2009-10 Issue 12 Loquitur

Page 1

Thursday, 2009 Thursday,Nov. Feb. 19, 19, 2009

YOU SPEAK, WE LISTEN

Radnor, Pa.

CABRINI COLLEGE

Pacemaker Winner Vol VolLI, L, Issue 12 17

www.theloquitur.com

The REALITY of HEALTH CARE

Enrollment for

colleges increase katie engell sports editor

kge722@cabrini.edu gianna shikitino features editor

gls722@cabrini.edu

BRIAN LOSCHIAVO/EDITOR IN CHIEF

megan kutulis deputy editor

mmk725@cabrini.edu brian loschiaVo editor in chief

bl726@cabrini.edu

H

ealth care legislation now going through Congress is likely to affect young college graduates more than any other age group. With the job

market tight, finding a job with health insurance will continue to be a challenge. “I was dropped from my dad’s insurance plan because of my age. It didn’t matter that I was still a college student and couldn’t afford health insurance on my own, and that I didn’t have a job that would give me health benefits,” Stacey Turnbull, 2007 Cabrini graduate, said. Turnbull is just one of the thousands of college graduates who has felt the harsh reality of traditional health insurance

policies, which usually drop students at age 23, or six months after graduation. Each family needs to investigate their own plan. Insurance experts say it is important not to go without co use that is called a “lapse in coverage” and may make it harder to get insurance later on. For students who are caught up in the

HEALTH CARE , Page 5

College enrollment has dramatically increased over the decades. Students have adapted to the idea that college is essential for their future in order to be successful. “It’s the general feeling across the country that a college education is the best way to achieve your goal. It’s a useful tool to have,” John Pino, admissions counselor, said. Pino believes that perhaps enrollment increased because college is an “affordable option that families have been able to take. It became an option for a lot of families.” The U.S. Census Bureau reported on the number of students enrolled in colleges and universities this fall across the nation, stating that it reached 19 million people. This number increased from 20 years ago, when only 13.5 million students were enrolled. “There was a lot of research that was done to say that between 2006 and 2008 we were supposed to get a big spread in admissions across the board with all demographics and minorities,” Peter Schauster, assistant director of admissions, said. Schauster said that since 2007 the numbers have been slightly going down. “Research would say that there’s a spike [in increasing enrollment], but that it would slowly taper off,” Schauster said. Between the years of 1970 and 2007, the amount of students attending a degreegranting institution has skyrocketed from an estimated 8.5 million to nearly 10 times that amount to 18.2 million. “I think it’s because nowadays people cannot get a job without a college education

ENROLLMENT , Page 3

Migrant farmers rally for rights alyssa mentzer staff writer

ajm332@cabrini.edu

A small crowd gathers at the door asking for help. They want an answer or even a piece of hope to hold on to. It doesn’t matter that it is late at night or early in the morning. They stand at the back door of his home waiting for the man that can help change their lives. Luis Tlaseca has been the light of hope for the farm workers in Kennett Square, Pa. He has dedicated his time to CATA, a farm workers support committee or El Comité de Apoyo a Los

Trabajadores Agricolas, that empowers farm workers to organize for better working and living conditions. He was also one of the founders of the only union for mushroom farm workers in the region. Tlaseca is the coordinator of the Pennsylvania CATA, which also has an office in Southern N.J. He strives to unify mushroomfarm workers and give them a voice to fight for what they deserve. “My job, it’s difficult, it’s challenging for me to try to organize,” Tlaseca said. Tlaseca, like many of the farm workers, is a native of Mexico

and came to the United States undocumented to pursue a better lifestyle. Tlaseca said that he left Mexico in 1978 due to the poor conditions and lack of income. Upon arrival in the United States, he worked a low paying job picking apples and peaches. He eventually moved on to the mushroom industry where he experienced terrible working and living conditions, as well as low wages. Tlaseca said that conditions were bad at Kaolin, the mushroom farm he worked at in

FARMING, Page 3

ALYSSA MENTZER/STAFF WRITER

Many farm workers have come from other countries, such as Mexico, undocumented in an effort to pursue a better lifestyle. Luis Tlaseca has been acting as a light of hope for farm workers in Kennett Square, Pa.


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2009-10 Issue 12 Loquitur by Loquitur - Issuu