College Offering ART 101 Course at the Barnes this Fall


For the first time, Community College of Philadelphia has created a course that allows students to use one of the world’s finest collections of Post-Impressionist and Early Modern paintings as their textbooks.

Art 101 will be offered at the Barnes Foundation during an accelerated 10-week term, with the first class beginning Tuesday, October 6. Subsequent classes will run Mondays through December 19, 2015.

Each Monday, students will have access to the Renoirs, Cézannes and Picassos of the renowned collection. The class runs from 4:10 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Barnes, 2025 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, with class time equally divided between the classroom and the galleries. The course will offer a primer on how to enter into a discourse about art and realize its cultural value.

Course instructor Brian Seymour, associate professor of Art History at Community College of Philadelphia, has examined Dr. Albert C. Barnes, founder of the Barnes Foundation, as part of his doctoral research on art collectors at the turn of the 20th century. Seymour says the class is designed for and open to all art lovers, not just students from the College, and it builds upon Dr. Barnes' desire to make his impressive collection accessible to all. Seymour said the close proximity of the Barnes gives Community College of Philadelphia students and guest students an opportunity to engage with a renowned art collection just blocks away from the College’s Main Campus.

Dr. Sarah Iepson, Art department chair at Community College of Philadelphia, shares Seymour’s excitement. “We have had partnerships with other museums but up to this point we hadn't figured out how to engage with the Barnes Collection. It’s a fantastic opportunity for the College,” she said.

“Dr. Barnes’ philosophy was that the collection be an educational institution – he wanted his art to educate people,” Seymour added. “Community College of Philadelphia is for the people. It’s the perfect location to host this course.”

The three-credit course fulfills a Humanities elective and is transferable to most four-year institutions. Tuition for the class varies by residency; Philadelphia residents pay $153 per credit hour or $459; other Pennsylvanians pay more.

Summary
For the first time, Community College of Philadelphia has created a course that allows students to use one of the world&…
Publish Date
Aug 28, 2015
Original nid
1873

Student Success: Shawn Jorden


Shawn Jorden

Shawn Jorden faced daunting roadblocks and abrupt detours on the road to earning a college degree. He dealt with a lack of housing and health care, as well as the financial struggles that often accompany unemployment.

At Community College of Philadelphia, Jorden discovered two places that were set up to help him and his peers be more successful in college and in life:  The Center for Male Engagement and Single Stop USA, a national, one-stop resource that partners with the College to connect students with additional financial resources and social services.

Jorden first connected with  the Center for Male Engagement, a program  created to assist African-American males and other underserved populations with skills to help them succeed inside and outside of class. The center provides academic support, leadership development and life skills training. In addition, he met people who treated him like family: Kevin Convington who would later become his mentor, as well as Derrick Perkins, the director of the program.

"The first semester was kind of rocky and then my second semester I kind of started to pull things together," Jorden said. "I started to have a clear mind when talking to Derrick and Kevin, who were motivating me."

The Center for Male Engagement then referred him to Single Stop, where Jorden found information on addressing life challenges and how and where to get a job. Single Stop also helped him develop a plan for financial success and apply for benefits. “We empower students to develop a plan for their lives based on their needs and take the lead on following through with their goals,” said Paula Umaña, Single Stop’s Project Director at the College.

Single Stop helped Shawn with his resume, which helped him in secure a paid work-study job. It also provided credit counseling, helped him craft a long-term financial plan, and provided experts to help with his tax returns. After many attempts and denials, Shawn was finally approved for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and later for Medicaid, after its partial expansion.

When Shawn walked across the stage on May 2 to pick up his degrees in Psychology and Liberal Arts, he had secured much more than a plan for the next stage of life. He gained new life skills and the confidence to fulfill his educational goals.

"I would like to see myself walking across that stage again, and I am capable of that," said Jorden who now plans to pursue a bachelor's degree.

Summary
Shawn Jorden faced daunting roadblocks and abrupt detours on the road to earning a college degree. He dealt with a lack …
Publish Date
Jul 30, 2015
Original nid
1843

Obama's Praise Spotlights Alum, Reentry Support Project


<i>Jeffrey Copeland (far left) and other ex-offenders met President Obama (center) at the NAACP convention. (Photo courtesy of Jeffrey Copeland)</i>

It’s not every day you get a national shout-out from the President of the United States, especially when you’re just an ordinary guy from Philly who’s had some run-ins with the law.

