SAY YES TO THE CAREER, NOT THE DRESS
PHILADELPHIA FLOWER SHOW BLOSSOMS WITH MOVIE THEME
WOMEN IN SPORTS
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YOU SPEAK WE LISTEN PACEMAKER WINNER
THELOQUITUR.COM
VOL. LVI, ISSUE 22
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
A place called home: Living in a top-ranked dangerous city
CREATIVE COMMONS
A street in Camden, N.J. BY ERICA ABBOTT News Editor Everyone has a place that they call home. But what if your home was listed as the most dangerous city in America? Recently, NeighborhoodScout released the list of 100 most dangerous cities for 2015 and the top two ranked cities are both within 20 miles of Cabrini. Topping the list, Camden ranked as number one and Chester at number two. “We’ve always been top five most dangerous cities in Amer-
ica. It puts our city down, like that’s not the only thing going on there,” Vinny Walls, senior liberal studies major, said. “But sometimes it upsets me. I know it’s on the rise; it’s getting better, even though we’re number one right now. I see it as getting better from when I was younger.” Walls is from Camden, N.J., and wants to do as much as he can to try to help. He did a summer camp for kids and when he was little, his father worked with kids playing basketball. “Children don’t grow up hav-
ing bad mindsets; it’s the environment that they grow up around. [With] younger generations, you just gotta put in that there’s more to Camden than just eight miles in the city. I just try to stay as positive as I can and try to be a role model,” Walls said. “If you go in Camden, you’ll find a lot of people that are prideful about the city. I love Camden [and] I’m going to do as much as I can to try to help.” Some of the worst experiences he has seen in Camden, however, are walking around the city and
Hispanics transforming American Catholic Church, speaker says BY BRIANNA MORRELL Asst. Social Media Editor This is a journey of the transformation of Catholicism and without faith you cannot have culture, a Boston College professor of Hispanic ministry said Wednesday, March 18. “From the 1930s there was no official word for Latin Americans. The unofficial word used around the United States was ‘The Spanish Speaking.’” People became offended because some have been in the country for a few years.” Dr. Hosffman Ospino is an assistant professor of Hispanic ministry and religious education at Boston College, said during the third presentation of the Lenten Lecture. Ospino was born in Colombia and had received a degree in philosophy. He is actively involved in the Latino ministry in Boston with his wife. He spoke to a boardroom of people about the understanding of the transformation of American Catholicism and also talked about Hispanic Catholicism. “Most of my life I have been involved in some form of service in the Church, whether as an altar
server when I was a child, or a catechist in my youth, or supporting teachers teaching theology and religion in elementary and secondary schools,” Ospino said. “In the United States I first became involved in the life of the Church by overseeing Hispanic ministry in a parish.” The lecture was the third in the series presented by the Wolfington Center on March 18 in the Grace Hall boardroom. His presentation started off with him getting to know the audience. There were students and faculty of different majors and areas of study within the audience. Each person was asked to talk about their major and generally introduce themselves. “I thought he made the presentation pretty personal and I felt as though I can listen better and pay attention,” Brian Quirk, undecided sophomore, said. “And asking question didn’t feel awkward because of how friendly he was.”
seeing how drained people look. “So many people just look like they’re drained, like Camden is sucking the life out of them. But some people are so used to it that they love being there and they’re used to the environment.” According to Walls, people love seeing the positive things happening in Camden but those types of stories are rarely published. “All everybody sees is outside looking in and nobody is going in to see what’s really going on.” Last year, Camden was ranked
as number three, while in 2013 it ranked as number two. Its lowest rank recently listed on the website was in 2012 when it came in as number five. This year’s second-ranked most dangerous city has seen much more dramatic jumps in their ranking. In 2012, Chester was ranked as number two, but in 2013 it fell to number 19. In 2014, however, it jumped back up in the top 10 to number eight. @ERICA_ABBOTT CONTINUE READING ONLINE
Gebauer awarded First-Year Student Advocate Award
PHOTO SUBMITTED BY RICHIE GEBAUER
Richie Gebauer, director of the First-Year Experience, was recently awarded with the Outstanding First-Year Student Advocate Award. CONTINUE READING ON PAGE 4
CONTINUE READING ABOUT HIS ACHIEVEMENT AND LLCS ON PAGE 4.