DAILY 49ER California State University, Long Beach
Vol. LIX, Issue 868
www.daily49er.com
Tuesday May 19, 2015
Graduation Issue
Inside the issue
Managing finances after graduation
49er In Focus
Page 11a
News 2a
Dirtbags sweep last homestand
Page 1b
Opinions 11a
Page 6b
Diversions 1b
Sports 5b
2a
Q
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
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News
The set-up of the ceremony
It takes roughly one week and countless hours of manpower for the graduation pit to be commencement ready. By Amy Patton Print Manager
Since the inaugural graduating class, commencement has been held on the central quad. Brian McKinnon, the Facilities Management manager of Grounds and Landscaping Services has been in charge of coordinating setup for commencement for the past four years. He described California State University, Long Beach’s ceremonies as “intimate” and “garden-like,” making it one of the best ceremonies in the CSU system. The Daily 49er recently sat down with McKinnon to talk about this what exactly goes into planning and coordinating one of campus’ largest annual events. Is there anything different this year? We went under formal fire marshal review this year. So we had to show all the exit calculations, as far as crowd
& A
egress, which we got our permit, we’re all good. We ended up losing maybe 500 seats. We added an additional entrance and exit on the east side…
Did you do anything to augment the seats lost? If there are ceremonies that exceed capacity, we will have an additional 1,000 seats that will be available inside. And it’s also good for people if it’s too hot for them, if they don’t want to be out in the sun. They’ll have an indoor airconditioning venue, and it’s a good seat. What is one of the trickier parts about setting up for commencement? Coordination of all the staff. We are coordinating services for all of the facilities that support each commencement. With all of the ceremonies I have staff that will be on site for site restoration. When the ceremony’s over, we give the graduates time to exit then all our staff comes in. We are to pick up all the trash, vacuum all the confetti off, dust off all the chairs, reset the entire stage platform and then open it up as quickly as possible for the next ceremony. Getting that venue cleaned up and restored, plus in addition emptying all the exterior trashcans… is a pretty important aspect as well. What are you most excited about?
Getting the show started. I think, once the first ceremony starts and everything is done, it basically has got a momentum of its own... And we’re always looking at ways to improve services and improve the overall experience of our graduates and our guests.
Anything in particular abut this year? One of the things they are doing this year is increasing Wi-Fi service to the area. Cellphone services will be optimized this year during the ceremonies. There are some dead spots up in the main quad but they will be putting up Wi-Fi transmitters on the large speaker poles to help boost cellphone reception. Has graduation always been out in central quad? Yes… I don’t know why it was started there, but it was back there in the 1950s. We have grown considerably. It used to be oriented differently. It was set up where the stage faced the FO4 building. I’d say about six years ago we reached that capacity and that’s when we rotated the entire venue and tripled seating. Over the past three years, we have maximized seating as much as possible. The only other thing we would do is split some of the bigger ceremonies… but that’s up to the commencement committee.
Johny Romero | Daily 49er
California State University, Long Beach has hosted the commencemet ceremonies in the Central Quad since the first grduting class in 1953.
Do you have any advice for those attending the ceremonies? Please arrive early. If you can get here an hour before the actual ceremony, that would be fantastic... If you’re here an hour before, and you’re parked, that gives you time to get on the shuttles and up to the site. The venue will be open for seating. Once the music starts, they do not al-
low anyone to be [seated]. The focus at that time is getting all the graduates… filling in the seats. Once the graduates are seated, they open up the entrances and exits again and allow people to be seated. But by that time, graduation is starting. You will have keynote speakers talking, music. And that’s when lines form and people begin to panic that they’re not going to se their kid walk.
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Govenor Brown’s budget benefits CSUs
Gov. Jerry Brown’s proposed state budget lends a hand and some money to public higher education in California. By Nicca Panggat News Editor
California’s undergraduate students
may finally find some tuition-related relief thanks to increases in the higher education budget as proposed by Gov. Jerry Brown in his May Revision of the California budget. The May Revision reflects a $6.7 billion increase in General Fund revenues in comparison with the January statement. The May Revision will also allot $38 million in ongoing funding for the California State University system as well as freeze in-state undergraduate
tuition within the University of California system. “The governor’s proposal to invest additional ongoing funding for the CSU is welcome news to the Cal State Long Beach campus community,” said California State University, Long Beach President Jane Close Conoley in a statement. “These additional state resources are essential if we are to keep tuition fees low, reduce student debt, and provide our students the support they need
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to achieve a quality university degree in a timely manner.” Yet despite the increased backing for the CSU system, the overall funding is still less than what is needed, according to a statement by the California Faculty Association. “The CSU educates nearly 450,000 students,” California State University, Los Angeles history professor and CFA President Lillian Taiz said in a statement. “Why aren’t they prioritized in the
Governor’s budget? Our students are the future leaders who could help create new water conservation systems, protect our families and teach our children.” In accordance with the increased funding from the governor’s budget, the CSU has announced it will not raise the cost of tuition in the 2015-2016 academic year, according to the May Revision. The final budget will be implemented July 1, 2015.
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
HEA DLINES 20 14 -15 FROM
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Re-Pete:
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ASI to stop selling SeaWorld tickets
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
DOJ establishes model for supporting campus rape victims State Attorney General aims to create a template for colleges around the country. By Greg Diaz Editor-in-Chief
The California Department of Justice, in conjunction with the University of California system, introduced a new model of cooperation on Wednesday between college campuses and local law enforcement when handling sexual assault cases. Attorney General of California Kamala D. Harris said that the Model Memorandum of Understanding aimed to improve methods used by universities and law enforcement agencies when investigating cases of sexual assault. Harris said that current data suggests that 80 percent of campus sexual assaults go unreported to law enforcement. Savannah Badalich, a survivor of a sexual assault and the founder of 7000 in Solidarity, a victim’s rights
This Summer See You at the
Greg Diaz | Daily 49er
California Attorney General Kamala Harris stands before reporters to announce a new model for cooperation between colleges and law enforcement. group at UCLA, said that there are many reasons why other survivors may not report their assault. “For survivors who report, there’s two traumas that they experience: one is their experience of the sexual assault itself,” Badalich said. “And the other is having to relive that sexual
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assault — sometimes for months if you are going through the campus adjudication process, oftentimes for years if you are going through the criminal justice system.” California State University, Long Beach Title IX Coordinator Larisa Hamada said that one of the effects
of better coordination between campuses and law enforcement will be not having sexual assault victims to repeatedly recount their experience. She said that the Title IX office meets quarterly with campus police, medical professionals, the Long Beach Police Department and various advocacy groups to look for best practices when dealing with sexual assault. “Right now we have excellent working relations with the local police,” Hamada said. UC President Janet Napolitano, members of law enforcement and victim advocates joined Harris to announce the new model at a press conference in the California Attorney General’s Office in Los Angeles. Harris said they hope that the MOU would serve as a standard for colleges throughout the state and for the nation at large. Key provisions from the MOU include clarifying the duties between campuses and law enforcement when responding to a case of sexual violence, ensuring the timely access of services for victims and providing training for the campuses and law enforcement. Napolitano said that the UC system, which helped to create the MOU,
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would be adopting the agreement system-wide, but participation from other colleges in the state will be voluntary. “CSU plans to use the Model MOU as a resource in evaluating whether to revise local coordination and collaboration agreements with other law enforcement agencies,” CSU Title IX Compliance Officer Pamela Thomason said via email. The guidelines are also set up to ensure that all California universities and local and state law enforcement agencies comply with Assembly Bill No. 1433, which requires reports of violent crimes, sexual assault and hate crimes to be disclosed to the other parties within a timely manner. Among the many issues that the MOU hopes to address is the jurisdiction for collecting and testing evidence in a timely manner. This includes the sexual assault forensics examination, commonly referred to as a rape kit. “One very important aspect of this MOU…adherence to this MOU requires that law enforcement will collect and test rape kits,” Harris said. “We are not going to allow rape kits to sit on a shelf and gather dust.”
