DAILY 49ER California State University, Long Beach
Vol. LXVII, Issue 97
ASI
www.daily49er.com
Monday, April 4, 2016
ASI election results in runoff
None of the ASI executive candidates won a majority of votes. By Michaela Kwoka-Coleman Staff Writer
A runoff election starting today is being held to determine the winners for all Associated Students, Inc. executive positions for the 2016-17 academic year. The ASI Election Board announced the results March 24 in the ASI Senate chamber before a crowd of students and
Executive
faculty. However, since none of the candidates for each of the three offices received a majority vote, the executive positions for next year’s ASI treasurer, vice president and president will be determined in an online runoff election April 4-6. Oscar Acevedo originally came in second place in the presidential election, but was disqualified. Students can vote in the runoff elections by clicking on the link sent to their email registered with CSULB. The results will be announced Thursday in the ASI Senate chamber in the University Student Union.
candidates in the runoff (Percent received in general election)
Treasurer:
Vice President:
Gio Smith (49.5)
President:
Logan Vournas
Marvin Flores
Novy Bowman
Robert Espinoza
(38.5)
Mariam Balogun
(33)
(19.4)
(29.6)
(15)
CRIME
Student arrested for having two knives James Edward Deguzman was arrested after having two knives. By Matt Simon Staff Writer
University Police arrested a student March 24 after receiving an anonymous report that the student was in possession of two knives, according to a campus safety notification from Chief of Police Fernando Solorzano. Student James Edward Deguzman, according to the Long Beach Police Department, was said to be seen opening and closing a black knife by a student, making her feel nervous. The 19-year-old then allegedly pulled out a second knife and had both knives open on his desk in the LA-5 building, ac-
Johnny Romero | Daily 49er
eFast and eFurious
Hundreds of fans were lined up outside the main entrance on Ocean Boulevard to get into the Long Beach ePrix Saturday. Many were anxious to see the newest series of electric speedsters. Lucas Di Grassi won the main event, but the event walked away with the biggest win. The Long Beach ePrix set a world record for the most electric cars on one race track. Raffle winners even got the opportunity to go out in a couple of the race cars.
cording to the crime bulletin. The reporting party left the classroom to notify University Police. When officers responded, Deguzman was detained for further investigation. Deguzman was arrested and booked at Long Beach City Jail after exceeding the 2.5 inch blade allowance set forth by California Penal Code 626.10(b). The university will conduct multiple investigations and determine the steps it will take. The arrest and subsequent notification came the day after a forum that was organized to address the immediacy of safety notifications after an unrelated knife incident Feb. 25. “Groups on campus have voiced concerns about safety notifications and the university is refining the process to distribute those notifications,” Solorzano said in the notification. “Please be assured that your safety is a top priority.”
BASEBALL
Gauchos put Dirtbags on short end of a series LBSU drops its first series of the season, going 1-2 aginst UCSB. By Matt Simon Staff Writer
A combination of untimely pitching errors and lack of hitting spelled doom for the Long Beach State baseball team, as UC Santa Barbara took advantage, winning back-to-back games to take the opening series in the Big West from the Dirtbags.
News 2
The Dirtbags’ (17-10, 1-2) series loss was their first after winning six straight series to start the year. “I thought [UCSB] completely controlled the tempo,” Dirtbags head coach Troy Buckley said. “We got out-tempo[ed], out-executed, out-competed, and out-coached in every facet.” While the Dirtbags got out to a 2-0 lead on Friday night with right-hander Chris Mathewson on the mound, UCSB answered right back, tying the game after a two-run homer from sophomore infielder Austin Bush. The Gauchos then took a 3-2 lead in the fifth after Mathewson gave up a leadoff homer to
Arts & Life 4
John Fajardo | LBSU Athletics
LBSU junior shortstop Garrett Hampson in full stride during the DIrtbags’ 2-0 win against Gauchos on Sunday at Blair Field.
Opinions 6
junior outfielder Andrew Calica. LBSU tied it at 3 in the seventh after junior shortstop Garrett Hampson hit an RBI single that scored senior infielder Zack Domingues. The Gauchos scored the go-ahead run in the eighth inning when sophomore pitcher Lucas Jacobsen threw three wild pitches that allowed junior outfielder Devon Gradford to advance from first all the way home. LBSU lost to UCSB 4-3 on Friday night.
see DIRTBAGS, page 8
Sports 7
2
Monday, April 4, 2016
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CFA
News
Fact finding report last stop before strike The impartial fact finder sided with the CFA in a last the step before next week’s planned strike. By Greg Diaz Editor-in-Chief
The prospect of a Cal State Long Beach faculty strike is looking more and more likely after the release of the fact finder’s report on Thursday, which sided with the California Faculty Association’s demand for a 5 percent salary increase. Both the California State University
Silence and ICE Student organizations held a silent protest at a CSULB police job fair. By Katherine Lemus Staff Writer
As students attended a police job fair, a row of protesters stood in silence with signs that spoke for them. On March 24, Cal State Long Beach
and the CFA seemed to declare victory in separate statements released after a mandatory 10-day period of silence that ended with the release of the report. The CSU’s statement focused on whether or not the schools could afford more than the 2 percent raise that the CSU budgeted at the beginning of the school year. The CSU statement said that the salary demands of the CFA could only be met by diverting funds from other projects, something the CFA said the fact finder agreed with. “Freshmen and transfer students have enrolled. New faculty, advisors and academic support staff have been hired. Desperately needed renovation and maintenance projects are already in process,” CSU Chancellor Timothy
P. White said in the statement. “Any attempt to pull back from these commitments would cause significant harm to students, faculty, staff and California. And as a fiscally responsible public entity, the CSU cannot commit to spend money it does not have.” The CFA countered the assertion that the fact finder agreed with the CSU’s logic, arguing that the fact finder “found no legitimate evidence that the CSU could not afford the raises.” “This is not just about faculty pay; it’s more than that,” said Antonio Gallo, the chair of the CFA bargaining committee. “We teach in ‘The People’s University’— with the largest number of students of color in the country. We confer more than half of all undergraduate degrees to the state’s Latino, African-Ameri-
can and Native-American students. It’s about an investment in the classroom.” Fact finding was the last official step in the CFA-CSU negotiation process. Both parties submitted documents and witnesses to the independent fact finder, Bonnie Castrey, who looked over the information provided and made a recommendation to both. Castrey, a 1972 CSULB alumna, sided with the CFA in her final report, recommending that the CSU provide a 5 percent general salary increase as well as service salary increases to roughly 43 percent of the faculty. “ … The faculty are still suffering from structural salary issues as well as the lack of substantial general salary increases in percentages in order to address the lack of progress in salary ad-
justments for all faculty,” Castrey said in the report. Among trends discovered in the report, Castrey found that longer serving employees are more likely to be behind the market in salary than newer employees; additionally, employees at larger campuses are further behind than those at smaller campuses. Castrey also recommended that money should be reallocated from other projects to cover the cost of a faculty raise, and that both sides should develop a joint strategy to lobby the governor for an increase in the CSU budget. Both sides will have until April 13 to come to an agreement to avoid the planned strike by CFA members. The CFA has scheduled a strike from April 13-15 and 18-19.
held a police job fair in front of the University Student Union building. During the fair, students came and began to take out signs and protest along the sidelines of the fair. The silent protest held during the fair was a response to the student-led forum March 23 where the Sociology Student Association revealed that an undocumented immigrant had been detained by University Police Officer I. Sanchez for deportation by Immigration and Customs Enforcement Feb. 21. Student organizations protesting the job fair included SSA, La Raza, the Muslim Student Association, the Future Underrepresented Educated Leaders, Students for Quality Education, Students for Justice in Palestine
and the Chicano/a and Latino/a Student Association. Jessica Howell, a silent protester at the event, said that these issues need to be resolved. Eduardo Vargas, another protester and ASI associate justice, criticized the university for its handling of both the ICE deportation and the recent knife incident. On Feb. 25, a 20-year-old student took out a knife in a sociology class on race, class and gender. The student claimed that he was cleaning his fingernails. At the time of the incident, he was a CSULB Community Service Officer. On March 23 at the student-led forum many students expressed their frustration, requesting a timely notification of the event and
the expulsion of the student. “There is definitely a conflict of interest and favoritism when it comes to the expulsion of the student,” Vargas said. “I can guarantee you that if I had pulled a knife out in front of someone or a classroom setting I would have been kicked out of school indefinitely.” Vargas explains that more transparency and communication is needed and required if issues like this incident involve the safety of the student body. “I spend about 16 hours a day on campus; how am I supposed to feel safe on campus knowing this student still has his job as an officer and still attends class? That is just something we do not agree with,” Vargas said. Monica Peralta, a silent protester, spoke about the ICE incident as well.
“This [protest] is a way to continue to support the family but also our beliefs that [police officers] are dehumanizing undocumented people and they’re not being given their rights,” Peralta said. Peralta says this protest was formed quickly this morning when the organizers found out about the fair. “This protest is to continue the topic here on campus and to find some solutions for not just us as family members who have undocumented family members but also the student population who are undocumented as well and to make them feel safe,” Peralta said.
This year, a small group from the organization decided to engage in an alternative spring break by advocating for the state to uphold the ban of single-use plastic bags. “The turtle resonates with us as an organization,” group spokesperson Semi Cole said. “It is one of the creatures that often get trapped in this environmental disaster because of the ocean pollution. Turtles have been found eating plastic
and died because of it. That breaks our heart and we want to provide justice for creatures like them.” Cole, a political science sophomore at UC Riverside, has been connecting with different political organizations that want to see a progressive change on the issue. Together with 19 of his fellow
COMMUNITY
Long Beach City Hall faces bag protest Student interest research group gathered to show their support for the plastic bag ban. By Erik Öhrström Staff Writer
A 30-foot-wide inflatable turtle sat on the lawn outside Long Beach City Hall to protest against overturning the plastic bag ban March 24. Dressed up in green shirts and holding posters, 20 students lined up alongside the giant turtle likeness. Gov. Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 270 into law in Sept. 2014, stopping large grocery stores and pharmacies from providing single-use plastic bags in the state. Since 2007, 147 county or lo-
cal jurisdictions have banned single-use plastic bags, according to Californians Against Waste, and on Nov. 8 the election to uphold or overturn the bill will take place. The California Public Interest Research Group is a consumer interest group whose mission is to stand up to special interests by studying and advocating for problems that affect the health and livelihood of the state’s population.
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MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2016
Student with knife no longer CSULB employee The Long Beach Police Department has concluded their investigation into the Feb. 25 incident. By Ariana Sawyer News Editor
The student who displayed a knife in a sociology class Feb. 25 is no longer employed by Cal State Long Beach police as a Community Service Officer, according to President Jane Close Conoley. “We cannot divulge student conduct disciplinary action because of federal law, but I can share that he is no longer an employee of CSULB,” Conoley said in an email Saturday.
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act protects the privacy of student education records at any institution that receives money from the U.S. Department of Education. “The LBPD investigation is also complete and they have turned the case over to the city prosecutor who is now handling [the case],” said Michael Uhlenkamp, executive director of me-
dia and digital news. The Long Beach Police Department took over the investigation due to a conflict of interest posed by the student’s relationship to the university as both an employee and the son of a University Police sergeant. The 20-year-old male holding the knife was doing so from behind another female student during a heated
debate. When the professor of the race, class and gender class saw the knife, she tapped the student on his shoulder and asked him to exit the classroom with her. Once outside, she told him he could not come back. According to an email from Conoley to NAACP Long Beach chapter President Naomi Rainey March 9, he did not argue and subsequently left.
