Wednesday, December 1, 2010

President's News Burst for December 2010


I hope you enjoyed a restful and enjoyable season of Thanksgiving.  As the semester culminates and the usual academic tensions rise for us all and our students, please make the time to take good care of yourself.  During this busy time, it’s all too easy to set aside our normal exercise, eating and sleeping patterns.  Please keep in mind that maintaining balance is key to managing stress and our long term health.  Take the time to enjoy the company of peers and friends during the many events on campus!  Exchange cookies, cook or taste chili, or attend a music, athletic or other performance.

THANK YOU for all that you do for our college and our students!  May the upcoming holiday season bring peace, joy and good health.
PRESIDENT’S LEADERSHIP AWARD
I am pleased to announce our "call for nominations" for the President’s Leadership award. Nominations are due to the President’s Office by Friday, Dec. 10. This award will be presented during the Spring 2011 Flex Week and at a special recognition ceremony in May 2011. Let me encourage each of you to consider nominating an outstanding member of our college community for this award. The President’s Leadership Award was established to recognize leadership in service to students, faculty and staff, and to encourage continuation of that excellence. Nominations of full-time administrative staff and other individuals in leadership positions at Grossmont College may be submitted by any member of the college community who has personal and direct knowledge of the nominee’s work, and who can comment on the unique and outstanding characteristics in support of the nominee’s excellent service to students, faculty and staff.
  
YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO ATTEND “INNOVATIONS 2011”
GCCCD has the distinct honor of co-hosting the League for Innovation in the Community College’s “Innovations 2011 Conference,” to be held Feb. 27 to March 2, 2011, at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront Hotel. The San Diego Community College District will also serve as an official host. Innovations 2011 is the premier event for professionals dedicated to improving organizational teaching and learning, and discovering new approaches for enhancing the community college experience. The conference provides a tremendous forum for collaboration among academic experts and leading community college professionals, while granting participants exclusive access to the most inventive and thought-provoking programs from around the world. More than 2,000 community college faculty, professional staff and administrators are expected to attend. Confirmed keynote speakers include Allan Golston of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Sarita Brown of Excelencia in Education, Paul Lanning of the Foundation for California Community Colleges and Janet Zadina of Tulane University School of Medicine. As a host district, we will play a critical role in supporting the conference through a volunteer corp.  GC employees who volunteer a minimum of four hours can receive a free registration to attend the conference, contingent upon supervisory approval. There will be a variety of volunteer assignments available. We need a total of 78 volunteers. If you would like to be part of this exciting conference and take advantage of the free conference registration and the professional development opportunity it provides, all GC staff should contact Bernadette Black in the President’s Office. Please correspond with Bernadette to take advantage of this fabulous opportunity.

DREAMKEEPERS GRANTS NOW AVAILABLE
Grossmont College has been selected by Scholarship America as a “Dreamkeepers Grant” school. Dreamkeepers grants are available to students who are enrolled in at least six units with a cumulative GPA of 2.0 or higher and can demonstrate an “emergency” need.  These grants are for unanticipated emergency costs and not for costs associated with a lack of preparation or anticipation associated with the costs of a college education. Some examples of such emergencies include child care, rent, gas money, and utilities. Expenses not considered emergencies, and will not be covered, include tuition and fees, books and supplies and normal academic related expenses. Approved awards will be made within two business days from the point of application. Checks in the amount of the approved award will be co-payable to the student and the vender seeking payment (i.e. utility company, child care provider, landlord, etc) and collected by the student receiving the grant at the College Cashier window. Faculty or staff aware of students experiencing a one-time emergency or a financial related crisis can refer students to Selam Gebrekristos in Financial Aid for more information. Scholarship America awarded Grossmont College $40,000 for students in financial crisis over the course of the academic year.  The average Dreamkeepers’ grant ranges from $300 to $500. 

PROGRAM SPOTLIGHT:  LIFE COACHING
Life Coaching Program (LCP) for new and continuing at-risk students: The LCP proposes serving 200 students per year, meeting weekly with a trained life coach on campus. With Basic Skills Funding, currently 19 life coaches have been recruited, screened, hired, oriented and trained in life coaching methods. Life coach professional development is on-going. These life changing coaches provide mentoring, support and direction for students who are in lower level English, Math and ESL classes, and/or on academic probation, and/or belong to a demographic group with a history of poor academic performance, such as foster youth, students with learning disabilities or economically disadvantaged. Students learn how to plan, manage and execute life skills such as developing and using weekly schedule and daily planner, eating nutritional balanced meals, exercising regularly, taking medication, creating and adhering to a budget, using campus and community resources, applying strategies to improve sleep and limiting distracting or negative behaviors and navigating through the educational maze and overcoming obstacles.

CSU SAN MARCOS SPRING 2011 ENROLLMENT
The University Transfer Center reports that CSU San Marcos has re-opened for spring 2011. This is an exceptional opportunity to transfer to a small, local public university that was virtually closed to our students for fall 2010. Please help let your students know spring 2011 applicants have a good chance of being admitted to CSU San Marcos. Students are eligible to apply if they fulfill either of the following admission criteria:  60+ transferable units, including completion of the “Golden Four” requirements (oral communication, written communication, critical thinking and mathematics); Overall GPA of 2.0; Less than 60 transferable units and CSU eligible from high school. Students must apply online at www.csumentor.edu  The campus remains open until further notice, but students are recommended to apply as soon as possible.
  
ASGC/CARE HOLIDAY PARTY NEEDS GIFT CARDS FOR STUDENT PARENTS
The annual ASGC/CARE Holiday Party will be held on Friday, Dec. 10 in Griffin Gate. The annual holiday party is for CARE, EOPS and CalWORKs students. Gerardette Nutt, ext. 7785, and Kitty Walden at ext. 7733, are soliciting gift cards for teenage children of student parents.  Please bring your donation to the EOPS/CARE/CalWorks office, Room 58-J, by 5 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 8. Last year’s holiday party was attended by about 100 children and their parents. Each year, the CARE Program receives toys from the Marine Corps Toys-for-Tots Program, but this program provides toys for the children only ages 0 to 10 and many CARE families include tweens and teens. So, we are asking for gift cards, certificates and/or merchandise, possible gift baskets for the teens and the student/parents. The Cooperative Agencies Resources for Education (CARE) program serves several hundred GC students who are single parents receiving public assistance, and are CalWORKs recipients. These students are low-income student/parents who are single head of household or CalWORKs recipients who attend full-time, with a goal to build better lives for themselves and their children, becoming self-sufficient.  GC’s CalWORKs program provides instruction, counseling and support services, including job search employment preparation for students currently receiving Public Assistance benefits. EOPS (Extended Opportunities Programs and Services) is a state-funded program established to recruit, enroll and retain students who are identified as economically and educationally disadvantaged.