But, as President Obama noted in a revelatory speech to the NAACP on criminal justice reform last week, Jeff Copeland’s determination helps him to stand apart. A formerly incarcerated Philadelphian, he received his associate’s degree, earning high honors, and is now working to complete his bachelor’s degree at Temple University.

Copeland used the Reentry Support Project (RSP) of the Fox Rothschild Center for Law & Society to guide him toward his path. Since 2010, the Reentry project has served over 500 students with criminal records seeking services to help them achieve their academic goals. In 2011, RSP established the REACH College Program to provide a select group of currently and formerly incarcerated men and women with wrap-around support services during their first academic semester. In 2014-2015, REACH enrolled 121 students, and 98 percent of those completed the semester and remained eligible for continuing enrollment. As of summer 2015, REACH has served 180 students.

Admittedly, Copeland would not have the confidence to stay the academic course if not for Tara Timberman, founder and coordinator of the Reentry Support Project. Timberman recruited Copeland to the College while he was still incarcerated. With her support, he was able to alleviate the fears he had about returning to school.

“She held my hand,” Copeland said. “At no point did she say ‘This is too much’ or ‘I’m too busy.’ The Reentry Project enabled me to stand up for myself.”

When President Obama addressed the NAACP in Philadelphia on July 14, he mentioned the College’s Reentry project and shared Copeland’s recent achievements. It was a meaningful moment for Copeland and Timberman, both of whom were seated near the front of the stage.

In addition, Copeland, who had served time for DUI, was invited to meet Obama privately before his speech, along with three other local ex-offenders.

As Vinny Vella, a reporter for the Daily News aptly summed it up: “The discussion was equal parts serious and silly, with thoughtful debates about prison policy interspersed with banter about basketball: Copeland, noting that five men were sitting together, offered to take Obama down to a court in South Philly, where he "was sure we could find five guys to take us on.”

And to think Copeland was once nicknamed “Running Man” after the popular '80's dance because he was running in place and going nowhere fast. Now he’s taking pictures with President Obama and feeling comfortable enough to joke around with him. It’s heady stuff.

"It feels like I’m intoxicated,” he said, “without taking a drink.”

Summary
It’s not every day you get a national shout-out from the President of the United States, especially when you&rsquo…
Publish Date
Jul 21, 2015
Original nid
1834

From Southwest Philly to the President’s Office, Kathleen Hetherington Always Dreams Big


Dr. Kathleen Hetherington and Dr. Donald Guy Generals

When Kathleen Hetherington first mentioned that she might enroll at Community College of Philadelphia, a teacher at West Philadelphia Catholic Girls High School tried to discourage her.

Back then, community colleges were not always on the radar.

Yet, somehow they still have managed to attract top talent like creative genius Walt Disney,  movie star Tom Hanks, American journalist Jim Lehr, and a girl from Southwest Philly, Kathleen Hetherington, who went on to become president of Howard Community College in Columbia, MD, and her alma mater’s 2015 commencement speaker.

“To paraphrase the famous actor Tom Hanks, also a community college graduate, ‘Community college made me what I am today,’” said Dr. Hetherington during Community College of Philadelphia’s May 2 commencement at Temple University’s Liacouras Center. “If it were not for the excellent education that I received and the experience I had as an employee of the College, I would not be standing before you today. So I am very grateful to the community college system, but my enthusiasm is more about what I’ve seen community colleges do for others. I have seen lives transformed. All of you who are graduating today have experienced that transformation.”

In Philadelphia, the Community College of Philadelphia Class of 2015 had 2,081 candidates for graduation. Four College employees, 25 international students, and 40 veterans were among this year’s class. Times are so different now, Dr. Hetherington told them.

Community colleges are a first option for a growing number of students seeking a path to the Ivy League or to top colleges and universities such as Temple, La Salle and Drexel. Four students in the College’s Class of 2015 already have been accepted to the University of Pennsylvania.

