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An Associated Collegiate Press two-time national Pacemaker award-winning newspaper, serving students since 1922. First Copy Free | Additional copies 25 cents October 21, 2010 Vol. XXXVIV, No. 4 Riverside, CA | www.viewpointsonline.org KHAI LE / SENIOR STAFF ASSISTANT GAME TIME: Riverside City College’s Sadale Foster returns a punt from Orange Coast in the fourth quarter of play during the homecoming game on Oct. 16. The Tigers won 45-20 bringing them to 5-1 in their season. Tigers kick it in gear for homecoming For a SPORTS STORY see Page 16
Transcript
Page 1: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

An Associated Collegiate Press two-time national Pacemaker award-winning newspaper, serving students since 1922.

First Copy Free | Additional copies 25 cents

October 21, 2010 Vol. xxxVIV, No. 4

Riverside, CA | www.viewpointsonline.org

Khai Le / Senior Staff aSSiStant

GaMe TiMe: Riverside City College’s Sadale Foster returns a punt from Orange Coast in the fourth quarter of play during the homecoming game on Oct. 16. The Tigers won 45-20 bringing them to 5-1 in their season.

Tigers kick it in gear for homecomingFor a SPORTS STORy see Page 16

Page 2: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

The Transfer Center is offering help to anyone in need of assistance with university applications. Interested students must register to attend the workshops.

The workshops for the California State University applications will end Nov. 24. The workshops for the University of California applications run Nov. 1 through

Nov. 29. For more information, call the Transfer/Career Center at 951-222-8446.

Assistance from the Transfer Center

News2 | October 21, 2010

California Autumn NightsThe Riverside City College culinary academy presents California Autumn Nights

on Oct. 22 at 1155 Spruce St. It will be an elegant evening with a six course meal, live jazz entertainment and

prizes. Tickets are $45 per person and benefit the student culinary competitions and other activities.

For more information, call 951-328-3575.

Free flu shotsRiverside City College students can get a free flu shot at Student Health. Walk in

and get vaccinated to protect yourself and others against the flu. Call Student Health and Psychological Services at 951-222-8151.

Donation drives charityTemple Fitness and the Riverside City College Softball team will be at Temple Fitness

on Nov. 13 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. collecting clothing, furniture, toys and electronics to benefit Goodwill job training and employment programs.

RCC is hosting a fun and safe Halloween environment for children 10 and under. There will be trick-or-treating, costume contests, game tables, and many more fun

activities. During the last few years, over 3,000 children have attended this fun event. This free event will be taking place in the Quad on Oct. 29.

Halloween is coming to RCC

Scholarships help ease students’ burdenThe online application process for Riverside Community College District scholarships

has begun. Interested students need to go to the financial aid page on the student services link of rcc.edu and click on scholarship information.

There are also informational pamphlets at the student financial services offices at Riverside, Norco and Moreno Valley colleges.

The deadline to apply is Dec. 8 at 5 p.m. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a

bill on Sept. 29 that will make it easier for community college students to transfer to a Cal State University.

“The bill will better align our higher education system, saving students time and money,” said state Sen. Alex Padilla in the LA Times Sept. 30.

The bill entitles that a student will need the same amount of units as required before, but also an associate degree at the college level.

When this is completed students will have the opportunity to transfer to their choice of a CSU and start their first semester as a junior.

The bill guarantees an enrollment spot at a CSU.

However, the CSU’s budget affects how many transfer students will be accepted per semester.

“I’m very happy with this law and can’t wait to see it put in play. I’m happy that our governor is finally helping out our school system,” said student Edurado Hernandez, who hopes to transfer to Cal State San Bernardino.

Although this bill is not to be put into effect until fall 2011, the director of the Transfer Center, Arturo Dassow, said that a statewide task force of CSU and California Community College personnel are working toward putting this bill into action within the proposed timeframe.

New transfer law is easysaNdra rodriguezSTAff WRITER

Many students are not aware that this bill has been passed.

“I didn’t even know they were trying to pass a law to help us transfer. I knew they were trying to help our schools but I didn’t think this is how they were going to go about it,” said RCC student Samantha Puerta.

Students worry that the law will cause a rise in transfer students, which will make it even harder for students to add classes.

Even worse, pushing student transfer years or graduation dates further back.

“The rate of transfer enrollment, as is the number of classes offered is more affected by state budget restrictions as opposed to enacting a new legislation,” Dassow said.

Mariane Baltizar a sophomore at RCC, doesn’t think the new law will make it harder to add classes.

“I honestly do not believe that adding classes will get any harder. I think if anything more students will expand their class selection,” she said.

Baltizar also expressed her interest in understanding the law so she could further her education.

“I looked it up a couple of times because I am seriously considering obtaining my associate and transferring somewhere out of state,” she said.

One concern is the success of this bill. Will this bill help students save time and money as the senator said, or could this bill put students behind in their career plans?

“The success of this legislation will depend on how it is put into action by the CSU and CCC systems in California,” Dassow said.

califorNia state uNiversityeducatioN first: San Diego State University is one of the colleges that students can utilize an easier path to transfer to under new legislation.

It will be easy for community college students to transfer with new bill passed

UC Berkley visits RCCUniversity of California Berkeley will be on the RCC campus on Oct. 28, from 4-6

p.m. in the Digital Library Auditorium to answer questions and give out information about transferring to the university.

Interested students have to register to attend in the Transfer Center or call 951-222- 8557.

A helping handFor students having trouble with their homework, there are people who can help. Tutorial Services offers help to anyone in need of it. The tutors are well-qualified

and have received a B or higher in the subject they are tutoring. for questions or to sign up to receive a tutoring session call 951-222-8170.

Viewpoints receives awardsThe Riverside City College newspaper Viewpoints received both print and online

General Excellence awards from the Journalism Association of Community Colleges in its annual Southern California conference on Oct. 16 at California State Fullerton.

Student journalists from community colleges throughout Southern California competed by entering stories, photos and designs published in their student newspapers during the fall 2009 and spring 2010 semesters.

This is the first time in the newspaper’s history its received the General Excellence awards for both Viewpoints and Viewpoints Online.

Under the spell of the ‘Bee’The Landis Performing Arts Center will host the Broadway musical “The 25th Annual

Putnum County Spelling Bee” for its off Broadway series. Performances will be on Oct. 28, 29 and 30 at 7 p.m. and Oct. 30 and 31 at 2 p.m. Get tickets at the Landis Performing Arts Center. Call 951-222-8100 for tickets or

visit www.landispac.com.

Page 3: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

School for the Arts. This $60 million school is

scheduled to be finalized by 2014 on University Avenue and Market Street.

Other projects in the works on that intersection include a new culinary center and the Mine Okubo Center for Social Justice, with an art gallery featuring works by the Riverside born artist.

This project is due for opening on June 27, 2012. All of the projects together are estimated to cost $88 million to build, incorporating renovations and new construction.

Chancellor Gray, publicized Mr. Coil’s gift to a group of Riverside leaders during an engagement at the Mission Inn.

He said in The Press Enterprise that the construction costs for the new school for the arts will be paid for with public funds and the $5 million gift from Coil will be utilized to fund programs for the school, as well as endowed professorships.

ViewpointsServing students since 1922News October 21, 2010 | 3

daniel balboa / SPECIAl TO vIEwPOInTS

an honorable award: Riverside Community College District Chancellor Gregory Gray announces the Gates Foundation award that will fund the Communities Learning in Partnership Initiative.

rCC awarded prestigious grantTakahiro kuorsakiSTAff wRITER

A f t e r g o i n g t h r o u g h a competitive process among 13 cities in the United States, the City of Riverside and Riverside City College won a grant to launch their innovative project to improve college access and success in the city.

On Sept. 27, the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation announced that it would award Riverside a $3 million grant over the next three years to support implementation of the Communities learning in Partnership Initiative, a coordinated community partnership project to boost their postsecondary completion rates.

The City of Riverside and RCC had already gathered with key educational, business and community institutions and groups over the past nine months to devise new ways of helping more students successfully complete an education after high school.

wi t h t h e g r a n t , R C C implements the project aiming to increase the associate degree completion rates from the current number of 14 percent to 20 percent by 2013.

“Four cities in the United States were chosen, and Riverside was one of those. So we feel very appreciative and fortunate,” said Riverside Community College District Chancellor Gregory Gray. “we believe we have the right plan

at the right time.” RCC is facing its lowest

associate degree completion rates now.

According to a press release, it was shown that only 17.5 percent of the entering seniors in the class of 2002 had earned a degree or certificate six years later.

The low college completion rates indicates a number of students who are not academically ready for college-level work, who juggle school and family responsibilities and who must work full-time while attending classes.