THE 5 SKILLS OF NON-DEFENSIVE COMMUNICATION
GCCCD Public Safety is inviting all staff, faculty, supervisors and managers to a workshop titled “The 5 Skills of Non Defensive Communication.” The workshop will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 3 and Friday, Dec. 10, at Grossmont College, Room 41-117. The five skills of non-defensive communication provide us with specific tools that help us reduce the risk of creating a defensive reaction in others. These tools are: Disengage, Empathize, Inquire, Disclose, and Depersonalize. Refreshments will be provided. Registration is not required.  If you have any questions, please call Continuing Education at 619-660-4350.

“TIME FLIES AND OTHER SHORT PLAYS”
The Grossmont College Theatre Arts Department will present “Time Flies and Other Short Plays,” a series of witty and wildly original one-act plays, starting at 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 10 and 11, and 2 p.m. on Dec. 4 and 11, at the Stagehouse Theatre. The performances feature hilarious characters pondering life’s metaphysical questions, including two Babylonian blue-collar workers building the Tower of Babel, three chimps locked in a room and recreating “Hamlet,” and two women who fashion a funeral breakfast out of thin air. “Time Flies,” written by David Ives, is directed by Grossmont College Theatre Arts instructor Beth Duggan. Admission is $12 per person, $11 for active military and seniors and $10 for students.

NEW VOICES STUDENT READING
The Creative Writing Program will present the New Voices Student Reading starting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 7, in Room 220. Outstanding students of the Grossmont College Creative Writing Program’s Fall 2010 semester will stand and deliver original works of poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction and drama. This is always an unforgettable evening.
  
FUN-RAISER AT SOUPLANTATION
Grossmont College Athletics will host a “fun-raiser” at Souplantation, 9158 Fletcher Parkway, in La Mesa on December 7th.  From 5 to 8 p.m., Souplantation will donate 20 percent of sales generated to Grossmont College Athletics. Purchase a meal and a beverage and have a healthy dinner out with the Griffins, and support our program at the same time.
  
CHILI COOK-OFF
The 3rd annual Chili Cook-Off holiday event will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 8, in the Distance Education Room. All faculty and staff are invited to this highly competitive event featuring extraordinary spicy and tasty chili from talented cooks at GC. Vegetarian chili also will be available. Beverages will be provided. Prizes will be awarded to the top chili entries from the following categories: Spiciest/Hottest, Vegetarian and Meat. In addition, there will be one Grand Prize winner. If you plan to enter the competitive chili cook-off or plan on bringing a dessert, chili fixings or cornbread to share, please contact Bernadette Black at ext. 7100.
  
COOKIE EXCHANGE
The annual Cookie Exchange will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 10, the Business Communications/Mail Center, Bldg. 58C, located in the Modular Village. You are invited to bring four dozen of your favorite homemade holiday cookies, along with a copy of your recipe (if you would like to share it). Please RSVP by Thursday, Dec. 9 to Lani Dennis at ext. 7134.
  
GROSSMONT COLLEGE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA AND MASTER CHORALE AND SAN DIEGO BALLET PRESENTS THE NUTCRACKER
The Grossmont Symphony Orchestra and Grossmont Master Chorale, in partnership with the San Diego Ballet, will present two special performances of “The Nutcracker” at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 4, and 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 5, at the Birch North Park Theatre, 2891 University Ave., San Diego. This magical holiday favorite will feature 100 costumed dancers, reveling in Tchaikovsky’s beloved score on an enchanting journey through a landscape of Yuletide dreams, including swirling snowflakes, leaping Cossacks and sugar plum treats. The production is directed and choreographed by Robin Sheretz-Morgan and Javier Velasco. The director of the Grossmont Symphony Orchestra and Grossmont Master Chorale is Dr. Randall Tweed. Premium seating tickets are priced at $55 per person. General seating tickets are priced at $45 for adults, $25 for students ($2 off for seniors and active military). Tickets can be purchased online at www.grossmontsymphony.org, or by phone the event box office at (619) 239-8836.
  
MORE MUSIC DEPARTMENT EVENTS
*      The Grossmont Guitar Guild will host a concert fundraiser with guest artist Robert Wetzel, classical guitarist, starting at 8 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 3, in Room 34-206 upstairs in the new Health and Science Complex. Admission is $10 for adults, $8 for students

*      The Music Department will present “Jazz Night,” an evening of Grossmont College students performing a recital of various styles of jazz music, starting at 6 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 5, in Room 220. Also performing that evening will be the Cannon/Kenyatta Project, featuring Music Dept. co-chair Derek Cannon and Kamau Kenyatta. Admission is $8 for adults and $5 for students, seniors and children.

*      The Guitar ensemble will perform at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 8, in Room 221. Admission is free.

*      The Grossmont Concert Band will perform its winter concert with the Cuyamaca College Band, starting at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 8, at the Cuyamaca College Performing Arts Theatre. Admission is $8 for adults and $5 for students, seniors and children. The Concert Band features many different kinds of brass, woodwind and percussion instruments. The Concert Band is under the direction of Russell Sperling.

*      The Grossmont Jazz Ensemble has scheduled a performance starting at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 9 at the Cuyamaca College Fine Arts Theatre. Admission is $8 for adults and $5 for students.

*      The Grossmont Jazz Ensemble will perform at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 16, at the Horton Plaza retail center, 324 Horton Plaza, in Downtown San Diego. Admission is free.

SPEECH AND DEBATE TEAM
Members of the Grossmont/Cuyamaca Speech and Debate Team were very successful at the 2010 Griffin Invitational Speech/Debate Tournament, held Nov. 20-21. We hosted 23 colleges from both two and 4 year colleges. Approximately 100 students from Communication classes assisted in helping to run the tournament. Among the top competitors: Asma Eweida, finalist in Open Division Persuasive Speaking; Jonathan Parker, Bronze Award in Novice Parliamentary Debate, Bronze Award in Novice Parliamentary Debate and 7th place Speaker Award in Parli Debate;  Asma Eweida, 9th place Speaker Award in Parli Debate. Other competitors included Ali Aldhalimi,  Jesse Gault, Courtney Gerlach, Gabriela Johnson,  Russ Lindquist, Victoria Olango, Griselda Quintero, Morgan Rain, Alexandria Rivera, Maria Torres and Diana Trinidad.  Faculty judged or assisted at the tournament included Nancy Jennings, Denise Schulmeyer, Jade Solan and Sheri Strothers. Assistants included Dan Jones and Frank Lake. Students from Communication classes observed the competition.
  
ADDITIONAL UPCOMING EVENTS
*      Phi Theta Kappa Induction Ceremony, Sat., Dec. 4, 6 p.m., Room #220.

*      Nursing Pinning Ceremony, Wed., Dec. 15, 1 p.m., Cuyamaca College, Performing Arts Theater Communication Building.

