The Pioneer Newspaper May 26, 2016

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THE PIONEER Covering the East Bay community since 1961

California State University, East Bay

News, Art, & Culture for the East Bay

THURSDAY MAY 26, 2016

www.thepioneeronline.com

Spring 2016 Issue 8

Train kills mother, daughter in San Leandro SEE OPINION PAGE 2

COUNTRY MUST SETTLE ON A LEADER

PHOTO COURTESY VANESSA HENRIQUEZ

SEE FEATURES PAGE 8

By Louis LaVenture

DIY SKATE PARK BECOMES OFFICIAL

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

ILLUSTRATION BY ARIANA GONZALEZ/THE PIONEER

Civil rights activist to visit Hayward Elizabeth Avalos

SEE FEATURES PAGE 10

STUDENTS HOST PILIPINX CONSCIOUSNESS NIGHT

#PIONEERNEWS /thepioneernewspaper @thepioneeronline @newspioneer

Warriors on brink of elimination

STAFF WRITER

American labor leader and civil rights activist Dolores Huerta is set to visit Cal State East Bay on May 31 to speak and reflect on her life and work in the labor movement in a presentation titled, “Lessons Learned: Past, Present and Future.” The event will take place at the University Theatre from noon to 1 p.m. and food will be served before the event from 11:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. The event is free but pre-registration is highly encouraged due to limited seating. Huerta’s visit to Cal State East Bay, co-hosted by the Office of University Diversity, the Chicano/Latino Faculty & Staff Association and the Associated Students, Inc., came about as the uni-

versity celebrated Cesar Chavez Day in March, said Dr. Lettie Ramirez, professor in the Department of Teaching Education. “At the university we try to celebrate our diversity. This year we wanted to bring Dolores Huerta who was Cesar Chavez’s left and right hand, to celebrate all the work that they have done for all farm workers,” Ramirez said. “As time goes by we often forget all the struggles and efforts that many have gone through and it is important to bring all the lessons that they learned from the past.” The title of the presentation was given by Cal State East Bay, and Huerta will be speaking about movements and leaderships that she helped mobilize, as well as how to advance leadership in our communities today. According to Ramirez, bringing Huerta’s lessons and sharing them with

the Cal State East Bay community is important because many continue to experience similar struggles to those that she has been fighting to improve. “We are currently experiencing a high dropout rate of Latinos at the high school level, as well as the university,” Ramirez stated. “We have a low graduation rate that President Morishita wants to change. We need to remember how much we’ve improved and how much work we have ahead.” According to the Dolores Huerta Foundation, Huerta was born Dolores Clara Fernandez in April of 1930 in a small mining town in the mountains of northern New Mexico. Following her parent’s divorce at the age of three, Huerta moved with her mother and brother to Stockton, California where she spent most of her childhood and

SEE NEWS PAGE 3

East Bay loses another head coach By Louis LaVenture EDITOR-IN-CHIEF PHOTO COURTESY OF NHAT V. MEYER/ BAY AREA NEWS GROUP/TNS

By Louis LaVenture EDITOR-IN-CHIEF This has been a season of firsts for the defending champion Golden State Warriors, which includes the 73 regular season wins, the most by any team in NBA history. However, it was a first of sorts that doomed the Warriors on Tuesday night in Oklahoma City. After getting blown out 133-105 on Sunday night, Warrior fans were confident going into game 4 since the team hadn’t lost back-to-back games all season. The Thunder gave Golden State another first when they blew them out again 118-94, the first time the Dubs have lost two games in a row this year. Oklahoma City guard Russell Westbrook became just the third player in NBA history to record a triple-double against the defending champions with 35 points or more as he tallied 36 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists in the victory. The Warriors now find themselves on the brink of elimination down 3-1 in a series for the first time in the Steve Kerr era. They were down 2-1 two times during the playoffs last year to the Memphis Grizzlies in the Western Conference Semifinals and in the NBA Finals against the Cleveland Cavaliers, but overcame both of those deficits en route to an NBA title.

SEE NEWS PAGE 3

Coaches leaving is not new at Cal State East Bay. In the last year, the school has seen its track, cross country, softball and men’s soccer coaches all leave for other opportunities. This trend continued last week when CSUEB swimming Head Coach Ben Loorz accepted the head job at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. “I am certainly not running away,” Loorz said. “We have an awesome lineup for next season, and whoever takes over this program is going to have a great time.” The squad that finished in second place at the Pacific Collegiate Swim and Dive Conference championship will return 14 of 23 swimmers and lose nine seniors to graduation. It is a homecoming of sorts for Loorz, who was an assistant coach at UNLV from 2007-2010, during which the team won three consecutive Mountain West Conference championships. “The personal capital I have in UNLV Athletics opened some doors for me,” Loorz said. “From there, the pieces fell into place. Our family is in Northern California, so this decision was incredibly hard, but in the end, it is such a unique opportunity to step up to DI Athletics, and also to coach both men and women.” During his six-year tenure at East Bay, Loorz led his team to three second place conference finishes and qualified for the NCAA championships twice, where they finished 21st in 2013 and 15th in 2014. Under Loorz, Pioneer swimmers have broken 20 of 21 records in every event except the 100 individual medley, which was set by Julie Radecke during the 19871988 season.

PHOTO BY TAM DUONG JR./THE PIONEER

Former CSUEB Swimming head coach Ben Loorz talks to his women's swimming team after a home meet in 2014. Loorz was an assistant under UNLV longtime Head Coach Jim Reitz, who was a fixture for the Rebels for 35 years until he retired prior to the start of this past season. Bobby Folan served as the UNLV Interim Head Coach in 2015-2016, but after the sea-

son, the school decided to open the position, which eventually went to Loorz. The UNLV women finished in fourth place last season at the conference championships while the men finished tied for 23rd place at the NCAA championships in Atlanta in March.

A mother and her 3-year-old daughter from Oakland were killed by a train in San Leandro on Tuesday afternoon. Thirty-year-old Vanessa Marisol Henriquez was running errands with her daughter Saidy when her Toyota Rav-4 stopped on the train tracks near Chapman Road and Washington Avenue, according to family members. The vehicle was struck by the Capitol Corridor Amtrak Train headed from San Jose to Sacramento and both victims were pronounced dead at the scene. “The heavy traffic in the area may have forced the vehicle to stop on the tracks,” San Leandro Police

SEE NEWS PAGE 3

Professor emeritus of psychology dies By Kali Persall MANAGING EDITOR Dr. Lyle D. Edmison, professor emeritus of psychology and former vice president of Student Services, died on May 4 in Cameron Park, California, according to an announcement from the Office of Academic Affairs. He was 91 years old. Edmison was hired at East Bay in 1959, the same year the school was founded by President Fred F. Harcleroad, who passed away at age 93 in 2012. According to the official CSUEB website, in 1959, the school was known as the State College for Alameda County. A few years and name revisions later, it was renamed California State College at Hayward in 1961. According to the Office of Academic Affairs, Edmison was the first person hired by President Harcleroad at CSC Hayward. Edmison remained involved with the campus after his retirement. East Bay’s Annual Report of Private Giving shows that Edmison and his wife Phyllis contributed between $1,000 to $2,499 in the Director’s Circle category as recently as the 2006-2007 year. Edmison served as the associate dean of students until 1961, when he was appointed dean of students and later vice president of Student Services in 1984. He retired in 1991 with a number of recognitions under his belt, including the NASPA Foundation Scott Goodnight Award for Outstanding Performance as a Dean from Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education in 1982. According to the Office of Academic Affairs, a memorial service is not scheduled at this time, pending a family decision later this year.


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