of something that can change the way that slut shaming is seen by using a visual display of feeling and real emotion.”
Protesting Police Brutality: All Lives Matter Pace Students Join the Displays
EMILY WOLFRUM EDITOR-IN-CHIEF NIKI PINTO FEATURED WRITER Students and faculty gathered around Choate pond to protest police brutality on Thur., Dec. 4. Protests were specifically in regard to the cases of Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, and Mike Brown. Director of Multicultural Af-
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fairs and Diversity Cornell Craig opened by discussing the case of Pace student Danroy “DJ” Henry who was fatally shot by police in October of 2010. Many of the students carried cardboard signs that read “Black Lives Matter” and “All Lives Matter” as they walked around the pond chanting “Hands up, Don’t shoot” with their arms raised. The demonstration was coor-
dinated by senior history major Ashley Lora, who began organizing just two days prior. After gaining approval from both Dean for Students Lisa Bardill Moscaritolo and Director of Student Development Rachel Carpenter, Lora reached out to the office of Multicultural Affairs and Diversity to spread the word. “I think it’s important for all college campuses. Everyone
should come out and say something that they believe in,” said Lora, who was motivated by friends who had participated in similar protests at other schools. “I think Pace hasn’t seen something like this. Pace hasn’t seen a protest.” Lora added that the on-campus connection of DJ Henry has contributed to student interest in the cause. “It affects everyone,” Lora
said. “I think that’s why this issue is so important, because there are so many things tied to it. It’s gun violence, it’s police brutality, it’s race, it’s age, it’s how you look, it’s so many things interconnected. It was DJ Henry, but now the country is feeling us. It’s not just one person, it’s not just one campus.”
ALS MASQUERADE BALL
GREEK LIFE
FOOTBALL COACH
ALS Sorority held their annual Red Masquerade Ball to raise money for the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatrics AIDS Foundation.
In regards to last week’s issue of the Chronicle, one writer debates what it means to be Greek, and how others percieve Greek life.
Even after his recent suspension, due to suspicions of abuse, Coach Rondeau’s players are supporting him.
Feature Page 3
Opinion Page 6
CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 “PROTESTING”
Sports Page 12