Not only does concrete float, it can be raced. Teams of civil engineering students from over 18 schools designed their own concrete vessels to sail through the water and weave through buoys Saturday in Long Beach. The concrete canoe race is just one event during the American Society of Civil Engineers’ student-run Pacific Southwest Conference. Cal State Long Beach’s ASCE chap-
ter hosted the conference this year for over 1,300 attendees on CSULB’s campus with the canoe race at the Marine Stadium on Paoli Way in Belmont Shore. Universities ranged from Southern California institutions such as San Diego State, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and University of California, Los Angeles, while others hailed from out of state such as Arizona State University and the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Each school was tasked to design and build a canoe out of a strong yet lightweight mix of concrete. ASCE Vice President Hernan Lozada said it involves months of planning utilizing software to test the hydraulics and function of the canoe. “[ASCE members] have done so many calculations on that bastard,” Lozada said. “We have these things called point loads so at certain areas we don’t want to put too much weight because it’ll crack and break.” The first race of the day was endurance rounds for men, women, and coed teams. Two members from each school rowed their canoes while maneuvering around strategically placed buoys. ASCE treasurer Abigail See, who participated in the women’s endurance race, said effective communication becomes the key element to getting the fastest time. “That’s what makes or breaks a good team,” See said. “You have to coordinate your strokes because if you’re going at different times you actually don’t move as fast or smoothly.” The ASCE conference started Thursday and culminated in a banquet Saturday. Over the course of three days student teams from each school participated in various competitions. Some games were engineering related, such as the canoe race or a steel bridge construction contest, others were not technical, such as volleyball or tug of war. What united them, however, was the boisterous show of support students gave their school’s team. “There’s a lot of screaming so you’ll probably be deaf after [the conference], if you don’t lose your voice already,”
Lozada said. “You’ll literally see everybody looking like howler monkeys.” Ashley Betance-Kearn, a graduate civil and environmental engineering major at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, said the enthusiasm came from students’ dedication to civil engineering and a bit of competitive energy. “We’re all really passionate about what we do and it’s nice to be able to compete against different schools,” Betance-kearn said. “Everybody wants to be the best.” ASCE co-conference chairs Mais Sagradyan and Lauren Kilroy headed organizing with co-presidents Cody Dodge and Tatiana Braun. Kilroy said ASCE’s planning involved booking venues, some a year in advance; coordinating catering for the three days and contacting local civil engineering firms for sponsorship. However, Kilroy said the responses she’s received from other attendees makes the two-year chaos worth it for her. “I’ve been running around like crazy, yet no one else knows,” Kilroy said. “They just see that everything is going well, and I’m like ‘that’s it, that’s how I can relax: they like it, we’re doing good.’” According to Amanda Corbett, a fifth year civil engineering major from San Diego State, the Pacific Southwest Conference is a competition but, beyond that, a valuable networking opportunity for future engineers. “These people we know in college, we’re gonna be friends with them later on and network with them,” Corbett said. “We have people that come to our meetings and they always show us pictures of when they went to conference back in the ‘80s.” Hosting for the conference rotates every year. Kilroy said that despite fierce competition between schools, ASCE is working closely with next year’s conference host: University of California, Irvine. “Usually they’re our rivals; UCI, they’re down the street, but we just want everyone to have a good time,” Kilroy said. “It’s what we’ve been working towards.”
freshman at UC Irvine. “A lot of companies have paid the government to put a hold on this ban. But they do not really see the effect that the bags and the plastic have on the environment.” The district director for Senator Ricardo Lara, Nick Jiles, attended the protest to demonstrate the senator’s support for the bill. Lara is one of the co-authors of Senate Bill 270. Jiles said he does not believe that the plastic industry is corrupt,
but that it is simply fighting to maintain its profits without thinking about eventual environmental consequences. “What we are seeing is that the industry is fighting back against progress,” Jiles said. “Corporate social responsibility is often an oxymoron. When we talk about this industry specifically, they are not interested in any type of corporate responsibility. They are interested in the bottom line, and that is what we can see
in their spending.” After a short protest, the CALPIRG members walked down to the Shoreline Aquatic Park where they gathered to clean and pick up trash. “Now is the time to promote a much more sustainable culture,” Cole said. “Now is the time to bring that future forth.” The vote on the plastic bag ban will take place as part of the general election on Nov. 8.
P HOTOS BY L INDSAY P ETERS | DAILY 49ER
Members of the Cal State Long Beach chapter of ASCE carry their concrete canoe “Umi”to begin the Swamp Test. During the Swamp Test canoes are intentionally filled with water to ensure they’ll still stay afloat during the race.
A civil (engineering) action CSULB engineers gathered with students from 18 other schools to compete at the Pacific Southwest Regional Conference. By Lindsay Peters Assistant Design Editor
At the Pacific Southwest Conference, students from San Diego State University loudly chant so their concrete canoe team can hear their support while rowing in the endurance race.
BAGS
continued from page 2 students, he’s been traveling from city to city to attend press conferences and talk to local people. He hopes that their work will contribute to upholding the bill. Experts at the World Economic Forum expect oceans to be filled with more
plastic than fish by the year 2050, according to their January report. CALPIRG members say they believe the multi-million dollar corporations in the plastic industry are trying to mislead and misinform the public in order to sway the vote in their favor. “When it comes to the plastic bag ban, it is interesting how much corruption there is,” said Mariela Padilla, CALPIRG member and social ecology
4
Monday, April 4, 2016
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Arts & Life
Farmers market season has sprung Local farmers markets in the Long Beach area offer a healthy alternative to grocery store shopping. By Miranda Andrade-Ceja Arts & Life Editor
April invites a number of interesting things to distract you from jumping back into schoolwork after spring break. Music festivals, springtime hikes — and the revival of farmers markets throughout all of the Los Angeles area. While hikes and festivals are signature springtime activities, local farmers markets offer products from organically grown produce to handmade jewelry and charms. Though farmers markets are an organic way to purchase groceries while contributing to the growth of small, California-based farmers, their short hours and sporadic schedules make accessing a farmers market tricky for college students.
Vecteezy
18172_10_25x8 OL.indd 1
Harvest Farmers Market 130 Cherry Ave. Open Tuesday 3-7 p.m. Open Saturday 9-3 p.m. Located between Cherry Avenue and Junipero Street, if you’re looking for an odd eat or tasty food trucks, Harvest Farmers Market is your destination. With a gourmet tamale stand and a pupusaria, this market boasts a variety of homemade food for any adventurous shopper. When I went to this market, I didn’t even spend any money. The place is flush with free samples, and you’re sure to be entertained with organized live performances. Harvest Farmers Market is cash only, and no dogs are allowed.
FARMER MARKET
Long Beach Southeast Farmers Market E. Marina Drive Open Sunday 9 a.m.-2 p.m. The Southeast farmers market brings the produce to the port. This market is held every Sunday at the Marina, and hosts numerous local arts and crafts vendors as well as community-based jewelry and clothing outlets. The market is most notable for the diverse foods it introduces to shoppers — at this market, health and ethnic foods converge. I’ve stopped by this market solely because it’s a great place to grab lunch, sit down and enjoy the view of the expansive Marina. However, if you’re only buying organic — be careful. This market only has four certified organic produce vendors, according to the website.
Spring Street Farm Project 3012 Long Beach Boulevard. Open Tuesday 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Open Friday 9 a.m.-6 p.m. The Spring Street Project gets all of its produce from their farm in Cypress, where they harvest cantaloupes, strawberries and other organically grown fruits and vegetables. The Cypress farm is close by, and if you ask, you can even pick your own produce. Though this market is in the middle of a bustling intersection, the market offers inexpensive prices to all shoppers but does not accept credit cards.
Bixby Knolls Farmers Market 46th and Atlantic Avenue Open Thursday 3-6:30 p.m. This farmers market is a bit smaller (parking lot-sized); however, it offers relatively inexpensive foods and produce for local market goers. Despite its small size, this farmers market offers the bare necessities to execute any student’s grocery trip. There’s also lots of nearby parking, so feel free to pull up and grab some free samples from the produce vendors.
12/14/2015 4:19:47 PM
O D S R E O D CSULB 2016
May Intersession
CSULB Summer Sessions 2016
Three-Week Session: May 16– June 3 (SSI)
One 12-Week Session: May 23 – August 12 (SSD) Two 6-Week Sessions: May 23 – July 1 (S1S) and July 5 – August 12 (S3S) www.ccpe.csulb.edu/summer
www.ccpe.csulb.edu/intersession
More than 75 Online Summer Classes May Intersession courses available include: Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
COMM COMM COMM COMM CRJU EDME FCS HIST KIN KIN KIN KIN KIN KIN POSC POSC PSY REC
10745 10747 10032 10748 10027 10986 10744 10140 10856 10882 10894 10884 10893 10808 10022 10023 10015 10035
Business-Professional Comm Communication in the Classroom Campaign Persuasion Oral Persuasn Attitude Change Correctional Environments Algebra Research-Basd Pedagogy Intro Family Consumer Sciences Early United States History Introduction to Kinesiology Exercise Physiology Historical Cultural Foundation Psych Sport Behavior & Perform Clinicl Exer Electrocardiogrph Physical Educ Elem Teachers Intro American Government American Government Psychology of Sexuality Recreation Ocean EnvIronment
334 355 442 449 423 520 299 172 201 301 335 339 465 476 100 391 457 430
01 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01
SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI
Units
Components
Days
Begin Time
End Time
Facility
Instructor
3 3 3 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC SEM SEM LEC LEC SEM* LEC LEC SEM SEM* LEC LEC SEM LEC
MW TuTh TuTh MTuWTh MTuWThF MWF MW MTuWTh MTuWThF MTuThF MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWThF MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh TBA
09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 08:00am 03:30pm 10:00am 08:50am 10:00am 08:00am 01:00pm 09:00am 01:00pm 08:00am 09:00am 09:00am 09:00am
01:35pm 01:35pm 01:35pm 01:35pm 05:00pm 09:00pm 11:30am 01:00pm 01:10pm 08:50am 05:00pm 01:00pm 04:10pm 10:45am 01:05pm 01:05pm 01:00pm
LA1-214 LA1-304 LA1-300 LA2-202 Off-Camp ED2-158 FCS-122 LA2-101 KIN-051A KIN-121 HHS1-100 HHS1-205 KIN-084 KIN-051B SPA-212 SPA-212 PSY-200
Bolkan, San Steven McPherson, Mary B Heyse, Amy Lynn Russell, Jessica C Ireland, Connie M S An, Shuhua Engstrom, Zoe B Dabel, Jane E Kress, Jeffrey L
3 1-3 3 3 3 3
LEC SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC
TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA
Online Online Online Online Online Online
Goeller, William S Powell, David Clayton Pedersen, William C Richmond, Laurel Patience Robertson, Terrance Patrick Fulthorp, Keith M
GE
Pearce, Debra J Alencar, Michelle Kulovitz Williams, Emyr W Rasmussen, Amy Carol Rasmussen, Amy Carol Span, Sherry A DeGree, Donald W
Online May Intersession courses: GERN PPA PSY REC REC REC
400 590 351 141 340 340
01 03 01 01 05 12
SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI SSI
10025 11088 10713 11089 10026 11086
Perspectives on Gerontology S Topics Public Policy Admin Social Psychology Intro to Leisure Services Leisure Contemporary Society Leisure Contemporary Society
Summer Sessions courses available include more than 75 online Summer courses: Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
AAAS AH ART ASAM BIOL BIOL CAFF CAFF CAFF CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS COMM COMM COUN
10391 10354 10330 11049 10368 10333 10342 10411 10776 10725 10290 10826 10727 10286 10812 10192
