Oct. 21, 2005

Page 1

EL VAQUERO Glendale College

www.elvaq.com

Volume 88 Number 3

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2005

IN THIS ISSUE NEWS GCC author Steve Taylor releases first book of short stories.

Photo by Jane Pojawa

Page 4

PHOTO FEATURE

A student displaced by Hurricane Katrina serves his new city. Pages 10-11 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

“Shaky Peanuts” opens at GCC Gallery

Katrina Refugees Welcomed Here By NANCY AGBENU EL VAQUERO STAFF WRITER

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hey climb up the broad brick steps to the building — some hesitantly, some skeptically. One small group of adventurous new arrivals enters through the doors of the John A. Davitt Administration Building to begin their studies at Glendale College hoping for a better future, nearly 2,000 miles away from the disaster that upended their lives. The second week of the semester had already started when David Mince, Catherine Babb, Brandon McIntyre and Jack Sigafuss filed their applications on campus. Despite their different backgrounds they all had one thing in common: their lives in New Orleans had been torn asunder by Hurricane Katrina and they had ended up starting life anew in Southern California. Brandon McIntyre and David Mince agreed to be interviewed for this story. When the home of Brandon McIntyre, a junior at Xavier University in Louisiana, was endangered by the storm, his family moved for safety to a

Photo by Jane Pojawa

Brandon McIntyre of New Orleans is attending GCC until Xavier University, where he is a junior, reopens in January of next year.

hotel on higher ground. But the water continued to rise and they fled New Orleans. “When we left our home, they told us to take enough with us for two days,” said McIntyre. “And

two days turned into a couple of weeks, so I ended up with only a couple of outfits.” The 21-yearold, wearing dark blue jeans and leisure white T-shirt, stares into space as he talks about his broth-

er and sisters who have been scattered to different parts of Louisiana, Texas and as far as Iowa. “We’re a pretty close family,” said McIntyre. “So we talk on the phone on a daily basis.” According to the American Council on Education (ACE), an estimated 75,000 to 100,000 students have been displaced by the damage of Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent flooding. When the catastrophe hit, McIntyre was already registered for 18 units of classes and had attended Xavier University for a month. In the midst of the hurricane, the mass communication major was the only one of his family who was evacuated to Los Angeles. “At first it [the evacuation experience] wasn’t affecting me,” he said. “But now I’m finding myself getting headaches. It’s getting pretty stressful, not being around my family, the schooling; I have a lot of choices. It’s overwhelming.” In spite of the trauma, two weeks after he was evacuated McIntyre was one of the first to take the opportunity to register for classes at GCC. Education has always been the “number-one priority” in his See REFUGEES, Page 2

Catholicos Aram I Visits GCC for an Open Forum Photo by Jane Pojawa

By JANE POJAWA EL VAQUERO EDITOR IN CHIEF

Page 13

ASGCC OFFICERS

Student Government Pages 17-18

NEWS........................1-5 FEATURE...................6-13 SPORTS .........................18 ENTERTAINMENT............14 CALENDAR....................19

G

CC students were treated to a special appearance by His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, Oct. 13. Aram I, who is a leading figure of the Armenian Apostolic Church, is in the midst of a world tour, addressing the concerns of members of the global Armenian community. His visit was unprecedented in terms of a religious figure of his stature, speaking at the college. The title Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia refers to the seat of an administrative branch of the Armenian

Apostolic Churcht that was originally based in Cilicia, a region in Turkey, but after the Armenian Genocide moved to Antelias, a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. About 90 percent of Armenians are members of the Armenian Apostolic Church, according to Levon Marashlian, professor of history at Glendale. The Catholicostate [the church’s terminology for the jurisdiction] of Cilicia acknowledges the primacy of the Catholicostate of all Armenians, which is based in Etchmiadzin, Armenia, but both arms of the church have played key historical roles since their division in

Photo by Jane Pojawa

See ARAM I, Page 5

His Holiness, Aram I, the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia is greeted by a full house at the Student Center.


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Oct. 21, 2005 by El Vaquero Newspaper - Issuu