LACC WEATHER FORECAST WEDNESDAY
67/55
THURSDAY
67/56
FRIDAY
67/54
SATURDAY
71/55
SUNDAY
80/62
Collegian Los Angeles
Wednesday, April 22, 2015 Volume 174 Number 4
NEWS BRIEFS COMPILED BY CARLOS MARTINEZ
The Voice of Los Angeles City College Since 1929
COME SEE “FLYIN’ WEST” AT THE CAMINO THEATRE “Flyin’ West,” directed by Louie Piday will tell the story of African-American women who pioneered and settled in Nicodemus, Kansas to create an all-black town. “Flyin’ West runs from April 22 to 25 at the Camino Theatre.
HEALTH COVERAGE EXTENDED DEADLINE Covered California is offering the public a final opportunity to sign up for health insurance. Anyone interested should contact the enrollment agent Jimmie Taylor at (562) 303-8228 or jtaylorenrollment@gmail.com
HEALTH, WELLNESS EXPO On Wednesday, April 22 the LACCD will host a Health Expo from 10 to 2 p.m. on the third floor of the Student Union. Health Connections and other organizations will offer information on a variety of health and wellness related topics.
REGISTRATION FOR SUMMER 2015 SESSION IS OPEN Registration is now open to students for the 2015 Summer Session. More classes are being offered, and they are on a two-track schedule. The first begins June 15, and the second on July 20.
ENTER THE ENGLISH/ESL DEPARTMENT’S 17TH ANNUAL WRITING CONTEST Scholarships will be awarded for the best short story, poem or ESL writing (short story or poem). The deadline for submission is Thursday, April 23 at 12:30 p.m. Bring all entries to the English Department office located in Jefferson Hall, room 301. For more information contact Professor Flavia Tamayo at (323) 953-4000, ext. 2716.
TATIANE AMNUAR/COLLEGIAN
L.A. Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas looks on as his wife Avis accepts the “Local Hero Award” from Common Peace Director Candace Carnicelli at the Martin & Music event held on the anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King’s assassination April 4, 2015. The award honors those who practice and acknowledge the works of nonviolence.
MLK PROGRAM RAISES MONEY, LIFTS SPIRITS SONGS FROM THE CIVIL RIGHTS ERA EVOKE STRONG EMOTIONS AT LACC FOUNDATION FUNDRAISER BY TOMAS RODRIGUEZ Broadway singer Charles Holt and Los Angeles City College alumnus Gerald C. Rivers headlined the performance of “Martin & Music” at the Camino Theatre on April 4, 2015. The Los Angeles founded organization, Common Peace, presented local hero awards in celebration of the annual celebration of “Season for Nonviolence.” Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas and his wife Avis won the awards for helping local communities in Los Angeles improve lives through peaceful and nonviolent methods. The VIP reception after the event highlighted the music of singer/actress Paula Newsome and saxophonist Cal Bennet. “Martin & Music” is about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and the music that was the soundtrack for the civil rights movement. Rivers played the role of Martin Luther King Jr., reciting some of his most recognized sermons and speeches such as “We Shall Overcome,” and “The Drummer Major Instinct.” Holt followed each speech with a musical narration of his own. Rivers and Holt co-wrote the show and performed at the event. After the performance, director of “Common Peace,” Candace Carnicelli, presented the “Local Hero Award” in honor of the 18th annual celebra-
tion for the “Season of Nonviolence.” The award honors those who practice and acknowledge the works of nonviolence. Carnicelli has been director of the organization since 2007, but her volunteer work for the nonprofit goes all the way back to 1998. “The focus for the nonprofit is nonviolence education based on Gandhi and King’s teachings of nonviolence, Carnicelli said. “We have a number of educational programs in place to promote these teachings.” The “Season for Nonviolence” is a campaign of 64 days to support nonviolence while honoring some of the greats in civil rights. The L.A. County Supervisor and his wife received the award for the work they have performed in local communities across the Los Angeles area. “We were involved early on with some of the people here tonight,” said Mark Ridley-Thomas referring to the supporters for ‘Season for Nonviolence’ in the audience. “I am impressed by their commitment and their steadfastness. This is not for the faint of heart. This is not for those who think they can phone it in.” Ridley-Thomas says his efforts will continue past the formal “Season for Nonviolence” Audience member Eisha Mason has been part of the “Season for Nonviolence” from the very beginning. Her efforts, along with many others, have helped build a nonviolent community around the
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“Come celebrate the different languages and cultures of the world.” The Department of Foreign Languages and Humanities is hosting a multicultural event on Thursday, April 30 from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the Student Union’s multipurpose room located on the third floor.
