Volume 64 Issue 08

Page 1

HARD DAY OF THE DEAD SEE WHAT’S CHANGED AT THIS YEAR’S MUSIC FESTIVAL 14-15

Highlander University

Volume 64

of

C a l i f o r n i a , R ive r s i d e

Serving the UCR community since 1954

Issue 08

FOR THE WEEK OF TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2015

R’PANTRY HOSTS TEST RUN AT BEAR DEN

VINCENT TA / HIGHLANDER

A student looks through the large selection of food items provided by the R’Pantry as they host a preview day at the Bear’s Den.

JOSEPH AVILA Senior Staff Writer

On November 3, 2015 the R’Pantry hosted a preview day at the Bear’s Den from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Students were encouraged to bring reusable bags, though bags were also provided by R’Pantry volunteers, to fill up on supplemental food items equating a week’s worth of food. The next operation for food distribution through the R’Pantry is December 3. Visitors to the R’Pantry were asked to sign in with their student IDs before they were given access to the pantry. Doing so entered students into a raffle to win $10 in dining dollars if they completed

a survey that asked about student eating habits, access to fresh food and any suggestions they may have to better the food pantry’s future operations. The mission statement written on a white board read, “The UC Food Pantry (R’Pantry) was created as a direct response to the needs among the student population for more resources to fight food insecurity. It has become increasingly difficult for students to juggle the costs of living with the costs of obtaining a university degree, forcing students to choose between essentials such as food and the costs of college. The R’Pantry is here to provide emergency relief to help students continue on to successfully complete & obtain their

degrees at UC Riverside.” The R’Pantry allowed three students at a time to pick out 10 items, two at most from each of the categories labeled condiments, crackers, cereal, gluten-free baking mix, baby food, pasta and teas and coffee, among many others. Smaller items like granola bars were counted differently with four bars equating to one item. Toilet paper, paper towels, tampons and other toiletries were also offered to students. Outside the pantry room was a table of taco shells, taco sauce, hamburger helper and frosting that students were encouraged to take without limit. Jacqueline Moreno, program coordinator at The Well, said that

Cal States face potential tuition hikes IXIA JOHNSON Senior Staff Writer

An advisory panel has recently suggested a plan to the California State University (CSU) Board of Trustees that endorses steadily increasing tuition rates annually at CSU schools. The plan is currently being drafted into a report and is expected to be finalized and released in full to the CSU Board in November and reviewed in January. If the plan is initiated, it will put an end to the currently static tuition rates. The panel believes that its passage

► SEE R’PANTRY PAGE 4

UCR Global Issues Forum hosts inaugural meeting SOM CHATURVEDI Contributing Writer

would help harbor financial stability and accommodate the increasing number of students being enrolled each year. “The report is designed to initiate a dialogue about the CSU’s future and how we can continue to serve students with limited resources,” Toni Molle, a spokeswoman for Cal State and former UCR Chancellor Timothy White, asserted to Press Enterprise. Molle said that the report outlines a number of possible actions that the CSU system can take, which do not include plans for increases from ► SEE TUITION, PAGE 5

the R’Pantry had initially planned to service 150 students but according to data aggregated from the preview day, they exceeded that number and serviced around 157 students while still having food left over. Michael Ervin, ASUCR vice president of campus internal affairs, who was a part of organizing and advocating for the R’Pantry and attended the event said of the test run, “It’s a culmination of months and months of work between all sorts of different student orgs and departments. A lot of people had their hands on this and I want to give credit where credit is due. It’s definitely something that originated

COURTESY OF THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Distinguished Professor Richard Alba.

NEWS 1 • OPINIONS 7 • FEATURES 12 • A&E 17 • SPORTS 23

The UCR Global Issues Forum held its first meeting on Thursday night to discuss immigration policies that are adopted and enforced by western nations, the statistics of who these migrants are and the socioeconomic implications of their integration and assimilation within countries. Thursday night’s forum, entitled “Comparing Immigration Policy in the U.S. and Europe,” featured a panel of three experts in the fields of immigration, political science and public policy — specifi-

cally, Distinguished Professor Richard Alba from The City University of New York Graduate Center, Associate Professor Sara Goodman from UC Irvine, and UCR’s Professor Karthick Ramakrishnan. The forum entailed all three panelists giving presentations on their approaches and interpretations of immigration trends and policies, followed by a Q-and-A session from the audience. Alba began his presentation by emphasizing the distinction between immigration policy and integration, the latter be► SEE FORUM, PAGE 4

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