“Our vision of success is a community where all students who have the desire to earn a degree or credential will also have a way to get one rather than fighting barriers,” Gray said. “we will remove them. That’s the goal.”

with the grant, RCC will take several strategic approaches including: working with the city to create an environment where college completion is valued and aligning academic standards between high school and college.

“The way that they shared the data is never happened before, which means we’re finding out a lot more. So we can help our students,” said executive dean of workforce development Shelagh Camak.

Although the approaches

require a community concerted effort among higher education institutions, government agencies and other business and community groups, the planning process has shown the solidarity of a citywide partnership and effort within Riverside.

“The beautiful thing was the partnership among the two school districts, the Mayor’s office, the Chamber of Commerce and ourselves,” Camak said. “The partnership was really cemented throughout the process, and even if we did not receive the funding, we knew that we could work together so well.”

In addition to receiving a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation, Henry w. Coil, Jr. of Tilden-Coil Constructors Inc. donated $5 million to the RCCD.

The $5 million donation, the largest ever to the district is going to fund programs at the Riverside School of the Arts, which will be named after Coil’s parents; The Henry w. and Alice Edna Coil

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daniel balboa / SPECIAl TO vIEwPOInTS

granTing eduCaTion: Local student Samuel Morgan talks about why the CLIP initiative will make a difference.

Page 4: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

California legislature agrees on budget after 90 day stalemate

Students struggle with being put on a waitlist, gamble on entry into essential classes Caitlin ElisonStaff Writer

News4 | October 21, 2010

enrollment in community colleges may be up, but that does not necessarily mean students are getting into classes.

California community colleges have faced $520 million in budget cuts during the 2009-2010 year which has caused many colleges to reduce classes by 20 percent and riverside City College is no different.

Many classes have been cut, and students are struggling to get enough units in order to graduate and possibly transfer to a four-year university.

according to ins t ructor rosemarie Sarkis, several language courses, including Latin, Greek, and Korean, have been cut for the time being.

furthermore, if not enough

Waiting becomes the normstudents’ sign up for french 2 in spring, that section will also be cut indefinitely.

these budget cuts come at a time when more students than ever are seeking admission to community colleges.

Students who enroll intend to complete a two-year education then transfer to a four-year university.

the largest high school senior class in California’s history graduated in 2010, leaving many four-year universities full.

in addition, many students cannot afford four-year university tuition due to rising college costs.

Student richard Sanchez was waitlisted for all of his classes this semester.

though it may seem shocking, Sanchez is not alone.

“the waitlists have a lot of people, so it sometimes makes it

difficult to get into the wait lists, let alone the actual class,” Sanchez said.

General education classes typically have the longest waitlists, because every student is competing for a spot.

Student Jacob Walker says he knows this situation all too well. He was waitlisted for his math class, and almost did not get in.

“It is generally difficult to get into general education courses because so many people are trying to get in, but there are only a set number of classes available,” Walker said.

even after students get past the waitlists and successfully enroll in a class, they could be looking at an enlarged time frame for transferring or getting a degree.

Many students are forced to take classes they need at a later time, which in turn sets back their

nita GandhiNeWS editor

Even with a $10 billion deficit the 2011-2012 state budget was agreed on oct. 8.

according to a document from Scott Lay, executive vice president and Ceo of the Community College League of California, community colleges in California will receive $206 million in new funds.

t h e b r eakdown of the budget i s w i t h a 2.21 percent en ro l lmen t g r o w t h i s $126 million, $35 million is to backfill categor ical cuts imposed in 2010, $25 mill ion for economic and Wo r k f o r c e development programs, and $20 million for Career technology programs equals to the $206 million that Lay stated in the document.

Lay states in the document the budget is flawed, but it is good for community colleges.

“the state budget provides funding for about 25,000 new full-time equivalent students in community colleges, expands targeted job training in high-demand industries, and provides colleges with some funds to mitigate the deep categorical program cuts imposed last year,” Lay wrote in an e-mail.

aaron Brown, the associate vice chancellor of finance at

riverside City College thinks highly of the new budget the state passed.

“the overall state budget, i think actually is a very good budget for community colleges and rCC in particular because we receive growth funding,” Brown said.

“We also didn’t receive any reductions in our general portion,”

Brown said. this i s

good thing f o r r C C s t u d e n t s b e c a u s e i t m e a n s tha t there w i l l b e a continuation of programs for students.

“in the c u r r e n t e c o n o m i c time we are in having a budget that b a s i c a l l y leaves you whole plus

a little bit of growth money is really a favorable situation for us,” Brown said.

“So that means we can continue to offer programs to students like we have in the past year,” Brown said.

a bad part about the new budget is that the $189 million increase is paid from a new deferral of $189 million from the 2010-2011 fiscal year to the 2011-2012 fiscal year which will total an inter year deferral of $892 million, Lay wrote in another document.

Lay wrote in an e-mail that his concern is to fund the new initiatives the state is essentially borrowing from the 2011-2012

budget by deferring the cash for the new investments to July 2011.

“the budget is believed to rely on many overly optimistic assumptions that will likely require mid-year cuts, overseen by the new governor,” Lay wrote in a document.

Brown said that the chancellor of rCC Gregory Gray made it clear that there will be no more section cuts to the colleges’ budget for this fiscal year.

Chancellor Gray and Jim Buysse, vice chancellor of administration and finance were not available for comment as of press time.

departments in the college apply for grants throughout the year for money.

S p e c i f i c a l l y f o r t h e i r departments to stop class cuts from happening.

rCC recently received a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation of $3 million over the next three years and a $5 million grant from Henry W. Coil, Jr. of tilden-Coil Constructors inc. for the school of the arts that will be named after Coil’s parents.

the $5 million from Coil is the highest amount ever given to rCC in its history.

“in the current economic time, i think this is a pretty favorable budget for community colleges,” Brown said.

“things could have been a lot worse given with what we are faced with; the state is faced with a $19 million budget deficit and for us not to take any reductions in this fiscal year is a favorable situation,” Brown said.

for more information and continuing updates on the state budget go to viewpointsonline.org.

educational goals.“it would be much easier to

get into the classes and waitlists i need if they would stop cutting courses,” Sanchez said. “if they continue to, it will take me longer to transfer.”

another common side effect to class cuts is problems with financial aid.

Many students have either lost or been at risk of losing their full-time financial aid status because they could not enroll in enough units.

“My second semester at rCC i did not make it into a class,” said student Nikki Collard. “i was enrolled in 10 units and needed 12, which made me lose my full time financial aid.”

Walker receives financial aid each semester, and has been in the same situation as Collard.

“there have been multiple

occasions where i was in danger of losing my full-time status because of waitlisted classes,” Walker said.

Sanchez made the suggestion that rCC should focus on opening more general education sections, because those are the classes required for students to transfer.

However, other students do not see this as the answer.

“i think it is best if they keep a good mix (of classes),” Walker said. “Courses that some people do not find important may be important in the eyes of others.”

according to Collard, the solution is not which classes are offered, but rather careful planning.

“i helped my boyfriend get almost full-time units his first semester,” Collard said. “You just have to plan it out right and know what to take and when.”

Community colleges receive $206 million from budget

““in the current economic time, i think this is a pretty favorable budget for community colleges”

-- Aaron Brown RCC associate vice

chancellor of finance

Page 5: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

opinionsViewpoints staff EDIToRIAL

Letters to the editor should be kept to 250 words or less. Deliver letters to the Viewpoints office in the room behind the Assessment Building. Viewpoints reserves the right to edit letters for space and to reject libelous or obscene letters. Letters to the editor and columns represent the opinions of the individual writers and do not necessarily reflect those of the entire Viewpoints staff, Viewpoints faculty advisers, student government, faculty, administration nor the Board of Trustees.

LetteRsTO THE

eDitoR

eDitoR-in-CHiefStephanie Holland

(951) 222-8495 [email protected]

[email protected]

ManaGinG eDitoRJavier Cabrera(951) 222-8488

[email protected]

aDVeRtisinG ManaGeRVanessa Soto

(951) 222-8488 [email protected]

faCULtY aDViseRsAllan Lovelace

Dan Evans

pRintinG sCHeDULeCopy deadline: Oct. 26Photo deadline: Oct. 27Ad deadline: Oct. 27Next issue: Nov. 4

Viewpoints is a public forum, First Amendment newspaper. Student editors have authority to make all content decisions without censorship or advance approval.

© 2010 by the Viewpoints staff, Riverside City College, 4800 Magnolia Avenue, Riverside, CA. 92506-0528. All rights re-served. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission of the Viewpoints Editor-in-Chief.

