AAI Behrend Beacon y\ I U April 16,2010 vy L J ■ www.thebehrendbeacon.com J/ MY VOICE A need for real health care reform MLADEN GRGIC i ontnfmlini* u nlt>i Land of the free, home of the brave; the American dream is what we all strive for. Wealth, happiness, and stability, all of which are easily accessible while living in the United States, as long as you are dedi cated to hard work and perse verance. So with all that said, how is it that today over 37 mil lion Americans live in poverty? Are they not working hard enough? Although finding a job without a car or significant ad dress if pretty much impossible. Or do they not ; want the “Ameri- "SIDC© th© QOV6ITI can Dream"? mentS’S fOCUS is OUt the American SidG Of th© United dream is just that, a States, these dream, a succes- >, r . Sion of images, 37 million people thoughts or emo- will live in poverty until liTugh the'mind the government wakes during sleep. Be- up and realizes that cause the Ameri- this Is a major can dream seems J so intangible it is problem” becoming obsolete to those 37 million Americans living in poverty. The 37 million people who are already living in poverty and the millions more that will join them be cause of the recession basically have no way out, so my ques tion is what is the government going to do about this problem? Living in a country where you can do anything you put your mind to, how do we have poverty? Maybe it's because the government’s focus is else where. Helping foreign coun tries with their poverty while ignoring our own backyard. For example. New Jersey, one of the richest states in the country is home to the poorest city in the country, Camden. How is that possible? New Orleans is another example of the govern ment’s lack of concern for the countries well-being and its in- DOUBLE DOWN Have Your Say: «' x°" £»»*£ Do " s Desstia Jones freshman undecided “I’m going because the Goo “No, I’m not going. I have Goo Dolls are freaking sweet!” to coach my lacrosse team habitants While our nation is plummet ing and becoming poorer every day, other places are flourish ing and benefiting from the American dream. Who’s to blame? Do we blame the past presidents for making eco nomic decisions that have made today’s economic reces sion? Or do we blame the peo ple who are living in poverty and the people around them who choose to not help them in their time of need? But how can those people do better or help when the government isn't showing any significant con cern for these peo ple? Most of the people who are liv ing in poverty are either African American or Latino and live in the worst of towns none as ghettoes. How are these peo ple supposed to bring themselves out of the slums when there is no help? Realistically they can't; since the govern ment’s focus is outside of the United States, these 37 million people will live in poverty until the government wakes up and realizes that this is a major problem. How can there be a war on drugs and a war on terrorism, but no war on poverty? The government should realize that a war on poverty within the United States is just as signifi cant as a war or drugs and ter rorism. In order for our country to get out of this slump that we are in, our leaders need to real ize that the focus is needed at home in order to attain that American dream and fix sur rounding countries like that of Haiti. This nrficle w.is not ud/teti for gum- tujtron. per Bt\i( on edrto niiii or pum ruif po/u \ TRIPLE BYPASS I -p . . !' o 1 -* * i | r i >\ L- ‘ >-f —lf* Ryan Adams sophomore business MY VOICE Lady NICK BLAKE sports editor Constructed from 2,950 tons of stainless Pittsburgh steel, the Mellon Arena opened in Sep tember of 1961 as the Civic Au ditorium. It featured the world’s first retractable roof on a major ath letic stadium, and it has been the home of the Pittsburgh Pen guins since day one of the fran chise. Mellon Arena, named for Mellon Financial which pur chased the arena in 1999, has hosted the likes of Elvis Presley and the Beatles. She has welcomed Muham mad Ali, the Harlem Globetrot- ters and the WWE. “To hp in Mpllnn over me and 1 Even though IU Dc IN MeilOll cou i dn ’ t S ee the Lady Mellon has Arena when that puck Jumbotron. seen her fair share hit that hark nf thp None of that of talent over her uldlUdUvUl ulc mattered, though. I 49-year career, the net WaS a Surreal was in The Igloo hockey games that f ,• Thphllilriinn for a P la Y off S ame have taken place IMg UUIIUlliy against the Flyers, under her silver was rocking, and I who are arguably dome may have ■ • , f the Penguins' produced her COfTnete biggest rival. greatest memories. StfanQefS Who felt like Bill Guerin I could go on a fripnrk " scored with less rant listing num- TnenOS. than two minutes bers and stats all to play in overtime relating to Lady Mellon, but Penguins fans already know that stuff. She has been the home to some of the greatest players to ever play in the NHL. Jean Pronovost, Andy Bath gate, Tom Barasso, Ron Fran cis, Paul Coffey, Mario Lemieux, Jaromir Jagr, Sidney Crosby, Evegeni Malkin, Marc Andre-Fleury, the list goes on and on. AH of these players, and countless others, have donned the Penguins uniform. Each and every one of them has had their fair share of ac complishments, and calls Mel lon Arena “home”. For you Penguins fans, who have been as lucky as I have to attend at least one game at The Igloo, you know what 1 am talk ing about. I went to my first Penguins Brian Beswick sophomore plastics engineering “I’m not going. I’ll be going home. I haven’t been there in two months.” Mellon , / game when I was 12-years-old. The Penguins beat the San Jose Sharks 4-2 that night. My seats were in the Igloo Club section, right behind the