*      Corrections Academy Graduation, Friday, Dec. 17, 6 p.m., Cuyamaca College Theater, B-17.
  
RECENT EVENTS
*      The Creative Writing Program recently hosted a very successful “Rock the Page,” an all-day creative write-a-thon fund-raiser, on Saturday, Nov. 13, on campus.  The second “Rock the Page” event featured 88 participants spending the day writing in four genres, including fiction, poetry, drama and creative non-fiction. More than $8,332 was raised to help with future Literary Arts Festival events and other Creative Writing Program activities. Rosie D’Agostino, a GC student, won the raffle for the MacBook.  Sydney Brown, English, said grants were provided by the Grossmont College Foundation, World Arts and Cultures Committee and American Federation of Teachers.

*      The Art and Design Club, with funding from the World Arts and Cultures Committee, hosted the “Fall Draw,” a collaborative drawing festival, on Wednesday, Dec. 1 in the Main Quad. Participants were able to collaborate, connect, interpret, observe, explore and express their inner artist. It was an excellent time of examining gesture, line, color, shape, culture and ideas through the process of drawing with others.

*      Student Health Services participated in National AIDS Awareness Week, Nov. 26 to Dec. 1 with an HIV and AIDS awareness info booth on Dec. 1 in the Main Quad. It was World AIDS Day on Dec. 1. Assisting Student Health Services was the Family Health Centers of San Diego HIV Outreach and Program Services.

ATHLETICS
*      Congratulations to the Women’s Water Polo and Women’s Volleyball teams. Both were Pacific Coast Athletic Conference champions. Also, the Men’s Water Polo team advanced to the second round of the state playoffs.

*      The Grossmont College Football players, coaches and athletic department staff would like to say “thank you” to the College Administration, Faculty and Staff for your continued support. The 2010 ended with their second consecutive Beach Bowl game appearance. The game was played on Nov. 20 in Santa Ana against East Conference runner-up Santa Ana College.  At 6-4, the Griffs posted a winning record despite playing in what is arguably the toughest conference in the nation. The Griffins were seeking their sixth straight bowl win, but lost 52-43.

*      The Grossmont College Men’s Basketball team will host the 39th annual Grossmont College Tournament, Dec. 3-5. The Griffins (0-4) will meet Cerritos in the opening round at 6 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 3. Other teams in the three-day event are Cypress, Saddleback, College of the Desert, Los Angeles Southwest, Cuesta and Southwestern.

OUR SYMPATHIES
Our sincere sympathies are extended to the family of the late Associate Professor Diane Mayne-Stafford, Computer Science Information Systems. A memorial service will be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Dec. 11, at the Palisades Presbyterian Church in Allied Gardens, 6301 Birchwood Street, SD 92120. The church’s website is www.palisadespres.com, which includes directions to the church. If you would like to share some thoughts about Diane at the service, please email Bob Stafford @ troutfly666@hotmail.com

Monday, November 1, 2010

President's News Burst for November 2010



THANK YOU TO OUR VETERANS
Thursday, Nov. 11 is Veterans Day, a day when we pause and honor the more than 25 million Americans who have served in our Armed Forces. We honor them for their love of our country and their willingness to serve. It is because of their great sacrifice that we all enjoy our freedom as we know it today. Their ranks include generations of citizens who have risked their lives while serving in military conflicts, including World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, and the war on terror. They have fought for the security of our country and the peace of the world. They have defended our founding ideals, protected the innocent, and liberated the oppressed from tyranny and terror. They have known the hardships, the fears and the tragic losses of war. Our veterans know that in the harshest hours of conflict, they serve just and honorable purposes. We have liberties and freedoms because brave men and women answer the call to serve. Our country is forever indebted to our veterans for their quiet courage and exemplary service. We are especially proud here at Grossmont of our student veterans. They are inspiring examples to our entire college community. Our veterans have returned home from their duties to dedicate themselves to their college studies and to further contributing to the growth and development of our nation. Our college will be closed on Nov. 11 in honor of Veterans Day. On that day, find a Vet and say thank you. Take time to thank our veterans.  Remember to pray for all veterans. I know you would want to join me in thanking all of them for their service past and present. Happy Veterans Day and thanks to all of those who have served and continue to serve in our military.
  
VETERANS RESOURCE CENTER’S OPEN HOUSE
Everyone is cordially invited to a “come-and-go” open house of the Grossmont College Veterans Resource Center (VRC) on Tuesday, November 9th from 3 to 5 p.m.  The VRC is located in Building 21, Room 253 on the ground floor (the former location of the Summit newspaper). Building 21 also houses the Theater Arts Department’s Stagehouse Theatre (the exterior wall features a colorful Aztec mural). It is nearest Parking Lot #1. There will be light refreshments, including cookies and punch, as well as demonstrations of the technology made available to assist veterans with learning. We look forward to seeing you Tuesday afternoon. Earlier in the day, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Tuesday, the Grossmont Student Veteran Organization (SVO), an organization that provides support, camaraderie and advocacy on behalf of student veterans, will host a fund-raising barbecue to be located on a grassy area near the LTRC. The barbecue will consist of hamburgers, veggie burgers and hot link hot dogs, along with cold drinks. Costs are $5 for burgers and $6.50 for hot link dogs. I encourage everyone to help support SVO and their efforts.
  
WELCOME TO DR. WENDY STEWART
Please join me in welcoming Dr. Wendy Stewart to the Grossmont College family as the new Dean of Counseling and Enrollment Services.  Dr. Stewart received her Doctor of Education, with a specialization in Higher Education Administration, from the University of Southern California.  Dr. Stewart also has a Masters of Science in Counseling with a specialization in Marriage and Family Therapy from SDSU, and a Bachelor of Arts in Literature/Writing from UCSD. She has a wealth of experience in community colleges and Universities in California. She most recently served at Miramar College as the Transfer Center Director, and previous to that at UCSD as an Academic Advisor from 1998-2005. She has worked in residence counseling at SDSU and has taught a range of PDC classes at Miramar as well as classes in Counseling and Research for National University. Dr. Stewart has been very involved in professional and community service and has been granted awards for her service and scholarship. She has chaired the Young Professionals Leadership Development Summit for the Urban League of San Diego, and served as President of the San Diego chapter of the National Pan-Hellenic Council. With Dr. Stewart’s academic preparation, higher education experience, and professional service, she will make a strong contribution to the Student Services team at Grossmont College.  I also want to take this opportunity to thank the screening committee for the many long hours spent in this process.  Co-Chaired by Bonnie Schmiege and John Colson the other members of the committee are Beverly Wight; Cindi Posada; Debbie Lim; Dee Murdock; Laith Shammas; Nancy Davis; Patrick Aure; Sandy Somo (student); Susan Topham; Tammy Huston; and Victoria Curran. Thanks for your hard work in identifying our new student services dean. 
  
