EL CAMINO COLLEGE
Additional parking on campus...Page 3
James Griffith’s “Revolution”...Page 6
Men’s baseball wins 9-2 vs. Cerritos...Page 9
Union T h e
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March 13, 2014
Torrance, California
NetTutor: 27 subjects available 24 hours a day Rocky Rivera
Staff Writer @ECCUnionRocky
From left, Yukiko Matsuyama and Edward Nakashima from the Taiko Center of Los Angeles preform a traditional Japanese song at the Cherry Blossom Festival.
Amira Petrus/ Union
Spring festival a blooming success Chris Lee
Staff Writer @ECCUnionChris
W
NEWS LINE
hile cherry blossoms floated down the Communications breezeway, booming drums beat rhythmically across the crowd as taiko drummers ushered in spring in traditional Japanese style. The Cherry Blossom Festival serves as a reminder to appreciate nature as it blooms to life once again, Humanities Division Associate Dean Elise Geraghty said. “The beauties of nature come when they come and leave when they leave so we have to remember to live in the moment and appreciate those things when we do have them,” Geraghty said. EC showed its appreciation March 4 with thunderous drumming, graceful plucking, haiku reading, and the awarding of the Dr. Nadine Ishitani Hata Scholarship. To open and close the ceremony, world-renowned musicians Yukiko Matsuyama, Saeko Kujiraoka, and Edward Nakashima performed both taiko and koto,
Japanese drum and string instruments. Thomas Lew, dean of humanities, gave a brief historical overview on each of the instruments. “In feudal times the japanese used the taiko to motivate soldiers and to set a marching pace. Villages communicated with other villages through the use of taiko,” Lew said. The Festival awarded the Dr. Nadine Ishitani Hata Scholarship to Kyle Graves, a second-year radiology student. Hata, a former EC vice president, created the scholarship for health science students before she had passed of cancer. “Nadine wanted to give encouragement to the people who make up the infrastructure of the health sciences in appreciation of their care for her,” California State University Dominguez Hills professor emeritus of history, Donald Hata, her husband, said. She wanted to give the scholarship to support technicians in a field where information becomes obsolete very quickly, he said. Graves, who described himself as honored to receive the scholarship, was present to accept his
Amira Petrus/ Union
Dr. Donald Hata gives a speech on how the Dr. Nadine Ishitani Hata Memorial Scholarship came to be during the Cherry Blossom Festival on March 4.
award. “I want to be an impact for someone else just as Hata was impacted,” Graves said. “Sometimes I’m the one helping a patient, and sometimes I’m the one in the bed. We have to have compassion for
one another.” Graves worked with Sony Entertainment for 14 years before he decided to switch to a career in radiology. “I’m looking ahead to my studies in Computed Tomography and
Nuclear Medicine, which I suspect will be very challenging,” Graves said, “but rewarding to know that I can have some sort of positive influence or encouragement on patients.”
It’s 1 a.m. the night before your midterm. Through the haze of hormones begging you for sleep, you can’t remember yesterday’s lecture from last week’s. Before, students might have looked around futilely before calling it quits. Now, they can turn toward EC’s online tutoring platform, NetTutor, a free service covering 27 different subjects, according to a Learning Resources Center announcement. “Students, it seems, are very busy and it’s not always possible to come on campus to meet face to face with tutors,” Sheryl Kunisaki, assistant director of the Learning Resources Center, said. “This is an opportunity to get help at 10 o’clock at night when the library, or the math and writing centers, might be closed.” According to the service’s website, students can register by visiting nettutor.com/ecc and using their school email to create an account. The site will run on desktops with the latest java update and on mobile devices as well. “So far, it’s been really convenient,” Todd Pye, 24, music major, said. “If the hours don’t work with my work or school schedule, I can log on and see a tutor right from my couch.” The service emphasizes learning instead of being a cheat sheet for homework. “You can ask specific questions but they’ll never give you just an answer. The purpose of the service is to make students become independent learners, so they will guide you through the process,” Kunisaki said. While the service boasts many benefits and conveniences to students, one drawback is the lack of personalization offered by a live tutor. “Sometimes if the student doesn’t quite know what they’re having problems with, you might have to spend some time going back and forth so the tutor gets a better understanding of your needs, which I think is easier face to face,” Kunisaki said. “You see my expressions, my tone of voice, we have paper that we’re both working on.”
Library Research Class
Calling All Models
Fashion Designers Wanted
Spring Blood Drive
Health science info session
Need a few more credits to graduate? Join the 8-week class “Library Research Using the Internet,” which is scheduled for Wednesdays from 1 to 3:05 p.m. The section number is 4964. Enroll now on through the MyEcc portal before classes begin March 26.
EC’s fashion department is having its 32nd annual fashion show and it’s looking for models of all ages. The casting days are March 25 and 27 from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Student Activities Center, East Lounge. For more information, contact Dr. Vera Bruce Ashley at 310-660-3593, ext. 3346.
Have a passion for fashion? There is a designer call meeting for the 32nd annual fashion show. Those interested may attend the last meeting on March 13 at 3 p.m. in the Technical Arts Building, Room 212. For more information, call Dr. Vera Bruce Ashley at 310-660-3593, ext. 3346.
Participate in the Spring 2014 Blood drive March 11 to 13 in the Student Activities Center, East lounge. Donors can stop in from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day, and on March 13, until 8 p.m. To learn more, contact the Student Development Office at 310-660-3593, ext. 3500.
Considering a career in health science? The counseling department will host a health science information session on March 17 from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the Distance Education Center. For more information, contact the counseling department at 310-660-3595, ext. 3458.