New course repeatability, drop-date rules to begin in summer

BOG waiver changes, priority registration on the horizon

City College’s new course repeatability rule—also known as the “three-strikes” rule—and a new rule limiting the drop date for courses will debut this summer.

According to Kim Goff, director of Admissions and Records, the new repeatability policy imposes a three-attempt limit to pass a course. Any combination of three “D,” “F” or “W” grades would prohibit students from taking the course again at any Los Rios college, though some physical education courses are exempt.

Goff said the policy is also retroactive, meaning past coursework counts as a strike. “The repeat policy is huge,” Goff said. “Five hundred people have been [read more...]


Players receive Big 8 Honors in losing season

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Coach happy with team’s effort

Things didn’t go as planned for the City College softball team this spring, compiling a record of 11-26-1 after going 6-15 in the Big 8 Conference.

According to the coach, these struggles weren’t because of a lack of effort.

“We don’t have players on the team this year that have played a lot of softball,” head coach Tim Kiernan said.

The Panthers got a very solid freshman campaign from infielder Molly Ryan, who led the team with a .458 batting average to go along with nine home runs and 36 RBI’s in 96 at-bats.

Ryan also was selected to the [read more...]

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Anthropology professor William Doonan releases 3rd novel

Doonan has spent summers digging in Peru and lecturing on diverse topics around the world.  After starting a family and subsequently putting archaeological fieldwork on pause, Doonan published three novels in between raising his two young sons and teaching full time at City College.  His third novel, “American Caliphate,” was released April 10 this year.

“American Caliphate,” which centers around two archaeologists searching the ruins of Peru’s pyramids for a long lost document that would stun the Islamic world, was an idea he had while doing fieldwork in the Peru.

“It never rains there so it’s really arid… so we [read more...]

‘Avengers’ is worth the wait

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There was anticipation, expectation, waiting, attention, hope and excitement. Four years, five movies, seven stars and a $220 million budget. Unfortunately, Marvel’s “The Avengers” is not as good of a film as you think it is.

It’s better.

Under Joss Whedon’s more than capable direction, “The Avengers” finishes what “Iron Man” started in 2008 with the greatest of flourishes. Its central plot pits the titular heroes (Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, The Hulk, Black Widow and Hawkeye, for the uninitiated) against the vengeful Norse god with tyrannical aspirations for Earth, Norse god Loki.

Perhaps Whedon’s greatest triumph is that “The [read more...]

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People's Day brings out the child in Khalil Cogman, 18 , kineseology major as he playfully competes with a friend's son. Kate Paloy | katepaloy.express@gmail.com
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From left to right, Alexis Shaffer, 20, 3rd year Psychology major, Annie Laurie Jennets, 20, 2nd year English major and Kelsey Egi, 20, Sports Medicine major study near the fountain. Deneke Metaferia dbmetaferia@yahoo.com

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