Color me mine
Mental health Awareness
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Page 10 Thursday, March 15, 2012
Thursday, March 25, 2010 Thursday, Feb. 19, 2009
YOU SPEAK, WE LISTEN
Pacemaker Winner
CABRINI COLLEGE
Radnor, Pa.
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Radnor, Pa.
www.theloquitur.com
Vol LI, Issue 21 Vol L, Issue 17
Vol. LIII, Issue 20
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MAKING HISTORY ERIC GIBBLE
ASST. NEWS EDITOR
ERG722@CABRINI.EDU
!"##$%&'#"()*'+,-.."/%012.2
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Hundreds of thousands of people rallied at the National Mall in Washington D.C. on Sunday, March 21 in support of comprehensive immigration reform. !"#$%&'()'$(&*$+*),,*%)'-$%),-'-"&*()-&".*'/"*0*)1&*$+*'/"-(*2$3%'(-"&*$+* 4-('/*),$%1&-."*'/"*5#"(-2)%*0*)1*-%*)*2($6.*'/)'*&'("'2/".*+$(*4,$27&8*9/"* :;)(2/*<$(*5#"(-2)=*(),,>*6)&*'/"*,)(1"&'*&-%2"*?@@A*)+'"(*-##-1()'-$%* ("+$(#*,"1-&,)'-$%*6)&*&/$'*.$6%*-%*?@@B8 <$3('""%* C)4(-%-* &'3."%'&* )%.* +)23,'>* #"#4"(&* 6"("* )#$%1* '/$&"* '/$3&)%.&8* D'3."%'&* +($#* E(>%* ;)6(* C$,,"1"F* G)&'"(%* H%-I"(&-'>* )%.* J-,,)%$I)*H%-I"(&-'>*)&*6",,*)&*$'/"(*$(1)%-K)'-$%&*+($#*'/"*)(")*6"("* also present. L)'>* <(-11,"MN$('$%* O("O)(".* '6$* 43&"&* '$* '()%&O$('* '/"&"* 1($3O&* +($#* J-,,)%$I)* H%-I"(&-'>8* * N$('$%* -&* )%* )2'-I"* 2$%1("1)%'* )'* C"%'(),* Baptist Church in Wayne. :9/-&* -&* '/"* 4-11"&'* (),,>* $%* '/"* #),,* &-%2"* P4)#)* /)&* 4"2$#"* president,” Norton said to the group. DO")7"(&* )'* '/"* (),,>* -%2,3.".* C)(.-%),* Q$1"(* ;)/$%>* +($#* R$&* 5%1","&*)%.*S"&&"*S)27&$%8*T("&-."%'*P4)#)*),&$*#)."*("#)(7&*'/($31/* )*O("("2$(.".*I-."$')O".*#"&&)1"*I$-2-%1*/-&*&3OO$('*'$*'/"*2($6.8 D'3."%'&*6"("*#$'-I)'".*'$*)''"%.*'/"*(),,>*+$(*)*%3#4"(*$+*.-++"("%'* (")&$%&8*;$%-2)*E3(7"F*&"%-$(*G%1,-&/*)%.*2$##3%-2)'-$%*)%.*4-$,$1>* #)U$(F* 4",-"I"&* '/"* 23(("%'* &>&'"#* -&* 4($7"%* )%.* 6)%'".* '$* &/$6* /"(* support for an overhaul of immigration legislation. :V-'/$3'* W*X-%1* '/"* ,)6&* '/)'* )("* -%"++"2'-I"F* -##-1()'-$%* O($4,"#&* 2)%Y'*4"*&$,I".F=*E3(7"*&)-.8*:9/"*23(("%'*,)6&*#)7"*-'*-#O$&&-4,"*+$(*'/"* %3#4"(*$+*O"$O,"*6/$*6)%'*'$*2$#"*'$*5#"(-2)*'$*.$*&$*,"1),,>8= 9/$&"*'/)'*#)(2/".*/",.*4>*&-1%&*'/)'*(").F*:GZ3),*'(")'#"%'*+$(*),,=* and “No human can be illegal” at the rally. <()%2"&*[)(("'F*&$O/$#$("*&$2-),*6$(7*)%.*DO)%-&/*#)U$(*)'*G)&'"(%* H%-I"(&-'>F*6)&*3O,-+'".*4>*'/"*&/""(*%3#4"(*$+*O"$O,"*)'*'/"*(),,>8 :\'*6)&*("),,>*O$6"(+3,*'$*4"*-%*'/"*#-.&'*$+*&$*#)%>*O"$O,"*'/)'*6)%'* change and have traveled so far to stand up for their rights,” Garrett said. 9/"* R)'-%$* 2$##3%-'>* +($#* V"&'* C/"&'"(* 6)&* ),&$* -%* )''"%.)%2"* ),$%1&-."* C)4(-%-* &'3."%'&8* D(8* ;-#-* !"T)3,F* 2$$(.-%)'$(* $+* ]-&O)%-2* #-%-&'(>* $+* D'8* 51%"&* C/3(2/F* 6)%'".* '$* ()-&"* /"(* I$-2"* +$(* '/"* undocumented. :9/"("Y&*4""%*)*,)(1"*]-&O)%-2*O("&"%2"*^-%*'/"*2$%1("1)'-$%_*&-%2"* SUBMITTED BY CABRINI COLLEGE ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT `aAbF=* !"T)3,* &)-.8* :b@* O"(2"%'* )("* ;"X-2)%F* `@* O"(2"%'* )("* T3"('$*
7-89(6-.&+,))1&32+ 5::5;+,-526&+(32+:& 56&<,.=56;-26>&!?$?>& See page 16 for full coverage +,5.(&:26(1&32+ ',6'(+&+(.(,+'= Cabrini men’s basketball team poses after cutting down the nets after,-&@A(),1&B2+&C53(D winning in the Elite 8 and punching their ticket to the school’s first Final Four. ,3..%,45'#-,36)012.25#301$%*.377
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Global activist promotes peace through understanding
!"#$%&"'()*%+,-(./0(123%4 BY LAURA HANCQ Editor-In-ChiefNOELLE WESTFALL STAFF WRITER NW 66@ CABRINI EDU than in There is more power in .love
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ing. Gibson spoke to Cabrini students on tices, beliefs and travels. +$(* R-+"* 12. -%2,3.-%1* C)4(-%-* C/""(,").-%1F* C5T* Monday, March Gibson is the author of “Life in Death” E$)(.F*!",')*T/-*e-F*[""7*DZ3).F*9")#*5OO),)2/-)* “I’m just one woman who lost some- and has traveled to countless post war)%.*J),,">*<$(1"*9($U)%&8 body who wants to prevent terrorism,” torn countries where she helps train lead:\'Y&* %-2"* +$(* C5T* E$)(.* '$* &/$6* &3OO$('* +$(* understanding and most of hateful retaliation was the message from Gibson said. “My goal is to build bridges of ers, promote 9/"* !-X$%* C"%'"(* /$3&".* ?B?* O)('-2-O)%'&* %)'-$%),*2)3&"&*,-7"*'/-&F=*G#-,>*<-$("F*&$O/$#$("* the founder and understanding and friendship.” all, share her personal story of loss. $+* '/"* Q",)>* <$(* R-+"*executive 2)%2"(* 6),7*director '$* 4"%"W*'*9/"* And&"2$%.)(>*".32)'-$%*)%.*G%1,-&/*#)U$(F*&)-.8*<-$("* build bridges is exactly what “My call is to go to the tough places,” American Cancer Society. Young and old, students 6),7".*the '$* Libyan 4"%"W*'*people 5\!D* )6)("%"&&* )%.* of the Peace and Gibson/)&* has ),&$* done--with Gibson said. )%.*2$##3%-'>*#"#4"(&F*'/"*2$##$%*'/(").*6)&* 4(")&'*2)%2"(F*$+*6/-2/*/"(*)3%'*-&*-%*("#-&&-$%8 Prosperity Alliance. and even the late Libyan dictator, who is She shared with the Cabrini communithe force cancer had on their lives and the impact Lisa Gibson, who lost speculated9)()*GI-&$%F*&"%-$(*O&>2/$,$1>*#)U$(F*'$,.*/"(* to have ordered the Lockerbie ty that her most notable moment amongst '/"&"*6),7"(&*6)%'".*'$*/)I"*$%*2)%2"(8 #$'/"(F* 6/$* Gaddafi. -&* 23(("%',>* *1/'-%1* 2)%2"(F*was when she was asked by her brother in the bombing, Muammar She Whad the 4(")&'* her travels :C)%2"(* )++"2'&* "I"(>$%"8* T"$O,"* 6)%'* '$* )4$3'*'/"*"I"%'8*:\*6)%'*/"(*'$*&""*'/"("*)("*O"$O,"* PanAm Flight 103 opportunity to meet with the former dic- Libyans to serve as a liaison--to change &""* O($1("&&* #)."* '$6)(.&* ("&")(2/* )%.* /)I"* -'* and 6/$*2)("F=*GI-&$%*&)-.8 Lockerbie bombing tator claims that even in their brief the perception of Libyans to the rest of the eliminated from our in community,” Katie Keller, :D$#"'-#"&*>$3*+"",*,-7"*>$3Y("*)%*$3'2)&'F*&$* 1988, has turned meeting, she was able to see glimpses of world as not being terrorists but as wantsophomore accounting -'Y&*While -#O$(')%'* '$* 2$#"* '$* "I"%'&* ,-7"* '/-&* 4"2)3&"* hermajor tragic and loss cochair into hisof heart. Gibson understands that ing peace. Subsequently, she received the C)4(-%-Y&*Q",)>*<$(*R-+"F*&)-.8 >$3*.$%Y'*+"",*,-7"*&32/*)%*$3'&-."(F=*C-%.>*GI-&$%F* advocacy for peace many view her as controversial, she has opportunity to speak at a rally for the Arab 9/"*6),7F*6/-2/*4"1)%*)'*c*O8#8*$%*D)'3(.)>F* 9)()Y&* #$'/"(F* &)-.8* GI-&$%* '6$* fondly remembers a 5-yearLisa Gibson and understand- been given inner peace through her&'$OO".* prac- &#$7-%1* Spring. She
;)(2/*?@*)%.*6"%'*3%'-,*a*)8#8*$%*D3%.)>F*;)(2/* years ago. “You almost have to change your life in ?`F* 6)&* )* /31"* &322"&&8* 9/"* 1$),* $+* +3%.&* '$* 4"* $(."(*'$*Z3-'8*GI-&$%*-&*O($3.*'/)'*/"(*.)31/'"(*/)&* ()-&".* 6)&* d?@F@@@* )%.F* )'* A* O8#8F* '/"* "I"%'* /).* Z3-'*&#$7-%1*'$*&/$6*/"(*&3OO$('8 ),(").>*#"'*'/"*d`AF@@@*#)(78*5'*'/"*2$%2,3&-$%*$+* C$##3%-'-"&* )%.* 2$,,"1"&* /$&'* Q",)>* <$(*
old girl being on stage, leading the cheers and thinking she was living history in the making. “If I had not chosen to take the road less traveled, what I would have missed,” Gibson said. Gibson chooses to take paths of resistance because she believes in order to move forward, we must think differently and try new strategies in order to create change. She encouraged Cabrini students to think of renowned visionaries such as Mother Teresa, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Gandhi and challenged the audience GIBSON,
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2 | The Loquitur
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Lisa Gibson talks about meeting Gaddafi, love over tragedy GIBSON,
Editorial: Diamonds in the rough, recognizing our elite athletes When a college sports team clinches a berth in the NCAA playoffs, it’s a big deal. When your school’s own basketball team moves on to the Final Four round of the NCAA Tournament for the first time in program history, it’s the talk of the school. Yes, our own Cabrini Cavaliers, after winning the CSAC championship for the third time in four years, have now reeled off four tournament wins and will be heading to Salem, Va., this weekend. With two more wins, the men’s basketball team will be crowned NCAA champions for the first time. Cabrini’s March Madness experience may not be akin to the experience of Duke University or Syracuse University but it’s still a special accomplishment that deserves recognition. The men’s squad has a record of 30-1 and currently holds a 21-game win streak. However, they’re not the only Cabrini team that has recently taken southeastern Pennsylvania and the CSAC conference by storm. We at The Loquitur recognize that even though Cabrini has under 1,500 undergraduate students, our athletic teams, in one way, help to define our school. While we will never lose sight of academics or deemphasize the importance of educating our hearts, Cabrini faculty members, alumni, students and parents can truly bond over athletics. Since the fall semester began, the basketball team’s CSAC title is our school’s third of the 2011-2012 campaign. The women’s soccer team took home the crown with a 1-0 victory over Neumann University on Saturday, Nov. 5, hours before the Neumann Knights also fell to the Lady Cavs’ volleyball team, who earned their third straight CSAC title with a 3-0 win. Go back to earlier in the year and you’ll see that the women’s tennis team jumped out to an 11-0 mark before falling in the CSAC playoffs. These teams and their accomplishments have helped to put Cabrini on the map as a school with ample talent. Our student-athletes may
