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Cal Poly football loses a heartbreaker at No. 7 Eastern Washington
EASTERN WASHINGTON ATHLETICS | COURTESY PHOTO SO CLOSE
| Cal Poly held the lead for most of the game, but couldn’t hang on. Eastern Washington drove down the field and scored with 57 seconds remaining to force the game into overtime. Eric Stubben @ericstubben
The Cal Poly football team’s trip to Cheney, Washington to take on No. 7 Eastern Washington (3-2, 2-0 Big Sky) was all it cracked up to be. However, the 42-41 final score did not favor the Mustangs (2-4, 1-2).
The highly touted offensive battle between the top rushing team in FCS (Cal Poly) and the top passing team in FCS (Eastern Washington) needed more than four quarters to decide on a winner. Eastern Washington quickly jumped out to a 6-0 lead as quarterback Jordan West capped his
first drive with a 13-yard touchdown pass. Cal Poly then rattled off 21 unanswered points on three consecutive touchdown runs by three different players. Senior quarterback Chris Brown ran in a 2-yard touchdown midway through the first quarter to give the Mustangs a 7-6
lead. Sophomore running back Joe Protheroe scored the Mustangs’ second touchdown on a 3-yard run 12 seconds into the second quarter. The Mustangs’ third and longest touchdown of the game came late in the second quarter when senior wide receiver Roland Jackson Jr. ran the ball
55 yards to the house. Eastern Washington ran for a touchdown with under a minute to go in the first half, settling the halftime score at 21-13 in favor of the Mustangs. Cal Poly had 298 team rushing yards at the break. Continued on page 8
CSU mandates sexual assault awareness training programs
FILE PHOTO | MUSTANG NE WS TITLE IX
| Students will now be mandated to take yearly online sexual assault education.
Naba Ahmed @nabaahmed
For the students who were bumped to the end of priority for not completing the new sexual assault education, Haven may benefit students in more ways than one in the future. Haven, the new sexual assault education program for Cal Poly, is part of a broader system that all California State Universities (CSUs) are subject to due to the new Title IX initiative. Title IX mandates all CSU undergraduates and transfer students to complete an online sexual assault education for the first time in history. Title IX requires institutions to take necessary precautions to prevent sexual assault on their campuses, and to respond promptly and effectively
when an assault is reported. In response to Title IX, the CSU Chancellor’s Office issued Executive Order 1095, which outlined information on what to do if you are a victim of sexual violence, and mandates educational training programs to prevent sexual violence. Dean of Students Jean DeCosta is working in correspondence with the Office of Equal Opportunity as one of the Deputy Title IX Coordinators for Student Affairs, where she handles Title IX compliance. “With the new implementation of Title IX guidelines, the legislature has asked that we make sure that every student has this education in some manner,” DeCosta said. Continued on page 6
GABBY PAJO | MUSTANG NE WS COMING TOGETHER | Transgender rights activist Janet Mock was one of the various professionals at the conference.
Your True Gender Conference: Three days of transgender education, awareness and support Brendan Abrams @brenabrams
The Central Coast is far from being known as a beacon of transgender activism. That description is usually awarded to bigger, more socially active cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco, but it doesn’t mean transgender individuals are concentrated only in those places. The 2015 Your True Gender Conference — a three-day event hosted at Cal Poly from Oct. 9-11 for transgender or gender-questioning individuals, their family members and allies — began
Friday evening. The opening lecture alone brought hundreds of people to the Chumash Auditorium. The conference, a result of collaboration between Tranz Central Coast, the Cal Poly Pride Center and Your True Gender, was intended to provide attendees with information about all aspects of undergoing a gender transition. Professionals from around the world showed up to talk about medical procedures and legal issues and to provide general support for the transgender community.
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