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Vol. LXXI, Issue 31
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Life through a window
Monday, May 4, 2020
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MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM | @DAILY49ER | EIC@DAILY49ER.COM
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Graduates to be recognized virtually Seniors will get the opportunity to participate in a virtual ceremony early this summer before a physical ceremony is held. By Rachel Barnes Managing Editor
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he Long Beach State commencement department has begun planning a virtual commencement ceremony for the summer, according to an email sent to graduating seniors. Graduates would be required to create a personalized slide that would include their name, degree, photo as well as a short quote or message.
“Free and streamed online this summer, the virtual celebration will also feature remarks from President Conoley, campus leadership, and special guests,� the email stated. Along with the announcement, a survey for seniors to submit was included in the email. Graduates have until 11:59 p.m. on May 2 to participate in the survey. A physical commencement ceremony will likely occur in the fall according to President Conoley.
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NEWS 3
MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM | @DAILY49ER | NEWS@DAILY49ER.COM
Photo courtesy of JOVANI RIOJA
Jovani Rioja, a nursing graduate student, contracted COVID-19 in early April and fully recovered around two-weeks later. Rioja, 29, works with COVID-19 patients at a local hospital.
‘It was like a semi-truck had hit me’ CSULB nursing student Jovani Rioja recovers from coronavirus. By Cristian Vasquez Staff Writer
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ovani Rioja noticed he had signs of coronavirus around April 5. “I remember it was like a semi-truck had hit me. I had these body aches all over like my back and legs. I couldn’t really get out of the couch,” Rioja
said. His wife Crystal did not believe it could be coronavirus at first, but the 29-year-old Long Beach State graduate student and registered nurse immediately accepted it as a possibility. After all, he works in an intensive care unit. “I do work in an ICU, around a COVID unit. So, it could happen, I mean it’s just a possibility,” Rioja said. He was unable to comment on the location or name of the hospital where he works. According to Rioja, his wife had to help him from their living room couch as he stood up to reach for Tylenol. He said the timing of his diagnosis had shocked him, as he had been working with COVID-19 patients since March, and it had taken nearly a month for him to catch the virus. After receiving his results, Rioja said he and his wife began cleaning their home. A registered nurse herself, his wife and him said they had the necessary tools and materials like gloves and masks to stay safe. Rioja researched what to do and what ways to keep him and his wife safe. “I was doing more reading about quaran-
tine; you know the isolation I can do,” Rioja said. “Luckily since we’re both RN’s, we both had the stuff like the masks at home, the alcohol, the wipes. So, we were actually able to clean our house really well,” As he went about his isolation, he said his family members continued checking up on him. Most worried about death. Rioja was not worried about dying from the virus. “They called me every day, texted every day,” Rioja said. “It was just they were worried because all you hear is death in
the news— you don’t hear any recovery patients. Because I was fine, I had no on-going conditions, I’m young, I’m active, there [was] no need to worry about that.” Rioja said he knew it was a high possibility that he would test positive for the virus because of the number of patients he worked with. “We’re around the patients, we’re constantly in the room, we’re going in and out of the room, we’re reusing our masks for most of the shift,” Rioja said.
Rioja has worked with 10 patients who have tested positive for coronavirus. One of these patients has died. “It’s dark because we did a lot of work. It was a constant battle trying to beat this thing,” Rioja said. “We tried different things and it just kept coming back stronger. We would try to make a turn for the better and all of a sudden we go right back like ‘Goddammit, I got to figure something else out.’ We did all our best but at times you just can’t.” As a frontline worker, Rioja said he never expected to deal with something this massive in his career, but the gravity of the virus only made him more dedicated to his medical oath. “I put my life on the line to take care of these patients. I took an oath. I would do anything I can to protect the community,” Rioja said. “I wanted to do this. I chose this, I have to do it. I got to fight this.” Rioja had initially wanted to pursue a career in engineering. After experiencing the difficulty of one math class he chose the medical field. “I always wanted to be a provider, dealing with more patients, treating the patients,” Rioja said. As frontline workers around the world continue to be praised for their work, Rioja said the praises are not the reasons why he keeps moving forward. “I appreciate your praise, I appreciate your thank you, I appreciate your gift, but at the same time I’m doing this because I want to be here,” Rioja said. He fully recovered around day 15 since his initial symptoms. He was able to get up and be active again. Rioja returned to work on April 29. He is not worried if he tests positive again. “There’s a possibility but hey, that’s why you go into it,” Rioja said. “I can beat this; I can do this.”