WOULD YOU HIRE YOU?
The Career Center’s Adult Reentry program will host “Would You Hire You,” a free informational meeting on how job seekers can put themselves in the shoes of hiring managers, from 10 a.m. to noon, on Tuesday, Nov. 9, in Building 36, Room #332, on the college campus. The Adult Reentry serves adults who are interested in returning to school to reenter the workforce, learn a new career, earn a college diploma or upgrade their skills for a job promotion.
  
MASTER CHORALE PERFORMS MUSICA SACRA
The Music Department will present “Musica Sacra,” performances by the 48-member Grossmont College Master Chorale, on Friday, Nov. 12, at All Saints Episcopal Church, 625 Pennsylvania Ave., San Diego, and on Friday, Nov. 19, at St. John of the Cross Catholic Church, 8086 Broadway, in Lemon Grove. Both performances begin at 7:30 p.m. Admission is free, although a free-willing offering will be held. The Master Chorale, under the direction of Randall Tweed, musical director, will perform four selections of liturgical music for organ and chorus, including “Te Deum” by John Rutter, “Missa Brevis” by Zoltan Kodaly, “Rejoice in the Lamb” by Benjamin Britten and “Nunc Dimittis” by Alexandre Gretchaninoff. Accompanying the Master Chorale will be organist Robert MacLeod, pianist Katherine Petrosyan and Mariachi Chula Vista, a 15-member Mariachi ensemble.
  
ROCK THE PAGE WRITE-A-THON
The Creative Writing Program will host “Rock the Page,” an all-day creative write-a-thon fund-raiser from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 13, on the college campus. “Rock the Page” features participants spending the day writing in four genres, including fiction, poetry, drama and creative non-fiction. Cost to participate is a minimum donation of $50, which will include continental breakfast, lunch and an “I Rocked the Page” t-shirt. A raffle also will be held for a MacBook computer. Proceeds from the event will help pay speakers fees for the English Department’s Literary Arts Festival, to be held in April 2011. Check-in for “Rock the Page” begins at 8 a.m. in Room #575. For more information, visit www.grosssmont.edu/english, or call Sydney Brown at ext.7523, or Stephanie Mood at ext.7495.
  
WOODWIN QUINTET PERFORMS CHAMBER MUSIC
The Music Department will present the Woodwind Quintet’s performance of “An Evening of Chamber Music” starting at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 13, at the Cuyamaca College Arts Center auditorium, 900 Rancho San Diego Parkway, in El Cajon. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for students. The Woodwind Quintet, under the direction of Randall Tweed, musical director, will perform four selections, including “Wind Quintet in B Major” by Franz Danzi, “Wind Quintet Opus 79” by August Klughardt, “Suite Opus 157b” by Darius Milhaud and “Common Ground” by Gernot Wolfgang.
  
HYDE ART GALLERY PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
The Grossmont College Hyde Art Gallery is proud to present “Still Photographers” New and Vintage Works in a Reunion of the 1972 Grossmont College Summer Photo Workshop. This will be a reunion exhibition of photographers from Charles Fridenmaker’s 1972 summer workshop at Grossmont College. Fourteen artists are represented with a selection of 112 photographs, including vintage works from 1972, as well as a selection of their most recent pictures. Included are works from the estate of Mr. Fridenmaker, who died suddenly in his early thirties, shortly after leading the summer workshop. Exhibiting artists are Kim Blackford, Tim Burke, Terry Chostner, Donna Cosentino, Hern Crane, Gordon Darby, Bill Fields, Tom Gregory, Marc Lieberman, Kay Levie, Alfred Pagano, Susan Richardson, Michael Turner, and Charles Fridenmaker (posthumously). The exhibition will also include a “History Wall” including casual photographs from 1972 depicting instructor and students at work and at leisure. The exhibition was conceived by Bill Fields and Alfred Pagano as a tribute to their departed mentor Charles Fridenmaker. It was curated by David Wing, who was appointed to succeed Mr. Fridenmaker and teach in the Grossmont College Photography program until his retirement in 2003. Anticipating the 50th anniversary celebration of the founding of Grossmont College next year, the Hyde Gallery is looking back 38 years over the evolving careers of these artists as it presents this exhibition. An opening event in honor of the artists will be on Tuesday, November 16th, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.  The Gallery hours are:  Monday and Thursday, 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Tuesday and Wednesday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. The Gallery is located in the 200 Building Main Quad.
  
CULINARY STUDENTS TO COMPETE IN ARIZONA
Joe Orate, Culinary Arts Dept. Coordinator, and six Grossmont Culinary Arts  students will participate in the Robert Bland Culinary Salon 2010 culinary arts competition, Nov. 11 to 14 in Mesa, Ariz. The competition is sponsored by the American Culinary Federation Chef’s Association of Arizona. In past year, our culinary students have attended and participated in numerous culinary competitions across the state, nation and the world, including the Culinary Olympics in Germany. Those who participate in the competition will develop and refine their culinary skills in a competitive setting. Good luck to all.
  
GRIFFIN RADIO AT CHARGERS BLOOD DRIVE
For the 13th consecutive year, students Grossmont College’s Griffin Radio will attend and man an exhibit booth at the San Diego Blood Bank’s Chargers Blood Drive XXXII, which will take place at the Town & Country Convention Center in Mission Valley on Tuesday, Nov. 30, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Chargers Blood Drive is one of the community’s longest running and most successful life-saving events of the year. Donors will be awarded a voucher that may be redeemed at the Chargers Blood Drive for a T-shirt, as well as a VIP wristband for the autograph line. Donors will also have the opportunity to purchase an entry to win a 2011 Honda CRV or Honda Insight Hybrid, donated by the Honda Dealers of San Diego County, which will be given away at the Chargers Drive on the 30th. Participants who do not plan to donate blood, but would still like to meet the Chargers and enjoy the festivities at the Town and Country will be charged a $5 entry fee ($1 for children). Blood donors will be refunded the admission price after they donate. Donors will be treated to a variety of food, entertainment and other goodies at the blood drive. There is also free parking for donors. For more information, visit www.sandiegobloodbank.org
  
NATIVE CULTURES OF WESTERN ALASKA
Zoe Close recently had the splendid pleasure of participating in an National Endowment for the Humanities Institute trip to study the indigenous peoples of the Native Cultures of Western Alaska. Some of the people, such as the Kwakwaka’Wakw, who have lived in a mist forest environment, while others, such as the Yup-ik, who have developed a complex culture in a subarctic environment. Zoe was one of 24 college/university faculty chosen from the U.S. The group was interdisciplinary and focused on different academic projects. Scholars who served as consultants were both native and non-native. Zoe’s work included: (1) conflicts between moral values and aesthetic values in native art; and (2) distinctions between religious and aesthetic experiences in native belief systems and ceremonies. She also studied contemporary ethical and political issues for these cultures, such as repatriation of art objects. She said most challenging aspect of research was the secret/closed nature of ceremonial practices. The group traveled to remote places, such as Haida Ghaii and Alert Bay in Canada, and communicated with native peoples about art, language, social structures, religious beliefs and political problems. Zoe also said the experience of eating, dancing and laughing with native peoples was uplifting and powerful.
  
