for the students, by the students
DECEMBER 2015 | www.thelcbridge.com
Volume 46 Issue 4
REVIEW OF ADELE’S NEW ALBUM “25”
A PEEK INTO L&C HISTORY
Page- 03
Page- 07
CEREMONY TO HONOR L&C SOCCER TEAMS
Page- 08
Left: During an open house and ribbon cutting ceremony for the new St. Louis Confluence Fab Lab at the N.O. Nelson campus of Lewis and Clark Community College, officials cutting ribbons are, from left, Vice President of External Affairs Jim Nelson, Illinois Manufacturing Association; Director of Human Resources Teri Higgins, Cope Plastics; Refinery Manager Jay Churchill, Phillips66 Wood River; L&C President Dale Chapman; Senior Manager for Learning and Training Programs at Boeing Dan Stroot; and Director of the St. Louis Confluence Fab Lab Luke Jumper. Right: Visitors learn about advanced equipment, during a grand opening of L&C’s new St. Louis Confluence Fab Lab.
Photos provided by: L&C FLICKR
Confluence Fab Lab Comes To L&C Helen Jarden hjarden@lc.edu A new Confluence Fabrication Lab (Fab Lab) has found its way to Lewis and Clark Community College’s N.O. Nelson campus in Edwardsville, Illinois. Tools for industrial grade design, assembly, and fabrication will be available in the lab, which will soon be open for everyone in the community. The concept for the lab came from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and began as an architecture student design project. It took three years of planning and six months of actual construction for the lab to be built.
While all students, faculty, and businesses are able to use the Fab Lab, students who are taking classes that require the use of the lab will be able to use it for free. The costs of individual membership will be $75 a month or $750 a year. Premium membership will be $100 a month or $1000 a year. Student membership will be $50 a month or $500 a year. This does not include the cost of any materials needed for projects, which are not provided by the lab. Classes, either new or existing, that will use the lab will be in the DRFT, TECH, ART, and ARCH programs. “The Fab Lab is geared towards making
Finding Holiday Cheer Through Giving This Season Eric Welch etwelch@lc.edu The holidays are a special occasion known as a time for charities and organizations to give back to their communities, and the Lewis and Clark Community College campus is no exception. One yearly tradition on the L&C campus is the teachers on the fifth floor of Baldwin Hall adopt an Oasis Family. The Oasis foundation provides help to families of domestic violence. The teachers receive a wish list from a family and each teacher purchases one item from the list. The gifts are then wrapped and given to the family for them to put under the tree for Christmas morning. “We are a community college. Most people around here take this seriously, so it is important to be involved in the community,” Terri Hilgendorf, Literature Professor, said. The Adult Education Department also gets involved with families during the holidays with their toy drive for the kids of Family Literacy. Unfortunately, the drive will not be done this year, due to a lack of participants. However, in the past they have provided presents for 30 to 50 families a year. It is also worth mentioning that the presents are anonymously given to the parents for them to give to their children. In order for a family to join Family Literacy, the adult caregiver must need help with basic skill instruction, have a child that is under 16 years of age, agree to monthly home visits, attend parenting classes twice a week, and attend family events at the library. “We started this program because in Family Literacy you get to know the children and we wanted to bring joy to
families in need during Christmas time,” Director of Adult Education Vicki Hinkle said. L&C has also helped students experiencing a financial crisis during the holiday season. For example, this year, a student who has two children is receiving donations from an anonymous L&C department in the form of warm clothes and children’s toys. The student is being sponsored because of his/her dedication to learning and upstanding character. An event that anyone on campus can get involved with is the 89.9 Hours of Christmas donation drive. Each year, two radio students stay on the air for 89.9 hours straight to raise money for the Boys and Girls Club of Alton. A large portion of the money raised will send 50 children on a Christmas shopping spree. To be eligible to receive the shopping spree, the children must be active in club activities, participate in study dates, and maintain good grades. On top of the shopping sprees, money, as much as $4,500 in the past 17 years, is also donated to the Boys and Girls Club general fund. For more information contact Mike Lemons at mlemons@lc.edu or donate to the drive from Dec. 17-20.
things. The kinds of degrees that will find this useful are Architecture, Drafting, Industrial Technology, Art, Engineering, Welding, etc. We will be teaching the Guitar building courses in the Fab Lab to take advantage of the cutting edge tools available to us,” said Luke Jumper, L&C Coordinator of Architectural Technology, Industrial Technology, and CAD/Drafting. Students who wish to use the lab past class hours will be able to do so only with a membership. No appointments are needed, but the lab will have a first come, first serve policy. The hours for the lab during the weekdays will be 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. for classes, then 2 p.m. to 9
p.m. for members. “Anyone from the public that has paid the fee and passed all of the safety training [can use the lab after 2 p.m.],” Jumper said. On Saturdays, the lab will remain open to all members from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Student jobs will also be offered around the beginning of the next school year. Evening availability will be required, and students who are given jobs will receive safety training for use of the equipment. To read more about the Confluence Fab Lab, check out www.fablabs.io/ confluencefablab. Those with questions can contact Jumper at ljumper@lc.edu.
Visiting Artist Series Wraps Up with Artist Ken Worley
Visiting artist, Ken Worley, lectures on his works at Lewis and Clark Community College.
Photos by: KAREN HANCOCK
Stock Photo
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