“For many students, community colleges are their first choice.  But they are also the place where people get a ‘second chance.’ Perhaps life intervened, or another college wasn’t a good fit, or maybe it wasn’t their time, but community colleges are the place where people get that rarest of things—a second chance—and it happens each and every day.”

Dr. Hetherington, who received an honorary degree during the ceremony from Community College of Philadelphia's president, Dr. Donald Guy Generals, then shared some advice to the graduates who will scatter as some enter new careers and others transfer to four-year colleges and universities.

Her personal rules for success?  Always dream big. Never underestimate the value of hard work. Face your fears. And stop worrying about what people think about you; most of the time they are thinking about themselves.

Student speaker Charlene Hoffman, a 57-year old mother of three and honor student who plans to teach theater to children, offered advice as well: Give back to the community. “We have a responsibility to our communities, to the world, no matter our majors or aspirations,” said Hoffman. “We must challenge ourselves to be engaged in our communities by giving back. Each one should teach one. The challenge is to take the connections we made, our unique passions, and take our degrees and do something positive and significant with them.”

Also during the ceremony, Dr. Generals announced that Dr. Sarah Iepson, associate professor of art, was the winner of the 2015 Lindback Distinguished Teaching Award, established by the Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Foundation. As the honoree, Iepson will deliver a celebrated lecture during the 2015-2016 academic year.

Summary
When Kathleen Hetherington first mentioned that she might enroll at Community College of Philadelphia, a teacher at West…
Publish Date
May 6, 2015
Original nid
1724

Dr. Generals’ Vision Unfolds: Create the #1 Community College in America


Dr. Donald Generals

Nearly 1,000 dignitaries, family, staff and students gathered at Congregation Rodeph Shalom on May 1 to witness the installation of Dr. Donald Guy Generals as the sixth president of Community College of Philadelphia.

The ceremony came weeks after Dr. Generals—a man who stumbled upon his own career path while tutoring at his local community college—announced the creation of the College’s groundbreaking 50th Anniversary Scholars Program. The scholarship, which starts in the fall, will expand access and opportunity by covering the cost of tuition not covered by federal or state financial aid for up to three years for some highly motivated low-income graduates from Philadelphia high schools.

The festivities began in the morning with a colorful cultural procession from the Main Campus. Hundreds of faculty and staff clad in regalia and students walked together. Some held up the 47 flags from the home countries of the College’s international students, who come from around the world to enroll.

Once that group entered Rodelph Shalom, the academic procession began as 39 delegates from regional colleges and universities, about 200 faculty and administrators, and the presidential party opened the investiture service.

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter and State Rep. James R. Roebuck, Jr., both members of the College’s Board of Trustees, were among the members of the Presidential party. Dr. Ronald J. Temple, the third president of Community College of Philadelphia and its first African American president, also joined the festivities.

The event had a distinctive community feel to it as students sang alongside faculty, staff, and singers from the larger community in The Concert Choir of Community College of Philadelphia. Led by Robert Ross, Director and Chair of the College’s Music Department, the group sang in harmony.  Music was a feature throughout the ceremony, as well as at the Celebration on the Skyline following the event. Dr. Generals, himself a musician, has played the drums at College events and believes that the arts enrich learning and inspire creativity. Thus the soulful sounds of the Jazz Ensemble of Community College of Philadelphia, led by Anthony Ferrara, filled the air before the installation service.

In his inaugural remarks, Dr. Generals spoke of the lasting economic and cultural impact of Community College of Philadelphia, which is celebrating its 50th Anniversary.
Dr. Donald Generals and Dr. Ronald J. Temple
Since its founding, the College has served as a pipeline where talent flows freely into industries and city departments, including the Philadelphia Police and Fire departments and health care industries, Dr. Generals noted. For example, Louis Giorla, Commissioner of the Philadelphia Prison System; Captain Verdell Johnson commanding the 39th District; Lancaster, PA Police Chief Keith Sadler; and Philadelphia Fire Commissioner Derrick Sawyer are all alumni.