Chad AriasJoel Avila

Monique BerduoChristian BowersNicole BurdetteJesse CastroKyle Crouse

Meagan CunninghamLily Dsouza

Caitlin EliasonMichael Fawcett

Dominique FranklinLeah Frost

Sahara GareyAndrew Gonzalez

Jason HoAntonia Huerta

Lonny HuffMecedes Jaudon

Richardson Jean-BaptisteRebecca Kern

STAFF

Viewpoints’ editorials represent the majority opinion of and are written by the Viewpoints student editorial board.

viewpointsReaCH Us:

PHONE: (951) 222-8488 E-mAil: [email protected] in Chief PHONE: (951) 222-8495

R I V E R s I D E C I T Y C o L L E G E

Vol. XXXViV, no. 3 october 21, 2010

MeMbeR:

Associated Collegiate Press

Journalism Association of Community Colleges

California Newspaper Publishers Association

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

senioR staff assistantKhai Le

[email protected]

news eDitoRNita Gandhi

[email protected]

opinions eDitoRSonja Eide

[email protected]

spoRts eDitoRDanielle Schmidt

[email protected]

insCape eDitoRJuan Aguilar

[email protected]

featURes eDitoRShardai Perry

[email protected]

pHoto eDitoRLauren Garcia

[email protected]

Takahiro KurosakiRyan Lynch

Fred McCarthyChristina Melgoza

John MendozaD’Zhane Parker

Garth PullenFatima Ramsey

Sandra RodriguezDenise Ruiz

Gabriella SalasSergio Santamaria

Clayton SkaggsAbrendal SmithKathryn SnyderKate StarbuckCloie Swain

Steve ThomsenJohanna Vasquez

Mailee Virgen-AguilarBilly Yang

In the midst of California’s financial meltdown, two contenders have stepped up to duke it out and let voters decide who will take the helm during these troubling times.

Unfortunately, the two candidates seem more than content to bulldoze each other’s reputations rather than focus on discussing and finding adequate remedies for the state’s problems.

Meg Whitman and Jerry Brown, the leading Republican and Democratic gubernatorial nominees, have been relentlessly flooding every media outlet available in an attempt to drag each other’s names through the mud.

In their most recent skirmish, Brown lambasted Whitman for employing an undocumented immigrant. Meanwhile, Whitman demanded an apology after one of Brown’s campaign aides was caught on voice mail calling Whitman a “whore” with Brown agreeing in the background.

These politicians have a firm grip on the other’s dirty laundry and are determined to air it out for all to see, and it’s not letting up any time soon.

Oddly, they both have taken to attacking people from their respective parties as well. Whitman criticized the other Republican candidate, Steve Poizner, after she beat him, and Brown has made public his distaste for Bill Clinton, even though Clinton endorsed him.

It seems anyone who might step into the picture to derail his or her personal vendetta is caught up in the chaos. And it appears that their back-and-forth denouncement of each other’s actions is gaining momentum as the election inches closer and closer.

With the economy in shambles and California’s actor-turned-governor twiddling his thumbs in anticipation of being booted from office, it is apparent that voters are left

with choosing the lesser of two evils.It is clear that citizens cannot trust either of them to lift

the state from the mire if they are more concerned with roasting their opponent at the stake. Does it have to come down to who has made themselves look better in the media rather than who has the most desirable plan to ensure the state’s survival?

California is in crucial need of a leader that will take initiative and create a plan that will get the state out of financial disaster, not one that will bicker like a child with their adversary.

Negative campaigning and petty quarreling merely serves as a distraction to voters, and it’s become a distressing trend in any type of election.

If the current candidates for governor take the attention off the fiscal situation by making their competitor look fallacious, they can gain support without actually saying anything valuable about themselves or their platform.

The question of why anyone would want to take the reins as the state’s financial situation veers further out of control must also be raised.

What’s in it for each candidate? Whitman has the chance to prove her political savvy, while Brown has a chance to end his career on a potential high note.

Neither petitioner appears to be concerned with providing a secure feeling for taxpayers, as both campaigns dish out vague promises for the future and withering remarks about their opponent.

Stuck in the middle of this grave debacle are the voters, who will once again have to cross their fingers as they check ballot boxes and hope for the best.

Whatever the outcome of November’s election, it’s clear: no one is getting out without getting dirty first.

October 21, 2010 | 5

JeRRY konstanin anD MeG wHitMan CaMpaiGn

babY-kisseRs oR MUDsLinGeRs?: California gubernatorial candidates Jerry Brown and meg Whitman are more focused on attacking each other instead of rectifying the state’s problems.

battle of the bureaucrats

Page 6: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

Marijuana tax necessary

for state revenue

Igniting California’s votersOpinions6 | October 21, 2010

In t imes of desperation, desperate measures should be called upon to shed new light on the current situation. The crisis at hand is that California, America’s highest populated and grossing state, is on the verge of bankruptcy.

State legislation has tried everything to revive its once booming economy. Citizens of California have sat back for the past eight years watching their beloved state create futile attempts at solving the problem.

It is evident that with the current economy, revenue needed to run California is not going to come from the labor force. New out of the box ideas are needed to help stimulate a lifeless financial state.

Proposition 19 states that if marijuana was made legal, it could be taxed and better controlled by the state. If passed California could make an estimated 1.4 billion dollars that could be used to aid the failing education system or other state funded programs.

Proposition 19 was not created on a moral stance but on a financial one. The fact is that California is hard up for revenue and this new tax could help solve the problem. Items such as alcohol and cigarettes (harmful substances) are already being taxed. If marijuana was to be added to the list, it would be the least harmful of the three.

Alcohol and tobacco carry a physical dependency that marijuana does not.

Out of any drug, alcohol is the only one that can cause fatality during withdrawal. Alcohol is legal and its fatality rate is far higher than marijuana’s will ever be. About 10,000 people die each year in California due to alcohol.

According to drugwarfacts.org the number of deaths related to marijuana is 0 a year. The statistics speak for themselves. If marijuana is safer than alcohol then why not legalize it and get some revenue?

Cigarettes cause 400,000 premature deaths in America each year and yet they are legal smoke. Why is there such an opposition to marijuana when it is a harmless substance?

It is safe to say that most of those who oppose Proposition 19 have never smoked marijuana. They have been brought up with propaganda that states if you

get high you die. The idea that marijuana turns you into some kind of zombie or vegetable is completely irrational and false. This stereotype needs to be ripped out of close minded opposers. It is impossible to make a judgment on something they have never tried.

People are going to smoke marijuana whether or not it is legal. Billions of dollars are spent every year trying to enforce a law that will never succeed. Eight hundred thousand people in America go to jail each year for marijuana related offenses. Why are police wasting valuable time on harmless stoners? Murders, domestic violence, rape, and vandalism all take place while the police focus on a harmless substance. Its an outrage to send someone to jail for marijuana when it costs around $60,000 a year to keep them there. Marijuana being an illegal substance costs Californians far more than if it was legal.

The state’s job is to make sure it can be self supporting and do the greatest good for the greatest amount of people. Proposition 19 is a new way to make this dream more plausible.

Marijuana becoming legal does not mean that the entire state will indulge in its new found freedoms. The same amount of citizens will smoke it like they always have, except this time the state will be profiting from it.

An underground network of cartels and dealers will be put out of business. Their black market product will not be needed anymore. Where there is demand, there is supply. If local farmers are meeting the demand then marijuana from Mexico will not be needed. This effect will lessen the tornado of crime that has been waged by drug cartels. Keeping money in the local vicinity will circulate helping each county get back on its feet.

It is a fact that people will always smoke marijuana and the government can do nothing about it.

If legalized by Proposition 19, less people will be thrown in jail, saving tax dollars for more useful things. Police can shift their patrolling to more impertinent matters. Crime over drug turf will become more and more a thing of the past. The state will receive more revenue and start to crawl out of the hole where it has fallen.

Proposition 19 is not the entire answer to California’s financial woes. It is a stepping stone that California can use to propel itself towards a full recovery. It is time for a new wave of ideas to flow through California. Proposition 19 is aimed to save a withering state, and if given the chance, it will do so.

Chad arIasEdITOr’S ASSISTANT

sergIo santamarIaEdITOr’S ASSISTANT

Legalizing drug has no

economic benefitsPOINT

COUNTERPOINT

November is just around the corner and Californians will face an important decision on whether to legalize marijuana. A large amount of people in today’s community are all for it, but is it the right thing to do? California is in need of revenue and the right thing to do would not be to legalize and marijuana.

The idea that this will help the economy is complete nonsense and it will also not allow enforcement to focus on more important crimes. It is common sense that these thoughts will surely lead to utter chaos and sink California into a grave of madness.

