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LOYOLAN
EST. 1921
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VOLUME 95 I ISSUE 19
Student Workers Program at LMU
struggles with new payment system
LMU has changed its financial
policy for the Student Workers,
leaving them searching for aid.
Sami Leung
Asst. News Editor
@LALoyolan
The Student Workers Program, a group
made up of 24 working class LMU students
to help them pay their tuition, has recently
gone through several changes in its payment
system that has some of its members calling
on the University to help.
Kayla Hampton, a junior psychology and
dance double major, is Student Worker
General, which requires her to run events,
keep track of the Student Workers’ hours,
schedule jobs, plan their group’s retreats and
other administrative jobs.
According to Hampton, the students who
applied and were admitted into the program
in previous years were paid a scholarship
in the beginning of the year with the
assumption that the students would show
up to mandatory jobs when required. When
attendance at those mandatory jobs began to
decline, LMU changed the scholarship so that
students are only paid for events they work at.
The award amount remains the same, but it
is now more in the students’ hands: They can
make their full award by doing mandatory and
volunteer events, or only go to the mandatory
events and not earn as much money.
“It really built in me this sense of work
ethic,” Hamptonsaid. “I really feel like I could
do just about anything. Also, I really think its
a family. You have those people that you can
build lifelong relationships with. But when
we go to jobs, we're about work.”
However, Ramona Sandoval, a senior
political science major, believes the new
system unfairly decreases their financial aid
package.
The announcement of the scholarship
change came after several students of the
program, including Sandoval, reached out
to LMU for a moderator to supervise and
support their program.
“As one of the main people who requested
a new moderator I deeply regret my decision
to reach out to the University for additional
support,” Sandoval said. “Not only were we
assigned a moderator with even more on her
plate but our $8,600 scholarships were taken
away 19 days before our first payments.”
Student workers are required to work in
the recycling center for 20 hours a week
their freshman year in addition to working
mandatory events such as graduation.
Founded in 1957 by Joseph Brovetil, the
program is only available to students who
qualify for the Pell Grant.
With the LMU Scholarship Initiative
surpassing its $100 million goal for need-
based scholarships by an extra $3 million,
some students in the program believe that
See Student Workers | Page 3
Jason Munoz | Loyolan
Sofia Hernandez, pictured above, is part of the LMU Student Workers Program and has worked for this program for four years.
Executive order hits
home with students
The recent travel ban has
affected LMU international
students.
Justine Biondi
Asst. News Editor
@LALoyolan
LMU has taken several steps to support
its international community as President
Trump’s travel ban affects LMU international
students and continues to halt their ability in
exiting and re-entering the country.
On Jan. 27, Trump signed an executive order
banning citizens from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Yemen,
Sudan, Somalia and Libya from entering
the U.S. for at least 90 days and placed a ban
on Syrian refugees indefinitely. It also bans
refugees entirely from entering the U.S. for 120
days and gives priority admission to refugee
Syrian Christians, which is less than one
percent of the 12,600 Syrians granted refugee
status last year, according to the Central
Intelligence Agency World Fact Book.
According to Politico magazine, there has
not been a terrorism- related death caused by
foreign operatives coming into the country
since
9/11.
Every terrorism-related attack
in the U.S. since
9/11
has been caused by
American citizens and green card holders .
President Snyder, along with Dean of
Students Jeanne Ortiz and the Office of
International Students and Scholars (OISS)
have made several efforts to ease the fears
of international students and show support
during this time of uncertainty.
“When the dignity and freedom of
any member of the LMU community is
compromised, we are all diminished,”
President Snyder wrote in an email to the
Loyolan. “As I learned of the executive
order and its impacts, I grew concerned for
our LMU students and families. [...] Our
international students interconnect us with
our global society, personify our global
aspirations and enrich our diverse, inclusive
academic community. Our Catholic, Jesuit
and Marymount education is based upon
intellectual discovery and learning encounters
with one another in a global context.”
OISS also sent out an email to all
international LMU students last week,
recommending that citizens of the countries
listed in the executive order, even those who
hold a valid visa and dual-national passports,
do not travel outside the U.S. during the 90-
day ban. The email further recommends that
U.S. permanent residents also refrain from
traveling outside the country, since entry
into the U.S. for green card holders will be
determined case by case.
Along with the email, OISS reached out via
phone to all students directly affected by this
ban and referred students who have questions
or concerns to an immigration attorney trusted
by the University.
The Multi-Institutional Study of Leadership
(MSL) and the Muslim Student Association
(MSA) also hosted a Friday Prayer last week
for the Muslim students on campus, followed
See Travel Ban| Page 4
SPECIAL ISS
Go to page 9 to see the Loyolan’s
Healthy Living Special Section.