September 1, 2011

Page 1

LOYOLAN LOS ANGELES

Your Home. Your Voice. Your Newspaper.

THUR FRI

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ESTABLISHED 1921 September 1, 2011 Volume 90, Issue 1

Loyola Marymount University

www.laloyolan.com

Free parking will be discontinued University decides to implement parking fee beginning next fall. By Laura Riparbelli Managing Editor

Jon Rou| LMU Photo

Students pose for celebratory photo during LMU’s birthday party Students clad in crimson, navy and white formed a “human 100” on Tuesday at Convo to celebrate LMU’s centennial birthday. An estimated 1,200 students participated in the event. Learn more about LMU’s centennial plans online at www. laloyolan.com.

LMU mourns loss of Brandon Farmer 2011 graduates lose classmate due to cardiac complications. By Margo Jasukaitis Asst. News Editor

Tracey Lincoln

Farmer was an active member of the Black Student Union (BSU) and took part in the special Kente graduation ceremony in June.

Brandon Farmer, a graduate of the class of 2011, passed away on the morning of June 17 as a result of heart complications, according to a statement issued by Senior Vice President of Student Affairs Lane Bove. He was 21 years old. “[He was] a gentle giant,” said Katleen Saturne, Campus Business Services OneCard supervisor and Farmer’s boss during the two years he worked in the OneCard office. Saturne remembers Farmer as a “very…

giving, very understanding spirit.” “I’ve never seen Brandon angry,” Saturne continued. “Even when things were going wrong, when there was frustration, there was a constant smile on his face. [He was] always trying to make people jovial. I don’t know what it was about him but no matter what you were going through, [if] you saw him it was like nothing was going wrong.” Everyone who knew Farmer recalls his constant smile and deep sense of caring for others. “He just had a very warm heart. You got the impression when you first spoke with him [that] he was caring of all the people he came into contact with and had a very good relationship with everyone,” said Alicia Amerson, who was Farmer’s supervisor between May of 2008 and the summer of 2009

See Farmer | page 2

Free parking on campus will be discontinued beginning in the fall of 2012, according to University officials, citing the lack of spots on campus and the need to combat the problem. Senior Vice President for Administration Lynne Scarboro said in a University-wide email on Aug. 31 that the decision to charge students, faculty, staff and visitors for parking is “directly related to the need for more parking on campus.” According to Mike Wong, the associate vice president for Administration Services, over 90 percent of the revenue incurred from the parking permits will go towards paying for more parking on campus. The first of such projects is planned to be the reconstruction of the Seaver lot, which will maintain the current 84 spots and will add an additional 190. There are also plans to funnel revenue toward expanding Lion Express routes and making public transportation more accessible to students. “We’ve got a parking issue, we’ve had a parking issue on campus for as long as I’ve been here,” Scarboro told the Loyolan, who has been an employee for nine years. Approximately eighty parking spots in Drollinger were lost this summer due to the construction of the Recycling Center within the lot. Those 80 spots were relocated to a newly constructed lot behind the Facilities Management Building where the old recycling center used to stand. Students, however, are not permitted to park there, but Wong said they plan to make much of the employee parking behind Daum Hall and within the Del Rey lot open to everyone by this weekend or the one following. “There’s no net loss in student parking,” said Wong. Senior business major Elle McDonald, who commutes to class from her house in Westchester, is still concerned. She said she’s made a habit out of arriving to campus at least 45 minutes before class. “That’s how long it will usually take me to get parking,” said McDonald. “It doesn’t make sense.” Now that McDonald lives close enough to

See Parking | page 2

Recycling Center moves to Drollinger Parking Plaza University completes first Master Plan commitment with the relocation. By Kayla Begg Copy Editor

After nearly five years of noise complaints and negotiations with the Westchester community, the Recycling Center has been relocated from upper campus to Drollinger Parking Plaza. The Recycling Center’s relocation to

Drollinger also heralds the first steps of the Master Plan being put into action, which was approved by the Los Angeles City Council on Feb. 25. According to Mike Lotito, director of Plant Operations at Facilities Management, the mandate within the plan to move the Recycling Center reflects LMU’s efforts to find a solution to the community conflict over its original location. The Recycling Center has slowly been moving from its previous location, only officially settling into Drollinger approximately two weeks ago. In addition to reducing both noise for Westchester neighbors and what Lotito described as “roll-off truck traffic” in upper campus, the Recycling Center has purchased

New to Campus? The Loyolan’s Freshman Survival Guide discusses the basics to becoming a Lion.

Freshman Survival Guide, page 11

new equipment to maximize efficiency, he stated. “The neighbors here are really happy that we moved. I think the community’s happy because we delivered on our first commitment of the Master Plan. … So I think that shows a strong commitment [from] LMU,” Lotito added. Will Shaffer, a junior civil engineering major who resides in Leavey 6, stated that his living room faces the new Recycling Center in Drollinger. “ [the Recycling Center traffic] hasn’t woken me up in the morning yet, but it is a little noisy. My main concern is the lack of parking in Drollinger already. … It was already an

See Recycling | page 4

Index Opinion...............................5 Freshman Survival Guide...11 A&E...............................15 Classifieds......................... 20 Sports.................................24 The next issue of the Loyolan will be printed on September 8, 2011.

Kenzie O’Keefe | Loyolan

The new Recycling Center is located where the Drollinger exit was previously.

Lights, Camera, Action The new Deja View Movie Lounge will screen “The Hangover” and “Bridesmaids” for free.

A&E, page 17


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September 1, 2011 by Los Angeles Loyolan - Issuu