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Volume 118 Spring 2013 Roundup Issue 10

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Woodland Hills, California

INSIDE

ROUND OUNDUP

Arts & Entertainment: Annual Student Art Show

Page 5 Story and photos of the Annual Student Art Show See more at theroundupnews.com

A FIRST AMENDMENT PUBLICATION

Volume 118- Issue 10

May 15, 2013

One copy free, each additional copy $1.00

Gun safety course draws fire Local neighborhood council takes aim at handgun course offered on campus Michaia Hernandez/Roundup

mhernandez.roundupnews@gmail.com

David Schub/Roundup

dschub.roundupnews@gmail.com The Woodland Hills Warner Center Neighborhood Council is trying to stop a gun training and safety course that has been offered by Pierce College since 2008 from being taught on campus. The council, an elected advisory body representing Woodland Hills and Warner Center locals, voted 10-9 on Wednesday, May 8 to revise and send a letter to the Pierce president, a trustee and the chancellor of the district the school is under, calling for the relocation of the class. The vote comes days before the next session of the National Rifle Association (NRA) Basic Pistol Course on campus. “We have absolutely no problem with the class,” said Scott Silverstein, council chair. “But the board feels that it’s inappropriate to have it on a

school campus.” Though the class has been ongoing for the past five years, the council only just became aware of its existence after they happened to see it listed in the latest catalog with the schedule of classes. Alma Johnson-Hawkins, Pierce’s acting president, was present at the May 8 meeting to get first-hand information on the issue, she said. “They had what they thought were facts,” she said. “We just want to make sure that everything is accurate.” Besides fact checking, the administration isn’t currently taking any steps to either cancel or move the class elsewhere. “There’s so much in the air right now. It’s really hard to plan a response,” Johnson-Hawkins said. “This is a serious issue. This will be handled by the appropriate people.” The course--provided through Pierce Extension, the college’s notfor-credit community education program--covers the basics of handling firearms, including ammunition, fundamentals of pistol marksmanship and how to clean and store handguns. While the lecture portion of the class is taught on campus, a live fire section is conducted at a nearby firing range, according to the course description. [See GUNS, page 3]

John Gutierrez / Roundup

MEETING: A member of The Woodland Hills - Warner Center Neighborhood Council reads a draft of the letter for Pierce.

Input provided for new leader

Auto club

Nationwide search for a new chancellor begins

Michaia Hernandez/Roundup mhernandez.roundupnews@gmail.com

Sonia Gurrola / Roundup

BEST IN SHOW: Kelsey Gordon shows off two awards in front of his 1949 Chevrolet pick up truck at the first car show on May, 11.

Auto show raises dough Future Automotive Service Technicians Club hosts their first auto show Tim Toton/Roundup

ttoton.roundupnews@gmail.com An old English proverb that states “necessity is the mother of invention” proves true for the Pierce College Future Automotive Service Technicians (F.A.S.T.) Club at their first car show on campus Saturday. The day was hot from the word go; public address speakers blasted rock ‘n’ roll; hungry show-goers gobbled tri-tip hoagies and hot dogs, while others cooled their bones in the shade talking with colleagues and friends over a cold drink. THE CARS Roughly two dozen show car entries and a handful of sponsors showed their support for the student club’s effort to raise money and awareness for their program. The event even drew walk-up students and those driving by, like Roland Horovitz and his family. Aspiring demolition expert in practicum at home, Horovitz, 11, said that he asked his mom

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to park the car after driving back from a swim tryout where he placed as an intermediate. “My favorite car was the old one that’s older than my dad,” Horovitz said. That truck belongs to F.A.S.T. member Kerrie Gordon’s dad, Kelsey. It’s a stock 1949 Chevy pick up truck that took Best in Show at the fundraiser, the club’s Public Relations Officer Dan Poppell said. Several other awards were given at the show but an official list was not provided to the Roundup by the time of publication. F.A.S.T. Club President Chase Williams, 21, signed in show cars as they rolled up. “We are accepting cars from your Hondas to your rat rods,” he said. “For our first car show we’re pretty pleased with it. We weren’t planning on anything big; we just wanted to get our name out there [and] get everyone interested in next year.” The cars ranged from a low-rider tweaked to starboard on hydraulics, off-road trucks, sports cars, modified Honda race cars and others still.