Over the last five decades, more than 54,000 students have graduated from Community College of Philadelphia. “Beyond our most celebrated graduates, there are thousands who have learned the lessons of civility, who have studied and embraced the core values of our humanities, and who have used their talents of critical inquiry to examine the problems in our communities, resulting in healthier neighborhoods,” Dr. Generals said. “We have made great citizens. We have made responsible parents. We have made Philadelphia one of the best places in the world to visit and one of the best places to live.”

The city’s renaissance has been fueled, in part, by affordable educational options provided by the College, Dr. Generals said. He cautioned, however, that the poverty rate—as high as 28 percent in some estimates—threatens recent progress. “The renaissance will screech to a halt unless we find ways to include those stuck in the 28 percent who continue to wallow in poverty and despair,” he said.

In closing, Dr. Generals mentioned the recent riots and unrest in impoverished areas of Baltimore, and offered a call to action.

“I am asking that you join me and our community partners to lead the city and pave the way for the 28 percent in our community who continue to live in poverty and seek a way out.  I am asking you to embrace the possibility that what we do is a matter of social justice. I am asking you to join me in making Community College of Philadelphia the number one community college in America,” Dr. Generals said.



Summary
Nearly 1,000 dignitaries, family, staff and students gathered at Congregation Rodeph Shalom on May 1 to witness the inst…
Publish Date
May 5, 2015
Original nid
1721

Shining the Spotlight on Student Success


Dr. Donald Guy Generals

President Donald Guy Generals convened a second all-College meeting on March 16, updating the College community on important issues relating to student success.

A crowd filled Bonnell Auditorium for the town-hall style gathering, which was also video-streamed for employees in the West, Northwest and Northeast Regional Centers. While on stage, Dr. Generals rolled up his shirt sleeves and used a lapel microphone that allowed him to move around and interact with the crowd.

Among the topics Dr. Generals highlighted:

  • The amazing season for the Colonials men's basketball team and Coach Joe Rome. The Colonials played in the NJCAA Division III Championships in Loch Sheldrake, N.Y., where Rafiq Johnson was named to the all-tournament team. They made it to the national championship in their first year of NJCAA playoff eligibility. Moreover the Colonials head coach Joe Rome was named the Doug Yennie Coach of the Year for leading his squad to a final overall record of 25-2 during the regular season and regional play.
  • The importance of student learning assessment activities and strategies, which enable the College community to monitor and broaden student success. A team from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education will visit the College March 31 to April 1 to review these efforts. Last year, a Middle States accreditation team found the College compliant on 13 of 14 accreditation standards. The College was directed to submit additional documentation in the area of student assessment. While a team has worked to pull together materials and connect the entire community to learning assessment efforts, the College remains fully accredited.
  • A proposal to offer 50th Anniversary Scholarships to help students who graduate from a Philadelphia high school pursue an associate’s degree full time at Community College of Philadelphia with no cost for tuition and fees. “We really feel strongly about moving students to full-time enrollment and having them have a structured experience here that doesn’t allow them to flounder...and enables them to graduate,” Dr. Generals said.
  • A decision to hire five new, full-time student advisors in the FY 2015-2016 budget. Advisors provide critical support and academic guidance to students so they can stay on track toward credential and degree completion.
  • Dr. Generals updated the College community on the budget process for FY 2015-2016. Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter have proposed additional funding for the College in their budgets. Wolf’s budget would give the state’s 14 community colleges an additional $15 million, of which the College would receive about $1.9 Million, Dr. Generals said. Mayor Nutter has recommended to City Council the College receive an additional $3.4 million in operating and capital dollars. Dr. Generals urged the College community to support the proposed increases, which will position the College to forgo a tuition increase for next fall. The funding levels proposed also would enable the College to expand and strengthen classroom instruction and student support services; address facility upgrades; develop customized training for businesses and align with the K-12 curriculum to expand high school partnerships.
Summary
President Donald Guy Generals convened a second all-College meeting on March 16, updating the College community on impor…
Publish Date
Apr 8, 2015
Original nid
1659

16th Annual Law and Society Week Poses a Question, “Is the Law Going to the Dogs?”


Many Americans today think of their pets as loving companions and family members, though American law still views them as property, according to Nadia S. Adawi, Esq., an attorney who specializes in animal law and serves as Vice Chair of the Pennsylvania Bar Association Animal Law Committee.