Asian Eats History of Graphic Design Intro to the Visual Arts Contemp Issues Asian America Evolutionary Biology General Ecology Family & Consumer Resrce Mgmt Family & Consumer Resrce Mgmt Technological Literacy Family & Personal Development Family Stress and Coping Family Stress and Coping Transition to Parenthood Survey Rhetorical Theory Communication Criticism Career & Personal Explorations
100 444 110 121 312 350 321 321 388 312 319 319 408 300 301 191
01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 02 01 02 01 01 01 01
SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S S3S SSD SSD S1S SSD S3S S3S
Units 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Components
Days
LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM LEC
TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA
Begin Time
End Time
Facility
Instructor
Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online
Yamada, Teri R
GE
Hashima, Lawrence S Carter, Ashley J. R. Allen, Bengt J Kreysa, Peter G Engstrom, Zoe B Goeller, William S Roy, Rudabeh Nazarinia Falberg, Janice M Phillips, Judith F Roy, Rudabeh Nazarinia Fox, Ragan Cooper Johnson, Ann M Ratanasiripong, Paul ...Continued
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY LONG BEACH COLLEGE OF CONTINUING AND PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION
May Intersession
O D S R E O D Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
COUN CRJU CRJU CRJU CRJU CRJU CRJU CWL CWL CWL ED P ED P ED P EDEL EDEL EDEL EDEL EDSP EDSP EDSP EDSS ENGR FCS FMD FMD FMD FMD GEOG GEOL GEOL GEOL GERN GERN H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HDEV HFHM HFHM HIST HIST IS IS IS I/ST ITAL JOUR JOUR JOUR JOUR JOUR KIN KIN KIN KIN L/ST MAE MKTG MUS NUTR NUTR NUTR
10711 10768 10769 10771 10770 10394 10773 11005 10332 10346 11094 10383 11047 10145 10138 10139 10302 10285 10406 10288 10590 11133 10190 10336 10318 11043 10319 10815 10236 10408 10999 10099 10251 10722 10287 10696 10706 10723 10343 10705 10710 10356 10122 10387 10095 10721 10545 10878 11046 10828 10554 10684 10357 10070 10503 11056 10347 10789 10816 10817 10854 11017 11121 10146 10592 11090 11091 10397 10345 10388 11048 10338 10339 10189
Career & Acad Counsel K-12 Set Crim Justice System in Society Criminological Theory Statistics for Crim Justice Statistics for Crim Justice Victimology S Topics Criminal Justice Folklore & Mythology Literature and Medicine Comic Spirit Child Development & Learning Adoles Develp: Cross-Cult Intro to Educational Research Dev Approp Tchg Pract Teach/Lrng Lang Art Teach/Lrng Readg Teach/Lrng His-Soc Sci K-8 Teaching the Exceptional Indiv Coll Model Inclusive Education Coll Model Inclusive Education Currclm Methd Teach Health Sci Energy & Environ Globl Perspec Intro Family Consumer Sciences Fashion Merch & Design Pract Internship in Fashion Internship in Fashion Internship in Apparel Design Geography of Latin America Natural Disasters Intro to Oceanography Water Resources & Society Perspectives on Gerontology Perspectives on Gerontology Orientation to Health Science Principles of Epidemiology Community Health Statistics Health Behavior Environmental Health Human Sexuality & Sex Educatn Human Sexuality & Sex Educatn Human Sexuality & Sex Educatn Drugs & Health HSC-Secondary Teachers Health Personnel Management Technology, Ethics & Society Mgmt Challenges Long Term Care Working Around the World Working Around the World Approach Adulthood Thru Aging Applied Foodservice Sanitation International Hospitality Dev United States-Past & Present Hist Westrn Scientific Thought Int Cmp Sys/App Int Cmp Sys/App Electronic Commerce Global Citizenship Fundamentals of Italian Intro Mass Communications Global News Media Introduction to Online Media Mass Media Ethics Internship Women in Sport Women in Sport Fit Adult Pop Uniq Hlth Consd Fitness Management Arts Capstone Engr Materls & Materials Proc Mass Mktg Comm- Advertising Popular Music in America Introductory Nutrition Introductory Nutrition Introductory Nutrition
507 101 304 325 325 401 490 132 315 320 301 302 400 413 442 452 472 350 355A 355B 450D 302 299 258 492E 492E 492M 321 110 160 280 400 400 301 400 403 421 422 425 425 425 427 411B 312 417 439 457 457 357 173 274 300 400 233 233 484 100 101A 110 312 340 431 498 338 338 364 469 404 322 330 290 132 132 132
01 01 01 01 02 01 02 01 01 01 02 01 03 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 02 03 01 01 03 01 01 05 06 07 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 02 01 03 01 01 01 60 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 02 01 03 01 01 01 02 01 02 03
S3S SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S SSD SSD S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S SSD S1S SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S SSD SSD S1S S1S SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S SSD S3S S1S SSD SSD S3S SSD SSD S1S S3S SSD S3S SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S S3S SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S
Units 3 3 4 4 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Components
Days
SEM LEC SEM LEC ACT LEC LEC LEC SEM LEC SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM LEC LEC LEC SEM SEM LEC SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC SEM SEM LEC LEC LEC SEM SEM* LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM LEC SEM SEM SEM LEC SEM LEC LEC SEM SEM LEC LEC SEM LEC LEC SEM* LEC SEM LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC
TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA
Begin Time
Three-Week Session: May 16– June 3 (SSI) www.ccpe.csulb.edu/intersession
End Time
Facility
Instructor
Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online
Ratanasiripong, Paul Choi, Alice H Perrone, Dina M Nash, Rebecca M Nash, Rebecca M Tolbert, Tracy F Binnall, James M McLoone, Katherine A Velcic, Vlatka
GE
Tortorici Luna, Joanne M Tortorici Luna, Joanne M Rezaei, Ali Reza Griffin, Stacy Anne Griffin, Stacy Anne Xu, Hong Ducharme, Catherine C Pavri, Shireen C Hansuvadha, Nat Achola, Edwin Obilio Bisorca, Victoria E Toossi, Reza Engstrom, Zoe B Marshall, Suzanne G Marshall, Suzanne G Marshall, Suzanne G Marshall, Suzanne G Beahm, Austin Christopher Weaver, Carla A Perry, Bruce D Weaver, Carla A Claver, Maria L Claver, Maria L Espinoza-Ferrel, Toni L Garrido-Ortega, Claire R Lopez-Zetina, Javier Garrido-Ortega, Claire R Lopez-Zetina, Javier Nomura, Wendy L Espinoza-Ferrel, Toni L Tenny, Kelley Sachiko Espinoza-Ferrel, Toni L Bisorca, Victoria E Reich, Aaron David O’Lawrence, Henry Perley, Rebecca M O’Lawrence, Henry O’Lawrence, Henry Schryer, Catherine Emily Jones, Jeanette E Yeh, Ronnie Jung Mao Bolelli, Daniele Jenks, Andrew Leslie Chung, Hyungmin M Kiang, Melody Y Chung, Hyungmin M Marcus, Richard R Shrader, John Wayne Herscovitz, Heloiza Golbspan Paskin, Daniel Daugherty, Emma L Shaffer, Gwen Lisa Fox, Kimberly L Fox, Kimberly L Alencar, Michelle Kulovitz Schroeder, Jan M Bryan, Victoria Kate Yavari, Parviz Homer, Pamela Miles Brown, Richard H Gray, Virginia B Gray, Virginia B Carson, Diane E
Questions? (800) 963-2250 | info@ccpe.csulb.edu 2A
#DoersDo @CSULBInterSessn
CSULB Summer Sessions 2016 One 12-Week Session: May 23 – August 12 (SSD) Two 6-Week Sessions: May 23 – July 1 (S1S) and July 5 – August 12 (S3S) www.ccpe.csulb.edu/summer
More than 75 Online Summer Classes
Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
PHYS PHYS POSC PPA PPA PPA PSY PSY PSY PSY PSY R/ST REC REC REC REC REC REC SOC SOC SPAN THEA THEA THEA THEA THEA THEA THEA THEA THEA WGSS WGSS
10227 10398 10491 11092 10162 10688 10008 10016 10011 10013 10018 10175 10133 10540 10611 10239 10240 11087 10371 10337 10790 10110 10519 10618 10972 10796 10111 10520 10168 10551 10341 10390
Mechanics and Heat Electricity and Magnetism American Government S Topics Public Policy Admin Sem Org Theory & Behavior Sem Org Theory & Behavior General Psychology Human Cognition Evolutionary Psychology Autism Spectrum Disorders Psy Adult Dvlpmnt & Aging American Religious Diversity Leisure Contemporary Society Leisure Contemporary Society Leisure Contemporary Society Leisure Contemporary Society Leisure Contemporary Society Leisure Contemporary Society Principles of Sociology Race Gender and Class Fundamentals of Spanish Theatre for the 21st Century Theatre for the 21st Century Theatre for the 21st Century How the World Talks Integration of Design Perform Theatre Today Theatre Today Theatre and Cinema Theatre and Cinema Gender, Race, Sex and the Body Pop Cult: Women, Gend, Sexulty
151 152 391 590 660 660 100 332 346 362 365 302 340 340 340 340 340 340 100 346 101B 122 122 122 212 323 324 324 425 425 101 365
04 01 04 04 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 03 04 06 07 13 01 01 01 01 02 03 01 01 01 02 01 02 01 01
S1S S3S S3S S3S S1S S3S S3S SSD S3S S3S SSD S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S3S SSD SSD SSD S1S S3S S3S S1S SSD S1S S3S S1S S3S SSD SSD
Units 4 4 3 1-3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Components
Days
Begin Time
SEM* SEM* LEC SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC
TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA
Components
Days
Begin Time
SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC SEM SEM LEC LEC ACT ACT ACT LEC* LEC* LEC* LEC* LEC* LEC* LEC LEC SEM SEM* SEM* SEM SEM SEM LAB SEM SEM SEM SEM
MTuW MTuW MTuW MTuW TuTh TuTh TuTh TuTh TuTh TuTh MW TuTh TuTh TuTh MTuWTh TBA TBA MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh Tu MW TuTh MW MW TuTh MW MW TuTh MW TuTh
End Time
Facility
Instructor
GE
Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online Online
Pickett, Galen T Gredig, Thomas Whitehead, Jason E Baber, Walter F Baber, Walter F Baber, Walter F Warren, Christopher Raymond Maxfield, Lisa M Chiappe, Dan L Whitney, David J Halim, May Ling Stone, Jon R Robertson, Terrance Patrick Fulthorp, Keith M LaPlace, Patricia L Richmond, Laurel Patience
End Time
Facility
Instructor
06:00pm 06:00pm 01:00pm 06:00pm 12:00pm 12:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 01:00pm 11:00am 05:30pm 06:00pm 09:00am 01:15pm 09:00am
09:35pm 09:35pm 04:35pm 09:30pm 03:45pm 03:45pm 12:45pm 12:45pm 04:45pm 02:45pm 09:35pm 09:45pm 12:45pm 05:00pm 12:55pm
CBA-123 CBA-124 CBA-237A CBA-228 PSY-201 PSY-201 FA4-311 FA4-311 LA1-301 LA5-359 LA5-165 LA5-165 AS-233 FA4-311 LA5-350
Constas, Michael
01:00pm 09:00am 01:00pm 01:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 02:00pm 02:00pm 04:00pm 03:00pm 03:00pm 05:00pm 04:00pm 04:00pm 12:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm
02:58pm 11:00am 02:58pm 03:00pm 11:00am 10:20am 03:58pm 04:00pm 05:45pm 05:45pm 05:30pm 09:05pm 08:10pm 07:50pm 04:00pm 09:00pm 08:45pm 09:10pm 08:45pm
LA4-108 HSCI-103 HSCI-100 HSCI-105 HSCI-100 HSCI-105 HSCI-103 HSCI-105 FCS-122 EN2-105 EN2-105 EN2-105 EN2-107 EN2-107 EN4-123 VEC-227 VEC-227 EN2-107 VEC-227
Shin, Gary Thomas Gardner, Manuela Natascha Rourke, Bryan C Rourke, Bryan C Gardner, Manuela Natascha Carter, Ashley J. R. Palmier, Christine Lee-Fruman, Kay K Blecher, Lee Nguyen, Tang-Hung
Alimahomed-Wilson, Jake B Alimahomed-Wilson, Sabrina Arteaga, Patricia Jackeline
Caban, Andrea C Jacques, David M
LeBank, Ezra M LeBank, Ezra M Baralt, Lori Beth Tarrant, Shira Beth
Summer Sessions courses available include: Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
ACCT ACCT ACCT ACCT AFRS AFRS AH AH AMST ANTH ANTH ANTH ART ART ART ART ART BIOL BIOL BIOL BIOL BIOL BIOL BIOL BIOL CAFF CE CE CE CE CE CE CE CE CE CE
10202 10582 10470 10163 11010 11012 10127 10128 10678 10177 10072 10779 11009 11018 10982 10504 10505 10076 10764 10043 10565 10976 10473 10044 10797 10295 10100 10822 10819 10107 10806 11003 10081 10108 10807 10818
Advanced Accounting Auditing Acct Systems & Data Processing Intermediate Accounting Composition II Composition II Impressionism to Post Impress Impressionism to Post Impress California Culture Intro to Cultural Anthropology Modernizatn Global Perspective Culture & Communication Writing about Visual Art Writing about Visual Art Graphic Design I: Introduction On Site Studies in Art Educ Spec Studies Art Education General Biology Human Biology Human Physiology Human Physiology Human Anatomy Biostatistics Molecular Cell Biology Immunology Internship in CA Analytical Mechanics I Statics Analytical Mechanics I Statics Transportation Safety Sustain Fluid Mechanics Fluid Mechanics Fluid Mechanics Laboratory Project Cost-Benefit Analysis Project Cost-Benefit Analysis Project Cost-Benefit Analysis Project Cost-Benefit Analysis
400 470 480 300B 100 100 437 537 350 120 307 412 311 311 321 415 499P 200 205 207 207 208 260 340 430 492C 205 205 325 335 335 336 406 406 406 406
01 01 01 01 03 04 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 01 60 04 60 01 01 01 01 03 01 01 02 01 01 02 03 04
S1S S3S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S S3S S1S S1S SSD S1S S3S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S
Units 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 3 3 3 3
GE
Smith, Rodney Fisher, Steven A Sartin, Natalie M Sartin, Natalie M Simms, Matthew Simms, Matthew Maram, Linda N E Rousso-Schindler, Steven Neil Loewe, Ronald B Quintiliani-Hodgson, Karen Mintz, Aubry J Schwendener, Alyssa Erin Hovind, Tor A
Parentela, Emelinda M Sciortino, Antonella Leij, Feike J Kim, Joseph Jinlee Goitom, Tesfai Shehab-Eldin, Tariq Saadeh, Shadi Continued
Register Now!
