Thursday, 3, 2009 Thursday,Dec. Feb. 19, 2009
YOU SPEAK, WE LISTEN
Radnor, Pa.
CABRINI COLLEGE
Pacemaker Winner Vol VolLI, L,Issue Issue13 17
www.theloquitur.com
Speaker encourages global awareness eric gibble staff writer
erg722@cabrini.edu
MEGAN KUTULIS/DEPUTY EDITOR
Students commemorate World AIDS Day megan kutulis deputy editor
mmk725@cabrini.edu
Cabrini students and faculty joined together to celebrate World AIDS Day on Tuesday, Dec. 1. Through participation in on and off campus events, the college community raised awareness for a disease
that continues to plague the world. Though the entire campus celebrated the day, Cabrini’s Catholic Relief Services ambassadors, specifically the HIV/AIDS ambassadors, planned the events that took place on campus. “AIDS hits everyone; it hits newborns, people our age and older people. It doesn’t
matter what your race or gender is, it can hit you, too,” Jamie Tadrzynski, CRS HIV/AIDS ambassador and sophomore history and secondary education major,
AIDS , Page 3
The policies of the United States have contributed to Haiti being the poorest western nation. Because of this, we should it take it upon ourselves to help improve the economic situation on the island. Bishop Thomas Gumbleton conveyed this message to the small crowd at the Higher Grounds Cafe on North Third street in Philadelphia on Nov. 18. He hosted the fundraiser for the House of Grace Haiti Health Care Project which he created. Gumbleton stated that Haiti has paid over $21 billion in reparations to France and this, along with the foreign policy of the United States in the ‘90s, has contributed to the islands inability to thrive. “France and other countries, including the United States, tried to prevent this country from flourishing. We could not recognize a country of slaves when we had so many of our own,” Gumbleton said. Haiti is in the midst of a health care crisis. It currently has the highest infant mortality rate among western nations. Haitians are most likely to die from diarrhea, respiratory infections and malaria. “You all probably have some awareness of Haiti and its lack of access to water. People are dying from diarrhea. It’s so simple to stop diarrhea. Really think about what that means. It doesn’t take a doctor to solve this problem,” Gumbleton said. Katie Huynh made her initial trip to Haiti five years ago on with a human rights group. She was inspired by Gumbleton and so the House of Grace Haiti Health Care Project was formed to improve the lives of those on the island.
HAITI, Page 3
College financing causes confusion among Cabrini students arielle friscia a&e editor
af728@cabrini.edu amanda carson news editor
arc726@cabrini.edu
Many students dread the day when the bill for their college tuition comes. For some students, settling their financial accounts with the college goes smoothly, while others experience confusion. Often times, those with tuition problems must go back
E
FFIC O S S E BUSIN and forth between the financial aid office in Grace Hall and the business office in the Mansion.
FINA
NCIA OFF L AID ICE
“My parents decided they were going to change the way they were going to pay the school,”
AMANDA CARSON/NEWS EDITOR
Matthew Rowe, senior business administration major, said. “Trying to coordinate this with
the school was a hassle because I was told by both offices that I needed to go to the other office.” The business office and the financial aid office are two separate, yet interdependent, offices. One is where students pay their actual bills; the other helps students receive money to pay the bills. Although differentiating each office’s purpose seems simple enough, financial uncertainties seem to blur each
FINANCES , Page 3