The Advocate 12-10

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CMYK

CMYK

WEDNESDAY l 12.10.14 OUR 65TH YEAR CONTRA COSTA COLLEGE SAN PABLO, CALIF.

41 exclusively student parking spaces comprise Lot 16, which is scheduled to re-open at the earliest in 4 months. The lot was closed to traffic more than 3 years ago after a sinkhole formed in its center. The total budget for the entire project is $729, 379.

900

Plate Pile elements are being installed to stabilize the hillside.

Step 2

Roughly half of the pilings will be used to stabilize this portion of hill southwest of Lot 17.

Plate Piles These nondisplacement steel sections are used to halt downslope forces and provide resistance to prevent further erosion.

Noise Complaints The loud sound of pilings being driven into the hillside has bothered children, students and faculty, from the ELC to the Art Building.

PARKING OPTIONS ABOUND Construction, carpool program to ease lot congestion

BY Cody McFarland ASSOCIATE EDITOR

cmcfarland.theadvocate@gmail.com

While students anticipate the return of 41 parking spaces in April, those planning to carpool to campus can take part in the college’s first ever carpool program as soon as spring semester begins. The re-opening of Lot 16 will provide students 41 currently unused parking spaces north of the Art Building and is scheduled for completion in April or March at the

earliest, Buildings and Grounds Manager Bruce King said. Students driving a vehicle of three or more persons can avoid this wait, as well as the $40 charge for a student parking permit, King said, by applying for a free carpool permit at the start of spring semester. Carpool permit applications can be picked up and filled out at Police Services, east of the Bookstore. Permits will be assigned on a first come-first served basis to 15 groups of three or more students

who can verify they are currently enrolled at Contra Costa College and will arrive on campus together in one vehicle. “These are a just a couple of things that will be helpful for the parking situation here,” King said. “It’s not going to solve the problem entirely, but it will help.” With construction of the new Campus Center and Classroom Building underway, the college was forced into closing various SEE HILLSIDE, PAGE 4

INFORMATIONAL GRAPHIC BY CODY MCFARLAND / THE ADVOCATE

EXECUTIVE ORDER AIMS TO PROTECT FAMILIES President Obama, immigrants under Republican scrutiny BY Lorenzo Morotti EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

lmorotti.theadvocate@gmail.com

SEE IMMIGRATION, PAGE 4

QING HUANG / THE ADVOCATE

Protesters nationwide respond to police brutality Public demands justice for victims, uncharged officers

‘EL CHAVO’ LEAVES VIBRANT LEGACY

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

lmorotti.theadvocate@gmail.com

OAKLAND — Within a week of the St. Louis, Missouri Grand Jury ruling regarding the Michael Brown case on Nov. 25, a second wave of protests swept the U.S. following a similar grand jury ruling. An eyewitness recorded New York City Police officer Daniel Pantaleo suffocating a 43-year-old African-American adult male, Eric Gardner, to death in an illegal chokehold for allegedly selling untaxed cigarettes during the day. The graphic video depicts Gardner repeatedly saying, “I can’t breath,” as Pantaleo sucks the life from his face. The clip went viral on social media sites and YouTube. On Dec. 2, the Staten Island Grand Jury ruled that there was not enough evidence to move forward with charges against Pantaleo for

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BY Lorenzo Morotti

killing Gardner. People protesting in cities across the U.S. are outraged that another case of police brutality escaped thorough examination within the judicial system. Contra Costa College political sciences professor Leonard McNeil said this civil unrest has escalated quickly because the issue is not isolated to a single African-American death by a Caucasian police officer. Within four months, the five encounters between Caucasian officers and AfricanAmerican men and children in which lethal force was used have gained national attention because of protests. “I don’t see this civil unrest as rioting,” McNeil said. “They are uprisings against injustices. These people are responding to their poor social and economic situation with righteous SEE PROTEST, PAGE 4

CMYK

The undocumented parents of United State citizens, legal residents, were given a sliver of relief when President Barack Obama took a step toward immigration reform on Nov. 21. Obama said he plans to issue an executive order that would temporarily halt the deportation of 4.7 million undocumented immigrants to a crowded auditorium at El Sol High School in

ABOVE: Protesters stand their ground on Interstate-580 during a protest in Oakland on Nov. 25, a day after a Missouri grand jury chose not to indict white police officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting of black teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.

CMYK


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