CITRUS COLLEGE
CLARION
SolaR PANELS IN DESIGN PHASE
Sola Luna records NEW EP for 2019
ceremony celebrates VETS
PG. 6
PG. 8 & 9
PG. 12
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2018 | VOL LXXII ISSUE 7
tccclarion.com f/ccclarion T@ccclarion
false starts
Owls’ defensive lineman does not give up on his dreams of playing football for a Division I school despite repeated setbacks. Read more on page. 14
Mistaken email about ICE visit sparks protest A Student Affairs emailed leaked to students contained false information BY JAMES DUFFY V EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JDUFFY@CCCLARION.COM
& BRIANNA SEWELL PHOTO EDITOR
BSEWELL@CCCLARION.COM
Protesters held signs and walked around Campus Center mall over what they said were Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency recruiters coming to campus on Nov. 19. ICE did not recruit on campus on Monday. An email from to the Student Affairs division mistakenly said ICE representatives were recruiting in two administration of justice classrooms on Nov. 19 and 20. Dean of student services, Maryanne Tolano-Leveque said she received a call from the dean of behavioral sciences Dana Hester on Friday alerting her ICE agents may be recruiting in the classroom. Tolano-Leveque said she emailed student services managers, but the information was not intended to be disseminated to all students. She said she received an update over the weekend that ICE agents were not coming to campus, but U.S. Border Patrol were. Associated Students of Citrus College President Fernando Flores said he informed LUSA about the ICE visit. S E E IC E • PAGE 5
Paintball pitch interrupts class
Owls’ defensive lineman Jonathan Shelley poses for a photo on Nov. 16 on the Citrus College football field.
Michael Quintero Clarion
eNGLISH LEARNERS TRAVEL GLOBE TO STUDY here BY JAMES DUFFY V EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JDUFFY@CCCLARION.COM
International students in English as a Second Language courses cross the world for opportunities in education and career advancement at Citrus College. Instructor Wendy Diegas has students from eight different countries taking her class. ESL student Luis Diaz fled Nicaragua for his safety. His parents forced him to emigrate to avoid state violence toward youth his age who have been protesting corruption. Diaz said he regrets his parents’ decision. His eyes widen when he talks about his country. “My country is the most beautiful place,” Diaz said.
He said he knows of friends his age who have been killed for protesting government corruption. Peruvian student Tais Kalout said she comes from a family of international travelers, but she has not had a teacher as effective as Diegas. “She’s always pushing you to be better,” Kalout said about her instructor. Kalout said she had little English education before Diegas’ class. “To be honest with you, the last time I opened a book was in 2011,” Kalout said. Students said the four-day-perweek class is comfortable. But Diegas has one important rule: students must communicate in English. Diegas said her students found jobs, started businesses and contin-
ued their education at Citrus. Tais said she hopes to start a baking business for her dulce de leche macarons. She and her sister Daphne who is also in the class have sold dozens of boxes to fellow students. The class is unusually close. Diaz said he found a second family in the group. “There’s stabilty and usually some support from some who speaks the same language,” Diegas said. Sean Weng left a job in insurancehe said called great, so his children would have more opportunity. In an essay he wrote for the class he descrbed his immigration experience. “Ten years from now, when our sons graduate from college, we’ll know that we made the correct choice to come here,” Weng wrote.
James Duffy Clarion
ESL student Maria Gomez danced for her class on Nov. 1 in the Life Long Learning Center.
A ticket salesman paused classes to sell passes to paintball amusement parks BY SAMMY FERNANDES STAFF REPORTER
SFERNANDES@CCCLARION.COM
A man entered classrooms selling paintball tickets on Nov. 13 in the LB building. He said he was from “campus activities,” but he is unaffiliated with Citrus College. Spanish professor Anna McGarry said the man came “several times” during the day, starting at 10 a.m. “When he started making the announcement, I realized that this was not a student announcement,” McGarry said. “This was a sales pitch from a company.” The salesman who identified himself as “Jeff” offered tickets to Hollywood Sports Paintball Park. McGarry interrupted his speech and asked him to leave. But he returned when he thought the professor had been done teaching. S E E PAIN T B ALL • PAGE 5