The Saint :: Issue 14

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Heartside Pride is coming up! Aquinas’ largest community volunteer effort takes place on April 21. Look inside for all the details.

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Wednesday, April 18, 2012 Volume 31, Issue 14

Commencement info | 3 The Saint has everything you need to know about coming graduation celebrations at Aquinas.

Costa Rica speaker at AQ | 3 Wege Foundation speaker Dr. Daniel J. Janzen is slated to speak on tropical rainforests in Costa Rica and their place in the environment.

>>A&E | 5

Aquinas’ theater department’s latest effort features steampunk science fiction strangeness.

Student art on display | 5 The All-Media Student Art Show is on display at the AMC. Get The Saint’s take on Aquinas’ student artists, inside.

>>SPORTS Women’s Lacrosse

Men’s tennis keeps on winning | 7

theSaint Is ready for summer. So ready.

>>NEWS

Isle of Marvels

Summer fitness tips | 4

| 8

The Aquinas Women’s LAX team heads to Rome, Georgia to compete in the national tournament.

AQ Cheer goes national | 8 Aquinas’ cheer team competed at nationals in Daytona, Florida. Read how they did, inside.

Aquinas’ 125th wraps up

The year-long anniversary celebration of Charisms concludes with “Community” By Samantha Swartout Staff Writer As the 2011-2012 school year comes to a close, so do the 125th Anniversary celebrations of Aquinas College. Over the past year, the four Dominican charisms of Prayer, Service, Study and Community were emphasized with huge events on campus. The last pillar, Community, will be celebrated on April 24, 2012, with a benefit dinner and concert. The event, called “One Enchanted Evening” will celebrate the donors and benefactors of Aquinas. Tickets will cost donors $175 each and will help to further benefit students of Aquinas. This event will feature a strolling gourmet dinner through campus with live music at each stop. On Monday, April 23 at 4:30 p.m. there will be a free concert for students and faculty to enjoy. Alumni Sara Jakubiak (’02) and Dr. Andrew Fleser (’00) will be performing at the Performing Arts Center. “The whole year went extremely well. Our two years of planning paid off beautifully and the entire board is very happy with the results,” said Gary Eberle, Aquinas English professor and Master of the Revels for the 125th Anniversary Planning Committee who has spearheaded the year’s events. “Along with the larger events were smaller events that also deserve recognition. The Scott Turow event raised $40,000+ alone and we are hoping to raise at least that with ‘One Enchanted Evening,’” said Eberle . The pillar of Prayer was highlighted on Sept. 14, 2011, with a formal blessing and rededication of the college and campus. There was a vast array of speakers representing each of the pillars from students to professors to Marywood Sisters. Students representing on-campus

New technology at the library

MIRIAM PRANSCHKE / THE SAINT

iPads for your use: Junior Brianna Harris holds one of the new iPads available in the Grace Hauenstein Library’s Media Department. The library has been updating their collection of electronic media devices for students to use. By Alyssa Frese Staff Writer In an always technologically advancing society, it is important to stay up to date and familiar with new devices. Codirector of the Grace Hauenstein Library Shellie Jeffries and the rest of her library staff have taken great measures to make sure that Aquinas College students and faculty have access to popular devices and digital formats such as Nooks, Kindles, and e-books. “Last August, the library began subscribing to a service that provides access to electronic books and we were able to add 72,000 new titles to our online catalog,” she said. “All those e-books are searchable in TomCat and many are definitely getting used by students. We are also buying many individual reference books as e-books.” According to Jeffries, a survey of students, staff and faculty last fall showed interest in electronic books, but not as a priority. “As we’re able to

add more e-books to our collection and more people use them, this attitude may change,” she said. The Media Department’s iPads, Nooks, Kindles, Wii consoles and most recent Kindle Fire come with books preloaded onto them. The uploaded literature is composed of mostly nonfiction titles. However, for those who are loyal print readers, fear not: the library will continue to purchase print editions alongside electronic ones, according to Jeffries. The library plans to add more to their technology collections as new concepts and inventions gain student attention. “Our intention with all of these gadgets is to provide students with the opportunity to play with them and, with the e-readers, a chance to read popular books that the library doesn’t usually buy for our collection. We’re happy with the usage we’ve seen for all our new ‘toys’ and hope to expand our offerings in the future,” said Jeffries.

