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National Pacemaker winner | Volume 70, Number 9 | March 23, 2016
Thefts from RTVFDept. span decade By COLLETTECARROLL City Times
Theft reports from Radio, TVand Film Department
A City Times r eview of campus police logs shows that City College's Radio, Television and Film (RTVF) Depar tment r epor ted at least 10 incidents of theft of its equipment as far back as 2007. The thefts r anged in value fr om $900 to $16,000, including ar ound $2,900 stolen in cash, and totaled mor e than $43,000 in losses. Meanwhile, additional electr onic equipment stolen fr om City College, wor th near ly $10,000, has been r ecover ed fr om the Palace Pawn Shop in downtown San Diego. The 15 newly discover ed items wer e connected to the account at the pawn shop of Ger ald ?L ar r y? Quick, said Campus Police L t. L ouis Zizzo. A long- time City College employee, Quick, 62, was arr ested last month and char ged with the theft of four video camer as, two of which wer e found at the shop. Quick's ar r est is r aising ser ious questions on campus, including how equipment was stolen over a per iod of at least 10 year s, what did the administr ation and campus police do after each theft was r epor ted, and whether secur ity measur es will be changed to safeguar d the
Thefollowingareentriesrecordedonthelogmaintainedby campuspolice, notingdate, valueof stolenitems, wherethey weretakenandwhat wastaken. TheRTVFDepartment ishousedinCBldg. January 2016 $16,000
March 2011 $900
CBuilding, 4 CanonC100 videocameras
CBuilding, Manifrottotripodstolenfromstudent
January 2016 $1,400
Summer 2010 $6,298
SavilleTheatre, twoElectrovoiceRE-20 microphones
CBuildingbreak-in, 2DVcameratapedecks
2015 $2,900 in cash
Fall 2007 $2,296 LBuilding, Lumenprojector andmonitor stolen
KSDSradiostation, stolenfromsafehoused insideof theLbuilding
Spring 2007 $1,500 CBuidling, 3Mvideoprojector
2014 $2,205 CBuilding 3 DSLRcamerasstolen(CanonRebel 3Ti) 2014 $10,000 CBuildingequipment
equipment. The new items wer e r ecover ed on Mar ch 15. They include two Canon C100 video camer as, a C100 kit including two micr ophones, headphones, XL R cable, and camer a bag, an Electr ovoice micr ophone, a zoom r ecor der, a DVR r ecor der, and a Canon DSL R camer a with lenses
Losses total $43,499 and bag, together having an appr oximate value of $9,800. L aur a Casta単eda, chair of the RTVF Depar tment, said that the pawn shop r efused to r etur n the equipment to City College, which had to buy it back. She said that it's her under standing the cost will be added to the amount Quick will be
INVESTIGATION City TimesSpecial or der ed to pay as r estitution if convicted. To date, Quick is facing felony gr and theft char ges for the theft of the four video camer as in Januar y of 2016. Quick, who is out on bail, has a pr eliminar y hear ing scheduled for Apr il 21. He r esigned fr om his position as Chief Br oadcast Engineer for City College and r adio station KSDS in the beginning of Mar ch. He had the master key for the depar tment and r adio station as well as the master alar m code. His keys have since been confiscated and his code disabled. "He has been dir ected by the judge not to make contact with anyone at the coll ege...I f he violates this or der and tr espasses, he will be immediately detained by college police," said City College Pr esident Anthony Beebe. The RTVF depar tment has str uggled with theft over the last ten year s. A City Times r eview of campus police logs con fir m at least 10 incidents of theft dating back to 2007. See THEFTSon page 7
Payroll problems affect up to 20%of staff in new system By THOMASCHESY City Times With near ly 1,000 employees being either under or over paid since the star t of the spr ing semester, the long- awaited r eplacement of the San Diego Community College Distr ict's aging business systems has gotten off to a r ocky star t.
Inside Calendar News Arts Life Voice Sports
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The upgr ade itself, which utilizes Or acle Cor por ation's PeopleSoft business- management softwar e, is slated to r eplace a major ity of the ser vices used by both faculty and students by the summer 2017. Chancellor Constance M. Carr oll addr essed the payr oll pr oblems in a memo sent to distr ict employees on Mar ch 10.
