CityTimes
www.sdcity.edu/citytimes
Volume 59, Issue 10
Fair beans
Students have new choice in café coffee News, page 3
Serving the San Diego City College community since 1945
April 19-May 9, 2005
Write-ins win seats in ASG election
HOPE SHAW 1935-2005
Student rep fee passes; voter turnout increases for second year in a row
Photo by Elizabeth Eross A poem was one of several items, including candles, photos, artwork and flowers, set up at a memorial outside the Communications building the week of April 11, following the death of longtime radio/television Professor Hope Shaw (pictured inset).
Remembering Hope ...
City College mourns radio/television department pioneer By Erin Resnick City College lost one of its most valued contributors, Communications faculty member Hope Shaw, when she died at age 70, leaving the campus community too soon to none other than the life that she loved. Those who knew Hope Warren Shaw would easily argue that she was not only a teacher at City College,
but a mentor and a friend through all walks of life including the many people that she stumbled on through her travels and adventurous lifestyle. It was indeed this adventurous lifestyle that took Mrs. Shaw on April 6 in La Paz, Mexico. While vacationing at one of her favorite places, Mrs. Shaw drowned when she was too weak to confront the rip current that
was sweeping her away, according to accounts. Mrs. Shaw was on her way to attending a BINACOM meeting in Mexico with her fellow colleagues and students. Mrs. Shaw was one of the cofounders of BINACOM, the Binational Schools of Communication,
By Christopher Young The results are in for this year’s Associated Student Government elections, and the student rep fee measure passed by a landslide 279 votes. The polls closed on April 14 with 619 ballots cast, about 100 more than the previous year, which marks a steady incline in turnout, returns show. The Associated Student rep fee is a proposition put forth by the ASG that would allow them to ask each student, upon registration each semester, for a contribution of $1 to a student activities fund. The contribution would be voluntary for the benefit student clubs and oncampus activities. It passed 390 to 111 votes. The presidential race went to Francisco Fabian, who campaigned on a platform of greater communication between students and administrators. Fabian’s 200 votes led his closest contender, Brandon Robinson, by 58. Jason Frye, the third-party candidate who campaigned for “more fun and free food,” received 107 votes. Sara Hernandez won vicepresident, hoping to affect some fiscal policy changes, including avid support of the rep fee. Mirona Constaninescu, the candidate called for free-trade coffee in City College’s café, was
See HOPE, Page 5 See ELECTION, Page 5