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EL CAMINO COLLEGE
March 1, 2012
International Club seeks new members
State’s budget targets aid for college students Roy Anthony and Kenneth Berry Staff Writer, Co-Opinion Editor Last minute statewide funding cuts will result in more than $2 million sucked from EC’s reserve fund with budget deficits that could affect students next year, an administrator said. “The $149 million in statewide cuts are the result of student fees not coming in because more students qualified for Board of Governors fee waivers,” Jeanie Nishime, vice president of student and community advancement said. She said the college plans to use the ending balance from reserve funds to absorb the $2 million deficit. “This year, we anticipated shortfalls and we budgeted frugally, so we’re not impacted as much,” Nishime said. She added that the cuts will not affect students this year, but that the administration doesn’t know whether any additional cuts will result in changes this fall. “Any further cuts could result in more cuts to course sections because the state will reduce our funding cap,” she said. She said EC is only in the beginning processes of building its budget for next year, but will include several contingency plans pend-
Robert Long/ Union From left, Tiyeri Gravitte, 20, vet medicine major, signing up for the International Club. While admiring the free spirit of club members, (middle) Angela Songco, 24, journalism/communications major and (right) Amira Petrus, 18, film major.
Students walkout in protest today Thomas Schmidt Staff Writer Rising up from seats in classes all across campus, students will stage a walk out today at 11:30 a.m. to coincide with the National Day of Action for Education, Occupy EC protesters said. The students will convene at the Ocuppy El Camino College camp on the Library Lawn, OECC organizer Daniel Osoy said. The event was planned following a call to action on the Occupy Education California website, which asks instructors and students from all levels of education to participate. “We refuse to accept educa-
tional re-segregation, massive tuition increases, outrageous student debt, and increasing privatization and corporatization,” the website’s statement reads. OECC hopes to use the event to bring attention to issues specific to this campus. “In general, the walkout is about the crisis in education” Osoy said, “More importantly, here at EC, we’re seeing the death of winter session.” Last November, the board of trustees approved a resolution that opened the door to cancellation of winter session, an outcome Osoy said he hopes to avoid by raising student awareness of the upcoming March 12 board meeting. “The hope to keep our winter
session is not over,” Osoy said, “we’re trying to get students to rally, to put pressure on the administration to reconsider what they’re doing and how it affects students.” OECC has invited several instructors to come to the Library Lawn today to offer tutoring to students missing their classes, Perry Petaccia, psychology major, said. “We don’t want people to think this is just students cutting class,” Petaccia said. Follow our walkout Tweets @ECCUNION
Torrance, California
ing the results of Gov. Jerry Brown’s statewide budget, which should be approved in the coming months. While the college is facing possible funding cuts under the state budget, students face tightening restrictions on what’s left of student aid. For his proposed 2012-’13 state budget, Brown would cut $110 million in funding to the Cal Grant program and would enforce new minimum grade point averages required for students to receive any Cal Grant money. Brown said that limited financial aid resources should be focused on “those students who are most likely to complete their degrees,” and subsequently to contribute to California’s economy. Many students, like Nick Coleman, 18, undeclared major, said that the new requirements are counterproductive and unfair. “A lot of people would have to drop out of school for something as simple as not having good study habits,” Coleman said. “It doesn’t mean they won’t graduate unless the financial aid that they rely on gets taken away because of it,” he added.
[See BUDGET, Page 2]
Library Fines for Overdue Books Carina Gomez Staff Writer Effective last winter session, Schauerman Library began charging students for materials not returned by due dates, from both the general collection and the library reserve. The new fine for overdue materials is 25 cents per hour for items on reserve and 25 cents per day for books from the general collection. The fines are kept on record in the library until totaling $10. At and above this amount, the library sends the fines for collection by the Cashier’s Office and a student is no longer permitted to check out library materials until the fines are paid and a receipt is brought back to the library. The fines was proposed by Ed Marti-
nez, public access librarian, to discourage students from abusing the library system by not returning checked out books before or at the time they are due. “Students who do not return the items on time create unfair access to other students,” Martinez said. Some students have reacted positively to the new measure and are happy that something is being done to help distribute library resources effectively. “I think it’s a fair fee because it prevents students from keeping books longer than they should,” Lorena Gutierrez, 20, linguistics major, said. David Shan, professor of Chinese and Japanese studies, said that this is a way to not let students take the books for long periods of time because other students waiting for a book are affected.”
