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THURSDAY MAY 5, 2016
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Celebrate Cinco de Mayo the right way By Elizabeth Avalos
Spring 2016 Issue 5
Reclaiming Latino and Latina
STAFF WRITER
SEE OPINION PAGE 3
BERNIE WON'T QUIT ON SUPPORTERS
SEE SPORTS PAGE 11
WATER POLO LOSE CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP
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NEWS
Faculty approve contract agreement
Cinco de Mayo is upon us again which means tequila shots, margaritas, chips, salsa and guacamole are served in more copious amounts than usual. This is because most of America and it’s advertisers know no better way to commercialize and celebrate this historically Mexican holiday. The fifth of May, which is the English translation for Cinco de Mayo, is a holiday that commemorates Mexico’s victory over French forces in Puebla, Mexico in 1862, according to an article by the History Channel. A common misconception about Cinco de Mayo is that it is designed to celebrate Mexican Independence Day, but this is false. Aside from being celebrated with much less fanfare in Mexico than in the United States, Cinco de Mayo also holds much less significance than Mexican Independence Day, which is commemorated on September 16. In Mexico, Cinco de Mayo is not known as that, but rather as the day of La Batalla de Puebla, which means The Battle of Puebla. According to the History Channel’s website, Mexico’s triumph in the Battle of Puebla gained immediate historical significance due to the unlikely victory; an outnumbered, poorly equipped Mexican army of about 2,000 men defeated a strong, fully prepared French army of about 6,000 men backed by heavy artillery. This triumph quickly became a symbolic moment of resistance, courage and determination against European domi-
PHOTO COURTESY OF MARIQUIS JARAMILLO
Poet Erika Vivianna Céspedes.
By Marquis Jaramillo CONTRIBUTOR
Trump turned his attention immediately to Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, as his campaign began seriously considering vice presidential running mates. “We’re going after Hillary Clinton, she will not be a great president, she will not be a good president, she will be a poor president,” he told supporters. Cruz, the last best hope of Republican insiders desperate to stop Trump, was a beaten man Tuesday. He put everything he had into Indiana, picking Carly Fiorina as a running-mate, getting rival John Kasich to stop campaigning in the state and securing the backing of Gov. Mike Pence. Nothing worked. Network exit polls showed Trump winning among men and women, virtually all age groups, even among the born-again and evangelical voters Cruz had courted so assiduously. Just as he had in states across the nation. “Together we left it all on the field in
At a recent “Una Noche de Poesia” event in the Diversity Center at Cal State East Bay, the aroma of café y pan dulce — coffee and sweet bread — filled the dimly-lit room. The evening was dedicated to the work of a unique group of poesia y artistas — poets and artists — who are part of a sub-community within the Latin community, who identify as “Chicanx” or “Latinx.” Members of this group use the terms “Latinx” and “Chicanx” to identify those of Latin descent who are gender neutral, gender non-conforming, gender fluid, agender or genderqueer. The “Latinx” and “Chicanx” movement is a reclamation of the terms Latino and Latina, census terms introduced in 1997 by the federal Office of Management and Budget as an alternative to the term “Hispanic.” It is a reclamation because the terms Latino and Latina are both gender binary, and the world is no longer strung strictly to those two binaries. Bay Area Latin poets like Suzana De Jesus Huerta, Joanna Villegas, Yosimar Reyes and Erika Vivianna Céspedes told stories about their ancestors and offered personal reflections during the “Una Noche de Poesia” event, which was hosted by student Mariela Esquivel from the Diversity and Inclusion Center on the CSUEB campus. At the event, each poet brought a different perspective to the stage about the intersectionality of being gay and Latin in a culture where being a part of the LGBTQ community is frowned upon. They shared their personal narratives about identity, citizenship, family relationships, romantic relationships and sexuality. Yosimar Reyes, 27-year-old San Francisco State graduate with a degree in creative writing, talked about his relationship with his family and loved ones as a gay and undocumented citizen in the United States. However, he brought a comedic flare to the serious topics, revealing that while he struggled at times, he was able to battle stereotypes, like the time he got into his first fight. “So here I am, about to get into my first fight being coached by a chola,” Reyes recalled. “They couldn’t believe that the little feminine boy beat the bully’s ass.” Another young poet, Erika Céspedes, a 29-year-old pursuing a master’s degree in ethnic studies at SFSU, spoke about her relationship with her family, who chose not to deal with her sexuality. She recalled awkward moments at family reunions, and nights where she and her friends ran wild in the streets of San Francisco. “For years it felt like my family