The proposition screams of crocodile tears in hopes that Californians will take it for the change it needs. Once engulfed in the problems it will bring, there will be no escape.

Many for the proposition will aim towards Amsterdam’s “coffee shop” marijuana sales, which is where marijuana is sold most and distributed to the public more often than other retail, but they do not know the full scoop. The dutch have reduced from thousands of shops to only a few hundred, and this is due to “drug tourists,” drug-related organized crime, and public nuisance problems.

That’s aside from the tripling of lifetime use rates, and the doubling of use among 18 to 20 year olds.

Now back in California, a 2004 meta-analysis showed that between 4 percent and 14 percent of drivers who sustained injuries or died in traffic accidents tested positive for THC, or delta 9 tetrahydrocannabinol, which is the active ingredient in marijuana.

Legalizing marijuana would lead to more accidents due to its affects such as affecting driver’s judgment, motor skills, and reaction time. This is only one risk aside from the handful that could harm the body mentally and physically.

The biggest risk that many are brainwashed to ignore is simply addiction. The drug can be easy to get hooked on, and then it goes downhill from there.

The economic benefits that many expect from the tax of marijuana if legalized are myths.

drugs already regulated and taxed such as alcohol and tobacco are not typically grown or made.

Consumers accept high taxes on them as retail.

Marijuana, on the other hand, is easy to cultivate indoors or outdoors and Proposition 19 would allow individuals to grow 25 square feet of marijuana for themselves.

Now this would not get out of hand at all, because everyone would be volunteering to pay taxes on marijuana if it were legalized. Of course not.

The underground market has been in this business longer than anyone would have expected and for them to adapt to undercut taxes would barely diminish.

The tax revenue alcohol and tobacco generate at the moment cannot surpass the costs given to health care and criminal justice due to many incidents due to just these drugs. For example, every dollar society collects in taxes on alcohol, we end up spending eight more in social costs.

What a way to help out our economy at the moment by giving the community another drug to abuse.

At least the law will concentrate on “real” crimes, but it will be the proposition that will bring forth a burden. Law enforcement currently doesn’t make much effort to arrest adults whose only crime is possessing small amounts of marijuana.

The proposition would burden officers by requiring them to enforce laws such as getting caught “ingesting or smoking marijuana while minors are present.”

does this come in effect when used in a private home and is a minor “present” if they are 15 or 20 feet away?

California law enforcement would have to be ignoring gunshots to be on the lookout for adults taking hits in front of children.

Clearly, if legalized, marijuana will jeopardize California to the point where drastic measures will have to be enforced. don’t take the proposition as a joke, it can and will ruin our society as we know it.

To a v o i d d e s t r o y i n g communities and millions of people’s lives, make Proposition 19 a thing of the past.

It’s not rocket science to know that legalizing marijuana will not solve California’s budget crisis or reduce criminal justice costs.

Everyone for the proposition now is just going for the legalization to be able to do it in plain view, and due to shortened attention span and distractibility that the drug does they will forget to even vote. But there is a much bigger group that will make sure it is not passed due to the truth.

There are other ways to help California, but not this way.

Page 7: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922Opinions October 21, 2010 | 7

Time to put an end to the struggle for wage equality

Whitman embroiled in scandal

Image courtesy of: Meg Whitman Campaign

Every e l ec t i on season , candidates are exposed and opponents do whatever they can to raise their image by tearing down the competition. This year is no different for Meg Whitman and her campaign as it slowly begins to crumble.

Running against Jerry Brown for California governor, the New York native Republican has a huge elephant sitting in every room she enters.

Last year, housekeeper Nicky Diaz Santillan, admitted to her employer, Whitman, that she is an undocumented immigrant. Santillan made it publicly aware via her lawyer Gloria Allred, that Whitman was well informed of her citizenship status and that Whitman treated her poorly.

Whitman denies ever knowing about the illegal status as well as denies ever seeing letters from the Social Security Administration regarding mismatching information in Santillan’s documents.

Whitman has a thick past with business including her former position as chief executive of EBay, senior vice president at Walt Disney Co. and general manager at Hasbro Inc.

Although her resume is full of great leadership skills in a business world, where will she stand in actually creating a functioning California?

She has not taken responsibility in her actions of hiring an illegal immigrant when she stands so strong in the fight to tighten our state’s borders in cooperation with

the nation as a whole. Whitman’s platform consists

of promises to create at least 2 million private-sector jobs by 2015, chopping $15 million out of the California spending budget, as well as creating letter grades for schools to give accountability to failing schools and expand charter schools to improve choice.

Unlike her Democrat ic opponent Brown, she strongly supports the t ightening of California’s southern border to keep immigrants from taking American dollars.

Whitman addresses her stance on immigration as the “need to build an ‘Economic Fence’ with a strong e-verification system that holds employers accountable for following the law. We are never going to solve the problem of illegal immigration as long as there is strong demand for undocumented labor.”

The Whitman family hired Santillan in 2000, where she provided a Social Security card and California driver’s license and falsely proved her citizenship.

In 2003, the Social Security Administration sent a letter to Santillan noting that there were discrepancies with her Social Security documents.

Though Whitman denies seeing any letter, the media were released a copy of the letter addressed to Whitman and her husband Griffith Harsh. The letter informed the couple that Santillan’s earnings couldn’t be put on the employee’s Social Security record until the information given matched the government records. Harsh said he did not recall receiving the letter, as it was sent seven years ago, it is possible that he would have noted a follow up for Santillan. “Nicky Please check this Thanks,” is scribbled at the bottom of the letter.

This scandal has definitely affected her campaign in ways that

may be irreversible. It places her in a state of mockery because she has gone against one of the platforms that is said to be most crucial to California, border strengthening. Rasmussen Report polls have shown that before Santillan’s immigration status became public, Brown and Whitman were virtually tied, Brown with 47 percent over Whitman’s 46 percent of voters support. Now they stand with a substantial gap. Brown trumps holding 49 percent of voters’ support and Whitman with 44 percent. May it be that this scandal turns Whitman into a hypocrite if all facts stand true? Are voters seeing that Brown has more experience with politics and might have a better vision for California than the greedy businesswoman, Whitman?

So what if Whitman fired Santillan? As a true politician, she had to follow appropriate measures to ensure her campaign would be unharmed by her mistake. Doesn’t look like it did much help. It only threw Santillan under the bus in tears as she now tries to fight for citizenship after working in an American home close to nine years, with no help from her emotionless former employer.

It is absolutely ridiculous that it took this amount of time for Santillan’s citizenship status to become knowledge in the home. Especially in the heart of southern California where over 60 percent of Los Angeles county informal work force are undocumented persons.

There is no doubt that Whitman had known about the undocumented status and is becoming extremely hypocritical in her campaign. She began producing campaign ads in Spanish to acquire support from the California Latino community.

If she wants to support the Latino community, then why not help Santillan in gaining her citizenship? Whitman would

have been able to then keep her housekeeper and Santillan would have been able to keep receiving her $23 per hour.

Whitman is trying to save face and appeal to a community in a demeaning way. She does not support the D.R.E.A.M. Act which not only allows alien students to receive education from the higher educational institutions that set our nation apart but also to give the students an irrevocable status of citizenship.

Whitman said, “I don’t think it’s fair to bar and eliminate the ability of California citizens to attend higher universities and favor undocumented (students.)”

Whitman has to be held responsible a 100 percent for having a non-citizen working

under her roof for nearly nine years. Brown criticized Whitman during a debate saying that she shouldn’t be running for governor if she cannot stand strong and admit fault.

Whether her fault or not, she ought to apologize and start fresh. He claimed that she blamed the housekeeper, blamed her competition, the left and the unions, but she never once accepted any form of responsibility.

This is tearing apart Whitman’s accountability and trustworthiness and will ultimately falsify her campaign as a whole.

Whitman made a huge mistake and because of this her supporters may not vote for her, giving Brown the upper hand in the running for California governor.

RebeCCa keRnASST. oPINIoNS EDIToR

CloIe sWaInSTAFF WRITER

Beggars can’t be choosers. This mantra, repeated by the

throngs of unemployed Americans, has become a chant in the minds of those desperate for a job.

With unemployment in its 17th month of being at least nine percent or more of the population and having 95,000 jobs lost this past September, the alleged end of the recession apparently doesn’t apply to the majority of the country that it was being bleated to by mouthpieces and press releases.

For the minority of employed workers, the situation fares better, but just barely.

Cut hours, reductions in benefits

and wage are only a few symptoms resulting from desperate business owners to stay afloat as the rest of the country sinks.