not be locking down tryouts with professional sports teams but they are giving it their all for the sake of their team and for this school. As with any school, the student athletes are not alone in this journey. They are accompanied by coaches, mentors, family, friends and fans. First and foremost, they’re students, young adults attending college to figure out what career is their best option for future employment. If they have the time and talent to play a Division III sport, we should applaud them and show them unconditional support. While the accomplishments of head coach Marcus Kahn’s men’s basketball team are at the forefront of campus news at the moment, the early stages of the men’s lacrosse are worth paying attention to as well. We at The Loquitur remind you that not long ago, one of our very own lacrosse players went above and beyond the standard for Division III athletes. In four years at Cabrini, Casey Grugan tallied 334 career points and a staggering 206 goals, numbers that enabled him to be drafted by the MLL’s Chicago Machine. Grugan was the first men’s lacrosse player from Cabrini to be drafted by a professional Major League Lacrosse franchise. While Grugan left behind a legacy that no other Cavalier lacrosse player may come close to reaching, the fact of the matter is that Cabrini has been producing quality student-athletes for decades now. Take a look at the Athletic Hall of Fame inductees and you will find names that include legendary coach John Dzik, men’s soccer star Glen Jaskelewicz and men’s basketball all-time leading scorer Billy Carr. Our athletes, both current and former, put in time and hard work to hone their skills as much as possible. We will be fully supporting our men’s basketball team this weekend and we hope that you give them your full support as well.
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to question if these trailblazers had gone with the status quo of retaliation, would they have made a positive impact? “It’s a circle of revenge; when does it end? When one person decides to change,” Gibson said. One of her biggest influences to continue on her path is the aforementioned Dr. King. To the audience, she offered one of his famous quotes that she lives by, “Love is the only force capable of transforming an enemy into a friend.” She says her Christian identity has shaped her views and shared that she uses the Bible, especially Romans 12, as a guideline for not matching evil with evil. “Faith can be used for hate or for love,” Gibson said. “We are all sinners and we have all been sinned against. Responding in a loving way to those who hurt us is incredibly shaming. It is not easy but
there is so much more power in it.” Gibson stressed the fact that in no way does her approach of understanding condone terrorist behavior. She told the audience that we must stress that it is unacceptable but respond with restoration and reconciliation because it is the only truly effective way to fight hate. “What I do can be controversial but when you try and respond in the moral high road, it’s uncomfortable, it challenges people but it bears witness to who we are as humans,” Gibson said. She continues to do what she does because she believes we have the opportunity to make a difference and she encouraged the Cabrini community to be of a similar mindset of the importance of understanding. “Love is the most important weapon in the war on terror,” Gibson said. LCH23@CABRINI.EDU
MCT
Muammar Gaddafi at the 12th AU summit, Feb. 2, 2009, in Addis Abeba. The late leader of Libya died on Oct. 20, 2011, during the 2011 Libyan civil war. Gaddafi was captured alive after his convoy was attacked by NATO warplanes as Sirte fell on Oct. 20.
MCT
Libyan people celebrate the death of the Libyan fallen leader Muammar Gaddafi in Tripoli, Libya, Oct. 20, 2011. Mahmoud Jibril, head of the Libyan National Transitional Council’s executive committee, confirmed Thursday, Oct. 20, that former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was killed in gun battle in his hometown Sirte.
The Loquitur
2011-2012 Editorial Staff EDITOR IN CHIEF Laura Hancq DEPUTY EDITOR Sarah Luckert MANAGING EDITOR Melanie Greenberg NEWS EDITOR Ransom Cozzillio NEWS EDITOR James Crowell
SPORTS EDITOR Nick LaRosa A&E EDITOR Jeny Varughese FEATURES EDITOR Chelbi Mims PERSPECTIVES EDITOR Kelsey Alvino PHOTO EDITOR Jenay Smith
COPY EDITOR Jesse Gaunce COPY EDITOR Carol Dwyer ADVISER Jerome Zurek
News
Thursday, March 15, 2012
The Loquitur | 3
Children, athletics focus of faculty panel discussion BY NICK LAROSA Sports Editor Five Cabrini faculty members touched on the history of organized sport, the values young children and collegiate athletes can take away from the games they play and the importance of balancing school work and athletics during the “Children and Sport” panel discussion held in the Mansion on Tuesday, Feb. 28. With children and sports being so interconnected, Dr. Joseph Romano, professor of philosophy, began the discussion with a lighthearted-story titled “Sixth Avenue Wildcats,” a tale that revolved around high school students’ love for America’s pastime of baseball. When the story concluded, Romano’s message was clear: sports need to be about fun. “They never seemed to care if they lost the game but don’t kid yourself, they had fun,” Romano said. “Don’t ever doubt that they took their game seriously. They were internalizing values that their parents had only presented to them externally. They were kids with a purpose and were having fun.” Played recreationally or as a part of a team, sports can always be tied to a number of core values and the skills children adopt can go far beyond the playing field. According to Vonya Womack, assistant professor of business administration, sports can help children achieve goals, work hard and build confidence, all attributes that she has seen her four children take away from organized athletics. “In regards to what they feel they’ve been able to take away from this, learning to have suc-
cess with grace and failure with dignity,” Womack said. “They know how to win and they know how to lose and they’ve had to learn that over time.” Womack feels that while she was the one who helped her children become involved in sports, they ultimately are the judges of whether or not they feel successful. “As I look at their practice schedules and what they do, did I necessarily choose that for my children? I don’t really know, because I always wanted them
the field while dealing with the temptation to take steroids. “Football gave me structure and gave me something to look forward to and to shoot for,” Dunbar said. “It was very tempting to take enhancement drugs. I never did but I knew a lot of friends that did.” Moving away from the temptations that some athletes face, Courtney Smith, assistant professor of history and political science, reflected on the history of sport and how sports can help athletes build character. Sports
“Unfortunately, very few are ever going to make a living at any sport. It’s a very blessed genetic group of people.” DR. TONY VERDE
to feel successful and when they felt successful doing those things I encouraged it,” Womack said. “But I also have always encouraged them that if they don’t to do that, then they could simply choose no.” Saying “no” often goes beyond simply choosing between football and baseball. The temptation to take steroids and performance-enhancing drugs is there for collegiate athletes, even at the Division III level, according to Dr. David Dunbar, associate professor of biology. For Dunbar, a former student-athlete who played football for Lycoming College in Williamsport, Pa., football was “a drug in its own right.” However, the game also helped him succeed both on and off
can help student-athletes gain skills for their future careers as well. “The people running colleges thought that athletics would take these young boys and mold them into adults that could be leaders in the fields of businesses and technology, growing fields that were going to make America a world power,” Smith said. At the forefront of this debate, of course, are the children, those who are actually playing the game. While coaches and parents have become heavily involved, the athletes themselves are the ones who will be vying for playing time, college scholarships and even pro tryouts. However, the odds of a career as an athlete developing is microscopic, according to Dr.