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Tuesday May 19, 2015
CONGRAT to CSULB Phi Kappa
One of the oldest and strongest traditions that has evolved at CSULB is the recognition of Ac membership into the Phi Kappa Phi National Honor Society. This group of more than 490 new me Phi and one of the largest groups of new members FACULTY AND STAFF Dr. Jane Close Conoley, President of the University Dr. Carmen Taylor, Vice President for Student Affairs Valerie Bordeaux, Director, University Outreach and School Relations and President’s Scholar’s Program Cameron B. Ungar, Associate General Manager – Walter Pyramid COLLEGE OF THE ARTS Robert Abreu – Theory and Practice of Cinema Mark Daniel Alpizar – Conducting Instrumental Kimberly Anne Bakovic – Art History Erin Anne Miller Bartosch - Musicology Montana Lynn Bull – Theatre Performance Chelsea Victoria Calma – Film and Electronic Arts Stephanie J .Cheung – Dance Sarah E. Cho – Studio Art HeeWon Joseph Chung – Violin Performance Christine Michele Curley – Art History Jessica Marie Egbert - Dance Leanna Maria Fletcher – Dance Christopher Roger Gaw – Film Anne Collins Geismann Alene – Art History Patrick Luprete Gibson – Music Composition Kathleen Whitney Helm - Dance Sarra Elizabeth Hey – Music Kristi Tristao Jensen – 3-D Media Art/Metals David S. Khair – Film and Electronic Arts/ Narrative Production Kelly Jaclyn Kittinger – Drawing and Painting Mike E. Lewis – Photography Kathryn Patrice Logue – Art History Adam J. Lopez – Music Education Alexandria Christine Macheski – Art History Joseph Frederick Mishica – Screen Writing Theory and Practice of Film Valentina Moeur – 3-D Media Art/Metals Crystal Marie Padilla – Film Jessica M. Padilla-Sanchez – Theory and Practice of Cinema Rosemarie Palacios – Printmaking Coleton Kargi Palmer - Illustration Russell D. Parks – Narrative Production/Film and Electronic Arts Ruth Robinson Perez – Art History Jordan Nicole Phillips - Metals Bryan James Portugal – Film and Electronic Arts Loretta V. Ramirez – Art History Annaliese Ippolito Reed – Viola Performance Andre’ Ritter – Metals Rebecca A. Roth – Technical Theatre/Costuming Taya Raquel Sebring – Graphic Design Annabel Turrado – Theatre Performance Nick H. Venden – Music Composition Barret Paul Wilber – Piano Performance Chelsea Marie Williamson – Studio Art Kyle John Winterboer – Music Performance Alice Zamora – Theatre Arts/Technology Alexander L. Zatolokin – Music Performance COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Brandon K. Beck – Operations/Supply Chain Management Shahde K. Carvalho – Business Administration/Marketing Stephanie Chang – Accounting Jonathan Lawrence Chin - Accounting Nathan Chu – Marketing/Finance Lindsey Michelle Clanton – Finance/Investments Julia Elizabeth Cobb – Accounting Yolanda Cortez – Accounting Michael J. Duncan – Business Administration Evelise Espindola – Business Administration Richard A. Garcia – Business/Finance Jason Han – Management Information Systems Kunal Haritwal – Accounting Anna Jeczmionka – Business Administration/Marketing Ayako Chizaki Kitajima – Finance Bess M. Kussner – Marketing Carlos Marcelo Larios – International Business McKay Carl LaSalle - Business Heleodoro Leyva – Human Resources Management Ian Rollins Livesay – Business Management/Supply Chain Management Cristina Danielle LoBue – Business Administration Vivian Huynh Ly - Accounting Dominique Nguyen - Accounting Anita L. Novelich – Business Management/Supply Chain Management Katherine On - Accounting Erika Otsuka – International Business/Marketing Edvardas Povilauskas – Finance Brandon Shawn Ratner – Finance Luis Romero - Accounting Alonzo Rosales – Marketing
Sinara Sagn – International Business Joanna Nicole Sanks – Business Administration Kaitlyn A. Sizemore – Finance Kevin Sotath - Finance Erik Suarez – Business Administration Henry Tep - Finance Mayako Toki – Accounting Ivan H. Vazquez – Operations/Supply Chain Management Steven Vu – Finance Andrew Alexander Walsh – Finance and Management Information Systems Morgan P. Wheeler – Business Management Joshua Matthew Wong – Operations/Supply Chain Management Marcus Denny Takao Yamanaka - Accounting Danny Yescas – Business Administration Melissa Beatriz Zavala – Business Administration COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Michelle Ann Gamboa – Single Subject Credential/English Kelly Louise Joyce – Liberal Studies Jennifer Ann LaJoy – Counseling/Marriage and Family Therapy Tiffany Adream Lee – Education Administration Jessica Rae Leishman – Liberal Studies Jose Malagon – Multiple Subject Credential Ariane Nguyen – Liberal Studies Catherine A. Nunez – Counseling/Student Development in Higher Education Ariel Elizabeth Sands – Liberal Studies Alisia G. Thompson – Curriculum and Instruction, Secondary Education Michael David Trimmell – Educational Leadership Kimberly D. Tyler-Brown – Counseling/Marriage and Family Therapy Crystal Denise Vasquez – Liberal Studies Kristy Yasuyo Kauionalani Vincent – Liberal Studies Amy Goldie Lempert Zavidow – Multiple Subject Credential COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING John Richard V. Abella – Aerospace Engineering Brian C. Armendariz – Computer Science Emily Angeline Bennett – Chemical Engineering Andres Felipe Bonilla Guerrero – Civil Engineering Jakob Pieter Brouwer – Mechanical Engineering Victoria Taglinao Campana – Electrical Engineering Trent A. Carter – Mechanical Engineering Marios Chartosias – Mechanical Engineering Anas Chibar – Construction Engineering Management Thuan D. Chu – Computer Engineering Ralph Jason Samson Climaco – Mechanical Engineering Edgar Andrew Cobos – Computer Science Steven R. Cole – Mechanical Engineering Kylie Dawn Couch – Chemical Engineering Dillon J. Davies – Mechanical Engineering Martin Diaz – Electrical Engineering Irene Diep – Chemical Engineering Sean M. Donovan – Chemical Engineering Keith Stafford Farwell – Computer Engineering Juan Manuel Garcia – Civil Engineering Daniel Christopher Givens – Electrical Engineering Miguel Gonzalez – Computer Engineering Robyn V. Goss – Electrical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering Blake A. Hice – Computer Science Shaher A. Kassaimah – Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mathematics Stephan I. Khamis – Electrical Engineering Lyndon Charles Kondratczyk – Computer Science Imanuel Eka Kurniawan – Computer Science Tiffany T. Le – Computer Engineering Nicolas Marino Lombardo – Electrical Engineering Samira A. Madapatha – Electrical Engineering Carlos E. Martinez, Jr. – Construction Engineering Management Nolan Kenny Mey – Computer Engineering Jose Julian Montalvo – Construction Engineering Management Cody Alan Myers – Electrical Engineering Pravalika Nagulapally – Electrical Engineering David Nguyen – Mechanical Engineering Do Thanh Nguyen – Construction Engineering Management Lam Huu Nguyen – Electrical Engineering Regina Guiritar Nufable – Mechanical Engineering Dillon Joseph O’Donohue – Civil Engineering Keerthi Parameshwaran – Electrical Engineering Crystal Louise Pelka – Chemical Engineering Julia Maria Pusel – Chemical Engineering Thanmaya Bithalli Raghuram – Computer Science Javier Rodriguez – Aerospace Engineering Bradley M. Roth – Mechanical Engineering Jimmy R. Rustrian – Mechanical Engineering Wilmer Rustrian – Mechanical Engineering Daniel M. Saei – Chemical Engineering Kelby Oliver Sapien – Computer Science Ara Sarhadian – Mechanical Engineering Michael Ryan Schoettler – Computer Science
