The Daily Aztec 9/22/2021

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Weds. Sept. 22 - Tues., Sept. 28, 2021 Weekly Print Edition

Vol. 108, Issue 6 www.thedailyaztec.com

San Diego State University’s Independent Student Newspaper Since 1913

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Graduate from Imperial Valley campus earns Scholar Award

OPINION Fifty years later, John Lennon’s song “Imagine” still inspires people around the world. PAGE 4

SPORTS Aztec football takes down Utah in triple overtime thriller in Carson. PAGE 5

MUNDO SDSU MECha tuvo su primera reunión del semestre con el aplauso tradicional de la unidad. PAGE 7

ARTS & CULTURE Criminal Justice teachers play in heavy metal band CANDLE$.

by Adam Correa STAFF WRITER

Lawson Hardrick III, born and raised in San Diego, recently won the Trustee Emeritus Murray L. Galinson Scholar Award. This award was given to him by the Cal State University (CSU) Board of Trustees. The CSU Board of Trustees gave out awards to 23 other students from different CSU schools. Hardrick is the only graduate student from the San Diego State Imperial Valley campus to win this achievement. Hardrick - who is 25 years old - said he identifies as Black, Latinx and queer. He grew up in an economically depressed area of the country. In spring 2021, he graduated from SDSU Imperial Valley with a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology and Public Administration. In a Zoom interview, Hardrick was able to talk about the person he looks up to, his first reaction to receiving the award and how he wants to inspire others. Hardrick said he looks up to Director of the SDSU Institute for Ethics and Public Affairs in Imperial Valley, Mark Wheeler. “He [Wheeler] always wanted me to stay in different

spaces within my community because he does the same thing,” Hardrick said. “If he is unemployed at school that doesn’t mean that he can’t be at different places as well.” Hardrick said he got inspired by Wheeler’s thought process and started to branch out into different spaces within the community. Now, he works with incoming SDSU freshmen and inspires them to push themselves outside their comfort zones. “I can only imagine that they [the freshmen] didn’t get the experience that they wanted in high school when they graduated this past year,” he said. “Now they are at the university which is an outstanding achievement, and I didn’t even get into the university when I was a freshman right out of high school.” When Hardrick got the announcement on Monday Sept. 13 that he won, he said he felt like he received a spam email or fake call. “It just didn’t feel real,” Hardrick said. “I never received

SEE SCHOLAR AWARD, PAGE 2

Photo by Scott Hargrove

Hardrick was one of 23 California State Univeristy students to be selected for this award. He is also a graduate from SDSU’s Imperial Valley campus.

Programs available to students and staff via Counseling and Psychological Services Lucelis Martinez & Brittany Cruz-Fejeran by

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STAFF WRITER, CONTRIBUTOR

FOLLOW US /dailyaztec @TheDailyAztec @thedailyaztec /TheDailyAztec

INDEX News.................................. 2 Opinion..........................3-4 Sports.............................. 5-6 Mundo .............................. 7 The Back Page, Arts............ 8

Photo by Brittany Cruz-Fejeran

Graduate students Katie Kindelan and Faith Curtis relax on the grassy hill near the turtle pond.

COVID-19 has impacted the mental health of students, and how they access the resources available to them on campus. The Counseling and Psychological Services department is all virtual now, but that does not waiver their motivation to help students struggling with self-care. A full list of these resources can be found here, but here are a few to be highlighted. (AAPI)phany is a workshop series that focuses on mental health experiences in the Asian American, Pacific Islander and Desi communities. The Thursday meetups consist of presentations on topics such as interracial relationships, model minority myths and even food! Dr. Koko Nishi, who co-

founded this series with Kathy Nguyen said the best thing about the workshops is that discussions are student-led. Like other organizations, (AAPI)phany had to pause their in-person activities where they occasionally provided boba to their well-attended meetings. Nishi said she was proud of her students pivoting their efforts to virtual outreach for their “Digital Adventure,” coined by one of the former interns. “I think it allowed students who usually wouldn’t be available because of classes and whatnot to join us because [the virtual format] gave them more accessibility,” she said. Nishi highlighted that at the core of (AAPI)phany were the students who lead these discussions with their interests and passions. Belle Phommavong, a recent SEE PROGRAMS AVAILABLE, PAGE 2


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