Tony Verde, associate professor of exercise science and health promotion. “It’s ironic that there are a set of parameters that if you meet and you can do all of these different things, you probably can’t compete at the highest level of sports,” Verde said. “Unfortunately, very few are ever going to make a living at any sport. It’s a very blessed genetic group of people.” With the odds of going pro in a particular sport being extremely rare, Verde advises parents and teams to remind their children to enjoy their sports as games, something that he also tells his son, a golfer at a Division I school. As Womack also attested to, children and student-athletes need to find a reason to play sports other than to simply win. There need to be values that can be carried over from the playing field to the office down the line. “If you can keep it balanced and you can keep it all together, it’s great to have a four-year career and play at the college level and have the excitement of winning and everything,” Verde said. “As long as you don’t forget that you’ve got to go to school, because that’s where you’re going to get your employment afterwards.” With many past and present Cavalier student-athletes in attendance, Womack concluded her speech with advice for those who may one day have children involved in organized sports. “As you get older and you decide to have families and you decide to have your kids play in sports, always remember what it is that you want them to gain out of it,” Womack said. NAL42@CABRINI.EDU
Tech Connection
JAMES CROWELL
The new iPad: worth the upgrade? For the past three years, Apple Inc. has released a line of tablet computers that have become wildly popular with the general public since it’s April 2010 launch. This year was no different, as Apple announced the release of the third generation iPad with a release slated for Friday, March 16. The biggest new aspect of the new iPad is an extremely highresolution display, featuring a 2048-by-1536 resolution screen with 3.1 million pixels in the same 9.7-inch space as the previous iPad models. Many individuals have considered the Apple iPad just “a big iPhone.” This is true, yet the iPad is much more versatile then some believe. The new iPad has a 5-megapixel rear facing camera, the ability to connect to 4G LTE networks and the new A5X CPU chip with quad-core graphics. All in all, the new iPad has quite a lot of new features and it can be said that the third generation iPad is worth upgrading to if you have an iPad now. It is easily the biggest tech gadget of 2012. Media reaction to the iPad has been generally positive. Time Magazine ranked the iPad as one of the 50 Best Inventions of the Year 2010. However, soon after the iPad was released, CNET and Gizmodo released a list of omitted features and lack of any support for Adobe Flash was chief among them. Ars Technica also noted the similarity between the iPad and Star Trek’s fictional PADD tablet computer, both in name and functionality. The late Steve Jobs, founder and former CEO of Apple Inc., was the primary champion of the iPad, even coming out of his medical leave to debut the iPad 2 last year. His creative vision brought the iPad from the drawing board to the hands of millions of users worldwide. Many consumers have praised the iPad for its ease of use and ability to enable many “technophobes” to be able to interact with a computer for the first time. I strongly believe the new iPad will become a huge seller in the coming months just as many past Apple products such as the iPhone and iPod. JFC46@CABRINI.EDU
Have an opinion about this column? Feel free to send Jimmy a tweet (@JamesCrowellJr).
News
4 | The Loquitur
Thursday, March 15, 2012
THURSDAYBRIEFING
[GLOBAL - NATIONAL - REGIONAL - CAMPUS]
GLOBAL & NATIONAL
REGION & CAMPUS
Many mourn, remember those lost in Japan
Future of Pa. turnpike features all-electronic tolling, no booths
Grieving families across Japan gathered to mark the oneyear anniversary of the major disasters that ravished the island nation. The March 2011 earthquake and tsunami affected the Northeastern Coast, killing almost 20,000 people and causing a massive nuclear radiation leak at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station. To this day, there is still a 12-mile ‘exclusion zone’ set up around the nuclear plant. MCT
Read the original story on NYTimes.com | March 11, 2012
New iPad touts highresolutution display, 4G data connection Apple updated its tablet computer on Wednesday, March 7, with a high-definition screen, faster wireless connection and new processor. The iPad will operate on the fourth-generation cellphone network technology known as LTE. Apple said the iPad would go on sale on March 16, starting at $499 for the baseline version.
A young girl prays for victims on Sunday, March 11, in Fukushima, Japan, during a tribute to the estimated 19,000 people killed from last year’s earthquake and tsunami.
US economy continues to add jobs, improve steadly After weak economic growth, the U.S. economy has had three consecutive months of solid employment growth, lifting the mood slightly of some consumers and the unemployed. The economy added 227,000 jobs in February, the Labor Department reported Friday, March 9. The unemployment rate has held steady at 8.3 percent.
Read the original story on NYTimes.com | March 7, 2012
Read the original story on NYTimes.com | March 9, 2012
Fighting continues between Syrian activists, government
U.S. Army sergeant kills 16 civilians in southern Afghanistan, sparks anti-American hostility
Opposition forces in Syria said on Monday, March 12, that progovernment individuals had rounded up groups of civilians in Homs overnight, then assaulted men and women, killing dozens of them, including children. Opposition groups continued to call for international military action and arming of the opposition activists. Syria denied any and all responsibility for the attacks.
An army sergeant was accused of methodically killing at least 16 civilians, nine of them children, in southern Afghanistan early on Sunday, March 11. The killings reportly happened in the Panjwai district of Kandahar Province of Afghanistan. This event comes after a period of deepening public outrage, spurred by the Koran burning by American personnel last month.
Read the original story on NYTimes.com | March 12, 2012
Read the original story on NYTimes.com | March 11, 2012
THIS WEEK AT CABRINI Thursday, March 15 Risa Vetri Ferman Receives 2012 Ivy Young Willis Award
Cabrini will honor Risa Vetri Ferman, District Attorney of Montgomery County, as this year’s award recipient of the Ivy Young Willis award in the Mansion from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. All are welcome to attend this free event and a reception is planned following the lecture. For more information, please contact Nova Johnson at 610-902-1015 or njohnson@cabrini.edu
Sunday, March 18 Mass
Celebrate mass in Bruckmann Memorial Chapel of St. Joseph from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Friday, March 16 Mass
Celebrate mass in Bruckmann Memorial Chapel of St. Joseph from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Monday, March 19 Mass
Celebrate mass in Bruckmann Memorial Chapel of St. Joseph from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 17 Sports
See page 14 for a list of all Cavalier games and times.
Tuesday, March 20 Body Image Coalition Meeting
The Body Image Coalition will have a meeting in the Iadarola Center, Room 101e from 3:15 p.m. to 4:15 p.m. Everyone is invited to come and get involved in the planning of an upcoming fashion show happening in February. Should you have any questions, please contact Andrea Sussel, LCSW at 610-902-8561 or ajs726@cabrini.edu.
The Pennsylvania Turnpike is planning to have all-electronic tolling in the next five years. However, there will be a 76 percent surcharge for motorists who don’t use E-ZPass devices. The turnpike will demolish all toll booths and instead charge drivers as they pass at highway speed under overhead gantries equipped with electronic readers and cameras. According to the turnpike officials, all-electronic tolling would improve safety, reduce travel time and reduce air pollution. Read the original story on | March 12, 2012
philly.com
Playground shooting in Logan section of Philly Philadelphia police said they received a call for a shooting on the playground at Belfield Recreation Center, located at 21st and Conlyn streets, just after 5:30 p.m. The 43-year-old victim suffered at least two gunshot wounds to the neck, one to the face and one to the head, said Chief Inspector Scott Small. The man was pronounced dead at the scene. Read the original story on | March 12, 2012
philly.com
Montco DA to receive 2012 Ivy Young Willis Award Risa Vetri Ferman, district attorney of Montgomery County, will receive the 2012 Ivy Young Willis Award in a ceremony at Cabrini College on Thursday, March 15 at 4:30 p.m. Elected in November 2007, Ferman is the first woman to serve as district attorney of Montgomery County. Everyone is invited to attend. Read the original story on | March 12, 2012
cabrini.edu
BY JAMES CROWELL News Editor jfc46@cabrini.edu
News
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Parent advocates for ‘invisible disorder,’ childrens’ dreams
The Loquitur | 5
Guatemalan immersion trip educates, enriches
BY BRANDON DESIDERIO Asst. News Editor Brian Mengini, a Schwenksville, Pa. parent and advocate for special needs children, will be holding a discussion on March 22 in the Grace Hall boardroom about sensory processing disorder (SPD). SPD is often considered the “invisible disorder.” Those diagnosed with the disorder, unlike the deaf or blind, do receive and register information with their senses. The information that’s received, however, is interpreted in a unique way by the individual’s brain. As a result, children with SPD often react or behave abnormally, or find certain things harder to do than their classmates. These issues are commonly presented with the affected individual, regardless of age, having observable difficulty with organizing or planning, or issues with completing everyday activities such as self-care and work. Sensory processing disorder has its roots in what used to be called sensory integration dysfunction (SID) although, unlike SID, SPD applies a larger perspective and attempts to classify it as an actual disorder rather than a discrete, or “invisible,” disorder. On his website, Mengini differentiates SID as a “traffic jam in the brain” where some sensory information simply never arrives; in contrast, those affected by SPD aren’t overwhelmed, instead solely interpreting the sensory information differently, uniquely. Neither the ICD-10 nor the DSMIV-TR recognize either SPD or SID as standard medical disorders, although a shocking one in 20 children are affected by SPD. Providing a personal perspective, Mengini himself has a child with SPD. He and his wife launched a non-profit dance outreach program called Hope Dances shortly after his son Dominic’s diagnosis with the disorder in February of 2005. According to the non-profit’s website, Dominic’s treatment needs, as well as those of others like him, range from occupational, physical and speech therapists and behaviorists, in addition to visits to sleep centers. The program wasn’t just initiated for his son, though. Mengini has held a passion for dance photography since the 1990s and saw the program as a way to bridge his own passion with his love for his son. Mengini sees dance as a nonjudgmental approach to helping special needs children “deal with their obstacles.” The Mengini family also created the Dominic’s Dreams Foundation earlier this year in honor of their son and SPD children everywhere. The mission of the foundation, as the website states, is to “build a network of advocacy and support for families of children with Sensory Processing Disorder.” The site includes a thorough list of educational resources, from books to films, as well as explanations of special education law. In particular, the website focuses on Section 504, which is a civil rights law that criminalizes discrimination against an individual with a disability and grants children with disabilities the right to an equal education. It also explains the parent’s right to obtaining a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) for their child under Section 504. More information about sensory processing disorder may be found on the homepage for Dominic’s Dreams Foundation and by attending Mengini’s discussion. BTD28@CABRINI.EDU
JAMES CROWELL / NEWS EDITOR
Top Left: Dr. Raquel Green and Kadee Schwalm watch and learn from a stove builder in San Martin, Guatemala. He said he earns the equivalent of $12 dollars a day doing his job. Top Right: Students, alumni and faculty members painted the hallways of the local medical clinic in San Lucas, Guatemala. Built in 2000, the clinc has emergency care and a pharmacy. Bottom: Students, alumni and faculty help sort coffee beans for “Juan Ana” coffee.