Gurprit Singh – Computer Science Andrew Craig Sover – Civil Engineering Songluk Suwannarath – Electrical Engineering Lawrence James Swift – Electrical Engineering Chi K. Tran – Computer Science Phuoc Chung Tan Tran – Computer Science Loc Vinh Truong – Civil Engineering Matthew B. Urtnowski – Computer Science Mauricio Valdivieso – Mechanical Engineering Kristin Amada Van Beek – Mechanical Engineering Roberto Carlos Vasquez – Mechanical Engineering Alan Roberto Villa – Computer Engineering Khoi Q. Vu – Electrical Engineering Nathan Junlei Zhang – Electrical Engineering COLLEGE OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES Mark K. Aalders – Public Administration Jane A. Agbayani – Health Care Administration Alicia Marie Alcazar – Family Nurse Practitioner Susy Gabriela Alvarado – Social Work Nelefar L. Aminzadeh – Sport Psychology Alexander Andrew Argame – Nursing Daisy Yesenia Arriaza – Social Work Rebecca T. Atmadja – Child Development and Family Studies Alla Baddour – Child Development and Family Studies Zareen Circe Balandra – Public Health Brian Scott Banh – Exercise Science Stefani Marie Banks – Child Development and Family Studies Scott Edward Beckendorf – Sport Management Daniel Konoa Bever – Exercise Science Brittni Christine Bohan – Nursing Deneen Marie Boyce - Nursing Alexandra Rose Bristol – Child Development and Family Studies Evan P. Burlingame – Sport Management Brianna Alexis Butler – Health Care Administration Samantha Castrejon – Health Science Aidde Castro – Nutritional Science Christopher Chung – Public Policy and Administration Patrick Y. Chung – Emergency Services Administration Christen Leroy Clark – Health Care Administration Careese Anne V. Cruzado - Nursing Paige N. Cunningham - Criminology Jessica Marie Curtis – Nursing Sara R. Davis – Social Work Lina de la Rosa – Health Care Administration Brianne Kristen DePalma – Social Work Norma Diaz – Health Care Administration Gianna DiGiovanni – Child Development and Family Studies Kyle Patrick Dorley – Hospitality Management Rachel Elizabeth Dreyer – Fashion Merchandising Annasel Peralta Dugenia – Social Work Shara R. Duncan – Social Work William Bruce Famularo II – Social Work Yasmin Farfan – Social Work Arthur J. Ford – Exercise Science Ginger Lorraine Foss – Child Development and Family Studies Sandra Fox – Public Administration Arturo W. Franco – Fashion Merchandising Rozie Juliet Garcia – Social Work Alicia Lynn Gerrard – Fashion Merchandising Brenda Godinez – Social Work Vanessa Gomez – Child Development and Family Studies Alecia Meghan Gonzales – Social Work Arthur Daniel Gonzalez – Health Care Administration Gabriela Angelica Gonzalez – Child Development and Family Studies Theodore August Greenwood – Health Care Administration Juan C. Guevara – Health Care Administration Carly Ann Harris – Physical Therapy Natania Chenae Hartfield – Child Development and Family Studies Kaitlyn Elizabeth Hedge – Social Work Nicole L. Herrick – Public Administration Sarah Rose Hicks – Social Work Krystal C. Hidalgo – Public Administration Dennis N. Hoang – Public Health Mindy Miryung Hsieh – Nursing Brittany Liann Hurst – Social Work Melanie F. Inskeep – Public Administration Vida C. Isaacs – Nutrition and Dietetics Yegor V. Ivanov – Health Care Administration Lakna Vajiramali Jayasinghe Withana – Public Health Shenna M. Jones-Lowe – Child Development and Family Studies Amber Marie Karl – Child Development and Family Studies Kathleen Julie Keilman – Social Work Grace Miyoung Kim – Nutrition and Dietetics Angela Marie Kohlmaier – Emergency Services Administration Wai Lam – Health Care Administration Vivian L. Lauwers – Child Development
TULATIONS
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Phi Initiates 2014-2015
cademic Excellence. This is the 52nd year that CSULB has honored qualified students who accepted embers constitutes the second largest group received during one year by the CSULB chapter of Phi Kappa s accepted during one year by any chapter of Phi Kappa Phi. Dieu Le - Health Care Administration Thao “Mia” Le – Social Work Yong K. Lee – Health Science Wendy Patricia Lewis – Dietetics and Food Administration Amanda Li – Social Work Ricardo Antonio Linarez – Public Administration Erik Niklas Andre’ Lindberg – Sports Psychology Eric Allen Lopez – Exercise Science Amber Nicole Lujan – Child Development and Family Studies Clarizzah Jovelle Ancheta Macatugal – Exercise Science Kristin Ashlee Mahood – Nutritional Science Rey Benedict Maranan - Nursing Mary Gherna Matson – Health Care Administration Monique Z. Mendez – Health Care Administration Victoria Juliet Migliorini – Sport Management Taylor Marie Moore – Health Science Krystle Amanda Morris – Health Care Administration Megan Summers Munce – Sport Management Victoria Elysse Muniz – Exercise Science Shelly Louise Necke – Health Care Administration and Nursing Administration Jessica Ngai – Health Science Annie Hoang Nguyen – Public Administration Kelly Ly Nguyen – Exercise Science Ethan O. Nicholls – Athletic Training Lauren Elizabeth Nieblas – Child Development and Family Life Education Stephanie Boayes Obusan – Speech/Language Pathology Rebecca M. Okada – Nutrition/Dietetics and Food Administration Evelyn Olague – Social Work Abigail Lynne Ostendorf – Health Care Administration Olivia Allesandra Ostunio – Nutrition Giancarlo A. Pena – Adapted Physical Education Nayeli Crystal Perales – Nutrition and Dietetics Guadalupe Perez – Health Care Administration Jorge Alejandro Perez – Health Science Mayra Alejandra Perez – Health Care Administration Amanda T. Phan - Health Science Sokhom Phou – Public Administration Florence Jill D. Polina – Nursing Sarah Sunyoung Pyon – Nursing Carleen Quach - Health Science Kryss S.Quinn – Health Science Hilario E. Ramirez – Social Work Eva Yvette Rangel – Public Administration Kristen Elyse Reid – Social Work Christopher Andrew Rice – Exercise Science Regina Elisabeth Rico – Social Work Cristina Rodriguez – Social Work Viviana Rodriguez – Health Science Magaly Rojas-Gonzalez – Health Care Administration Anna L. Rourke – Family Nurse Practitioner Myra Ruiz – Health Care Administration Jennifer Rusnanto – Nursing Seanell San Andres – Recreation and Leisure Studies Jennifer C. Sanchez – Social Work Bilal Mohammad Sankari – Public Administration and Policy Whitney Santos – Child Development and Family Studies Nasr Sayed – Health Care Administration Veronica Lyn Scheele – Social Work Bonifacia Francis Sciortino – Nursing Siouneh Shabandari – Social Work Jared J. Simpson – Health Science Heather Ann Sykora - Nursing Joshua D. Smith – Criminal Justice and Criminology Joelle May Snipes-Sagehorn – Health Care Administration Matthew T. Sonkin – Sport Management Marissa McGinley Steiner – Health Care Administration Julia Gabriela Stroe – Health Care Administration Johanna S. Subia – Social Work Alecsa Rouie Taboada – Health Care Administration Jessica Taylor – Social Work Maryam Joy Tecson – Nursing Hannah Renee Thomas – Fashion Merchandising Sonia Thong – Social Work Meghan Cathleen Tolentino – Adult/Gerontology Nurse Practitioner Charlie Tran – Health Care Administration Phuong Diem Tran – Health Care Administration Tien Vu Thuy Tran – Child Development and Family Studies Tracy B. Tran – Health Science Keiko Trias – Health Care Administration Anna Truong – Community Health Science Paul Edward Turgeon – Emergency Services Administration Kathryn Grace Vander Molen – Dietetics and Food Administration Roxanne Amanda Gutierrez Visaya – Social Work Thong H. Vo – Community Health Education Kay Voravong – Hospitality Management Kristen Thanh Vu – Health Science Karla M. Washburn – Health Care Administration Anthony Portillo Watanabe – Social Work Bethany Rae Watson – Social Work
Christopher Dylan White – Social Work Deborah Campana Winstead – Family Nurse Practitioner Eugene G. Wohlgezogen – Public Policy and Administration Justin K. Wong – Hospitality Management Ka Man Wong - Dietetics Stacey Wu – Family Nurse Practitioner Lauren Konomi Yao – Sport Management Katelynn Zentner – Health Science COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Refugio Daniel Aguirre – Communication Studies Nina Adelle Aispuru-Bartlett - Classics Taylor Alderson – Psychology Kristen Elizabeth Althizer – Applied Anthropology Jace Anthony Bandy - Linguistics Elizabeth Anne Bay – Anthropology Andrew Anthony Bollhagen – Philosophy Michelle K. Botros – Creative Writing Kiawna LeeAnn Brewster – Italian Studies Monica Karla Bustamante – Communication Studies Danielle Christine Caldwell - Psychology John E. Campbell, Jr. – Geography Kristin R. Candaza – Human Development Robert Matthew Carrasco – Political Science Ariel Catherine Cervantes – Communication Studies Melissa Anne Clegg – Communication Studies Ashley Alanna Coccaro – Psychology Fabiola Cooper – Business Economics Sepideh Dadashi – Geographic Information Science (GIS) Devin L. Darling - Geography Shana Christine Dent – Communication Studies Michelle Catherine Desrosiers – Political Science Cristal P. Diaz - Spanish Taylor Marie Dohm - Sociology Richard W. Eldridge – Religious Studies Alexandria Taylor Ellis – Psychology Troy Timucin River Ersan – Economics Gabriella Marie Famiglietti – Psychology and Human Development Keith Stafford Farwell – Japanese Danny A. Flores – Political Science Anne M. Friedman – Communication Studies Emmanuel D. Gabriel, Jr. - Sociology Enga Arlene Garnett - English Christopher Roger Gaw – Geography/Geographic Information Science (GIS) Daniel Aaron F. Genove - Psychology Gianni G. Geraci – Psychology Megan Elizabeth Gilbert - Classics Jason M. Gilliam – Geography Donny Gillson – Sociology and Psychology Kassandra Glodowski – Psychology Cristal Simone Guzman – Literature Miles Benjamin Haisley - Linguistics Ambyr Michelle Hardy – Applied Anthropology Matisse Claire Hemingway- Human Development Paige Lauren Henley – Psychology and Human Development Meghin Nikole Fellows Hewitt - Journalism Kylee Rae Hoelscher – Creative Writing George Charles Hoffman – Communication Studies Jennifer J. Hong – Psychology Loni Loan Huynh – Communication Studies Alicia D. Isaslazo – Comparative World Literature Alannah Yukiko Ito – Business Economics Abrielle Arrianna Johnson – Japanese Kenneth W. Johnson – Psychology Lindsey Marie Jones – Human Development Paulina Selene Jones – History and English Megan Marie Josephs – English Education Grace Patyl Kadahjian – Women’s Gender & Sexuality Studies Jaeho Kim – Psychology Gene Otten Kumagai – English Rhetoric and Composition Garam Lee – Psychology Jennifer Christine Luhrs – Psychology Marie Swami Luna – Liberal Arts Jacob Howard Maldonado - History Michelle Manos – Political Science/Global Politics Melinda Marie Marion - Sociology Jessica Martinez – Human Development Jacqueline Martinez Cerna – Spanish Nicholas Cony Matthews – Communication Studies Steven Matthew Maybrier – Creative Writing and English Literature Suzanne Marie McCall – Linguistics Selena Lauren McQuarrie – History Rebecca Louise Mercer – Psychology Delany Miller – Psychology Matthew R. Miller – Chinese Cynthia Isabel Moreno - Anthropology Nancy Moreno - Sociology Jonathan Samuel Murrietta – Journalism Anthony James Oi Santo - Sociology Robin Marie Ordaz – Spanish Christian Andrew Ortega – Sociology
Jason Park - Psychology Hien Monique Thi Pham – Sociology Christine Phan – History Davin Phuong – Human Development Janeen Christianne Pisano – Communication Studies Saemi Lee Ramirez – Japanese Dulce M. Reyes - Sociology Kate Asha Rolls – English Education Zeferino Roman – Sociology Manuel A. Rubianes - Economics Rusty Marilee Rust – English Literature Robin Lynne Sachs – Human Development Christian Justin Samortin - Psychology Kathryn Eryn Saulman - Psychology Karen Marie Schindler – Philosophy Paige Melissa Shannon - Sociology Nicolas Edward Sirianni – Psychology Lisa Marie Snipes-Sagehorn – Psychology Ryan I. Snodgrass – Psychology Raphael A. Sotelo – Communication Studies Nikole M. St John – English Education Thomas Clifton Starmann – Political Science Jeffrey A. Stone – Psychology John Colin Stringfellow – Religious Studies James Daniel Suh – Psychology Sayaka Suzuki - Linguistics Zsofia Bernadette Szlovak – English Literature Kelly Marie Tabatabaeepour - Psychology Javad TahbazSalehi – Political Science Rene A. Tellez - Sociology Karen K. Thorpe – Human Development Ryan Peter Tucker – Geography Mary A. Turner – Geography Anthony J. Urquidi – Creative Writing Elyse Marie Vargas – Political Science Nicole Kathleen Vargas – Communication Studies Maria Vittoria – Sociology Eric L. Vuu – Political Science Roshini J. Waldron – Psychology Yuehai Wang – Business Economics Adrianna Louise Whalen – Psychology Brandi S.Wilson – Sociology Amanda Yamamoto - Linguistics Karen Kelley Yee – Chinese and Geography Noriko Yoshida – International Studies Noemi Zarate – Spanish Myles Zuckerman – Communication Studies COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCES & MATH Ali Riad Akil – Chemistry Paolo Sillador Alcantara – Biochemistry Andrew D. Alexopoulos - Chemistry Kendra Kathrine Brooks – Biology Ming Cong – Statistics Kylie Dann Couch - Chemistry Brittany R. Daws – Biochemistry Maureen Devon Dougherty – Biochemistry Elizabeth Ashley Duncan – Biological Sciences Analisa Sarmiento Garcia - Biochemistry Jasmine Garcia – Biochemistry Christina Gayle Heath - Mathematics Steven Wesley Kerns - Environmental Science and Policy Thomas Francis Kroupa – Marine Biology Christina Gayle Heath - Mathematics Kaitlin A. Morgan – Biology Khang M. Nguyen – Chemistry Minh Ngoc Hien Nguyen – Chemistry Phuong-Lan Thi Nguyen - Biochemistry Thuynguyen C. Nguyen – Math Education Regina G. Nufable – Mechanical Engineering Ashkan Tapia Paykar - Physics Brettni Quinn – Biology Corinna Joy Roles – Cell Molecular Biology and Physiology Steven H. Tseng - Mathematics Fan Yang – Applied Statistics Evan Dennis Zarate - Physics
The Officers of CSULB Local Chapter 086 of Phi Kappa Phi offer their heartfelt congratulations and best wishes to our best and brightest Seniors and Graduate Students. Dr. Mike Walter, President Dr. Wendy Reiboldt, Vice President Professor Kathleen Lacey, Treasurer Professor Thomas Rhoads, Public Relations
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Reburial uncovers Long Beach land The CSULB archaeology department is conducting a field school to rebury the remains of GabrielinoTongva ancestors on campus. By Danielle Carson Contributing Writer
Archaeologists disturbed at least 20 individuals aged 800 years old during a dig in 1952, but within the next year they will be laid back to rest. Dr. Carl Lipo, an archaeology professor at California State University, Long Beach, recruited students for his spring 2015 Anthropology 450 class to excavate an area in which the remains will be reburied.
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The remains will be reburied in the area surrounded by a black fence by the entrance of Beach Drive, on the land known as “Puvungna.” “I proposed we have to do this [reburial] as a big field school [for Anthropology 450],” Lipo said. “So we can learn about the deposit and collect the material as it gets reburied, so were not losing the archaeological record entirely. It’s kind of a win-win in that sense.” The individuals and other burial remains were found at the intersection of the 405 and Bellflower Blvd. in Long Beach, where brittle fragments of white shell scatter the ground, though water has not run there for a century. At this site known as California Los Angeles site 270, an archaeologist named Ethel Ewing along with other colleagues and a team of students excavated the remains of 21 individuals. Construction workers found the first body while working on a housing tract in what is today the Los Altos neighborhood, according to the National Park Service release of inventory completion. A 1972 report by California State College, Long Beach professor Eleanor H. Bates identified site 270 as a burial site that can be associated with the Southern Californian GabrielinoTongva people. Archaeologists used radiocarbon dating to date the individuals to the late period, about 1250 A.D. Though not all skeletons were whole, Bates identified that the individuals were buried in flexed positions, oriented from the east to west and surrounded by ornamental beads, tools and pottery shards. “[Participating in the Anthropology 450 field school is] the beginning of really good things to come academically and culturally,” Candice Bren-
nan, an anthropology graduate student in Lipo’s class, said. “Academically, it gives us more insight into prehistoric subsistence patterns, as well as teaches us the best practices for conducting an archaeological site.” The remains were brought to the campus and deposited into the thenCSCLB archaeology lab. Today, the remains are still stored in a few boxes in the Liberal Arts 5 building. Under the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act, the university consulted with the tribe and the remains were repatriated back to the native population in 2000. According to Lipo, repatriation is a consultation process in which remains are returned back to a group of rightful ownership or ancestry. NAGPRA was established by the National Park Service in 1990 as an act that required any agency, institution or museum that held within their possession human remains, burial associated goods sacred objects or objects of cultural patrimony to first to create an inventory of these items, to disclose and to supply those inventories to the tribes of rightful ownership. “People were caught off guard [when the law passed],” Cindi Alvitre, American Indian Studies professor and member of CSULB’s NAGPRA committee, said. “You had a lot of anthropologists, archaeologists [and] physical anthropologists who have felt that these human remains, all these collections, were their professional property.” Some university campuses have NAGPRA committees that serve as mediators between all parties involved in a repatriation and reburial. CSULB’s
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Seashells cover California Los Angeles site 270, which sits at the intersection of Bellflower Bvld and Los Coyotes Diagonal.
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Engineering the future Cl assifieds CSULB mechanical ClassAdD49er@gmail.com engineering students showcased their final Teach English in Korea! 27 LEGAL Sat ERVICES products a design Fall 2014 Teach and Learn in exhibition Friday. Legal Concerns? On-Campus Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean consultation with private attorney (562)481-5884 Michael Lindley Esq.