These opposing views, at times, result in heartbreak for pet lovers. For instance, if a pet owner were to sue after a dog or cat has been injured by a groomer or pet sitter, and win, he or she might expect to receive market value for their beloved pet which, for an aging shelter dog, may add up to no more than a few dollars.

From Feb. 23-27, the Fox Rothschild Center for Law and Society at Community College of Philadelphia held its 16th Annual Law and Society Week, which included a session, “Is the Law Going to the Dogs?” The session examined how the law is struggling to catch up with the rapidly evolving view of animals by society. More than 100 students, faculty and guests at Community College of Philadelphia packed an auditorium on Feb. 24 to consider the changing legal landscape in the nation, and how it might affect their pets.

Currently, about 68 percent of American households have a pet. There are 179 million cats and dogs living in American homes, according to the Humane Society of the United States. With the U.S. population tipping 319 million in 2014, that’s an abundant supply of pets. Consider that, in 2014, the population of humans—a.k.a. pet companions—was 12.7 million in Pennsylvania; 26.96 million in Texas and 6.5 million in Tennessee.

As pets have been transformed into celebrities, people walkers, therapy animals and guides, complex legal issues have begun to arise, Adawi says:

  • Seventy-one percent of pet-owning women entering women’s shelters reported that their batterer had injured, maimed, killed or threatened family pets for revenge or to psychologically control victims. Still, many domestic abuse shelters don’t accept pets, Awari says, making their choices difficult. Between 25 percent and 40 percent of battered women are unable to escape abusive situations because they worry about what will happen to their pets or livestock should they leave.
  • People are creating trusts so their pets will be provided for after they die. The care of pets is becoming more important in estate law. Pet protection agreements, which are less expensive than trusts and allow people to name pet guardians, are gaining in popularity.
  • Divorcing couples are fighting over pets and, in some cases, custody hearings have been held to determine where the pet will live after a couple splits. There are not pre-pup agreements (at least not yet), Awai says, but divorce courts are delving deeper into animal issues.

The laws under discussion right now will shape the direction of animal laws and are watched closely, she says. In Pennsylvania alone, 33 animal-related bills were introduced last session in the General Assembly. One of them, House Bill 1750, prohibited the raising or killing of

cats and dogs for human consumption. The measure won approval in the state Senate, but later was buried in the House Rules Committee.

A standoff developed after an amendment was attached to the bill prohibiting pigeon shoots, where captive birds are released and shot. At that point, the National Rifle Association joined the debate and legislators let the measure expire. The NRA called the proposed ban of ‘pigeon shoots’ a slippery slope, and said it could open the door to more restrictions on hunting.

Afterwards, people around the country poked fun at the state, after headlines blared: “It is still perfectly legal to cook your dog in Pennsylvania.”

Since animals are considered by law to be property, much like a chair or a table, they don’t have rights, Adawi says. Not now, at least. Some animal rights groups are hard at work trying to change that attitude, however.

New laws and court rulings are changing the petscape constantly, Adawi says, providing a “good way of looking at where we might be going in the future.”

Summary
Many Americans today think of their pets as loving companions and family members, though American law still views them a…
Publish Date
Mar 20, 2015
Original nid
1603

Philadelphia Still Torn 30 Years After Deadly MOVE/Philadelphia Police Confrontations


During the Fox Rothschild Center for Law and Society’s 16th Annual Law and Society Week (Feb. 23-27) at Community College of Philadelphia, panelists took on a topic that has haunted the city for Ramona Africadecades: What were the lessons learned—and the lessons yet to be learned—from the deadly MOVE bombing on May 13, 1985?

The goal was to foster a better understanding of the aftermath of the two clashes between the MOVE Organization and the Philadelphia Police Department (PPD) in both 1978 and 1985, and explore the lingering effects it has had on America’s fifth largest city.

“Knowing our history, including our controversial, messy history, is the duty of every citizen,” said Kathleen M. Smith, J.D., Fox Rothschild Center director. “By looking at MOVE, the confrontations and the history, we do come away with a deeper understanding of our society and ourselves. This is not an easy topic, but it's a critically important one and one which Community College of Philadelphia is uniquely positioned to take on.”

