May 4, 2015

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Behind closed doors:

Abuse in college relationships

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY JASON HUNG | MUSTANG NE WS RED FLAG | According to research from the University of Michigan Sexual Assault Prevention Center, one in five college students have experienced dating violence. Editor’s note: the woman pitcured is not the woman in the article.

Oriana Bardinelli Special to Mustang News

Editor’s note: Caitlyn is a pseudonym. For the protection of her privacy, her name has been changed.

HE’D WAIT UNTIL WE WERE ALONE OR HAD WALKED AWAY (FROM EVERYONE EL SE) AND START CALLING ME NAMES...

Caitlyn had just finished high school and was excited to spend the summer with her boyfriend of four years before they went to college together. Looking back, she never expected the violent turn their relationship was about to take. Caitlyn followed her boyfriend to Cal Poly without sec-

ond-guessing it. But soon after fall quarter began, Caitlyn’s boyfriend began drinking heavily. When she raised concern and became annoyed, he became violent. “He’d wait until we were alone or had walked away (from everyone else) and start calling me names,” she said. “A few times, he pushed me, and then once he just threw me up against the wall.” Dating violence is a pressing concern on college campuses. Students like Caitlyn are faced with the emotional and

physical stress of abuse as they struggle to maintain normal college priorities. According to research conducted by the University of Michigan Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, one in five college students have experienced dating violence at the hands of their partner. It is important to note the stigma of reporting acts of dating violence often prevents many victims from reporting the incident.

A FEW TIMES HE PUSHED ME, AND THEN ONCE HE JUST THREW ME UP AGAINST THE WALL.

see ABUSE, pg 2.

A balancing act: Theatre and dance department to present ‘Spike Heels’

JOSEPH PACK | MUSTANG NE WS BARBIE WORLD | Sophomore catcher Brett Barbier went 4-for-11 in Cal Poly’s series vs. Cal State Northridge.

Baseball squanders series sweep with 6-4 loss to Cal State Northridge Harry Chang & Stephan Teodosescu @CPMustangSports

For the second Sunday in a row, the Cal Poly baseball team had the winning runs on base in the final frame but couldn’t capitalize on the opportunity to complete a series sweep. Down by two with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth inning, senior center fielder Jordan Ellis fouled out to the third baseman, giving the Mustangs a 6-4 loss to Cal State Northridge at Baggett Stadium. The same story played out last Sunday, as sophomore catcher Brett Barbier struck out with two men on and Cal Poly down by a run to Long Beach State in the bottom of the 10th inning.

“We had opportunities,” head coach Larry Lee said. “If you look at statistics of hitting with runners in scoring position, there are guys who are successful and guys who aren’t, and that’s a sign of a quality hitter, is guys who can produce with runners in scoring position. But there’s too many times where we have a chance to do some damage but don’t come through.” Despite winning the three-game set against the Matadors with victories on Friday and Saturday, the Mustangs dropped to 21-23 overall and 9-6 in the Big West standings. Cal State Northridge moved to 27-19 and 6-12 in conference.

see BASEBALL, pg 8.

IAN BILLINGS | COURTESY PHOTO SPOTLIGHT | Jacob Corsaro and Christina Garcia star in “Spike Heels,” which analyzes relationships.

Madi Salvati @MadiSalvati

Have you been feeling disconnected from those around you lately? Does the thought of putting effort into anything except rewatching all six seasons of “Lost” sound familiar? Do your roommates think you’ve gone missing because you’ve been holed up in the library studying for midterms? It sounds like it’s time for a connection intervention. Put down your laptop and step away

from Netflix. Free yourself from the 24-hour study lounge. After you’ve done so, check out the Cal Poly theatre and dance department’s latest production of “Spike Heels” by Theresa Rebeck. How would seeing a modern production of George Bernard Shaw’s “Pygmalion” help you get reconnected?

News... 1-3 | Arts... 4-5 | Opinion... 6 | Classifieds... 7 | Sports... 8

see SPIKE HEELS, pg 5.


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May 4, 2015 by Mustang News - Issuu