But how can being one of the privileged few with a job have even more negative impact based on something predetermined before birth?

Being a woman.Females in the American

workplace will earn, on average, 77 cents to every one-dollar that a man makes doing the same job.

In an economy where people are literally scrounging for change, those missed 23 cents make an impact.

The truly offensive aspect of this is the archaic nature of the gap.

Women and men can get the same educations, the same qualifications and can do the same quality of work.

So what justifies paying someone, who in all respects is an equal, less than another based strictly on which box they check

on forms to indicate gender?While many are outraged by the

inconsistency in wages between genders, what is more concerning is how little attention this struggle for equal pay is getting in the mainstream media.

With the foreclosure drama, Brett Favre’s alleged indecent exposure, and Hungary being buried under feet of toxic mud, it is reasonable to expect much of the attention to be diverted to things that will generate clicks and views as opposed to something that many people are unaware of.

It is unacceptable not to be educated about the battle for wage equality.

Not only the nation, but also the female population of the Riverside Community College District, should be aware of the battle going on on their behalf.

The legislation, the Fair Pay Act sponsored by Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa and Delegate Eleanor Holmes of the District of Columbia, would mark an attempt

to establish equal pay for equal work.

It also has scores of fans that would like to see it turned into a law.

According to the site Pay-Equity.org, over 80 percent of people registered to vote are in favor of some form of new legislation to ensure that equal pay becomes a reality, instead of just a hopeful policy.

Much like the debate over gay marriage, gender equality has faced its share of hurdles in spite of the gains it has made.

Many people support it, but the lack of momentum on important issues often halts the progress right before something important is addressed.

The importance of having a fair pay scale regardless of sex is the underlying meaning in it.

When society begins to demand equal pay for equal work, it will emulate what the theory of trickle-down economics state (except it will actually work), and begin

to spread into all areas of the American social spectrum.

A c k n o w l e d g m e n t a n d enforcement of equality is the first important step towards gaining it in its truest sense.

This act is no exception, which is why it is so crucial to be informed about it.

Knowing is half the battle, and with widespread exposure of the injustices in the work force affecting women, there is an opportunity to make an effectual change.

While some may question the necessity for laws such as this one, there is an obligation that needs to be fulfilled by its passage, if only symbolically.

Since the women’s suffrage movement of the early Twentieth century, women have gained the same status as their male counterparts in American society.

But the discrepancies in pay are a glaring blight on that fact, and this bill offers an opportunity to correct this.

Page 8: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

In this day and age, where the whole 3-D revolution has taken over, one must ask themselves sensible questions.

For example, “is making a movie where a bunch of testosterone bound idiots who puke and defecate on the camera in three dimensions necessary?”

The answer is a resounding: no, it is not at all. But my goodness, is it amusing. Anyone who can deny that they didn’t at least giggle for every 3-D slow motion fist to the face or kick to the groin has no funny bone, or at least has no juvenile funny bone.

How appropriate that a 3-D “Beavis and Butthead” introduced the movie, which was probably the best thing to ever be done in box office history. Throughout the whole movie the audience will no doubt ask “why is this in 3-D? What’s the point?”

Then they’ll forget and marvel at the idiocy the filmmakers somehow pulled off in three dimensions in this hilarious and somewhat familiar sequel from America’s favorite band of idiots in “Jackass 3-D.”

So how is this different from the other two movies, besides the 3-D gimmick? Not that different at all. There’s still the same disgusting and often dangerous skits that fueled the other reality based movies, and in some ways this one didn’t really step it up from the other two. That’s not to say that you won’t laugh until it hurts, but it really doesn’t deviate from the formula in any significant way.

Anyone who’s seen the show, or even a commercial for the show, knows what to expect. Johnny Knoxville, the fearless leader of the Jackass squad, has survived an amazing career and constantly puts his life in jeopardy for his fan’s amusement. For that, they owe him their gratitude. But that doesn’t mean that this broke any new or exciting ground.

Most of the pranks that occur are so disgusting they can’t be written about in a newspaper, but suffice it to say it is larger and grosser than ever before. However, this time around didn’t feel like the step up that “Jackass 2” achieved.

One of the skits involves Johnny Knoxville dressing up as an old man and pretending to make out with his granddaughter, only to be caught by his wife and the girl’s grandmother. It was kind of funny, but didn’t achieve the same guttural laugh as in the second movie where he gives his grandson cigarettes and gets confronted by an angry tough-guy wannabe.

But some of the 3-D gags are hilarious. Bam Margera has a special section called “Rocky” where he splashes an unsuspecting victim with water and then punches them in the face with a boxing glove. The slow motion 3-D effect that results is truly a piece of cinematic genius.

And watching Steve-O play tetherball with a beehive is also an amazing example of all that this movie did right. You see the swarm swoop past the glasses and come to marvel at the complexity of a shot that good on a movie this stupid.

It’s hard to really be critical of such idiots, so there will be none. It’s more of the same, but this time around the fun’s in 3-D. Anyone who bought a ticket and left disappointed, didn’t take the time to absorb the Jackass formula and decide if it worked for them or not.

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

‘Jackass’ takes the 3-D experience to a new level

Steve thomSenStaff Writer

Images courtesy of: Paramount Pictures

8 | October 21, 2010 October 21, 2010 | 9

In this day and age, where the whole 3-D revolution has taken over, one must ask themselves sensible questions.

For example, “is making a movie where a bunch of testosterone bound idiots who puke and defecate on the camera in three dimensions necessary?”

The answer is a resounding: no, it is not at all. But my goodness, is it amusing. Anyone who can deny that they didn’t at least giggle for every 3-D slow motion fist to the face or kick to the groin has no funny bone, or at least has no juvenile funny bone.

How appropriate that a 3-D “Beavis and Butthead” introduced the movie, which was probably the best thing to ever be done in box office history. Throughout the whole movie the audience will no doubt ask “why is this in 3-D? What’s the point?”

Then they’ll forget and marvel at the idiocy the filmmakers somehow pulled off in three dimensions in this hilarious and somewhat familiar sequel from America’s favorite band of idiots in “Jackass 3-D.”

So how is this different from the other two movies, besides the 3-D gimmick? Not that different at all. There’s still the same disgusting and often dangerous skits that fueled the other reality based movies, and in some ways this one didn’t really step it up from the other two. That’s not to say that you won’t laugh until it hurts, but it really doesn’t deviate from the formula in any significant way.

Anyone who’s seen the show, or even a commercial for the show, knows what to expect. Johnny Knoxville, the fearless leader of the Jackass squad, has survived an amazing career and constantly puts his life in jeopardy for his fan’s amusement. For that, they owe him their gratitude. But that doesn’t mean that this broke any new or exciting ground.

Most of the pranks that occur are so disgusting they can’t be written about in a newspaper, but suffice it to say it is larger and grosser than ever before. However, this time around didn’t feel like the step up that “Jackass 2” achieved.

One of the skits involves Johnny Knoxville dressing up as an old man and pretending to make out with his granddaughter, only to be caught by his wife and the girl’s grandmother. It was kind of funny, but didn’t achieve the same guttural laugh as in the second movie where he gives his grandson cigarettes and gets confronted by an angry tough-guy wannabe.

But some of the 3-D gags are hilarious. Bam Margera has a special section called “Rocky” where he splashes an unsuspecting victim with water and then punches them in the face with a boxing glove. The slow motion 3-D effect that results is truly a piece of cinematic genius.

And watching Steve-O play tetherball with a beehive is also an amazing example of all that this movie did right. You see the swarm swoop past the glasses and come to marvel at the complexity of a shot that good on a movie this stupid.

It’s hard to really be critical of such idiots, so there will be none. It’s more of the same, but this time around the fun’s in 3-D. Anyone who bought a ticket and left disappointed, didn’t take the time to absorb the Jackass formula and decide if it worked for them or not.

Steve thomSenStaff Writer

‘Jackass’ takes the 3-D experience to a new level

Page 9: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

Coming around with new music

10 | October 21, 2010

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

MOVIES“Fame”“Surrogates”“Pandorum”“All Shook Up” at

Landis PACAlejandra Guzman at

PechangaNorm McDonald at

Irvine Improv

Viewpoints Enter ta inment CalendarOct. 22 Oct. 23 Oct. 24 Oct. 25 Oct. 26

Oct. 27 Oct. 28 Oct. 29 Oct. 30 Oct. 31

MOVIES“Paranormal Activity 2”

“The Company Men”“Inhale”EVENTS

Photography in the Owens Valley

at UCR Extensionfrom 1-5 p.m.

Birds of Anza Borregoat UC Riverside Fine Arts

from 7-9 p.m.

