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# Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Fall Music Showcase to feature music therapy presentation

On Sunday, October 12, the Lourdes College Department of Music will present its Fall Music Showcase at 3 p.m. in the Franciscan Theatre and Conference Center. This free event kicks-off the 25th season of Lourdes’ choral program.

 

The Fall Music Showcase will feature three mini-concerts of vocal, instrumental and choral music as well as a special presentation on music therapy and health by Lourdes faculty members Roberta Wigle Justice and Karen T. Biscay. The schedule for the event is as follows:

 

3 p.m.     Opening Concert: Lourdes College faculty, students and friends

    

4 p.m.     Presentation: “What is Music Therapy and What Do music Therapists Do?”

                                                                           

5 p.m.     Chorale Finale: “Voices of Earth,” celebrating the Earth, the human spirit and the power of music

 

For more information on the Fall Music Showcase or to join the Lourdes College Chorus, please contact Karen T. Biscay, Chairperson of the Department of Music, at 419-824-3772 or email kbiscay@lourdes.edu.


Media Relations
Wednesday, September 24, 2008 12:46:10 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] | 

Lourdes' Theater Vision opens season 24 with Leo Lionni

On Wednesday, October 8, a poetic mouse, math loving worm and an adventurous fish help Theater Vision kick-off  its 24th season with a presentation of Leo Lionni’s Swimmy, Frederick and Inch by Inch. 

 

Shows at 10 a.m. and 12:15 p.m in the Franciscan Theatre.

Tickets $7 per student. Call 419-824-3999.

 

Click here for more about the story of Leo Lionni and Theater Vision.


Faculty and Staff | Media Relations
Wednesday, September 24, 2008 12:40:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] | 
# Monday, September 22, 2008

New Blog!

Get Out The Vote! is a new LourdesWorld blog! Welcome Get Out The Vote!


Students | Get Out The Vote
Monday, September 22, 2008 11:47:54 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] | 

The Catholic Church Does Have a Doctrine of Porportionality

My question is this...

As a Catholic, I am open to consider an argument proposing there is something of greater porportion than the violent death by abortion of over 40,000,000 innocent human beings. Is there one? Iraq War? Minimum wage? Death penalty? Immigration? Energy policy?


Students | Chris
Monday, September 22, 2008 6:58:47 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] | 
# Sunday, September 21, 2008

My Contemplative Mood

Over the weekend I’ve done a lot of thinking. It seems that the older I get, the faster the time goes. It seems like it was just yesterday when it was New Years  Day; it seems like I just had my baby, when in actuality she’s now 4 ½ months old! I just had my oldest daughter’s 5th birthday party…I can still remember staring into her bright blue eyes when she was born in the hospital, and at the party I couldn’t help but get teary-eyed because I guess I never accepted how big she truly was. Anywho- I guess my point is that time flies!!! And so far in this semester, there’s no difference there! We’re already pretty much a month in, and all of my poor study habits have kicked in. I no longer do my homework right when I get home…in fact, I leave the book bag in the car, telling myself I’ll get it out later. That doesn’t happen. It sits there, until I literally FORCE myself to sit down and do the work. It is gentle to say that I am COMPLETELY exhausted. Between working part-time, 4 classes, and 3 kids---my nerves are pretty much shot and my body aches of fatigue. I look forward to that moment at 8:30pm when I can lay down and try to watch a movie or something, but always fall asleep within the first 20 minutes or so. I can specifically remember 2 separate nights this weekend when I tried to watch a movie with my husband, and both times there was no way I was making it. Eventually I either went to bed in apology, or was awakened by him after the movie. It’s that sleep when you don’t even realize you’re sleeping…that’s how relaxed you are---I haven’t experienced this in years. I used to be somewhat an insomniac, but I think coming back to school and work and adding another child on top of it has cured me! Maybe it’s a blessing in disguise…

So anyway- as I said before, I’ve done a lot of thinking over the weekend. The world is truly a small place. It seems that anywhere I go, I know someone, they know someone I know, or they know me because of someone they know. Did that make any sense? It is really weird; people I haven’t seen in years are popping up everywhere…it’s awesome to see these people…to see where their life has taken them. It is especially awesome when its people you’ve searched for and wondered about for years…you start to question why you’ve run into them again. Is there a reason? Were you supposed to see these people for a specific cause? Do they enter your life because you need them in yours, or because they need you in theirs? This is what I have been thinking about practically all weekend: IS THERE A REASON WHY WE ENDED UP IN THE SAME PLACE, AT THE SAME TIME, MANY YEARS LATER? I just have so many unanswered questions and curiosities…this whole thing about reuniting with people can be so exciting, and new, and yet it can be confusing too. I need to just not question things so much. I truly need to just believe that everything happens for a reason, and eventually I’ll discover the reason…whatever it is- it’s providing me with many blessings in my life.

