battle of eagle road
Ella’s American Bistro Opens
Pages 15-16
Page 10 Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012
YOU SPEAK, WE LISTEN
Radnor, Pa.
CABRINI COLLEGE
www.theloquitur.com
Pacemaker Winner
Vol. LIII, Issue 15
College upgrades presidential house BY LAURA HANCQ Editor-in-Chief A new official residence has been purchased for the President of Cabrini College. Known as Cabrini House, Dr. Marie Angelella George is set to move in at the end of this school year and the residence will serve as home for the future presidents of the school as well. The president is required to live in the house provided by the college as per contract. The new residence, 185 West Matsonford Road, will not only serve as home of the president but also an offcampus site for events and meetings. It is ADA accessible with adequate parking and a spacious lawn, making it suitable to accommodate a large number of guests comfortably. “It meets the evolving needs of the college to provide an off-campus but easily accessible facility for meetings with donors, alumni, faculty, staff and students,” Deb Takes, chair of the Board of Trustees, said in an email to the Cabrini community. The former residence, 7 Crow Creek Lane, will be listed and sold between $750,000-$850,000. The new house was purchased for $1.4 million. The money used to purchase the house comes from long-term investments by the college, which Cabrini Magazine lists at $23.3 million for fiscal year 2011. “The current residence at Crow Creek Lane is not suitable for what the Board envisions the role of the president will be in friend-raising and fundraising as we enlarge the donor base, and move forward
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with the Master Plan and the college’s strategic goals,” Takes said. “For several years, the college has relied on the generosity of trustees, alumni, and donors to host a number of off-campus alumni and donor events. That generosity is deeply appreciated but we can’t do that forever.”
It is reasonable, as with any big purchase, students and parents would question why money needs to be spent when the Woodcrest Mansion on campus serves as an event site for the college. “With increasing efforts to generate ancillary revenue through rentals of col-
lege buildings and facilities, the installation of air-conditioning and improved heating in the college’s historically significant Woodcrest Mansion have increased its desirability for weddings, other social occasions, and meetings of civic groups such as The Radnor Conservancy,” Daniel DiPrinzio, Media Relations manager for Cabrini College, said. “Meetings with neighbors to describe the Gateway project have been, and will continue to be, held in the Mansion.” DiPrinzio also added that inquiries about the Mansion rentals have almost doubled and bookings are up this year over last. Sodexo, the catering services in the Mansion and partner with the college, have also really increased efforts to market the Mansion. The new property on Matsonford Road will serve the college’s needs now and in the future. There will be spaces designated for the president to live and certain spaces designated for college functions. “The first floor and grounds are designated as ‘public space’ to be used for college events and there are specific areas of the grounds where a temporary or semipermanent tent can be erected for larger college functions. Other areas of the property are reserved for the president’s residence,” Takes said. Cabrini House will serve trustees, donors, alumni, faculty, staff, students and all those who are honored by the college. The house represents a positive growth for the college through partnerships, fundraising and events. LCH23@CABRINI.EDU
Travelers look ahead to South African immersion BY ROBERT RICHES
Students, faculty and staff of the college are anticipating a three-week immersion project to South Africa this coming June. The trip, which is tentatively scheduled to start on June 1 and conclude on June 25, promises to be an interesting learning experience for everybody involved. “This trip does not focus on service, it focuses on immersion,” Roxanne De La Torre, of the Wolfington Center, said. “It is important for us as humans to understand how people live in other parts of the world.” “I learned about the trip through a
friend of mine and I am really excited about applying,” Felicia Melvin, senior communication major, said. The immersion trip to South Africa is part of a pilot for future Engagements with the Common Good classes, which are to be run from the Wolfington Center. “We are looking to live in solidarity with people of South Africa,” De La Torre said, “and experience the culture and poverty of a country with a huge HIV and AIDS problem.” Those on the immersion trip will also get the opportunity to work with Grandmothers against Poverty and AIDS (GAPA). “GAPA is basically an organization of grandmothers who lost their children to
AIDS, and had to become parents again to their grandchildren in a new generation,” De La Torre said. “Nowadays there’s sex education and AIDS education, which GAPA did not have available when they raised their children.” In addition, the trip will focus on an instrumental part of South Africa’s history: apartheid. “We hope to gain an understanding about the history of South Africa,” De La Torre said. “South Africa and the United States both have had similar problems with racism and apartheid.” Apartheid was racial segregation enforced by the South African government and came to an end in 1994. “We want to learn where South Africa
is after apartheid and where it will go,” De La Torre said. The trip should provide a tremendous opportunity to learn from, and promises to hold memories that will last a lifetime. Considering that it is part of a pilot program, it may even lead to more trips like this down the road. “We hope that Cabrini continues its partnership with South Africa in the future,” De La Torre said. RTR29@CABRINI.EDU