SUBMITTED BY DONALD POWELL
JAMES CROWELL / NEWS EDITOR
Cabrini welcomes new VP of finance, treasurer BY SEAN COLLINS Asst. News Editor
Cabrini College is honored to be adding a new talented member to its administration team. Dr. Steven Feld was made Cabrini’s new vice president for finance as well as the school’s new treasurer. Feld was selected after a national search was conducted. He replaced Robert Allison interim as vice president for finance. Stepping down from his previous position at Newberry College in South Carolina on Feb. 29, Feld became a part of the Cabrini staff the very next day. Feld had formally served at Newberry College as the Chief Financial Officer. At Newberry, Feld was responsible for starting the effect Habit of the Heart. This is Newberry’s Quality Enhancement Program. Feld also was responsible for overseeing all of the business processes at Newberry. According to Newberry’s website, Feld has also been praised for the energy and leadership skills he displayed at the college by acting President John Hudgens in a statement regarding Feld’s departure from the school. Feld is an expert in higher education, one of the many traits he will be bringing with him to Cabrini. President Marie Angelella George has stated her trust in Dr. Feld in what he will bring to the campus. “Steve’s understanding of Cabrini College’s mission and his desire to be a part of our vision for the future are evident,” George said.
This is evident in the hopes Feld wants to apply to use in his financial service to the students. “Steve brings a great deal of international expertise and an entrepreneurial acumen that will serve our college well,” George said. Many students should feel the same about Feld from the experience he has gained in the past. His accomplishments
“Steve brings a great deal of international expertise and an entrepreneurial acumen that will serve our college well.” MARIE ANGELELLA GEORGE
and past work proves he is more than capable enough to take on his position at Cabrini. Despite moving schools, Feld’s overall goal remains the same. This is to use his financial experience to help give students the best education possible so they can in return make a difference in the world. With a goal like this, it would only make sense that Feld would be the perfect choice for president of finance and
treasurer here at Cabrini. His mission fits that of Cabrini’s perfectly, where the goal is to inspire students to use their college education to do something extraordinary in the world. Dr. Feld is a graduate of the University of New Mexico. There, he earned his bachelor of science in mechanical engineering. Besides this, Feld has a long list of past experience that is more than enough to bring to our campus. These range from serving as the executive director of executive education at the Robert H. Smith School of Business to serving on the Higher Education Management faculty at the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania. Feld’s achievements span globally. Besides working in just the United States, Feld has also worked in such countries as Switzerland, China and Tunisia. He has helped these countries in developing the Smith Executive MBA. Feld has also taught at Penn’s Graduate School of Education. These are just a few of Feld’s achievements. With his experience combined with his goals to always help students financially, it will be exciting to see what Feld brings to our campus in the future. Both the faculty and student body of Cabrini College are grateful to have someone as experienced as Dr. Feld as part of our family. SFC35@CABRINI.EDU
Perspectives
6 The Loquitur
Thursday, March. 15, 2012
“Coming Out” About Mental Health BY ROBYN SUCHY Guest Writer
This is a coming out. Not the kind of coming out that your mind automatically jumps to; no, a different kind of closet has trapped me for the last six years of my life. Mental illness is something that we don’t talk about in our society. It’s conveniently hidden away, restricted to the “few” or the “insane” that we don’t see or associate with. It’s talked about in relation to homelessness or poverty, not in relation to young adults and college students. It’s definitely not something that people talk about with their roommates and their professors, during classes, or with their peers over meals. But I’d like to help change that. After a friend of mine died my freshman year of high school, I fell into a depression. It was my first time needing to deal with real emotions and I was overwhelmed. I started cutting myself and isolating myself from everyone because I was so paralyzed by my sadness and the depth of my own emotion. After a few months, my friends, teachers and guidance counselors began to notice my changing
behaviors and scars. I got the beginnings of the help I needed. It wasn’t easy to fight my way back to what I used to be but that wasn’t the end of my story. In my sophomore year of high school, my best friend and my biggest supporter started failing classes and isolating herself. It wasn’t until our senior year that things really became evident that she was cutting herself and was suicidal. I did everything I could to help her; I went to the guidance counselors, teachers, and ultimately I helped her parents get her committed to a hospital. She hasn’t spoken to me in almost two years and when I came to Cabrini as a freshman, the last time I saw her, she was on a ledge. Getting away from home and the school where all of these things had happened was definitely good for me but I didn’t foresee some of the important questions that have arisen. My friends and some teachers in high school knew about my past with depression and the anxiety that came to the forefront in my senior year; my roommates and
professors didn’t and I didn’t know if I should tell them. My roommates caught on pretty early that I was disappearing for an hour a week when I didn’t have class but I was still worried to tell them where I was really going (the Counseling Center). But I did work up the courage to tell them and I felt closer to my friends after I was honest. Now I’m a sophomore, though, and I feel like there are so many people who I am close to but that don’t know this important part of my life that drives all I do. Consider this my coming out to you. I’m able to tell you this story because I know I am not alone. One in four college students will suffer from a diagnosable mental illness. I know that there are people just like me who have personally experienced a mental health issue but beyond that, I’d say that every single person on this campus has been touched by mental illness. Friends, family members, teammates, colleagues, roommates, of all the people in your
life can you make at least one connection to mental health? Now you can. I hope that one day, I can get to know you if I don’t already. I hope that one day I can prove to you that mental illness is not a debilitating disorder that will cripple me for the rest of my life. In fact, I have found purpose through it. I’m president of Active Minds, a club on campus that promotes awareness about mental health and tries to reduce stigma surrounding mental illness. I was recently appointed to a national student advisory committee for this organization. My past struggles and the struggles that I continue to overcome have given me the motivation to reach out to you. I want to create a more open campus environment; an environment where we are able to talk about counseling and therapy in our own lives, not just through the theoretical model of some class. I want an environment where people are able to walk into the Counseling Center if something is wrong just as they would walk into Health Services. It’s not fair that we can’t do that. It’s not fair that so many people suffer in silence. Ultimately, I want to start a dialogue and I want all of you to be involved in it. Join us for our Active Minds meetings every other Monday at 2 p.m. in Iadarola 101 E, or find us on Facebook. Even just stop me in passing, send me an e-mail, knock on my door; I’m always up for a conversation.
RGS38@CABRINI.EDU
Perspectives
Thursday, March. 15, 2012
The Loquitur 7
BY KELSEY ALVINO Perspectives Editor
It’s 11:30 a.m. on Saturday morning. You hear the sound of voices in the hallway rushing to brunch. As you pry your eyes open between the layers of dried up mascara, you awaken to realize this is not your bedroom, this is the hallway outside your dorm. The last thing you remember is slapping the bag of your gross, Franzia wine and yelling obscenities at public safety. You quickly decide to look at your texts to see who else you irritated the night before. After taking a big sigh of relief, to the fact that you didn’t text your parents, you make a mad dash to your bag.
Frantically you dump out your bag and realize the inevitable. Franz-1, you-0. You left your dignity at the door. Fabulous. Due to your impeccable planning and responsibility, you’ve lost everything. Where is your phone? Where are your keys? Where is your underwear? Congratulations, you have just mastered the art of losing your things and blacking out. Bye, bye brain cells. The art of losing things tends to take place after you lose your ability to walk straight. Judgment gets clouded and you begin to think irrationally.
The light on my phone is making my eyes hurt, I’ll just throw it across the room. My shoes are hurting my feet, I’ll just take them off and walk away. You like to dance? So do I, I’ll sway around and hopefully won’t fall over. Classy. We got it; we know… we’re so irresponsible. But hopefully this weekend we can redeem ourselves and be accountable for ourselves. With Saint Patrick’s day, lets keep some helpful tips in mind. Drink slowly - if you sip a drink and do not have more than one drink per hour, the alcohol will not have a chance to build
up in your bloodstream. This is due to the natural metabolic functioning of the liver. Set a limit on how many drinks you are going to have when you drink, and stick to it. Don’t drink on an empty stomach. You are more likely to get sick and less likely to be able to control Pregnant or think you might be? Alcohol goes straight from a mother’s bloodstream to the unborn baby causing birth defects and other abnormalities. Never accept a drink from someone you don’t knowYou don’t know what they could have put in it!
Be well hydrated. Make certain that you drink plenty of water before you start drinking any alcohol. Alcohol is a diuretic and it will cause you to become dehydrated. The more alcohol you drink, the thirstier you feel. Having plenty of water in your system will keep you from feeling thirsty and you will drink more slowly. Drinking slowly is the best way to enjoy alcohol and avoid blacking out or passing out. So remember to have fun and be careful, its always better to remember a fun night.