4 NEWS
MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM | @DAILY49ER | NEWS@DAILY49ER.COM
Conoley cautious about comeback Alternative instruction to continue for ‘large classes’ for at least first 8 weeks of fall semester. By Julia Terbeche Podcast Editor
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RYAN GUITARE | Daily Forty-Niner
Alternative instruction will continue for “large classes” at the beginning of fall semester.
lternative instruction will continue for “large classes” at the beginning of the fall semester, President Jane Close Conoley said Monday “Right now, it seems clear that we will have to continue some instruction remotely,” Conoley said. “Faculty members who teach large classes should be preparing for remote delivery for at least the first eight weeks of the semester.” In an effort to make appropriate adjustments for the coming months, Conoley said CSULB is working to increase Wi-Fi coverage in the public areas surrounding campus, including parking lots. The university is also looking to put
in place a permanent laptop loan program for students who rely on campus facilities and services. “It’s clear that many of our students need better support to thrive in a remote environment,” Conoley said. Conoley also said the university is working on a plan to safely accommodate residential students for the fall semester. As a follow up to the university’s initial promise to provide medical professionals from the Veterans Administration a place of rest, staff are now using rooms in Building E of Hillside College Dormitory to avoid them returning to their homes after possible exposure to coronavirus. According to Conoley, all locked buildings on campus are disinfected, and all essential construction projects and renovations are carrying on with proper safety precautions. CSULB is reducing its spending by 5% in July, which equals about $24
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million, in order to prepare for an expected mid-year cut, Conoley said. In regards to Long Beach State Athletics, Conoley is taking a cautious approach in handling the way fans and athletes experience fall sports and has even considered incorporating esports into the department. “It’s unlikely that we’ll be able to have fans at our fall sporting events,” Conoley said. “In addition, we’re working on developing — if at all possible — strict safety protocols for our student-athletes as they train and play.” Since the beginning of the pandemic, seven CSULB students have tested positive for coronavirus, and all have experienced or are recovering from “mild symptoms.” “We know of no new cases, although we have instructed several staff members to self-quarantine after they reported possible exposure to the virus,” Conoley said.
ARTS & LIFE 5
MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM | @DAILY49ER | NEWS@DAILY49ER.COM
JULISSA VILLALOBOS | Daily Forty-Niner
My mother, Julie Villalobos, watching the live stream of my great grandmothers viewing as we were on out way there. Some family members were unable to attend due to being out of state, having symptoms of the Corona virus, or just wanted to stay safe at home.
Screening her grieving A Daily Forty-Niner reporter documents her experience with a funeral during this unprecedented time.
By Julissa Villalobos News Editor
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passed my Mami Chela, my grandma, on my way to my great-grandmother’s coffin. We stood six-feet apart from each other and cried until it felt like we could no longer stand. From six-feet away I told my Mami Chela how much I loved her, how sorry I was that this happened. I can’t wait until all this is over to finally be able to hug her. My great-grandmother, Sara Urena Rubio, was buried in a graveyard with only five of her eight daughters present. The rest of us got to
watch through Facebook Live. I will never take someone’s hug for granted ever again. Coronavirus has stripped so many families of their ability to mourn in a time when we are all feeling lonely. I long to embrace my family and am looking forward to the day when I can be free of quarantine. I hadn’t seen my great-grandmother for about a month before she passed. COVID-19 was creeping closer and closer to home, so my family and I took the precautions we needed to. We wanted to protect my 89-yearold great-grandmother who is high risk due to her age and weak lungs. The family agreed to not make our weekly visits to her and wait until the virus had passed.
