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Vol. 101 Issue 13

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RIVERSIDE CITY COLLEGE VIEWPOINTSONLINE.ORG

MAY 11, 2023

Students still unsure

VOL. 101, NO. 13

Lack of prompt notification causes concern on campus following emergency ANNABEL SILVA STAFF REPORTER

Riverside City College students have vocalized concerns for their safety following new information regarding a campus emergency that took place April 18. Riverside Community College District Chief of Police Christopher Cano presented a timeline of the incident to the District Board of Trustees on May 2. The timeline revealed that authorities received reports of a man walking near the campus with a knife in hand at 7:19 a.m., just over two hours before the campus received an emergency alert to “shelter-in-place.” “It makes me feel unsafe, it makes me feel like the school doesn’t care about the students safety,” RCC student Diana Rosales said. “I think they handled this in the worst way possible for a college campus.” She questioned if students were a top priority or if the school’s reputation was. “If it was to protect their image of handling the situation, and that’s why they didn’t tell us, then it shows who they are,” Rosales said. “I’d understand if they’d want to not panic students but at the same time they need to be more honest and direct with us,” RCC student Gabriel Zaragoza said. “Anything could have happened, no matter the severity of the incident.” Students were left to feel uncertain if the campus is safe to come inperson. Many looked through social media to find any more information about what was happening. “I hopped on Instagram, and went to the City of Riverside’s Instagram page, and it was through the comments that I was getting more information,” Zaragoza said. “I noticed (something wrong) around the bottom floor of the Parking Structure, there never is any security,” RCC student Ruby Gonzales said. They said that there should be more security on a daily basis. “I felt like no one knew what was going on,” Gonzalez said. “There is something we could all learn from (this) to prevent anything from happening.”

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MATHEW ACOSTA | VIEWPOINTS

After a hard fought game, the Riverside City College’s baseball team suffered defeat against the Grossmont College Griffins. Sophomore Sebastian Flores lined out to center fielder Ethan Caschetta to end the game and bring the Tigers’ season to a close. RCC was swept in a best-of-three series.

Defending champs swept Tigers upset at home by underdog Griffins JAIR RAMIREZ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

It’s all over for the reigning state champions. The season ended for the Riverside City College baseball team after being swept at home in a best-of-three series by the Grossmont College Griffins in the first round of the California Community College Athletic Association Southern Regional Championships. “We just didn’t pick up on the message,” RCC sophomore pitcher Chris Fields said. “It hurts obviously, there’s expectations everyone has on us, but also the expectations we had on ourselves.”

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The No. 3 seeded Tigers were blown out in game one and were unable to bounce back when they were the road team in the second game, resulting in a swift defeat to the No. 22 Griffins. Riverside finished the season 28-13. “If you find a way to get to the playoffs and if you’re playing quality, competitive baseball in the end, the game allows you to make a deep run and we failed at that,” RCC head coach Rudy Arguelles said. Grossmont freshman pitcher Ethan Heider set the tempo early, allowing no hits through the first four innings of game two. The Griffins then opened up the scoring with three runs in the

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bottom of the inning with some help from the Tigers’ defense. The middle infielders both suffered errors which allowed two unearned runs to score. The Tigers lost 4-2. RCC did get back into the game by scoring two runs in the top of the fifth inning on a sacrifice fly by sophomore infielder Adrian Arechiga and a single by freshman catcher Dominic Dominguez. Dominguez went 2-for-2 with an RBI and three walks. Unfortunately for the Tigers those would be the only runs they would score the rest of the game. “At the plate from an offensive standpoint we didn’t stick to or understand the scouting report,” Arguelles said.

Grossmont sophomore infielder Skyler Agnew got hot in the series and capped it off with an RBI double in the bottom of the fifth. Agnew finished the first round batting 4-for-8 with a home run, a double and five RBI’s. The Griffins offense was too much to handle for RCC. It outscored The Tigers 18-5 in the two games against Grossmont. “We could have obviously executed with runners in scoring position but at the end of the day we gave it our all,” Riverside sophomore first baseman Jordan Ruiz said. The Tigers finished with a 20-win season for the seventh consecutive season excluding the shortened 2020 COVID season.

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