HOW OKLAHOMA GOT ITS SHAPE
Mark Goodman, Geography, reports he recently delivered a presentation in Blackwell, Okla. to the annual meeting of the Friends of the 1893 Land Run. The title for his presentation: “How Oklahoma Got Its Shape.” In addition, he assisted in the English-to-Thai translation of correspondence from the Güssing Renewable Energy Company of Güssing, Austria, to the Thai Army and Air Chief Marshal Kamthon Sindhavanada,  Privy Councillor to His Majesty Rama IX, King of Thailand. Mark is on sabbatical this semester.
  
SPEECH/DEBATE TEAM
Joel Castellaw, Professor and Department Chair of the Communication Department, reports that Roxanne Tuscany escorted the Grossmont Speech/Debate Team at the recent Pasadena City College Tournament, held on Oct. 23 and 24. Among the award recipients: Ali Aldhalimi with a Bronze Novice Parliamentary Debate Award and 6th Place Speaker Award in Novice Parliamentary Debate; and, Russ Lindquist with a Bronze Novice Parliamentary Debate Award, 5th Place Speaker Award in Novice Parliamentary Debate and Finalist in Novice Impromptu Speaking. Other competitors on the trip included Courtney Gerlach, Jesse Gault, Jonathan Parker, Jonathan Smith, Maria Torres and Diana Trinidad, who was a first-time competitor.
  
CAREER EXPO
The Career Center presented Career Week, Oct. 11 to 14, which included the 32nd annual Career Expo, a job fair featuring more than 50 exhibitors, on Oct. 13. The topics for the Career Week workshops included resume and cover letter writing and dress for success, as well as “How To Be A Star Performer,” “The Competitive Edge” and “What Employers Want.” Another workshop, “Lower The Red Flags,” was designed for paroles, counselors, Career Center directors, faculty, employers and students. RoadTrip Nation was featured at the job fair. RoadTrip Nation is currently recognized statewide as a major Career Development resource for students. Lauren Ho and colleagues made a special effort (re-arranging schedules) to participate in our job fair. While RoadTrip Nation has a long list of four-year colleges and universities they have visited, they only recently have begun visiting community colleges and high schools. Grossmont College was among the first community colleges in Southern California on their visitation list. Also at the Career Expo, the ASL Program was showcased and their “Deaf Community” was fun for students and a tremendous success.

Friday, October 1, 2010

President's News Burst for October 2010



THANK YOU FOR ALL YOUR HARD WORK!
As we begin the month of October, let me take the time to acknowledge all the hard work that you do on a daily basis for Grossmont College and our students, each and every day. All of us -- faculty, staff, administrators -- are facing challenging times that are unparalleled in the history of the state. We know that our students are struggling in many ways, including financially, which can create tension and escalating pressure points. So, as we continue through this semester, please accept my sincere appreciation for your determination and heroism on the front lines. I applaud each of you for your spirit to excel and endure during rough times. Thank you for working together in service to our students and community during these very difficult times.  
  
STATE BUDGET UPDATE
As the calendar turns, there is still no budget deal to announce. Legislative leaders and the governor are very close, with "pension reform" as the major sticking point.  On the community college budget, all indications are that the budget package will be at or above the governor's proposal. We hope that enrollment growth will be included, as well as a small amount of resources to mitigate last year's categorical cuts. Of course, until there is final agreement, details can change. There is talk of a budget deal by next week. Nevertheless, GCCCD is working with a major bank to provide an additional borrowing possibilities if budget negotiations fail and the dreaded "wait until after the election" strategy occurs.
  
GOVERNOR SIGNS BILL TO GUARANTEE CSU ADMISSION TO COMMUNITY COLLEGE GRADS
To increase access to the California State University (CSU) system, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed on Wednesday SB 1440 by Senator Alex Padilla (D-Pacoima) and AB 2302 by Assemblymember Paul Fong (D-Cupertino). These two measures will tremendously streamline the transfer process, providing a clear pathway to transfer for tens of thousands of community college students each year.  This simplified process will save students significant time and resources as they transfer from a community college to a CSU campus and will create greater efficiencies for both the CSU and the community colleges. 

Senate Bill 1440 guarantees admission to a CSU campus for any community college student who completes the newly established associate degree for transfer.  This associate degree will be in every community college and will be limited to 60 units.  In turn, the CSU will admit each holder of this transfer degree with junior standing and require no more than 60 additional units for graduation.  It further provides students who earn this degree with priority consideration for admission into a similar major and to their local CSU.  Assembly bill 2302 requires that the California Community Colleges work collaboratively with the CSU to inform students and the general public about this new opportunity and encourages the University of California to examine what it would take to join in this new transfer reform effort. The bill calls for the UC to examine the development of a transfer pathway for students which would result in a transfer associate degree and system admission, and it provides a framework for student notification of the new transfer pathway created in SB 1440.
  
WHITE HOUSE SUMMIT ON COMMUNITY COLLEGES
On October 5, 2010 Dr. Jill Biden will chair the first-ever White House Summit on Community Colleges. President Obama asked Dr. Biden to convene this event to highlight the critical role that community colleges play in developing America’s workforce and reaching our educational goals. The summit will be an opportunity to bring together community colleges, business, philanthropy, federal and state policy leaders, and students to discuss how community colleges can help meet the job training and education needs of the nation’s evolving workforce, as well as the critical role these institutions play in achieving the President’s goal to lead the world with the highest proportion of college graduates by 2020. On the agenda will be how community colleges can ensure that the United States has the most educated workforce in the world so American businesses can compete in the global economy. Here at Grossmont, we will be streaming the White House Summit opening and closing sessions live on October 5th in Room 220. The opening session will begin at 9:15 am and the closing session is scheduled to convene at noon. We would like to invite all faculty, staff, administrators and students who would like to stop by to share in this first-ever event. For more information, go to http://www.whitehouse.gov/communitycollege.
  
OPT DAY IN SAN DIEGO COUNTY ON SEPTEMBER 27
In honor of the 25th anniversary of the Office Professional Training (OPT) program this year, Fred Allen and Mary Leslie accepted a proclamation on Monday, Sept. 27 from the County Board of Supervisors. Sept. 27 was designated as “Office Professional Training Program Day” in San Diego County. The framed copy of the proclamation is in Mary Leslie’s office. You are welcome to stop by and visit anytime.  As a fundraiser and birthday celebration, the OPT program will host a dinner on November 4th at the Ronald Reagan Community Center @ 6:00 p.m.  For ticket information or to contribute, please contact Mary Leslie x7533.
  
