Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Friday, May 3, 2013
Another day of work - TGIF
Went onsite to a new client today in Willow Grove, PA. Everything went very well. Just glad it’s Friday! Kelsie is home from school J
Friday, April 27, 2012
Me and My Girl
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Monday, January 16, 2012
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Time continues...
As time continues to fly by, so does life. My youngest is 18 now, been since the 3rd of this month. I wonder just like other adults my age where and how my life went to. Granted, I'm only 51, but still something has been stolen from me. Guess I better take more pictures
;-)
Sunday, July 24, 2011
WD Safety Town 2011 Gang
Who's that girl?
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Off to Las Vegas
First leg to Chicago, then to Vegas. Arrived in rainy Chicago. Hopefully be betting in a couple of hours.
Friday, April 8, 2011
Coffee Time
What more can I say? Wawa coffee every morning; delicious!

Thursday, April 7, 2011
One of my favorites - Thanks mom!
Open face Bacon, Tomato, Onion and Cheeze...I love them. My record is 8. Delicious!
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Get your tickets here!
Can't believe the show is this weekend. The shows are not quite sold out but almost. Kelsie has been working very hard and is very tired. Kathleen and I are very proud of her!
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Casey has her Pups - 2/23/2011
2 boys and 4 girls. Names in order of birth: Otis, Dude, Daisey, Squirt, Lilo (Pia) and Riley.
We've had to have someone stay with the pups all the time because their mother still trying to eat cords.
Looks like we will be giving them all away.
Friday, February 4, 2011
My girl has finally gotten her drivers permit!
I don't if I should be happy or sad right now. Picture taken right after we pulled out of WaWa and heading to pick up Cella.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Thursday, October 7, 2010
History was made today
Friday, October 1, 2010
So proud of my son, Anthony.
SGA breathes life into Cavalier
by Diana Campeggio
The redesign of the new and improved Cavalier costume and logo hopes to promote a rejuvenated sense of school spirit throughout the Cabrini community.
The Student Government Association worked with both the athletic department and Students Engagement and Leadership to create an improved Cabrini icon that would help school spirit around campus flourish.
“I think that many of us on campus felt like we needed a new costume and a new design,” Anne Filippone, director of SEaL, said. “But Student Government was really the group that came forward and said we are lacking pride on campus and we needed to do something about it.”
The athletic department knew that a new mascot costume was needed because the previous costume was in pretty bad shape.
The departments came together in the spring of 2010 to come up with a contest in which students could submit their ideas to update the mascot.
“Let’s come up with a contest to develop a new logo and to design the costume to let the students feel included and invested and we get what we want which is maybe a little bit more school spirit, a new costume and a new logo,” Joe Giunta, director of athletics and recreation, said.
SEaL received eight different submissions for the contest from students, faculty and staff, alumni and even one parent. The SGA, SEaL, athletic, marketing and communication departments came together to agree on a winner.
“I did have something in mind, yet I was open to what the students came up with and what they wanted,” Giunta said.
The students questioned why the previous mascot scarcely came to athletic games and other events on campus and were envious of Eastern University’s pride in their mascot.
“We are so competitive with them and we don’t have anything that rivals that,” Filippone said.
Students were also disappointed in the mascot’s lack of participation at sporting and campus events.
“Some of the students last year were angry that school spirit was lacking and it was something that we felt very passionately about,” John Solewin, president of SGA and senior political science and history double major, said.
In the end, the departments found two clear winners and decided on the ideas of two graphic design majors.
Anthony Casazza, ’10, who is behind the development of the logo while Brian Birdsall, ’10, designed the mascot’s costume. They were notified at the end of the spring semester that the college was choosing their ideas.
Some people might think that the use of another logo seems unnecessary but in fact many schools have two or three different logos. Cabrini has not had a logo that displayed the mascot for many years.
“I wanted to create something that was intimidating but also recognizable as a cavalier,” Casazza said in a recent telephone interview. “I think they needed a logo that showed the actual mascot.”
Casazza drew up several different logos before deciding on his submission. Once chosen, he submitted several versions of the mascot logo in both black and white and variations of the school’s colors. The only thing that Cabrini wished to change was the font type, which Casazza resubmitted.
The newly created mascot logo did not cost anything to develop. Because the development of the logo was completely internal, with the help of the marketing and communication department, no money needed to go into the development.
The logo will begin to make its appearance on merchandise within the bookstore in a few weeks but is already available through the CAVS club, an organization that helps supports Cabrini athletics. It is also swiftly adorning several sports uniforms and their gear, but the logo will soon be available for everyone to access.