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the confrontation. In 1985, MOVE and the police made headlines after PPD authorities dropped an explosive device onto the roof of MOVE’s home in an attempt to end an armed standoff. The explosion and ensuing fire killed 11 people (five children, six adults) and destroyed more than 60 homes on the 6200 block of Osage Avenue in West Philadelphia.

Hundreds of people attended the College’s MOVE-related panels throughout the week, including Ramona Africa, MOVE’s minister of information and the only living survivor of the 1985 bombing.

The most spirited discussion unfolded during a Feb. 25 panel featuring Africa, Let It Burn authors Randi and Michael Boyette, and Jason Osder, filmmaker of “Let the Fire Burn.” It was moderated by Temple University Journalism Professor Linn Washington, who covered both the 1978 and 1985 events for media outlets worldwide.

Africa described the MOVE Organization, which still exists and today has a website, as a “revolutionary organization.” She took exception with those who have labeled the group, over the years, as violent and cult-like.

Africa said the fault for the 1985 confrontation lies squarely with the Philadelphia Police Department and City of Philadelphia officials who sought to eliminate the entire MOVE Organization.

“This was an attempt, a plan, to kill,” Africa said. “Not to arrest, but to kill. You don’t need to go past the fact that a bomb was dropped on our home, a bomb that ignited a fire…When we realized that our house was on fire, we attempted to get ourselves, our children, and our animals

out of that blazing inferno. We were met with a barrage of police gunfire that forced us back into the house several times…They (the police) came out there to Osage Avenue with a plan to kill, not to arrest.”

No representatives of former Philadelphia Mayor Wilson Goode or the Philadelphia Police Department were in attendance at this week’s sessions. However, Goode historically took exception to MOVE’s characterization of the actions. He was adamant the city had no other choice. “As Mayor of this city I accept full and total responsibility,'' Goode said on the evening of May 13, 1985. ‘‘There was no way to avoid it. No way to extract ourselves from that situation except by armed confrontation.”

Panelist Randi Boyette noted that clashes between citizens and police still exist today, and have escalated with the recent killings of unarmed African-American men by police in Ferguson, MO, and Staten Island, N.Y. Some participants, and audience members, wondered how the lessons of MOVE could inform today’s police-community debate.

The MOVE discussion was eye-opening for many of the College’s students in the audience, including those who had not been born when the group’s clashes with police took place. “I think many of the students are touched because Philadelphia is our home and the fact that something as awful as that happened in our city is a tragedy,” said Fiona O’Neill, a Culture Science & Technology major. “I hope that we’ve learned that violence doesn’t result in anything good and that fighting with each other isn’t a way to solve problems…I think that what we have learned is that people need to be more accepting of one another. We are all entitled to our rights and beliefs.”

The MOVE Organization is a Philadelphia-based, Black liberation group founded in 1972 by the late John Africa. In 1978, Philadelphia police officers had their first clash with MOVE when police raided the group’s Powelton Village home, resulting in the imprisonment of nine MOVE members and the death of police officer James Ramp. None of the nine was identified as the person who fatally shot Ramp.

Eight MOVE members remain in jail today as a result of the 1978 incident. One of the so-called MOVE Nine, Phil Africa, died in a Pennsylvania prison in January 2015.

On another panel featuring journalists who had covered MOVE as the tragedy unfolded, panelists said the local media have made efforts over the past decades to probe deeper into this conflict and to provide fresh insights into how things went so wrong.

Members of the media panel said they had heard complaints from Osage Avenue neighbors against MOVE’s behavior and lifestyle for months leading up to the 1985 incident. None of them felt that they had been used by government officials, as Ms. Africa charged this week, to create a negative public impression of the MOVE Organization.

Bill Marimow, executive editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer, said the Inquirer probably should have paid more attention to what was happening to the Osage Avenue neighborhood in the years leading up to the bombing.

“The fact that we didn’t pay attention to that consistently, in my opinion, probably created less pressure on first the (William) Green (mayoral) administration and then the Goode administration to address the issues prior to the tragic events of May 13, 1985,” he said.