Visit www.ccpe.csulb.edu/summer for the most up-to-date and complete schedule of classes.
Payment Plan Available *Course has additional class components. Please check website and MyCSULB for more class details.
3A
CSULB Summer Sessions 2016 One 12-Week Session: May 23 – August 12 (SSD) Two 6-Week Sessions: May 23 – July 1 (S1S) and July 5 – August 12 (S3S) www.ccpe.csulb.edu/summer
More than 75 Online Summer Classes
Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
CE CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CDFS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CECS CEM CH E CH E CH E CH E CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM COMM COMM COMM COMM COMM COMM COMM COUN COUN CRJU DANC DANC DESN DESN EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE ECON ECON
11002 10506 10102 10147 10729 10510 10097 10508 10085 10730 10763 10728 10291 10292 10832 10850 10223 10834 10836 10844 10534 10838 10840 10846 10848 10842 10609 10580 11122 11128 11125 11123 11127 10830 11055 11054 11050 11051 10501 10071 10829 10047 10594 10207 10752 10208 10753 10115 10137 10528 10573 10751 10746 10572 11004 10074 10569 10513 10987 10777 10778 10112 10512 10605 10171 10118 10233 10134 10119 10232 10167 10607 10038 10526
Reinforced Concrete Design 3 Guiding Young Children 3 Prenatal Development & Infancy 3 Family & Personal Development 3 The Older Child 3 Indivdl Child Study & Guidance 3 Fieldwork Preschool Children 3 Fieldwork Preschool Children 3 Fieldwork Infants & Toddlers 3 Parent Education 3 Family Life Education 3 Admin Supv Child Devl Prog 3 Internship in CDFS 3 Internship in FLE 3 3 Crit Think in Digital Info Age Crit Think in Digital Info Age 3 Intro Prog & Problem Solving 3 Computer Logic Design I 3 Discrete Struc-Computing Appl 3 Discrete Struct Comp Applic II 3 Obj Oriented Prog & Data Struc 3 Computer Org & Assembly Lang 3 Operating Systems 3 Data Structures and Algorithms 3 Computer Architect Organizatin 3 Microprocessors+Controllers I 3 Organizatn of Programming Lang 3 Appl Programming Using .NET 3 Topics Distributd Computr Syst 3 Software Test & Verification 3 Fault Tolerant Computing Systs 3 Topics Distributd Computr Syst 3 Obj Oriented Analysis & Design 3 Appl Mechanic Strength Matrls 2 Chemical Engr Thermodynamics I 3 Chemical Engr Thermodynmcs II 3 Fluids 3 Chemical Reactor Kinetics 3 Chemistry & Today’s World 4 Fundamentals Organic Chemistry 3 Fundmntals of Biological Chem 3 General Chemistry 5 General Chemistry 5 Organic Chemistry I 3 Organic Chemistry II 3 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 1 Organic Chem Laboratory II 1 Interpersonal Communication 3 Communication Theory 3 Measurement Comm Research 3 Argumentation & Debate 3 Performing Culture 3 Story Telling 3 Comm Conflict Resolution 3 Marriage & Family Therapy 3 Group Counseling 3 C J Research Methods 4 Nonverb Comm Interac Mind Body 3 Nonverb Comm Interac Mind Body 3 2D Computer Aided Graphics 3 Hist Furnitre & Decoratve Arts 3 Electric & Electronic Circuits 3 Signals & Systems 3 Energy Conversion Principles 3 Prblity, Stats, & Stoch Modlng 3 Digtl Filter Desn & Audio Proc 3 Mixed-Signal Ic Design 3 Linear Systems Analysis 3 Digtl Filter Desn & Audio Proc 3 Mixed-Signal IC Design 3 Adv Digital Syst Computer Arch 3 Fiber Optic Networks 3 Principles of Macroeconomics 3 Principles of Microeconomics 3
459 211 311 312 314 411 414 414 415 418 419 416A 492A 492B 100 100 174 201 228 229 274 285 326 328 341 346 424 475 574 644 646 674 675 304 220 310 320 430 100 227 448 111A 111B 220A 220B 223A 223B 110 306 307 331 333 352 411 608 638 320 373 373 255 369 211 310 350 380 427 434 511 527 534 540 587 100 101
01 01 01 01 01 01 01 03 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 03 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 02 01 02 02 02 01 01 01 01 01 60 01 60 01 60 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 03 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01
S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S SSD SSD S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S SSD S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S
Units
Components
Days
Begin Time
End Time
Facility
SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC* LEC* LEC* LEC LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM* SEM SEM SEM SEM* LEC* LEC SEM LEC* LEC* LEC LEC LAB LAB LEC* SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC* LEC LEC ACT LEC SEM SEM SEM* SEM* SEM SEM* SEM SEM SEM* SEM SEM LEC LEC
MW MW MW MW TuTh MW MTuWTh M MTuWTh TuTh TuTh TuTh Tu Tu TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuWTh TuTh TuTh TuTh MW MW MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWThF MTuWThF MTuWTh MTuWTh MWTh MWTh MW W W TuTh TuTh MTuWThF MW Tu MW TuTh TuTh TuTh MTuWTh MW MW MW MW TuTh MW TuTh MW MW TuTh TuTh TuTh MW MW
05:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 01:30pm 09:00am 01:30pm 01:20pm 01:30pm 12:30pm 01:30pm 09:00am 01:30pm 04:00pm 04:00pm 08:00am 01:00pm 02:00pm 09:00am 02:00pm 09:00am 08:00am 01:00pm 02:00pm 01:00pm 02:00pm 09:00am 08:00am 02:00pm 02:00pm 11:00am 09:00am 02:00pm 05:00pm 03:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 09:00am 09:00am 08:00am 10:00am 09:30am 11:55am 12:00pm 10:00am 10:00am 01:00pm 01:00pm 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:00am 09:30am 03:00pm 05:00pm 09:00am 06:00pm 06:00pm 09:00am 02:00pm 06:00pm 05:40pm 01:00pm 05:15pm 05:45pm 03:10pm 06:00pm 05:45pm 03:10pm 01:00pm 02:00pm 05:30pm 05:30pm
09:00pm 01:05pm 01:05pm 05:35pm 12:45pm 05:35pm 02:00pm 04:25pm 01:10pm 05:15pm 12:45pm 05:15pm 05:45pm 05:45pm 09:40am 02:40pm 03:40pm 10:40am 03:40pm 10:40am 09:40am 02:40pm 03:40pm 02:40pm 03:40pm 10:40am 09:40am 03:40pm 04:30pm 01:30pm 11:30am 04:30pm 07:30pm 04:15pm 12:45pm 12:45pm 01:05pm 11:40am 10:00am 12:00pm 11:30am 01:30pm 01:35pm 12:00pm 12:00pm 03:40pm 03:40pm 12:15pm 01:35pm 01:35pm 01:15pm 01:15pm 06:00pm 01:35pm 09:30pm 09:05pm 12:45pm 09:45pm 09:45pm 12:55pm 06:00pm 10:05pm 09:45pm 03:45pm 07:45pm 09:50pm 05:40pm 10:05pm 09:50pm 05:40pm 04:45pm 05:45pm 09:35pm 09:35pm
VEC-322 FCS-106 FCS-106 FCS-106 FCS-008 FCS-106 FCS-126 FCS-122 FCS-136 FCS-136 FCS-106 FCS-106 FCS-122 FCS-122 ECS-302 ECS-308 ECS-302 ECS-308 ECS-308 ECS-308 ECS-302 VEC-402 VEC-418 VEC-402 VEC-418 VEC-418 VEC-419 VEC-419 VEC-330 ECS-308 VEC-330 VEC-330 VEC-330 VEC-322 EN2-103 EN2-105 ECS-202 EN2-103 HSCI-107 HSCI-105 PSY-154 HSCI-102 HSCI-102 HSCI-100 HSCI-103 MLSC-307 MLSC-307 LA1-202 LA1-300 LAB-114 LA1-306 LA5-357 LAB-224 LA1-300 AS-244 ED2-216 ET-107 DC-S103 DC-S103 DESN-105 DESN-112 VEC-516A VEC-326 VEC-326 VEC-516A VEC-401 VEC-401 VEC-326 VEC-401 VEC-401 VEC-501 VEC-326 SPA-106 SPA-204
Instructor
GE
Tuveson, Richard V Tuveson, Richard V Tuveson, Richard V Anderson, Treshawn LaCarra Tuveson, Richard V Melton, Leslie L Dayne, Nancy Lan Melton, Leslie L Anderson, Treshawn LaCarra Roy, Rudabeh Nazarinia Dayne, Nancy Lan Blecher, Lee Blecher, Lee Johnson, Thomas G Varela, Katherine Nguyen, Tyler Jondon Terrell, Neal D Hernandez, Eric Agustin
Hayter, Joshua M Giacalone, Anthony Stephen Nguyen, Phuong Duc Morales Ponce, Oscar Wu, Xiaolong Morales Ponce, Oscar Murgolo, Frank D Nguyen, Tang-Hung Mendez, Sergio Yu, Ted TH Lo, Chih-Cheng Shukla, Bikau Sorin, Eric Joseph Marinez, Eric R McAbee, Douglas D Derakhshan, Shahab Cullen, Thomas Donovan Lopez, Marco A Lopez, Marco A Zigmont, Sarah L Zigmont, Sarah L Bachman, Guy F Cargile, Aaron C Rodriguez, Jose I Duerringer, Christopher M Sauceda, James S Robinson, Subrina Jo Downey, Sharon D Ghafoori, Bita Forrest, Laura U Fischer, Ryan G Levy, Dorothea Y Levy, Dorothea Y Kleinpeter, John R Tredway, Thomas Daniel Druzgalski, Christopher K Shahian, Bahram Talebi, Mohammad H Chassiakos, Anastassios G Yeh, Hen-Geul Wagdy, Mahmoud F Hamano, Fumio Yeh, Hen-Geul Wagdy, Mahmoud F Mozumdar, Mohammad M Chang, Chin L Yamashiro, Guy M Bailly, Jennifer N
Questions? (800) 963-2250 | info@ccpe.csulb.edu 4A
