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Los Angeles LOYOLAN The
Est. 1921
Candlelight vigil remembers victims of sexual assult
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Print Managing Editor Allie Heck talks college relationships.
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Junior forward Shannon Kent is top scorer for Lions.
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Alumni engage in JVC program LMU alumni do postgraduate service around the U.S. with prestigious program. Amanda Lopez Asst. News Editor @AmandaLo_
Leslie Irwin | Loyolan
Belles service organization held a candlelight vigil on Monday, Oct. 20 in front of Foley fountain to honor victims of sexual assault as part of their Domestic Violence Awareness month. Belles also held a Good Shepherd Shelter Fundraiser and self-defense seminar this week. Their next event will be the silent protest on Thursday, Oct. 23 in the William H. Hannon Library at Convo. For more see the article on Page 8.
Permit parking is on the horizon One Westchester block implemented permit parking and others are soon to follow. Julia Sacco News Editor
@_JuliaSacco_
At the end of July, Westchester established its first permit parking on a block adjacent to LMU. The 7900 block of Fordham Road now has enforced permit parking, leading the way for other blocks surrounding the back gates to follow this example. After a year-long dispute with LMU over parking policies, the residents of this block have positive feedback about the new permit enforcement. “It is definitely effective for the residents,” said associate professor and the chair of the economics department Jennifer Pate, also a Westchester resident. “We only have a one-car driveway and we have to park on the street, so the permits are helpful from a family standpoint.” The process to establish permit parking
on these blocks is extensive for the residents, especially in areas with many houses per block. “Residents of the block worked with the local CD11 city councilman’s office to implement permit parking on their block,” said Michael Wong, associate vice president for administration services. In order to permit the block, the residents must cooperate and have a clear majority on the ruling. “You can’t permit a block unless twothirds of the residents agree to permit the block, one cross street to the next, so my small block was easier to collaborate with the neighbors,” Pate said. “It took a long time from when we submitted a position to go through with it; we turned it in February, and we didn’t get the signs up until late July.” While LMU has no role in the establishment of the permit parking, it has committed to reimbursing the residents for the permits used by their households. In a parking update issued by LMU Local Lions News on Oct. 17, it stated, “LMU’s current master plan, approved See Parking | Page 2
For LMU alumnus Eric Joseph de Lara, one of his key experiences in postgraduate service was being “able to work with a family, who has been living in their car the past few years, to finally obtain a place of their own. Seeing the face of the mom sign her lease papers was seriously one of the most life-giving things I have seen and am just happy to be part of something that gets us one step closer to ending chronic homelessness.” De Lara, who graduated from LMU this past May, is currently volunteering as a case manager at Miriam’s Kitchen, one of the biggest soup kitchens in Washington, D.C. The kitchen seeks to put an end to chronic homelessness and provide supportive services to homeless individuals. De Lara is one of several LMU graduates currently engaged in postgraduate service the Jesuit Volunteer Corps (JVC). JVC is one of the largest postgraduate service programs in the United States. About 12,000 people have volunteered with the program in more than 30 cities in the U.S. and six countries internationally. Within these areas, there are hundreds of different placement sites. Volunteers focus on social justice issues including, but not limited to, homelessness, AIDS/HIV and domestic violence. People participating in a JVC program typically work 40 hours per week, and are See JVC | Page 2
Defense seminar empowers women
Emelia Shelton | Loyolan
As part of their Domestic Violence Awareness month, Belles teamed up with LMU peer educators and Pi Beta Phi to put on a self-defense workshop on Tuesday, Oct. 21 in St. Robert’s Auditorium. The seminar was taught by junior Belles member Sierra Hegle (center) who educate attendees on what to do in threatening and potentially violent situations.