The football team lost against Southern California’s No. 1 team Saddleback College with a score of 56-21 on Oct. 22 at Saddleback Stadium in Mission Viejo.
EDITORIAL: New transparency law a step forward
The Richard McKee Transparency Act of 2011 is an important change in the publics’ ability to access college information.
Occupy L.A.: Protesters angry at deceit
It remains to be seen if the Occupy Los Angeles movement and it’s global counterparts will generate any future changes in economic and political policies.
Board of Trustees candidates forum set for Wednesday
A forum for the six candidates running in the Board of Trustees election in November will participate in a forum in the Creveling Lounge on Oct. 26 at 7 p.m.
Women’s soccer defeats Mt. SAC for first time in three years
The women’s soccer team had its first win against Mt. San Antonio College in three years on Tuesday. The Lancers pulled off their win with a lockout score of 2-0 after a slow first period.
Football upsets ranked Fullerton in conference opener
The PCC football team started off conference play Saturday with an upset victory over 3rd ranked, and undefeated Fullerton College. The final score of 30-20 was attained by The Lancer’s opportunistic defense, and the poised arm of third-string quarterback Zeke Julien.
Courier wins top honors
The weekly Courier newspaper and annual Spotlight magazine published by the Journalism Department were both honored with coveted General Excellence awards at the Southern California conference of the Journalism Association of Community Colleges on Oct 15.
New arts building progresses
The Center for the Arts Building is rising above the campus and is 25 percent complete, according to Measure P Director Jack Schulman.
New law improves access to college records
A new state law named in honor of former PCC Professor and open government activist Richard McKee was signed by California Gov. Jerry Brown and will make college records more accessible to the general public.
Stories and poetry vie for spots in literary magazine
The editors of PCC‘s literary magazine Inscape gather in a circle, each with the same story in hand.
They discuss various opinions and comments about the submitted pieces that are poetry, non fiction and fiction. Questions are raised: what is considered a literary story? Was the story engaging and is it relevant to what they are looking for?
The editors don’t always agree on whether a story should be put in the magazine but they are all open to discussion about how they feel about it.