KMA69@CABRINI.EDU
8 | The Loquitur
Features
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Experiencing the history of Ireland BY CHELBI MIMS Features Editor ALL PHOTOS SUBMITTED BY STUDENTS FROM THE ECG CLASS
During spring break, 20 students and three faculty members traveled to Ireland to view the historical landmarks of the The Emerald Isle. Dr. Mary Harris, economics and finance department chair and associate professor, and Dr. Erin McLauglin, assistant professor of business administration, have been planning this tour for two years. They wanted to take students to Ireland and knew that they wanted to focus on the issues of justice, tolerance, and equality. Out of these goals arose this study abroad course. “As an Irish Catholic, I had always wanted to visit Ireland to see where my ancestors were from. And as a young person growing up in the U.S. during the troubles, I was very interested in seeing if Northern Ireland was how I envisioned it during that time,” Harris said. “I wanted to go on this particular trip because I thought it was important to teach our students about the discrimination against the Catholics during the Troubles and to give them a different perspective than was sometimes portrayed by the U.S. media,” Harris said. The students spent eight days in Ireland traveling to Dublin, Londonderry and Belfast. The trip included a tour of the Guinness Storehouse, Trinity College, tour of the Bogside Artists’ Studio, Giants Causeway and Oil Bushmills Distillery, Stormont Estate and Long Kesh Prison. “My favorite part of the trip was seing the prison where the hunger strike took place. I was very interested to see where history actually took place,” Jaclyn Rescigna, junior social work major, said. The days were full of activities and beautiful sites. The first day, the group walked through Dublin with their tour guide, Gearoid O’Caoimh. Dublin is known for its cobbled streets dating back to medieval times. The next day, they took a tour of Kilmainham Goal. They learned about the Easter Rising and the suffering of many political prisoners
once housed and executed here. The group also visited the Guiness Storehouse, which is a brewery museum filled with seven floors. Each person was introduced to the brewery process and enjoyed a pint of the Irish classic beer. They also took an excursion through Giant’s Causeway, a stunning volcancic rock formation, built by legendary Finn McCool. They ended the trip with an excursion to Stormont Estate and HM Maze prison located in Long Kesh. The estate hosted peace negoations that led to the Belfast Agreement. “I love to traveling and I was a little scared but I was definitely more excited than anything,” Alex Saboe, junior commications major, said. The trip was a part of a ECG 300 class and they will have a speaker coming to campus on March 29 to meet with the class to discuss advocacy options for relatives of former political prisoners. The speaker is from the Ancient Order of the Hibernians, America’s oldest Irish Catholic Fraternal Organization founded in Pennsylvania in May 1836. “I had an amazing time in Ireland during spring break,” Amy Quigley, junior education major, said. “I was hesitant at first to attend because I didn’t know many people and had never really been that far away from home, but I am so glad I went on the trip. I learned a lot and actually experiencing it first hand helped me understand what really happened in Ireland between the Catholics and Protestants in the previous years.” The students will also be researching and completing a 10-15 page paper, and presenting their PowerPoint slides at the undergraduate research symposium in April on one of four topics: 1916 Rising (Dublin); Irish Culture; Blood Sunday (Derry); and the Hunger Strikes (Belfast). cam376@cabrini.edu
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Features
The Loquitur | 9
Traveling to Rebuild BY CHELBI MIMS Features Editor Through a series of unknown events, eight students and two faculty member found themselves in New Orleans, La. helping to rebuild a home for someone who lost everything during Hurricane Katrina. “We were meant to go to New Orleans because we were originally supposed to go to Gallop and last spring I was in touch with the people in Gallop and starting in September, the guy wasn’t returning phone calls and I felt something was not right,” Father Carl Janicki, director of Campus Ministry, said. “The faculty made the contact in New Orleans and in a week, we had work to do and a place to stay,” Janicki said. The group was initially set to travel to Gallop, N.M. to experience the unique culture but embarked on a journey to New Orleans on March 4 that changed many of their lives. “I was surprised and a little disappointed that we were not going to New Mexico but my group members and I later realized that we were meant to be in New Orleans and God had a different plan than the plan we had for ourselves,” Felicia Melvin, senior communication major, said. The group of 10 lived at Camp Hope, the largest housing development in the United States, for seven days and worked with Saint Bernard project, an awardwinning project for home renovations in the lower ninth ward. During their time in New Orleans the group helped rebuild the home of longtime resident of New
Orleans, Elaine Henry. Henry came back to the Big Easy for the first time in six years to meet the Cabrini students and faculty who were rebuilding her home. They also witnessed a house ceremony for another house that was rebuilt by Saint Bernard project. During the ceremony, all the volunteers gathered to welcome the home owner into her house. “My experience was very insightful and inspiring. When I saw what we were actually doing for Ms. Elaine Henry, I thought ‘wow this a great deed you can do for someone’ but when I actually saw Ms. Henry, I was shocked,” Tracy Hyatt, junior education major, said. “Just being in her presence greatly impacted my heart. That's when I knew that God truly did bless us with the tenacity and willfulness to reach our mission's goal.” They also went out locally to eat at Tony Po Boy restaurant, view the French Quarters, visit the levies, witness the damaged homes from Hurricane Katrina, and speak to residents of New Orleans and hear their individual stories. “It was a great experience and my first mission trip ever and it has made me want to go on more,” Michelle Kane, senior psychology major, said. “The best part of the trip was the welcome home party for Mrs. Patricia. It showed me how me being there really was making a difference and showed me that there really are good people left in the world and that people are so grateful for something we think is so small.” The group also visited Cabrini High School and took a tour of a local cemetery. Many of the cemeteries in Louisiana are above ground. They then talked with the principal and teachers at
Cabrini High School and heard the stories of how many of the teachers’ homes were ruined during Katrina and Cabrini High School had to be moved to Baton Rouge for a couple of months because of damage. “They connected the Cabrini world between the high school and college,” Janicki said. From this experience, many students’ eyes were opened to a world outside of their own. Some realized why they were led to come to New Orleans and others learned that there is a larger world and everyone has gifts and talents that can help people in need. Two of the students from the trip are speaking about becoming Americorp volunteers and lead a year of service upon graduation. “I learned so much about construction work, I learned so much about Katrina, about the culture of New Orleans,” Rasha Sharhan, senior mathematics major, said. “And I will definitely go back. I am applying to an internship with St. Bernard Project for the summer and I am also applying to become an Americorps member.” “I learned not to take the simple everyday things for granted. You never know from one day to the next what will happen,” Dana Drake, junior human resources major, said. “Having the opportunity to gain friendships, satisfaction and impact has taken a huge toll on me. I will never forgot the time I spent in New Orleans and look forward to continuing to help others in need.”
cam376@cabrini.edu
The true Eastern experience BY LIA FERRANTE Staff Writer
Did you ever wonder what is right across the street from our small college? Did you ever want to go over there and experience a college that is so different from ours but is so close? Eastern University is a Christian-based college that is located right on Eagle Road. Even though the colleges are so close to one another, their dynamics are so different beyond belief. I had the opportunity to talk to my sister, Danielle Ferrante, on her experience about going to this school and how she deals with the many rules and obligations that are required for her to follow. “The school has a great sense of community in the hallways,” Ferrante, finance and accounting major, said. The rules at Eastern are much more strict in comparison to Cabrini. For example, she talked about the visitation hours students have on the weekdays and the weekends. On the weekdays, students of the opposite sex are only allowed to visit from about 4 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. On the weekends it is a little bit more lenient. The hours of visitation for students of the opposite sex to visit in a hallway are 1 p.m. to 1 a.m. There are also no sleep overs allowed for the opposite sex on the campus. “The hours of visitation can be a negative or a positive because it’s good that I can get all my work done early in the night without interruptions,” Ferrante said. Whenever we go over to the school, it has such a welcoming atmosphere. The people over there are very open and everyone loves meeting someone new. The education over at the school is different because of the core requirements. At Eastern, the students are required to take at least four religion classes before graduation. At Cabrini, the students are only required to take one religion class in order to graduate. “I meet someone new every day and learn about where they are from and their background,” Ferrante said. The persona of the school is that every one talks about God all the time, which is not the case at all. God is the center of their education and college careers but its not all the students talk about all the time. “Our school is a Christian-based college because God surrounds us for positives in our education,” Ferrante said. Eastern University and Cabrini College are both excellent schools to attend and were great educations can be gained. Each school surrounds themselves with God bringing positive opportunities for the students and faculty.
ALL PHOTOS SUBMITTED BY DANA DRAKE
A group of 10 students and two faculty members spent spring break restoring, mudding, painting and sanding a damaged home destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.
LF375@CABRINI.EDU
Arts & Entertainment
10 | The Loquitur
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Explore your creativity with pottery
staffplaylist
SARAH LUCKERT / deputy editor
Get Low - Lil Jon & The Eastiside Boys Young Homie - Chris Rene So Good- B.o.B
JESSE GAUNCE/ copy editor
ALL PHOTOS /LAURA GALLAGHER / ASST. A & E EDITOR
Color Me Mine offers creative craft ideas for all ages to enjoy.
BY LAURA GALLAGHER Asst. A&E Editor Color Me Mine is a great place to explore if you want to try a new activity to express your creative side. It is a studio where you can paint different pieces of pottery and decorate it to your preference. Color Me Mine offers over 400 items to choose from such as Disney characters, mugs, puppies, plates and much more. How Color Me Mine works is you first pick the ceramic piece of your preference. Next, you pick out a design to put on your item. You can sketch a design or use stencils and sponges with the 22,000 images they have available to choose from. If you prefer, you can also use a personal photo. There are dozens of colors to choose from and the employees will bring them to you. The staff will then dip the painted item in a glaze and fire it in their kilns to bring out the color. All of the materials are non-toxic, lead free and food safe. In just a few days, you pick up the piece and you can enjoy the art you’ve created. There is a studio fee of $7 for kids under the age of 12 and $10 for those 13 and up. The fee is good for the day and you add the cost of each item you paint. Prices start at $14. Color Me Mine can host many different occasions and events.
This includes birthday parties, closed studio parties, teacher gifts, paint-for-profit, community events and much more. Color Me Mine has different ideas to fund raise for a good cause while having fun. An example of how they do this is auctioning. Many schools do this to raise money and a class will paint a large bowl that will be auctioned off. Another way of raising money is creating a tile wall. A group of people can paint a commercial-grade tile wall. Color Me Mine will help you and when it’s done hang it up. This is an easy way to make money for any group or occasion. Color Me Mine is the perfect place to bring out your imagination. Whether you are 5 years old or 55 years old, there is room for everyone.
ADDRESS: Color Me Mine 109 W. Lancaster Ave. Wayne, PA 19087 (610) 687 - 9777 HOURS:
Sunday 11a.m. - 6 p.m. Monday - Thursday 11 a.m. - 8 p.m. Friday - Saturday 11 a.m. - 9 p.m.
LCG39@CABRINI.EDU
FRIDAY MESSIAH
War Pigs- Black Sabbath It’s Late- Queen White Punks on Dope - The Tubes
Application of the Week: Draw Something BY JESSICA JOHNSONPETTY Asst. A& E Editor Ready to get creative and challenge your friends? Draw Something created by OMGPOP proves itself to the App Store and the Market by pleasing its users beyond expectation. Draw Something was founded in January 2012. The App Store reported that Draw Something was voted the No. 1 free app, No.1 paid app, and No.1 world game in over 40 countries. This app was declared the most popular social drawing and guessing game amongst users. If you play the game one time, it will become your next healthy technology addiction. Draw Something is similar to Pictionary, allowing users to draw on their handset and guess what their friends are drawing Connect to Facebook and Twitter to play your friends and followers that are drawing things too. If you don’t use either, you can find someone through email, username or find a random match. Don’t fret, there is no previous drawing experience required. Whether you draw stick figures or
SATURDAY
MOSCOW FESTIVAL BALLET: CINDERELLA
if you are a little Picasso, anyone can draw and guess; the worse the drawing, the funnier the game. You are in control of the level that you want to draw choosing either easy, medium or hard. You have your opponent guess by choosing out of the three levels. When you guess the drawing correct, you get the points allotted from one to three points, depending on the level of difficulty. Once you get a certain amount of points you can buy more colors to enhance your drawings. One of the objectives is to rally back and forth in order to gain the most turns. You can also buy bombs with the money you obtain. Bombs are the explosive way to take way extra letters that have you completely puzzled. Draw Something is available for a free download for the Andriod OS 2.3+ and Apple’s iOS 4.0, iPhone 3GS+ and the iPAD 1, 2, and 3. JRJ56@CABRINI.EDU
SUNDAY
ESSENCE OF SOUTH PHILLY TOUR
Choreographer Robert Weiss brings Handel’s famous liberetto to stage through ballet performance.
