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Harbor Occupational Center, San Pedro Skills Center and Wilmington Skills Center are full-time regional occupational centers that offer “open entry/exit” classes designed for students to proceed at their own pace.

The centers, operated by Los Angeles Unified’s Division of Adult and Career Education, provide short-term career technical training in business education (accounting 1 and 2, office procedures, business English and math, and computer operations); health occupations (medical assistant and pharmacy technician); automotive and diesel technology; industrial technology (photovoltaic, forklift operation and welding); specialty classes (graphic design, computer networking and upholstery); and academic programs.

Classes have varied hours for those who work or cannot attend school full time because of other obligations.

Classes are conducted from 8 a.m. to 2:45 p.m. Monday through Friday or 5:45 to 9 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday at Harbor Occupational Center, 740 N. Pacific Ave., San Pedro.

Costs range from $60 to $130 per class, and exemptions are available.

Call 310-547-5551 (or TDD 310-547-5346) or visit

Students of Syracuse University Abroads new summer program, Italian Film Studies and Restoration in Bologna, are spending five weeks immersed in one of Italys most vibrant cultural cities learning about classic cinema and attending sessions on film restoration.

Nine SU students are currently in Italy participating in the program, which began on June 18 and runs through July 23. The program is led by Gian Vittorio Baldi, founding producer and distinguished film director of SUs film studies program in Bologna; Stefano Giannini, assistant professor of Italian in The College of Arts and Sciences Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics; and Owen Shapiro, the Shaffer Professor of Film in the College of Visual and Performing Arts Department of Transmedia. It is open to both undergraduate and graduate students.

The Bologna program is based on a total filmmaker/film studies approach in which students are engaged in the study of Italian film history, along with that of visual strategy, pre-production planning and production. Students generate filmmaking ideas based on their study of such Italian filmmakers as Roberto Rossellini, Luchino Visconti, Vittorio De Sica, Giuseppe De Santis, Pier Paolo Pasolini and Baldi and incorporate what they learn into their own world views and filmmaking interests. The students each make a video project under the direction of Shapiro and cinematographer Stefano Coletta, a professional director of photography who has worked with Ettore Scola, Baldi and numerous other well known directors and producers.

Students in the program also attend Il Cinema Ritrovato, one of the worlds most famous classic film festivals, and have the opportunity to meet with the festivals organizers, attendees and presenters, who this year included British film historian/documentary filmmaker Kevin Brownlow, actress Charlotte Rampling and director Bernardo Bertolucci.

The students also engage in independent research activities at the archives of the famous Cineteca di Bologna and receive an introduction to the film restoration process and the facilities. Program presenters include Baldi and Roberto Chiesi.

To learn more about this years experience in Bologna, visit the blog of participating student Kevin Kern at http://theeanimationguy.wordpress.com.

A memorial service for longtime El Camino College journalism instructor Jolene Combs has been set for Friday.

The service will be at 3 p.m. at Riviera United Methodist Church, 375 Palos Verdes Blvd., Redondo Beach.

Combs, 69, of Rolling Hills Estates died Wednesday of a heart attack while undergoing treatment for pneumonia.

Combs taught journalism, yearbook and English classes at Redondo Union High School in Redondo Beach beginning in 1970. In 1984, she moved to El Camino, where she taught journalism and advised the student publications, including the Warwhoop and Union newspapers.

Brianna Carrier 12, a dual major in geography and policy studies in Syracuse Universitys College of Arts and Sciences, has been selected as a 2011 Udall Scholar. A member of the Turtle Clan of the Mohawk Nation, she is one of only 10 Native American and Alaska Native scholars in this years Udall class, comprising more than 80 students from 61 institutions nationwide. Carrier will receive a $5,000 scholarship to use for housing and tuition.

This years group of scholars is one of our strongest classes ever, with an impressive showing of native students pursuing careers related to tribal public policy or Native American health care, says Terrence L. Bracy, chair of the board of trustees for the Udall Foundation.

A native of Niagara Falls, Carrier is one of three Udall Scholars pursuing a career in tribal public policy.

After college, I want to go into public service for the betterment of the Native American people, says Carrier, whose interests range from environmental and natural resource protection to sovereignty and self-determination issues. Her ultimate goal is to obtain ground experience with a prestigious nonprofit, such as Teach For America or the National Congress of American Indians, before pursuing a professional graduate degree in public policy, public administration or law.

Im a very lucky person to have had many opportunities, so I want to try to make the most of them, she adds.

Carrier was selected by an independent review committee from among 510 candidates at 231 colleges and universities. Working in her favor was an internship last summer at the National Science Foundation, where she served in the Office of Polar Programs. In this capacity, Carrier presented a white paper on the emerging field of sustainability science and its impact on indigenous communities, and then spent a week at the Arctic hamlet of Clyde River, studying support systems among Inuit women.

Last summer provided many eye-opening experiences that built me up as a student and person, recalls Carrier, whose interest in storytelling, game playing, berry picking and cooking endeared her to the Inuit community. Meeting people who were affected by climate change made my studies more relevant and more important to me.

This summer, Carrier returns to the nations capital to intern for Sen. Tom Udall of New Mexico. She is confident that the experience will boost her understanding of and appreciation for the policy making process.

In a short amount of time, Ive met many intelligent and influential people, and have learned a lot about how the Hill works, she says. Its rewarding to have an insider view of the U.S. government.

Sociology professor Richard Loder 67, G78 is not surprised by Carriers success. He believes her coursework in geography and policy studies, coupled with internships and community service, has groomed her for an array of opportunities during and after college.

Brianna is a bright, articulate and energetic emerging scholar who is concerned about environmental issues in this fragile world. Her experience is indicative of her commitment to sustainability and the environment and to future generations yet unborn, writes Loder, who doubles as a faculty representative to the Udall Foundation.

Carrier is committed to making the most of her senior year at SU. When not cracking the books, she will likely be found volunteering for Alpha Phi Omega, a co-educational national service fraternity, or serving as captain of the womens club hockey team.

Although Carrier does not reside on a reservation and, thus, is unable to take advantage of SUs Haudenosaunee Promise Scholarship Program, she applauds the Universitys commitment to the historic nations (e.g., Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca and Tuscarora). It is this relationship, she admits, that initially drew her to campus.

We, as students, dont always realize how fortunate we are to attend a university and to have the freedom and luxury to study what interests us, she summarizes. Its important to bring that knowledge back to our community for their own betterment and to give back to those people who have not had the opportunities we have had.

The Udall Foundation is an independent federal agency that was established by Congress in 1992 to provide federally funded scholarships for college students intending to pursue careers related to the environment, as well as to Native American students pursuing tribal policy or health care careers. In 1998, the foundation grew to include the U.S. Institute for Environmental Conflict Resolution, created by Congress as the federal governments only program focused entirely on resolving federal environmental disputes.