clubs, organizations, teams, music groups and Aquinas in general met at the Cook Carriage House for a memorable march to Touchdown Mary where hundreds gathered for the blessing ceremony. In October and November the pillar of Service was highlighted. In October, a special commemorative token was mailed to thousands of Aquinas alumni and friends. The recipients of these coins were asked to share their stories of service. Along with the mailing of the tokens was the All Saints Day Summit on Service held on Nov. 1. Sr. Anna Maria Santiago was the keynote speaker and spoke of the Dominican tradition of service. Hundreds of stories were shared on the Aquinas website, with a map showcasing locations of service done by Aquinas students, alums and community members across the world. On March 13, 2012, Eberle gave a speech about his 60 years in the Catholic intellectual tradition. This was followed later in the month and into April with lectures by Sr. Barbara Reid on the Dominican Intellectual Tradition and renowned Catholic theologian George Weigal, who discussed the future of Catholic higher education. The final Study event was a student “Talk Back” which consisted of a panel of five students representing various clubs on campus who discussed their personal views on the identity of Aquinas College as a Catholic school on Tuesday, April 17. The goal of these events was to not only take a look into the past, but to get everyone excited about the future of the college. “We wanted to look to the past and build a future,” said Eberle. “We have laid JONATHAN TRAMONTANA / AQUINAS a great foundation this year–we gave the college a lasting effect and will go into the Focus on the Charisms: Aquinas students process with banners listing the Dominican future with a united story and history with Charisms in St. Andrew’s Cathedral during the 125th Anniversary Mass, celebrated by Bishop Walter Hurley on Sept. 18, 2011. the celebration of our charisms.”

Working toward zero waste on campus

By Rachel Luehm Staff Writer Since Aquinas is a leader in the sustainability education movement, it is only fitting that the entire campus should work to create a more sustainable environment. To do this, some members of the Aquinas community who are highly committed to sustainable practices have devised a plan to eliminate all municipal waste generated by the college by May 2014. This team, composed primarily of dedicated students, has been meeting three times a week in order to brainstorm and get the zero-waste plan into action. The goal of the plan is to decrease the capacity to hold waste on campus by 10 cubic yards per semester. The same method was used at Cascade

Engineering, a Grand Rapids-based sustainable engineering firm, to eliminate all waste over the course of five years. The plan will be put into action incrementally. “Basically, it’s a ninestep process that will be used every year until we get to zero-waste,” said senior Stephanie Krajnik, who is one of the leaders of this plan. This new zero-waste policy will mean that the students, faculty, staff and campus dining will need to rethink their use and disposal of the items they purchase, use, and come in contact with. It will also mean that there will need to be more education on how to dispose of waste other than using the trash can. Recycling, upcycling and composting, as well as thinking about how much and what a person is buying before they buy it,

and simply using objects creatively rather than just tossing them will need to be implemented. Some waste reducing measures have already been implemented and successful for Creative Dining Services, Aquinas’ food service provider. Two large trash dumpsters and a single compost bin for Wege waste have been replaced with two compost bins and only one dumpster. This saves on waste going to the landfill. Although these initiatives were started by the on-campus club Students Striving for Sustainability (S3), it does not mean that others cannot get involved. Anyone is invited to help out with the effort. All interested in joining can contact Krajnik via email at sak001@aquinas. edu.

AQ SIFE claims another victory in Chicago regional competition By Laura Rico Staff Writer On Monday April 16, Students In Free Enterprise (SIFE)attended the Regional Competitions in Chicago, Illinois. The team took home it’s 11th win, earning a spot in the SIFE national competition in Kansas City May 22-24. Ten students presented on five projects that SIFE has worked on throughout the year. “Our projects this year have met all judging criteria, which were qualitative and quantitative factors of economic, environmental, and social empowerment of people in need,” said AQ SIFE’s President Tom Olson. Hopes were high going into the competition. Before the competition, Aquinas professor and SIFE advisor Masato Yamazaki said, “We have been winning every year since 2009. Of course, we hope to win this year again. This is our

tenth anniversary year.” The team did not disappoint. Senior Brianna Scott, presenter for the Help Japan Volunteer Program, was proud of the team’s accomplishments. “We represented Aquinas well and brought honor to the school,” said Scott. Despite technical malfunctions, with movie devices failing to work during her group’s presentation, Scott said she and her peers were able to pull off a presentation that was, “straight to the point, just what the judges wanted.” The projects discussed included: the Steepletown GED and Fitness Project which assists GED students at Steepletown through tutoring and providing physical fitness programs, and the Help Japan Volunteer Program which contributes to the KIE Kintetsu International’s Volunteer Program,

Kizuna, and helps to send more volunteers to Japan for rebuilding efforts. The other three projects presented were the The Magnanimous Salsa Project; the Energy Project that supports successful energy conservation education at Congress Elementary School; and the If The Shoe Fits Project, which provides athletic shoes to students in Grand Rapids and a Malawi microfinance effort. Even with this victory, Aquinas’ SIFE team is not taking a break. “After having a widely successful year, AQ SIFE will throw themselves into next years projects with even more fervor,” said Elizabeth Ochs, AQ SIFE’s president-elect for 2012-2013. “We are excited about our win at regionals and it has only motivated us to work even harder to place higher at nationals than ever before. “


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