Car r oll's lengthy message began with an apology to affected employees, mor e than 20 per cent of the distr ict staff, and then pr oceeded to explain the cause of the pr oblems. Car r oll blamed them on human er r or at the distr ict level r anging fr om "late doc umentation" to ?"coding er r or s"? See PAYROLLon page 7
Chancellor Carroll apologized tostaff. Filed photo CELIAJIMENEZ City Times
VIOLENTFEMMES
DUALPASSIONS
After 16 years, bandreleasesalbum"We CanDoAnything. " Arts, page4
Knightscatcher Alex Bentleyisat home pursuingtwodreams. Sports, page8
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www.sdcitytimes.com | March 23, 2016
CITYNOTES
VOX POPULI Voice of t he People Questionsby BelindaMendozaI Photosby ThomasChesy
"What doesfeminismmean toyou?"
Feminists in action The Visionary Feminists held a recent workshop on sexual and reproductive rights. Yaneth Escobosa, left, and Ale Lopez addressed topics such as abortion and health care for low-income communities from a variety of
"Believing women can do the same things men do but it's not a competition. Ther e's nothing bad about feminism unless it's taken up to the extr eme." Kevin Campos, 21,Theater
perspectives. Malesmadeupabout half theaudience, underscoringthat thissubject affectsevery one.
ANTONIOMARQUEZ City Times
New requirements for BOG waiver announced By BELINDAMENDOZA City Times The Califor nia L egislatur e has imposed new r equir ements for the Boar d of Gover nor s waiver that will begin in the fall semester. Pr eviously the BOG waiver, which pays for basic tuition, was only based on income, but now gr ades and units completed will be taken into consider ation. To qualify for the waiver, students will have to maintain at least a 2.0 gr ade point aver age. They also will have to complete at least 60 per cent of the units they attempt, meaning they can't fail or withdr aw fr om mor e than 40 per cent of the units they take. Nor a Hinsley, a counselor at City College, expr essed concer n about the new r equir ements. "This is definitely something that's going to affect a lot of our students because a lot ar e lower income and ar e BOG-eligible." Though the BOG waiver only cover s tuition, for some students it's the only for m of financial aid they qualify for. At $46 a unit, full-time students pay $552 for 12 units, which they would have to cover on their own if they did not r eceive the waiver.
Hinsley wor r ied that the new r equir ements ar e another obstacle to over come. "A lot of our students have housing and financial issues, and they alr eady have enough str uggles and we'r e going to add another bar r ier on top of that," Hinsley said. Four of City Colleges' counselor s have put together a gr oup of infor mational sessions, titled "Save Your BOGW." These sessions ar e two times a week until mid-Apr il. Thy include pr ogr ess r epor ts, infor mational packets, and interactive scenar ios to help students impr ove their gr ades. Counselor s ar e available to answer questions as well. "We'r e tr ying to help them under stand what these changes in policy ar e and how to be successful in school so they can keep their Boar d of Gover nor s Waiver and their pr ior ity r egistr ation," said Ray Wong, one of the counselor s. Although these sessions ar e not mandator y, Wong encour ages students to see what they'r e about. The next sessions ar e on Apr il 6 and 7. Students may call or stop by the Counseling Center in A-110 for mor e infor mation or to sign up. The sessions ar e listed in the calendar of the San Diego City College website, sdcity.edu.
CORRECTION I n the Page One photo in the Mar ch 9 edition Hanin Zayat's name was misspelled. City Times r egr et the er r or.
I t is policy of City Times to clar ify content or cor r ect er r or s. Send r equests to the paper at info@sdcitytimes.com or call (619) 388-3880.
