February 19, 2015

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Dating in your senior year: What happens next? visit mustangnews. net for the full multimedia story

DAKOTA GREENWICH | MUSTANG NE WS STAY OR SPLIT? | Senior couples must decide whether to stay together after graduation, with at least one partner often moving away for a job or graduate school. Some actively try to find work near each other.

Florence Chui Special to Mustang News

Laurie Nakagawa, an industrial engineering graduate student, and industrial technology senior Greg Wee have been in love for three years. Now, as they both approach the end of their senior year, they face the largest hurdle their relationship has come in contact with: graduation. “We have been trying to see if we can try to get jobs that are close to each other, because right

now we visit each other very often,” Nakagawa said. “We’re almost living with each other.” College has always been a place to learn and grow, as well as a place where many people enter their first serious relationship. That relationship, however, sometimes comes with an expiration date — the day they graduate. According to psychology professor Laura Freberg, students can be under unconscious stress about their relationships when it comes to what will happen

after graduation. “We are conflicted sometimes, and we could even have some, what we would consider, implicit or unconscious feelings about a situation that we really hadn’t thought through,” Freberg said. Most students haven’t been in a serious relationship until college, and when confronted by this sudden issue, they have no prior knowledge on how to handle it properly, Freberg said.

see DATING, pg 4.

Convicted felon Moriarty’s name stays atop scoreboard

JASON HUNG | MUSTANG NE WS SCOREBOARD | Al Moriarty gave the Cal Poly Foundation $625,000 for the naming rights to the scoreboard.

Sky Zimmerman @skycelestee

In 2009, investor Al Moriarty gave the Cal Poly Foundation $625,000 for the naming rights of the Alex G. Spanos Stadium scoreboard. Due to his involvement in a Ponzi scheme, the university wants to remove “Moriarty Enterprises” from the scoreboard. Cal Poly has been trying to work with the trustee handling Moriarty’s assets to remove his name from the scoreboard since September 2013, but the university has been unsuccessful so far in its attempts, university spokesperson Matt Lazier said. Both sides claim the other’s resistant nature toward negotiating and legal matters has slowed the process. Moriarty’s agreement with the Cal Poly Foundation states that “Moriarty Enterprises” shall remain on the scoreboard for the entirety of its

existence, and a possibility of selling the naming rights was not discussed. According to Jeremy Faith, one of the trustee’s attorneys, there are no rights for the name on the scoreboard to be sold or assigned, likely because the $625,000 was given to the Cal Poly Foundation. As the university’s nonprofit 501(c)(3) corporation, donors may use their donations as tax exemptions, which Moriarty did. Since the money Cal Poly received from Moriarty actually belonged to investors, the trustee requests the $625,000 back to return to those Moriarty stole money from. Motions have been made by both parties offering options to settle the dispute, but none have been accepted. The trustee proposed to reopen discussions with Cal Poly last December, yet no meeting occurred. Both the trustee and Cal Poly will continue to work through the court system.

FILE PHOTO | MUSTANG NE WS VERDICT PENDING

| Vice President for Student Affairs Keith Humphrey will issue a final ruling.

PIKE appeals suspension Olivia Proffit @ojproffit

Cal Poly’s Pi Kappa Alpha (PIKE) fraternity has submitted an appeal for its suspension to be reviewed by Vice President for Student Affairs Keith Humphrey. The chapter was suspended in January for party violations and a reported sexual assault. After reviewing the file and case history, Humphrey will decide whether to meet with the leadership of the organization or issue a response based on the arguments made in the document. Ultimately, Humphrey will choose to

keep the current sanctions or make them lighter or stronger. “I know it’s important to the organization to resolve the matter as quickly as possible, but it’s also important that we are thorough and complete in our response,” Humphrey said. “The process will take a reasonable amount of time to gather all the information that I need to make a fair decision.” If Humphrey decides to keep the current sanctions, PIKE could face a six-year suspension. Alpha Gamma Rho (AGR) also has the opportunity to appeal after a decision was made last week to put it on social probation.

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February 19, 2015 by Mustang News - Issuu