2019 Los Angeles City College Collegian

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Collegian

party all night long for the nationals

Los Angeles

Wednesday, November 13, 2019 Volume 183 Number 5

NEWS BRIEFS

pg 8

The Voice of Los Angeles City College Since 1929

JOBS, JOBS, JOBS

SAFER CAMPUS

LGBTQ Students Find Safe Space

COMPILED BY XENNIA HAMILTON

Students Shine in Spotlight Talented students move to center stage next week for a showcase of their work. The music department will host its Evening Concert Series on Nov. 18, 2019 at 7 p.m. at the Herb & Lani Alpert Recital Hall (HAMC 210).

Iconic Art Critic to Visit VAMA Lecture Series

Mat Gleason offers up wit and a sharp tongue for the Visual and Media Arts Department Lecture Series On Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2019. For more information, contact vamavisitingartist@gmail.com

BY ANGELA JOHNSON

Photos by BEATRICE ALCALA

Tales from the Nose

“Post Pinocchio” struggles with the truth in the LACC Theatre Academy presentation as a man instead of a boy. Pinocchio will deal with many adult dilemmas when the play opens tomorrow, Nov. 14, in the Caminito Theatre and closes on Saturday, Nov. 23. Tickets sell for $10/$15.

POLICE WIRE

The L.A. City College Incident Report from the L.A. County Sheriffs Department was not made available to the Collegian. The staff apologizes for the inconvenience. The following statistics for crime represent the most recent reporting from the LAPD, courtesy of the L.A. Times.

East Hollywood Sept. 19, 2019, 1:15 p.m. Aggravated Assault 3500 block of West Temple Street

Fall Classic Hiring Spree Brings Opportunities for Job Seekers BY CHISLEY HAYNES

R

ows of tables with white tents overhead lined the Quad at Los Angeles City College on Nov. 7, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for the seventh annual Fall Classic Hiring Spree. At least 1,000 people attended the job fair by Collegian staff estimates. The event was open to members of

the community and to the many students who stood in lines to interview with employers from NBC Universal, Amazon, Los Angeles Unified School District, LAX, and officials from the Los Angeles Police Department and recruiters from the U.S. Army. There were even options for the mechanically-inclined applicant to find work with a national brand. A representative for Jiffy Lube, a national automotive services brand is

recruiting workers for several locations. “I work for Alamitos Enterprises, Jiffy Lube, and we do preventative maintenance for cars,” Danny Lim told the Collegian. “We are looking [to hire people for] our 14 locations. We need advanced technicians like mechanics. All that’s required is a valid license, be available [on the]

SEE “JOB FAIR” PAGE 5

SEE “LGBTQ” PAGE 5

MAKING THE GRADE

CCCCO Gives AB 705 Thumbs Up, Others Turn Thumbs Down BY CHISLEY HAYNES

How is that the fault of the community college where more than 70 percent of incoming students don’t know how to add fractions or work with decimals. … How is that my fault? I mean you came to me. You didn’t do anything from the ages of zero to 19 ... Go fix high schools. The problem isn’t here.”

Sept. 20, 2019, 9 p.m. Robbery Monroe and Vermont Sept. 23, 2019, 12:15 p.m. Theft from Vehicle 4600 block of Melrose Avenue Sept. 24, 2019, 12:20 p.m. Robbery 5300 block of Santa Monica Boulevard Echo Park Sept. 24, 2019, 6 p.m. Theft from Vehicle Sunset Boulevard and Waterloo Street East Hollywood Crime Averages: Over the last three months, East Hollywood averaged 9.2 violent crimes and 24.8 property crimes per week. Six-month crime averages for East Hollywood: 230 Violent Crimes 735 Property Crimes 123.4 Crimes per 10,000 people

INDEX Opinion & Editorial

Employers from the military to private companies gather in the Quad at LACC to recruit students to fill possible vacancies on Nov. 7, 2019. The job fair attracted many students such as, Amazon, Jiffy Lube, among many.

More than 20,000 students from every walk of life from all over the city and the world attend Los Angeles City College. The diversity of background, ethnicity and lifestyle among students here gives this campus an inclusive feeling. LACC enrolls more lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) students than any other school in the entire nine-college district. LGBTQ individuals may find the world outside their community can be a hostile environment. In 2019, White House officials proposed and passed a laundry list of antiLGBTQ policies and legislation. The Trump administration created laws that excluded, denied, targeted or otherwise discriminated against LGBTQ people. Within the context of this contentious socio-political brew is where LACC Safe Space Club dwells. For the past three years, the club has provided a safe and inclusive environment for students and their allies.

—Professor Raymond Badalian

Worse Than Watergate; Carl Bernstein Calls Out Trump BY SARAH RAGSDALE

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Arts & Entertainment

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Campus Life

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News

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Scholarships

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Sports

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Illustration by BEATRICE ALCALA

SEE “AB-705” PAGE 6

Hearings that begin today in Washington D.C. will go down in history – and Carl Bernstein, the legendary Watergate reporter is calling President Donald Trump’s Ukraine telephone call a “definition of high crime” for impeachment. President Trump is under scrutiny for his alleged efforts to coerce Ukraine to investigate 2020 Democratic Party presidential candidate Joe Biden, along with Biden’s son.

As LACC students are busy with midterms, finals preparations, finishing up this semester and getting ready for the upcoming holidays, it’s not yet clear if most voters will see any of this as a threat to democracy. “It’s exactly the same thing that Nixon was impeached for,” Carl Bernstein, famed reporter who broke the Watergate case told the Huffington Post recently, “and was one of the articles of impeachment [against him] — trying to undermine the electoral process through

sabotage and political espionage. We’ve got it all over again.” Bernstein added that this instance with President Trump is even worse than Watergate because of the interest of a foreign power. Bernstein spoke at L.A. City College Sunday, Oct. 27, 2019 as the inaugural speaker in the Nick Beck Investigative Journalism Lecture Series, and he had much to say about the president in regard to Ukraine. “Let’s take a look at what President Trump is being investigat-

ed for in the impeachment, undermining the electoral system,” Bernstein said. “In this instance, by engaging a foreign power like Ukraine to get its president to come up with dirt against the candidate Donald Trump most feared running against – Joe Biden, is a very parallel situation except in this instance what Nixon did not do is engage a foreign power.” Bernstein went on to address why the system worked in the Watergate scandal. “Because courageous Republi-

cans were the heroes and said that they would put the truth in rule of law and the national interest above the narrow interests with party and ideology, not cower in fear of the lawless president who happened to be a member of their party,” Bernstein said during his lecture in the Camino Theater. “And so, on the house judiciary committee in that impeachment investigation, votes were cast by Republicans for the articles of impeachment which SEE “BERNSTEIN” PAGE 6


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