SPORTS pg. 10: Eastern Washington defeats Cal Poly football, 35-22 Monday, November 18, 2013
Volume LXXVIII, Number 19
Cal Poly Filipinos feel typhoon’s effects RACHEL SUN
@rachellsun
Cal Poly students and faculty members of Filipino descent are dealing with some of the emotions associated with disastrous outcomes of the Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan). Although Filipinos live all across the globe, many of them still have close ties to their country. The United Nations reported this week more than 11 million people are believed to have been affected and some 673,000 displaced. “It’s hard for me,” Cal Poly degree audit analyst K. Sheerin Castillo said. “I still feel a very tight affinity with the people there. My friends and family are still there. I’ve even been to some of the places the storm hit, too, which is petrifying to me.” Castillo’s immediate family lives in Manilla, north of where the storm hit. But they are still being affected by the typhoon. “It’s all connected,” she said. “There is a close link between what has happened to those in the Visayas and those people living in Manilla.” Cultural clubs on campus have been teaming up to
www.mustangnews.net
ASI considers transparency program BENJY EGEL
@BenjyEgel
Psychology senior Nina Reyes, a first-generation Filipino American, whose family is also from Manilla, acknowledges efforts the world has made to help in times like these. Countries around the world, including the United States, have been sending troops to help in the aftermath of the catastrophe. “It makes me proud that we are still a world that is willing to help out other countries during their times of need,” Reyes said.
Important budget information can be hidden behind confusing spreadsheets and dull numbers, but if Associated Students, Inc. (ASI) President Jason Colombini has his way, Cal Poly will be on the cutting edge of government transparency. The Student Success Fee Allocation Advisory Committee is considering using a budget transparency program called OpenGov to show the public where Student Success Fees go. OpenGov reorganizes raw budget numbers in easyto-read graphs and charts to help the public identify funding going into each section of the government. The committee consists of Colombini, the Board of Directors’ top vote-getters from each academic college and six staff members. “(OpenGov) is a very easily accessible way to view the budget, whether through graphs, pie charts or raw numbers,” Colombini said. “It’s a really good way to increase transparency.” The cost of using OpenGov differs based on the budget being organized, but Colombini said it would probably be approximately $1,500. The premise of OpenGov aligns with two of Colombini’s three goals for the year: growing and developing ASI student government, and effectively
see TYPHOON, pg. 3
see ASI, pg. 2
COURTESY PHOTO
Cal Poly’s Pilipino Cultural Exchange club baked cookies to raise funds for the Red Cross in the Philippines. raise awareness and funds for this disaster. Pilipino Cultural Exchange (PCE) club president Calvin Choy
I still feel a very tight affinity with the people there. My friends and family are still there. I’ve even been to some of the places the storm hit, too, which is petrifying to me. K. SHEERIN CASTILLO DEGREE AUDIT ANALYST
and co-coordinator Serena Brown have set up a webpage that allows people to donate online. “We also have jars that circulate around the room so people can just drop a couple dollars in,” Choy said. “At PCE performing group practices, our traditional and hip-hop groups as well as our choir, we also stop by with the jars.” PCE is selling lumpia, which is a Filipino version of an eggroll, and baking cookies this weekend to raise funds. There are also international
mobilization efforts happening in Manilla to pack goods and prepare resources to ship to the Visayas Islands. “I spoke with my sister in Manilla; she said every time she watches the news, she cries,” Castillo said. “They have to bring piles of bodies out of the streets.” Castillo has been proactive with helping her native country in the midst of this tragedy by posting links to her Facebook encouraging her friends to send donations to the Facebook page of Ateneo de Manila University, her alma mater.
CIE to present students’ inventions ELLIOT STILLER
@CPMustangNews
Students’ inventions will be put on display at an innovation-driven forum hosted by the Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (CIE) in the Cal Poly Performing Arts Center Pavillion on Wednesday, Nov. 20 from 4:30 to 7 p.m. For the first half hour, attendees will mingle and become familiar with influential community members, faculty and students. After the networking, seven featured inventors will display their creations to the audience; then, the attend-
ees will be broken into groups to brainstorm further application of the product. During the final hour, selected panelists will answer questions posed by a moderator and the audience. “These types of events didn’t exist in San Luis Obispo before CIE was founded,” Chelsea Brown, the program’s media coordinator, said. “We’re a start-up that helps create start-ups. We are trying to build an entrepreneurial ecosystem here.” The CIE was established three years ago with the purpose of discovering innovative people and helping them
successfully capitalize their ideas. CIE has close ties to the community, enabling them to use mentors and consultants. Their Founders’ Circle includes people who want to see the entrepreneurial ecosystem grow on the Central Coast. “A lot of people in CIE are investors, mentors, and you get access to this insider club by being in CIE and being in a program,” outreach coordinator Tiffany Keller said. Forums are held six times a year and typically draw 175 to 200 people, although
COURTESY PHOTO
Rory Aronson, a 2013 Cal Poly alumnus, is a featured inventor at CIE’s forum. He wants to resee CIE, pg. 2 vamp the food production system by developing the FarmBot prototype.
Correction In the Nov. 14 edition of Mustang News, the story “CLA dean pushes for fee increase,” incorrectly listed the current college-based fees as $239.19 for the College of Liberal Arts and $347.19 for the rest of the colleges. The actual CLA fee sunny is $162 and the five other colleges’ fees are $291.
Tomorrow’s Weather: high
INDEX News...........................1-3 Arts.............................4-6
65˚F
Opinions............................7 Classifieds.......................8 Sports..........................9-10
mostly cloudy low 48˚F partially cloudy
cloudy
foggy
windy
light rain
rain
thinderstorm
snow