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LuxNova 3D printer could bring Circle Marina Hand Car Wash new bone life to animals 4800 E PCH Needs P/T ticketand evenwriterhumans. $8.50 an hour and tually communications. 5 minutes from Created by a groupApply of California CSULB 562-494-4698. online www.circlemarinacarwash.com. State University, Long Beach engiCommunication majors preferred. neering students, the LuxNova was one many projects displayed at the 18582of - 3.26.14 exhibition for the design and analysis of mechanical engineering systems course, at CSULB. 35 EFriday MPLOYMENT OPPORT. Mechanical and aerospace engiGymnastic and Cheer Tumbling Beyer neering professor Christiane Coaches Wanted. said that the course, which is full of Looking for fun enthusiastic reliable coaches. Flexseniors, schedule.is to premostly graduating Please email kidnastics@gmail.com pare the students for the real world of 18584 - 3.27.14 engineering. “These are all industry related projects,” Beyer said. “The team learns the skills that are needed 35 Eall MPLOYMENT OPPORT . as an engineer. They have to deFront desk personnel needed. velop skills likeservice. how toFlex present, how Great customer hrs. interested to Ifpitch, howplease to doemail proposals of the kidnastics@gmail.com and attach project.” resume. The LuxNova 3D printer won the 18585 - 3.27.14 2015 CSULB Innovation Challenge
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done with the 3D printing of bones and wanted to create a new process that would separate them from the competition. “We wanted to replicate bones that could be used in the medical industry for surgical purposes such as bone replacements,” Ventimilla said. “This specific printer here, we want to focus it for research for 3D printing bones for rats and rabbits and get results there before we get the bigger printer for bigger bones.” Another project on display was an unmanned underwater vehicle similarly created for a competition held
by the Association of Unmanned Vehicle Systems International in San Diego in July. “It’s an underwater robot that will be able to maneuver through various obstacles,” said Nicole Van Derhoof, senior mechanical engineering major. “Eventually it will be able to maneuver small objects with a claw and fire torpedoes.” The robo-sub, nicknamed Zeebo, could replace scuba divers at companies who search for oil underwater. Zeebo can also check the hulls on boats if there are any issues while in the water as well as search for underwater mines. The end-of-the-year exhibition also allows students to continue their work from the course and expand on the knowledge they gained throughout the year. Senior mechanical engineering student Trevor Wagner, who helped create the LuxNova, said that his team has a spot to speak at the upcoming 3D RAPID convention in Long Beach, which focuses on 3D printing, scanning and additive manufacturing. “We started a company and are getting everything patented,” Wagner said. “I think [the convention is] focusing on bio printing because the FDA is soon to release their restrictions on 3D printing for bio parts and we believe that bones are going to be one of the first ones that they release.”
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continued from page 8a committee is called the Committee on Native American Burial Remains and Cultural Patrimony and is comprised of members of the native community, anthropology department faculty and others recommended by tribal authorities, according to Ron Loewe, a CSULB anthropology professor and committee member. “It’s a collaboration between local Native American communities and the university,” Brennan said. The Gabrielino-Tonga group and university agreed to have the remains of the 21 individuals buried on the site to the south of Beach Drive, which is called California Los Angeles site 234. Site 234 and the large expanse of undeveloped land across the street, site 235, are better known as “Puvungna.” The land is recognized in the National Register of Historic Places as historically significant to the Gabrielino-Tongva as the birthplace of their lawgiver and god, Chinigchinich. “Puvunga [was] explained to me by elders and others that this was a spiritual center…a place of emergence of a spiritual philosophy that impacted and was associated with many, many California Indian tribes,” Alvitre said. The field school cannot proceed with the investigation because remains are already buried on their site of choice. A partial body, dated to a similar time period as the site 270 remains, was found on the lower portion of Puvungna, site 235, in 1972 during a dig for a sprinkler line. Those remains were reburied on the upper portion in 1979.
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Wooden stakes mark site 270, though no digging has started yet. “We are waiting to hear from the state historic preservation office to proceed to make sure that the space that we want to physically do the reburial is clear,” Alvitre said. “[We want to make sure we are] not disturbing anything of significance, that there’s not any other archeological material or cultural resources.” As of April, the class was cleared to only 10 centimeters of their threemeter depth goal, Lipo said. The site is still untouched save for wooden markers. Lipo is working on recruiting students for a summer field school to continue the reburial process. “If we ever actually get to do anything with the site, [this is a great opportunity],” Elizabeth Bay, a senior anthropology major in Lipo’s class said. While they wait for federal approval, the class has been learning about Cultural Resource Management, scanning with different types of equipment to make sure no archaeo-
logical material—which includes human remains, artifacts and objects of historical significance—in the subsurface will be disturbed. According to the website of former CSULB Anthropology professor Gene Ruyle, there are over a dozen archaeological sites within the 500 acres of land surrounding campus. To Alvitre, these are pieces of the “cultural layers” of Long Beach that tell a story about the transformation of the landscape. Though “Puvungna” is widely considered confined to the land by Bellflower Blvd, Alvitre said that it could have stretched as far as Bolsa Chica and inland to Bellflower. “You have to erase all these boundaries,” Alvitre said. “As we go back in time you have to deconstruct this whole colonial process, we have to deconstruct the university, we have to deconstruct the agricultural processes that were here. Then we have to deconstruct the rancho period … and go back to earlier times when the village sites existed.”
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Letter from the couch Jaclyn Baiz 2014 CSULB Alumna
I
’ve taken approximately 120 units of classes during my time in community college and at California State University, Long Beach. In that time I don’t remember being told to prepare for what was coming after. As I am writing this I am fully aware that the life of a post-grad sounds unappealing. As of now it is more anticlimactic. I found more of an adrenaline rush in planning out semesters, coming up
with Plans A, B and C just in case one fell through and the worst was to happen, like being waitlisted. I actually miss the all nighters, which included coffee and the rest of an eight-page paper, which I hadn’t fancied to start until the day before it was due. For the engineers who had a job straight out of college, I tip my hat off to you. But what happens to the California State University, Long Beach alumni who graduated under the college of liberal arts but no concrete plan afterwards? LinkedIn, employment sites and headhunters start becoming your preferred choice of social media sites instead of Instagram. Okay, I’m lying. I’m still 100 percent
addicted to following celebrities I don’t know. The reality is that a post-graduate, pre-full-time work force life includes
for 6-year students, it feels as if the rest of the graduates did everything right in college and I was the only one just trying to finish school. Why wasn’t I paying attention to my future? Why didn’t I think ahead? If I could go back in time to my first semester at CSULB, I would become more involved in the planning for my post-grad life. I don’t mean that you should do everything that you think would look great on a resume, but do the things you enjoy doing while staying involved. Join clubs on things you’ve wanted to do before, because being involved with other students will keep you motivated to do well in school and to stay focused. Speak more with your professors,
Post-grad life is not as “flawless” as you think.
boredom, eye straining from computer screen and Netflix accompanied with countless hours of resume building and filling out of applications. With a graduation rate of 13 percent for four-year students and 57 percent
not only for the sake of maybe improving a grade, but as a connection for a potential referral for a future job. And most importantly, stop and ask yourself, “am I happy?” Whatever the answer may be, take action before you enter post-grad life. There is a saying my mother says that has annoyingly stuck into my post-grad subconscious: “Quien busca, encuentre,” which means, “The person who looks for something, finds it.” It’s phrases like these that encourage me to keep my head up. When looking at the big picture, it’s just the beginning of a life outside the college bubble. And, even from the post-grad throne of my living room couch, I can feel what great potential my postcollege life has.
4 Tips for finding success after graduation
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Many financial planners talk about having a “nest egg.” Ideally, you should have the cash on hand in order to pay your bills in the event that you do not receive income for several months. Although it is difficult as a college student to save money given that going to
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account).
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According to the Pew Research Center, more young adults are living with their parents than at any time in the last 40 years. There was a 4 percent increase in the amount of millennials (ages 18-31) who lived with their parents from 2007-2012, with 36 percent living at home. More students are seeking the financial freedom that comes with living at home and having a stable support network. Many students may be hesitant when it comes to moving back home, but there is nothing wrong with admitting that you need help. For many students, post-graduation is the first time that we deal with the real world. It’s a scary place, and we all may not be adequately prepared, but you should never be afraid to reach out and get some help.
2009
3. Have a plan (and a savings
4. Don’t be afraid to go home.
2008
It’s easy to say “find a job,” but it’s an entirely different story when you’re fresh out of college and trying to make a living. Make a LinkedIn account, connect with people you know and build that resume. Sell your skills and hopefully someone buys. Maybe your first few jobs aren’t exactly what you hoped they would be, but that shouldn’t deter you from pursuing your goals. The unemployment rate for recent graduates in 2014 was 8.5 percent,
Every year students are graduating with record amounts of debt, and most of us have to start paying that back in about six months. There are three types of payments you should never miss: mortgage, auto and student loans. Student loans generally cannot be charged off in bankruptcy proceedings, so even if you fall on hard times, the payments will follow you until they are paid off. Your credit is one of the few things that you have absolute control over in this world. Take that control.
2007
1. Find a job.
2. Pay your bills on time.
Since 2004, student debts have become the largest non-housing debt balance in the United States, accounting for $1.16 trillion in fourth quarter of 2014.
2006
E
ntering the realm of adulthood is one of the scariest propositions for every student that is graduating college. According to debt. org, the average student leaves college with about $33,000 dollars in student loan debt. We are introduced to reality of “real life” the minute we are handed our diplomas. So the question is, how do we deal with our newfound financial responsibilities?