SEE POLITICS PAGE 10
SEE FEATURES PAGE 4
PHOTO COURTESY OF DBKING
Dancers at the annual Cinco de Mayo Festival in Oakland last year. nance — especially as Mexico’s battle of resistance continued. Although Cinco de Mayo is a day that symbolized Mexican pride and patriotism, it is not recognized as a federal holiday in Mexico. Students get the day off from school, but banks, stores and offices remain open. So this leads to one major question: why does the United States make such a big deal out of Cinco de Mayo? Accord-
ing to The Daily Dot, an online newspaper that covers Internet culture and life, Mexico’s improbable victory over the French was favorably seen by the United States because they feared having France in such close proximity to the Confederacy. The History Channel’s website further explains that Chicano activists first raised awareness of this holiday in America in the
SEE OPINION PAGE 6
By Louis LaVenture EDITOR-IN-CHIEF The “Fight for 5” looks like it could be coming to an official end for faculty and staff of the California State University system. On Tuesday, the California Faculty Association, the union that represents the CSU staff and faculty members, announced that its members approved a tentative agreement through an online ballot conducted from April 22 to 29. According to the CFA, 63 percent of the faculty and staff voted, with 97 percent voting in favor of the agreement. “CSU faculty are in the classrooms, facilitating student learning and achievement, which is the whole point of a public university,” CFA President and Cal State East Bay professor Jennifer Eagan said in a statement through the CFA on Tuesday. “This agreement is an important step toward normalizing salaries for public state university faculty.” On April 8 the CFA and CSU averted a planned strike for April 13 to 15, 18 and 19 when the tentative agreement was first reached. Now that it has been approved by the CFA, the CSU Board of Trustees must ratify it and are scheduled to meet on May 24 and 25, according to the CFA. The agreement includes three general salary increases for all faculty. The first is a five percent increase on June 30, the second is a two percent increase on July 1 and the last is a three and a half percent increase on July 1, 2017. The agreement also includes a 2.65 percent service salary increase for eligible faculty and an increase in promotion for tenure-track faculty up to nine percent from seven and a half, according to the CFA and CSU.
PHOTO COURTESY OF JIAHE WEI
Donald Trump protesters collide with police in Burlingame on Friday when he spoke at the Hyatt Regency.
Analysis: Now, nothing between Trump, and GOP title, and Clinton By David Lightman
MCCLATCHY WASHINGTON BUREAU (TNS) Once unthinkable, Donald Trump now is the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee for president. That became a certainty Tuesday as he crushed rival Ted Cruz in Indiana, drove the Texas senator out of the race, and set the course to clinch the needed delegates in the next few weeks. The nomination of the brash man with no political experience sets the party and the nation on a collision course with all-but-certain Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, herself an unprecedented choice of a major party. And it will be a jarring campaign, underscored anew Tuesday as Trump lashed out at his last GOP rival even en route to defeating him, accusing his father of playing some role in the assassi-
nation of JFK. Now assured of a first ballot nomination at the GOP convention in July, Trump has shattered the rules of how a prospective president should look, talk, behave and campaign _ making the general election run, likely against Clinton, unpredictable, vicious and volatile. There’s never, in modern times, been a candidate such as Trump. He’d never run for elective office. He largely funded his own effort. He spewed gaffes and lived _ and proudly boasted about _ the sort of glamorous, amorous lifestyle that for years had doomed other candidates. He unapologetically insulted and offended women, Mexican-Americans and the leaders of his own party. Democrats were almost giddy Tuesday at the prospect of running against the billionaire businessman. “Trump spreads hate,” tweeted Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Democratic Party chairwoman, “and we will defeat him in November.”