"Feminism to me is about inter sectionality and the inclusion of all types of women. Women of color, disabled women, tr ans-women, all standing as allies. Andr e De L eon, 19 Jour nalism
"Wait, isn't feminism bad? I sn't it a bad thing? At fir st I thought it meant powerful or str ong, but when I go on Facebook people use it like it's a bad thing." Mar quilla Gells, 25, Psychology
"For me feminism is mor e about justice than equality, because we'r e all alr eady bor n equal, but ther e ar e systems and ways we ar e tr eated that make us (women) unequal to men." Nayeli Castillo, 18, Spanish
"Equality. I t's about giving females the oppor tunity to be seen as equals and getting r id of gender r oles." Andy Gomez, 23, Sociology
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March 23, 2016 | www.sdcitytimes.com
CITYARTS
New record worth the 16-year wait By RICARDO SOLTERO City Times The Violent Femmes r eleased their fir st r ecor d since 2000?s ?Fr eak Magnet,? titled ?We Can Do Anything.? Sixteen year s is a long time, even longer when it comes to the music-str eaming wor ld. Now her e?s the million- dollar question: Do you r ide the nostalgia and play it safe or do you take r isks even if you fall shor t on your comeback outing? A band like the Violent Femmes r ealizes that it not only has to cater to the old fans but must satisfy new ones. The band walks that fine line in their new r elease, avoiding the too much, too soon syndr ome and somehow landing in between. The Femmes?angst seems untouched even by time, opening with the familiar str ut of ?Memor y,? a tr ack somehow r eminiscent of anything on their self-titled r elease. The song hits the familiar notes and hooks, deliver ed in the signatur e Gor don Gano deadpan. The band seems r einvigor ated on ?Big Car,? with its innuendofilled ver ses and folk r ock stomp. ?You?ve been sleeping your whole life, I ?m going to wake you up,? sings Gano, the band sounding as fr esh as it did on its heyday. I t?s when they br ing it down to those basics that they
By RICARDO SOLTERO City Times
T
he just- concluded 23r d San Diego L atino Film Festival r aised a var iety of themes dur ing its 10-day r un.
hit the jackpot. ?What You Really Mean? is a per fect example. I t deliver s that classic, str ipped- down sound without r ehashing it. The hear t-on-your-sleeve honesty that the band can deliver is inimitable and her e it's well on display. With ?Untr ue L ove? and ?I ?m Not Done? the band takes on the r ole of positive pessimists to end on a high note. Ther e?s no intended r esignation or r egr et but a subtle hint at newly found inspir ation, offer ing a clue for fans that they ar e indeed back and her e to stay. Their wor k is not done yet. Not ever ything succeeds on this r ecor d though; tr acks like ?I Could Be Anything? and ?I ssues? ar e not par ticular ly memor able. They ar e not bad songs in any way but str uggle to stand out in compar ison with the str onger mater ial on the r ecor d. The Violent Femmes don?t ventur e too far fr om their comfor t zone but to be fair that?s not a bad thing. Dur ing its car eer, the band did one thing and did it well. I f it?s wor king don?t fix it. Her e, the band slowly r etur ns to its r oots and pr oves that the member s have plenty of gas in the tank. ?We Can Do Anything? is a fine r etur n for the band and a definite success. Gano seems to have r egained his songwr iting mojo, str iking up a handful of songs that will stand up next to anything in their classic cannon. Violent Femmes celebr ate their r etur n with a U.S tour, stopping in San Diego on May 6 at Humphr ey's.
The band Violent Femmes gcomes back to life with their new album"WecanDoEverything." Official album cover
Culture that moves
Challenging Society One of the most talked about films of the festival was ?L as Apar icio.? I t's a film adaptation of the popular Mexican TV ser ies about sever al women coping with a cur se that has haunted their family for gener ations. I t kills their husbands and r ender s them unable to give bir th to males. Actr esses L iz Gallar do and Er éndir a I bar r a and dir ector Moisés Or tiz Ur quidi attended the festival's opening night celebr ation on Mar ch 10 and spoke in SpanLosAmigosInvisiblesopenedtheSanDiegoLatinoFilmFestival. RICARDOSOLTEROCity Times ish about the film. Contr over sy sur r ounded the supposed to be por tr ayed, with par ty, L os Amigos I nvisibles ?This is the fir st time that or iginal ser ies for its por tr ayal dignity," said Or tiz. ar e hitting the r oad. we jammed as a band to wr ite of str ong women but not in "I n Mexico, the major ity They ar e headed to Buenos songs. Usually we wor k on commonly accepted ways and wants to watch television with Air es, for the beginning of a something for days but this for featur ing an openly L atina a cr eative concept that?s ver y tour that will take them to time we jammed. Songs came lesbian couple. outdated," said Gallar do. "... I Chile, Mexico City, Monter r ey out within two or thr ee hour s,? The contr over sy has shifted think this exactly what makes and sever al U.S. cities. said Br iseño. to pr aise, mostly because of this pr oject so special." After war d, the member s ?We ar e ver y cr itical of ourthe honest por tr ayal of the r eI bar r a expr essed optimism. will head into the studio for selves. We tr y ever ything poslationship between Julia and ?I see a futur e in Mexico to tell their eighth studio album. sible when we make our music, Mar iana, the couple. extr aor dinar y stor ies about Julio Br iseño, singer of the ever ything possible to make it ?I think 'L as Apar icio' is a extr aor dinar y women because cr itically acclaimed band, took funky ... Something ver y fr esh ver y impor tant pr oduct that we have plenty of them." time to speak fr om Miami. He came out of this appr oach.? talks about homosexual consaid Metallica?s ?Some Kind Of Autentico Decadente and tent in a differ ent way. I t does Los Amigos Invisibles Monster ? documentar y film Enr ique Gonzales Muller ar e not ster eotype its char acter s. Fr esh off their per for mance r ejuvenated the band's ap- among the guests in the alI t pr esents them how they ar e bum, due on August. at the festival's opening night pr oach.