P I E R C E The Pierce College Weather Station has provided meteorological data to national agencies since 1949. The information in this graph was provided by our weather correspondent, Sean Clemmons.

Doug Sofio, a retired studio carpenter from Arleta, “the Beverly Hills of Pacoima,” found a flyer on the windshield of his 1923 Ford “T-bucket” he has had since age 14, he said. He backed up the 17-inch wide tires in between a red Triumph TR6 and a glittering blue Chevy Camaro race car owned by Pierce adjunct instructor Mark Schatkun. Sofio went to Pierce for a few years beginning in 1969, he said. Though he was never a professional mechanic, Sofio said he has raced boats, top-fuel funny cars, and pro stock street racing cars. His son Junior raced open-wheel in Long Beach, he said Schatkun’s Camaro is a well-built and tested race car that has won him many races at local tracks, he said. “They call me Shotgun. I used to race that Camaro right over there for 20 years at the Los Angeles County Raceway.” [See CARS, page 3]

The incoming chancellor for the Los Angeles Community College District must be responsible with accreditation, accountable and available for the long term, according to Pierce College administrators, faculty and staff. The aggregation of campus officials was given the chance to contribute to the chancellor profile that will help narrow down the pool of applicants for the position during a forum hosted Monday, May 14 by a national search team helping the LACCD with the process. The current chancellor, Daniel LaVista will be resigning after his contract with the district ends on June 30. Similar forums are taking place in the other eight colleges in the district. From these meetings, the Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT) will be developing the finalized profile, which will be posted in the next week or two in a search site dedicated to the application process. “We’re working very hard to come up with a recruitment strategy that will work with this district. Obviously, the LA district is very different and unique compared to other districts in the country,” said Julie Golder, search services coordinator/board of services specialist from the ACCT. “The profile plays a key role in the recruitment strategy.” One of the biggest issues that the district as a whole is going through is the number of LACCD colleges that have gotten sanctions following accreditation reviews. All of the three colleges visited last year, as well as two of the three campuses visited this year, have had their accreditation threatened. “Once the stigma is out there, it’s damaging to the district,” said Tom Rosdahl, president of Academic

W E A T H E R

Senate. “If half of the district is under sanctions, people aren’t going to want to come here. We need a chancellor that understands the accreditation process in the state of California.” Another issue brought up by officials is accountability between the district and campus leadership. “The chancellor needs to make administration and staff all along the line accountable,” Rosdahl said. “You can’t have people in jobs they can’t do. We’ve had college presidents in the past that should’ve gone bye-bye but was able to continue.” Officials are additionally concerned with the quality of leadership that prospects will possess. “We need somebody who’s going to lead, not somebody who will make a committee to lead,” De La Garza said. The future chancellor’s longterm commitment to the position is also something that concerns Pierce officials. “[He should be here] long enough to make changes,” Perrett said. “That’s the way the system is set up, unfortunately.” This is something that was acknowledged by LaVista in a letter sent out by his office last February. “The Chancellor who leads this… district must take the long view and make a long-term commitment, something I’m unable to do,” according to the email. Golder said that she doesn’t expect a large pool of candidates for the position. “There will not be 100 applicants. We’ve never seen that,” Golder said. After the applicants are narrowed down, the process goes to a search committee, then is brought to the LACCD board of trustees for the final decision. According to Golder, the final profile should be done by the next LACCD board of trustees meeting. Once that is done, the interviews will take place mid-September, and the final decision should be made by the end of September or beginning of October. Contributing Fahema Kakar

R E P O R T

Wednesday May 15 High: 85° Low: 60°

Thursday May 16

Friday May 17

Saturday May 18

Sunday May 19

Monday May 20

Tuesday May 21

Wednesday May 22

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High: 83° Low: 60°

High: 88° Low: 62°

High: 88° Low: 62°

High: 87° Low: 61°

High: 85° Low: 61°

Partly Cloudy

Sunny

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Volume 118 Spring 2013 Roundup Issue 10 by Pierce College Publications - Issuu