DAILY 49ER California State University, Long Beach
Vol. LXVII, Issue 17
Rushing back to campus After more than 40 years, the Zeta Tau Alpha sorority returns to Long Beach State. By Liam Brown Contributing Writer
Zeta Tau Alpha will return to California State University, Long Beach for the first time since its original charter in 1957 as one of the 26 members of the National PanHellenic Conference organization of sororities. In an email, ZTA Extension Director Marlene Conrad expressed the organization’s desire to return to CSULB after 41 years. “Zeta Tau Alpha looks for opportunities to reactivate closed chapters whenever possible, and our chapter at CSULB was no exception,” Conrad said. “As one of the largest institutions in the state of California and the fifth best university in the West, CSULB is an institution we want to grow with.” Conrad described the sorority’s goals for its members as “crown chapter criteria,” which are standards that emphasize leadership, philanthropy and community involvement. Brett Waterfield, director of Student Life and Development at CSULB, said that ZTA’s previous CSULB chapter closed in 1974 as part of “an attitudinal turn” of college students toward political activism and away from Greek life during the Vietnam War. The last NPC sorority chartered on campus was Alpha Omicron Pi in 1965, making ZTA the first to join CSULB in 50 years, Waterfield said. ZTA’s re-colonization will occur in April as a result of their successful application this past spring, Conrad said. Because ZTA is new on campus, the sorority will hold recruitment year long as a way to establish its numbers. Waterfield said that the increasing number of collegiate women joining sororities combined with the tangent number of organizations caused an uneven distribution of members. As a result, CSULB undertook a two-year process to charter a new sorority. After invitations were sent out to all NPC organizations not chartered at CSULB, interested organizations submitted their applications. Waterfield said that
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Tuesday, September 22, 2015
West Nile bites Long Beach 123 80 1 14 28 percent show no symptoms.
cases in California.
Case reported in Long Beach this year.
days for symptoms to appear.
cases on average annually in Long Beach.
Source: Center for Disease Control Graphic by E milio A ldea
The first case of West Nile Virus has been reported in Long Beach. By Mackenzie Martin Staff Writer
Long Beach residents who spend time outside should keep a watchful eye out for bug bites and symptoms of the West Nile Virus, according to city
officials. The Long Beach Health Department confirmed last week the city’s first recorded human case of the West Nile Virus this year. Dr. Mitchell Kushner, a Long Beach city health officer, said that this year Long Beach is actually seeing a downturn in the number of human cases with West Nile Virus. Kushner said that at this same time last year Long Beach had already seen 28 cases. California State University, Long Beach Health Resource Center Coordinator Heidi Girling said that California’s abnormally hot summer
combined with the state’s drought conditions create an ideal environment for mosquito breeding. The West Nile Virus is transmitted through the bite of an infected mosquito with symptoms developing three to 14 days after being bitten, Girling said. The symptoms for West Nile Virus are similar to symptoms of other diseases like the flu or meningitis, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC website also noted that approximately 80 percent of people who are infected show no symptoms, and
about one in 150 may develop a more serious disease, such as brain inflammation or paralysis. “You are more likely to get an STD or be in a car accident than to die from West Nile Virus,” Girling said. As of Sept. 11, 123 human cases and two West Nile Virus related deaths have been reported from 23 California counties, according to the Long Beach Health Department.
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Jordan Daniels | Daily 49er
Tea for view
Artist Kiyomi Fukui stands in front of her installation in her exhibit, Reminiscing Remnants, at California State University, Long Beach’s University Art Museum. The installation is a roll of Japanese Gampi paper that contains drawings made of tea stains and sugar cubes created by participants at a tea ceremony Fukui held outside of the museum. Story on page 4.
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