I was half-awake trying to get up for work when my parents told me my great-grandmother had passed away at 5 a.m. while I was sleeping. My first thought was that I needed to see her. I needed to look at her one last time and give her a proper goodbye. My aunt Sari, who was her caretaker for the last months of her life, said she couldn’t have visitors. She didn’t want a bunch of people mourning over the body of my great-grandmother while coronavirus was around. I was furious, I channeled all my grief into screaming at my parents about how unfair it was that I wouldn’t be able to see her body one last time, screaming that I needed to see her in order to cope. All the yelling and screaming did no good. The family
started a Zoom call where we got to hear everyone’s cries and wails through the laptop speakers. My mother and I got to try and guide my cousin on how to properly close my great-grandmother’s jaw with one of her scarfs. Family members prayed the rosary until we all got to stare at the computer screen and watch my great-grandmother’s lifeless body get taken away by the funeral home four-hours later. As days passed, the family called every funeral home and cemetery in our area to see if we would be able to hold a viewing or a funeral. The answer every time was “no.” No one would hold a funeral of more than five people in the time of COVID-19. So, for the sake of our
own hearts, we held a secret viewing at a ranch located in the middle of nowhere. We scheduled 15-minute time slots so families who were quarantined together could say goodbye to my great-grandmother. Everyone arrived and waited in their cars. I just watched people walk up to my great-grandmother’s coffin and spend their last 15-minutes with her body. I was grateful for the opportunity and the “safe” risk we were all taking as a family who loved their matriarch with all their hearts. That day turned out to be the most painful moment of my life. Although I got to see my great-grandma one last time, I was unable to hold or comfort the rest of my family.
6 ARTS & LIFE
The Quarantine Diaries BY GARRETT TROUTMAN
The Quarantine Diaries is an intimate perspective into how life has changed for individuals as a result of COVID-19. Pairing portraits of self-isolation and handwritten accounts of their experiences, the series gives an insight into the life of staying at home amidst the global pandemic.
p Zach Sorensen, 23, is a freelance photographer who is currently self-isolating with his family in Costa Mesa, California.
MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM |
ARTS & LIFE 7
| @DAILY49ER | ARTS@DAILY49ER.COM
Leah Norwood, 21, is a student at Long Beach City College who began working part-time from home in Long Beach selling knives via virtual appointments after losing her job due to COVID-19. p p Tyler McHenry, 24, is an engineer who returned to live at home with family in Fountain Valley, California after his company had all non-essential employees work remotely.
8 OPINIONS
MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM | @DAILY49ER | OPINION@DAILY49ER.COM
A day at the beach isn’t worth your life Protests calling for an end to the quarantine are putting themselves, their families and their communities in danger. By Perry Continente Opinions Editor
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nti-quarantine protestors clad in Make America Great Again hats and waving little American flags flooded Huntington Beach, bravely demanding an end to the tyranny of the lockdown and the reopening of their beloved bars and hair salons. After all, what are a few tens of thousands of deaths compared to being able to grill storebrand hot dogs on white bread at the beach? How can we expect these people to live without their stylists to dye their graying hair? It’s unconscionable. Across every state, at every one of these protests, there are some commonalities. Pickup trucks, the flag, and, inescapably, the pro-Trump signs that
saturate the crowd. I am impressed how completely we’ve managed to politicize a deadly virus. Only in America. The cruelest irony of this whole circus is these “activists” who are so incensed by this quarantine are the very same people who scoff at civil rights protests. They are the ones who characterize Black Lives Matter as a “Terrorist Organization,” yet throw childish fits when measures are taken to save their lives and the lives of their loved ones. For these people, bars closing is a cause to riot, but the disproportionate police brutality faced by Black and brown people is not. Colin Kaepernick takes a knee and they burn their Nikes in protest. There are countless videos of the outright murder of people in the street by police officers and not a peep from these protes-
tors, but now since they can’t dine in at Carl’s Jr something must be done? I would be more inclined to tolerate these protests if they seemed to care about anyone other than themselves. But their congregating together like a somehow-even-more-insufferable Coachella crowd is endangering themselves and everyone else. This is an easily transmissible virus, with a high mortality rate that has left survivors with major lung and kidney damage. There are few environments where it is more easily transmitted than crowds where people are packed cheek to cheek waving cringe-inducing signs comparing this quarantine to the holocaust. How deluded do you have to be to be sitting at home and, after cashing your stimulus check, look around and say to yourself, “this is a lot like what happened to Anne Frank”? Protests like the one in
Huntington Beach are some of the grandest displays of willful ignorance I have ever seen. Operatically ironic, a monument to a complete absence of self-awareness. People across the country are storming state capitals and flooding the streets because their lives are being inconvenienced. Are there major problems with this quarantine? Of course, many Americans need more economic assistance, but reopening beaches won’t help that. Plus the economic and health ramifications will only get worse if we reopen. The virus will come back in force, lengthening the lockdown and taking more and more lives. Almost every expert is saying that we need to stay quarantined, and I get it, it’s hard. I’m not loving this either, but going to the beach is not worth someone’s life, no matter what the throngs of people demanding they reopen might think.
MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM | @DAILY49ER | SPORTS@DAILY49ER.COM
SPORTS 9
‘I GREW UP IN THE PYRAMID’ After years of spectating, it's Aidan Knipe’s turn to play for the team his father has coached since 2001.
By Cain Hernandez Staff Writer
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t just a weekand-a-half old, Aidan Knipe got his first taste of the Long Beach State men’s volleyball team. “I had him dressed in his Long Beach State gear,” his mother, Jennifer Knipe, said. “I was hiding up in the Ukleja room, peeking out the window watching the game. I didn’t go in the crowd with a newborn baby.” With his father just beginning his path towards becoming one of the most prominent figures in Beach athletics history, Aidan was right there along the way, following in his footsteps. “I grew up in the Pyramid,” Aidan said. “My whole life, every single weekend was spent there watching matches. I felt like it was something that I had to continue on.” The choice was crystal clear when it came time for freshman setter Aidan Knipe to choose where he wanted to play collegiate volleyball. He had never considered playing for any other
Head coach Alan Knipe, top, poses with his two sons, Aidan left, Evan right, and wife Jennifer after winning the 2018 men’s volleyball national championship. Head coach Alan Knipe, right, walks along the beach with his one-year-old son Aidan.
school but Long Beach. For the first time in 17 years as the Long Beach State men’s volleyball head coach, Alan Knipe will have the opportunity to coach his son. “With these young men that you recruit, you watch them mature through these real formable years of their life, it’s special,” Alan said. “To combine that with your own son, has been really, really special.” Coach Knipe’s legacy is already set in stone in Long Beach history, being inducted into the athletic department’s Hall of Fame in 2011. As a player, he was named to the All-American second team in 1991 and helped Long Beach win it’s first men’s volleyball national championship. A year later he was selected to the All-American first team. Alan boasts a career .696 win percentage over his 17 (one shortened) seasons at the Beach, along with seven championship appearances as a coach and two as a player. At the helm he elevated the program back to its winning ways, capturing back-to-back national championships in 2018 and 2019, and was crowned Big West Conference Coach of the Year in both seasons. Although Aidan is following
Courtsey of Jennifer Knipe
the path his father paved, he still plans to “blaze his own trail” and leave his own mark on the university’s history. “There’s also some added pressure on Aidan because he is the coach’s son,” Aidan’s mother Jennifer said. “There will always be people that speculate, ‘Oh is he going to be good enough? Is he going to live up to the national championship standards that Alan has developed?’” Though it has always been in Aidan’s plan to play volleyball under the tutelage of his world-renowned father, growing up he got grief “here and there” from people thinking he was going to be given a spot simply for being the legend’s son. “Aidan has done such a good job standing on his own two feet,” Alan said. “He’s created his own resume that he could pretty much play at any program in the country, and I think people understand that.” Straddling the line between coach and father was an adjustment Alan had to make when Aidan joined the team. “I think it would be more difficult to handle it if Aidan wasn’t so committed to being all-in to our program in every area, whether it be academically, lifting and conditioning,” Alan said.
Before stepping foot on campus as a student-athlete, Alan hadn’t coached Aidan as he climbed through high school and club volleyball ranks. “By having those other experiences, I think he came to value his dad’s wisdom even more,” Jennifer said. “Maturity-wise for Aidan, when he was so young, it was hard for him to be coached by his father because that whole ‘wanting to please your dad all the time.’” One factor that made things easier for Alan was having his son move into the dorms on campus. The two wouldn’t have to take volleyball home with them. “Starting the year, it was obviously by far the greatest experience of my life,” Aidan said. “Getting to play Division-1 volleyball on a daily basis, living with my best friends and getting to make those great connections.”
