“Road of Insecurity: The Global Food Crisis” explores the current conditions of those living without food in the world and what is being done to address the problem.
The Loquitur has been a Cabrini College tradition since 1959, exactly two years after Cabrini opened. Over the years, The Loquitur has given hundreds of students the ability to experience writing and the world of journalism first hand.
Each fall semester, a new staff of editors take on the task of creating the weekly publication to inform, educate and entertain the Cabrini community.
With the current economic crisis, the high cost of health care has become a daunting expense for both individuals and companies. For more and more Americans, health insurance has become an impossible expense. When we graduate, we may find that our employers will no longer give us health benefits.
Spring break, a well-known college tradition, is a week when many students get away from class and any responsibilities to party in the sun. However, this year the economy has made buying plane tickets and a hotel room in popular Mexico, Jamaica or Florida, almost impossible.
Most students know Cabrini College was named after Mother Cabrini.
Few of us know exactly who she was and why she was so important. Students don't understand that there are Cabrini sisters all over the globe, working everyday, continuing the work that Mother Cabrini had started.
Even before the current U.S. economic crisis, there was a worldwide epidemic affecting more than half of the world's population, leaving almost a billion people starving and many more, even in the U.S., struggling to get a basic necessity in life: food.
Justice Matters is more than the name of Cabrini's new curriculum; it is the way Cabrini students think. Rather than just having students engage in community service activities, Cabrini emphasizes how students can bring about long-lasting change for social justice.
Audiences, whether in Washington D.C. or on campus watching on television, were captivated
and mesmerized by the inauguration of Barack Obama, America's 44th president. For many college students this was the first time the inauguration of a U.S. president was celebrated,
the first time their vote helped place this man before us, the first time it mattered and we cared.
Freedom is what our country was founded on. This is the land of the free and the home of the brave, where all men and women are created equal. These may be the words used to describe America, but the truth is that our country is not always fair and injustice can still be found today.
Cabrini and its "education of the heart" will only grow as we begin a new chapter under the leadership of Cabrini's new president, Dr. Marie A. George.
Nov. 15, 2008 was the Inauguration of Cabrini College's seventh president. In her inaugural address George explained the future of our college and the direction in which she sees Cabrini becoming a nationally-recognized college.
“Road of Insecurity: The Global Food Crisis” explores the current conditions of those living without food in the world and what is being done to address the problem.
The Loquitur has been a Cabrini College tradition since 1959, exactly two years after Cabrini opened. Over the years, The Loquitur has given hundreds of students the ability to experience writing and the world of journalism first hand.
Each fall semester, a new staff of editors take on the task of creating the weekly publication to inform, educate and entertain the Cabrini community.
With the current economic crisis, the high cost of health care has become a daunting expense for both individuals and companies. For more and more Americans, health insurance has become an impossible expense. When we graduate, we may find that our employers will no longer give us health benefits.
Spring break, a well-known college tradition, is a week when many students get away from class and any responsibilities to party in the sun. However, this year the economy has made buying plane tickets and a hotel room in popular Mexico, Jamaica or Florida, almost impossible.
Most students know Cabrini College was named after Mother Cabrini.
Few of us know exactly who she was and why she was so important. Students don't understand that there are Cabrini sisters all over the globe, working everyday, continuing the work that Mother Cabrini had started.
Even before the current U.S. economic crisis, there was a worldwide epidemic affecting more than half of the world's population, leaving almost a billion people starving and many more, even in the U.S., struggling to get a basic necessity in life: food.
Justice Matters is more than the name of Cabrini's new curriculum; it is the way Cabrini students think. Rather than just having students engage in community service activities, Cabrini emphasizes how students can bring about long-lasting change for social justice.
Audiences, whether in Washington D.C. or on campus watching on television, were captivated
and mesmerized by the inauguration of Barack Obama, America's 44th president. For many college students this was the first time the inauguration of a U.S. president was celebrated,
the first time their vote helped place this man before us, the first time it mattered and we cared.
Freedom is what our country was founded on. This is the land of the free and the home of the brave, where all men and women are created equal. These may be the words used to describe America, but the truth is that our country is not always fair and injustice can still be found today.
Cabrini and its "education of the heart" will only grow as we begin a new chapter under the leadership of Cabrini's new president, Dr. Marie A. George.
Nov. 15, 2008 was the Inauguration of Cabrini College's seventh president. In her inaugural address George explained the future of our college and the direction in which she sees Cabrini becoming a nationally-recognized college.