#DoersDo @CSULBInterSessn
Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
ECON ECON ECON ECON ECON ED P ED P EDEL EDEL EDME EDSE EDSE EDSP EDSP ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL ENGL FCS FCS FCS FCS FIN FIN FIN FIN FMD FMD FSCI FSCI GEOG GEOL GEOL GERN GERN GERN H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC H SC HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HCA HDEV
10469 10039 10500 10196 10673 10041 10571 10153 10403 11130 10075 10231 10716 11073 10040 10619 10242 10600 10084 10853 10968 10087 10967 10088 10066 10507 10367 10344 10733 10604 10158 10511 10548 10547 10124 10993 10089 10296 10813 10888 10237 10297 10736 10298 10704 10715 10615 10186 10522 10563 10222 10123 10152 10529 10544 10060 10784 10825 11093 11079 10524 10574 11081 10067 10320 11045 10321 10335 10824 10781 10750 10485 10322 10331
Fundamentals of Economics 3 Microeconomic Theory 3 Macroeconomic Theory 3 Game Theory 3 Economic Statistics 4 Intro to Educational Research 3 Positive Stratgs Classrm Mgmt 3 Cultural/Ling Divers in Schl 3 Teach/Lrng Math, K-8 3 Global Perspective Math Teach 3 U S Secondry Schls Intercl Edu 3 Reading Writing in Sec School 3 Acad Lang Devel Engl Learners 3 Assessmt Eval Student Disabil 3 Technical Communication 3 Technical Communication 3 Theory of Fiction & Film 3 Shakespeare I 4 Comedy in the United States 3 Approaches to English Studies 4 English Lit 20th Century 3 20th Century American Lit 3 English Lit 20th Century 3 20th Century American Lit 3 English Proficiency 3 English Proficiency 3 FCS Field Experience 3 Internship FCS & Gerontology 3 Research Methods 3 New York Fashion Study Tour 3 Business Finance 3 Business Finance 3 Investment Principles 3 Intermediate Financial Mgmt 3 Computer Application for Profs 3 Intermediate Textiles 3 Food Science 3 Internship in Food Science 3 California 3 Geology for Engineers 2 Natural Disasters Laboratory 1 Internship FCS & Gerontology 3 Research Methods 3 Internship in GERN 3 Medical Terminology 1 Contemporary Health issues 3 Principles of Epidemiology 3 Community Health Education 3 Concepts of Community Health 3 Community Health Statistics 3 International Health 3 Human Sexuality & Sex Educatn 3 Human Sexuality & Sex Educatn 3 Human Sexuality & Sex Educatn 3 Human Sexuality & Sex Educatn 3 School Health Program 3 Internship Community Health Ed 3 Health Care System 3 Financial Mgmt Health Care 3 Mktg Health Serv Organizations 3 Management & Informatn Systems 3 QA in Health Care 3 Economics of Health 3 Analysis & Evaluation 3 Internship Health Care Admin 3 Internship Health Care Admin 3 Internship and Careers in HCA 3 Internship and Careers in HCA 3 Health Care System 3 Health Care Economics 3 Managing Population Health 3 CQI in Health Services 3 Internship in HCA 3 Lifespan Human Development 3
300 310 311 330 380 400 405 431 462 550 435 457 454 564 317 317 318 363 372 380 459 474 559 574 301B 301B 392 592 696 490B 300 300 350 400 296 353 332 492F 304 370 110L 592 696 492G 150 210 400 401 402 403 420 425 425 425 425 430 485 300 341 353 416 450 451 465 480 480 481 481 502 503 528 550 580 180
01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 02 01 02 01 01 01 01 02 01 02 01 01 03 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 03 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 02 03 04 01 01 01 03 02 01 01 02 01 01 03 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 01
S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S3S SSD SSD SSD S3S S1S S3S S3S S3S S1S SSD S1S SSD S3S S1S S1S SSD SSD SSD S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S3S S3S S1S SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S S3S S1S S3S SSD S1S
Units
Components
Days
Begin Time
End Time
Facility
Instructor
LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM* SEM SEM LEC LEC SEM LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC SEM SEM LEC* LEC* LEC* SEM LEC SEM LAB SEM SEM SEM LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM* LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC ACT LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM ACT ACT ACT ACT LEC SEM SEM SEM ACT LEC
TuTh MW MW TuTh TuTh TuTh MW TuTh Th TuTh MW TuTh TuTh MW TuTh MW MTuWTh TuWTh MW TuWTh MW TuTh MW TuTh TuTh TuTh Tu Tu TuTh TBA MW MW TuTh TuTh MW MW TuTh Tu TuTh MTuW MTuWTh Tu TuTh Tu TuTh MW TuTh MW TuTh MW TuTh TuTh MW MW MW MW MW MW TuTh MW TuTh MW MW TuTh Th M Th M MW MW TuTh MW Th MW
05:30pm 05:30pm 05:30pm 05:30pm 05:30pm 06:00pm 05:00pm 12:30pm 01:00pm 04:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 04:00pm 04:00pm 06:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 05:00pm 05:00pm 09:00am 05:30pm 06:00pm 05:30pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 09:00am 04:00pm 04:00pm 06:00pm
09:15pm 09:35pm 09:35pm 09:15pm 09:15pm 09:45pm 09:05pm 04:15pm 06:00pm 07:45pm 09:05pm 08:45pm 07:45pm 08:00pm 09:45pm 01:05pm 01:00pm 08:20pm 09:05pm 12:20pm 09:35pm 09:45pm 09:35pm 09:45pm 09:45pm 12:45pm 05:45pm 05:45pm 08:30pm
Martin, Wade E Funkhouser, Edward K Pynn, Dan W Chen, Yutian
08:00am 05:40pm 06:00pm 01:00pm 08:00am 09:00am 09:00am 04:00pm 09:00am 01:30pm 01:00pm 04:00pm 06:00pm 04:00pm 09:30am 09:00am 01:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 01:45pm 05:00pm 06:00pm 04:30pm 05:40pm 09:00am 09:00am 04:30pm 05:00pm 12:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 05:40pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 04:00pm 01:00pm 07:00pm 04:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 05:40pm 04:00pm 09:00am
12:05pm 09:45pm 09:45pm 04:45pm 09:20am 10:45am 11:30am 05:45pm 12:45pm 05:10pm 04:45pm 05:45pm 08:30pm 05:45pm 10:45am 01:05pm 04:45pm 01:05pm 12:45pm 04:30pm 08:45pm 09:45pm 08:35pm 09:45pm 01:05pm 01:05pm 08:35pm 09:00pm 03:45pm 08:45pm 08:45pm 09:45pm 09:00pm 08:45pm 06:45pm 03:45pm 09:45pm 06:45pm 09:00pm 09:00pm 08:45pm 09:45pm 06:45pm 01:00pm
SPA-204 SPA-204 SPA-106 SPA-106 SPA-106 LA1-207 ED2-158 EED-041 ED2-158 LA2-203 EED-041 EED-041 LA1-303 LA4-100 LA1-202 LA1-310 LA1-309 LA1-214 LA1-204 PSY-152 LA1-314 LA1-300 LA1-314 LA1-300 LA1-310 LA1-310 FCS-122 FCS-122 FCS-106 Off-Camp CBA-230 CBA-228 CBA-235 CBA-228 FCS-120 FCS-011 FCS-127 FCS-122 PH1-227 HSCI-384 HSCI-382 FCS-122 FCS-106 FCS-122 ET-229 VEC-401 HHS1-101 HSD-111 VEC-401 KIN-057 HHS1-200 HHS1-101 HSD-111 HHS1-100 HSD-113 HSD-113 HHS1-101 HHS1-105 HHS1-204 HHS1-200 SPA-005 HHS1-105 HHS1-201 SPA-005 HHS1-105 HHS1-204 HHS1-105 HHS1-104 HHS1-105 HHS1-201 HHS1-104 HHS1-105 HHS1-105 PSY-153
GE
Nguyen, Huong Tran Bober, Deborah L An, Shuhua Anderson, Felicia Monique Hume, Shawne T Leonard-Giesen, Susan M Pavri, Shireen C Mitchell-Smith, Ilan Strahl, Ronald J Cooper, Stephen P Mello, Mary Barbara Waters, Raymond M Zitzer-Comfort, Carol R Blankley, Elyse M Hart, George L Blankley, Elyse M Hart, George L Smurthwaite, Lori F Palomarez, Michael Anthony Blecher, Lee Blecher, Lee Reiboldt, Wendy L Marshall, Suzanne G Gupta, Paramita Sachdeva, Darshan L Le, Son V Ma, Yulong Poteet, Colleen M Botkin, Mary M Rock, Cheryl Rosita Blecher, Lee Carter, Norman D Burchard, Ewa Malgorzata Blecher, Lee Reiboldt, Wendy L Blecher, Lee Nomura, Wendy L Tenny, Kelley Sachiko Lopez-Zetina, Javier Bavarian, Niloofar Forouzesh, Mohammed R Bavarian, Niloofar Acosta-Deprez, Veronica Gunatilake, Sarath Acosta-Deprez, Veronica Gunatilake, Sarath Sparks, Lisa O Bisorca, Victoria E Acosta-Deprez, Veronica Lott, James Sinay, Tony Martinez, Linda K Goto, Nora Billimoria, Rus B Sinay, Tony Blanco, Lyzette Cunningham, Terence T Sinay, Tony Cunningham, Terence T Whitehouse-Capuano, Natalie Lott, James Sinay, Tony Reynolds-Fisher, Grace Lynn Billimoria, Rus B Cunningham, Terence T Rae-Maristela, Heather Continued
Register Now!
Visit www.ccpe.csulb.edu/summer for the most up-to-date and complete schedule of classes.
Payment Plan Available *Course has additional class components. Please check website and MyCSULB for more class details.