So I told you I was in a contemplative mood. I hate it when I get like this; because usually I end up having a worse headache than when I first started (I get headaches a lot).  I realize with each and every day that family is the most important thing in my world. My mom serves as one of my inspirations, my dad-I am so grateful for the relationship I now have with him, my husband-words cannot even express the love and gratitude I have for him…my siblings have helped me to learn a lot over the years, my kids are my cheerleaders and my biggest weakness and hold every inch of my heart, and my nieces and nephews know that their Aunt Savannah will always be there for them-regardless if they need me to be or not. Sometimes I just get amazed by the different generations we are building…and we may be a dysfunctional family that came from a poverty-stricken family, but we’ve all done something to change that. We are all in better places than where we began, and I think that’s something to be proud of. These members of my family are grateful for the things they have, they’re proud of their individual families, and they strive to reach their full potential. If there’s one thing I would love for my nieces and nephews to take away from having a relationship with me, it would be that hard work, determination, and perseverance pays off. I would love for them to see the dedication people have to have in their lives in order to succeed. College isn’t easy, either are jobs, or careers, or parenting…you have to keep working hard and ‘keep on, keeping on.” That’s what I tell myself when I get to this point in the semester right before midterms…otherwise I’d go crazy!

So to sum up this blog-I’M RAMBLING! I’m letting you in on some of the thoughts that were flowing through my brain this weekend.  First thought: I’m tired. I’m exhausted. My body aches with fatigue. Second thought: Is there a reason why we’ve ended up in the same place, at the same time, many years later? Third thought: I love my family including my kids, nieces and nephews, whom I hope learn that hard work, perseverance, and determination pays off in life. And my fourth thought: Keep on keeping on!!!!


Students | Savannah
Sunday, September 21, 2008 11:03:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] | 
# Friday, September 19, 2008

Give me your tired, your poor.....

 

Last Saturday afternoon I was teaching a class in SFH when I saw a man, woman and small child walk by the classroom. Nobody seems to be here on Saturday afternoons unless they are lost, so I expected to see them again soon. I had a speaker in my classroom at the time, so when a student working in the Center for Professional Studies came to my room to tell me that there was a family here and they don’t know where they need to be, I could easily leave.

 

I found out quickly that they were Martin and Maria with their son Jesus. The parents were here to find in advance where the ceremony that will make them American citizens will take place. They didn’t want to get lost Wednesday morning and then be late for this.

 

I pointed out the Franciscan Center to them. (thanks to whomever sent all the emails leading up to this.) They looked at that building and the rest of the campus from that spot in front of SFH on a really nice day and you would have thought they were seeing heaven. They tried to explain to Jesus what was going to happen in a few days, but the boy seemed just as happy to look at something on the ground. They were so pleased to hear that Sisters lived and taught here, and Martin told me that he thought Lourdes was a very large campus, certainly bigger than BGSU. They are from near Defiance and had some familiarity with Bowling Green I guess. I was sorry to dispel that thought for him, but it didn’t seem to diminish anything much. I wish I could describe their mood and spirit at that time of anticipation, but I could never do it justice. It was a great encounter for me, I am grateful to have met them.

 

I decided then to attend the Naturalization myself on Wednesday. If this is such a huge deal to people, I should be there. I didn’t foresee that it would be a huge deal to me as well.

 

As almost all of you business students know, my parents were born in the old country. Both are gone now, and I am embarrassed to admit that I don’t know anything about their naturalization. That hole in my background really hit me hard as I saw the 78 people about to take their oath. How could I not know every detail? I should be able to recall stories. What was it like? How did they feel? Where was it? Did it happen this same way? I got a little panicky and I feared them slipping further away from me.

 

I thought “You dope! Why did you come here today? Was it just to make yourself feel rotten?”

 

A pretty great thing happened to me then. As the soon-to-be-citizens walked into the theater two by two, I caught sight of Martin. He was wearing a nice suit and a red tie, and he and Maria were beaming. He saw me at the same time and waved from across a small distance. Then he got out of line to come and shake my hand and I got to wish them well before he had to reassume his position next to his wife. We went into the theater and just about the time one of our students read the Emma Lazarus poem “The New Colossus” which is on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty I realized that I actually felt closer to my mom and dad then. It was as if I was able to see them in Martin and the rest of these excellent people. Just like my folks did, they want a better life and they want it here. I guess it didn’t matter anymore when and where it happened for my parents. It matters why it happened. Those stories I know all about and I know I won’t forget them.


