
A R O U N D C N R
President
Sweeny hosts Education Matters
on WVOX
Radio
Education
Matters, a
half-hour monthly interview program hosted by Dr. Stephen J. Sweeny on
WVOX
Radio (1460 AM), examines the ways in which education influences
society. On
March 14, Dr. Sweeny will be joined by Harold Crocker, Director of
Intercollegiate
Athletics, and Dr. Dora Ierides, Associate Professor of
Physical Education, School of Arts & Sciences, to
discuss “Wellness and Athletics.” In January, Dr. Donna Demarest, Dean,
School of Nursing,
joined Dr. Sweeny to discuss “Nursing and CNR,” and in February, Helen
Wolf, CNR’s Director of Campus Ministry, spoke about “Spiritual
Wellness.” m o r e
School of Arts
& Sciences Alumna
Wins
Third Emmy Nomination
Angela Cascarano SAS’01,
associate producer for WNYW FOX 5 News, has won her third Emmy
nomination for “Scam
School Series,” a program which reenacted street crimes in New
York City. Angela, who served as a producer for
this series,
was awarded an Emmy in 2003 for her work on Fox 5’s investigative
report “Fake
Rabbi.”
Noted Author Colman
McCarthy
to Speak at CNR on “Peacemaking in a Time
of War”
On
April 12, author
Colman
McCarthy, former columnist for The
Washington Post and founder and director of the Center for
Teaching
Peace,
will speak at the Westchester Consortium for International Studies
“Presidential Lecture 2005.” Hosted by President Stephen J. Sweeny, the
lecture
will begin at 7:30 p.m. in
the Student Campus
Center on the
Main Campus in New Rochelle.
Ursuline Institute
Lecture Addresses
HIV/AIDS Crisis “Up
Close and Personal”
On February 24 the College
hosted the Ursuline Institute’s Lecture, “HIV/AIDS Up Close and
Personal -- Expanding
the Horizons.” The lecture was delivered by Sisters Pascal Conforti ’56
and
Maureen McCarthy ’61, who spoke about their 2003 trip to Botswana
in Southern Africa to work with HIV/AIDS
victims. Addressing a crowded Romita Auditorium, Srs. Pascal and
Maureen shared
slides from their trip and offered insights into what it means to be a
midwife
in the age of HIV/AIDS, how the medical experience changes for patients
and
health care workers in the face of the disease, and how we can better
minister
to HIV/AIDS patients.
After Welcoming
Record Number of Visitors,
“The
Black
Madonna” Exhibit Closes
By the time
“The Black
Madonna” closed on February 27, more than 1,400 visitors had come
through the doors
of Castle Gallery to view the extraordinary exhibit, some from as far
away as Virginia, Colorado,
Ireland,
and Scotland.
On February 15, Elaine Soto, Ph.D., a clinical
psychologist and one of the exhibit’s featured artists, addressed an
enthusiastic audience in Romita Auditorium, speaking about the history
of the
Black Madonna and exploring the relationship between Black Madonnas and
psychological therapy.
At
a closing reception held on February 24, another featured artist, Aisha
Tandiwe
Bell, performed with her spoken word group Second2Last. The event,
held
in honor
of Black History Month, was planned in collaboration with Phoenix, the CNR student literary
magazine and arts club.

C N R S P O R T S & F I T N E
S S
School of Nursing
Freshman
makes “All
Conference”
School of Nursing freshman
and Blue Angel athlete Ruth Collura has made the All Conference Swim
Team for
the Hudson Valley Women’s Athletic Conference. “Ruth was the top
swimmer in our
program this year,” says Harold Crocker, Director of Intercollegiate
Athletics.
“She was a wonderful team leader, and everyone is looking forward to
next
season.” During intersession in January, Ruth took a break from
athletics to
perform community service in Brownsville,
Texas, and Matamoros,
Mexico,
as part of the College’s 2005 International Plunge.
CNR’s own Mo
Chuisle Golden Gloves Champ
Teaches Boxing at CNR
This semester,
CNR is making
an exception to the “no hitting in school” rule with the addition of an
exciting new boxing course. Angel Bovee, U.S.
Olympic-style boxer and National Golden Gloves title
holder is teaching a boxing course at the New Rochelle Campus as part
of the School of Arts
and Sciences’ physical education program. According to Dr. Theodora
Ierides,
Associate Professor of Physical Education, School of Arts &
Sciences, “Not only does boxing
provide a
great all-body workout, increasing participants’ stamina, speed, and
agility,
but it also has excellent cardiovascular benefits as well.”
The
new course, introduced before the release of the academy-award winning
movie Million Dollar Baby,
has drawn
overwhelming interest from undergraduate students. For safety reasons,
the
class is kept small – 16 students. “But, we could have had twice that
number,”
says Dr. Ierides. “We are very fortunate to have a wonderful
professional like
Angel teach this class.”

F A C U L T Y F O C U S
Herb Boyd, adjunct faculty, School
of New Resources, is the
author of We Shall Overcome: The
History of the Civil Rights Movement as It Happened. Published
by Source
Books, Inc., the multi-media living history of the Civil Rights
Movement
includes two audio CDs narrated by actors Ruby Dee and the late Ossie
Davis.
Cristina
de Gennaro, Associate Professor of Art, School
of Arts
and Sciences, presented her paper, "Spaces of Disjunction:
Subjectivity,
Aging and the Collage Aesthetic," at the 93rd Annual College Art
Association Conference in Atlanta, GA
in February, 2005.
Also attending the conference was Dr.
Susan M. Canning, Professor, Art Department, School of Arts and
Sciences, who
presented a paper entitled "Snow White, Sleeping Beauty and
SuperGrrrl: Feminist Fracture
Fairy Tales" in the session "Autobiographical Strategies: Politics and
Poetics of Women's Self-Representations in the Visual Arts."
In
February, Dr. Amy Bass, Associate Professor of History and Director of
the
Honors Program, School of Arts
and Sciences, gave the Black History Month Keynote Lecture at the University
of Maryland. The lecture
was based on her book, Not
the Triumph but the Struggle: the 1968
Olympic Games and the Making of the Black Athlete, and dealt
with the
cultural politics of race and citizenship as articulated at the Mexico
City
Games. The following day, as part of the University’s annual “Sport
Commerce
and Culture Symposium,” Dr. Bass presented her paper, “Getting Up Close
and
Personal: Knowing Bob Costas and
Manufacturing Discourses of Sport.”

M
O R E N E W S
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College Receives
$26,000 Grant for Gill Library m
o r e
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For “Children of All Ages”:
Circus Exhibit
to Open
in
Castle Gallery
“From Venice
to Vegas: Circus Memorabilia from the Collection of
Earl Chaney” opens in Castle Gallery on April 3. m o r e
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CNR Opens
Celebration of Women’s History Month with
Dowell Lecture by Filmmaker Faye Lederman m o r e
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Taking the Plunge:
Students Perform Community Service
in New York, Texas, and Mexico during
2005 Intersession m o r e
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Rosa Parks Campus Hosts Book Signing
by
Dr. Anderson J.
Franklin, in honor of Black History Month m o r e
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CNR Website Wins Case Award m o r e
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