April 26, 2007 issue 24 Loquitur

Page 1

Thursday, April 26, 2007

C a b r i n i

C o l l e g e

The Loquitur Y o u S p e a k, W e L i s t e n

www.theLoquitur.com

Radnor, Pa.

Freshmen finances soar

Vol XLVIII, Issue 24

Marines encounter mental obstacles DIANA VILARES

ASST. EVENTS EDITOR

DVV722@CABRINI.EDU

ASHLEY COOK

ASST. NEWS EDITOR

AAC722@CABRINI.EDU JAMIE HUFNAGLE

ASST. NEWS EDITOR

JLH729@CABRINI.EDU

The American Dream of a college education is getting harder as richer kids more and more are

WHAT’S INSIDE

able to go to college while poorer kids cannot. This trend has been growing over the past 40 years. The family income of freshmen students is 60 percent higher than the national average, according to a study by the University of California at Los Angeles cooperative institutional research program. This is compared to 46 percent above average in 1971. Data

JAMIE HUFNAGLE

JLH729@CABRINI.EDU

SPORTS Track Page 15

MARINES, page 3

ECONOMICS, page 3

Number of full-time faculty decreases ASST. NEWS EDITOR

A&E Vonnegut Page 12

Charlie Grugan

collected from 1966 to 2006 shows freshmen changes in terms of characteristics, values, attitudes and behaviors. The study recorded the answers of the high school graduates who will become the next batch of American college students. Freshmen are the most

The United States Marine Corps has a “leader’s guide to deployment issues,” which includes sections on “what to look for,” “what to do,” “what to avoid” and “what to expect after taking action.” According to the overview of the guide found on www.usmc-mccs.org, some Marines can experience “dissatisfaction, disillusionment, depression or domestic violence” if they return from their service time without the “required return and reunion education and decompression time to give them realistic expectations.” “When I come home, I don’t really feel like I have one,” Anthony Cruz, a Marine’s intelligence specialist, said. Despite the picture perfect stories of the homecomings televised on numerous news channels and written about in daily papers, troops don’t always come home as they

left. Some even come home with the realization that they left with disillusionment about what they were getting themselves into. “The allure of a combat deployment and all that is involved is greater than I could imagine, but the Marine Corps tends to treat some Marines like children because of other people’s negative actions,” Stephen Norton, a Marine’s intelligence analyst, said. “I believe my idea of the Marines has changed for the worst. It isn’t what I expected,” Jordan Balsat, a Marine’s maintenance integrated management specialist, said. “In the Marines most of the higher ups treat you like shit, like you can’t think for yourself. That’s why so many Marines now a days get shot or hurt in the war. They can’t think for themselves because they are so used to getting yelled at and taking orders.” Granted that some degree of disappointment is expected

New data from the U.S. Education Department reveals that full-time, tenure-track faculty members are slowly decreasing in American higher education. A report from the National Center for Education Statistics shows that 624,753, or 47.5 percent, of the 1,314,506 faculty members at colleges that awarded federal financial aid in fall 2005 were in part-time positions. “The move away from tenuretrack faculty is due, in part, to a management model that desires flexibility in the hiring and firing of personnel. This is part of the inherent struggle between an educational institution doing what is best to serve its students and

financial necessities of balancing the budget,” John Heiberger, associate professor and chairman of the business department, said. “Unfortunately, it uses an old business model of management, which sometimes treats employees more like replaceable equipment.” The new numbers represent an increase in number and proportion from 2003 when the last full survey of institutions was conducted and when 543,137 of the 1,173,556 professors, or 46.3 percent, at degree-granting institutions were part timers. “There seems to be less communication among the part-time professors within the departments,” freshman English major

FACULTY, page 3

DIANA VILARES/SUBMITTED PHOTO

Marines can experience “dissatisfaction, disillusionment, depression or domestic violence” when they return home.


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