Be amazed by the greatest ballet talents as the Moscow Festival Ballet Performs the timeless classic, Cinderella.
Fight your temptation for delicious treats and goodies and embrace the culture that is South Philadelphia.
Academy of Music, (240 S. Broad St., Philadelphia), $20 - $140, 7:30 p.m.
Lehigh University - Zoellner Art Center, (420 E. Packer Ave., Bethlehem), $26 - $42, 8:00 p.m.
Center City, (Vine St., Philadelphia), $39, 9:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Arts & Entertainment
Thursday, March 15, 2012
The Loquitur | 11
Luck of the Irish
BlogRoll:
BY JENY VARUGHESE A&E Editor
BY NICHOLAS RAYNER Staff Writer
Insidehoops
Shamrocks and cold beers
McGillin’s Old Ale House
Finnigan’s Wake
The oldest Irish Pub in Philadelphia, McGillin’s, opened its doors during Lincoln’s presidential election in 1860. This is the oldest operating pub located in an alley in Midtown Village in Philadelphia. Originally called “The Bell in Hand,” the bar got it’s name from it’s original owner, William McGillin, who raised his 13 children on the second floor of the building above the pub. With that said, McGillin’s St. Patrick’s Day party overflows with green beers, authentic Irish brews, Irish cocktails and Irish food.
Located on the outskirts of Northern Liberties in Philadelphia, Finnigan’s Wake is a large three-story bar filled with lots of colors on the outside. The first floor houses a low-key bar and a band performs on the third floor. The second floor of the bar also known as the Civil War floor is dedicated to both Abraham Lincoln and the Irish 68th Brigade. Finnigan’s offer over 40 bottled beers and 16 draft beers to choose from as well as Irish food choices.
ALL PHOTOS MCT
The Bards
Fado Irish Pub & Restaurant
Located in Rittenhouse Square, the Irish owned and operated pub The Bards gives you the feel of an authentic Irish bar. Embrace the luck of the Irish with an early start with Kegs and Eggs and enjoy a special Irish menu including Shepherd’s pie, bangers and mash and many other traditional pub favorites.
Located in Philadelphia, Fado’s tell the tale of rich Irish pub culture through hearty food and drink, music, warm hospitality and friendly chatter. Start St. Patrick’s Day festivities early with Hibernians Pints and Pancakes Breakfast buffet. Also, enjoy live music by Lima Bean Riot and Irish Dancers.
Insidehoops.com has a blog section that I’ve been following for a few years. This blog gives you inside news about the NBA. Insidehoops.com is a great source for finding out news about your favorite teams and players. Insidehoops.com gives you the news on the NBA before anyone else does. Whether it’s a player that is getting released or traded, or a coach being fired, you get the news on Inside Hoops as soon as it occurs. A lot of times, Inside Hoops will report and predict possible trades, free agent signings, and other news in the NBA and are almost always correct. Inside Hoops has many features that attract a variety of fans from all over the world. When you first open the blog you will get the latest news that is occurring in the NBA. Then as you scroll down the page you will receive older news from that day or week. Inside Hoops also offers different links and pages to its blogs. On the right side of the blog they have categories for different blog pages. The categories that are featured are recent posts and news. These blogs report on the most current news that is occurring in the NBA. The all-star blog section reports on all the news from the NBA All-Star Weekend. Whether it’s Kobe Bryant’s broken nose, Kevin Durant’s MVP performance, or players getting added to the dunk-contest and the three-point shootout. Inside Hoops has got it covered. The entertainment blogs give information on players and managements personal lives. Some of the blogs in this section include Jeremy Lin living in a hotel, Magic Johnson launching television channel, and Kris Humphries’ desire to have the Kim Kardashian divorce trial on television. Inside Hoops also offers other blogs that provide info on every team in the NBA. Any possible news you need on your favorite team you can find it out with Inside Hoops. Other blogs that are featured are international blogs, NBA playoffs and rumor blogs. Inside hoops is a great blog site because it’s accurate in what it reports and it’s a great way to learn a lot about the NBA.
JAV83@CABRINI.EDU LF375@CABRINI.EDU
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Join locall and local and national artists perform a mix of different music.
Learn about the tragic events and the story of the Titanic.
Celebrate and be intrigued by a presentation of epic proportions. Enjoy the exhibition From Asbury Park to the Promised Land: The Life and Music of Bruice Springstein.
World Cafe Live at the Queens, (500 N. Market St., Wilmington, DE), $11, 7 p.m.
Rosenbach Museum & Library, (2010 Delancey Pl., Philadelphia), $5 - $10
National Constitution Center, (525 Arch St., Philadelphia), $8 - $14.50, 9:30 p.m.
GROOVE NIGHT
TITANIC: THE RISE OF ROSENBACH
THE LIFE AND MUSIC OF BRUCE SPRINGSTEIN
Arts & Entertainment
12 | The Loquitur
Thursday, March 15, 2012
WEEKLY REVIEW
Man vs. wolf: grim fairytale BY AMANDA TOTH Asst. A&E Editor “The Grey,” starring Liam Neeson is an eventful story of a group of oil workers whose plane crashes in the dangerous wilderness of Alaska. From the beginning, the story draws the audience in with unexplained questions and events that go on before they are even in the plane. Soon, it takes the audience on the plane with the oil workers anticipating their arrival back to their homes and with their families. Then, the story takes a turn for the worst. Just when you think it can’t get any worse for these already trauma-ridden men, your thoughts are surely mistaken. It turns out that the area where the plane crashed is directly near the den of a huge wolf pack. The wolf pack soon starts to terrorize the men and the crash site. From there, the men make decisions to try to escape their inevitable fate of becoming meals for the wolf pack by attempting a dangerous journey across the Alaskan tundra. One by one, the men are faced with tough decisions and obstacles during their journey. The main character, played by Liam Neeson, is the fearless leader of the crew the whole time. During the journey, the audience is lead through short snippets of each characters lives and their struggles. Yet, in the end, it is survival of the fittest. This movie kept the audience intrigued the entire time. The audience seemed captivated by the internal stories through out the larger story line. However, there are some things that are never explained and left the audience to make their own conclusions. Also, there are some parts of the movie that could have been done a little better, such as some of the details of the fates of certain characters. The directors and writers probably wanted it that way because it shows man’s true downfalls and not just the ef-
MCT
Liam Neeson plays John Ottoway, a member of an oil drill group who got stranded after a plane crah in Alaska.
fects of man versus nature. Apart from the abrupt ending, the movie was all in all a nail-biter. It kept the audience at the edge of their seats the entire time. There weren’t really any dull moments that gave the audience time to relax and get bored. There were unexpected twists and turns through out the entire story. When everything seemed like it would work out for the men, something unexpected would happen to knock them down again. It was a true tale of man’s internal
conflict and man versus wild. The cast was outstanding and made the audience believe their stories. The script and dialogue also made the audience become attached to the characters. The effects were also outstanding. The entire movie took place in the wilderness of Alaska with wolves surrounding so there were a lot of effects for the conditions as well as the wolves. The movie was very graphic so those moviegoers with weak stomachs should stay away. There is a short clip at
the end after the credits that leave the ending more open for the audiences’ interpretations. For the adventurous and suspense seeking moviegoers this movie is highly recommended.
AMT84@CABRINI.EDU
New website is go-to for college students BY ALEXANDRIA JETER Asst. A&E Editor Do you want to know the best colleges to go to? Do you want to know all the information you need for attending or choosing the right college? Then CollegeCellar is the site for you. CollegeCellar.com is a website that provides you “with the most vital information on and around your campus.” The site was started by Justin Gellar in late 2010 while he was staring down at a pile of old college textbooks. “CollegeCellar is your one-stop shop for information around your campus,” Gellar said. Gellar is the type of person who has a lot of ideas up his sleeve and shared his new ideas to his brother, Scott Gellar. Scott is presently a computer science major and decisively put CollegeCellar.com into movement. In November 2011, Scott spent the majority of his free time working on this website. During his winter break, he continuously worked on the program while holding down a full-time position as a Best Buy Geek Squad member. Everything was installed and created by early January 2012. The first version of the site was launched in early February 2012. Justin has continued to be a part of CollegeCellar.com by being financially stable as well as managing the marketing and promotion of the trade. “Our five-year plan is to work with local companies to offer discounts to students who use CollegeCellar.com as
a resource,” Gellar said. “First and foremost, we want to build up our site to operate as a college community forum. Currently, we offer a review section, where you can review on/off campus housing, eateries and bars.” “Our post section is an even larger value to students because it offers a place to buy, sell and trade books as well as things they don’t need any more,” Geller said. For example, a senior selling a mini-fridge. After that, we will concentrate on working out deals with multiple companies in and around the college community.”
“I USUALLY TRY TO ADD SOMETHING INTERESTING AT LEAST ONCE A DAY.” JUSTIN GELLAR
The website describes it in the best way possible, making it fun and easy for future customers to understand. The site also has a Facebook like page. It says, “Welcome to CollegeCellar.com: the site that provides you with the most vital information in and around your campus. Girlfriend or boyfriend in town for the night and you need to know who has the best dining experience in town? Check out our review section and don’t forget to add your own
feedback as well.” “Better yet, you want to get rid of those text books from last semester? (We know you’ll never look at them again.) Check out our post section, which will allow you to buy, sell or trade books locally with peers at your school. Graduating but not ready to leave the party? Find a new roommate for the new apartment you just rented. We have you covered and if we don’t, contact us. Our ears are always open for suggestions.” Right now, Gellar has a very busy life. A typical day for Gellar consist of waking up at 6 a.m. and checking CollegeCellar’s social media sites. “I usually try to add something interesting at least once a day,” Gellar said. “From there, I work a full-time job working between 40-50 hours a week. After work I jump back on our social media sites and see what’s going on at local colleges.” “I spend about 10 minutes to an hour speaking with Scott about any new information pertaining to the site. I also work on setting up promotions and advertising.” Gellar’s nights consist of checking the site’s analytics which explains vital information pertaining to users. “During these early stages, it’s really only about introducing students to the site and letting them know it’s a site for them,” Gellar said.