EVENTSBook Signing: “Night of the Living Trekkies” by Kevin

David Anderson at the the Riverside Plaza

Border at 4 p.m.Zontober Fest: A

Luncheon, Paddle and Silent Auction

at Phood on Main in Riverside from

10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

EVENTSFirst Annual Spay-ghetti

Dinner at Elks Lodge in Riverside

from 5-8 p.m.28th Annual Friends Of U.C. Riverside Botanic Gardens Fall Plant Saleat the UC Riverside Fine

Arts from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

EVENTSSkalloween, The

Skeletones and Chase Long Beach at The Barn in

Riversde from 7:30-11 p.m.

Author Tom Lutz book signing and Q&A

at the Riverside Plaza Border’s from 7-8:30 p.m.

EVENTSBut First, Define The Mountain:

Joey Lehman Morrisat the UC Riverside Fine Arts

from 12-5 p.m.Lunchtime Learning

“Disability Etiquette”at the UC Riverside Fine Arts

from 12-2 p.m.

MOVIES“Monsters”“Saw 3-D”

“Welcome to the Rilevs”“Wild Target”

EVENTS“The Color Purple”

at the Fox Performing Arts Center at 8 p.m.

EVENTSThe Coven Next Door:

Reading The Early Modern Witch In Horror

Films Of The ‘60s And ‘70s

at the UC Riverside Fine Arts from 12:30-2 p.m.

Employment Law at the UCR Extension from 6-9 p.m..

EVENTSROCK with

Micah Justice at the Mission Tobacco Lounge in

Riverside at 7 p.m.Alan Disparte: InterNatural

at the Riverside Art Museum from

10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

EVENTSWheels to Warbirds Cruiseat the Riverside Municipal

Airport Hangar “S” from 8-11 a.m.

Victoria Gardens Fall Festat The Victoria Gardens in

Rancho Cucamonga at 10 a.m.

EVENTSBook Signing with Author Paulina Jaramillo, “The

American Southwest: Pride ~ Prejudice ~ Perseverance”

at the Riverside Plaza Border’s from 12-3 p.m.

jason hoASST. INSCAPE EDITOR

Kings, that’s what they are, the Kings of Leon.

With their great musical drive and epic rock ballads, they come back this year with yet another great album, “Come Around Sundown.”

The three Followill brothers and their Followill cousin formed the group Kings of Leon in 1999.

After significant success in the U.K. and their previous album “Only by the Night” topping the charts in the U.S., the group was due for an epic fifth album.

Their song, “Beach Side” was available for web streaming, as a trailer or teaser for their album.

“Beach Side,” like the title, is a beach side song, one to enjoy while relaxing on the sand with a few friends and burning firewood.

A very relaxing song indeed, listening to the consistent guitar riffs, and hearing the lead singer’s unique voice.

The Clash Music reporter Simon Harper said in part about Caleb Followill’s singing styles on this album, “Caleb Followill opens his heart throughout–he sounds yearning; his usual fervid bawls here turn into tender pines.”

“Everything I cherish is slowly dying or it’s gone,” Followill sings in “Pyro,” “I won’t ever make you cry,” he appeals in the throbbing doo-wop blues of “Mary.”

Entertainment Weekly writer

Leah Greenblatt writes about the “Tennessee-bred champions of whiskey, women” and she said, “The group now sounds like a more ponderous My Morning Jacket, coiffed and calibrated to

reach the cheap seats. That does lend tracks like “The Immortals’’ and “Mary’’ their own sonorous appeal, but as Sundown drones on, it begs for less melodrama, and more levity.”

Entertainment Weekly grades this album a B-minus.

Their first single released from the album was “Radioactive.”

It’s obvious to say that the track was electrifying. It’s definitely a

feel good song. A lot of their songs are very

positive and “feel-good” and have a pretty epic rock drive to a lot of their tracks.

The band had written and composed all of their songs on this album; they did not require any assistance from other lyricists and composers.

The song “Pyro,” like the title is fiery with a hint of folk music.

“Single book of matches, gonna burn whose standing in the way, burning down the mountain, better call on the fire brigade,” is one of the best lines from the song.

“The Immortal” has a really good drive, and a handful of awesomeness.

One of the lines from the song was really outstanding, “Just put your foot in front’ the other Crow like the rooster we are allowed to get us something free as a danger...”

Kings of Leon ultimately sells a great album with epic rock drives and a melodramatic sound to their songs.

There were mixed reviews of the album, but overall, the album gets a B-plus.

The record had a same sound to their previous albums, but the lyrics were really well-written and lead singer Caleb Followill’s vocals were perfect.

He sung with such heart and passion that it was too perfect to give the band a lower grade on this album.

source: sony Music

Page 10: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922Inscape October 21, 2010 | 11

games pressfirepower: Whoever is in the line of fire is going to wish they had taken cover because this guy is on a rampage.

garth pulenEditor’s assistant

the “Medal of Honor” series sees a revival in it’s recently released revamp of the series, ironically entitled: “Medal of Honor.”

aside from the name, the game doesn’t really push the boundaries of originality; but what it lacks in surprise, it more than makes up for in a solid multi-player experience.

With the last decade seeing the release of very competent and well-received military shooters, sales for the “Medal of Honor” franchise slowly took a back seat and eventually fell off the first-person shooter map.

Electronic arts–the developer of the series–was running out of steam until, back in 2007, the project finally went dormant after the release of the ill-received “Medal of Honor: airborne.”

However, sho r t ly a f t e r production wrapped on the aforementioned title, Electronic arts reached out for help.

What they found was a little development team known as diCE.

any gamer familiar with PC shooters to an unhealthy extent, knows diCE was likely responsible for that compromising behavior in some way, shape or form.

they are the development team behind the critically praised “Battlefield” series, and after some swift negotiations with Electronic arts, they agreed to devote a team to develop the multi-player component for the new “Medal of Honor.”

How this translates into the multi-player experience will be a relevant discussion for later.

For now, let’s take a moment to analyze the rich, cohesive canon of controversy that is the single-player campaign.

so maybe the campaign isn’t as reflective or as gutsy as Electronic arts has advertised, but there is something to be discovered in its’ depiction of the true grit american warrior.

neglecting the few tense and believable moments shared between the generic-looking characters you’re surrounded by throughout the story, this is another “Call of duty” clone.

game presshere comes the chopper: Those two and their RPG’s won’t stand a chance against that oncoming helicopter.

the real surprise here, it’s not a bad one. “Medal of Honor” serves up many uncontrollable situations with a bold stance on “less is more.”

Without interpreting a lack of butt-kick within the title, the care that was given to militaristic authenticity will have many vets of the field either genuinely appreciat ive, or downright uncomfortable.

Players start the campaign a spy of sorts.

the units’ directive: act like the enemy; talk like the enemy; befriend the enemy; kill the enemy.

all of the missions are situated in afghanistan, and as soon as the first chapter starts, there is an uneasy cloud about the environment that will definitely keep players on their toes.

Given the amount of staging and pure cinematic appeal the first few chapters evoke, it’s a real shame that the game-play and artificial intelligence don’t respond with the same polish.

in-fact, about halfway through the third chapter, everything that was engaging about the game takes an insane dive into awe-inspiring tedium.

Even with the campaigns’ innate ability to strip you of your own hair, you’ll probably breeze

through much of the slop in roughly four hours.

When the hours are up, run to the nearest barber for a good once-over, then jump onto the multiplayer bandwagon and don’t look back!

there’s not much to say about the level-up system or the generic

game modes because anyone reading this has already played it in any other military shooter to come out in the last five years.

“Medal of Honor’s” multiplayer is one part “Modern Warfare,” two parts “Battlefield” and three parts heart.

Electronic arts has successfully

revitalized one of its’ most popular franchises with sometimes stunning execution.

the only problem lies in the titles’ increasing competition.

Whatever the critique, “Medal of Honor” may not be the biggest dog in the room, but it’s got one heck of a distinctive bite.

‘medal of honor’ returns to glory

Page 11: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

A night with the cast of ‘Jackass 3-D’MeAghAn CunninghAMAsst. InscApe edItor

MeAghAn CunninghAM / Asst. InscApe edItor

MAking the rounDs: Assistant Inscape Editor Meaghan Cunningham met up with star Johnny Knoxville at the “Jackass 3D” college press junket in Hollywood.

through oct. 8 and 9, paramount pictures allowed college press an amazing opportunity to attend the “Jackass 3d” pre-screening and interview the stars of the film.

the crew reunited for their 10 year anniversary to make “Jackass” in 3-d.

the all star cast includes: Bam Margera, Johnny Knoxville, Jason “Wee Man” Acuna, preston Lacy, dave england, steve-o, chris pontius, ryan dunn, ehren McGhehy and the director Jeff tremaine along with multiple guest stars.

on oct. 8, I attended the press pre-screening of the movie at Mann’s chinese theatre in Hollywood.

