Banner | Vol. 67 Issue 5

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Volume 67 | Issue 5 | November 8, 2019

@cbulancermedia cbubanner.com

Daily Brew Coffee House hosts entertainment —

CBU choirs perform first concert together —

SAE team to compete in upcoming race —

L i f e s t y l e , Pg . 7

A & E , Pg . 1 2

B & T , Pg . 1 1

Students can enjoy live music the first Wednesday each month.

Magnolia Singers, Rhapsody, Lancer Chorus performed Nov. 4.

Vice president for Marketing and Communication to retire in January BY JASMINE SEVERI ASST. NEWS EDITOR

Dr. Mark A. Wyatt, California Baptist University’s vice president for Marketing and Communication, announced Oct. 15 that he will be retiring, effective Jan. 31, 2020. Wyatt, also an assistant professor of communication arts, has worked at CBU for 18 years, leading the school’s Division of Marketing and Communication since Aug. 1, 2002. Wyatt said he is fortunate to have worked with Dr. Ronald L. Ellis, president of CBU, and his executive leadership team.

I look forward to celebrating the next wave of achievements at CBU.

Dr. Mark A. Wyatt, vice president for Marketing and Communication He said he has enjoyed assembling and leading the professionals responsible for the institution’s branding, public relations, advertising, media relations, publications and internet marketing. Wyatt said, “I count myself very fortunate to have served with President Ellis and his executive leadership team during this golden age at CBU. “Few other colleges in the nation, if any, have experienced the sustained increases in enrollment, enhanced quality of academic programs, athletics and institutional reputation

‘Servant of Two Masters’ comes to CBU Pg. 13

that CBU has achieved during this period. That all of these have happened together at CBU is a testament to bold visionary leadership, practical know-how, hard work and divine favor.” John Pate, assistant professor and chair of communication arts, said, “He’s always been able to provide wise counsel to us. ... He has been the perfect reflection of what we should be showing to the general public.” Lisa McDonald, administrative assistant to the vice president for Marketing and Communication, has worked with Wyatt for five years. “I am thankful for the opportunity to have worked with Dr. Wyatt,” McDonald said. “I wish him the very best as he pursues his next adventure.” Wyatt said the time feels right for him to retire after a prolific professional life. “I have worked for more than a half century in various professional pursuits,” Wyatt said. “It feels like the time is right for me to step away and pursue other interests.” After his retirement, Wyatt said he is looking forward to traveling with his wife and spending time with their family and nine grandchildren. “I feel honored and humbled to have had a hand in all of this and the tremendous impact CBU is having on so many lives here and around the globe,” Wyatt said. “I can only imagine what God has in store for the Lancer Nation in the years ahead. I look forward to celebrating the next wave of achievements at CBU from a new vantage point.”

Elijah Hickman | Banner

Robert Pendleton, freshman graphic design major, rehearses for the upcoming play, ‘Servant of Two Masters,’ which opens Nov. 15 in Wallace Theatre.

Professors, alumna travel to China, teach students English Faculty and alumna took opportunity to serve in China over summer BY EMILY MCGINN ASST. NEWS EDITOR

Two professors and an alumna from California Baptist University, along with other American teachers, spent two weeks in July teaching middle school students at various locations in China. Brenda Harris, adjunct professor of education, Donna Harris, adjunct professor of English, and Anna Hart, 2019 CBU graduate, went to China through a program called

“Coastline Education” to teach English to give more opportunities to Chinese students. Brenda Harris, Donna Harris and Hart originally learned about the opportunity to teach at Chinese summer camps through the CBU Dr. Bonnie G. Metcalf School of Education in April. After being accepted into the program, they were assigned a subject to teach and a specific school in China. Brenda Harris taught students drama at a summer camp in Shenzhen for one week, and for the second week, she traveled to various schools to promote the camp through example lessons. During these lessons, she taught an English lesson to students at the schools using literature written in English. “Teaching English is like second nature,” Brenda Harris

Engineering students built formula race car from scratch.

said. “It is a tool that I use to reach China’s people. As far as CBU and students here, it is a good (opportunity) for them to see other cultures.” In the past, Brenda Harris worked with “China Outreach Ministries” and has taken multiple trips to China. On this trip, she was able to visit friends and practice her Chinese in addition to teaching students. “I wanted to see as many people as possible because I wanted to keep those connections,” Brenda Harris said. “In Chinese culture, friendship is spending time (together), bringing gifts and being a servant as far as maintaining those friendships.” Donna Harris taught social studies at a summer camp in Jiangshan. Although she observed teaching styles in the

SEE TRIP TO CHINA | PAGE 6

University opens ADC for latenight study hall on weeknights BY JASMINE SEVERI ASST. NEWS EDITOR

So many students, not enough space. Over the past few years, the population of students at California Baptist University has grown immensely. While this has led to great success for the university as a whole, it also brought the need for more study spaces. With few options, students have gotten creative in the past in their search for study areas after hours. Common areas are typically full, leaving students restless in their search for a good study environment. The Annie Gabriel Library is one common place to study, but it closes at 1 a.m. most nights. Students are also able to study in the lobbies of the Yeager Center, Dr. Robert K. Jabs School of Business or the Dennis and Carol Troesh En-

gineering Building, as well as open classrooms, dining areas or Lancer Plaza. However, these areas are often crowded and close early.

Late-night study hall is a great start to meeting students’ needs for spaces to study at night. Emily Sublette, senior computer science major

In a campus-wide email sent Oct. 15, CBU announced students will now have the option to study in the Alumni Dining Commons in the evening. CBU has decided to implement late-night study hall in

the ADC from 9 p.m. to 4 a.m. Monday through Thursday. This will continue throughout the 2019-2020 school year. The Office of Student Success aims to ensure that all students have the necessary resources available to succeed academically, and the most popular suggestion found in CBU’s previous end-of-year student survey was the desire for more study spaces. Dr. Jeff Barnes, dean of Student Success, said his office offers many different resources to students in order to ensure their academic success. These resources include a writing center, mentoring, individual tutoring, success seminars and other methods of academic accountability. “It is the goal in the Office of Student Success to allow students to be

SEE NEW STUDY SPACE | PAGE 2


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