5A
CSULB Summer Sessions 2016 One 12-Week Session: May 23 – August 12 (SSD) Two 6-Week Sessions: May 23 – July 1 (S1S) and July 5 – August 12 (S3S) www.ccpe.csulb.edu/summer
More than 75 Online Summer Classes
Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
HDEV HDEV HFHM HFHM HFHM HFHM HIST HIST HIST HIST IS IS IS IS IS KIN KIN KIN KIN KIN L/ST L/ST L/ST LAT LING MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAE MAPB MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH MGMT MGMT MICR MKTG MKTG MKTG MKTG MTED
10289 10327 10148 10738 10783 10299 10677 10197 10575 10472 10129 10997 10160 10549 10780 10184 10415 10477 10881 10880 10965 10966 10064 10795 10517 10536 11057 10531 10091 11063 10053 10587 10960 11075 11066 11076 10955 10964 11065 10205 11064 10165 10879 10956 10206 11110 11059 10974 10877 11077 10225 10132 10895 10692 10068 10049 10135 10552 10181 10559 10062 10561 10527 10216 10969 10973 11074 11097 10885 10156 11072 11000 11001 10970
Approaches to Childhood 3 Seminar & Practicum 4 International Hospitality Dev 3 Hotel & Lodging Management 3 Prof Integrtn Into Hosp Mgmt 2 Internship in Hospitality Mgt 3 Early United States History 3 Recent United States History 3 Contemporary World History 3 California History 3 Management Information Systems 3 Management Information Systems 3 Business Communications 3 Business Statistics I 3 Business Statistics I 3 Motor Control & Learning 3 Adapted Physical Education 3 Applied Motor Learning 3 Biochem Hormone Adaptatn Exerc 3 Biochem Hormone Adaptatn Exerc 3 Crit Thinking and Public Educ 3 Language Arts Capstone 3 History-Social Science Capston 3 Intensive Latin 6 Education Across Cultures 3 Computer Methods in MAE 2 Intro Manufacturing Processes 2 Engr Instrumentatn & Measurmnt 2 Numerical Methods in MAE 3 Engr Materls & Materials Proc 3 Engr Thermodynamics I 3 Engr Thermodynamics I 3 Engineering Fluid Dynamics 3 Aerodynamics I 3 Power Plant Design 3 Flight Mechanics 3 Materials & Properties Lab 1 Analyticl Mechancs II Dynamics 3 Analyticl Mechancs II Dynamics 3 Mechanics of Deformable Bodies 3 Mechanics of Deformable Bodies 3 Kinematics Dynamics Mechanisms 3 Modeling Analysis Dynamic Sys 3 Composite Materials 3 Heat Transfer Systems Design 3 Aerodynamics Laboratory 1 Mech Control Systems I 3 Composite Materials 3 Finite Element Methods I 3 CAD/CAM 3 Mechatronics Systems Design 3 Enhanced Intermediate Algebra 4 Precalculus Trigonometry 3 Precalculus Algebra 3 Calculus for Business 3 Calculus I 4 Calculus I 4 Calculus I 4 Calculus II 4 Calculus II 4 Calculus III 4 Calculus III 4 Introduction Linear Algebra 3 Probability and Statistics 3 Ordinary Differentl Equatns I 3 Applied Math I 3 International Comparative Mgmt 3 Business Strategy & Policy 3 Gen Micro/Health Professionals 4 Marketing 3 Digital Marketing and Media 3 Marketing Research 3 Consumer Behavior 3 Prob Solv App Math Elem Ms Tch 3
307 470 274 372 379 492J 172 173 396 473 300 300 301 310 310 312 320 432 466 566 111 400 471 300 425 205 272 300 305 322 330 330 333 334 336 350 361 371 371 373 373 375 376 422 431 440 476 522 409A 490A 490G 11 111 113 115 122 122 122 123 123 224 224 247 380 364A 370A 405 425 200 300 437 470 490 402
01 01 02 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 01 61 02 02 03 01 01 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 05 01 01 02 01 02 02 03 02 02 01 03 04 01 03 01 02 01 01 01 03 01 02 01 01 01 02 01 01 01 03 60 01 60 01 60 60 01 01 02 01 62 01 01 01 01 02 01
S3S SSD S1S S1S SSD SSD S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S3S S1S SSD S3S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S SSD S3S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S1S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S S3S S1S
Units
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SEM SEM* SEM LEC SEM SEM LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM* SEM* LEC SEM SEM LEC SEM LEC SEM SEM SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM LAB SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM* SEM SEM SEM LAB SEM* SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM* SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC LEC* LEC SEM SEM LEC SEM*
TuTh M TBA MW W Tu MW TuTh TuTh TuTh TuTh MW TuTh MW MW MTuWTh MTuWThF MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh TuTh TuTh TuTh MTuWTh TuTh TuTh MWF TuTh TuTh TuTh MW TuTh MW MW TuTh TuTh TuTh Tu TuTh MW MW MWF TuTh MW TuTh MW MWTh MW MW MW TuTh MTuWTh MWTh MWTh MTuWTh MTuWThF MTuWThF MTuWThF MTuWThF MTuWThF MTuWThF MTuWThF MWTh MWTh MTuTh MWTh TuTh TuTh MTuWTh MW MW MW TuTh MTuWTh
09:00am 01:00pm
12:45pm 03:45pm
01:00pm 05:30pm 04:00pm 08:50am 01:00pm 01:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 08:45am 06:00pm 09:00am 03:00pm 10:00am 09:00am 11:00am 09:00am 09:00am 09:00am 01:00pm 09:00am 09:30am 01:00pm 09:00am 01:00pm 04:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 09:00am 08:35am 04:00pm 09:00am 05:00pm 09:00am 09:30am 09:00am 09:00am 02:00pm 02:00pm 08:30am 02:00pm 05:00pm 09:00am 01:00pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 02:00pm 01:00pm 01:00pm 09:30am 05:00pm 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 09:30am 05:00pm 05:00pm 09:00am 01:00pm 01:00pm 09:00am 01:00pm 08:00am 09:00am 09:00am 09:30am
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PSY-153 PSY-153 Online FCS-122 FCS-122 FCS-122 LA1-301 LA5-154 LA1-309 LA1-301 CBA-237A CBA-237A CBA-217 CBA-230 CBA-218 PH1-108 KIN-051B PH1-108 HHS1-104 HHS1-104 AS-233 AS-233 AS-244 PSY-200 PSY-152 ECS-208 ET-019 VEC-115 ECS-210 ECS-210 VEC-202 VEC-227 ECS-202 VEC-401 VEC-202 VEC-201 EN4-125 ECS-202 VEC-401 VEC-113 VEC-112 ECS-208 VEC-113 ECS-210 VEC-202 VEC-201 EN2-204 ECS-210 VEC-112 EN2-204 EN2-204 LA5-267 LA5-261 LA5-165 LA5-167 LA5-250 LA5-355 LA5-250 LA5-246 LA5-246 LA5-353 LA5-248 LA5-343 LA5-154 LA5-343 LA5-343 CBA-229 CBA-214 PSY-201 CBA-230 CBA-237B CBA-237B CBA-230 LA5-265
Lanza, Haydee I Rae-Maristela, Heather Yeh, Ronnie Jung Mao Zhong, Yun Ying Blecher, Lee Blecher, Lee Sheridan, David Allen Smith, Sean W Igmen, Ali F Binkiewicz, Donna M Chen, Hongyu Thomason, Asela M Brown, Lori A Moshirvaziri, Khosrow Moshirvaziri, Khosrow Wu, Wilbur F W Reich, Lori M Wu, Wilbur F W Schick, Evan E Schick, Evan E Pandya, Jessica Z Pandya, Jessica Z Schillig, Hollie L Wida, Elaine M Sharifi, Amir
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY LONG BEACH
COLLEGE OF CONTINUING AND PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION 6A
Stout, David Andrew
Marayong, Panadda Moule, Rebekah Jane Johnson, Andrea Leanne Li, Xuhui Ziemer, William K Segalla, Angelo Kim Park, Yonghee Suaray, Kagba N Valentini, Robert C Moon, Hojin Mena, Robert A Viet, Ngo Nhu-Phu Korosteleva, Olga Lax, Melvin D Byun, Linda H
Zhang, Xianpin Soni, Praveen K Flexo, Scott W Soni, Praveen K Siddiqi, Farhana I Noguera, Norma A
GE
Subject Catalog Section Session Nbr
Class Nbr
Title
NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NRSG NUTR NUTR NUTR NUTR NUTR NUTR PHIL PHYS PHYS PHYS PHYS POSC POSC POSC POSC POSC POSC PPA PPA PPA PPA PPA PSY PSY R/ST REC SW SW SW SW SW SW SW SOC SOC SOC SOC SOC SOC STAT STAT
10369 10370 10422 10255 10702 10707 10412 10378 10414 10372 10413 10379 10150 11131 10739 10373 10375 10401 10742 10300 10670 10052 10493 10051 10492 10042 10488 10131 10046 10490 10103 10691 10988 10212 10211 10220 10009 10017 10852 10126 10361 10362 10679 10681 10683 10061 10366 10686 10671 10471 10672 10180 10484 10080 10614
Pathophysiology for Nurses Dimension Professional Nursing Health Assessment Community Health Nursing Nursing Research Hlth Care Delivery Syst Ldrshp Adv Physicl Assessmnt Adv Prac Adv Physicl Assessmnt Adv Prac Research for Adv Nursing Pract Research for Adv Nursing Pract Adv Physical Assessment Lab Adv Physical Assessment Lab Microteaching in Nursing Practice Teaching Nutrition through Life Cycle Advanced Nutrition Advanced Nutrition Evaluation Nutritional Status Evaluation Nutritional Status Internship in Nutrition Critical Reasoning Mechanics and Heat Electricity and Magnetism General Physics General Physics Intro American Government Intro American Government Introduction to California Gov American Government American Government Comparative Political Movemnts Local Govt Econ Devel Process Government Budget & Finance Pub Sect Human Resources Mgmt Policy Issue Analysis Research Methods Psychological Assessment Intro to I-O Psych Islamic Religion and Culture Leisure Contemporary Society Foundtns SW Prac Skills Interv Foundtns SW Prac Skills Interv Adv Soc Pol Analysis Adc Prac Adv Soc Pol Analysis Adc Prac Adv Soc Pol Analysis Adc Prac School Social Work Resrch Methods Social Work II Elementary Statistics The Family Social Psychology Criminology Juvenile Delinquency Child Abuse & Prevention Statistics for Everyday Life Statistics for Everyday Life
305 309 312 402 450 456 530 530 596 596 530L 530L 556C 556L 331 436 436 436L 436L 492K 170 151 152 100A 100B 100 100 199 391 391 450 547 555 577 670 696 314 381 331 340 500 500 605 605 605 665 594B 170 320 335 342 345 423 108 108
01 01 02 01 02 02 01 02 01 02 01 02 01 01 01 01 03 01 03 01 01 01 60 01 60 02 03 01 02 03 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 03 04 01 03 05 01 02 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02
SSD SSD SSD S1S SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S SSD S1S SSD SSD SSD SSD SSD S1S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S S1S SSD SSD S3S S3S S3S S1S SSD S1S S3S S1S S3S S1S S1S S1S S3S
Units 3 2 3 6 3 3 2 2 3 3 1 1 3 4 3 3 3 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 4 3 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Components
Days
Begin Time
End Time
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Instructor
LEC LEC LEC* LEC* LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LAB LAB SEM SEM LEC LEC* LEC* LEC* LEC* SEM SEM SEM* SEM* LEC* LEC* LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM LEC LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM SEM* SEM LEC LEC SEM SEM SEM SEM
W M F ThF M F F M F M F M MTuWThF M MW Tu Tu M W Tu MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MTuWTh MW TuTh MW M MW W MTuWTh MW MW TuTh Sa Sa MW MW MW MW Th TuTh MW TuTh TuTh MW MW MWTh MWTh
08:00am 09:00am 08:00am 08:00am 08:00am 08:00am 09:00am 09:00am 04:00pm 04:00pm 12:00pm 12:00pm 08:00am 10:00am 08:00am 09:00am 12:00pm 09:30am 09:30am 04:00pm 01:00pm 12:00pm 12:00pm 12:00pm 12:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 01:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 05:30pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 01:00pm 01:00pm 09:30am 09:00am 09:00am 09:00am 06:00pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 06:00pm 01:00pm 09:00am 09:00am 01:00pm 01:00pm 09:00am 09:30am 09:30am
12:30pm 12:00pm 11:00am 11:45am 01:00pm 01:00pm 11:30am 11:45am 07:50pm 07:50pm 03:45pm 04:00pm 05:00pm 03:25pm 12:00pm 09:50am 12:50pm 10:15am 10:15am 05:45pm 05:00pm 02:00pm 01:55pm 02:00pm 01:55pm 01:05pm 12:50pm 04:45pm 01:05pm 12:50pm 09:35pm 09:45pm 10:05pm 08:45pm 10:05pm 09:45pm 05:00pm 05:00pm 01:40pm 12:45pm 01:05pm 01:05pm 10:05pm 10:05pm 10:05pm 10:05pm 09:45pm 04:50pm 01:00pm 12:50pm 04:45pm 05:05pm 01:05pm 12:10pm 12:10pm
VEC-227 VEC-227 CBA-228 NUR-066 CBA-214 CBA-214 HoagHospital LB Memorial HoagHospital LB Memorial HoagHospital LB Memorial NUR-062 NUR-026 FCS-008 FCS-122 FCS-122 FCS-123 FCS-123 FCS-122 LA1-202 HSCI-103 HSCI-103 HSCI-105 HSCI-100 SPA-211 ET-105 ET-105 SPA-211 ET-105 SPA-107 SPA-203 SPA-209 SPA-212 SPA-211 SPA-203 PSY-332 PSY-154 LA1-306 ET-107 SPA-208 SPA-112 SPA-212 SPA-111 SPA-109 SPA-210 ET-109 LA5-352 LA5-154 PSY-148 LA5-153 LA5-153 LA3-110 LA5-347 LA5-167