Faculty and Staff | Dane Copti
Friday, September 19, 2008 3:57:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] | 

Most of the blogs on here are boring. sooooo.........

I will write a non-traditional blog. This my dear readers is where i wish i was...............................................................................

It is a place of calm, relaxing air. When at the beach all the cares of the world seem to be lifted. Even the most important matters almost vanish as the wind rushes around. There is no place as beautiful as the beach. It is therapy enough to heal any quandary of a weary soul.

            Stepping onto the sun-warmed sand is like walking through a door to a much more magical place, with the grains of sand becoming one between every toe. Every step is greeted by the warm embrace of a caring gentle friend. Bending over to sift the sand through your fingers it is apparent all that exists is right here and right now.

            As each and every speck falls, the cool ocean breeze sweeps it away. The palm trees rustle with glee in the mid-afternoon's sun. The gulls all around seem to just float merrily as if not for the current of air they would be lost. It whistles through your hair as though to gently massage every woe away. The sea smells of salty air, so strong the taste is over whelming.  

            In the distance is a cabana, a little wooden paradise. The thatched roof made of old palm leaves glows in the sun light. It is so close on the horizon that it seems easily attainable while still so far off. Finally, reaching the cabana, sweat dripping from the brow; it is imaginable that there is no other place on earth with so much allure.

Underneath the make-shift roof is a cold refreshing beverage. The glass has condensation on every side. The drink hits your lips with a splash of sour lemonade, with the sweet after taste of mint. It is instantaneously refreshing like a cool mountain stream.

Gazing out from the hut there are two noticeably strong coconut trees standing with pure satisfaction. In their grasp sways a cloth held tightly on both sides, trusting these gentle trees. Languidly inside the hammock, the wind sways it to and fro. Images shoot through the mind as it wanders idly from this nonsense to that.

The noises all around ensure your security from all civilization. The waves rolling up onto the beach come to a calming rumble. The birds sing a gay tune in the air above. The rustling and bustling of the trees float in and out of idle ears. In the distance there is a thunderous roar from the waves smashing against mammoth cliffs. A soft Caribbean tune comes from the cabana down the beach where others enjoy their own personal heaven.

The healing powers of a private beach, on the soul, can be matched by no other. Whether it is here or there, the sights, the smells, and the atmosphere as a whole, stand alone. When troubles weigh heavy, there is only one way to go and that my friend is to the beach.

 

 

I just thought it might be nice to get away from all the crap politics. Have a drink, kick your feet up and having a good weekend. Come Monday Wallstreet will have opened back up and one can only wait to see what life will have in store.

 

 

                                                               Tell Me A Story I Love You?


Students | Matt
Friday, September 19, 2008 3:05:19 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] | 
# Thursday, September 18, 2008

Ohio Supreme Court and CCW

The Students for Concealed Carry on Campus is a national organization that works primarily for CCW issues on College campuses. SCCC applaudes another victory for Ohio CCW permit holders that has come down from the Ohio Supreme Court:

Today’s ruling by the Ohio Supreme Court that strikes down a ban on legal concealed carry in public parks was “a proper decision that upholds the state’s concealed carry preemption statute,” the Second Amendment Foundation said.

Ohio’s current concealed carry statute, adopted by the State Legislature in 2006, prohibits local governments from adopting more stringent gun control regulations than the state. The City of Clyde passed an ordinance banning legal concealed carry in city parks. The law was challenged by Ohioans for Concealed Carry.

“Anti-gun municipalities across the country have been cooking up ways to challenge state preemption statutes,” noted SAF founder Alan Gottlieb, “as a means of harassing legally-armed, law-abiding citizens. Today’s ruling by the Ohio Supreme Court struck a necessary blow in the Buckeye State for civil rights and the rule of law.”

The court ruled 4-3 against Clyde in a case that was being closely watched by both sides in the gun rights debate. It was a SAF-supported lawsuit against the City of Cincinnati that was the catalyst for concealed carry legislation in Ohio.

“The right of self-defense does not end on the sidewalk at the entrance of a public park,” Gottlieb observed. “The rights of law-abiding gun owners are not subject to the whims of anti-gun municipal governments that think they have the authority to ignore state statute. It’s because of city officials like those responsible for the Clyde ordinance that the State Legislature acted correctly two years ago and stripped them of the power to adopt such harassment laws.

“Ohio gun rights activists, and especially Ohioans for Concealed Carry, have every right to be proud,” Gottlieb concluded. “Ohio’s concealed carry statute is both sensible and responsible, and municipal governments have no business interfering with the lawful exercise of a constitutionally-protected civil right.”