“In my opinion, it (the 1985 MOVE bombing) was the most significant urban tragedy and public policy travesty in my lifetime and in the last century,” said Marimow, who was an Inquirer reporter on that date. “It was a total disaster, in my opinion, in terms of public officials’ responsibility to protect citizens and their well-being.”

Chivonne Green, an Architecture and Interior Design student at the College, said she attended the various Law and Society Week events to learn more about the 1985 MOVE confrontation.

She was only four-years old in 1985, but said the discussion on the 1978 and 1985 MOVE confrontations provided some greater insights into the issues of today.

“I hope what students got the most out of this was an understanding of different perspectives,” she said. “Not just looking at it from the MOVE perspective, not just looking at it from the public figures’ point-of-view, but looking at it from all sides and being able to come up with a rational decision about what could have been done differently and what could happen moving forward.”

Summary
During the Fox Rothschild Center for Law and Society’s 16th Annual Law and Society Week (Feb. 23-27) at Community …
Publish Date
Mar 9, 2015
Original nid
1576

A Philadelphia Basketball Team That Brings Fans Together


Juanita Watson-Traore, now retired at age 66, came back to Community College of Philadelphia recently, a place that helped her to advance in life.Alumni Tailgate

Watson-Traore first began taking courses at the College in 1967, when it was located inside the now former Snellenburg Department Store on 11th Street. She left the College to work and raise a family but came back in 2006. In 2010, she graduated with an associate’s degree in Culture, Science and Technology.

On Feb. 3, Watson-Traore found her way back to Main Campus to cheer on some remarkable students following in her footsteps. She attended the season’s first alumni tailgate event, held before men’s Colonials basketball team defeated Bucks County Community College 114-68 before a crowd of about 200 at the Athletics Center. The team is ranked fifth among Division III teams in the February 10 National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) poll.

“I had never been to a tailgate before and it was fun,” Watson-Traore said. “I really enjoyed the event and I hope they have more of them.”

Ollie Johnson Community College of PhiladelphiaOllie Johnson, a former member of the Philadelphia Sixers NBA basketball team, was a special guest that night. Johnson played for the Colonials as a freshman before transferring to Temple University, where he was a standout with the Owls.

With staff, students and alumni on hand, the Colonials men’s basketball team attracted one of the largest crowds of this season.

“I think one thing that is important for athletics is for the kids to see people in the stands,” Johnson said. “...Whether they are alumni, staff or other students. I think it is just a great thing.”

Before the Bucks County game started, alumni took time to catch up inside the Coffeehouse in the nearby Winnet Student Life Building, where they munched on hotdogs and chili, and played games such as a giant version of Jenga and bean bag toss.

Darryl A. Irizarry, Jr., the Annual Fund and Alumni Relations coordinator, pronounced the tailgate a huge success. Ninety-six people RSVP’d, and about 40 stropped by before the game.

“Success is pretty much seeing the smiles on our alumni’s faces,” Irizarry said. “If we have smiles on the alumni’s faces then we are doing our jobs. They haven’t been back on campus in such a long while so why not have their comeback be something fun and festive?”

There was an extra bonus as well. Athletic Director Rogers Glispy noted the College’s red-hot men’s basketball team 23-2 record (as of February 11) was now bringing people together and uniting them with a shared purpose: student success.

“I was excited, happy and proud to see our men’s basketball team bring our College community together,” Glispy said. “Our vision is being fulfilled.”

The Colonials have made it into the NJCAA Division III Region XIX tournament. The NJCAA Division III Men's Basketball National Championship Tournament goes from March 12-14 at Paul Gerry Fieldhouse, Loch Sheldrake, NY. The National Championship game will be played on March 14.

Summary
Juanita Watson-Traore, now retired at age 66, came back to Community College of Philadelphia recently, a place that help…
Publish Date
Feb 12, 2015
Original nid
1532

Samuel A. Alito, Associate Justice of The U.S. Supreme Court, Offers Five Principles of Citizenship


U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito, Jr. discussed the importance of citizenship at the College’s 2015 Judge Edward R. Becker Citizenship Award luncheon.

“Good citizenship is not easy,” he told an audience of students, judges, lawyers, business and civic leaders. “It requires hard work.”

