CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LONG BEACH
VOL. LXVIII, ISSUE 70 | FEBRUARY 27, 2017
FINANCES
Forum discusses tuition increases Students voice their concerns on increasing CSU tuition. A lively woman joins parading Samba dancers at the Long Beach Mardi Gras 2017 celebration on Saturday.
Photos by Christian Park | Daily 49er
Staff Writer
Bring on the booze and beads
L
ong Beach residents didn’t need it to be Tuesday for Mardi
Gras
celebrations
to kick off across the city. Revelers clad in purple, green, blue and yellow speckled the Pike, Shoreline Village and an assortment of bars to honor the holiday of over-consumption on Saturday. Mardi Gras, which translates to Fat Tuesday, is recognized the day before Ash Wednesday as a sort of last hurrah before Lenten fasting.
By Matthew Ramirez
A man donning a rubber horse mask gives out decorative Mardi Gras beads to eager parade attendants.
Following the recent plans to increase student tuition, Dale Lendrum of Associated Students Inc. and Maggie White from the California State University Board of Trustees held an open forum for students to voice their opinions. Fees are predicted to increase after announcements made by the CSU Board of Trustees propose to increase tuition for undergraduate and graduate students. Students may have to pay an additional $270 a year for undergraduates, $312 a year for credentialed students and another $438 a year for graduate students “How many of you have an extra $270 on you a year?” Lendrum asked students. While students did not openly reply, it was clear that they did not approve of this initiative. Looks of agitation were visible in the faces of students who lat-
see FEES, page 2
ADMINISTRATION
CSU Super Sunday reaches Long Beach churches
By James Conley Staff Writer
February is Black History Month, but Cal State Long Beach’s Super Sunday was all about the future. CSULB’s president, Jane Close Conoley, spoke to the congregation at Antioch Church of Long Beach before
their service Sunday morning and her message was simple: “college is for you.” “CSU Super Sunday reaches out to churches statewide as one of many events coordinated by CSU’s African American Initiative, an effort to increase the preparation and retention of African-American students,” according to a press-release from CSULB. Regardless of an individual’s age or circumstance, they can attend and afford college, Conoley said. “The federal Pell Grant alone is $900 million a year; there is a lot of money available for you to get your degree,” Conoley said. “Any family that makes under $70,000 annually can have their education fully covered by grants.” Forty percent of CSULB’s students are the first in their families to attend
“
“
President Conoley speaks at a local church with the hopes of raising attendance and graduation rates at CSULB.
The federal Pell Grant alone is $900 million a year; there is a lot of money available for you to get your degree. -Jane Close Conoley, CSULB President
college, 51 percent of them are on the Pell Grant and just over half of them graduate with zero student loan debt, she said in her presentation. Anyone
see SUNDAY, page 2
President Jane Close Conoley worked with the congregation at Antioch Church of Long Beach to increase the preparation and retention of African-American students in the CSU system.