Student debt on the rise
2005
Contributing Writer
school is essentially a full-time job, we have to try to protect ourselves from falling into financial instability. Any amount that you can put into your savings every month is helpful, but strive to put at least 10 percent of your income into an accessible cash savings account in addition to any 401(k) contributions that you may be making at your job; you should always contribute at least the max matching amount, if there is one.
2004
compared to 5.5 percent in 2007, According to the Economic Policy Institute. In addition, liberal arts degrees tend to have higher unemployment rates than engineering and science degrees.
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Editorials: All opinions expressed in the columns, letters and cartoons in this issue are those of the writers or artists. The Letters Policy: All letters and e-mail must bear the phone number opinions of the Daily 49er are expressed only in unsigned editorials and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the journalism of the writer and must be no more than 300 words. The Daily 49er reserves the right to edit letters for publication in regard to space. department or the views of all staff members. All such editorials are written by the editorial board of the Daily 49er.
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Poppies for armies Lenna Nguyen Contributing Writer
“W
ould you wear a poppy flower in honor of our fallen veterans? Donations are not required but certainly welcomed/greatly appreciated,” was the phrase that I had to say with a smile in front of my local grocery store. What are these little red things that I was passing out in the first place? Wearing of the pins on Memorial Day pushes the idea that the red from the poppy represents the blood spilled on the same battlefields and that to those who fell did not die in vain. I came to learn that the poppy flowers were spearheaded by Moina Michaels, who was inspired by Lt. Col. McCrae’s ‘In Flanders Field’ poem as representation of the veteran’s sacrifice.
These donations of buying and wearing poppy flower pins not only help veterans who are disabled and hospitalized directly, but raise awareness and respect by educating the public about the sacrifices of our local veterans and the help that they continue to need. Last year 3.5 million poppies were distributed and helped to raise over $2 million, according to alaforveteran.org. I understand that our generation is now in a very strange sandwich generation; not only caring about the issues of our elderly, like grandma and grandpa, but also about the kind of legacy we would leave behind for our younger generations, such as lack of clean water, pollution and extinction of our diversity. I knew that what I learned in class about the physical decaying of the elderly didn’t stop the group of volunteers from the American Auxiliary Legion who stood by me, standing by the men on the battlefield. I really respect that. The American Auxiliary Legion is the world’s largest women’s patriotic service organization with more than
800,000 in more than 9,000 communities nationwide. I never realized that it was so easy
Students should support our local Southern California veterans by wearing a red poppy flower pin during Memorial Day weekend.
million towards $3 million veterans and military families and more than $2 million to children and youth, according to alaforveteran.org “The Legion gives out poppy flowers to the general pub-
to help and that all you needed to do was to show people your open hands. I believe that any volunteer is relevant and that it is the collective efforts of the few that can make such a difference to the many. The global impact of the 9.3 million volunteer hours helps to contribute $36
lic as a required activity for the national organization and that each poppy that is handmade by our local veterans earns them only 10 cents each,” Sandy Esslinger, an AAL volunteer, said. “These poppies are a way for them to earn a living, but if each Auxiliary unit buys from them at 16 cents each, it gives more importance to the donations that are received from the public.” Take your time this Memorial Day Weekend to stop by your local grocery store and offer to help spread awareness for our local military families by simply wearing a handmade poppy f lower in honor of our fallen veterans, from the women that have stood by their vets since day one. 100 percent of the donations go directly to helping out our local military and their families, here and overseas.
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
49er in Focus About an hour ferry ride from Long Beach, growing up on Catalina Island was isolating, entrapping. He jokes about a lack of stoplights on the 76-squaremile landmass and its general quaintness. But for Christopher Padilla, education was his only lifeboat away from a life of monotony and the familiar. Johnny Romero | Daily 49er
Transferring from Catalina to college A business economics student looks forward to the opportunity a diploma offers. By Amy Patton Print Manager
His mom made him take professional graduation photos, and she’s throwing him a large graduation party. He purses his lips as he thinks about a mother’s pride. “Just do what you want to do, mom” Business economics graduate
Christopher Padilla recalled telling his mother. “I just want to go to work.” Padilla is the first to graduate from California State University, Long Beach under the Long Beach College Promise, a program designed to help local students attend and graduate universities. Education has always been instilled in Padilla as a priority. “Anything to get of the island,” he joked. His parents worked at the K-12 school Padilla and his twin brother, Christian, attended on Catalina Island. He said they were always wanted him and his brother to go to college. “It’s a good thing I wanted to go to college just as badly as they wanted
me to,” Padilla said fondly. “Otherwise, I’m sure there would have been more friction.” Padilla said that his original plan was to go to San Jose State University. “The further, the better.” But when he was denied acceptance there and at his second choice school, CSULB, his heart sank. His only way mainland now was through Long Beach City College. “I was so discouraged,” Padilla said quietly. “I didn’t know what to do.” Padilla’s parents got him a meeting with the K-12 principle. “You have no choice now, so set your mind as determined,” Padilla recalled Principle Carlson saying. From there on out, Padilla went
forward with a new perspective. He and his brother both attended LBCC from 2009 to 2012 before transferring to the business program at CSULB. They bounced from relatives’ houses to month-to-month rentals, just to stay mainland during the school year. “It’s a strange feeling referring to school as a break from work,” Padilla said with a crooked half-smile lighting his face. “By he end of summer me and my brother would be itching to go back to school.” Completing the last of his courses in December last year, Padilla has been working as a snuba diving instructor since. He said he worked as a diving instructor on Catalina Island for the past several summers.
Now that he is graduating, he hopes to get a jump on the job market, in search of new opportunities. Growing up on the island, Padilla came to the realization that living his adult life there was out of the question. The economic opportunities were not what he was looking for. “I look around and think, ‘you can’t afford me,” Padilla jokes. After receiving his diploma, Padilla intends to go into the public sector of economics, specifically macroeconomics, before working his way to the private sector. “Ultimately though, I want to get my MBA,” he said. “I don’t know where and I don’t know when but that’s the goal.”
Last month The Daily 49er introduced a new photo-feature series. 49er In Focus zooms in on the lives of students, community members, faculty, maybe even YOU! On the primary image, you will find 49 words that highlight that person. See her, as she sits alone among a fray of scurrying students. Pass her, and she will ask, in a soft voice, if you have change to spare. Ignore her, and she will hurt but flash a smile anyway. Listen to her, and she will tell you her story.
Eight —
nights in jail, one for every time they caught him at the border.
Six —
students sitting at “the table for outcasts” back when he couldn’t speak much English.
Three — younger sib-
lings watching him become the first in his family to finish college.
One —
undocumented immigrant named Jose Salazar.
See stories online at daily49er.com
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
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Diversiond49er@gmail.
Student-entrepreneurs share their struggles and triumphs
By Alexandra Huynh Contributing Writer
The million-dollar idea may be an abstract concept, but for some young entrepreneurs at California State University, Long Beach, it’s a reality that hinges on diligence and dedication. “The reason I’m here at my age is probably because I’ve made more mistakes than anybody that you know or that’s currently in school,” 32-year-old senior marketing student Alexander Gallasso said. After parting from his nine-to-five job working retail for Sprint in 2011, Gallasso went all in on his first business venture, Battery Recycler, which started out as an idea his dad had for a 6th grade science fair project to help people collect and recycle their used batteries. “I wasn’t going to school,” Gallasso said. “I was that a--hole that said, ‘I don’t need school, school is for suckers.’” In the course of a year or two,
he learned that he had made many mistakes, which cost him a lot of money. “I had stocks and earnings and everything from Sprint, and I still went through with it. I probably invested $55,000 into the business,” Gallasso said. Like many before him, Gallasso learned that starting a small business leads down a path fraught with sacrifice and uncertainty. “I realized there was so much to running a business. I wished there had been some way to have known this before going into it,” Gallasso said. Gallasso enrolled at CSULB after working with Michael Solt, the Dean of the College of Business Administration and Professor of Finance, on a marketing presentation. Freshman marketing student Yavuz Yilmaz can relate to Gallasso’s feeling of uncertainty after starting an Amazon-based business. He sells products such as cables and electrical wiring online that he buys from wholesalers. It wasn’t easy finding the right product, one that could be bought at low enough prices to be sold for an exponential return, Yilmaz said. At the moment, that magic product is an iPhone 6 case. “Taking the risk of putting in the money was the biggest thing,”
Yilmaz said. “Sometimes you put in money for a $5,000 order and you don’t know what you’re going get out of it. You just try to sell and sell and sell.” Rather than having to learn everything the hard way, entrepreneurs
“
Typically people don’t have a success story on their first venture. They will start something and it won’t work, start something and it won’t work and finally, eventually it’ll work.
“
Business courses teach would-be tycoons that success is often made up of failure.
