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Радев
EST. 1921
VOLUME 92 I ISSUE 41
AB trips
celebrate
lO strong
years
Since 1994, the Alternative
Breaks program has offered
students diverse service trips.
Carly Barnhill
Assistant News Editor
@carlybarnhill
The Alternative Breaks program celebrated
its 10th anniversary last week with a special
celebration that honored past and current
students, faculty and community members
involved with the program. The event, which
took place Friday evening, included a dinner
reception, a look back at the past 10 years
of alternative break (AB) trips, a musical
performance, awards and various speeches
for those who attended.
The Alternative Breaks program organizes
AB trips for students centered around diverse
issues in various communities, putting
participants in new and unfamiliar cultural
contexts. The program gives students the
opportunity to learn and serve in different
areas of service in hopes that these volunteers
will turn into advocates for social change.
Junior English major Allison Croley said
that the event, set up in U-Hall, educated
those in attendance about AB trips and what
See AB Program | Page 3
Dance and bento bring students
together under the palms
Emma Spiekerman | Loyolan
Asian Pacific Student Services put on the annual Bento Beneath the Palms event on Regents Terrace during Convo last Thursday,
April 10. It featured dances from various cultural groups on campus as well as Aslan cuisine in the form of bento box lunches.
EASTER LITURGY SCHEDULE:
Holy Week
■Mon., April 14
7:30 a.m. Leavey Chapel
12:10 p.m. Mary Chapel
■lues., April 15
7:30 a.m. Leavey Chapel
12:10 p.m. Mary Chapel
■Wed., April 16:
7:30 a.m. Leavey Chapel
12:10 p.m. Marymount Institute
xW
Easter Triduum
■Holy Thursday, April 17
Mass of the Lord's Supper
8:00 p.m. Sacred Heart Chapel
■Good Friday, April 18
Liturgy of the Lord's Passion
3:00 p.m. Sacred Heart Chapel
■Good Friday, April 18
Sacrament of Reconciliation
4:00-5:00pm Sacred Heart Chapel
■Holy Saturday, April 1 9
Faster Vigil
7:30 p.m. Sacred Heart Chapel
■Faster Sunday, April 20
10:00 o.m. Sacred Heart Chapel
8:00 p.m. Sacred Heart Chapel
10:00 p.m. Huesmon Chapel
Graphic: Mo Haley | Loyolan
Student participates
on TV game show
Junior theatre arts major
Ryleigh Sherer competed on
“Let’s Make A Deal” last Friday.
AN Swenson
News Editor
@aliswenson
Ali Swenson: How did you get tickets to
be on “Let’s Make A Deal” ?
Ryleigh Sherer: I got tickets online. I think
it’s under liota and you can go right on their
website, and they’re free. I told my roommate,
OK, let’s go, I’ll take care of all the details and
everything, and we ordered them.
AS: For those who don’t know, how does
the game show work ?
RS: There are a ton of games. I don't even
think I know all of them. You can guess
between three curtains and hopefully win a
prize, or Wayne Brady will try to give you cash
instead of picking a prize, or you have to pick
between different boxes. There are all these
different things. It’s almost like gambling. It’s
intimidating.
AS: How did you get picked to be a
contestant?
RS: The audition process was not too bad,
but it was a long waiting process. As soon
as you get there, they interview you. It’s two
producers and they ask you some questions
and they want to see your personality. And you
have to take a picture and you weave through
these lines and take another set of pictures and
then the producers come and talk to you. And
then you sit in a waiting area where producers
come out and they tell you about the show
and they try to get you excited. And people are
actually filming you, to see if you would be a
good contestant or not, to see if you have good
energy.
AS: I understand that people wear some
pretty crazy costumes when they go on
the show, and you wore onesie pajamas.
How did you choose your outfit?
RS: It was kind of a last-minute choice to go
to the show. I didn’t really feel like buying
anything and I didn’t want to look too
ridiculous, just in case I did happen to make
it on TV. I actually already had the onesie and
never really had the chance to wear it, so I
thought, why not?
AS: How did you feel when you found out
you would be a contestant?
RS: I was shocked. The only way I found out
was with everybody else, when Wayne Brady
called me down. And it was just an adrenaline
rush. I had no idea what was going on. It was
pretty crazy.
AS: What was it like meeting Wayne
Brady?
RS: It was cool. He’s pretty funny. I’m a little
bit of a fan of his. I liked him from “Whose
Line is it Anyway?” so meeting him was
nice. It wasn't anything crazy, but it was nice
meeting him. He was really playful and fun.
He really talked to me. He actually let me do
a monologue and everything and he was just
really cool to talk to .
See Q&A | Page 3