4/8/13

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SAN JACINTO TIMES The show went on... for two e student publication of the San Jacinto College District

Vol. 23, No. 9

Top photo credits: Naama Gouti San Jacinto Times

Clear skies and rock climbing highs coaxed students and faculty alike outdoors to enjoy refreshments at Coyote Day on South campus (pictured above) March 27. On the other hand, thunderstorms and lightning left Raven Fest participants scrambling indoors on Central campus Wednesday, April 3 (pictured below). No worries, Hot 95-7 (pictured below right) turned up the heat with a live broadcast getting the Ravens rockin’. Gator Day on North Campus was postponed until Monday, April 8.

Shine for Coyote Day

Bottom photo credits: Flor Barrero San Jacinto Times

Rain for

Raven Fest Gator Day postponed

San Jac features immigration roundtable

Student honored for local serial killer research

Jeannette Jimenez Staff Writer

The Texas Folklore Society will publish Marissa Gardner’s theory of the mysterious murders that have plagued I-45 since 1971.

A mysterious killer has roamed the I-45 corridor since 1971. Former San Jacinto College student Marissa Gardner constructed her own theory about this unknown killer. Gardner is a 25-year-old single mother who is now a nursing student at UTMB. She finished her prerequisite courses in May 2012, and began at UTMB’s School of Nursing the following

teams in Austin. No Texas team participated in the NCAA tournament this year, ending a streak that began 1977. On March 17, the NCAA announced the 68-team bracket, completely excluding Texas teams from play.

Only three years ago, The Lone Star State matched the NCAA record for the most teams participating from a single state in a season by sending seven teams. Texas also holds the record for the most teams to ever participate with 23 teams that have ap-

Monica Davila

Department Editor

The Texas Association of Chicanas for Higher Education hosted an Immigration roundtable at San Jacinto College Central campus on March 27. The roundtable featured several speakers including Saul Zarco, an educational planner and regional representative for the group; Maria Jimenez, an immigration activist that develops programs for immigrant workers and immigrant rights; Jannel Robles, who works as a policy analyst for Texas Criminal Justice Coalition Immigration in Harris County communities; and, Aysar Al Shamsy, an Iraqi-born San Jac student who offered the immigrant perspective. Zarco kicked off the roundtable discussing the struggles of his undocumented parents from Mexico City. His father was deported nine times and his mother was deported once. Zarco said it is easy for natives to say “send them all back”, but they fail to realize the economic consequences. Sending 11 million people, that although are not in the tax registry, pay sales tax, sometimes state taxes, and many times federal taxes would have an impact. On the other hand, Jimenez spoke about migration on an international level. According to Jimenez, every country in the world has immigrants

See Discussion on Page 4

Courtesy of Marissa Gardner

fall. While attending San Jac, Gardner was enrolled in an English Composition class where she was required to write a research paper. She chose the topic of the I-45 killings. “In 2010, when I started my research assignment in Dr. Smith’s English Composition class I did not know what I wanted to write about. Dr. Smith suggested various topics, and the I-45 Serial Killer intrigued me

See I-45 Killer on Page 4

Missing March Madness makes Texans angry Aaron Preston Staff Writer

The only March Madness that took place in Texas in March was the maddening effect of outof-state fans cheering on their

peared in the tournament. The 14-year streak came to a screeching halt for the Texas Longhorns (16-17) after losing in the first round conference tournament game to 11th-ranked Kansas State Wildcats.

See NCAA on Page 4

‘Shake’ and ‘Plank’ fads burn bright, fizzle fast

Amanda Beard Staff Writer

It doesn’t discriminate, pick favorites, or distinguish itself to one particular group. Instead, the free floating unorganized movement sweeps the nation, latching onto one person after another until everyone has seen or heard, if not participated in, the trend. From Planking to the Harlem Shake, people jump on the bandwagon as it slithers through Youtube channels and other social media websites. San Jacinto

contributed to one of the latest viral videos with our very own Harlem Shake. Following a trend is part of a natural tendency to mimic the actions of other human beings. According to an active trading and frugal living website, Investopedia, “most people are very sociable and have a natural desire to be accepted by a group, rather than be branded as an outcast. Therefore, following the group is an ideal way of becoming a member.” Herd mentality, or making decisions based on the actions of

others, Psych Central says, only requires “just five per cent to influence a crowd’s direction – and that the other 95 per cent follow without realizing it.” Although it does require some thought to record and upload a video, the desire to emulate an action after viewing the positive feedback from other people diminishes further contemplation. Blindly boarding a majority thought train does not always end in everyone dancing. Groups of people have unified to create havoc instead of harmony using religion or opinion

as a foundation for destruction. From the polls to clothes, popular opinion rules in America. Television and social media allows trending topics to be shared, watched, and repeated at electric speeds. Rense.com contributor Alex Ansary says, “Audiences are mimicking what they see and hear because the current ‘norm’ is selling this behavior as cool or ‘chic.’” After media sells this behavior or trend, “these forms of content are considered the norm, anything else seems either bizarre or uninteresting.”

April 8, 2013

World News Briefs

Same-sex marriage The French senate will be reviewing a bill that will allow same-sex couples the right to marry and adopt. Legislators in the United Kingdom are also debating on legalizing same-sex marriage. Uruguayan senators had a majority in favor of legalizing same-sex marriage, despite opposition from the Catholic Church. Justices of the United States Supreme Court began voting on the matter at the end of March. The Roman Catholic Church and social conservatives are leading opposition groups against same-sex marriage and adoption rights.

Deadly floods in Argentina Argentina's president declared three days of national mourning on April 3 after 13 inches of rainfall claimed 48 lives and forced 3000 to evacuate from La Plata, Argentina and another eight deaths were reported from storms in Buenos Aires, the capital. "In 12 hours it has rained what it normally rains in the entire month of April," said Santiago Martorelli, cabinet chief of the city. Nuclear threat North Korea accused the United States of pushing the region to the “brink of war”. South Korean Defense Minister Kim Kwan-jin announced to a committee in Seoul that the North has moved a missile to its east coast. The United States announced on April 3 that they would be sending missile defenses to Guam, a U.S. naval and air base, which could be the target of a North Korean attack.

Saudi sentenced to paralysis A Saudi court has sentenced a man, Ali AlKhawahir, to be paralyzed if he can’t pay one million Saudi Riyals for a crime he committed when he was 14. He reportedly stabbed and paralyzed his best friend 10 years ago. Amnesty International, a human right group, has condemned the ruling saying it was “outrageous” for one man to be paralyzed as punishment for having paralyzed another man.

Exxon pipleline bursts An Exxon Mobil Corp. pipeline burst March 29 in Mayflower, Arkansas, spilling around 5,000 barrels of diluted tar sands, forcing 22 homes in a nearby neighborhood to be evacuated, and causing local streets to be shut down. Mitigation and clean up efforts are underway. The incident comes just two days after a train in Minnesota derailed, spilling 30,000 gallons of crude oil.

— Briefs compiled from multiple media sources


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