SEaL will also continue to give out shirts with the new logo throughout the semester at different campus events and athletic games.
“It’s cool to have students and the whole community like a logo or a mark and to be proud of it and want to wear it,” Giunta said.
The mascot costume debuted at Move-In day on Aug. 19 and received a positive response from students.
“I was walking around with him and the turn out of kids that were flocking to him was incredible,” Solewin said. “Everyone wanted a picture, to give him a hug and I’m happy to see that our hard work paid off.”
The mascot costume was a larger financial investment but the campus completely supported the cost. The cost of the costume was added to the athletic department’s budget for the year and no funding from other athletics was used in purchasing the costume.
Brian Birdsall was not available for comment on his role in designing the mascot costume.
“I’m not surprised he also won,” Casazza said. “He is very talented.”
The athletic department could not release the name of the person behind the Cavalier costume. The school believes in keeping this a secret to promote the mascot as a symbol of Cabrini Cavaliers and not a man or woman in a costume.
“We knew of a student who was interested in doing it,” Giunta said, “and because we got the costume so close to the beginning of school and move-in day was the first day we rolled it out, this student was interested and available.”
The departments hope that students begin talking about the new costume and logo and embrace them positively.
“Students are really excited about it so I think that was the outcome we were hoping for and really wanted,” Filippone said.
The Cavalier has already been to Move-In Day, Cabrini night at the Phillies game, and the orientation picnic. SGA has worked with the athletic department to set up a few larger athletic games that will be preceded with a pep rally, in which the Cavalier will attend.
Friday, September 24, 2010
WDHS Marching Band Color Guard 2010
Saturday, September 4, 2010
Opinion from Linda (my sister) entitled: Embryonic stem cell research is insanity
Letter: Embryonic stem cell research is insanity
Thursday, September 2, 2010Is ESCR morally complicated?
It seems to me that this comes down to just one question: Is the embryo a member of the human family? If so, killing it to benefit others is a serious moral wrong.
So what exactly is an embryo?
According to Robert George, writing for National Review, "Your life began, as did the life of every other human being, when the fusion of egg and sperm produced a new, complete, living organism — an embryonic human being.
"You were never an ovum or a sperm cell, those were both functionally and genetically parts of other human beings — your parents. But you were once an embryo, just as you were once an adolescent, a child, an infant, and a fetus.
"By an internally directed process, you developed from the embryonic stage into and through the fetal, infant, child, and adolescent stages of development and ultimately into adulthood with your determinateness, unity and identity fully intact.
"You are the same being — the same human being — who once was an embryo. It is true that each of us, in the embryonic and fetal stages of development, were dependent on our mothers, but we were not maternal body parts. Though dependent, we were distinct individual human beings." (When Life Begins, National Review.com, 11/2/08).
In 1981, a U.S. Senate judiciary subcommittee heard expert testimony on when human life begins.
The subcommittee report concludes, "Physicians, biologists and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being — a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings." (Subcommittee on Separation of Powers to Senate Judiciary Committee S-158, Report, 97th Congress, 1st Session, 1981).
To fully examine Bonnie Erbe's point, let's look at a hypothetical situation presented by Scott Klusendorf in his book, "The Case for Life":
"Suppose you oversee a Cambodian orphanage with 200 abandoned toddlers. The facility cannot care for them any longer. Water levels are critically low, and food supplies are exhausted.
"It's only a matter of time before starvation and disease will set in. A scientist has offered to take the toddlers off your hands and use them for grisly medical research designed to cure cancer.
"He confronts you with hard facts: Many of these children will die soon, and there's nothing you can do to prevent it, so why let all those organs go to waste?
"Nonetheless, you refuse. You could never, even for a moment, consider turning the kids over to the scientist on grounds that 'these kids are going to die anyway, so let's put them to good use.'
"True, given your impoverished circumstances, you are powerless to save them, but you would never be complicit in actively killing vulnerable human beings, which is what ESCR does."
ESCR — seems like insanity to me and like the height of cruelty.
Linda Nichols is a resident of Harleysville.
Katie's move in day at Rowan! (8/29/2010)



Here's TCaz's location, courtesy of Glympse
TCaz says: Bacon Headquarters
Glympse.com - Share your where
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Let Go Phillies (for Maggie's sake)
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Matthew heads back to College today
Triplets & Bernie at OC
July 2007