Spring 2014, Issue 13

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Huskies head to playoffs as 6th seed

Filmmaker screens at VPAM Page

Volume 71, Issue 13

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SERGIO BERRUETA Staff Writer An online petition to commemorate horror movie legend and art enthusiast Vincent Price is underway. The petition currently has 98,360 signatures out of 100,000 signatures needed by the March 6 deadline. It can then be sent for review by President Barack Obama’s administration. Vincent Price was famous for his acting career which started in the mid-1950s. He appeared in several horror films such as “House on Haunted Hill,” “The Raven,” “House of Wax” and “The Last Man on Earth.” Price also did voiceover work in the music video for Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and as Professor Ratigan in "The Great Mouse Detective." Director of the Vincent Price Art Museum Karen Rapp thinks that a stamp would be a good way to commemorate the life and career of Price. “A Vincent Price stamp would be prestigious and just plain fun. He is an American icon remembered mostly for his horror films,” Rapp said. A lesser known fact about Price was his enthusiasm for the arts. He contributed to the arts at ELAC by donating more than $5 million of artwork to ELAC. “We at ELAC know that there was more to him than mummies and monsters. He donated more than 2,000 artworks to this campus. He was both scary and a perfect gentleman,” Rapp said. The petition was created by Jake Godbold of Evansville, Indiana. It was started after Godbold began moving into his new apartment and found his old collection of Universal Horror Monsters stamps from 1997. "I saw the stamp collection and then my friend on Facebook posted a picture of Vincent Price. I asked myself ‘Does he have a stamp?’" Godbold said, "I did my research and I went, ‘I'll be damned. He does not have one.’" From there, Godbold saw many other petitions online and decided to make a petition of his own for the postage stamp. "I saw people signing to deport Justin Beiber and how 10,000 people are willing to sign off on a Death Star and decided why not make a petition for the stamp," Godbold said. Godbold describes himself as a typical horror fan wanting to honor the legacy of Vincent Price. "I was a fan of him, more so the Roger Corman (Edgar Allen) Poe films like "The Pit and the Pendulum" and "The Masque of the Red Death. Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff and Lon Chaney, Jr. got a stamp and I just didn't see how this didn't happen," Godbold said. Victoria Price found the petition online and was enthusiastic about it. “I found out about it on Twitter and was amazed about it. It would be nice to see him get recognized alongside the other horror legends,” Victoria Price said. Victoria Price hopes that the postage stamp can send out a message and show her father's legacy was more than just his horror career. “It would also be great to get the word out there about his devotion to the art rather than just his acting career,” Victoria Price said. For more information or to sign the petition visit at petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/honor-great-american-horrormovie-star-vincent-price-stamp f9sxZ4ZX.

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News Briefs

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

www.elaccampusnews.com

Petition to commemorate American icon ends soon

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Construction on main campus

ELAC staff and students are to be advised of the following construction alerts taking place from Feb. 27 and 28. A crane will be delivered and assembled on Feb. 27. On Feb. 28 the crane will be disassembled starting at 6:30 a.m.

ELAC’s Spring College Fair

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ELAC seeks sexual orientation data Jesus figueroa Staff Writer East Los Angeles College joins a short list of colleges in the nation to survey student's sexual orientation on admission forms. California legislators have struggled to come to a consensus on allowing colleges to place the question of sexual orientation on undergraduate admissions form. Private college Elmhurst College in Illinois, became the first college to ask about sexual orientation on an undergraduate admission application in 2011. Last summer Washington State Community and Technical College System were the first entire system of two-year colleges to ask students about their sexual orientation on their admission forms. They tracked data on students who opted to answer the optional question and identify as LGBTQ – lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or questioning.

For California, the optional question is posed because of state law aimed at collecting the data for the size of LGBTQ populations on the campuses. The law encourages UC, Cal State and community colleges to examine if they offer enough services for students who identify as LGBTQ, such as counseling since nationwide statistics show LGBTQ students to suffer from depression more often. Associate Student Union President Eduardo J. Vargas feels it can be a step in the right direction for ELAC to ask about sexual orientation on the admissions form. "I think that the whole purpose is to get more statistics on our student population," Vargas said, "However, it is optional. It is also confidential. It is not something that would violate a person's privacy."

LGBTQ Continued on page 3

Students encouraged to study abroad in Spain Liliana marquez Staff Writer East Los Angeles College is offering a chance for students to travel to Spain and spend a month in Salamanca during the summer as part of the Study Abroad Program. The city of Salamanca is located to the west of Spain’s capital, Madrid and from June 28 to July 28, students who enroll in this program will have the opportunity to attend classes at the Pontifical University of Salamanca. This opportunity was made possible because of a partnership between ELAC and West Los Angeles College. During the month abroad, students will take Spanish instruction classes for four hours Monday through Friday mornings. Any student at ELAC or any other community college in the Los Angeles Community College District can enroll in this program. If students have never taken a Spanish class, they will be able to take an introductory course in Spain, therefore they don’t need to be fluent in Spanish nor be currently enrolled in Spanish courses. The program has introductory, intermediate and advanced courses available. These courses tend to focus on language, civilization and culture. This program will also offer students the opportunity to explore

ELAC’s Transfer Center is organizing a Spring College Fair. The Spring College Fair will be held in the walkway between parking structure 3 and the D5 Swim Stadium on March 20 starting at 10 a.m.

Contest

and travel around Spain during their free time as well as with the rest of the students in excursions to Segovia, La Granja, the El Alcazar Castle, etc. “This is such a valuable experience. Many of our students have not traveled even just outside our city. They’ve had very limited experiences and this is going to open so many doors. “Not only because they are Spanish speakers, but they are going to look at themselves as Spanish speakers in a different context in Spain,” ELAC Spanish instructor Norma Vega said. Vega can relate to that, since she also studied abroad. She said that when she went abroad, she had the opportunity to appreciate more her Spanish because she had something to contrast it with. She also said that students who decide to travel to Spain will also have the opportunity to separate themselves from their families and friends and meet people from different cultures, not only in a different country, but also in a different continent. “There are many Latinos here in the United States, Spanish speaking Latinos, who don’t see themselves as an extension of the Spanish speaking community. They don’t see themselves as an extension of Latin America and studying abroad will bring that out,” Vega said.

SPAIN Continued on page 3

ELAC Campus News has a prize to give away from the WB’s upcoming film “300: Rise of an Empire.” Find out how to enter on Elaccampusnews. com. Follow ELAC Campus News on Instagram and Twitter @ELACCAMPUS NEWS.


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