Fitzgerald, Anne M Cheffer, Natalie D Burgess, Leslie Ann Coffey, Melody G Jadalla, Ahlam A Windle, Debra L Bever, Jean Claire Conahan, Laura Jane Kumrow, David E Qahoush, Rafat Bever, Jean Claire Conahan, Laura Jane Huckabay, Loucine M Keely, Beth R Devine, Gwendolyn S Barrack Gardner, Michelle Barrack Gardner, Michelle Blaine, Rachel Eugenia Blaine, Rachel Eugenia Blecher, Lee Wright, Cory D Jaikumar, Prashanth Papp, Zoltan Hlousek, Zvonimir Geier, Montserrat P Wright, Teresa A Haas, Anna Liesl Martinez, Larry F Wright, Teresa A Haas, Anna Liesl Carlos Marquez, Alfredo Moore, William S Moore, William S Martin, Edward J Ostrowski, John W Butz, Adam Michael Amirkhan, James H Wax, Amy Martha Pandya, Sophia Matthews, Nancy L Stallings, Justin D Lam, Brian T Santhiveeran, Janaki Jennings, Lisa K Crotts, Shannon Christine ODonnell, Julie A Brocato, Jolae Davis, Jeffrey P Campbell, Carole A
GE
Haldipur, Jan Naren Chavez, Michael J Eriksen, Shelley J Acosta, Victor Kim, Sung Eun Continued
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7A
O D S R E O D Summer Study Abroad Study abroad this summer! Studying abroad is one of the best ways to make the most of your college Education. Be one of the fewer than 2 percent of all U.S. college students who study abroad. We still have spots available, but if you’re interested you need to act fast. Study in one of the following countries in summer 2016 and receive CSULB course credit: Barbados
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APPLY NOW! For more information go to: ccpe.csulb.edu/SummerAbroad Please visit website for updates on Winter 2017 and Summer 2017. @CSULBAbroad |
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CSULB Study Abroad
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY LONG BEACH COLLEGE OF CONTINUING AND PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION
Arts & Life
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5
Monday, April 4, 2016
“Everything That You’ve Come To Expect” Domino Records • April 1
YouTube
The music video to EP “Everything That You’ve Come To Expect” features TLSP buried up to their necks in sand while a slow ocean tide comes in and a devastated woman pirouettes.
What did you expect from TLSP? The English duo’s second studio album ends an eight-year hiatus with a crash and bang. By Miranda Andrade-Ceja Arts & Life Editor
The Last Shadow Puppets hit music charts worldwide eight years ago when their debut album, “The Age of the Understatement,” was released, delivering epic cinematic tracks accompanied with intricate strings and the collaborative lyricism of artist Miles Kane and Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner. After 2008, duo Turner and Kane went into a hiatus without delivering a promise for the return of the Last Shadow Puppets. Indie rock band Arctic Monkeys soon stole the spotlight, demanding most of Turner’s attention that came to a head after the critical-
ly-acclaimed release of Arctic Monkeys’ self-titled album “AM.” Turner completed a two-year long world tour with the Monkeys before the group went on hiatus — and after so many gigs, I can’t say I was expecting to see material from Arctic Monkeys within the year, let alone the dormant Shadow Puppets. Aptly named “Everything You’ve Come to Expect,” the Puppets’ second album was released on April 2 by Domino Recording Company and is the soundtrack to a movie that you’d definitely want to see. Canadian conductor Owen Pallett is responsible for the layered string arrangements on both their first and second album, though EYCTE doesn’t parallel the nouveau-western cellos implemented in their debut. Instead, Turner and Kane incorporate elements of disco dance (“Dracula Teeth,” “The Element of Surprise”) and classic rock ‘n’ roll with otherwise classical strings, setting up the scene for yet another cinematic album full of twists, turns and orchestrated chaos.
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The album opens with the shrill ascension of violins, only to abruptly stop and carry on with a steady guitar riff and accompanying beat. Kane, who carries a hard-edged voice similar to that of Bob Dylan, is the first voice we hear. He belts out a song that would sound classically Western had it not been for the playful accompanying violin. Though most of EYCTE’s tracks are a collaborated work by both Turner and Kane, Turner worked solely on three tracks from the album — lyrically, his presence is heard. The album reaches its peak on track seven, “Sweet Dreams, TN.” Vocally, the song is peppered with sudden bursts of frustration that exemplify Turner’s developing vocal range that deepened significantly in between 2008 and 2016. Now sporting a low, baritone drawl — Turner addresses his hopeless, lonely state with clumsy lyrics and simple rhyme in the first second of the ballad, “I just sorta always feel sick without you baby/I ain’t got anything to lick without you baby.”
B O G
Without the veil of Arctic Monkeys, Turner’s songwriting turns personal. He assumes the position of the narrator, adding his wit to cliché expressions heard in the verse “You’re the first day of spring/With a septum piercing.” The track is classic rock ‘n’ roll, complete with a desperate narrator who calls out a first and final “Little Miss Sweet Dreams, Tennessee!”, a declaration of love and potential allusion to Turner’s Midwest sweetheart, Taylor Bagley. Following track “Used to Be My Girl” features Turner and Kane rasping out hot and heavy vocals and backed by a chugging guitar — succinct and dark, the album continues down this road by establishing a 1950s horror-flick sound reminiscent of TAOTU (“She Does The Woods,” “The Dream Synopsis”). “Bad Habits” was the first EP released by the Last Shadow Puppets, demonstrating an unbridled chaos, Kane’s vocals lashing out violently against screeching, fast-paced violins and a chugging guitar. Though overall
impressed with the refined, ever-exciting new sound — “Bad Habits” felt oddly unresolved due to the duo’s inclination to work in a lot of strange chord shifts and key changes. EYCTE ends on a bittersweet note, Kane and Turner’s overlapped voices muffled by static and partnered with upbeat, happy-go-lucky (and possibly Beach Boys-inspired) instrumentals. “The Bourne Identity” addresses a dual anti-personality experienced by the narrator, who finds himself destroying the good that comes to him and bidding that personality farewell, chiming “Yeah I’ll be leaving now I’m making tracks/And I doubt that I’ll be coming back.” Overall, “Everything You’ve Come to Expect” didn’t disappoint. The audibly cinematic experience that fans bought a ticket for in 2008 has returned eight years later, and I don’t have a doubt that the Last Shadow Puppets are embarking on the world tour of their lives. The Last Shadow Puppets will be performing in Los Angeles on April 20 at The Theatre at Ace Hotel.
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Monday, April 4, 2016
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Opinions
While you were gone
Coming back from a week of relaxation and jumping into the real world again can be a lot – so we’re here to catch you up on what you need to know. By Micayla Vermeeren Opinions Editor
Apple/FBI Remember when the FBI was harassing Apple in attempt to get the corporation to create software that would help break into a locked phone that was considered evidence in an ongoing investigation into the San Bernardino shootings? Remember when Apple absolutely refused, claiming that creating the software wouldn’t just affect the phone in question, but also lower the security of every iUser around? Remember when, somehow, the FBI was able to get into the phone without any actual help from Apple anyways? I can’t say I’m surprised that the FBI figured out a way to get what they wanted. I’m more irked that they played off the entire situation like Apple’s help was vital to their success. There are a lot of unanswered questions pouring forth in the wake of the break — who is the mysterious third party that stepped in where Apple didn’t? Why did the FBI go to Apple if there were other, easier options? What does this mean for other law enforcement agencies trying to get private information, and how did the third party manage to get the job done?
I’m not expecting answers. Not satisfactory, properly presented ones, at least. The FBI has shown they’re in a place to kind of just do what they will and only involve whoever ends up being beneficial to a particular step. I’m not too happy about it, not too comfortable with the idea that there is a way for passcodes and privacy features to be overridden in such a blatant manner. Even if it’s not made public, I’m sure Apple will figure out how the bypass occurred and patch whatever holes they didn’t know were there. I’m sure they’ll strengthen the way their systems and machines operate and reassure the public that such a thing will not happen to them. But, the larger issue here is the precedent the FBI has just set and the reality of the action they just took. The idea of “privacy” just becomes more and more diluted each passing year, and all I can sit here and do is wonder just how much further things will go. It’s not like electronic communication and photos stored on clouds haven’t been in total jeopardy for years as it is.
K atie Falkenberg | L os A ngeles Times | TNS
Protesters, from left, Sandra Bell, Victoria Best, and Charles Fredricks, hold signs in support of Apple store inSanta Monica, Calif., on Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016. Rallies were planned at Apple stores across the country to support the company’s refusal to help the FBI access the cell phone of a gunman who took part in the killings of 14 people at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino.
CFA/CSU Update Yes, we all know there’s a strike coming up and we’re basically cashing in on spring break 2.0. Yes, we all know the discrepancy between requests and offers on faculty pay raises and the deadlock in negotiations. We know that the California Faculty Association and the California State University system have been butting heads for way too long. But now, finally, we know that CFA is the side that has actually been able to support its argument. Over break, an independent mediator released a fact-finding report that tells the CSU to drop their argument and pay faculty what they actually deserve. There’s money in the system and lecturers living out of their cars – how can anyone be surprised by the call for action? With everything the CFA has put forth showing how much faculty across the state are struggling financially and the efforts those same faculty have gone to in order to have their voices heard, it’s finally time for their stance to be validated in such a massive way. The CSU system has been fighting back valiantly every step of the way, but this report is way too hard to counter. The vice chancellor has already released a statement to the effect of
not having the budgeting ability to account for the extra millions of dollars needed to give the 5 percent raise, but at this point in the game, he and his office are playing a losing hand. Claiming that money in the budget is more fit for development projects and facility maintenance than giving faculty any sort of purchasing power in the economy and the bare necessities of a lower-middle-class individual just doesn’t fly anymore. Faculty aren’t asking for paychecks to support hillside mansions and intercontinental vacations. They’re asking to have their pay match the cost of living and inflation rates so they can eat without fear of hunger the next day. Give them the raise, already. CFA isn’t kidding when it comes to taking action, but the CSU won’t take any at all. If the CSU system holds its ground and really does stick to its 2 percent offer, I’m concerned for what the next few weeks will bring in terms of CFA responses. Five days of striking over the next two weeks will be detrimental enough – if the request still isn’t met in the days following and further action is organized, who knows what we’ll have to look forward to in terms of spring break 3.0.
