The Advocate 10-11

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WEDNESDAY l 10.11.17 OUR 68TH YEAR CONTRA COSTA COLLEGE SAN PABLO, CALIF.

LEFT: Sitting in his campus office, counselor Alfred Zuniga reads a book given to him by his mother while she was on her death bed. Zuniga said his mother instilled in him the importance of keeping documents and creating records because his life is a symbol of what others with his Hispanic culture have gone through.

“ For it to have purpose for me, it has to involve helping other people.” ­—Alfred Zuniga, counselor

DENIS PEREZ / THE ADVOCATE

Accomplished counselor, teacher holds history Cherished momentos gained through decades fuel career longevity By Michael Santone associate editor

msantone.theadvocate@gmail.com

“I am often asked, ‘What do you tell students?’” Contra Costa College counselor Alfred Zuniga said as he eased back into his chair and began observing the assorted mementos that decorate his office. “I always say, ‘They tell me.’ And I just sit and listen,” he said with a smile of pure elation. Dedicating the last 49 years of his life to CCC, the 83-year-old Zuniga has transcended that of a beloved counselor tucked away in the back of the counseling department.

Over the decades he has been pivotal in the lives of students and in shaping the college curriculum. He has also become a fixture, providing resources and campus history. As the first proud Chicano hired by the Contra Costa Community College District in August 1969, Zuniga brought to CCC his first-hand experiences of growing up in the barrio. Born on June 10, 1934 in San Diego, California, Zuniga who was raised in a Catholic household along with his older brother and two younger sisters, was studious from a very young age. “We lived 17 miles away from the Mexican border,” he said. “I made my

first nickel when I was 5 years old — that’s what Mexican kids do.” After graduating high school in 1952, he began his Jesuit formation, which spiritually and academically prepares candidates for the Roman Catholic Society of Jesus. “I grew up in a Catholic home and from my mother learned life is about service,” he said. “How can I be of service?” From 1952 to 1956 Zuniga spent time at Sacred Heart Novitiate in Los Gatos, California, and later three years at Mt. St. Michael’s in Spokane, Washington from 1958 to 1961. SEE ZUNIGA, PAGE 3

SEX ASSAULT AMENDMENT TO ALTER GUIDELINES SQUAD’S STRUGGLE RESULT IN 3-0 LOSS

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Education secretary reshapes Title IX’s enforcement edict By Roxana Amparo associate editor

DENIS PEREZ / THE ADVOCATE

Interfaith room locale offers silence, privacy Applied Arts Building

Fundraiser promotes scholars, teachers PAGE 8

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balcony set to be prayer room

By Alondra Gallardo advocate staff

agallardo.theadvocate@gmail.com

The Muslim Student Alliance (MSA) now has a location for its interfaith mediation room on the balcony of the second floor of the Applied Arts Building. Open to any religious and spiritual belief, the converted space will provide chances throughout the day for students to practice their faith in peace and quiet. Dean of Student Services Vicki Ferguson said MSA President Rayah Alammari told her that students from any faith or belief did not have a dedi-

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cated space to pray, meditate or reflect throughout the day and in between classes on campus. “I put the proposal for an interfaith room on the Operations Council agenda last semester,” Ferguson said. “I shared the proposal and the committee was open to the idea. The next steps were to find a location.” Ferguson, along with Building and Grounds Manager Bruce King and Director of Business Services Mariles Magalong surveyed the campus for available space. During the Operations SEE INTERFAITH, PAGE 3

ABOVE: On Monday biology majors Kulsoom Mohsin (left) and Dema Aldabbas (right) walk across the balcony set to be converted into an interfaith prayer room on the second floor of the Applied Arts Building.

ramparo.theadvocate@gmail.com

Zero tolerance for any type of harassment continues to be the standard throughout the Contra Costa College Community College District, despite Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’ plans to amend Title IX to change the way colleges handle allegations of sexual assault. The 1972 education amendment Title IX protects people from discrimination based on sex in education programs or activities that receive federal financial aid. “Everyone has a Ferguson right to an education to be free from any Contra type of assault that Costa may come,” Contra College Costa College Title dean of IX Coordinator Vicki student serFerguson said. vices and “She (DeVos) is Title IX proposing to make coordinator the evidence lie more on the victim, which looks like it supSEE TITLE IX, PAGE 3

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