The Guardsman, Vol. 158, Issue 8. City College of San Francisco

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THE GUARDSMAN VOL. 158, ISSUE 8, DEC. 09 - DEC. 19, 2014 | CITY COLLEGE OF SAN FRANCISCO | SINCE 1935 | WWW.THEGUARDSMAN.COM | @THEGUARDSMAN | #THEGUARDSMAN | FREE

INSIDE

IT’S GOOD! A 41-yard field goal in the last seconds of the match gives Rams the win and a spot in the championships By Patrick Cochran

@theguardsman pcochran@theguardsman.com

The Guardsman

Board of Trustees Reinstatement of board may not come for another 18 months. » Page 4

Prereq Enforcement Banner, also known as WEB4, your online registration center, will enforce prerequesite requirements for Spring 2015 enrollment. » Page 5

Alberto Campos Meet the man who fuels the energy of Mission Center students. » Page 9

Tied at 14-14 with twelve seconds left on the clock, Rams kicker Cristian Antezana had to kick a 41-yard field goal to win the Northern California Championships and advance to the state title game. American River College, the only team to beat the Rams all season, had given them a tough game all afternoon. Winning the game now and not risking overtime was critical for the Rams. The pressure on Antezana was immense, who earlier in the game missed his first two field goals. American River only heightened it with a timeout to “ice” Antezana. When the play resumed, the anxiety in the air was palpable. The holder called hike and then promptly received the long snap. For a second, it looked like everything might go wrong, as the holder had to quickly readjust the ball, but he was able to get the ball in the proper spot before Antezana made contact and sent the ball sailing. The kick was a line drive and

Rams linebacker Justus Fa’ai’u reacts after the game winning field goal, Nov. 29. (Photo by Khaled Sayed)

looked like it might end up short of the goal post, but it didn’t. The referees signaled the touchdown was good and the Rams celebrated the 17-14 lead with just seconds remaining on the clock. “On that last play, I had trust in my line, and I just had to go out there and do my job,” said Antezana. “They do 90 percent of the job, I am just a kicker. I just stand there and occasionally kick.” From start to finish the game was back and forth with both teams playing top-notch defense. “The defense was their best day,” said an ecstatic head coach George Rush after the game. “I really couldn’t ask any more out of them. With Tony out, they knew they would have to step up, and they did.” Starting quarterback Anthony Rodriguez sat out of the game with an injury he sustained in his previous game versus Chabot, leaving Jerry Peralta to start. Peralta lacks the size and pocket presence of Rodriguez, but is an excellent scrambler in the backfield. With the ability to turn broken plays into 20-yard runs, he seems like a poor-man’s Johnny Manziel.

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Film festival showcases college filmmaking talent By Elisabetta Silvestro

@theguardsman esilvestro@theguardsman.com

The Guardsman

The fourth annual Festival of the Moving Image, presented by the City College Cinema and Broadcast Electronic Media Arts (BEMA) departments, showcased selected works from the students’ short movies from the past year and a half. The festival was organized by the students of the Cinema 170 class, a work experience course coordinated by teacher Trina Lopez. The event was held at the Mission District’s historic Roxie Theater on Nov. 20. The 40 short films were presented in two different shows, one at 7 p.m. and one at 8:45 p.m. They ranged from ten-second IDTV (the college’s own TV show) bumpers, to 12 minute more elaborate short movies. The selection included the winners of the past City Shorts

Moviegoers line up Nov. 20 at the Mission District’s Roxie Theater for the “Festival of the Moving Image.” (Photo by Natasha Dangond) Film Festival and was handpicked by the heads of the BEMA and Cinema departments. “You’re about to see the best of the best,” student Carlos Sandoval

said, introducing the first screening. The themes were diverse, many were documentaries about San Francisco or City College

people, activities, issues and history. Others were fiction, from comedy, to drama and horror. “Harvest: A Season on Alemany Farm,” by Ivan Moore,

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