Occupy EC students still on campus and moving forward with their plans Eva Ziss-Patton Staff Writer
NEWS LINE
Winter session is safe, for now, after Occupy EC students said they helped to delay the board of trustees’ vote to eliminate it. Activist Daniel Osoy said the vote which would have taken place last December, but is now set for March 12, was delayed due in part, to hard work and planning by the OECC. OECC participants said they stayed busy through winter session and will continue to rally into spring to prevent the cancellation of “one of the most successful sessions that we have,” Osoy said. OECC held its first protests against the winter session cut in early December and has since gained support through networking on and off campus, Osoy said. The protesters addressed clubs, distributed literature, and generated awareness using social networking sites, such as Facebook. Robert DeWitz, another OECC organizer, said the group “met with numerous activists, and established a relationship with the National Lawyers Guild.” “We’ve seen a lot of new faces,” he said. “We have a lot more active members than we did last semester.” OECC’s general assemblies take place every Monday and Tuesday from 1 to 2 p.m. on the Schaeurman Library Lawn and various students are encouraged to act as the assembly facilitator each week. Instead of meeting in a room on campus, a possibility discussed last fall, students involved with OECC continue to meet on the lawn by choice. “In the spirit of the Occupy movement, we want to be visible, we want to be transparent, we want to be all-inclusive,” DeWitz said.
DeWitz said that if OECC established a permanent meeting room, the movement would have to establish itself as a club that would mean more subjection to control by the administration. “So we’ve decided to stick to free speech, because it gives us the opportunity to accomplish more,” he said. A recent event OECC organized was Monday’s “Occupy the Club Rush,” where DeWitz said OECC protesters staged a “deathin” by dropping to the ground to symbolize the death of higher education. Throughout Club Rush week, DeWitz said OECC will use the busy campus quad as an opportunity to continue to educate students to petition elimination of winter session by tabling and providing students with free silk-screening of shirts to feature various OECC designs. Good Jobs LA, a nonprofit organization that aims to address major community concerns, said it is also working in conjunction with OECC because it feels the necessity to connect community members with students. “Often times, only the [groups] that are politicized are the one’s taking action so we feel that there’s a connection that needs to be made with those two groups,” Jose Beltran, of Good Jobs LA, said. However, Occupiers maintain that the OECC is a non-political movement because the issues they address are of concern for all students, regardless of which party they affiliate with. “We’re trying to appeal to everybody as opposed to when you’re actually affiliated with some political party,” which Osoy said creates “tension between people’s ideologies and philosophies.” Another project OECC has orchestrated is the Student [See OCCUPY, Page 2]
Today is the last day to apply for graduation
Major and university workshop is Tuesday
University Fair will be held next week
Students who qualify for an associate degree in June must apply for graduation today at 1 p.m. The graduation intents can be filed in the Admissions Office and late requests will not be accepted.
Designed to help students find the right fit, the workshop will take place on Tuesday, from 1 to 2 p.m. in the conference room of the Distance Education Building.
In an effort to motivate students for transfer, 30 universities will participate in the University Fair, that will take place on the Schauerman Library Lawn on March 8 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Information about financial aid will also be available.
Kyle Borden /Union Occupiers Robert DeWitz, Michael Glass and Rapheiel Portillo set up camp.
Last day to drop without ‘W’ is March 8
Arts Month panel to take place
Students looking to drop classes without notation on their transcript must drop on or before March 8. To drop, log on to the myECC website portal.
Representatives from the arts division will present information about admissions requirements and program options on March 15 in Haag Recital Hall. The panel will be from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. followed by portfolio reviews from 12:30 to 2 p.m.