November 3, 2011

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ESTABLISHED 1921 November 3, 2011 Volume 90, Issue 15 Your Home. Your Voice. Your Newspaper.

Loyola Marymount University

www.laloyolan.com

Hearing addresses LAPD-cited students

City Attorney hearing aims to improve relationships between students and neighbors.

By Tierney Finster News Editor

Photos by Kellie Rowan and Devin Sixt | Loyolan

Students sleep outside as part of Homeless Awareness Week Magis, the Black Student Union and Delta Zeta are hosting Homeless Awareness Week, during which students sleep outside as a sign of solidarity with the homeless population. To hear students reflect on the event, listen to a collection of sound bites at laloyolan.com.

LMU ranks third in educational value NEWS ANALYSIS

Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine lists LMU as the private college with the third best value in the state. By Margo Jasukaitis Asst. News Editor

According to Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine’s annual list of Best Values in Private Colleges, LMU students are getting the third best value in the state. The list, which was released last Tuesday, Oct. 25, evaluated colleges based on a variety of factors perceived to affect the overall value of an education. Four-year graduation rate, student debt at graduation and class size

were among the factors Kiplinger included in its assessment. In an economic climate that necessitates an increased level of fiscal caution, the cost of higher education continues to rise. The number of institutions charging more than $50,000 a year has increased to 123 in the past year (up from 100), according to an Oct. 26 article in The Chronicle of Higher Education titled, “Institutions Charging More Than $50K for Tuition, Fees, Room, and Board.” According to Dr. Jennifer Pate, chair of the economics department and a member of the University’s Strategic Planning Committee, LMU is fairly unique relative to the other colleges named on Kiplinger’s list, in that a majority of its funding comes from student tuition. “We are a tuition-dependent university,” she said. “I think it speaks to just

how much value LMU students are getting from [the University] that [LMU] is able to have that high caliber of education while being tuition-dependent,” Pate said. “I think we’re an even better value than [is] reflected on the list because of that,” she said. Pate continued to say that other schools lauded by Kiplinger rely heavily on large endowments, but pointed out the equally high caliber of education LMU provides without such an endowment. Pate said she sees this as a “testament to the University’s commitment to its students.” According to Pate, one of the objectives of the Strategic Planning Committee is to maximize the value students receive from an LMU education. “It’s nice to hear [LMU] is

See Value | Page 4

Tony Alonso aims to ‘inspire participation’ NEWS FEATURE

Director of Music for Campus Ministry Tony Alonso discusses his passion for liturgical music. By Emily Rome Copy Editor

Sacred Heart Chapel is a place most members of the LMU community are accustomed to seeing filled with people and music. Outside of Mass, however, the chapel is a quiet, serene place. This is how Tony Alonso, whose office is in the back of the chapel, is accustomed to seeing the church. Alonso, LMU’s director of music for Campus Ministry, is responsible for filling Sacred Heart Chapel with song on certain Sundays and Holy Days.

When he moved from Chicago to Los Angeles in 2006, Alonso began directing the LMU Ensemble, the choir that sings during Mass. The move to LMU was not only a major shift from the windy city to sunny Southern California but was also a transition to working with an age-specific group. “I was very nervous to work with college-age students just because I had not worked with an age-specific group before,” Alonso said. But any apprehension Alonso felt only further encouraged him to accept the invitation from John Flaherty, director of liturgy and music, to work at LMU. “I think it was that little bit of nervousness that made me want to be a part of this. … I figured if you’re not doing something that makes you a little nervous once and a while, you’re never going to grow,” Alonso said.

See Composer | Page 3

Dear President Burcham, An opinion columnist responds to President Burcham's request to save Federal Pell Grants.

Opinion, Page 8

Progress has been made in the cases of over 30 LMU students who were cited at an offcampus party in September. As reported in a Sept. 12 Loyolan article titled “Arrests made at off-campus party,” approximately 32 students were issued misdemeanor citations at a Labor Day Weekend party on West 79th Street in Westchester. Of these 32 individuals, three were arrested for disturbing the peace and one for public intoxication. According to the Department of Public Safety’s report, over 200 people were at the party when the arrests were made. Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Captain Gary Walters explained at the time of the previous article that the students facing misdemeanor charges could potentially face fines, community service requirements or jail sentences of one year or less. However, Deputy City Attorney Claudia Martin told the Loyolan that the Office of the City Attorney decided to host a hearing only for the renters of the home in which the party took place. “We focused our efforts on the people who were renting the house where the party took place and were cited. … Since we determined that we were focusing our efforts on the people that rent the house, in the interest of justice we figured that declining to file charges against them was the appropriate thing to do. These cases weren’t set up for hearing or prosecution,” Martin said. At the hearing, the homeowner, the student renters and LAPD were present. Also in attendance was a hearing officer and Martin herself. The benefit of these hearings, as Martin explained, is to give all parties involved a chance to communicate with each other.

See Hearing | Page 3

Devin Sixt| Loyolan

Delta Zeta hosts annual Turtle Tug philanthropy

Last Saturday’s Turtle Tug event in Sunken Garden consisted of a tug-of-war competition over pools of green Jell-o. According to Amanda Pesqueira, senior communication studies major and Delta Zeta president, the 2011 competition had 639 participants and raised approximately $13,000. Turn to Page 2 for more photos from the event.

Index Classifieds.............................5 Opinion...............................6 A&E...................................9 Sports..............................16

The next issue of the Loyolan will be printed on November 7, 2011.

Confident Cure An LMU sophomore battled leukemia and is now a walk-on for the men's water polo team.

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Sports, Page 16


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