October 2016 - The Bridge

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the

bridge for the students, by the students

VOL 47/ISSUE 02

OCTOBER 2016

Rock the Vote at L&C Halloween’s L&C Students can Most Notorious register to vote and Monsters win concert tickets. Page 02

Be prepared for all their tricks and schemes. Page 04

Trump vs. Hillary

Election year mania, who will be our next president? You decide. Join the debate.

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of Lewis and Clark Community College | www.thelcbridge.com

L&C Hosts the 2016 BikeMS Charity Ride Photo by: Shelby Clayton

Photo by: Krystie Morrison

Photo by: Krystie Morrison

Photo by: Krystie Morrison

KELLY RULISON

krulison@lc.edu

L&C hosted the 2016 BikeMS event charity ride for people who suffer with multiple-sclerosis Sept 9-11. Roughly 3,000 cyclists signed up to ride all around southern Illinois. This is the second year that L&C has hosted The National Multiple Sclerosis Society’s BikeMS: Gateway Getaway Ride after its relocation from Columbia, Missouri. “We wanted to bring the event a bit closer to home for some of our St. Louis area participants,” senior coordinator of the

Photo by: Shelby Clayton

Photo by: Krystie Morrison

National MS Society Randy Adler said. “We got such great feedback about last year’s event that we’re very excited to return to campus this year,” Adler said. This event offers an opportunity for anyone seeking a personal challenge and a world free of multiple sclerosis. The cyclists took different paths based on the mile length they planned to ride, their choices being 25, 50, 75 and 100-mile routes. Saturday’s routes took riders through Fosterburg, Prairietown, Livingston, Hamel, Edwardsville, Wanda, Bethalto, Worden, New Douglas and Old Ripley. Sunday’s

Photo by: Shelby Clayton

routes turned north through Brighton, Shipman, Wilsonville, Staunton, Bunker Hill, Fosterburg, Carlinville and Gillespie. “Although some of the cyclists camp here on campus, many of them, along with family and friends, stay in area hotels and patronize our local establishments throughout the weekend,” L&C President

Dale Chapman said. “In addition, they get to explore a great deal of the communities throughout our district along the bike routes,” Chapman said. BikeMS is the largest fundraising cycling series in the U.S., attracting more than 100,000 participants nationwide. Last year alone, the National MS Society raised $122.2 million to connect more than one million individuals to the people, information and resources they need to fight MS. For more information about BikeMS and their fight against multiple sclerosis, visit www.nationalMSsociety.org or www.gatewaybikems.org.

Automotive Club Works to Rebuild ‘59 Ford RYAN ROBERTS

reroberts@lc.edu

The Automotive Technology Department has been holding a fundraiser in order to raise money for the rebuilding of a 1959 Ford F-100 pickup truck. Students will be able to practice their skills working on the old truck, which was bought last spring. While students will gain important “live-work” experience by repairing the automobiles of faculty and staff, they have a lot more to work with fixing the truck. A long process awaits Automotive technology students as they will be rebuilding virtually every aspect of the vehicle, which will require retrofitting new parts onto the old truck, and salvaged parts from other cars, such as an old Ford Explorer, to fix the pickup. Some of the work which will be performed includes, welding, fabricating, building an engine, custom suspension work and custom break design. “It’s just an extra project for them to work on,” Clayton Renth, the Associate Instructor of the Automotive Technology Department, said when talking about his

students. Renth explained that students will gain valuable skills, which will give them an upper hand in the job market. Speaking of the finished product, Renth said, “It’s going to be a symbol for the program showcasing what future students will be able to do if they join the program. We plan to use the truck for promoting the program, taking it to car shows, and using it for recruiting purposes.” He mentioned that once this project is finished, they will look for another car to rebuild to repeat the process. For the fundraiser the Automotive Club will be offering its services to faculty and staff, who require any repair work for their cars, so that students can apply the skills they were taught in class. The Automotive Club is a state funded facility, so they cannot charge for labor, but there is a $20 shop fee, and any parts used to fix the vehicle must be paid for. If any faculty or staff would like to support the fundraiser they can contact Clayton Renth via his email cvrenth@lc.edu concerning any issues their vehicles are having, and if the work needed applies to the program, it can be fixed. “Any and all donations are much appreciated,” Renth said.

This is the 1959 Ford F100 truck the Automotive Club students are in the process of rebuilding . (Photo by: Clayton Renth)

The Automotive Club students are in the process of rebuilding a 1959 Ford F­100 with a fuel injected engine that students pulled from a Ford Explorer. (Photo By: Krystie Morrison)


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