Although the 2020 volleyball season has been canceled, Alan stresses an important message to himself, Aidan and the whole team. To get one percent better each day. “Right now, I have the ability to control getting a really good jump start on next season as far as our culture, our planning and training,” Alan said. “Aidan doesn’t have a lot of opportunities with his team, but he has a lot of opportunities for individual growth.” As an educator, Jennifer sees her husband guide his athletes through more than just volleyball. “He’s getting 18-year-old boys and they’re leaving as 22-yearold men,” Jennifer said. “To watch Aidan now be a part of this at Long Beach, I can’t put into words what that means to me.”
10 SPORTS
MONDAY, MAY 4, 2020 | DAILY49ER.COM | @DAILY49ER | OPINION@DAILY49ER.COM
COVID CLAIMS CHANCE AT 3-PEAT
Worldwide pandemic prevents men’s volleyball from finishing season, possibly three-peating as NCAA champions. By Teran Rodriguez Staff Writer
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AUSTIN BRUMBLAY | Daily Forty-Niner
Head coach Alan Knipe, right, and sophomore Shane Holdaway celebrate a point against San Diego. The Beach was “hungry to three-peat but lost the opportunity due to coronavirus.
nly hours before No. 4 Long Beach’s first Big West Conference game of the season against No. 3 UCSB, the news hit that all Big West Conference spring sporting events were suspended indefinitely. “I didn’t believe it was real,” junior outside hitter Ethan Siegfried said. “It felt like a dream because it was all happening so fast. I was definitely just baffled at the whole situation and the progression of it all.” Soon after, all spring competition was outright canceled, preventing Long Beach the chance to win its third straight NCAA championship, a feat that had only been done once before by UCLA, which captured four in a row in the `80s. The Beach was 10-1 by the time the season was canceled, with their only loss coming at the hands of UCLA in four sets on Feb. 1 at the Walter Pyramid. Long Beach started the season with five-straight wins until the loss halted the streak. Four weeks after the loss, the Beach returned the favor by beating the Bruins in five sets at the Wooden Center. The win was part of another five-game winning streak that the Beach strung together before the season was cut short. “We got significantly better [after the loss] and that’s a really big thing for me as a coach, to have the guys to be able to identify individually and team areas of focus,” Long Beach head coach Alan Knipe said. Despite the season coming to an early end, junior middle blocker Simon Anderson said although the
team was relatively new, he was happy everyone had finally found their role and built chemistry. “We found different ways to get better and win matches,” Anderson said. “It takes a while for a team to get settled in and everyone to get used to playing with each other. We definitely needed the time in practice to get the rhythms right.” Setter Gary Trejo, the only senior on the roster, said that the team got the most out of the 11 games it had played, however, the news came as a shock. “This is never how anyone wants to end their volleyball career, especially [being] back-to-back champions and having that final year to potentially have a three-peat,” Trejo said. “A lot of the [players] were putting a lot more into it this year. Our coach prepared us that we were going to have that target on the back of our head and that teams are going to play us as hard as they can.” Trejo said that the team was “hungry” to repeat as champs for a third-straight year and it was working to improve every day. “They’ve implemented a culture that you’re just working with your boys, whether it’s on the court or off the court, you’re always being around them,” Trejo said. “I’ve played on many different teams, but this is the first program that I’ve been in that they’ve really instilled a culture that is just hard to resist.” Although the season ended abruptly, Siegfried is excited for next season based on the foundation the team built this year, and the new recruiting class coming in next year. “It’ll be a good group of guys to have as [options] to try and implement into our systems, which [will] benefit us,” Siegfried said. “Whether the freshmen come in to play on the second team or some are implemented into the starting lineup.”
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DIRTBAGS’ SEASON DASHED BY DISASTER Through 15 games, the Dirtbags were putting up numbers on par with previous teams to make deep playoff runs.