MICHAEL GOLDEN TABBED FOR BRIDGES AWARD
Michael Golden of Grossmont College's Biology Department has been named the recipient of the 2010 Homer Peabody Bridges Award. Dr. Peabody, who died in 2005, was executive director of the Rees-Stealy Research Foundation, and an activist for youth advancement in tennis and education. He was instrumental in the Bridges to the Future program at San Diego State University, which assists under-represented students in obtaining degrees in the biological sciences. Michael Golden received this year's Bridges honor, “for excellence in mentoring and teaching,” for guiding so many Grossmont students onto the Bridge to jobs and careers in the biological sciences.

“I have been told by SDSU that we have provided the most students to the Summer Enrichment Program than any other community college in the area,” Golden said. The Summer Enrichment Program is “a major portion” of the Bridges program, Golden said. “Monday through Thursday, students take classes to help prepare them for chemistry, physics, microbiology and scientific writing,” he said. “On Fridays, the students work in a research lab where they may have the opportunity to not only participate in research, but often present at national conferences.” The students are also paid for the duration of the summer program, Golden said. The program is funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health.

Golden said he and retired counselor Claudia Thompson began Grossmont’s participation in the program 12 years ago. Golden was and is the program coordinator at Grossmont, and working with him over the years have been Craig Milgrim, Janice Johnson, Gopa Patnaik, Michele Perchez and Arturo Milan. “Here at Grossmont,” he said, “we identify the students and advise them along their path toward transferring. We also get the students together as a group a couple of times a year for both peer and faculty support.”

Grossmont students in the summer program just concluded were Amira Abdullah, Mark Flores, Kevin Kinyanjui, Sandra Mairena, Sara Roldan, Fernanda Sanchez, and Alexandria Valadez.

BUY YOUR TICKETS TO THE OCTOBER 16TH GALA
The Grossmont College Foundation’s 2010 Dinner Gala and Auction fund-raiser will be held on Saturday, Oct. 16, at the Barona Valley Ranch Resort & Casino. Don’t miss attending this spectacular event. Festivities will begin at 6:00 p.m. with a reception and silent auction, followed by dinner starting at 7:30 p.m., live auction and live entertainment.. The theme for the 2010 Gala, the ninth annual, is “Griffin Gold Rush: 49 Years of Excellence.” The theme anticipates the upcoming celebration of the college’s 50-year anniversary to be held during the 2011-2012 school year, according to Ernest Ewin, Grossmont College Foundation executive director. Significantly discounted tickets are available for GC faculty, staff and administrators. In addition, everyone is invited to donate silent auction items, including gift certificates for merchandise and professional services. Proceeds again will benefit student scholarships and under-funded programs at Grossmont College. A donation to the Grossmont College Foundation directly supports students through scholarships, educational equipment and supplies, educational programs and improvements to activities. For more information about tickets, sponsorship and donation opportunities, contact Alexis Popko at the
Grossmont College Foundation office at (619) 644-7109, or via e-mail at grossmont.foundation@gcccd.edu, or visit www.grossmont.edu/foundation.
  
COLLEGE TRANSFER DAY
College Transfer Day is scheduled next Wednesday, Oct. 6, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Main Quad.  More than 40 colleges and universities will be represented on campus to provide students with one-on-one contact and to provide a variety of information to students on transfer admissions, financial aid, housing, majors and programs/services available at their specific school.  Please get in the spirit by wearing apparel from your alma mater on this day!  If you don’t have a t-shirt or hat to wear, please pick up an Ask Me Where I Graduated pin in the University Transfer Center, right next to the Business Office/Mailroom  in modular unit 58D. 
  
CAREER WEEK, OCT. 11-14
The Career Center will present Career Week, Oct. 11 to 14. Clinics held in the Main Quad on Monday, Oct. 11 will include: Resume & Cover Letter, 9-10 a.m. and 11-noon; Dress for Success, 10-11 a.m. and noon-1 p.m. “How To Be A Star Performer” will be discussed on Monday, Oct. 11, 10-11:30 a.m., in Building 34, Room 255. Clinics held in Building 36, Room 333 on Tuesday, Oct. 12 include: “The Competitive Edge,” 10-11:30 a.m.; “What Employers Want,” 2-3:30 p.m. The 32nd annual Career Expo, featuring more than 50 exhibitors, will be held from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 13 in the Main Quad. On Thursday, Oct. 14, “Lower the Red Flags” will be held 10-11:30 a.m. in Building 36, Room 333 (this workshops is recommended for paroles, counselors, Career Center directors, faculty, employers and students).  For more information, visit www.grossmont.edu/studentempservices.
  
“THE MISER” BEGINS OCTOBER 7
The Theatre Arts Dept. will present “The Miser” by Moliere, beginning Oct. 7. “The Miser,” written by the great French playwright Moliere, stands out as one of the great comic masterpieces of all time. Harpagon, a miserly father, creates the ultimate dysfunctional family when he decides to marry his son’s girlfriend, wreaking havoc with his daughter and her beau, all leading to a revelation which unveils the miser’s true nature. Join us as we begin our 2010-2011 season with Moliere’s classic. The Miser is translated by David Chambers and directed by Henry J. Jordan. Performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 7 to 9 and 13 to 16, and at 2 p.m. on Oct. 9 and 16. For more information, visit www.grossmont.edu/theatrebrochure. Culinary Arts will serve a meal in conjunction with opening night. Dinner begins at 5:30 p.m. and the show begins at 7:30 p.m. Cost is $32 per person. For reservations, phone ext. 7234.
  
FACULTY ART EXHIBITION OCT. 4-28
This year’s faculty art exhibition features a very diverse and outstanding selection of work from the various disciplines that exist within the Grossmont College Art Dept., including photography, jewelry, painting and drawing, ceramics and sculpture. The exhibition is free and open to the public. An opening event will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 5. For more information, call ext. 7299.
  
SOVIET POET HERE AT GROSSMONT ON OCTOBER 21
The English Department is hosting Soviet born poet Ilya Kaminsky for a reading on campus on Oct. 21. The event is open to the community. Kaminsky’s book of poems, “Dancing in Odessa” (Tupelo Press) was named the Best Poetry Book of the Year in 2004 by Foreword Magazine. He also is a recipient of the Whiting Writer’s Award, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters’ Metcalf Award’s Dorset Prize. In 2008, Kaminsky was awarded the Lannon Foundation’s Literary Fellowship. In 2009, sections from Deaf Republic, a work in progress, received Poetry magazine’s Levinson Prize. In March of this year, HarperCollins published his anthology of twentieth century poems in translation, the Ecco Anthology Of International Poetry. The San Diego resident teaches Contemporary World Poetry, Creative Writing and Literary Translation at San Diego State University’s MFA Program in Classic writing. More information about the Creative Writing Program’s literary events in Fall 2010 and the 15th annual Literary Arts Festival in Spring 2011 can be found at www.grossmont.edu/english.
  
