1 minute read
Liquor violations pile up
KELLY MURPHY KAM736@CABRINI EDU STAFF WRITER
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If one were to sit on a bench behind the library at 9:30 on a Thursday night, one would witness the migration of numerous barely-clothed underclassmen making there way to the coveted Cabrini Apartment Complex before 10 p.m. Now this person on the bench must realize that if a student makes it inside the apartments before 10 p.m., the student arrives earlier than the public safety officer and is granted the privilege of staying there all night. This fact is compared to the fashionably late students who only get the pleasure of staying until 2 a.m. Once the clock reaches 2 a.m., a public safety officer will trek upstairs to eject students that were signed-in after 10 p.m.
When inside the apartments, one is graced with a plethora of choices: hang out and drink, hang out and drink or hang out and drink. Carding students to check age does not apply in the apartments, which is a life-saver for many underage students.
Throughout many cramped living rooms in the apartments, beer is the single-most important object in the room. Whether one drinks beer or not really does not matter because it is Thursday night and there are no rules or consequences. This statement, however, may be untrue.
As time flies by, one continues to observe the Thursday night action from the bench. It is now
11:48 and a group of men and women in yellow jackets walk by in a hurry The pack walked by walked by so quickly that it was difficult to realize the group in actuality was public safety on its