-Larry Pate, CSULB professor of business administration
can take university courses that help prepare them for the challenges that come with opening a business. There is now legitimacy in entrepreneurial studies whereas before there wasn’t, professor of business
administration at CSULB Larry Pate said. Before 1988 only the University of Sothern California and Harvard were offering programs in entrepreneurship. Since then, virtually every school, including CSULB, offers entrepreneurship courses. “Business schools are no longer about just helping people rise to top of corporate America,” Pate said. “It’s also about helping people with different kinds of dreams.” These courses help students who want to venture out in creating their own business, Pate said. By knowing how to form a marketing plan and by understanding the importance of finance, students are improving their probability of success. “Typically people don’t have a success story on their first venture,” Pate said. “They will start something and it won’t work, start something and it won’t work and finally, eventually it’ll work.” On top of learning about marketing plans and how to start a business, entrepreneurial courses at CSULB also focus on tapping into the passion that is necessary to become a successful entrepreneur. “We try to get people to realize that, in essence, there’s opportunity in everything,” Tate said. “The whole notion of if one door closes another will open.”
Instructors want to steel students against all the doors slammed shut on the way to success. “We talk about failure in entrepreneur classes,” Tate said. “The question is what is failure? Michael Jordan said the reason he made so many baskets is because he missed so many baskets.” Now that Gallasso’s business has grown, the freedom of being in control of his own life and being able to create a positive difference in the world through recycling batteries has given meaning to all the sacrifices he’s made. “I wanted to do something that makes a difference so that when I’m old I can look back and say I helped change something in a positive way,” Gallasso said. He credits an education that he never thought he needed for the turnaround of his business. “I go to school because I learned that education is important,” Gallasso said. “You can learn it on your own without school, but you are going spend a sh-t ton of money.” Gallasso says entrepreneurship requires sacrifice and dedication. “It takes the ability to never give up,” Gallasso said. “Life’s not about how hard you hit, its about how hard you can get hit and get back up, its about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward.”
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Music venues hidden in plain sight Music is strongly associated with memory—you tend to remember the places and faces around you when you first heard a favorite song. Now that finals are over and summer is wide open, there’s no better time to advantage of Long Beach’s wide-array of quirky music venues to make these types of long-lasting memories.
By Kevin Flores Diversions Editor
Fingerprints 420 E. 4th St, Long Beach, CA 90802 Good ol’ Fingerprints has been a go-to for audiophiles and vinyl-heads for over two decades. Apart from curating and selling music, they periodically host intimate in-store performances by an eclectic range of acts. The shows are all ages and typically free, but RSVP’ing won’t hurt—especially for bigger acts.
The Federal Underground 102 Pine Ave, Long Beach, CA 90802 This Underground can be found in the basement of the old Security Pacific Bank building in downtown Long Beach. Accessed from a staircase inside The Federal Bar, its red-curtained stage is adjacent to a giant 19th century bank vault. Complete with steampunk décor and a conjoined speakeasy, this spacement provides a sophisticated and intimate setting to watch a performance.
Que Sera 1923 E 7th St, Long Beach, CA 90813 Although its name is scrawled out front in a sinister font, this is another spot that’s easy to miss if you don’t know what you’re looking for. Once inside the cavernous venue, you’ll find a long bar that leads to the dance floor. The stage and its backdrop of gold-colored, space-age foil hosts a different style of music every night of the week. Visitors should expect a good dose of bodybumping and thumping underground sounds.
4th street Vine 2142 E 4th St Long Beach, CA 90814 Literally a brick-and-mortar, this wine bar on Retro Row doubles as a performance space. Musicians playing against its exposed brick walls are so close to patrons that it wouldn’t be surprising to see a busker’s hat at their feet.
Alex’s Bar 2913 E Anaheim St, Long Beach, CA 90804 This punky dive is notorious for guttural, hellraising shows that leave you in a buzzy, sweatsoaked daze. Inconspicuously located, the bar is accessed through the rear—as is the parking lot. The interior is soaked in blood red and filled with Transylvanian kitsch.
P hotos
by
Haskell’s Prospector 2400 E 7th St, Long Beach, CA 90804 The Prospector isn’t the type of joint that usually comes to mind when you hear band names like Teenage Exorcist or Future Graves. But don’t be fooled by its middle-of-the-desert-steakhouse feel. Walk past the dinner tables, through a glass-and-wood door and eureka!—a whiskey-soaked haunt that somehow manages to reconcile its trove of Gold Rush accoutrements with its appetite for local rock n’ roll.
K evin Flores | Daily 49er
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Diversions
Escape Long Beach by going camping above the clouds A sight to behold awaits the daring. By Kevin Flores Diversions Editor
K evin Flores | Daily 49er
The view from Prewitt Ridge provides a chance to take in the meandering California coastline from a new vantage.
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The Prewitt Ridge campground is one of the most secluded campsites in California. About a five-hour drive from Long Beach and nestled high atop the Los Padres National Forest, it offers unparalleled views of the state’s magnificent coastal beauty. Campers are surrounded by the glinting Pacific Ocean on one side and rugged hilly hinterlands on the other. Throughout the day, the fog unfurls over the water like a duvet and then suddenly dissipates, only to creep back the next hour. At dusk, the sun slips into the water in a glory of color, leaving a glow over the horizon that is not so much light but a gentleness. This soon gives way to a big, starry sky that wraps the world in a celestial dream. None of this is hyperbole but a severe understatement. If you’re already dusting off the old tent and sleeping bag, here’s what you should know before heading out into the wide blue yonder. There is no running water or bathroom facilities of any kind at these campsites, so make sure to bring sufficient water and then some. There is also no reservation system. Campsites are claimed on a first-come, first-serve basis. While not the most popular campsite in the Big Sur area, it is still recommended that you get there early on the day of your arrival to make sure you snag a spot. Getting to the campground is a bit of a challenge, and it would be a shame to brave the daunting roads only to have to turn around. Approaching from the east, take the 101 freeway to G18, which turns into G14 somewhere around Lockwood. This will get you to the city of Jolon. Take this opportunity to fill up your gas tank because from here on
Class of 2015 ~
Best of luck from your friends at the University Library
out there is only one tiny country gas station. Tank full, take Mission Road through Fort Hunter Ligget for four miles. You’ll come across a junction with Nacimiento-Ferguson Rd., which you’ll want to take for 17 miles. Soon after you enter the Los Padres National Forest, this road begins to rapidly gain elevation. After you reach the summit you’ll see a park ranger station. If the fire danger isn’t high, and those who want to operate a gas-powered stove or setup a campfire can get the required permit here. Not too far past the ranger station you’ll find a sign for South Coast Ridge Road. Turn left onto this road. Now here’s where the fun really begins. For the next 4.3 miles you’ll be navigating a single-lane dirt road with sharp switchbacks and no guardrails up the mountain. This sounds a little troubling but if you drive carefully it shouldn’t be a problem. While a 4×4 vehicle probably makes this road easier to tread, it’s not necessary. Word to the wise: You will come across some large potholes – fight the urge to slow down or else you might find yourself stuck. If you do get stuck, the best thing to do is to slowly reverse out of the ditch. Accelerating will only entrench you further. Signs guide you to the campground all along the road. Once you make it up, you’ll find your perseverance will be well rewarded with a breath-taking view. The campsites are car camping, so you just pull up to a spot and that’s where you set-up. No need to haul equipment through the wilderness. Another great thing about the place is that the sites are well spread out so it will seem like you are up above the clouds all by yourself. The weather can get chilly at night near the coast at this elevation so bring a jacket and a good sleeping bag. It’s well worth it to let the din of the city fade away this summer because as naturalist John Muir once wrote, “In every walk with nature one receives far more than he [or she] seeks.”
Sports
Tuesday, May 19, 2015 Track
and
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Sportsd49er@gmail.com
Field
Speeding through
Back to back to back The LBSU men’s track and field team clinched the Big West Championship title for the third year in a row.
Senior Jahmani Lockett pushed through college life, thanks to uplifting support he received from teammates.
By Kayce Contatore
By Will Hernandez
Assistant Sports Editor
Contributing Writer
Senior sprinter Jahmani Lockett’s days as a member of Long Beach State’s track and field team often started before sunrise and ended long after sunset, but he calls them “all worth it.” “Nobody else goes through the things that we go through,” Lockett said. “Even if you join a frat, you don’t get that bond that we have on the track team. Like when you’re out there and about to pass out and throwing up, what we do during the offseason to train.” For Lockett, the team is his second family. The La Mesa native said that the relationships built solely through athletics are what he’ll take away from his career when it is over; one particular relationship more than the others. In 2012 Lockett, who had played multiple sports in high school, walked on to the LBSU track and field program, which is when he met his girlfriend, DaShane’ Lars. A teammate of his from the women’s squad and a close friend, Lars paid for Lockett’s meals when he was broke freshman year. Since it was Lockett’s freshman season, he was not eligible for an athletic scholarship; therefore he had to pay his way through school and necessities. Locket recalled having no money in his meal plan account and as a result, was locked out of the resident dining hall. “When I walked onto the program, everything was being paid through financial aid and loans,” Lockett said. “And basically she took me and fed me everyday and night. Then a relationship fostered out of that.” With emotional and financial support coming from Lars, Lockett made a quick impact on the track. In his first season, Lockett was named Co-Big West Freshman of the Year, while helping the
John Fajardo | LBSU Athletics
Jahmani Lockett is a three-time Big West champion since joining men’s track in 2012. 49ers win a conference title. For Lockett, he said that his college career has gone by quicker than his fastest 4x400 finish of 47.75. “It’s going to be crazy, when it’s all over,” Lockett said. “Just on that four by four squad, two of us are seniors and it’s probably going to be very emotional not running with this group again.”
