3 minute read
Need for more adverti.sing by SGA
If one were to pick an organization on campus that affected his/her future the most, a logical choice would be the Student Government Association. It is a smart choice, since SGA is responsible, to some extent, for the funding of every registered club on campus, which enables that respective club to exist, which, in turn, affects the entire community's future at Cabrini. On Friday, April 25, a large portion of the future for the 2003-04 academic year was decided with the executive board SGA elections, but fewer than 300 people, out of the entire student body, came out to vote.
This poor voter turnout can be attributed to a number of things, but the most pertinent would be the lack of advertisements and lack of plat• forms that SGA put out for the upcoming elections.
Advertisement
When a government election is around the corner, the respective candidates advertise relentlessly for the voting public to swing their way. This advertising campaign includes platforms, flyers, television spots and personal visits from the candidates. Very little of this advertising, if any, happened for this year's executive board SGA elections.
Granted the SGA does not have the money the government candidates have, it does have the space and the means to advertise to its voting public.
The first problem is the lack of platforms to the voting population, especially from the presidential candidates. This problem can be attributed to the fact that the SGA platforms were due on Wednesday, April 16. which was the last day of classes before Easter Break, This left little time for the procrastinating candidates to put forth their platforms to the campus community. However, if they are taking on the responsibility of being the student's voices at Cabrini, their thoughts, ideas and aspirations for the college community should have been in our faces well in advance of their deadline, instead of the day it was due. They should have taken the initiative and handed i1in earty and gotten it approved, so they could plaster their campaign where people would see it.
The second problem is the lack of catchy fly· ers and posters by the SGA advertising the election. There were flyers put up in the posting areas, but they were overshadowed by the other random and outdated flyers that surrounded them. A good majority of posters promoting the election was in the residence halls, which excluded the high number of commuter students on campus who do not frequent the halls.
SGA does a lot of things for the campus that many people do not know about and a major reason why that happens is because it does not promote its events like other organizations do. However, when it does advertise persistently, its events are extremely successful.
The SGA should advertise the campaign like it did for the winter formal and the Mr. and Mrs. Cabrini pageant. It you put two and two together, the reason the events were so successful was because the ads for the events were displayed everywhere you looked-in different sizes, shapes and forms-and they were displayed well in advance of the event. If the SGA took the advertisements and platforms for the elections as seriously as it did for the events it sponsors, it would have more than 300 people tum out to vote for its Mure members.
Would you have voted in the SGA elections if there were more advertisements posted around campus?
J ~.. J I
..
No, because I would have only voted for someone that was my friend
I would have voted if the advertising had been more descriptive. I didn't know about it, because there wasn't enough advertising.
I did vote. I saw the signs everywhere. I guess everyone else wasn't paying attention to them.
Honestly, probably not because I'm graduating, and I didn't know who was running. "
Je~ Skiirsk:y Tim Williams freshman
Kelly Finlan
Rosemarie Gonzalez
Kendall Neil
Cristin Marcy
Gina Peracchia
Anne Marie White
Antonio Masone
Stephanie Moritz
Heather Dilalla
Jenna Lewandowski
Angelina Wagner
Dr. Jerome Zurek staff writets
MaryAdam, VinceDeFn:scio,Meli<;saDiPietranmo, Andrew Findlay,LaurenGatto, Catharine Hemson.ShannonKing.JamieI<noblet;JermaineCYNeil,RichardMagda,Lauren Mmeo,LeannePanlone,RyanMulloy,RyanNorris,Amanda8tiow,AlexisSlrizziere,~oo Utbannavage,Oieryl ~' Paul Williams staff photographers
Nicole Anista, Adriene Baldwin, Kryten Bradley, Rob Cain, Justin Coe, Nate Day, Matt Difalon, Cecelia Francisco, Meghan Franzese, Greg Kerr, Steph Mangold, Holly Orlando, Jim Peterson, Shaun Smith, Annie Turco, Katie Wright, Katie Reing