Alito, who was the seventh recipient of the Becker Award, spoke on January 15, the actual birthdate of the late civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. The citizenship award, sponsored by the College’s Fox Rothschild Center for Law and Society, honors the late Edward R. Becker (1933-2006), a Philadelphia native, scholar and a highly respected jurist who served with Alito on the Third Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. Judge Becker was a civil servant noted for his down-to-earth humility, his ability to connect easily with diverse groups and for upholding the highest standard of the law.

With Judge Becker’s widow, Flora, and his children Susan and Charles seated in the audience in the Great Hall, Alito used Becker’s life to offer guidelines on good citizenship. The Justice laid out five principles that Judge Becker adhered to in living a life as a legal scholar, a family man and a public servant.

PRINCIPLE ONE: HAVE A CONNECTION TO THE PLACE WHER E YOU LIVE

Judge Becker was a Philadelphian who worked hard for the city and its people. Americans today, however, are very mobile and do not live in one place for a very long time, Alito noted. He said this freedom, plus the ease to communicate with anyone in the world via social media is a good thing, but, for many people, the freedom of movement “has become much more important than physical proximity and that can have its downside.”

Alito said, “A number of commentators have made the point in recent years that our country is becoming more stratified (and) that we are losing a common culture that the country is dividing up based on all sorts of things. That, of course, is contrary to what we aspire to as a nation and it is certainly contrary to what Ed Becker stood for.”

PRINCIPLE TWO: REACH OUT TO A DIVERSE GROUP OF PEOPLE

Becker was a one of the finest federal judges in history, Alito said. Yet he made it a point to interact with “real” people by taking public transportation to get to and from work, and using the public entrance of the federal courthouse in Philadelphia, even though there was a private entrance for judges.

Becker was concerned that federal judges were vulnerable to "black robe disease," which “is the thing that happens when you put on the robe of a judge” and receive the constant respect shown to them in court and in public, Alito said to laughter.

PRINCIPLE THREE: REAL CONCERN FOR REAL PEOPLE ENCOUNTERED IN DAILY LIFE

Alito said Becker learned from his father at an early age to “treat people with dignity and consideration.” Becker followed that advice daily. In fact, he read the Philadelphia Daily News, billed as the “people’s paper,” daily to stay abreast of the everyman’s issues and challenges.

"It is sometimes a lot easier to love people in general than it is to love people in particular," Alito noted. "Ed was not like that. He loved both. He had a great concern for people in the abstract but also for the particular people he came in contact with.”

PRINCIPLE FOUR: IMPROVING SPIRIT

Alito remembered Becker as “a man who made a big difference in my life.” He compared Becker’s life of service to others to that of Philadelphian Benjamin Franklin, an inventor, a writer and a signer of the Declaration of Independence who helped to establish the nation’s first lending library.

“As we know, Franklin had a wonderful, pragmatic, problem-solving spirit,” Alito said. “As a young man, Franklin believed that he could rise in the world even though he lacked formal education, family connections, social standing and wealth…If he had of lived a little longer, he might have founded the Community College of Philadelphia.”

PRINCIPLE FIVE: HARD WORK, PUBLIC SERVICE AND STRIVING FOR EXCELLENCE

Alito encouraged the College’s students in attendance to get involved in public service and work hard like Judge Becker. He recalled Becker as "a legendary worker" who read legal briefs during halftime of watching Philadelphia Eagles games and during intermissions at concerts.

"He once gave me this advice about getting a haircut," Alito said. "He said I was wasting time by not working while I was getting a haircut. He said I should tell the barber that when he was trimming the hair on the right side of my head, I could be holding a brief in my left hand and reading it and then we could reverse. I didn’t see that but I fully believe he did it.”

The audience for the Becker Award included people from all walks and stages of life, including Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter.

Many students clearly understood they had had a front seat to history.

“A lot of people take community college for granted,” Indiana Crousett told a reporter for the Philadelphia Metro. “It’s a pleasure and an honor to have a Supreme Court justice here.”

Summary
U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito, Jr. discussed the importance of citizenship at the College’s…
Publish Date
Jan 20, 2015
Original nid
1472

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