Tijuana wins One of the most color ful events of the festival occur r ed at the pr emier of the documentar y ?Club Fr onter a,? which tells the stor y of Tijuana's soccer team, Xoloitzcuintles. The scr eening featur ed some of the player s, cheer leader s, even the team's mascot. The documentar y follows the r ise of the team to Mexico's pr emier soccer and the team's unlikely championship r un. The film shows the positive impact the success the ?Xolos? had dur ing a time when the Tijuana was mar r ed by dr ug-tr afficking violence. ?I think this documentar y will demonstr ate the impact the team had in the city and how beautiful the spor t of soccer is,? said Alejandr o Guido, a midfielder for Club Tijuana and the U.S. national team. ?I believe that it will help r emove the stigma that the city (Tijuana) had.? The 2012 championship season in the Pr imer a División challenged Tijuana?s r eputation of violence and cor r uption, giving Tijuana the collective pr ide the city had long sought. ?This is the fir st time Tijuana has had a fir st- division team ... Now people can r oot for a team in their back yar d," said the film's dir ector, Chr is Cashman. "Tijuana is a r eal city, with cultur e and identity, and its people needed that.?
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www.sdcitytimes.com | March 23, 2016
CITYVOICE Working students need more help The San Diego Community College Distr ict has sever al pr ogr ams that help specifc student populations succeed in college but it doesn?t have anything to assist students who have unexpected life changes. The completion r ate for City's students was 65 per cent, accor ding to 2014 data -- meaning that only 65 per cent ear ned an associate's degr ee, tr ansfer r ed to a four-year univer sity or competed 60 tr ansfer able units with a 2.0 GPA or better. We wonder how many of those who didn't complete their studies fall in that categor y. Unfor tunately, the distr ict data does not show why students fail to complete their studies. But it does show that Afr ican Amer icans and L atinos, who make 60 per cent of City?s student body, have the lowest completion r ates, with a 63 and 64 per cent r espectively. While it is tr ue that the college and the distr ict offer a var iety of suppor t r esour ces, such as tutor ing center s, libr ar y databases and teacher s' office hour s -- they don't offer much for students with abr upt schedule changes. Dur ing the fall of 2014 ther e wer e 10,735 students wor king full or City TimesEditorial Board par t- times jobs. That?s 66 per cent of the City College?s student population. Students who find a job after the semester has star ted have two options: They can dr op their classes and for get about school to ear n money or tur n down the job, attend school and sur vive with little or no income. Ther e is another option students have but it's only available for "an unfor eseeable emer gency and/or justifiable r eason at the end of the ter m? and car r ies the r isk of failing if the student can?t complete the cour sewor k in the next two semester s. City College has mainly non- tr aditional students, meaning that at least six out ten of them don't enr oll r ight after high school, have a GED or wor k full or par t-time. The distr ict has been obsessive about cutting classes that have low enr ollment. What it needs to do is help mor e wor king students, who r epr esent two- thir ds of the population. That r equir es innovative thinking. Students need mor e flexibility than what's being offer ed to be able to complete their classes if they face an abr upt change in their schedule, par ticular ly after the add-dr op deadline. This includes being able to take classes on the weekends, being able to switch to an online cour se or being able to switch to the same class offer ed at a differ ent time. We need non- tr aditional solutions to City's major ity nontr aditional students.
