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Students discover Peeping Tom
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Sororities welcome new sisters on bid night
Instances of attempted breakins and a Peeping Tom occured outside of LMU’s back gates. Julia Sacco News Editor
@_JuliaSacco_
Recently, LMU students have reported a Peeping Tom in the Westchester area surrounding the back gates. This person has not yet been identified, but the residents of two households have found tools indicating that he or she has been watching them. Junior health and human sciences major and Westchester resident Charlotte Cronenweth discovered traces of the intruder at her house on Kenyon Avenue on Jan. 21. “We had an attempted break-in a few weeks ago, but upon further discoveries we realized that now it was most likely a Peeping Tom,” Cronenweth said. “We found cement pavers outside – under our bedroom windows – that he was using as a stool, as well as a hand-built ladder that he hid under our house to look into our bathroom window.” See Peeping Tom | Page 2
Talia Baugnon | Loyolan
Monday, Jan. 26 marked the closing of the 2015 panhellenic recruitment, when the six chapters that participated in formal recruitment offered bids to their new members. All six chapters, including Delta Gamma (pictured above), celebrated across campus with their new members. Junior theatre arts major Jena Fakroddin (above) is welcomed to the chapter by other Delta Gamma members. Alpha Chi Omega is still in the recruitment process and fraternity recruitment will conclude this weekend.
Mission Day honors Alumni come back Catholic Identity to work on the Bluff Various LMU staff members didn’t let graduation end their University experience.
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Carly Barnhill
Interim Managing Editor @carlyabarn
Josh Kuroda | Loyolan
LMU’s Mission Day took place on Tuesday, Jan. 27 in the Sacred Heart Chapel. The theme was “Jesuit Catholic Higher Education: Why It Matters in a Pluralistic World.” Check out page 3 for Burning Questions with Fr. Caro S.J. (above), who organized the event.
Patrick Furlong’s (’06) LMU experience was spent traveling and learning about the world on service trips and programs, which led him to reflect on the meaning of his life. However, this didn’t end once he graduated. Furlong continued to do post-graduate service and work in social justice, and he eventually returned to LMU to work in Campus Ministry and immersion programs. Furlong’s time at LMU and the time he spent in other countries around other cultures while attending LMU provided him with opportunities “to learn more about the world through a lens of solidarity.” Now, as an alumnus, he has the opportunity to watch students undergo the growth that he experienced as an undergraduate. The LMU experience doesn’t always end at graduation, and many alumni, like Furlong, stay connected to LMU by becoming staff members in the community. The University has provided an array of opportunities for those who want to continue their LMU experience after walking across the stage, and those who have taken these opportunities have embraced their passions and helped enrich students in the same way that they were enriched as students. Lydia Ammossow (’94) began her work in
the Student Affairs office at LMU the Monday after her commencement. Since she graduated with her European studies major and business administration minor, she has worked with Student Affairs, academics, resident ministry, KXLU and the Del Rey Players. Among these experiences, her favorite part of LMU is “the community of extraordinary human beings that inhabit this place and continually work to elevate it.” Ammossow currently lives as the resident minister of O’Malley Apartments. “Resident ministry provides dynamic and profound ways in which staff members get to journey with students,” she said. “It’s a wonderful other side to my work at LMU.” Like Ammassow, Samantha Hartman (’10) has been closely connected to the LMU community since she graduated with a sociology major. Attending LMU helped her find her passion and grow into the person that she is today. Now, as an alumna, the LMU community is her family. Hartman currently works as the campus minister for Service and Spirituality, which gives her the opportunity to attend and lead different LMU service functions. She explained, “Overall, I basically get to help students live out the mission of LMU: being a man and woman with and then for others.” “LMU is such a huge part of who you are, and as an [alumna], you join this huge family of people who are like-minded,” Hartman said. “There are so many resources that can help you find a job, meet new people in a new city and just share fun stories with. The heart of a lion continues to beat once you’ve graduated and are no longer living on The Bluff.” See LMU Alumni | Page 2