Oct. 17 Vol. 72, Issue 2

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EL CAMINO COLLEGE OCTOBER 19, 2017 Follow us at /ECCUnion

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Emma DiMaggio/ Union Football players Jason Myers, James-Lightsey Lawerence, Brylen Buchaum, and Mike Mason kneel during the national anthem at the homecoming game on Thursday, Oct. 12.

Players kneel to raise awareness for racial injustice Taking a knee during the national anthem becomes a symbol of solidarity, especially for football players Emma DiMaggio

Arts and News Editor @ECCUnionEmma

As the national anthem pours out of the loudspeakers, seven players solemnly take a knee. Many crouch with eyes closed, surrounded by their fellow players, standing. Since quarterback Colin Kaepernick first took a knee to bring awareness to police brutality and racial injustice over a year ago, many football players have followed suit in support of his message, including players at EC. “I take a knee to let people

know that there are things going on in the world that are not fair for people of color,” Taylor Flowers, EC football player, said. Multiple EC football players knelt at homecoming game on Thursday, Oct. 12, in support of the message. James LightesyLawrence, Mike Mason, Brylen Baucham and Jason Myers were amongst those who knelt with him. “I don’t want anybody to think that we’re taking a knee to disrespect the military or anything like that,” Flowers said. “My grandfather served.” After President Donald Trump called out the National Football

League for allowing players to supposedly disrespect the flag by kneeling, the movement gained momentum. Though the controversy behind kneeling has created a divide, players feel that they have been met, for the most part, with support. “Our coach respects what we stand for. He knows we’re not doing it in a disrespectful manner. We just want people to be aware of what’s going on,” Flowers said. However, there have been some exceptions. At a game hosted at Cal State Bakersfield, EC football players were booed for kneeling during the national anthem.

“I took a knee and a couple of my fellow teammates took a knee and there was a lot of woofing in the stands, a lot of people going, ‘Stand up.’ Little things like that, but I don’t let it get to me,” Flowers said. Four calls to Bakersfield head coach Jeff Chudy and assistant coach, quarterback coach and offensive coordinator Carl Dean were unanswered and unreturned. Some players choose not to kneel during the national anthem. Okwes Nwaelleh, an EC football player and international student from Canada, feels that it’s not his place to take a side and

Chorale dreams of traveling to Carnegie Hall Campus singing team sells chocolates to pay their way to New York City

Faith Petrie

Opinion Editor @ECCUnionFaith

The Chorale Club is fundraising in order to travel across the country to New York City’s Carnegie Hall. El Camino professor and Director of Choral Activities Dr. Joanna Medawar Nachef will be conducting a piece at the hall in May 2018 and plans to take around 20 students to accompany her on the trip. “I have done (this trip) five times already since 2005 and this is my sixth conducting appearance, so I normally raise money to take students of mine who cannot afford to make this happen,” Nachef said. Students apart of Chorale Club are raising moneys in various ways, according to Nachef.

“We do performances like the variety show coming up. They do a theme and they showcase their talents,” Nachef said. “It is soloist, duets, ensembles and it’s inviting the whole community, student body (of ElC).” Another way that the club is raising money is through the selling of See’s chocolate bars. According to Nachef, she has purchased over $2700 worth of chocolate bars so far. “We sell these candy bars across the campus and we’ll do that on a regular basis for the coming fall and spring semester and you’ll see them running around carrying boxes and selling chocolates,” Nachef said. Chorale Club member Renaissance Austin was first introduced to Carnegie Hall after her uncle showed her Billie Holiday’s “Lady Sings the Blues” performance when she was 12

years old. “If you made it to Carnegie Hall, you made it,” Austin said. First year Chorale Club member, Joey Flint, 19, theatre major, hopes to make the idea of going to Carnegie Hall a reality. “The idea is a cloud in the sky, I just want to walk up there,” Flint said. “It feels so incredible that I am so close to doing that.” Another member of the club, Abraham Cervantes, 27, music education major, performed at the hall in the past but hopes to relive the experiences he had with the Chorale Club. “I went my freshmen year of high school with my brother and my sister and our choir, and walking on the stage from the back was indescribable,” Cervantes said. “To go again with a whole new group of people, a whole family and group of friends would be incredible.”

According to Chorale member Kreli Washington, 26, theatre arts major, students wishing to purchase candy from club members can find them in Music Room 134 on Monday’s, Wednesday’s, and Friday’s from 11:15 a.m. to 12:50 p.m. Nachef believes that every student deserves a chance to go on the trip whether they can afford it or not. “The students who are unable to pay for this trip, which costs almost $2000, does not mean they are not worthy of being supported,” Nachef said. “(Not being) elite doesn’t mean they’re not deserving, talented, and certainly needing our support.” Chorale Club will be hosting a “Battle of the Sexes Variety Show” on Friday, Nov. 10 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets cost $10 and can be bought from Chorale Club members directly.

kneel during the games. “I definitely do have an opinion on it, but I don’t think it’s really fair for me to protest. It’s not really my place,” Nwaelleh said. “But I support my teammates and my brothers who do it. I’m definitely not against it.” Coach Gifford Lindheim believes that kneeling is just one way of many that players can protest inequality and racial injustice. “I think whether you’re a football player, whether you’re a non-athlete, whether you’re a fan, I think that everybody has a different opinion of what the protest should

look like,” Lindheim said. “There’s a lot of discussion internally and in the public eye about the right way to deal with the issue of inequality.” Whether or not bystanders agree with their form of protest, Lindheim believes that bringing up the issue can make a positive impact. “These are the questions of our times,” Lindheim said. “I don’t think you can run from them, or should run from them, but you should take time to have meaningful dialogue about it.” Additional reporting done by staff writer Jeremy Taylor.

INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Library print system receives full upgrade over summer, P. 2

Abstractionist performance artist displays work in Art Gallery, P. 3 Football player, P. 3 Dance instructor starts his first year at El Camino, P. 7


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Oct. 17 Vol. 72, Issue 2 by El Camino College The Union - Issuu