EDITORIAL
CityTimes www.sdcitytimes.com
Illustrationby BELINDAMENDOZA City Times
My life stuck in maze I 'm a young immigr ant who r eceived a tempor ar y per mit to live and wor k legally in the United States. I was thr illed to r eceive that per mit, under a feder al pr ogr am known simply as DACA, which I now have r enewed for another two year s. I 'm taking community college classes while planning to get a bachelor 's degr ee. So far I ?ve been accepted by thr ee univer sities and I 'm awaiting to hear fr om my dr eam school, San Diego State Univer sity. I t hur ts me to r ealize that I may not be able to pur sue any of these oppor tunities. I am afr aid that my status may change if a Republican candidate who has pledged to get tough on undocumented immigr ants wins the pr esidency. Even if I 'm allowed to stay, I 'm afr aid of having to dr op out
March 23, 2016 | Volume 70, Number 9 National Pacemaker winner, Associated Collegiate Press PublishedasTheJay Sees(1945-1949), Fortknightly (1949-1978), City Times(1978- ) IncorporatingthenewspapersTecolote, Knight Owl andFlicks
CELIAJIMENEZ
LUISASAUSEDO
CITYTIMESSTAFF
Editor in Chief Photography Editor
Sports Editor
RICARDOSOLTERO
Social Media Editor Video Editor
Collette Carroll, Thomas Chesy, Natalie Hanson, Oisis Jones, Michael Markulin, Antonio Marquez, Belinda Mendoza, Beatriz Merced, Destiny Ortiz, Denise White.
Arts & Feature Editor
MIKEMADRIAGA
AIDAGARCIA JERRYMcCORMICK Journalism Advisers
CORRESPONDENTS Griffin Dehne, Alan Hickey, Richard Mendoza.
because I will not be able to qualify for feder al financial aid. The Boar d of Gover nor s Waiver helps DACA students like me to pay for community college classes but we don?t qualify for feder al student aid. We will have to pay for our housing, books and other necessities on our own. With my legal status uncertain, having a stable job is out of the question. I feel like a mouse r unning thr ough a maze - achieving what I was meant to, like staying out of pr ison, gr aduating fr om high school and being a good citizen -- with no end in sight. I f a mouse knows ther e is cheese in the maze, at least he's motivated to go after it. But having no cheese or even a fin-
ish line makes me wonder if my chasing will ever end. I stay awake at night wonder ing if I should follow my dr eam and attend my top univer sity, or just decline to go, and look for a job, which could come to an abr upt end. Accor ding to the The UndocuScholar s Pr oject, or ganized by UCL A in 2015, I 'm far fr om alone in facing this uncer tainty, ?Roughly 65,000 undocumented students gr aduate fr om U.S. high schools each year, and near ly 250,000 undocumented immigr ants ar e enr olled in college, which accounts for r oughly 2 per cent of all college students nationwide.? That's 2 per cent of college students whose futur e likely hangs on November 's election.
PERSPECTIVE AntonioMarquez
City Timesispublishedtwicemonthly duringthe semester. Signedopinionsarethoseof theindividual writersanddonot necessarily represent thoseof the entirenewspaper staff, City Collegeadministration, faculty andstaff or theSanDiegoCommunity CollegeDistrict Boardof Trustees. District policy statement: Thispublicationisproducedasalearningexperience under SanDiegoCity College?sDigital Journalismprogram. All materials, includingopinionsexpressedherein, arethe soleresponsibility of thestudentsandshouldnot be interpretedtobethoseof thecollegedistrict, itsofficers or employees. Letters to the editor: LetterstotheEditor arewelcome, 350 wordsor less. The staff reservestheright toedit for grammar, spelling, punctuationandlength.