MUSICA LATINOAMERICANO ON OCTOBER 8TH AND 13TH
The Grossmont College Symphony Orchestra cordially invites you to “Musica Latinoamericao,” an inspiring performance under the direction of Dr. Randall Tweed. “Musica Latinoamericao” from the Grossmont Symphony Orchestra will feature the music of Jose Pablo Moncayo’s “Huapango,” Julian Orbon’s “Tres Versiones Sinfonicas” and Arturo Marquez’s “Danzon No. 3.” With guest artists Suzanne Kennedy on flute and Fred Benedetti on guitar. Performances will be held on Friday, Oct. 8 at St. John of the Cross Catholic Church in Lemon Grove, and on Wednesday, Oct. 13 at East-Lake High School in Chula Vista. Performances begin at 7:30 p.m.  More information is available at the Music Dept., ext. 7254.
  
CULINARY ARTS DINNERS
The Culinary Arts Dept. will host on most Thursdays, from Sept. 23 to Dec. 2, a five-course dinner prepared by students enrolled in Grossmont’s Quantity Foods class. The dinners, which start at 5:30 p.m., will be held at a new location, #58 bungalow, in parking lot #5, near the parking structure. Cost is $20 per person. The dinners will feature soup, salad, entree, dessert and coffee service. Vegetarian dinners are available with 48-hour advance notice. Space is limited and some dates may already be fully booked. Dates are Sept. 23 and 30, Oct. 7, 14, 21, 28, Nov. 4 and 18, and Dec. 2. Reservations can be made by phoning Michele Martens in the CTE office at (619) 644-7550 or 644-7549, or by e-mail at michele.martens@gcccd.edu.
  
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES – OCTOBER EVENTS
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month!
Be sure to get a pink ribbon from the nurse and remind the women in your life to get their mammogram!

Seasonal Flu Shots 2010
Now available to all students, faculty and staff in Student Health Services Office H1N1 flu strain is included in seasonal vaccine (Only one shot is necessary) Monday and Tuesday 8am-7pm, Wednesday and Thursday 8am-5pm
Friday 9am-3pm.  Cost:  Students: $10.00; Staff/Faculty: $20.

Protect yourself and your new baby from whooping cough
Get your Pertussis/Tetanus booster vaccine.  Come to Health Service for more information

Professional Counseling and Screening for Depression
Call 644-7192 or come to Health Services to make an appointment dealing with depression, anxiety, stress, or panic

Domestic Violence Awareness Month
Resource information and purple ribbons are available in Health Services Office

MORE UPCOMING EVENTS
*      Grossmont Master Chorale, October 11, “Liturgical Music for Organ & Chorus,” All Saints Episcopal of San Diego, 7:30 p.m.

*      Concert Band Fall Concert, October 18, Cuyamaca College Fine Arts Theatre, 7:30 p.m. Adults $8.00; Students, Seniors, Children $5.00.

*      Governing Board, October 19, Closed Session 5:20 p.m. Open Session 6:30 p.m. Grossmont College

*      Tin, Stagehouse Theatre, Oct. 22-23 at 7:30 p.m., Oct. 23 at 2:00 p.m. Tickets $6.00.

*      Blurring the Edges” Guest Artists-Peter Sprague, Tripp Sprague, and Fred Benedetti. Grossmont Recital Hall, Room 26-220. $10.00 General; $8.00 Students. Oct. 29, 8:00 p.m.

*      The Creative WRITE-A-THON, Saturday, Nov. 13 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Room 575. In this all-day fundraiser for the Creative Writing Program’s literary arts events, participants who raise a minimum of $50 will receive a day of inspirational writing prompts in the four genres: fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, and drama writing; continental breakfast and lunch; an “I Rocked the Page” t-shirt; and the opportunity to win a variety of fantastic raffle prizes, including a laptop computer donated by the Grossmont College Foundation.

*      The New Voices Student Reading, Tuesday, Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. in Room 220. Outstanding students of the Grossmont College Creative Writing Program’s Fall 2010 semester will stand and deliver original works of poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and drama. This is always an unforgettable evening. 

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

President's News Burst for September 2010


THANK YOU FOR WORKING TOGETHER!

As we begin the Fall 2010 semester, let me acknowledge the stressful circumstances that we are all under. Due to the economy, personal stresses, education cuts, increased demand for classes, construction/re-location, and summer heat -- tensions are high.  I want to express my appreciation for your efforts and hard work despite the many hardships. I would like to personally commend every employee -- faculty, staff and administrator -- for your hard work, selfless dedication and personal sacrifices during these difficult times. I am so proud of every one of you, and I certainly appreciate all that you are doing for our college and our students. Many of you have assumed extra responsibility and gone the extra mile, and you should be praised for it. The results have been extraordinary (see below). With an attitude of excellence, enthusiasm and loyal teamwork, you have put forth the effort to our students and to one another. Thank you for working together. With our best minds and combined energies, we will survive these challenging times and continue to change lives through education. Thank you for your support and cooperation.


GROSSMONT COLLEGE IS 2010 BEST LOCAL COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY
Hooray for Grossmont! The results from The San Diego Union-Tribune‘s 2010 San Diego’s Best Readers Poll are in, and Grossmont College has just been named “San Diego’s Best Local College or University for 2010.” Our competition this year included SDSU, UCSD, USD, Pt. Loma Nazarene and Cal State San Marcos. Grossmont was previously selected as “San Diego’s Best” in 2003, 2004, 2007 and 2008. So, this is our fifth time in the past eight years. Like any election, the results represent the total votes received. Behind Grossmont College were UCSD in second place and SDSU in third. It was the U-T’s 14th annual San Diego’s Best Readers Poll. The Union-Tribune said there were more than 1 million page views to their website (last year it was 462k) and about 650,000 votes were cast (last year it was 180k). Winners in more than 150 categories can be viewed under “San Diego Life” at www.sdbestpoll.com.


HEALTH AND SCIENCE COMPLEX GRAND OPENING
Please join us as we celebrate the grand opening of our new Health and Sciences Complex at 10 a.m. on Friday, Sept. 17, on campus. The celebration will include a ribbon cutting, plaque unveiling and refreshments. The 52,000-square-foot, two-story Health and Sciences Complex houses classrooms with the latest technology, state-of-the-art labs and lab preparation areas, as well as indoor and outdoor gathering spaces for studying. It also has faculty and staff offices for Career Technical Education, Forensic Technology, Physics and Health Professions programs. The Complex features the latest teaching tools and equipment, including high fidelity simulation labs with lifelike mannequins for Nursing, a casting room for Orthopedic Technology, a mock apartment for Occupational Therapy, a blood-spatter room for Forensic Technology and simulated ICU patient stations for Nursing and Respiratory Therapy. The Cardiovascular Technology Program and EKG Training have three specialty classrooms and a dedicated ultrasound scan lab. Additional features of this comprehensive facility include Physical Sciences labs, a rooftop astronomy lab, two computer labs, and a large lecture hall for health seminars, guest speakers and combined class lectures. The $35 million construction cost was financed by the Proposition R bond measure that East County voters approved in 2002. Construction began in July 2008, and was completed this past spring.