benches. I was sitting five rows behind Lemieux, Martin Straka and Alexei Kovalev. I got to see Lemieux score a goal that night. It wasn’t a mile stone goal or anything like that, but I got to see Mario Lemieux score a goal at Mellon Arena. That was special. Last season, I was lucky enough to get a ticket for game two of the Penguins’ first round match up against the Philadel phia Flyers. My seat was in section E. The section F balcony hung to give Pittsburgh a 2-0 lead in the series. To be in Mellon Arena when that puck hit the back of the net was a surreal feeling. The building was rocking, and I was hugging complete strangers who felt like friends. I’ll never forget that moment. The Penguins would go on to win the Stanley Cup, and I could say that I got to go to a game on the road to their third Stanley Cup in franchise his tory. This season, on a chilly No vember day, my girlfriend and I sat outside of gate eight for six and a half hours for a Student Rush game against the Ana heim Ducks. With no blankets or chairs, we sat on 6f\e cold pavement in the shadow of the Mellon, and it was amazing. FORMALDEHYDE <7* !& Lauren Liebdzinski freshman IBE “Yes, I will be going. I’m on the hospitality commitee.” All profile photos taken by Daniel Smith / Behrend Beacon bid you adieu Mike Lange, who has been the play-by-play voice of the Penguins since 1975, is a leg end when it comes to Pitts burgh Penguins hockey. On that day, Lange was enter ing the arena right next to the Student Rush line. I had the opportunity to meet him and have my picture taken with him. The Penguins won the game, and it was easily one of the best days of my life. For anyone that has been to a hockey game at Mellon Arena, you have your own special memories. MY VOICE Is this Ben's reputation? SHAWN ANNARELLI manji>in# editor Big Ben is the NFL's Big Sleazy. Just check out how the guy presented himself in his scripted apology to the NFL last week after it was announced no charges would be filed against him for sexual assault. Ben s lack of professionalism had less to do with his attire and a lot to do with his hairdo. Ben s normally golden, curly locks were greased back, al most as if a steamroller leveled his cranium. He looked like Ted Levine playing a well-dressed Buffalo Bill in The Silence of the Lambs, but 1 digress. Ben needs to be suspended: not by Roger Goodell, but by his own team. In just less than four years, Roethlisberger has engraved his skull into the windshield of a Chrysler New Yorker after plowing his 2005 Suziki Hayabusa into it, and he has been accused of sexual assault by a woman in Las Vegas, Nev. and another in Milledgeville, Ga. How much grief can he put Dan Rooney through? He was the man that en dorsed Roethlisberger as the Steelers number one pick in the 2003 NFL Draft. The answer should be that the Rooneys are fed up with being disrespected. The Rooneys, one of the NFLs most storied and influen tial families, should be fuming after their $lOO million plus quarterback walked his way into a bathroom stall of trouble, again. It is not that Ben is a bad guy, but you cannot help but feel that he needs to be held ac countable for his lack of off the field professional judgement. Just look at what has hap pened over the years to three of Ben s top receivers after they failed to uphold themselves as character teammates. Plaxico Burress was not re leased due to a lack of talent or any off the field issues, but he was widely regarded as a inion Right next door to Lady Mel lon, the Consol Energy Center is being built, and come next season will be the new home of the Penguins. While Penguins fans are looking forward to a new arena with more seating, more space and a new feel, we will be sad to see The Igloo go. Even though Mellon Arena will be demolished, her memo ries will live on, and Penguins fans will never forget the magi cal moments that were experi enced under her silver dome. the end of Big locker room cancer. In 2004, former head coach Bill Cowher temporarily suspended Burress for missing an unexcused prac tice. Where has that accountabil ity in the Steelers’ organization gone? Despite being Bens favorite target as a rookie play caller, the Steelers let Plaxico go north to the New York Giants in 2005. Five years later, Burress can be found in a Rikers Island jail cell serving a two-year sen tence for shooting... himself. Fast forward to March 2008, and the Steelers are suspend ing Ben's then No. 3 receiver Cedric Wilson. Wilson, who is no stranger to being a distrac tion to teammates, allegedly as saulted his girlfriend. Wilson was later released on $lO,OOO bail, but the Steelers released him for good. You can probably find him at your local anger management therapy group. Our next and final stop on Big Bens troubled receivers' past takes us to a not so distant name, Santonio Holmes. Holmes, a break-out star in 2009, just did not know when to stop "waking and baking.” The young and restless re ceiver was also accused of as saulting a woman, which was the last straw for the franchise. The Steelers traded him for a fifth round pick in the upcom ing NFL Draft. You can find Holmes in a Jets jersey, but he will be sidelined by an NFL four-game suspension for sub stance abuse. This brings us back to Ben. He carelessly rode helmetless on a motorcycle into another vehicle, and two women have accused him of sexual assault in the last two years. How many straws are the Rooneys giving this supposed football icon? It would appear that Roethlis berger has one more straw left, which is probably one too many. Until he pulls that one, a mes sage should be sent to him. That message should come in the form of an unpaid multiple game suspension. Contributed photo