SPORTS pg. 10: Volleyball sweeps weekend series
Monday, September 30, 2013
OP/ED pg. 7: Conservative columninst tackles immigration
Volume LXXVIII, Number 5
www.mustangdaily.net
CSU system uses Center gets community’s approval Aware Awake Alive
CARSON STARKEY
ARYN SANDERSON
@ArynSanderson
Carson Starkey would have graduated from Cal Poly last spring at 23 years old. But, as many Cal Poly students know, Starkey died from acute alcohol poisoning alone on a mattress in 2008 at age 18. Most Cal Poly students identify with Starkey’s story — he was, after all, “one of their own,” Julia Starkey, Carson’s mother, said. But her son’s story isn’t just important within the Cal Poly community, she said. He’s just one example of “a college student that dies every 44 hours of alcohol poisoning.” “His story will always be relevant, and there will always be stories that are just like his story,” Julia said. Five years after Starkey’s death, Aware Awake Alive, the peer-to-peer alcohol education program created by his parents in his memory, is expanding to all 23 California State University (CSU) campuses. “This is huge for Aware Awake Alive,” Julia said. “It will help put us on the map nationally, and that’s great because this program doesn’t just need to be CSU-wide, it needs to be nationwide. It needs to be on every college campus and in every high school. We don’t want another family to have to go through a tragedy like we did.” CSU committed to rolling out the Aware Awake Alive
program to all its campuses during the CSU Board of Trustees meeting on July 23. The decision was an emotional one, said David Wyatt, communications director for Aware Awake Alive. “Carson’s parents went and gave a 5-minute speech and gave Carson’s whole story, and at the end of the speech, where it was just supposed to be this FYI update, the chancellor was nearly in tears,” Wyatt said. “He had this unilateral vision to bring it to all CSU campuses right away. It was an on-the-spot decision, and it was this wonderful sort of turning point where a grassroots, emotional-based vision was given this huge opportunity to expand.” The program is already empowering students at
44 a college student dies every 44 hours from alcohol poisinong
more than 60 campuses nationwide, including eight CSU campuses. “Cal Poly has kind of been a beta tester for Aware Awake Alive,” Wyatt said, “and the goodwill that sprung out of the tragedy in San Luis Obispo is really continuing to keep San Luis Obispo the place where the leadership and commitment started and continues to this day.” Orientation programming was one of the places the commitment was first see AWARE, pg. 3
ZACH MAHER/MUSTANG NEWS
The Warren J. Baker Center for Science and Mathematics also includes study areas, which students of all majors can use. BROOKE SPERBECK
@brookesperbeck7
As he walks around the Warren J. Baker Center for Science and Mathematics, College of Science and Mathematics Dean Phil Bailey beams. He’s showing off the product of 20 years of hard work and is eager to talk about it with anyone who will listen. “Does it look OK?” Bailey jokingly asks a professor passing in the halls.
“You did a good job,” the professor responds. “Thanks a lot.” Bailey has been working on the construction of the building since 1993, when he and then-Cal Poly President Warren Baker came up with their vision that is now a 189,000 square-foot, six-floor reality. The nearly-completed building is even better than he envisioned. It will benefit not only students in his college, but the entire university, he said. “You call it the Center for Sci-
ZACH MAHER/MUSTANG NEWS
If all classrooms and labortories were filled to full capacity, the building can hold approximately 1,300 students.
ence and Mathematics, but it’s for all students,” Bailey said. “If you just look, it was designed for students.” With four terraces, multiple study areas and furniture for approximately 400 students in what Bailey calls “living rooms,” the building was created with students in mind, he said. It is now the second largest building on campus, only smaller than Robert E. Kennedy Library, and houses eight lecture-style classrooms with a combined capacity of 484 students, 64 faculty offices, approximately 50 state-of-theart laboratories and about two dozen prep spaces and stockrooms, Bailey said. According to Bailey, students in every college will take at least one class in the building during their time at Cal Poly, and many will take more than one. “The thing about the building that you’ll see that’s different from probably any building on campus is that there’s tons of space for students,”
Bailey said. “If we had every classroom and every laboratory filled to capacity at any one time, we would have probably 1,300 or 1,400 students in the building at that time.” Equipment in the building is also unlike any the campus has ever seen. Two new nuclear magnetic resonance instruments — which cost between $250,000 and $300,000 each — will be available for undergraduate use, something Bailey said is unheard of at many universities. “I talked to some new faculty members in physics that have been other places … and they said, ‘I’ve never seen anything like this for undergraduates.’ This is very unique,” Bailey said. Other additions Bailey is enthusiastic about are the seven studio classrooms in the building, which allow for the integration of lectures and labs. The rooms are set up so that students can collaborate easily see CENTER, pg. 2
CSU Chancellor White aims to increase student enrollment SEAN MCMINN
@shmcminn
Fresh out of a Board of Trustees meeting where Gov. Jerry Brown warned the California State University (CSU) system against dwelling on increasing its number of students, CSU Chancellor Timothy White did exactly that Friday at a press conference for student media. “Clearly there’s more demand for people to join the CSU as a student than there is capacity,” White said during his opening remarks. “It’s frustrating for me personally to know that there are people who, through no fault of their own, can’t get in our campuses.” From the CSU’s Long Beach headquarters, the chancellor’s comments sounded familiar to those following Cal Poly President Jeffrey Armstrong’s own goals in San Luis
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Obispo. By 2022, Armstrong aims to add between 4,000 and 5,000 students to Cal Poly’s student population. Throughout Friday’s press
have to tackle head on: how to get money from Sacramento. “At the end of the day, we have to be persuasive in Sacramento,” White said. “And it’s
It’s frustrating for me personally to know that there are people who, through no fault of their own, can’t get in our campuses. TIMOTHY WHITE CSU CHANCELLOR
conference, White echoed other ideas supported by Armstrong, including using public-private partnerships to enhance student opportunities, enrollment growth and additional classes. But as lobbyer-in-chief for the CSU, White hovered on a dilemma Armstrong doesn’t always
not about money for CSU, it’s money really to help these students and their families to become vibrant members of the California economy.” But White will likely have a tough time being persuasive in the state capital as a battle looms for 2014-2015 dollars. Mandatory spending on pris-
ARTS pg. 6 Kiristen Black goes from the classroom to the stage.
ons and firefighting will drain the state’s coffers more than usual, according to a CSU report, leaving higher education to fight for a smaller piece of the pie. The chances of a CSU win in next year’s state budget didn’t look promising at a CSU Board of Trustees meeting this past week, either. Brown, who attended the Long Beach meetTODD JOHNSON/DAILY49ER ing, told the governing board CSU Chancellor Timothy White proposed a $250 million it will face challenges persuading the state legislature to ap- funding proposal for the academic year 2014-2015. prove its $250 million funding suggested catching up on de- care of before you bring more proposal for 2014-2015. That ferred maintenance of aging students in.” request is roughly $110 mil- buildings across the CSU beWhite conceded Friday that lion more than the legislature’s fore expanding the number of persuading lawmakers to give planned 2014-2015 budget for students it enrolls. CSU everything the Board of the CSU. “If you take more people than Trustees wants will be difficult, Under the Board of Trustee’s you’re already serving, you’re but he continued to emphasize plan, much of the additional going to expand the need for the importance of increasing money would go toward ad- space, gas and electricity,” the number of students in Calmitting 22,000 additional stu- Brown said, according to the ifornia higher education. dents and adding 1,000 more Associated Press. “It sounds see CSU, pg. 3 classes. But Brown instead like buildings need to be taken
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