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March 23, 2016 | www.sdcitytimes.com
CITYSPORTS
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Athlete behind the plate and camera By LUISASAUSEDO City Times City College athlete Alex Bentley is living both of his passions by combining film and baseball into his life. Bentley, a 23- year- old film major, was cast to act as a San Diego Padr es player in Fox's new ser ies ?Pitch.? Not only is he playing a baseball player, he's one in r eal life. He's the star ting catcher for the Knights team and in the past has played for I sr ael?s national baseball team. ?We all have that par t of us that wants to contr ibute to life and ear th and animals and people and we have that sense of pur pose. I don't necessar ily feel like I 'm contr ibuting when I 'm on the set or on the field, but at least I 'm doing what I love,? said Bentley at an inter view. When Bentley was asked at what age he star ted playing baseball, he laughed and said that his family has pictur es of him thr owing balls ar ound the house befor e he could walk. Bentley followed up with a quote fr om his father that explains his son's passion for the game. ?I ?ve never seen a kid so in love with something that he could sit and not watch but listen to a r adio baseball game for thr ee hour s and ask not to be
AlexBentley. Courtesy photo
AlexBentley istheKnights' starting catcher after comingback fromaseriousinjury. CELIAJIMENEZ City Times inter r upted.? ?I r emember that vividly,? Bentley continued, ?and that's just been me, listening to Jer r y Coleman and Ted L eitner calling Padr es games since I was old enough to talk.? When Bentley was 12 year s old, his mother decided to move to her home countr y, I sr ael. Bentley used baseball as an outlet to keep his sanity after moving to a new land. He pr acticed his skills and was eventually r ecr uited to play for I sr ael?s national baseball team.
He said he had the time of his life playing ball for that team, but when he tur ned 18, decided it was best for his car eer to move back to the United States. ?My r eal goal is to stay close to the beach, stay close to people I love and who love me and cr eate enough financial secur ity to live comfor tably, wake up when I want and to live as I please. That?s the ultimate goal and fr om ther e I will figur e out contr ibution and giving back to the wor ld.? As for his film car eer, Bentley
said he is motivated by the oppor tunity to change the wor ld thr ough movies. He wants people to feel something after viewing his films. Bentley wr ites his ideas for films in multiple jour nals he keeps in his house, car, baseball bag and backpack. He hopes to tie his passion for film to baseball some day. Though he plays baseball for City's team, ther e was a point in his life wher e he thought he would never play again. A br oken wr ist and thr ee sur ger ies
later, at age 18, he decided to hang up his cleats. After a few year s of focusing on his film wor k, Bentley, at age 22, decided to get back into baseball and tr ied out for the Knights pr ogr am managed by Chr is Br own. ?I was lost, just with life. Film was going gr eat... I star ted a business, ever ything was gr eat, and then I r ealized I could do all these things until I ?m 60. Baseball is the only thing that has to happen now. That's was when I made my comeback.? As of Mar ch 20, the Knights ar e 8- 8 and Bentley is batting .231, has 9 hits and 6 RBI . He's looking to play baseball for as long as his body allows him to -- but also continue to be involved with film for year s to come, fulfilling his dual passions.
Teen player on top of her game By MICHAELMARKULIN City Times This is Palia Gr iffin's fir st year at City College and she's alr eady the L ady Knights top singles and doubles tennis player at the age of 19. Given her family backgr ound, that's not sur pr ising. Gr owing up in the Nor th Par k ar ea, Gr iffin attended San Diego High School and pr acticed tennis at the Balboa Tennis Club. ?You can say my second home was the Balboa Tennis Club,? Gr iffin told City Times. Gr iffin's entir e family is dedicated to the spor t. Her father and uncle both coach tennis, while her mom wor ks as a
str inger at the tennis club. Recently, Gr iffin and her family competed in a national competition for the United States Tennis Association's Family of the Year Awar d. They ended up taking home the tr ophy for 2016. Gr iffin was always expected to play tennis, but didn't star t playing competitively until high school. She also coaches a junior s team at the tennis club. Gr iffin's inter ests extend beyond tennis; she also finds happiness in ar t. ?I ?ve been dr awing since I was little, but it kind of gr ew because I love to dr aw hor ses," she said. She dr eams of having a hor se and living in the countr y some day. Gr iffin is using her time at City College to figur e out what her next step
along her jour ney will be. Gr iffin's said her father, Chaz, is her inspir ation. ?School never wor ked out for him and he dr opped out but that did not stop him fr om achieving so much. When he wants something he does it,? said Gr iffin. She hopes to find that same dr ive. She said that her mother, Sunya, who is fr om Thailand, has given her a wellr ounded per spective on life. Jamie Jones, Palia?s head coach for the L ady Knights, r aves about her number one player. ?Palia has a gr eat game and has all of the shots. I hope she will be a qualifier for r egionals this year, but most of all she is a gr eat gir l. Super sweet and wor ks har d.?
Freshman PaliaGriffin leadsher tennisteam. MICHAELMARKULIN City Times