S T A R G N CO GRADS!
The Long Beach State men’s track and field team claimed its ninth Big West Championship title and its third in a row at the UC Riverside Track Facility Saturday. The three-peat for the men’s team was the first in LBSU history and the first in the conference since former member Utah State did it in 1996. At the end Friday night’s event, the 49ers men’s team was in second place behind UC Santa Barbara. LBSU took the event on Saturday afternoon by scoring big performances from sophomore Michael Montgomery in the pole vault and by senior Jacob Fraser in the discus throw. The men took the lead from the Gauchos after a win in the triple jump with senior Ryan Sanders taking first and junior Willie Alexander finishing second. Montgomery had a career-best performance in the pole vault clearing 17 feet 9 inches. Montgomery jumped himself into sixth overall in school history with his mark. The 49er women’s team finished seventh overall after they ended the first day of the meet tied for sixth with UC Irvine. Freshman Jasmine Bass earned the second overall spot in 49er history with a third place finish of 40 feet 11.5 inches in the triple jump Saturday afternoon. The women’s 4x100m relay recorded a time of 45.44 seconds; the time is good for the third best in school history. The team consisted of twin sisters senior Kayla and junior Kristina Goosby and freshmen Ashleigh Chambers and Madison Carney. The 49ers will look to add on to their Big West win at the NCAA West Preliminary Championships on May 28 in Austin, Texas.
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Tuesday, May 19, 2015
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Baseball
The historical, unfair Blair Blair Field is a difficult park to play in, but a beautiful one to sit in. By Josh Barajas Sports Editor
Bobby Yagake | Daily 49er
Senior left fielder Nolan Meadows takes a swing during Long Beach State’s 4-2 win on Saturday.
Dirtbags sweep in final homestand The Dirtbags wrap up their last season series at Blair Field with a sweep of the Aggies. By Eddie Rivera Contributing Writer
The Long Beach State baseball survived a late rally by UC Davis on Sunday to complete the series sweep at Blair Field. The Dirtbags (28-23, 11-10 Big West) exploded for 12 hits in Sunday’s 9-8 victory over the Aggies (28-25, 7-14 Big West). LBSU put up seven runs in the first inning, but the Aggies slowly chipped away at the lead. Head coach Troy Buckley said it was not a pretty game.
“That was an old school, 10-yearsago, old bat type of game,” Buckley said. “I’m glad we were on the winning end.” The Dirtbags entered the ninth inning with a 9-4 lead before the Aggies rallied. UC Davis put up four runs to cut the lead to one run. The comeback fell short after junior righty Ty Provencher got UC Davis’ Kevin Barker to groundout. Left-fielder Alex Bishop and junior catcher Eric Hutting were both crucial for LBSU. Hutting went 1-3 with 3 RBI and Bishop put together an impressive game in his last appearance at Blair Field, going 2-4 with 2 RBI and one run scored. “It was a little bit of a weird feeling with my last game here at Blair,” Bishop said. “I was trying to focus on finishing the season strong.” On Saturday the Dirtbags won 4-2 behind freshman right-hander Chris
Mathewson’s second complete game of the season. Mathewson (6-5) struck out eight batters while giving up six hits and three walks. The Dirtbags jumped to an early 3-0 lead in the first inning when senior left-fielder Nolan Meadows hit a two-run triple to the right-field corner. The Aggies answered back in the top of the second inning with two doubles and two runs to cut the lead down 3-2. However, the rally fell short and the Dirtbags put up the final run of the game in the sixth inning to clinch the win. Senior right-hander Kyle Friedrichs made his last career start at Blair Field on Friday. He threw for seven innings and had six strikeouts while only allowing one earned run. The Aggies built an early 3-1 lead by the fourth inning, but Friedrichs was able to settle down after that and shutout the Aggies between the fifth and seventh
innings. “I kind of went out of my book in the first [few] innings but after that I wasn’t having it,” Friedrichs said. “I feel like I left everything out there and I got no regrets.” The Dirtbags rallied in the eighth inning to win the game 4-3. Freshman designated hitter Brock Lundquist capped the comeback by singling past the shortstop to bring in the gamewinning run. Lundquist, who went 2-4 with 2 RBI and double, also had the game winning hit two weeks ago against UCLA. “I was just trying to hit the ball into the gap like last time,” Lundquist said. “The guy was throwing pretty hard so I wasn’t trying to do anything overpowering.” Long Beach State will travel to Fullerton to play the rival Titans in a three-game series starting Thursday at 8 p.m.
Sandwiched in between Woodrow Wilson High School and Recreation Park is the storied Blair Field, the 3,283-seat, brutal home of the Long Beach State Dirtbags. It’s also home to the local high schools and “virtually every baseball player to lace up their cleats in Southern California during the past 50 years,” according to CSULB’s website. The ballpark serves as hub for past, present and future students of California State University, Long Beach. This is why Blair Field was chosen as a centerpiece for the I Declare campaign. President Jane Close Conoley spoke to a crowd about the purpose of the campaign before the Sunday’s Dirtbags game vs. UC Davis. Among the stadium improvements the I Declare campaign will offer are new batting cages, better locker rooms, offices and a hall of fame room. Blair Field already does a great job reminding its visitors of its rich baseball history; the hall of fame room will add to this. Everywhere you look you can spot a banner, billboard or jersey bearing the name or face of a former Dirtbag. There’s the image of Colorado Rockies shortstop, and four-time MLB allstar, Troy Tulowitzki swinging his bat in centerfield. There’s also the banner in left field with Los Angeles Angels pitcher, and three-time all-star, Jered Weaver’s face. The walls of the left field seating entrance are decorated with mag-
See BLAIR, page 7b
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
BLAIR
Continued from page 6b azine covers featuring former major leaguer and American League MVP Jason Giambi. Tampa Bay Rays third baseman Evan Longoria is right there beside Giambi, along with more of Weaver and Tulowitzki. Over a dozen banners hang outside Blair, each one containing an image of an all-time Dirtbag great along with the years they attended. There’s Brad Davis, Danny Espinosa, Bobby Crosby and a
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Sports current World Series champion, San Francisco Giants infielder Matt Duffy. Over 1,000 people fill up Blair Field on average on game days, each one hoping that they’re looking at the next major league all-star. The air around the stadium is drenched in the smell of hot dogs, beer and the sound of children laughing. “That’s fairly recent, I gotta say,” former LBSU Athletic Advisor Don Peters said. “I think the people they’ve got doing their marketing really know what they’re doing.” Peters worked with the school and its athletes from 1997 to 2005. Because he holds baseball close to his heart, he’s
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become one of the Dirtbags’ biggest fans and attends several games year in and year out. He even sings the national anthem a few times every season. “I have probably close to a .758 winning percentage when I sing,” Peters joked. “So the coaches, they see me coming [and they ask], ‘You singing, Don? You singing today?’” If anyone knows the ins and outs and the atmosphere at Blair, it’s Peters. He loves the park, but admits it isn’t too friendly to the game of baseball. “Blair Field is not an easy field to play baseball in,” Peters said. “It’s what they call a pitcher’s park. Hitters don’t come
Sportsd49er@gmail.com here, so they have to learn how to play small ball.” Peters calls the enormous amount of foul territory at Blair Field the pitcher’s best friend. He points out that the center field wall, that seems to be miles away from the plate, is farther out than some of the walls at major league parks. Blair Field can be cruel to hitters, but Peters believes it better prepares them for the major leagues. He recalls a story he heard about Duffy and Giants’ manager Bruce Bochy. Apparently, Bochy needed Duffy to lay down a bunt in the middle of the Giants’ championship run. Bochy asked the for-
mer Dirtbag if he could come through for the team to which Duffy replied along the lines of “you know where I went to school, right?” Peter’s story about Duffy isn’t the only evidence that Blair Field produces MLBready players. 44 former Dirtbags have made it to the major leagues, 12 of them are currently active; that’s good for the most active players in the majors from any college in the country. The I Declare campaign will help improve the stadium along with the school. The Campaign for Blair Field website makes the case that a program with so much history deserves something back.
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