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CAMPUS NEWS Health CENTER REVIVES NURSING HOURS The Health and Wellness Center has restored nursing hours since last semester, but finding more staff to fill those shifts is still a work in progress. Rebecca Barnard, a registered nurse and Health and Wellness Center coordinator, said that due to scheduling issues, nurses were only available for 13 to 14 hours per week last Spring. “Staff was cut significantly and there were gaps in the number of hours assigned,” Barnard said. Rancho Santiago Community College District’s $19 health fee is mandatory for all students. For fall, the Health and Wellness Center has four part-time nurs- es scheduled for 32 to 33 hours per week. Mondays through Thursdays, a nurse is now avail- able during nearly all hours that the center is open. On Fridays, Barnard is available for nurse advice only. According to Barnard, the number of hours are increasing even though the number of staff is decreasing. “I am working with the District to move through the hiring process as efficiently and quickly as possi- ble, while maintaining the integrity of our district-wide hiring process,” Vice President of Student Services Vaniethia Hubbard said. /Selina Urquiza Harvey Milk was the fi rst elected openly gay offi cial for San Francisco. He is one of the center portraits of the new mural. LGBTQ Mural STORY KATE GUADALUPE BUSTAMENTE PHOTO NIKKI NELSEN Art students paint wall to raise awareness of community activists The idea of creating a visual representation honoring LGBTQ history fi rst crossed Lance Lockwood’s mind when he started teaching at Santa Ana College more than 15 years ago. The communication studies department chair and LGBTQ activist, Lockwood has seen many students over the years come out, overcoming the stigmas present in Santa Ana’s majority Lati- no Catholic community. He envisioned the mural as a way of eliminating prejudice and hoped it would empower the campus’ large LGBTQ population. “Just being a member of the LGBTQ community in Santa Ana is a little risky as it is,” says Lockwood, “and I know that a lot of my students... they’ve grown up in a very traditional, Hispanic Catholic household…so I think having something to represent and having something to talk about was very important.” With help from Associate Professor of Art Darren Hostetter and his students, Lockwood’s dream is becoming a reality, with a mural of LGBTQ icons right outside his offi ce. Lockwood believes it’s the only mural on a college campus in the U.S. honoring historical LGBTQ fi gures. Work on the mural — which can be found tucked behind a wall in a corner on the second fl oor of the Fine Arts building — started last Spring semester and is being painted in layers of brown and black tones by members of SAC’s Mural Team. The photorealistic mural showcases LGBTQ fi gures throughout history, celebrating their achievements despite society’s undermin- ing of their importance and impact. It depicts a variety of famous and lesser-known LGBTQ icons, actors and activists, including: Ru Paul, Marsha P. Johnson, George Takai, and Mathew Shepard. “[The historical fi gures] connect with a group that’s marginalized and targeted, people who have lost their lives because they’re gay, or diff erent. That’s real,” said Hostetter, “I think our students need to see that, recognize and pay their respects.” After the revival of the SAC mural program in 2015, student artists have been engaged with creating art around the campus and in the com- munity. “We have been very busy these last couple months,” said student Alberto Donjuan, who’s been in the mural program since 2015, as he used brown paint to detail a photorealistic face on the wall earlier this month. Student murals can be seen throughout greater Orange County and on campus. Their latest work can be found by fl ipping through the pages of the OC Weekly’s “Best Of” issue. Students hope to fi nish the LGBTQ mural soon as they are currently preparing for the Dia De Los Muertos celebration on 4th Street. el Don Santa Ana College · October 29, 2018 3