Volume 64 | Issue 10 | March 10, 2017
"Wake Up Wednesdays" -- Arcade Coffee Roasters brings locally brewed coffee to campus.
B & T , pg. 10
Medeiros adds defense to team -- Goalie brings depth, encouragement to water polo team.
S P O R T S , pg. 12
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“What if we actually did think about our relationship with God and service to others in considering whether to marry... rather than about ... our own desires?” - Joe Slunaker
O P I N I O N , pg. 1 4
Plane crashes into homes Fire erupts in Riverside homes after small plane goes down BY HANNAH PRESTON A&E EDITOR
A twin-engine plane crashed into a Riverside neighborhood Feb. 27, resulting in four fatalities, one injury and the destruction of two homes on Rhonda Road near Riverside Community Church. Reports of what felt like an earthquake were reported to the Riverside Police Department about 4:50 p.m. According to ABC7 news, the deceased were identified as Nouri Hijazi, 83, Dana Hijazi, 67, Joanne Stacey Pierce, 46, and Adine Farelas, 22, all residents of San Jose. The Cessna 310, en route to San Jose from Riverside Municipal Airport, was carrying five passengers. Nouri Hijazi piloted the plane with the five people aboard that included his wife, Dana, and their daughter, Pierce, who died March 8 from injuries she sustained in the crash.
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Randy Plavajka | Banner A crew of firefighters puts out remaining flames from the Feb. 27 plane crash. Riverside officials said there are no indications as to what caused the crash. They were heading home from watching their granddaughter’s cheer competition in Anaheim when the plane crashed into a residential area in the 6000 block of Rhonda
Road for reasons unknown. According to KGO-TV news in San Francisco, Adine Farelas also died in the crash and the only survivor was her mother, Sylvia Farelas, 46.
Randy Plavajka | Banner
Firefighters discuss the next steps in clearing the debris from the scene of a plane crash in Riverside.
Initially, the plane clipped the first house, then crashed into the adjacent house, where flames engulfed the plane and surrounding houses. Two houses were destroyed and some neighboring houses received minor damage. Amy Unger, a 35-year-old resident who lives two streets down from the scene of the plane crash, said she heard and felt the crash. “It felt like a quick earthquake — it was like ‘boom’ and everything rattled and I walked outside shortly after and saw all the smoke and assumed it was a house on fire,”
SEE PLANE CRASH | PAGE 3
Art show encourages campus social interactions
Austin Romito | Banner
Paul Johnson, junior music composition major, attempts to crawl through a tunnel in the “Dog Show” obstacle course.
BY KRYSTA HAWKINS ASST. NEWS EDITOR
Art can be defined in many ways, and some students are taking a more interactive approach to their work.
People walking past Wallace Lawn March 1 were presented with a dog showstyle obstacle course set up on the grass, featuring all the typical parts of a dog show from colorful tunnels to hula hoop jumps.
Contrary to the ordinary course, this one was not set up for dogs but for people to have an interactive artistic experience. Lauren Sankey, senior visual arts major, set up the course for her interactive
arts project for “Contemporary Art Issues,” a new class at California Baptist University. The project was designed to get people out of the classroom mindset and socially engaged in art. “The people make it our art project,” Sankey said. “We always think, ‘What is art?’ Art is what you make it, art is what the experience is and it’s all what you get out of it.” Kristi Lippire, assistant visual arts professor and instructor of the contemporary art class, described the basis of socially engaged art and the focus for these interactive projects. “It requires visual art students to create an artwork that really considers the audience first and get artwork out of the classroom and into everyday life. It forces students to engage and encourage the public in ways they never have with their work
and ideas,” Lippire said. Sankey had participants strap a GoPro camera to their heads while they ran through the obstacle course on their hands and knees. After a couple hours, the course was taken apart and the GoPro recordings of the dog show experience are what will be turned in for Sankey’s art project. Hannah Yokoo, junior visual arts major, participated as referee and “dog” and pointed out the artistic significance of the experience. “This experience is comparable to contemporary art in the way it’s pushing the boundaries of what can be called traditional art,” Yokoo said. “Just like how society changes with time, so does art and how it is represented.” Not only did the obstacle course provide a fun experience for students heading to SEE ART SHOW | PAGE 9
University, PepsiCo sign partnership BY JEFF KISSEL
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR A partnership between PepsiCo and California Baptist University was announced Feb. 21 that includes a multi-year integrated athletic marketing plan and a campus-wide relationship with the company. The marketing agreement with PepsiCo will be the second founding-level partnership for the university’s new Events Center. This agreement will also incorporate PepsiCo products into CBU’s dining locations and will work with Provider, CBU’s main food and beverage distributor, to sell more PepsiCo products to consumers of CBU’s dining establishments. Dr. Micah Parker, director of Athletics for CBU, said there is
SEE PEPSICO | PAGE 2