Vol. 68, Issue 8, Sept. 11, 2014

Page 1

EL CAMINO COLLEGE September 11, 2014

Women’s volleyball team goes undefeated in Long Beach Tournament, Page 7

Union T h e

eccunion.com

Torrance, California

Left: Freshman defensive linemen

Victor Villarreal tackles Pasadena City College quarterback Dejon Williams during the first quarter of the Warriors’ first game at Pasadena City College Sept. 6. The Warriors led the Lancers 3-0 in the first quarter and ended the game with a 37-20 win. Photo by John Fordiani/ Union. Below: Redondo Union High School’s Sea Hawk Stadium will be home for the football team this season during Murdock Stadium’s construction. Photo by John Fordiani/Union.

EL CAMINO FOOTBALL IS BACK and North High School. Regardless of where the home field is, the general consensus is that a field, is a field and that it does not matter where they play according to players. “I look at Redondo now completely differently because it has a nice stadium, it’s a good field, it’s going to be a nice place for us to play,” coach John Featherstone said. “They have great lockers, they have great facilities. I am looking forward to making it our home for the next couple years.” With Murdock Stadium out of commission, Sea Hawk Stadium will be the official home Stadium for the next two years. Though some players may not be used to playing at Redondo, there are a few who used to play for Redondo and some who used to play against Redondo. “Well I used to play there in high school and I

Patrick Cruz

Staff Writer @ECCUnionPatrick

T

he jerseys are clean, the cleats are tied, the water bottles are filled and the players are ready to play, but one of the biggest pieces of Warrior football is gone. Murdock Stadium was torn down to make way for a new field. The Warriors will not have a new home at Redondo Union High School’s (RUHS) new Sea Hawks Stadium. With the construction over at RUHS and the newly built facilities and locker rooms, the choice was obvious. However, not to say that there was no competition, EC looked at other schools in the area like Mira Costa High School, West High School

think that we are going to be good as a team playing there,” sophomore wide receiver Davion Goodall. “All of my teammates like it, from playing during the scrimmage and everyone is pretty excited for it to be our home.” Sophomore offensive lineman Cory Sanicky, who used to play for Mira Costa, expressed his thoughts on playing at Redondo Union. “It’s kind of weird because I went to Mira Costa and they are our rival school,” Sanicky said. “So, it is kind of odd, but I mean it does not really matter, it’s just a field to play on. New sophomore transfer from University of Kentucky, Tanner Blaine, ranked as 15th best punter in the nation also gave his thoughts on his new home “It’s all good, I know it will be a good atmosphere,”Blaine said.

When asked whether or not it would be a disadvantage to play there, the players had mixed answers. Blaine felt that it would not matter and that it is the same as any other field. Goodall felt the only disadvantage is that it gets a “little windy” over there, but other than that he felt good to play at his old school. Sanicky felt that it was sort of a disadvantage but that it “shouldn’t affect us too much.” When Featherstone was asked about any disadvantages for the team, he expressed that the only disadvantage was on game days when they have to travel from EC to Redondo Union. The first home game for EC is Saturday at 4 p.m. at Redondo Union High School.

Faulty elevator sticks again Puente Project is put on hiatus Lorilynn Lomeli

Features Editor @ECCUnionLorilyn

NEWS LINE

Stuck in the west elevator in the Humanities Building, Roxana Diaz, 19, social work major, had to be freed by the Los Angeles County Fire Department Sept. 2. “I was trying not to be late to class when the elevator got stuck on the third floor,” Diaz said. “I waited about 25 minutes (before being released).” When the same elevator stopped working in April, two students were freed by officers from the El Camino Police Department after being stuck for 10 minutes. Elevator breakdowns seem to happen frequently. Rodrick McMillan, systems supervisor of facilities, said elevator malfunctions are common and usually occur about twice a month.

Michael Trevis, EC police chief, said, “I can tell you that anything that’s mechanical, you know, technology, your iPhone, your laptop, your car, anything. Sometimes those things just fail. It happens from time to time.” Facilities frequently handles elevator breakdowns by contacting a certified company to help with the elevators. “There are certain elevators that seem to not have very many problems and other elevators that are problematic,” McMillan said. “Campus-wide, we probably have the company coming out two (to) three times a week to look at certain problems.” The newer elevators tend to break down the most. It takes a while to work out the bugs of the system, so the older elevators tend to be more reliable, McMillan said.

- See Elevator, pg. 2

The program with a mission to help underserved students has been placed on a one-year break

Rocky Rivera

Staff Writer @ECCUnionRocky

The Puente Program, which helps students develop language skills and transfers to four-year universities, is on a one-year hiatus, Rachel Ketai, cocoordinator of the program said. “(Puente) didn’t have consistent leadership and we didn’t have a consistent team so we needed to get that team back in place,” Ketai said. “We just didn’t have enough time before the semester started in the way that we thought would be beneficial for students.”

Ken Brown, vice president of the board of trustees, said the board has agreed to suspend the program’s activities this year. The one-year hiatus was promised to only last that long and Ketai hopes the administration sticks to their word. “It is safe to say that the program is in jeopardy. Those who care about this program were promised a one-year hiatus,” Ketai said. “We’ve been told that administrators want to reassess for those who want to keep the program on campus.” Puente was founded in 1981 and extends to other

TAG Workshop

Club Rush

Constitution Day

CSU Strategy Workshop

Today, a Transfer Admission Guarantee Workshop will take place in Room 120 in the MBA Building from 1 to 3 p.m. This workshop will help students receive knowledge about the specific requirements corresponding with TAG. For more information, call 310-660-3593 ext. 340.

Club Rush will take place on the Library Lawn from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Students will be able to receive information about clubs and sign up to join them. Food and drinks will also be for sale from select clubs. For more information, call 310-660-3593 ext. 3500.

Constitution Day will take place on the Library Lawn from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday. This is the day in 1787 when the Constitution Convention met for the last time to sign the document they created. For more information, call 310-660-3593.

A CSU Strategy Workshop will take place in the Alondra Room Wednesday from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Presented by the Transfer Center, the CSU Strategy Workshop helps with transferring students to the CSUs of their choice. For more information, call the Transfer Center at 310-660-3593, ext. 3408.

G

- See Puente, pg. 2

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