ANJ34@CABRINI.EDU
Sports
Thursday, March 15, 2012
The Loquitur | 13
LAURA GALLAGHER / ASST. A&E EDITOR
Junior brings talent, humor to men’s lacrosse team BY LAURA GALLAGHER Asst. A&E Editor Erick “EZ” Zarzecki is well-liked and can be described as an outgoing, funny guy. On the Cabrini men’s lacrosse team, he has been the starting goalie for the past three years and is a team leader who uses his skills and size greatly to his advantage. Zarzecki is originally from Baltimore, Md. He started playing the position in elementary school. Zarzecki attended Pikesville High School and some of his accomplishments there included being named an All-American and he helped his team win a state championship his senior year. Zarzecki, junior psychology and criminology double major, was named Cabrini’s starting goalkeeper as a freshman. “As far as a career, I want to do something with sports psychology,” Zarzecki said. In his first year at Cabrini, Zarzecki won 15 games while posting a 7.81 goals against average. “A freshman starter is not very common. Usually, you have a junior or senior,” head coach Steve Colfer said. “He came in and won the position that year and beat out two
upperclassmen.” Zarzecki is very competitive and even during practice, he does not like to give up goals. Colfer has seen him grow through the years and has seen him mature. “He is taking coaching better and asking questions and interacting with the coaches a little bit more,” Colfer said. Zarzecki’s willingness to improve to become the best goalie he can be is something he strives for. “I would do anything I need for my team to get us to have a great season,” Zarzecki said. His teammates agree that he is someone you want to be around, both on and off the field. JT Irvin, junior attack, says that Zarzecki “is without a doubt one of the best goalies in the nation.” Irvin also describes how Zarzecki is very funny and has a distinct laugh that is “the funniest thing in the entire world.” In his free time, Zarzecki likes to play video games, watch television, hang out with friends and toss the football around the Kingswood apartment complex. “He is a lot of fun to hang out with,” Andy Kvech, junior defenseman, said. “You know when he gets excited because he has a big mouth so he smiles real big.” This season, Zarzecki wants to help the Cavs win another CSAC Championship and advance all the way to
the National Championship game in the NCAA tournament. “The last two years we have lost in the second round, so we want to get past that hump,” Zarzecki said. “We love all the Cabrini players, coaches and parents; they have become our other family. We love Cabrini lacrosse and Erick loves it,” Kathie Zarzecki, Erick’s mother and one of his biggest supporters, said. “It has taught him that you are only as good as your last save, so he is always working at improving his skills.” Zarzecki would like to be involved with lacrosse when he graduates because it is a sport he loves and wants its growth to continue. He would one day love to coach, possibly as a head coach at the college level. “Lacrosse has taught Erick about the agony of defeat as well as the thrill of victory,” Kathie Zarzecki said. “The team and the players are very important to Erick. They have a strong bond and truly are a team of brothers.”
LCG39@CABRINI.EDU
OFF THE FIELD WITH ERICK ZARZECKI 1. What is your favorite food? - Crab cakes.
4. Did you play any sports other than lacrosse when you were younger?
2. What types of music do you listen to?
- I played recreational basketball in middle school and football and golf in high school.
- Rap and house music.
5. Which professional sports teams do you root for?
3. Who are some of your favorite artists?
- The Baltimore Ravens and Baltimore Orioles.
- My favorite artists are Wiz Khalifa, Los, Rick Ross, Meek Mills, Avici, Swedish House Mafia and Deadmau5.
6. Who is your favorite professional athlete? - Ray Lewis (Baltimore Ravens linebacker).
Sports
14 | The Loquitur
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Thorp’s hat trick helps Cavs to 7-3 win BY KEVIN DURSO Asst. Sports Editor The Cavaliers men’s lacrosse team defeated the Swarthmore College Garnet by a score of 7-3 to net their first home victory of the season at Edith Robb Dixon Field on Saturday, March 10. The win was Cabrini’s second straight and brought their record to 3-2 on the young season. Swarthmore scored on their first possession, just 42 seconds into the game, on a goal by senior midfielder John Bukawyn. The Garnet would increase that lead just past the midpoint of the first quarter on a goal by junior midfielder Steve Selverian. Cabrini would rally from there, scoring two goals in the final three minutes of the first. Junior attack Bobby Thorp got Cabrini on the board and freshman attack Damian Sobieski tied the score. “I think our whole team puts us in pretty good situations to score,” Thorp said. “I’m just putting the touch on it when someone tries to get me the ball.” The two teams would trade goals in the closing stages of the second quarter. The Cavaliers briefly led off another goal by Thorp but Swarthmore’s senior midfielder Max Hubbard tied the score with just under a minute to play to knot the score at halftime. “Swarthmore traditionally plays a really tight zone,” 11th-year head coach Steve Colfer said. “They really have a good goalie and today he was outstanding.” The offensive struggle would continue into the third
quarter, as the two teams remained scoreless for the next fifteen minutes. Cabrini would finally find a way to break through in the fourth but not without keeping defense in mind. “[The defense] played unbelievable today,” senior attack Brian Hill said. “Our defense every day in practice pushes our offense. That’s why we play well.”
“I think our whole team puts us in pretty good situations to score.” Bobby Thorp
The Cavs broke the stalemate with just under 10 minutes to play on a pair of goals in short order from freshman midfielder Anthony DiSanzo. The two goals were separated by 57 seconds. Hill already had two assists on the day but had been stopped eight times by Garnet senior goalkeeper Michael Brockway. His ninth shot finally found the twine to extend Cabrini’s lead to three. “They were running a zone which sometimes opens you up to a lot of shots,” Hill said. “Towards the end of the game, we finally broke through and were able to put some in the back of the net.” In the final minute, Thorp would finish off the hat trick
with an empty-net goal. In the five games the Cavaliers have played this season, Thorp has a team-high 12 goals and 17 points. Hill is a close second in both categories with 11 goals and 4 assists. Both had three points in Cabrini’s third win of the season and first on their home field. Junior goalkeeper Erick Zarzecki made seven saves in the match on 10 shots, perhaps none bigger than his only second half stop with four minutes remaining in the fourth. Cabrini shut out the Garnet in the final 30 minutes of the contest. Colfer said that their March 7 win against HampdenSydney College, featuring a game-winning goal by Sobieski in the final minute, will hopefully get the team going on a winning streak. After losing back-to-back one-goal games, both to ranked opponents in Dickinson and Lynchburg, the Cavaliers are using that as valuable experience to fuel their current two-game winning streak. “Those one-goal games teach you to play 60 minutes,” Hill said. “We stress in practice that you’ve got to go hard for all 60 minutes and hopefully end up on the winning end.” “We want to be playing at the highest possible level,” Colfer said. “In situations where we lost to Dickinson and Lynchburg both by a goal, most of those games we played well. We learn from it, we’re a young team and we’re moving forward.” KAD323@CABRINI.EDU
KEVIN DURSO / ASST. SPORTS EDITOR
KEVIN DURSO / ASST. SPORTS EDITOR
ABOVE LEFT: Senior attack Brian Hill (No. 21) and junior attack Bobby Thorp (No. 8) celebrate Thorp’s hat-trick goal in Cabrini’s 7-3 win over Swarthmore College on Saturday, March 10. ABOVE RIGHT: Junior attack Bobby Thorp picked up a hat trick in Cabrini’s 7-3 win on Saturday, March 10 and now leads the team with 12 goals in five games this season.
Cavalier Athletic Calendar Thursday, March 15
Friday, March 16
Saturday, March 17
Men’s Tennis @ Wesley College 3 p.m.
Softball vs. Immaculata University (doubleheader) 3 p.m.
Softball @ Gwynedd-Mercy College (doubleheader) 12 p.m.
Women’s Lacrosse vs. Ursinus College 3:30 p.m.
Men’s Basketball vs. Illinois Wesleyan University 6 p.m. (NCAA Final Four - Salem, Va.)
Women’s Lacrosse @ Marywood University 1 p.m. Men’s Lacrosse vs. FDU - College at Florham 1 p.m. Men’s Basketball vs. NCAA Championship Game 7 p.m. (Salem, Va. - if Cabrini wins on Friday, March 16)
Sunday, March 18
Monday, March 19
Tuesday, March 20
Wednesday, March 21
No Events
Softball vs. Valley Forge Christian College (doubleheader) 3 p.m.
Golf @ Philadelphia University Spring Invite 12 p.m.
Men’s Tennis vs. University of the Sciences 4 p.m.
Women’s Lacrosse @ Immaculata University 4 p.m.
Softball @ Haverford College (doubleheader) 3 p.m.
Women’s Lacrosse vs. Swarthmore College 7 p.m.
Men’s Tennis @ Haverford College 4 p.m.
Sports
Thursday, March 15, 2012
The Loquitur | 15
OUTTA’ RIGHT FIELD RANSOM COZZILLIO
No place for “bounty-gate”
starting their spring season in early March. Walter Jesuncosky, senior history major, has been playing tennis since he was a junior in high school after an injury ended his baseball career. “Even though it is going to be tough, I believe we will be bringing back the CSAC title to Cabrini,” Jesuncosky said. Justin Lutteroty, senior marketing major, was Second Team AllConference for the 2010-2011 season. He has been playing tennis for about five years competitively and really enjoys the Cabrini College athletic program. “Cabrini has an excellent chance at taking the title this year,” Lutteroty said. “Marywood is a very strong team but we are just as competitive.” During the team’s recent training trip, they held a team meeting that motivated everyone to strive for the best and want the title back. The first conference game for the Cavaliers will take place on March, 23 against Baptist Bible College. “This is going to be a fun and unforgettable season,” Jesuncosky said. “On April 28 we will become the new CSAC champions for men’s tennis.”