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Anti-Semitic fliers The Friday before spring break, wireless printers on our campus and others across the country started spewing out fliers addressed to white men, reading “ARE YOU SICK AND TIRED OF THE JEWS DESTROYING YOUR COUNTRY THROUGH MASS IMMIGRATION AND DEGENERACY.” Definitely doesn’t sound like the average class project being printed in a last-minute frenzy, huh? It rings a bit truer to some sort of hate crime or really poorly veiled threat at the Jewish community here. There was no signature on the fliers, just directions to visit a white supremacy advocacy site. Awesome. That’s exactly what I as a student want 20,000 copies of. Over the course of last week, hacker Andrew “Weev” Auernheimer owned up to the stunt in a very public way. A lengthy, self-praising blog post from Weev barely touches upon the content of the fliers, other than to praise the inherent beauty of the swastika as a symbol, but rather focuses far more on the attention he got on a national scale from the stunt. His fliers reached from California to DePaul University, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Princeton, Smith and more. The media coverage garnered from
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the fliers had him acting like a proud father, showing off just how cool this thing he had a part in making was. The screencaps of tweets, emails, news stories and campus bulletins sprinkled throughout the post only exist to stroke his ego and remind him just how many people he got talking . In the world we live in, there are dozens upon dozens of ways to get attention from the internet. There are websites dedicated to posting selfies and personal ads, myriads of channels to self-publish created works and far too many threads users can jump into and spark discussion (or argument) in a matter of moments. I cannot for the absolute life of me figure out why Weev decided that remotely printing anti-Semitic propaganda that may or may not even be serious was the way to go. I cannot understand why bringing legitimate fear to students and faculty completely unrelated to Weev was the direction he took. His need for attention and validation is pitiful at best, but the fact that he is attempting to get it via promoting a movement that has taken security and livelihood away from individuals based on nothing more than religious affiliation is revolting.
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Monday, April 4, 2016
What you missed While students at Long Beach State got a break this past week, several student-athletes went right back to work. By Josh Barajas Sports Editor
Movin’ on up Before going on break, then-No. 21 LBSU women’s water polo team thumped Chapman University 16-3 at home on March 24. Sophomore utility Virginia Smith scored a team-high three goals and four other 49ers finished with two goals each. Then on March 26, the 49ers made a statement in the Big West with an 8-4 upset away at No. 5 UC Davis in the conference opener behind senior goalie Alexis Butler’s nine saves. However, California brought the 49ers back to Earth by picking up an 11-5 win in Berkeley on March 27. Butler made seven saves against Cal and even though they weren’t enough to get the win, they were enough to earn Butler
Big West Player of the Week honors. After a successful weekend, the 49ers moved up the national rankings, landing at No. 16. On Thursday, LBSU split a homestand, losing 8-7 in a non-conference matchup against No. 20 San Diego State before beating Brown University 7-4. The LBSU baseball team also moved up the rankings over the break, going from No. 20 to No. 17 to wrap up non-conference play. In their annual non-conference series against Cal State Fullerton the Dirtbags took two of three games at Goodwin Field March 24-26. In game one the Dirtbags beat the Titans 5-4 after 12 innings. In game two the Titans tied the series, defeating LBSU 4-2 after scoring all four runs in the final four innings. The Dirtbags took the rubber match the next day, moving past CSUF 5-4. In their second meeting of the season with Fresno State, the Dirtbags lost 10-5 on Tuesday in Fresno. After the loss, LBSU learned redshirt sophomore Tristan Mercadel will have season-ending surgery after suffering a knee injury during the series against Fullerton. Movin’ on down The LBSU men’s volleyball team started the break on a historic but sour
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Ben H ammerton | Daily 49er
The No. 5 LBSU men’s volleyball team is 4-4 over the past eight games after starting the season 17-2 and ranking No.1 in the country for several weeks. note. On March 26, a record-breaking crowd of 2,682 for volleyball watched then-No. 4 LBSU lose 3-0 against thenNo. 2 UCLA inside the Walter Pyramid. Freshman outside hitter T.J. DeFalco was the only player with double-digit kills, picking up 10 in the loss. The 49ers bounced back with a 3-2 win against Pepperdine on Thursday in Malibu. DeFalco and fellow freshman outside hitter Kyle Ensing combined for 53 kills in the win. Ensing picked
up a career-high 27 kills while DeFalco finished with 26. However, LBSU failed to pick up any momentum from the win and lost 3-1 against No. 4 Stanford on Saturday in Stanford. DeFalco once again led the 49ers with 20 kills. Spring sweeping The LBSU softball team swept through a doubleheader against Loyola Marymount in Los Angeles and opened
Big West play by taking the series 2-1 against CSUN in Northridge over spring break. The 49ers outscored the Lions 16-5 on Wednesday as a tuneup for their conference opener against the Matadors. The 49ers dropped the first game of the series 2-1 in an eight-inning thriller on Saturday, but bounced back with a 3-2 win later in the day to even things up. On Sunday, LBSU took home the rubber match 2-0 behind a complete game shutout by junior right-hander Christina Clermont. Clermont allowed just two hits and struck out seven Matador batters. The No. 7 LBSU beach volleyball team also ran through the break, going a perfect 6-0 since March 24 when they beat Nebraska 4-1 at the LBSU Sand Courts. On March 25, the 49ers swept a doubleheader, winning 4-1 against both LMU and California at home. On Thursday, LBSU swept another doubleheader, that time beating both Concordia University and CSUN 4-1 in Northridge. The 49ers returned to the LBSU Sand Courts on Friday and defeated No. 6 Arizona 4-1. The LBSU beach volleyball team has now won eight of their last 10 games after starting the season 0-5.
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Monday, April 4, 2016 WOMEN’S WATER POLO
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Sneaking up on the Big West The 49ers are two for two against conference opponents after stifling the Matadors offense. By Will Hernandez Assistant Sports Editor
Behind freshman attacker Tori Morrissey’s career-high five goals, the Long Beach State women’s water polo team topped Cal State Northridge 10-4 on Sunday afternoon at the Ken Lindgren Aquatics Center. Morrissey, the first-year player out of Maroubra, Australia, gave the 49ers (14-9, 2-0) an early 3-0 edge with a pair of first period goals. LBSU pulled away after that, outscoring CSUN 7-2 in the following three periods. “In sports, if you can get some good luck and get things to go your way, you can build off of that momentum, and I think that’s what happened for us today,” LBSU head coach Gavin Arroyo said. “Northridge is a real good team and I’m not looking forward to facing them in conference.” The 49ers are now 2-0 in the conference and CSUN’s (10-16, 0-2) head coach Marty Matthies thinks LBSU is a team everyone in the Big West needs to look out for. “In general, this is a really good conference,” Matthies said. “Long Beach is coming off a big conference win [at UC Davis] and they showed why they’re a force to be reckoned with and we will see in [the] conference tournament how things pan out.” Although the Matadors only scored four goals in the game, Matthies said the team’s inability to limit the 49ers offense was their main Achilles’ heel on Sunday. “Our defense was our biggest strug-
Bobby Yagake | Daily 49er
49er sophomore attacker Luiza Moraes looks for a teammate to pass to in LBSU’s 10-4 win over Cal State Northridge on Sunday at the Ken Lindgren Aquatics Center. gle, and on top of that, we just gave them too many opportunities,” Matthies said. One of those opportunities came with around three minutes remaining in the game. It started when CSUN’s sophomore utility Paula Abellan Garcia was ejected for complaining to one of the game officials, resulting in a sixon-five power play for LBSU. The 49ers moved the ball around and found Morrissey who drilled in her fourth score of the game, extending the LBSU lead to
8-2. On the ensuing CSUN possession, the Matadors snapped LBSU’s 4-0 run when junior utility McKenzie Pollei cleaned up a missed shot with no one in front of the net with 2:30 left on the clock in the third period. But sophomore utility Virginia Smith answered right back and delivered a backbreaker when she fired in her second score of the game from the perimeter. Smith said that she sensed a good feeling about Sunday’s game during the
49ers’ warmups because “everyone was on the same page.” “After we scored our first goal, the energy just kept increasing and increasing and we started feeding off of each other,” Smith said. Smith is the 49ers’ leading scorer with 39 goals, while Morrissey has the second most with 32. LBSU’s senior goalkeeper Alexis Butler, the reigning Big West Player of the Week, made 10 saves against CSUN and has the fourth most stops in the league
with 119. “When Alexis is on we are a real dangerous team and she was really good today,” Arroyo said. “This is kind of new territory for us, being someone that can beat good teams. I think that pressure got a little too high for them against SDSU so it was nice for them to bounce back from that instead of dwelling on it.” The 49ers host Pomona Pitzer next on Saturday at noon at the Ken Lindgren Aquatics Center.
BASEBALL
DIRTBAGS
continued from page 1
John Fajardo | LBSU Athletics
LBSU senior right-hander Tanner Brown winds up in the Dirtbags’ 2-0 win over UC Santa Barbara on Sunday at Blair Field.
“There’s small margins for error,” Buckley said. On Saturday, the Dirtbags got a lift as Hampson hit his first homer at Blair Field, giving LBSU a 1-0 lead in the first inning. “I haven’t hit enough of those to know right off the bat,” Hampson said. “But I did know I hit it pretty well.” Sophomore pitcher Darren McCaughan continued his hot start to the year, pitching three scoreless innings until the Gauchos tied the game in the fourth after J.J. Muno hit an RBI single with the bases loaded. UCSB took the lead after freshman catcher Thomas Rowan hit a leadoff single. Rowan would score after advancing on a wild pitch and a sacrifice fly to give the Gauchos a 2-1 lead. Buckley said that his team played a little tight while UCSB played with a bit more of a relaxed mindset. “They played free,” Buckley said. “They came in here to make a statement. We tried to counterbalance that by being in neutral. Sometimes
we’ll try and step on the gas and [we make] poor decisions. Sometimes we’ll back off the gas and that’s when they should step on the gas.” The Dirtbags got things going again on Sunday as they beat UCSB 2-0 avoiding the sweep. “[This] was very much needed; not to get swept,” Buckley said. “You can’t get swept in conference. It’s really difficult, I believe that every conference loss is almost like two losses, because you have limited opportunities to play everybody.” Senior Tanner Brown was cooking on the mound as he pitched eight innings, allowing only two hits and striking out five. “The defense played great,” Brown said. “They made a couple of great plays. I just stayed down, and threw a lot of strikes and this was a big win.” Facing a sweep and coming off his three-inning outing against Cal State Fullerton last week, the right-hander showed great command of his pitches. “Walking into this one I knew we had to win,” Brown said. “I knew I had to do well for my team and just pound the zone.” LBSU will be back in action Tuesday at 6 p.m. as the Dirtbags travel to San Diego State for a non-conference game.
Series Leaders
Shortstop Garrett Hampson
First baseman Austin Bush
4 Hits
5 hits
2 RBIs
RBI
Home Run
Home Run