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nation and the world. “I was responsible for the first task force in Los Angeles and now ‘Season for Nonviolence’ takes place in multiple cities and multiple countries,” Mason said. “In fact, South Africa is planning to have its first ‘Season for Nonviolence’ later this year. It’s a reminder that you’ll never know the repercussions of the choices that you make, but our involvement from the first season is everything that the ‘Drum Major’ sermon is about. We were captured by an idea and we continue to reap the awards.” Actor Gerald Rivers grew up in Compton. He later attended LACC and earned an Associate of Arts Degree in Theater Arts. Most commonly known as “The Voice of Martin Luther King Jr.,” he shares his thoughts about his return to his old college campus. “I remember being on the stage, I remember walking to class on this campus,” he said. “In some ways it seems like a long time ago, and in some ways it seems like it was just yesterday. But when I see the students here and what they are involved in now I am grateful that times have changed but some of the people haven’t. They’re still good people here.” Proceeds from the “Martin & Music” performance will be dedicated to inscribe excerpts from Dr. King’s “I Have a Dream” speech in the front windows of the LACC Library, which is named after the fallen civil SEE LACC FOUNDATION PAGE 3
Deltas, Day Shed Light on Education
FOREIGN LANGUAGE DAY CELEBRATION
Opinion News Arts & Entertainment Campus Life Sports Special Report
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Protesters March Against Police Brutality BY TOMAS RODRIGUEZ
LAPD JOB INFORMATION EVENT The Los Angeles Police Department is hosting a hiring workshop on Wednesday, May 20 in the Science Building, room 130 at 3:30 p.m. Students interested in a career in law enforcement should check in online at joinLAPD.com and complete the interactive Preliminary Background Application (PBA) and Job Preview Questionnaire (JPQ) prior to taking the written test.
NAN PUTS HER FUT DOWN
PHOTO COURTESY OF DR. JOWEL LAGUERRE
A member of Delta Theta Sigma Sorority Incorporated, the West Palm Beach Chapter, wears the traditional red associated with the group, plays games with Haitian students on their new school campus in Cherette, Haiti located 96 miles outside Port au Prince.
BY ANDE RICHARDS
t took only three minutes to devastate an already fragile nation. Years of hurricanes combined with a 7.0 earthquake shook Haiti into a state of extreme crisis. People from all over the world offered support with emergency services, money, food, clothing, well wishes and prayers, but just as quickly as the response came so did the unfortunate disclosure that aid was not reaching those in need. Instead, containers of donations lay untouched in Haiti’s ports. Flash-forward two years to the Northern California campus of Solano Community College where Los Angeles City College Dean of Academic Affairs, Dr. Thelma Day, is presenting a workshop about the service her sorority, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. performs internationally in countries such as Ghana, South Africa and Japan. Taking this all in was the Superintendent and President of Solano Community College, Dr. Jowel Laguerre. He posed the question, “What about Haiti?” What about Haiti indeed? Dr. Day and her sorority sisters had already collected money they could
Hundreds of demonstrators converged at the Los Angeles County Hall of Administration after marching from four different locations around Los Angeles on April 7, 2015 to protest numerous lives lost at the hands of police officers due to excessive force. Demands for separate hearings in cases that involve law enforcement officers accused of murder, demilitarization of the police, and decreased funding for police and prisons were at the center of the demonstration. Demonstrators shouted chants and told stories of fallen loved-ones for the more than one-mile journey across the city from MacArthur Park to the Los Angeles County Hall of Administration. One of the four branches of the “Remember Me, Death By Cop” protest led by the Youth Justice Coalition made several stops on the way to the county building, including the Rampart Police Station. Protesters carried pieces of cardboard cut in the shape of coffins to honor those who lost their lives to police violence. Coffins showed victims’ names, ages and ethnicities. Demonstrators called out the names of those killed through a megaphone during a ritual die-in. Onlookers could hear demonstrators using their voices to express their outrage. “If we don’t get no justice, you don’t get no peace,” demonstrators shouted. “Too black, too strong, all the power to the people, too brown to strong, all the power to the people! ...When our community is under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight back! ”Pedestrians witnessed the demonstration from businesses along the route. It was an opportunity for them to record and take pictures of the protest with their mobile phones. Demonstrators did not have a permit but police allowed them to protest anyway. The protest remained nonviolent. Ingrid Garcia who was a passerby who paused on her way to work to observe. “I have the upmost respect for SEE COMMUNITY PROTESTS PAGE 3
Burglary Rattles Chemistry Building BY MELISSA BRECCIA AND JASON PISKOPUS
donate for earthquake relief. However, they had not yet released the funds because of uncertainty about where the money would actually go. Meeting Dr. Laguerre might be the conduit needed to create an effective partnership. There had to be a way to direct funds to the people who needed them. “I grew up in the southern part of Haiti in St. Georges,” Laguerre said. “I was educated in Haiti and the U.S. and I am a graduate of the University of Kansas. Laguerre says he was able to allay the Deltas’ fears. His knowledge of Haiti and U.S. business practices helped reassure them the funds could reach their intended destination. “Here they had a way to invest directly in a project without paying overhead and having someone who was educated in Haiti and the U.S. raised their level of confidence,” Laguerre said. Laguerre’s education roots run deep: He formerly taught math in Haiti. He proposed they turn an existing dilapidated shed in the town of Cherette, located 96 miles
A burglary that is estimated at over $42,000 in lost equipment has left students with limited resources after 22 iMacs were stolen from Chemistry, Room 207 on April 14. The room is also used to produce the campus newspaper, the Collegian. Students and staff members have lost irretrievable information and have been forced to work around the problem. Thieves also took two computer towers, but left new Apple keyboards and computer mice on top of the desks. Aside from the physical losses, the thieves also stole opportunities from students. Feelings of violation were echoed the following morning when students arrived in the lab. “There are no funds to replace the stolen computers,” said journalism student Lizzy Welch. “They didn’t just steal from our school, they stole part of our education.” The investigation into how the burglary was possible is ongoing, however it is possible that the equipment was stolen while professors, students and other workers were still in the building at night. “I work from the top [of the building] down, and then I work back up,” said custodian Mark Toomes. “When
SEE COLLEGE DEAN PAGE 3
SEE COMPUTERS STOLEN PAGE 3