4/2/12

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THE

San Jacinto Times

Pastor speaks out against Houston Mayor. Page 2.

The voice of San Jacinto College since 1991

Staying safe in parking lots April 2, 2012

The Student Publication of the San Jacinto College District

Vol. 22, No. 17

Check out our staff blog at www.sanjactimesstaff.wordpress.com

Is the new iPad as hot as people claim? Page 3.

Astros 50th anniversary and fashion tips. Page 6.

Women are prime targets By EDITH MANZANARES San Jacinto Times

Many times, we find ourselves walking out of a store, both hands occupied with shopping bags, with a cell phone held between our face and shoulder. We are deeply lured into the conversation; forgetting where we parked or too busy to notice that a person lurks around. Distractions like these are wonderful in the eyes of a thief, criminal, rapist, or even a murderer. Some students believe that it will never happen to them; perhaps it will, and perhaps it won’t. In today’s society though, someone is bound to witness it at some point. Although this is not meant to instill fear, it is important to have another kind of fear. The kind of fear that will make you take a stand against crime and violence. We all have a life to live, and it is fear that should enable us to protect our own lives. Each year, college students, as well as elderly people are targeted in parking lots. It happens in parking lots,at schools, malls, day cares, and even gyms. Males are often targeted as well, but most males have a tendency to fight back and use their strength. Young women usually are the main targets in parking lot related assaults. Most women are vulnerable, and being of the female gender, must constantly think about how to be safe. When a dark shadow carefully watches a young lady walk out of the store alone, she quickly becomes an easy target. Those criminals are corrupt, appearing to look normal, but when the opportunity presents itself, they attack the victim, stealing their belongings, raping them, or killing them. SEE SAFETY on PAGE 5

Battle of San Jacinto marks key date in Texas history Women should take particular care to focus on safety in parking lots.

By NICHOLAS PAGE San Jacinto Times

Driving on state highway 225, a manmade dividing line between industry and suburbia, it is hard to imagine the landscape before modernization. Steel and steam rise into the atmosphere for miles. The beltway toll bridge arches high connecting two cities separated by the ship channel’s waters. Before industrialization this land was beautiful and vast. The tall windswept grass of the open plains of this southeast region stretched far to the water’s edge. Although impressive, the development of this historic area is somewhat somber. Many forget that their homes and businesses sit atop real estate that 176 years ago was soiled with the blood of both Texan and Mexican soldiers. American immigrants had once settled in the state of Coahuila y Tejas with the encouragement of the Mexican government. In 1835, after years of tension between federalists and centralists within Mexico, battle broke out. Santa Anna had asserted his dictatorial control over the Mexican nation which resulted in the Battle of Gonzales. This battle marked the beginning of the Texas Revolution. The most renowned battle of the Revolution is of course the Texan defeat at the Alamo. Even though the battle at the Alamo has become widely publicized, there is a nearly unrecognized battle that concluded the Revolution and gave birth to Texas independence. On April 21, 1836 the Texian army led by General Sam Houston waged battle upon General Antonio L pez de Santa Anna’s Mexican army in presentday Harris County. The fighting lasted 18 minutes with the Texian army suffering only 9 killed and 30 wounded while the Mexican army suffered about 700 deaths and 208 wounded. In addition, the Texian army captured 730 prisoners including Santa Anna

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Commentary................2 Around Campus..........3 Front Page Jumps.......5 Fashion/etc..................6

Edith Manzanares/San Jacinto Times

himself. Initially, Santa Anna evaded capture by donning the uniform of a common soldier. The morning after the battle, a Texan search party closed in and surrounded Santa Anna but without his ornate uniform the party assumed they had captured yet another soldier. Santa Anna’s true identity was revealed to his Texan captors when the other prisoners saluted and called him “El Presidente”. Instead of sentencing Santa Anna to death, Houston spared his life in the hopes of negotiating a resolution. On May 14, 1836, the Treaties of Velasco was signed by the Mexican General. He agreed to withdraw his troops from Texas soil and lobby for Texas’ independence in exchange for safe passage to Mexico. Santa Anna never received escort to his homeland. Instead, he was held as a POW for six months during which time he was disowned by his government. He was taken to Washington D.C. to meet with President Andrew Jackson and afterward returned to Mexico in disgrace. Texas independence was officially recognized when the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the Mexican-American War in 1848. Now, amongst the plants and refineries, a beautiful monument cuts the sky. It is dedicated to the “Heroes of the Battle of San Jacinto” and all others who contributed to the independence of Texas.” The monument’s construction began on April 21, 1936, 100 years after the battle was fought. Constructed Nicholas Page/San Jacinto Times with cordova shell stone that is over 100 million The San Jacinto monument is testament to a key battle for Texas independence. years old, the monument stands at 604 feet tall from the base to the top of the star. This makes the San Jacinto Monument taller than the Washington monument as well as the world’s tallest war memorial. By CATY CHRISTY to the Campus Bookstore where he will be During the three years of the construction of this San Jacinto Times ready and willing to sign autographs for those ambitious project not a single life was lost. who would like them from 2:30 pm to 3:30 pm. SEE BATTLE on PAGE 5 This Tuesday, April 3, Dr. Jerry Bradley will be on campus to read from his works and to Dr. Bradley is a contemporary poet with an sign copies of his books. He will also be availinnovative way of striking emotion in readers. able to answer any questions some of you aspirHis first book, Simple Versions of Disaster, was ing artists might have. Bradley will be in the published in 1991. The most recent, however, is Kaleidoscope Room from 1:00 pm to 2:30 pm The Importance of Elsewhere, published in for the reading and questions. That’s room C2009. If you like poetry, this is definitely an 1.102 in the ILC. After that, Bradley will move author you might consider looking up.

Bradley book signing is Tuesday


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