 


Students | Chris
Thursday, September 18, 2008 7:28:26 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] | 
# Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Department of Business receives seven year accreditation

Lourdes College has received accreditation for its Bachelor of Science degree programs in business through the International Assembly for Collegiate Business Education (IACBE).

 

Upon notifying Lourdes of its accreditation approval, the IACBE noted the strength, innovation and commitment of Lourdes’ business faculty, the College’s Business Alumni Advisory Council and other business resources that are a testament to the program.

 

The International Assembly for Collegiate Business Education (IACBE) is the professional accreditor for business programs in student-centered colleges and universities. The IACBE exists to promote, develop and recognize excellence in business education.

 

 

For the accreditation, Lourdes was required to complete a self-study and provide documentation supporting the implementation and success of initiatives set forth by the College’s Department of Business. “This accomplishment and acknowledgement from the IACBE reinforces the academic excellence of our Business Department,” says Dr. Janet H. Robinson, Vice President for Academic Affairs. "Lourdes is known for its dedicated faculty and strong academic programs."

 

Students may receive a Bachelor of Science degree in a variety of business majors including accounting, accounting & finance, business administration, health care management, human resource management, management and marketing. For more information, contact Laura Ott, Director of Academic Advising for the Department of Business at 419-824-3712 or email lott@lourdes.edu.


Faculty and Staff | Media Relations
Wednesday, September 17, 2008 10:14:50 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] | 
# Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Cracking the Code

 

I heard an interview with President Carter a few weeks ago. The conversation touched on many topics, but much of it was about how the politics of today differ or resemble those of his era. He made a point of talking about code words that were used in the South, words that covered the truth. A person can’t say out loud that they are racist, so they say something much more innocuous, but anyone listening knows what is meant. For example, Carter talked about the code in his day was still states’ rights. Anybody who has ever studied the Civil War is aware that it was fought to preserve slavery. No one can actually say that and still say anything nice about the Confederacy, so they say to this day that the war was about states’ rights. That same code was in existence into the 70s.

 

Of course President Carter also said that he is thrilled to be around for the candidacy of Barack Obama, and that in itself speaks to the kinds of change we have seen. That’s a common refrain. I was saying it myself a couple of months ago. I’ve said and written to anyone and everyone that I never thought I would live long enough to see an African-American at the head of one of the parties.   

 

Then I started really listening.

 

During the primaries I never got the feeling that there was a real race issue in this election. Everybody said the right things and Sen. Obama won primary after primary on the way to Denver. Once the nomination became secure, however, people opened up and got more real.

 

Let me just state here that I’ve been alive a long time, and I’ve lived much of that time in this area. I am lucky enough to have had many friends for decades, some for up to 50 years. I can’t tell you how disappointed I became by hearing old time hatred and fear coming out of the hearts and minds of a few friends, students and even a relative. Some said they voted for Hillary but won’t vote for a black man. Some got pretty nasty about it. I hadn’t heard the N word used so much in years. It was as though it was time now to come out of hiding and use the password. I usually got the feeling that I was of course supposed to be in agreement with them. When I made it clear that I am not of like mind, the discussion became a referendum on inexperience. Time after time. "Black...N word...Race...ummm...I mean...inexperience. I can't vote for someone as inexperienced as he is." It’s our newest code word.

Those have been my thoughts for a couple of months now, and I’ve been more than a little depressed about it. Just when I successfully started to convince myself that people are too good to use race as the primary voting variable, I read an article regarding Dick Armey’s point of view of this election. This is a real conservative guy, a former House majority leader.

"The Bubba vote is there, and it's very real, and it is everywhere," Armey told USA TODAY and Gannett News Service. "There's an awful lot of people in America, bless their heart, who simply are not emotionally prepared to vote for a black man.”It's deplorable, but it is real," said Armey, adding that he believes "Republicans would not encourage" such prejudices. He said the "Bubba vote" is "invisible" in pre-election opinion polls, because voters do not admit they would oppose a candidate because of race.

Well, thanks. The Bubba vote, huh? Don’t ever tell me I won’t agree with a Republican, I do it all the time and this is just the most recent. On Meet the Press, NBC’s Chuck Todd said that he believes this is the best explanation for why people everywhere are voting Democratic in most local and congressional races but say about Obama, “ I just don’t know him yet, he’s so inexperienced.” This is why it is so important to so many to split hairs about Gov. Palin’s similar level of inexperience, saying that hers is executive experience. Oh please! It’s just that it is better than giving up a perfectly good code word.

 


Faculty and Staff | Dane Copti
Tuesday, September 16, 2008 5:11:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] |