DAILY 49ER California State University, Long Beach
Vol. LXVII, Issue 34
Fall semester to see forced Friday classes
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Column
Exxon needs to feel the heat
Academic Senate has agreed on a two-year trial period that will affect about 300 sections of classes.
There should be no leeway left for environmental criminals.
BY VALERIE OSIER Assistant News Editor
The “Monday through Thursday mentality” on campus will be interrupted next fall. A compromise between Academic Senate and administration will allow for a two-year pilot program that will push departments to offer Friday classes. As of next fall, California State University, Long Beach will have the largest number of students on campus since 2008. The scheduling for fall 2016 is happening now, so the administration needs to come up with a solution now, said Dhushy Sathianathan, Interim Vice President of Academic Planning. “The focus is not how faculty teach the class or how students take the class, it’s basically saying how we use the rooms,” Sathianathan said. “So you could have a schedule … that says we can have a two-day class on Monday and Wednesday, we can have a one-day class on a Friday, or you can have a Monday, Wednesday, Friday class. But we’re not saying that all classes have to be Monday, Wednesday, Friday. We’re saying the rooms have to be used for
See CLASSES, page 2
Thursday, October 22, 2015
DANIELLE DELGADO | DAILY 49ER
On Wednesday, Alex Bellenger stands in reflection while reading messages victims of sexual violence wrote on shirts for the Clothesline Project on Friendship Walk.
Abuse survivors wear their hearts on their sleeves The Clothesline Project and Take Back the Night break the silence about sexual assault. BY NORMA P. GARCIA Contributing Writer
Survivors and victims openly displayed their feelings about sexual and domestic violence at The Clothesline Project and Take Back the Night rally held on campus Wednesday. The Clothesline Project was a visual display of T-shirts hung on a clothes-
line that survivors of different types of violence decorate. The YWCA Greater Los Angeles founded the project in 1993 to encourage women to break the silence about violence against women. “It’s really important to know that when assault is kept silent, that’s when the cycle continues,” Sexual Assault Victim’s Advocate Candis Simmons-Davis said, “When the silence is broken that’s when the violence can stop, and survivors can get help. Each T-shirt color on the line symbolizes a different type of abuse. Yellow and beige represented women who survived domestic violence. Red, pink and orange shirts were for those that survived rape and sexual assault. Blue and green represented the ones that have survived incest and sex-
Branden Raulston Assistant Arts & Life Editor
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ual abuse, while purple and lavender T-shirt represented those that were targeted because of their sexuality. Black and gray shirts were made to honor both women and men who survived gang rape. White T-shirts represented the people who have died because of the violence. “Most victims feel isolated, ashamed and terrified to report or get counseling, but when they do speak up they learn that they are not alone and can get the healing they need,” Simmons-Davis said. According to the Sexual Assault Victim’s Advocate pamphlet, one in
merica has been given the perfect opportunity to make an example of a deceitful company, and to not deliver the harshest of punishments and set an intimidating standard would be a grave mistake. A recently published investigation from the LA Times and InsideClimate News has shown Exxon to have been unforgivably irresponsible in its actions. The investigation found that not only did Exxon determine that fossil fuels were a significant contributor to climate change as early as the 1970s, as well as identify the harm it would cause, but also that a warming planet would reduce the cost of drilling and exploration.
See SHIRT, page 2
See EXXON, page 5
Taking a leap of faith over adversity First-time business owner and CSULB alumna opens book bar in Downtown Long Beach. BY ARIANA SAWYER Contributing Writer
As a child, Samantha Argosino wanted to drive a yellow school bus. Then she wanted to play professional volleyball (until she stopped growing at 5-foot-2-inches).
NEWS 2
Now, she is the owner and designer of new business, The Brass Lamp Book Bar and Lounge – the first of its kind on the Promenade in downtown Long Beach. While many bars use book-lined walls as decoration, The Brass Lamp is the first combined bookstore and bar in Southern California and one of few in the nation. It opens early for coffee drinkers and closes late for an after-work cocktail or a mellow jazz show. “To me, this is more than just a job,” Argosino, 34, said. “I’m excited to see what this place holds for the community. I want people to feel like, when they don’t want to be
OPINIONS 4
home working…that they can come here.” She that said she created the book bar to showcase local creative talents, promote Long Beach businesses and give people somewhere they can congregate and feel at home. But as a first time business owner, she struggled to find support. “The banks all told me, ‘This concept doesn’t exist,’” Argosino said. “And I don’t come from money. I had to work hard for this myself.” She is a first-generation Filipina-American from a working-class home. After she finally found a loan, property owners and landlords didn’t want to risk renting space to
her. Knowing that Argosino lacked experience and that restaurants often fail, they were afraid she would dig herself into a financial hole. Not even her friends or family believed in her until the very end. She was determined to push through. “It’s like as long as I stay focused on my purpose, that stuff doesn’t bother me anymore,” Argosino said. When she finally found the location at 245 Promenade and began construction, even her contractor wanted to quit, she said. Its long-awaited opening day came last weekend, five months behind schedule, along with unex-
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pected certificates of recognition from Rep. Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) and Mayor Robert Garcia. Besides the standard bar area and table and chair seating, there is a stage area in front of a mural; reupholstered mismatched chairs around a table and fireplace in the corner; and three private rooms with glass and wood panels. To use the private rooms, patrons must purchase two items. The design of the book bar reflects Argosino’s bachelor’s degree in psychology and communications
See BOOK, page 7
SPORTS 8