At the showing, the audience was provided with complimentary soda and popcorn.

As the theatre quickly filled up everyone was given the option to sit in the regular theater seat or a “d-Box” motion seat. I took the “d-Box” seat and enjoyed the action as if I were apart of the stunt.

After the film, college press was released for the night.

However, the fun wasn’t quite over for me yet. on the way to my car, I walked right into Margera, who was there for the press junket that was to take place the following day.

As Bam and I exchanged small talk he told me, “the worst thing I could have probably done

was tell the director of “Jackass” that I’m terrified of snakes cause that means, lets throw snakes on Bam.”

the next day the press junket for “Jackass 3d” was held at the Hollywood roosevelt Hotel.

the press were divided into small groups and sent to different rooms where we waited for the cast to enter.

though “Jackass” is not a project that seems like it lends itself to 3-d, Knoxville explained that it didn’t hinder their usual process.

“I asked Jeff, I don’t want me and the cast worrying about cameras…I don’t want to worry about going too far over here, too close because that’s not how we shoot, and we did not worry about the cameras at all,” he said. “We wrote ideas that had to be funny in 2-D first… if it isn’t funny in 2-D it won’t be funny in 3-d…that was kind of our rule.”

Movies in 3-d are either shot in 3-d or converted after shooting. the difference can be seen in the final product.

shooting in 3-d, as they did on “Jackass,” is always better, but is more expensive, so the conversion method is what’s generally used.

“shooting it in 3-d, that’s what we did on this movie, it isn’t post converted, shooting it required extra crew, so getting used to that, but really the energy of the guys, getting them back together was so hot, you didn’t feel that wall,” tremaine said.

tremaine also discussed how

the cast and crew comes up with the unique stunts they perform.

“our favorite stuff is the stuff that isn’t planned…like while we’re setting up an elaborate stunt,” he said.

Margera explained how they always have to be on guard on set, because anything’s fair game.

“that’s the worst part, if you sleep on the set, you’re doomed,” he said. “there’s a masseuse on set. If you’re like, I just did a stunt, my neck hurts and I need a massage; that’s another vulnerable position that you get stun gunned or peed on or punched.”

From several interviews and speaking with the guys during down time, which was quite often, I got a sense of what they’re like in person.

Many of the guys claim that their inspiration comes from watching cartoons or stuff that makes them laugh.

Although they’re not hardcore pranksters all the time, they are full of humor.

When they sat down at the table for questions they were relaxed and would say something funny to

PArAMount PiCturesA DynAMite oPening: “Jackass 3-D” is the third film of the franchise and grossed $50 million its opening weekend.

lighten any awkwardness. throughout the junket all of

the guys were really nice and accommodating.

overall the access to the cast seemed limitless with respectful boundaries.

the cast mingled with press, contest winners, dJs and staff while taking pictures with fans and making jokes.

Fortunately, I was able to meet much of the cast and hang around

the extravaganza. I was able to ask almost any question I had in mind.

Although everyone that was interviewed from the film said a lot of stunts were cut out. there is a “Jackass 3.5” with some extra footage that will be out later this year.

This film is meant for mature audiences and reenactment of any stunts or pranks of any kind are completely discouraged.

MeAghAn CunninghAM / Asst. InscApe edItor

sAy Cheese: “Jackass 3-D” star Bam Margera discussed his fear of snakes with Viewpoints’ Meaghan Cunningham.

12 | October 21, 2010 Inscape

Page 12: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922

Ryan lynch / staff photographer

action!: Riverside is the only school Kraus has ever taught at, he celebrates his fourth year here in January.

instructor does more than teachShaRdai peRRyfeatures editor

October 21, 2010 | 13Features

Zack Kraus, part time theatre teacher, part time actor and director, practices what he preaches.

aside from his two theatre classes, intro to theater and acting for the camera, Kraus is directing a version of “Macbeth” in Los angeles.

“i like active theatre, i took interest in this production because of the use of non-traditional space, it’s taking place in an old warehouse,” Kraus said.

Non traditional theatre is when a play is held somewhere other than the traditional theatre.

“it kinda has this bohemian feel,” he said.

When asked to describe “acting” he quotes sandy Meisner, “acting is living truthfully under imaginary circumstances.”

Acting was only the first step for Kraus.

“in order to be a well rounded actor you have to know how to do a little of everything,” he said.

and that’s precisely what Kraus did.

“ i ’m not so much in to producing, but this isn’t the first play that i’ve directed and it won’t be the last,” he said.

Kraus has been teaching at riverside City College since 2007, but acting since high school.

“i never wanted to become a teacher, but it’s been the best

surprise of my life,” he said.Kraus puts teaching on the

same level as his passion for acting.

“Both give me the opportunity to change someone’s life,” he

said. although Kraus has become

quite fond of teaching, it’s been “trial and error” trying to balance it, with his passion for acting.

“When push comes to shove

my priorities come first, if I have an audition the same day i have class, i have to go to class,” he said.

unfortunately Kraus has missed auditions for class, but it just goes to show how dedicated of a teacher he really is.

in the long run, his technique in the acting world has actually helped him become a better teacher.

“Being on stage you realize the amount of energy it takes to obtain people’s attention for a certain amount of time,” he said.

Kraus learned soon after becoming a teacher the biggest difference between teaching and acting.

“teaching puts you in a more vulnerable state than acting,” he said.

the classroom and the stage although both familiar places to him, require different parts of him.

“teaching is all me. there’s nothing to hide behind, no character, no lines, no costumes, just me,” he said.

at the end of every class he may not get a standing ovation or even a “bravo!”

“i just want my students to leave with the ability to think critically, to question everything, life as they know it,” he said.

Kraus may not be the best but, “i am me and nobody else

is that.”“every once in a while,

depending on the class and my mood, we’re able to have a open, meaningful dialogue, those are the moments i walk away feeling like i succeeded,” he said.

some days are better than others, whether you’re in the world of education or entertainment.

“there i sn’t a fo rmula for teaching or acting, every class, every play is a different experience,” he said.

he’s no Buddhist but he does believe “all we have is the present.”

“there are days i have no idea what i’m doing, and there are days i feel like i actually taught someone something,” he said.

teaching and acting are similar in one way though, both audiences are judging you, whether it be consciously or unconscious.

“You really have to have a clear understanding of what you’re teaching, or rehearsing, because you’re being watched, tested even,” he said.

Whether he’s on stage or in class, he’s doing what he loves.

“Life is a constant learning process and i’m still a student, i don’t want to ever lose the ability to surprise myself,” he said.

as a teacher, for Kraus learning never stops.

“i believe in education more than anything,” he said.

Page 13: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 192214 | October 7, 2010

Page 14: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

Volleyball

Women’s Soccer

Season RecordOverall:

5-2-6Conference:

4-2-3Next game:

10/22At Saddleback

3 p.m.

Season RecordOverall:

5-1Conference:

1-0Next game:

10/23At Golden West

1 p.m.

Season RecordOverall:

5-3-4Conference:

3-2-1Next game:

10/22At Orange Coast

3 p.m.

Season RecordOverall:

13-4Conference:

1-3Next game:

10/22Vs. Fullerton

7 p.m.

Season Record Overall:

18-0Conference:

3-0Next Game:

10/22At Long Beach

Tournament TBA

Season Record Overall:

14-6Conference:

3-0Next game:

10/22At Golden West

Tournament TBA

Men’s Water Polo

Women’s Water Polo

Cross Country

RCC 14 American River 9RCC 13 Fresno 3RCC 19 Chaffey Tournament 5RCC 13 Orange Coast 4 RCC 22 Cuesta Tournament 2RCC 11 Northwood 7 RCC 16 Saddleback 1 RCC 12 Golden West Tournament 5At Fullerton 3 p.m. At Long Beach Tournament TBA Vs. Golden West 3 p.m. Orange Empire Conference Championship at Cypress College Vs. Cypress 3 p.m. * Home games will be played at Sippy Woodhead Pool at the Cesar Chavez Center on 2060 University Ave. Riverside

Sept. 10Sept. 11Sept. 17Sept. 29Oct. 1Oct. 9Oct. 13Oct. 15Oct. 20Oct. 22Oct. 27Nov. 4

Nov. 6

At Southwestern 5 p.m.RCC 3 Pasadena 1 RCC 3 Chula Vista 0RCC 3 Mt. San Antonio 1RCC 3 San Diego Mesa 0RCC 3 San Bernardino Valley 0RCC 3 Santa Ana 0RCC 2 Saddleback 3 RCC 1 Golden West 3RCC 2 Cypress 3RCC 10 Orange Coast 18 At Irvine Valley 6 p.m. Vs. Fullerton 7 p.m.Vs. Santa Ana 7 p.m.At Saddleback 6 p.m.Vs. Golden West 7 p.m.Vs. Cypress 7 p.m.At Orange Coast 7 p.m. Vs. Irvine Valley 7 p.m.At Fullerton 6 p.m.

