Movie remake of ‘Cabin’ receives high praise in first week
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Double-header doesn’t go well for Mustangs baseball team
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L M C E X P E R I E N C E . C O M
F.Y.I. Meet LMC’s interim president Important Dates February
is Black History Month
Feb. 15
The LMC men’s basketball team takes on first place Yuba City College at 5:30 p.m.
Feb. 17&20
Celebrate Lincolns’ and Washingtons’ birthdays by not having classes.
By JADEN FORTIER Staff Writer
With former LMC President Bob Kratochvil retiring from the community college last fall, LMC has transitioned into a new era in the school’s history. This new era will be kicked off by Dr. Pamela Ralston, who is LMC’s Interim President for the next six months while the college and district work to find a permanent signee for the position. As an interim, Ralston’s role is a little bit different
than one she would have in a permanent role. “I need to be here to help maintain the work that he [Kratochvil] was leading in the fall,” Ralston said, adding that “another part of it is exciting where I can see what’s working well, and what else we can do to get everything else working well.” Ralston doesn’t need anything to slip through the cracks before LMC brings on the permanent president, and sees herself as “the bridge
between Kratochvil and the future president,” she said. Since she was first brought in on Dec. 29 of last year, Ralston said she hasn’t had many bumps or struggles in her transition to LMC. “The only hard thing is making sure that we haven’t lost track of anything that was important,” said Ralston. Students, faculty, leaders and managers have all met with Ralston as she gets acclimated with an entirely new group of See PRES, page 5
Students get certificates after long wait
TOP Thursday workshops
Non-credit snafu fixed
Meet with experts about what is best for you when it comes time to transfer to UC Davis. Register for webinar workshops on the LMC college website. All workshops run from 5 p.m to 6 p.m every Thursday.
By RAY KOPF
Ray Kopf • Experience
Professor Michael Kean (left) and professor Jeff Andre perform PTEC activities.
PTEC building up the world By RAY KOPF Staff Writer
Drop-in and find your career Every Tuesday from 2 p.m to 4 p.m stop by the Student Union Building on the second floor for career counseling. Students can also drop-in via zoom by visiting the LMC website.
“At the time, there were not many California Community The Contra Costa Commu- Colleges offering noncredit nity College District has finally programs that we could reach resolved the software issue out to for assistance with our that was impacting non-credit programming,” said Hall. students and preventing them It would take direct work from receiving the certificates with the software company they had earned. The changes to fix this issue, and the onset were implemented at the end of the COVID-19 pandemic of the fall semester and are would significantly delay this being felt across process. Still, the campus, especially issue retur ned in the English as a and was fixed in Second Language the fall of 2022. department. Positively imThe issue origpacting the ESL inally stemmed program, as now from a software they were able to error at the district give out their cerlevel involving the tificates to the stusystem the district dents that needed uses for student them. The ESL information. The department chair, only software alDr. Paula Gunder lowing certificates “This is agrees that the fix and degrees to be in the software is really awarded to proa massive step in grams that were awesome the right direction. worth credit. Ac- news for “This is really cording to Riki awesome news Hall, the director those for those students, of Admissions and students, our program and Records, the disthe college, in trict thought the our program my opinion,” said system would also and the Gunder support non-credit But she becollege.” programs. lieves there is still — Rikki Hall more work to be “Unfortunately, this was not the done. There are case, and the system would not still issues caused by the softprocess noncredit programs ware malfunction that directly with a completed status, there- affected the ESL program and by making it impossible for its reputation. us to award the certificates,” “There is a very large numsaid Hall. ber of students who have The issue specifically had to earned one or more of these do with the different academic certificates, who did not apply levels of the two programs and because we have to tell them the system was not prepared to stop applying because the to handle that difference. See CERT, page 5 Staff Writer
Black in Stem week Black in STEM week kicks off Feb. 21 with a Buttons and Boba event that is being held at the Brentwood Center math lab. Feb. 24 LMC alum Amy Vreeland will speak to the college. Anyone wanting to attend can sign up for the Zoom on the LMC website.
Juan Cebreiros • Experience
President Pamela Ralston (left) speaks with Dean Tanisha Maxwell at the College Asembly meeting Feb. 6
In-person classes have been slowly increasing at Los Medanos College and many programs are now able to resume regular activities. This is especially true for those with more of a “hands-on” approach, such as the Process Technology program. PTEC trains future chemical, mechanical, and powerplant technicians to excel in
the workforce, teaching them the tools they need to thrive in their profession. Alongside all of the math and scientific components of the program, students get real insight into what working in these plants will be like. From operating actual systems they will encounter, to taking tours of the plants they could potentially work at in the future, the program encompasses every aspect of the profession and
hammers in the point that safety is key. On top of all of this, the program includes professors who have worked in the field for years. William Cruz, who has been teaching in the PTEC program since its inception in 2008, highlighted the importance of these jobs. “It’s a very necessary thing for the country to run these plants,” said Cruz. See PTEC, page 5