VOLU ME 25
ISSUE 2
CHAFFEY
BRE E Z E MONDAY + SEPTEMBER 8, 2014
News
Feature
OPINION
SPORTS
Fergusun From A Local Perspective
Not “Just an AA Degree”
Tinder: Swipe A Date
Remembering Sheldon Martin
JANET TRENIER San Bernardino County Sheriff ’s Deputy Janna Kovensky sweeps the campus during lockdown situation.
Student Arrested:
safety concerns raised after false bomb report No one got in, no on got out. Campus Police said that on Thursday, Aug. 21 at approximately 1 p.m. Jonathan Nicks, a 21-year-old student, reported a bomb threat at the college’s Rancho Cucamonga campus. They said he contacted authorities, reporting a suspicious white man wearing a vest with anti-government patches, holding a metal cylindrical device suspected to be a bomb.
The campus was put on lockdown in response to the threat. Students were told to head to the nearest classroom and to follow law enforcement directions. “I got to school and I found a parking spot in less than five minutes. That’s when I knew something was wrong,” Mark Reotutar, communications studies major, said. “I heard that there was a bomb threat and that the school was on lockdown. I started
running.” “I was coming from the library and I saw a helicopter, and I heard over the helicopter speaker, ‘go inside, this is not a drill,’” Aisha Dawson, economics major, said. “I was freaking out. I started trying to open all the classroom doors. I didn’t know what was going on.” Confusion was the primary feedback from students in regards to the lockdown. There was no emergency
message over the school’s intercom or any other notification to students. “I didn’t get any messages or anything,” Ashley Gose, a new student studying nutrition and food science major, said. “Some kind of text message alert system would be very useful for emergency situations. To keep students informed. Communication to students is vital.” + Continue reading on page 9