Well, imagine that. The NFL is in hot water again over the practices of its employees. It’s been dogfighting, player misconduct, weapons charges, steroids and concussions (among countless others). Now, apparently, it’s the revelation that some teams have been offering a “bounty fee” to their defensive players as incentive to knock opposing players out of the game. And, just like the litany of other offenses, the NFL and the football watching public just can’t seem to react reasonably. With player conduct and “Twitter abuses” we’ve heard too much. With concussions, we are still hearing dangerously little. So what if a few defensive coordinators put a few thousand dollars on the table to any player who could get the opposition “carted-off”. The “bounty scandal” is the least of the NFL’s problems. Honestly, it’s just football. You want to know what a “bounty” is? Any hard-hitting defensive player’s contract. Watch old footage of Brian Dawkins, tell me his salary wasn’t a bounty on any offensive player in range. Love him though I do, Dawkins isn’t so much a football player as he is a running muscle that happens to be on a football field. He doesn’t tackle, he clobbers and that style of play has left countless players unconscious after a hit from him. So go ahead, tell me a bounty would make players like him any more dangerous. Inevitably though, someone will argue that with extra money on the table, players might be encouraged to go for career threatening dirty hits. It’s certainly possible, just not necessarily rational. What if we found that illegal hits exempted a player from winning the bounty? That alleviates the worry that it’s spurring dirty play. We would still viscerally protest but our reason would be gone. Ultimately, it doesn’t matter because the effects of this bounty program are certainly marginal at worst. At the NFL level, everyone is fighting tooth and nail for every inch, just to stay in the league. Excuse me if I’m a little skeptical that an extra grand is going to make them hit any harder than they already are in the hopes of earning millions. Nevertheless, reasons or not, here we are, inveterate in our purchase of outrage. Especially in sports, our common last frontier of hero worship, where our broken moral compasses speak volumes. Be my guest, get mad, demand reform. But before you do, tell me you won’t be madder when they stop playing like this.
MM3585@CABRINI.EDU
RJC@CABRINI.EDU
CABRINI COLLEGE ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT / SUBMITTED PHOTO
Senior third baseman Ryan McDonough played in all 33 of her team’s games last year while hitting .272 and driving in 20 runs.
Softball shoots for success in new season BY ROB RICHES Asst. Sports Editor Now that spring has made its return, softball season will return as well. The Cavaliers softball squad will look to make a big turnaround from last season. Last year, the team finished with one win over the .500 mark in the Colonial States Athletic Conference with a 12-11 record but finished with a 13-20 record overall. They also finished in sixth place in the CSAC. This season, they may have what it takes to improve their record and gun for their sixth CSAC title. “Our main goal in 2012 is definitely winning the CSAC championship,” senior third baseman Ryan McDonough said. McDonough also happens to be one of three seniors on this year’s team, alongside first baseman Angela Shookster and shortstop Sammy Thompson. While the Cavs are aiming high, they face some stiff competition. They have to go through the Neumann University Knights, who finished in first place last season; the Baptist Bible College Defenders, who are currently in first place as of press time; and the Centenary College Cyclones, who won
last year’s CSAC Championship and have been selected as the team most likely to win this year’s title by CSAC coaches. “As far as our competition goes, our conference has a bunch of repeat contenders in Neumann, Centenary and Marywood [University]…and a few underdogs that are always solid teams in Baptist Bible and Immaculata [University],” McDonough said. “Personally, I see our biggest competition this year in Neumann and Immaculata.” The team opened their 2012 campaign in Cocoa Beach, Fla., and went 3-5 against schools such as MacMurray College (Ill.), North Central University (Minn.), Bloomfield College (N.J.) and Carlow University (Pa.). They are scheduled to open up CSAC play on Friday, March 16, against the Immaculata Mighty Macs, which is also their first home game of the season at Cabrini Field. “Immaculata has been on the rise in the past couple of years and they have a really young team that is very talented and very determined,” McDonough said. In 32 starts at the hot corner for the Cavaliers last season, McDonough recorded 25 hits for a batting average of .272. Her 20 runs batted in (RBIs) were the sec-
ond-most on the team, behind Shookster, who notched 21. Her seven doubles were second-most on the team as well, behind Thompson, who recorded 10. McDonough also scored 11 runs, good for fifth on the team and slugged one home run. As long as McDonough and her teammates continue to post superb numbers, the rest of their season should turn out very well. “I think we are our biggest competition this year,” McDonough said. “If we can be mentally prepared and keep our heads in each and every game, we can hang with anyone.” While the Cavaliers did not enjoy too much success in their 2011 campaign, they may have the talent needed to win their first CSAC title since 2004. Four promising freshmen, seven experienced sophomores and juniors and three leading seniors under the leadership of fifth-year coach Lisa McGregor may make a tremendous impact on the CSAC this season. “I think that this year, we have the most overall talent I’ve seen in my four years on the team, so we are well equipped to have a great season,” McDonough said. RTR29@CABRINI.EDU
Men’s tennis optimistic for spring campaign BY MARYKATE MCCANN Staff Writer The Cabrini College men’s tennis team finished with four victories in the CSAC conference for the 2010-2011 season. For the first time since the 2008-2009 season, the Cavs also advanced to the CSAC Tournament as the No. 4 seed after finishing the season with a 6-3 win over Gwynedd-Mercy College. Marywood University, the No. 1 seed, ended the Cavaliers’ season with a 5-0 victory. For the second consecutive year, the Pacers claimed the CSAC title with a 5-1 win over Baptist Bible College. The Cavs finished the 2010-2011 season with a 5-13 overall record under nine-year head coach Rich Aldrete. “We made the playoffs,” Aldrete said. “It was completely unexpected.” Aldrete uses team practices as a way to challenge his players. “A mature team knows what it takes to win,” Aldrete said. “I make sure our practices are both tough and competitive.” The team opened its 2012 spring season with a 9-0 loss to Virginia Wesleyan College on Tuesday, March 6. The loss brings the Cavs’ record to 0-4 overall. Cabrini played three games in the fall before
Sports
16 | The Loquitur
Thursday, March 15, 2012
CABRINI ADVANCES TO FINAL FOUR Cavs defeat ECSU, Scranton in Middlebury
Friday, March 9: Cabrini defeats ECSU 72-65 BY NICK LAROSA Sports Editor The Cavaliers men’s basketball team defeated the Eastern Connecticut State University Warriors by a final score of 7265 on Friday, March 9, at the Pepin Gymnasium in Middlebury, Vt. The win was Cabrini’s 20th straight and improved their overall record in 2011-2012 to 29-1. “We got to handle the ball a little bit better but from start to finish, our effort was there,” head coach Marcus Kahn told Cabrini sports information director David Howell following the game. “They executed the game plan exactly how we wanted them to.” “It’s a big win, it’s well-deserved, he
[Kahn] had us well-prepared for the game,” Cory Lemons, senior guard, said after the game. The Cavaliers were led in scoring by freshman guard Aaron Walton-Moss, who scored 15 points and added 14 rebounds. Lemons added 12 points and five assists while senior guard John Boyd put up 13 points. The Cavs and Warriors went into halftime with the score 29-23 in Cabrini’s favor. Cabrini shot 38.7 percent from the floor in the first half while ECSU shot 33.3 percent. In the second half, Cabrini expanded their lead to 17 points in hopes of putting the game out of reach. However, ECSU fought back and only trailed by four points with 17 seconds remaining in the game.
Senior guard Nick Nedwick led the Warriors with 31 points and was the only ECSU player to tally double-digit points in the game. “In the second half, we opened it up a little bit and that’s where we took our run and took a big lead,” Kahn said. The Cavaliers also received significant contributions from junior guard A.J. Williams and sophomore forward Fran Rafferty. Williams was one of four Cavaliers to score double-digit points in the game and finished with 14. Rafferty collected five rebounds and scored seven points in 20 minutes of action. As monumental as the win was for the team, it was even more special for Kahn. In his fourth year as the head coach of the
men’s basketball program, Kahn earned his 100th victory in the game against ECSU. He is the second men’s basketball coach in Cabrini history to reach 100 career wins. John Dzik, who finished his career with an astounding 483 wins, is the other coach. “It’s a great statement for Cabrini and our basketball program and where we are now,” Kahn said about his 100th coaching victory. “To be able to do that in four years time is a good thing and it’s no secret that it’s all about having the right players.”
NAL42@CABRINI.EDU
ABOVE: The men’s basketball team huddles together before the start of one of their games in Middlebury, Vt. LEFT: Head coach Marcus Kahn cuts down the net following Cabrini’s victory over Scranton on March 10. CABRINI COLLEGE ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT / SUBMITTED PHOTOS
Saturday, March 10: Cabrini defeats Scranton 78-58 BY KEVIN DURSO Asst. Sports Editor The Cavaliers men’s basketball team kept their amazing ride going with a 78-58 win over the University of Scranton Royals in the Elite Eight round of the NCAA Division III Tournament at the Pepin Gymnasium in Middlebury, Vt., on Saturday, March 10. The win clinched a sectional championship for the Cavs and advances them to their first Final Four in school history. After clawing their way to a 72-65 win over No. 21 Eastern Connecticut State University in the Sweet 16, which they led from start to finish, Cabrini found themselves down early in this match. After Scranton jumped out to a 10-4 lead, the Cavs went on an 18-2 run that shifted the score in their favor. The Royals had advanced to face Cabrini on a last-second three-pointer at the buzzer against host Middlebury College, which established that three-point shooting was a key part to their game. Credit the Cabrini defense then, as Scranton missed their first seven attempts from beyond
the arc. That didn’t stop the Royals from making things difficult on the Cavs. By the end of the half, Cabrini’s lead, which at one point was as high as 14, was cut to 11 on a buzzerbeating three by sophomore guard Tommy Morgan.
Keep up with the Cavs this weekend through Twitter: @CabriniCavs #GoCabrini In the second half, Scranton started to find their touch from three-point range. The Royals drained their first six three-point shots and cut the Cabrini lead to two with 11 minutes to play. From there, the Cavaliers put on a shooting clinic.
Within four minutes, their lead was back to double digits. The Cavs would finish the final seven minutes on a 16-5 run to seal the win and a trip to the Final Four. The Cavaliers were led by the senior guard who has carried them all season, Cory Lemons. Lemons finished with a game-high 20 points and added five rebounds and four assists. Freshman guard Aaron Walton-Moss continued his strong run finishing with 17 points and 10 rebounds for another double-double, his fifth straight game completing the feat. It was also a big night for junior guard Jeremy Knowles and sophomore forward Fran Rafferty. Knowles finished with 16 points, while Rafferty had the hot-hand shooting, making five of his seven field goal attempts and finishing with 11 points. After a successful weekend in Middlebury, Vt., the team prepares to travel to Salem, Va., for the Final Four. They will play host to Illinois Wesleyan University on Friday, March 16, in the National Semifinals. Game time is set for 6 p.m. KAD323@CABRINI.EDU