Clarion 2/18/09

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Citrus College

Clarion A First Amendment Newspaper

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Owls clinch 2nd consecutive WSC title See pg.11

February 18, 2009, Volume LXII, Issue 9 www.theclariononline.com

Student slain due to race, say neighbors A Citrus College student was killed Feb. 9, only a few houses away from his family’s home. By Julia Kupisiewicz Clarion Editor In Chief

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rom a make-shift memorial for a slain Duarte resident, the beautiful city of Bradbury is within sight. It might as well have been a million miles away. Miguel Sanchez, an 18-yearold Citrus College student, was walking down the street with a friend when he was slain near the northwest corner of Fernley Drive and Millbrae Avenue in Duarte. The Sanchez family moved into the neighborhood seven years ago. Directly across the street from the location of the shooting lives a 15-year-old neighbor, Vincent Smith.

Things haven’t improved. This is just the beginning.

Matthew Jones Sanchez’s best friend “We were watching TV around 6 or 7 p.m., and we heard five or six shots,” Smith said. “We kinda ignored it, and then we went out front because there were cops out there. They told us a guy got shot, and he was dead.” Smith stated that Sanchez was known in the neighborhood as “a good kid” and, as far as he knows, Sanchez is not affiliated with any gang. Three black men were shooting a handgun in a drive-by fashion from a black Dodge Magnum, said Detective Dan McElderry of the Los Angeles Sheriff Department. Sanchez was hit by bullets in

See Student / page 3

Julia Kupisiewicz Citrus College Clarion

A make-shift memorial stands on the spot where 18-year-old Citrus College student Miguel Sanchez was slain in a drive-by shooting in Duarte on Feb. 9.

Emergency prep is top priority By Dustin Call Clarion News Editor

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onsidering the recent increase in seismic activity, all of the buzz about preparing for “The Big One,” and the occurrence of the first regional drill known as the Great Southern California Shakeout on Nov. 13, 2008. It is time to evaluate the preparedness of Citrus College for a major earthquake. 2008 saw the highest level of seismic activity of a 3.0 scale or higher ever recorded in

Southern California’s history. The amount of quakes that were 4.0 or bigger was also high compared to recent years, numbering 27, according to the Southern California Earthquake Data Center. Since Dr. Geraldine Perri, took over as superintendent/ president and President of Citrus College, one of her top priorities has been emergency preparedness. Perri has been working with West Coast Consulting Group to assist the college community with an emergency operation plan and to help train employees. An emergency response

team has been developed which includes 62 personnel from the administration, staff and health division. Background checks were performed on all persons chosen for the team to make sure that they would be the best choice. This team, along with the board of trustees, is required to go through training sessions so that they will be prepared for an emergency. Faculty were also required to have some emergency training for their Flex Day, held Feb. 17. Detailed evacuation plans and purchase accounts for

emergency equipment that might be needed in a disaster or an emergency are also being developed. “I’m hoping that we get overprepared,” Perri said in regards to all of the emphasis being put on emergency preparedness. And while it seems to her that other college presidents don’t see it as such a big deal, she thinks that it is critical that she focus first on safety. Perri has good reason to prioritize emergency preparedness. While Vice President of

See Emergency/page 3

Cabinet nomination is still laboring By Ariel Carmona Jr. Clarion Correspondent

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local Congresswoman will soon be serving in the president’s cabinet if a Republican hold on her confirmation is lifted. President Barack Obama announced that U.S. Rep. Hilda Solis (D-El Monte) would serve as the next Secretary of Labor in a press conference on Dec. 18. Solis represents the 32nd Congressional District, includ-

ing Azusa, Baldwin Park, Covina, Duarte, West Covina, portions of Monterey Pak and East Los Angeles. According to Associated Press reports, the

Senate set a test vote for mid February on Solis’ nomination. A 60-vote majority will be required in the Feb. 24 vote to advance her nomination. Solis ran unopposed on Nov. 4, 2008, and is now serving her fourth term in the House of Representatives. Until recently, Republicans were using a parliamentary procedure to delay her confirmation, according to news sources. The hold was placed in response to her support for pro-union legislation and due to reports surfacing that her husband settled and paid more than $6,400 in outstanding tax liens against his business. The Los Angeles Times recently reported Solis’ husband, Sam Sayyad, had two Los Angeles County tax liens lodged against him

since 1993. Throughout her career, Solis actively supported labor and has been a fixture on picket lines. She is highly regarded as a champion of labor by union leaders. Some Republicans are worried that Solis will bring a pro-union bias to the U.S. Labor Department. Solis, 51, has credited labor unions for making her success a reality. Her father immigrated to Southern California from Mexico and worked in a battery factory. Her mother comes from Nicaragua and worked on an assembly line. Both were union members. Solis graduated from California State

See Nomination / page 3

Life Pg. 4 Sports Pg. 11 A&E Pg. 12 Opinions Pg. 14 Editorials Pg. 15 cmyk

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