GROSSMONT COLLEGE OSHER SCHOLARS FEATURED IN AFFINITY MAGAZINE
Published by the Foundation for California Community Colleges, Affinity Magazine features stories that discuss the impact and reach of California’s community colleges. In the most recent issue, “Creating a Legacy,” a story about how the Osher Initiative for California Community College students is delivering on its promise. The story features a photo of Grossmont College Osher Scholarship recipients. Here is a link to the article: www.affinityonline.org/Departments/ScholarshipEndowment/CreatingALegacy/tabid/209/Default.aspx.  For every $1 donated until June 30, 2011, 50 cents is matched and held in the California Community Colleges Scholarship Endowment, and 100 percent of every dollar donated goes directly to funding $1,000 student scholarships every year, forever. A gift of $13,334, matched by the Osher Foundation, results in a $1,000 scholarship every year, FOREVER! For more information about Osher Scholarship, contact the Grossmont College Foundation at x7109.


SUMMIT NEWSPAPER
The Media Communications Dept. invites you to visit www.gcsummit.wordpress.com. This is the website for the new GC Summit, the student newspaper. On this website you will find news stories, a calendar of on-campus events, links to campus and District publications, sports results and an invitation to subscribe to a blog and receive notifications of new posts by e-mail. Students enrolled in Media Communications 132 are assisting in the content seen on this website, all to the benefit of the Grossmont College population of students, faculty and staff. Donald H. Harrison, creator of San Diego Jewish World, an online newspaper, has been selected as the new instructor for this class. Harrison has more than 40 years of experience in journalism. He was the managing editor of the Daily Bruin as a student at UCLA, and has worked for the Associated Press, San Diego Union and Los Angeles Herald-Examiner.


FIRST FOOTBALL GAME THIS SATURDAY
All employees and students are invited to watch community college football up-close this Saturday afternoon, Sept. 4, on our own football field as our Griffins football team plays cross-town rival San Diego Mesa College in the season opener. Kickoff is 1 p.m. All faculty, staff and administrators can enjoy the game with free admission (show your college I.D. at the gate). Coach Mike Jordan begins his fifth year as head coach. Last season’s 2009 team finished 8-3 and ended on a high note as the Griffins beat perennial powerhouse, El Camino College in the U.S. Bank “Beach Bowl” 27-22. The Griffins football program has a tremendous tradition of successes. Grossmont has posted the best winning percentage of all the other 71 teams in California over the past decade. The Griffs have participated in more post season games than any other college in the nation over the past 15 years.



RECENT HONORS
David Weeks, Stagecraft Technician, recently received the Best of Show Award from the International Plastic Modelers Society for his 56-inch tall model of a Saturn 1-B rocket that was used in the 1960s in NASA’s Apollo program. David began his research on this rocket 20 years ago, and it took the past seven years to build it. David’s model won first place in the “Real Space” category and “Space & Science Fiction” class before winning Best of Show competing against about 1,600 other entries.

Michael Golden, Biology, has been honored by the SDSU Bridges program with the 2010 Homer Peabody Award for Excellence in Mentoring and Teaching. The award is presented in honor of Homer Peabody, M.D., executive director of the Rees-Stealy Research Foundation, in recognition of individuals who carry on his commitment to the students of San Diego.


HYDE ART GALLERY EXHIBIT
The Hyde Art Gallery is presenting on display through Sept. 16 an exhibit of 31 paintings from three different artists, Wade Cline and William Glen Crooks, both of San Diego and Suong Yangchareon of Los Angeles. The exhibit is open to the public. The paintings feature local landmarks and sights, including famous traffic intersections and waterfront scenes, from San Diego, Los Angeles, Hollywood, Pasadena, San Francisco and New Mexico. Cline’s 13 paintings includes Adams Avenue and Kensington in San Diego, Crooks’ six paintings feature Humboldt Bay and Leavenworth and Yangchareon’s 12 paintings showcases a railroad crossing in Azusa and an alley in Los Angeles. The Hyde Art Gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays, and 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Admission is free.


WHOOPING COUGH IMMUNIZATION
The Grossmont College Student Health Services Office reports that whooping cough (Pertussis) cases in San Diego are greater than ever. Everyone is encouraged to protect yourself, protect your family and get immunized. Immunizations for Pertussis are available to students, faculty and staff at Health Services for $35, at Kaiser Permanente Nurse Clinics at no cost and at selected San Diego County Public Health clinics for $10. Whooping cough disease causes coughing fits that make it hard to breathe. The disease spreads easily when someone with the disease coughs or sneezes. Early symptoms start mild and are like a common cold, including runny nose, sneezing, low or no fever, mild cough. Symptoms can get worse after 1-2 weeks and can last for months. Bad coughing attacks can include vomiting, red or blue face, a “whoop” sound, problems breathing, extreme tiredness and sweating spells. For more information, contact Health Services at ext. 7192.


MORE UPCOMING EVENTS
*      Women’s soccer vs. Chaffey, 3 p.m., Friday, Sept. 3.

*      Women’s Volleyball vs. Chaffey, 5 p.m., Friday, Sept. 3.

*      Grossmont Guitar Guild fund-raiser with Grossmont College guitar instructor Fred Benedetti, starting at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 8, in Room #220. Admission is $10 for adults, $8 for students.

*      Chamber Music Concert with guest artists Michael Dvoskin, violin, and Katherine Petrosyan, piano, starting at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 10 in Room #220. Admission is $10 for adults, $8 for seniors, $5 for students, children 12 and under are free with paid adult admission.

*      Odeum Guitar Duo with Grossmont College guitar instructors Fred Benedetti and Robert Wetzel, starting at 8 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 17, in Room #220. Admission is $10 for adults, $8 for students. Odeum refers to a small building in ancient Greece or Rome that was used for public performances of music.

*      The Scholarship Department and Grossmont College Foundation will present the Fall 2010 Scholarship Awards Breakfast on Saturday, Sept. 11, in the 200 Building Courtyard. The breakfast begins at 9:30 a.m., and the program begins at 10 a.m. With questions, contact Selam Gebrekristos at ext. 7121.

*      The Grossmont College Foundation’s upcoming Auction and Dinner Gala will be held on Saturday, Oct. 16 at the Barona Resort & Casino. The theme is “Griffin Gold Rush, 49 Years of Excellence.”