El Camino College The Union, Nov. 17, 2016 issue 11

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EL CAMINO COLLEGE

Eugene Engle retires from EC football, P. 8

NOVEMBER 17, 2016

THE UNION eccunion.com

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Campus clubs attempt to garner money and support on Library Lawn Victor Liptzin

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Staff Writer @ECCUnionVictor

Alba Mejia/ Union The members of the Society of Music club are raising funds during the Fund Fair on the week of Nov. 14 - Nov. 17. - Facebook Page: facebook.com/societyofmusicECC. Sabels, 21, chemistry major and President of EC Science Club wanted to get the word out the club exists and to raise awareness of his club which known for its trips to the American west, like to Arizona, Utah, and parts of California and Nevada. “I really want my club to be interacting a lot more with my students, and we have pictures of our club trips on display so we are hoping that it gets people to join us,” Sabels said. The clubs that the EC students were supporting and benefitting includes the Inter-Club Council, (ICC), the EC Science Club and the ECC Broadcasting Club, the EC Film Club, the EC Society of Music and the Honors Transfer Club (HTP Program). The price for the tickets of this fair to play games range from one ticket for $1, four tickets for $3 and eight tickets for $5.

Alba Mejia/ Union One of the games featured at the “Fund Fair” was “Presidential Election Simulator.” The point was to throw objects at “Clilary Hinton” and “Tronald Dump.”

Campus named a top 25 community college Christina Lyon

Copy Editor @ECCUnionLyon

El Camino made the top 25 list of the best community colleges in California, according to the Niche 2017 Best Community Colleges in California. EC outranked local colleges Santa Monica College and Los Angeles Trade-Technical College. Niche is a research website that helps people find schools best suited to their needs or location, and calculated the results using “rigorous analysis of academic, financial, and student life data from the U.S. Department of Education,” along with millions of reviews, according to the website. Here’s how El Camino fared in several areas including student experience and overall value: Receiving 3.9 out of five stars for overall quality,

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A Value Grade of C+, A Diversity Grade of A-, A Safety Grade of B+, And an A for Local Area Grade. President Dena Maloney said she is “thrilled to be president of such a great school,” and added that EC is implementing strategies in order to “move the needle on student success.” Both the Student Experience Grade and the Professors Grade received a B-, and some students on campus have supported that grade based on their personal experiences. Regarding academics, Italiannative Michele Tesauro, 20, undecided major, said that EC deserves a higher ranking than No. 25, especially in comparison to the Italian schooling system. “I’ve been to schools (in Italy) where I didn’t learn or have incentive,” he said. “(Here) they teach and motivate you to study.”

EC received a B+ for safety, and in light of the rise in crime this semester, including five robberies and two “peeping tom” incidents, Maloney said the school is formulating initiatives and implementing safety procedures to assure that students feel safe on campus. “We’re updating emergency planning (and) putting greater emphasis on ensuring students have access to information,” she said. “It’s a priority to me that we remain vigilant about safety.” There will be two safety forums on Dec. 6 in which EC Police Chief Michael Trevis, along with local safety agencies and police departments will come together to talk to students and employees about safety in the area and on campus, Maloney said. She added that faculty members are being equipped with safety folders entailing strategies to address campus safety.

“We’re ramping up our efforts to ensure there is communication about safety.” Though safety is a relevant issue, students like Julio Rodriguez, 29, communications major, aren’t letting it deter them from their schooling. Aside from the consistent campus advisories, Rodriguez agrees with the ranking of No. 25 because of resources like computer labs and the Extended Opportunity and Program Services (EOPS), which are instrumental in aiding students to success. “(The resources offered) make the community college experience much more comfortable,” Rodriguez said. Maloney said the ranking is important, but that the school is always looking for ways to improve in order to uphold its set standards. “This external ranking validates what we already know, which is that El Camino is a great school,”

70th

Anniversary TORRANCE, CALIFORNIA

Send us an email at /eccunion@gmail.com

El Camino hosts annual ‘Fund Fair’

l Camino hosted it’s annual Fund Fair on Monday on the Library Lawn, providing a variety of food, drinks and games to benefit various clubs on campus. “I bought a muffin for $2 at the Inter-Club Council and I ate the muffin and felt good about supporting the clubs on campus,” Kameron Squalls, 19, arts design graphics major said. Squalls favorite clubs to support at El Camino were the HTC and the EC Film Club because the HTC is used to help students to a higher college and the EC Film Club need filming because that costs a lot of money. There weren’t many game booths at the fair but the EC Broadcasting Club had a Presidential Simulation booth which looked very popular were you can throw three different politically symbolic items at the mock candidates of the 2016 Presidential election. Diego Perdomo, 18, journalism major and member of the ECC Broadcasting Club participated in the Presidential Election 2016 simulation game. “I’ve only participated in the game because you get to throw props and items at Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton (Impersonators), like a piece of the wall from Mexico, the email server and the shoe thrown at former President George W. Bush,” Perdomo said. Another student at the fair who was trying to raise money, Shira Basa, 19, music major and Vice President of the EC Society of Music felt that people there were helpful friendly and welcoming. “I’m mostly interested in the EC Society of Music which is the club that I’m here for,” Basa said. A booth staff member Josh

1946-2016

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Student threatens to shoot another student Keith Francis

Staff Writer @ECCUnionKeith

A 19-year-old female student was arrested for allegedly threatening to shoot another student on Thursday, Nov. 10 at 7:50 a.m., according to the police beat. The victim, a 39-year-old women and El Camino student, reported to the police officers the day after the incident occurred, according to police beat. ECPD responded and went to the cosmetology class, where the accused student was at, in the ITECH building. ECPD interviewed witnesses and the suspect, and following the questioning the suspect was arrested for criminal threats, according to police beat. The suspect was transported to Torrance PD for booking. This is not the first time that someone has been threatened. In fall 2014, 36-year-old James Lemus, a former El Camino student, threatened to “create a massacre on campus.” He was in jail for almost one and a half years, before his case reached a conlusion. The result: Lemus was sentenced to five years of formal probation. The most recent indicent occured when 28-year-old Dash Porter used Facebook Messenger to send 13 messages threatening to kill former English professor Cynthia Somin. He was arrested after Somin reported finding the messages. One of his messages said that he was coming to school and that his “(gun’s loaded).” He is currently out on bail and his next court date is Nov. 28. A Union reporter called Torrance PD for more information, but the officer on the phone said he would return the call at a later time. When the officer called back, he told the reporter not to call TPD and to refer all questions to ECPD. The officer hung up the phone before the reporter could get a contact name. ECPD did get back to The Union by deadline. For more on this and other news stories, go to eccunion.com

Ripped jeans are the new black, P. 4-5

Women’s soccer loses final game, P. 8


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