Daily 49er, February 7, 2018

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CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LONG BEACH

D49er

During Associated Student Inc.’s “Evening With” series, actor and activist Diane Guerrero took the center stage Tuesday night in the USU Ballroom. For coverage, check out daily49er.com.

VOL. LXVIII, ISSUE 45 | FEBRUARY 7, 2018

We have to save money on something and we don’t want to raise student fees. If it’s a disaster, that will be a story for those students to tell. They’ll say we were the class of 2018 and it was a disaster.”

Jane Close Conoley GRADUATION

The day the music died Budget cuts have resulted in significant changes to the 2018 commencement ceremony. By Lauren Martinez Staff Writer

Graduating seniors will be walking the commencement stage without the real-time bravado of graduation classic, “Pomp and Circumstance,” as live music has been cut from the budget this year, in addition to a slight venue change. During a routine Academic Senate meeting Thursday, talks of changes to the College of Liberal Arts commencement ceremony were revealed. An email released to select faculty was disseminated on Jan. 25 announcing the planned changes. The proposed modifications include cutting live music, altering the location from the Quad to the Athletic Soccer Field and reducing the time of the ceremony. Multiple Academic Senate

John Fajardo | LBSU Atheltics

The commencement ceremonies for 2018 will be moved to George Allen Field as a result of budget cuts.

members questioned President Jane Close Conoley regarding the cuts. “The plan, as it’s been presented to me, would save us $100,000

a year,” Conoley said. “It also would reduce some of the liability we experience with the people walking across campus.” According to Conoley, live

music costs approximately $13,000 and it is unclear at this time what the remaining $87,000 savings would be. Due to Governor Jerry Brown’s

proposed budget plan, many public universities like Cal State see BUDGET, page 2

SUSTAINABILITY

Campus makes room for electric parking spaces New parking spaces made for electric vehicle users. By Jessica Jacobs Staff Writer

Hunter Lee | Daily 49er

A vehicle makes use of the electric charging station in lot G7. The stations were installed in an attempt to neautralize greenhouse gas emmissions.

Students who drive electric vehicles now have a brand-new resource to save the environment and the ability to charge their cars on campus. Monday, 40 new electric vehicle

charging stations were planted in Lots G7 and E8 on Cal State Long Beach’s campus to offer students the opportunity to save money while reducing air pollution. Additionally, four single-unit charging stations located in the Palo Verde South and Walter Pyramid Parking Structures were replaced Feb. 5, according to the university’s parking and transportation services website. see PARKING, page 3


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