Aug. 25Aug. 27 Sept. 3Sept. 10Sept. 17Sept. 22Oct. 1Oct. 6Oct. 8Oct. 13Oct. 15Oct. 20Oct. 22Oct. 27Oct. 29Nov. 3Nov. 5Nov. 10Nov. 12Nov. 17

RCC 0 Miramar 5 RCC 0 San Diego Mesa 1 RCC 1 Moorpark 3RCC 4 Mt. San Antonio 1RCC 4 Golden West 1 RCC 0 Santiago Canyon 1RCC 2 Saddleback 0RCC 0 Santa Ana 0 RCC 3 Cypress 3

Aug. 27 Sept. 1Sept. 3Sept. 7Sept. 14Sept. 17Sept. 21Sept. 28Oct. 1

RCC 12 Golden West 7RCC 23 Santa Ana 712 Cuesta Tournament 13RCC 10 Cal Baptist Tournament 8RCC 12 Orange Coast 4 RCC 19 Chaffey 9RCC 19 Saddleback 8RCC 10 Cal Baptist 18At Fullerton 3 p.m.At Golden West Tournament TBA

Sept. 10Sept. 15Sept. 17 Sept. 24Sept. 29Oct. 8Oct. 13Oct. 15Oct. 20Oct. 22

Fresno CC Invitational at Fresno Woodward Park 10 a.m.At Golden West Invite at Huntington Beach Central Park 10 a.m.At Cal Baptist University 10 a.m.At Southern California preview at San Diego Mission Bay Park 10 a.m.At Orange Empire Conference at Mission Viejo Oso Creek Park 10 a.m.At Southern California Finals at San Diego Mission Bay Park 10 a.m. At CCCAA State Championships at Fresno Woodward Park 10 a.m.

Sept. 10

Sept. 24

Oct. 2Oct. 9

Oct. 29

Nov. 6

Nov. 20

RCC 1 Rio Honda 3RCC 2 San Diego 3RCC 3 Citrus 2 RCC 2 Palomar 3RCC 0 Chaffey 0RCC 16 Imperial Valley 0RCC 5 Orange Coast 1RCC 0 Irvine Valley 3RCC 1 Santa Ana 1 RCC 2 Fullerton 1 RCC 5 Cypress 2 RCC 1 Santiago Canyon 1 RCC Golden West At Orange Coast 3 p.m.Vs. Irvine Valley 3 p.m.At Santa Ana 3 p.m.Vs. Fullerton 3 p.m.At Cypress 3 p.m.At Santiago Canyon 3 p.m.Vs. Golden West 1 p.m.* All home games are played at Norco College.

Football

Aug. 30Sept. 3Sept. 7 Sept. 10Sept. 14Sept. 17Sept. 28 Oct. 1Oct. 5 Oct. 8 Oct. 12 Oct. 15Oct. 19Oct. 22Oct. 26Oct. 29Nov. 2Nov. 5Nov. 9Nov. 12

RCC 3 Fullerton 2RCC 1 Orange Coast 2RCC 0 Irvine Valley 1 RCC 4 Golden West 1RCC Santiago Canyon At Saddleback 3 p.m. Vs. Santa Ana 3 p.m.At Cypress 3 p.m.Vs. Fullerton 3 p.m.At Orange Coast 3 p.m.Vs. Irvine Valley 3 p.m.* All home games are played at Norco College.

Oct. 5Oct. 8Oct. 12Oct. 15Oct. 19Oct. 22Oct. 29Nov. 2Nov. 5Nov. 9Nov. 12

Vs. Golden West 3 p.m.* Home games will be played at Sippy Woodhead Pool at the Cesar Chavez Center on 2060 University Ave. Riverside

Oct. 27

Women’s Water Polo

Men’s Water PoloVolleyballWomen’s SoccerMen’s SoccerFootball

Bye weekRCC 64 San Bernardino Valley 28RCC 16 Victor Valley 7 RCC 10 Mt. San Antonio 36RCC 32 Chaffey 26 RCC 28 Citrus 14RCC 45 Orange Coast 20 At Golden West 1 p.m.At Santa Ana 1 p.m.Vs. Desert 6 p.m.At Southwestern 6 p.m.

Sept. 4Sept. 11Sept. 18Sept. 25Oct. 2Oct. 9Oct. 16Oct. 23Oct. 30Nov. 6Nov. 13

Men’s Soccer

Sports October 21, 2010 | 15

Sports Brief RCC football team ranked No. 10

The RCC Tigers are still improving with age and do not show any signs of stopping.

With only one loss to the defending state champions, the Mt. San Antonio Mounties, the Tigers continue to show off their new and improved team by not letting any other team get in their way.

The Tigers are currently tied with Santa Ana for first place in the Central East Conference with a record of 5-1.

RCC’s next game is at Golden West on Oct. 23

NBA set for a super seasonJAVier CABrerAMANAGING EDITOR

As the NBA faces a possible lockout next year, the upcoming season will be centered on the main attractions, the Los Angeles Lakers and Miami Heat.

After the Lakers ended last season as back-to-back NBA Champions, the attention shifted to LeBron James and where he would he play, since he was an unrestricted free agent.

Rumors had James going to New York, Chicago and Los Angeles with the Clippers, but the big rumor was in Miami, with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.

After Wade and Bosh said that they would sign with the Heat, James followed behind them a few days later when he announced it on the television show “The Decision” on ESPN in primetime.

The Heat went from an average team to a championship elite team in seconds once James made it official that the three will be teammates in Miami.

The ground-breaking moves that occurred in the NBA landscape this past offseason sets up what is expected to be one of the most anticipated seasons to look forward to for NBA fans all across the world.

The Lakers have most of the spotlight and attention entering the season. NBA experts and basketball fans will watch and see if the Lakers can three-peat as champions with three new bench players and two rookies.

Not only do the Lakers have the pressure to win their third straight title, but they also will be looked upon to see if they can capture their 17th NBA championship, and tie the Boston Celtics with the most titles won.

On top of all the team’s expectations and pressure in the upcoming season, coach Phil Jackson will seek to win his 12th NBA title and Kobe Bryant will attempt to tie Michael Jordan with six NBA championships.

While the Lakers handle their business in Los Angeles, the “super team” in Miami will be expected all season to win all their games and beat the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls’ regular season record of 72-10.

The Heat will be favorites to come out of the east and make it to the finals. Before it can do that the Heat will have to get past an older Celtics team that acquired Shaquille O’Neal and Jermaine O’Neal in the offseason.

The Lakers are favorites to win the west since the San Antonio Spurs are nearly done as an elite team, the Utah Jazz did not improve their roster and the Denver Nuggets will likely be trading their superstar, Carmelo Anthony by the season’s trade deadline.

The Lakers’ only main concern in the west will be the young and dangerous Oklahoma City Thunder since it was the only team to catch the attention of the Lakers in the NBA playoffs last season.

The Thunder also has Kevin Durant, who finished second in MVP votes last season behind James and who is rapidly evolving into a superstar.

No one is expecting any other teams but the Lakers and Heat to make it to the NBA Finals in June 2011.

In the annual NBA general manager’s survey predictions on NBA.com, 70 percent of the general mangers believe the Heat will win the Eastern Conference and 96 percent believe the Lakers will win the Western Conference, which means the managers believe it will be the Lakers and Heat in the NBA Finals.

In the survey, 63 percent believe the Lakers will three-peat and win the NBA championship.

A Bryant vs. James NBA finals match-up looks to be happening this season after years of dreaming by fans.

Page 15: Viewpoints 10-21-2010 Issue

ViewpointsServing students since 1922 Sports16 | October 21, 2010

Tigers come out on top after homecoming

Khai le / Senior Staff aSSiStant

go long: Tigers quarterback Dalton Livingston looks to make a pass during the Oct. 16 Homecoming game against Orange Coast College.

Khai le / Senior Staff aSSiStant

MaKing The caTch: Brandon Young attempts to make a catch during the Oct. 16 Homecoming game against Orange Coast College.

Khai le / Senior Staff aSSiStant

cheer on: RCC’s dance and cheer time rile up the crowd during the Oct. 16 Homecoming game against Orange Coast College


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