By Eric Watson-Bailey Staff Writer
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he Long Beach State Dirtbags didn’t get to showcase their full potential after the coronavirus pandemic abruptly ended the season, but with a 10-5 record, this year’s team had a special aura around it. Helmed by first-year coach Eric Valenzuela, the Dirtbags were off to a remarkable start, winning the season-opening series against California, then continuing to win over high profile opponents behind their stellar pitching. Junior LHP Adam Seminaris and sophomore LHP Alfredo Ruiz both had dominant performances in the first two games. The
CAIN HERNANDEZ | Daily Forty-Niner
The Long Beach State Dirtbags started the 2020 spring season with a 10-5 record, toppling two top-25 teams before the abrupt end of competition ruled by the NCAA on March 13.
two struck out 21 combined batters in their respective starts, giving fans a glimpse of hope that this season could have been special compared to last year’s 14-41 disaster. Valenzuela immediately brought a winning culture to the Beach that he instilled at St. Mary’s College. He led the Gaels to four consecutive 30-win seasons in six years as the skipper. After taking on the lead job at St. Mary’s, the team improved from 16-39 in his first season in 2014, to back-to-back seasons finishing above .500 in 2015 and ‘16. Valenzuela coached the team to a 2016 NCAA tournament appearance before he left to become the eighth coach of the Dirtbags. The Dirtbags offense opened up the season batting .248, but the pitching staff stole the show with an overall team ERA of 2.38, good for 12th in the nation. The most interesting part is the Dirtbags do not have a single pitcher with an ERA in the top-50,
meaning their success has been a team effort, rather than relying on one ace to carry the team. With two dynamite starters in Seminaris and Ruiz, freshman RHP Luis Ramirez also burst onto the scene to round out the trifecta with a one hit, 12 strikeout performance against Wake Forest Feb. 22. The Long Beach starters were able to pitch aggressively thanks to the strong bullpen behind them, featuring freshman RHP Devereaux Harrison (13.2 innings pitched, two earned runs and 18 strikeouts) and redshirt junior RHP Matt Fields (six innings pitched, one earned run, eight strikeouts). Long Beach’s last playoff appearance in 2017 saw them hitting .270 with a 3.07 ERA, finishing first in the Big West with a 42-20-1 record. Despite getting off to a 6-11 start through 15 games, that team ended up falling one round short of a College World Series berth, losing in the super-regional to Big West rival Cal State Fullerton in a
three-game series. The Dirtbags had similar success in 2016, coincidently starting off 10-5 as well. Long Beach finished that year losing to the University of Miami in the regional final. In 2014, the Dirtbags plunged themselves deep into the NCAA tournament as well, hitting .260 with a 2.97 ERA for the season after a modest 8-7 start. The team would finish second in the Big West at 3426, but fell to the College of Charleston 4-2 in the regional final, one round shy of making it to the CWS in Omaha. Compared to years past, thanks to an uptick in pitching and aggressive new coaching style, the 2020 Dirtbags seemed to be in prime position to reach the College World Series for the first time since the 1998 semifinals under legendary coach Dave Snow. Although it’s impossible to tell what the Dirtbags season would have resulted in, it’s clear the team was on a path towards success.
SHARK BITES Across 2. the space near the USU where students line up to walk through. 3. The virtual reality file “Birthplace of the People” was shown in the ________ in the basement of the library. 5. CSULB celebrates _______ during October. 9. this type of dorming option will cost $7,994 at CSULB for the 2019-20 academic year. 10. this species of rodent is found all over campus and terrorizes students. 11. Beach Weekly is the Daily Forty-Niner’s what? 12. September is dedicated to celebrating this heritage. 14. ________ studies started in 2013. 15. this building is going to be replaced with the Anna W. Ngai Alumni Center.
Down 1. in the video uploaded to the Daily Forty-Niner youtube page earlier this year, the Pyramid was inspired by the building 3. the school’s air conditioning system is cooled by huge amounts of this. 4. this is being built in Downtown Long Beach for teachers. 6. Cyrus Parker-Jeannette retired as the dean of this college. 7. The downtown CSULB campus, known as the University ______, is projected to be finished in 2022. 8. La ________ is one of the student organizations that would have to move due to the demolition of PH-1, FO-4 and FO-5.
16. students use this app to look for love.
10. The CSULB vertebrae lab gets donations of animal carcasses from this zoo.
17. Information and Technology officials warned Zoom users of this potential cybersecurity threats associated with the video conference application.
11. Parking and Transportation officials announced that they would refund amounts for ________ permits.
18. the sport our multimedia managing editor tired out earlier this year.
13. Monday, March 23, was the first day of ________ teaching.
19. this past year the school is going to turn this milestone age.