daily 49er feb. 16, 2015

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Vol. LIX, Issue 817 www.daily49er.com Monday, February 16, 2015 NEWS 2 OPINIONS 6 DIVERSIONS 4 SPORTS 8 D AILY 49 ER California State University, Long Beach e Associated Student Inc. Grow Beach! community garden is under way. e manpower of about 70 vol- unteers consisting of ASI represen- tatives, Grow Beach! members and plot owners began to build and raise garden plots behind the Isabel Pat- terson Child Development Center on Sunday. “I have this vision that’s coming into play, and I’ve been working on this for almost two years now,” ASI Vice President Nayiri Baghdassarian said. “ So seeing something tangible, its great.” Baghdassarian said that volunteers had been working since about 10 a.m. and planned to finish as much as pos- sible Sunday so that soil can be laid out and students can be planting by next week. e Board Chair of Grow Beach! Elizabeth Flores said that once they are finished building the garden box- es, the physical planning and facili- ties management department can set up fencing and gates for security and build ADA regulated cement path- ways and ramps. As she was lending a hand to the building process, freshman theater major Megan Benetta said she would be renting a plot this semester. She said she plans to plant tomatoes, green beans and carrots once the plots are ready for gardeners. “My mom used to grow a lot of vegetables and I always liked doing it with her,” Benetta said. “And I’ve been looking for something to keep me occupied.” Baghdassarian said that all gar- dening would be organic. She said that Grow Beach! Plans to host work- shops to teach organic gardening. Grow Beach! Holds meetings every other week. Flores said that three quarters of the 88 plots have already been claimed. Applications to rent a plot for the semester are open until all slots are full. Grow Beach! hosted a build-it day for the community garden this weekend. By Amy Patton News Editor By Brooke Becher Diversions Editor BUILDING AT THE BEACH Mustangs break 49ers’ hearts Clan culture bydand! A trio of injuries derailed the women’s basketball team in an overtime thriller on Valentine’s Day. Scotsfestival attendees represented their ancestral ties with traditional festivities and tartans at the Queen Mary. e Long Beach State women’s basketball team lost three key players to injury in a heartbreak- ing 58-57 loss in overtime to Cal Poly Saturday in the Walter Pyra- mid. ree pivotal 49er players went down with injuries: Junior center Devin Hudson, sophomore guard Raven Benton and sophomore guard Jewelyn Sawyer. Hudson leſt in the first half af- ter coming down awkwardly on a rebound attempt. LBSU carted off Benton, the team’s leading scorer, on a wheelchair and took her to the hospital aſter getting hit hard on a layup attempt. e team has not released and update on her status. Cal Poly’s Taryn Garza fouled Sawyer hard over the back and knocked her out of the game. Sawyer and Benton were having big games before they exited. Ben- ton had 13 points while Sawyer crashed the boards and collected nine rebounds. Hudson returned in the second half, but her injury limited her playing time and role in the game. Head coach Jody Wynn said the three injured players are doubtful for the upcoming games. “I’m not counting on any of them to play,” Wynn said. “Not to be a Debbie-downer, but they’re in pretty excruciating pain.” Sophomore guard Anna Kim drained a jump shot with 13.2 seconds leſt on the game-clock to give LBSU a one-point lead in overtime. e 49ers defense needed to make one more stop to secure a win. Cal Poly (12-11, 7-4) senior guard Ariana Elegado beat the 49ers with a game-winning layup in the final seconds of overtime. “Just coming off that last play I knew I wanted to take it to the hole,” Elegado said. Elegado’s game-winning field goal was the ninth lead change of the game. e Cal Poly bucket capped off an up-and-down game for both sides. “It was pretty crazy,” Elegado said. “[I had] chills almost the whole game. I felt like it was a championship game. So many people were into it. We had pas- sion for it.” e 49ers offensive drought See INJURIES, page 8 See SCOTS, page 4 By William Hernandez Assistant Sports Editor WOMENS BASKETBALL DIVERSIONS Afloat the iconic 1936 ocean- liner-turned-hotel moored in Long Beach might be the last place one would expect to find a plaid sea of kilt-clad clans tapping their ghillies to blaring bagpipes and tossing 20-foot cabers. Queen Mary traded her sun- bathing seals for sheep-herding demonstrations on Saturday at the 22nd annual Scotsfestival, the longest running annual event, ac- cording to Steve Sheldon, director of events at the Queen Mary. “e music, the whiskey and the craic—the friendliness—are what bring us out today,” Michael O’Donoghue, a festival-goer, said while spectating the sheaf toss competition, head-to-toe in Celtic garb with traditional, evergreen Irish tartan. “Everyone feels open enough to walk up and talk to you about what you’re wearing; you can’t come here and just be closed off.” Traditional wool-woven skirts and their cross-hatched designs have extended beyond the post- romantic era of Highland-dress code into the modern age of liber- ty-spiked punk rockers and on the racks of stores like Forever 21 and Hot Topic. Although they originally served as a military insignia to earmark troops, tartans eventu- ally became the unifying crest for Scottish clans of the early 19th century. “[Tartans] are very uniquely related to Scottish culture—funny thing is, they’re not even from [Scotland],” Edward Grant Ries of Clan Wallace said, explaining that the fabric predates the time of Christ and was transferred over— along with bagpipes—by the Ro- mans to the British Isles. Ries cited clan-culture as a pos- sible explanation for the overbear- ing Celtic importance of ancestry. Under clanship, genes didn’t decree authority. Instead, leader- ship transposed to a clan member best suited to protect the family’s interest, juxtaposing the widely practiced system of monarchy at the time. “e problem with [clanship] is that it led to a lot of divisiveness and separation; the Scots could never pull together—which is still true—because of this “clan- AMY PATTON | DAILY 49ER Senior accounting major Chris Dinh (left) and junior communications major David Kling (right) screw together side panels for the garden planters at the Grow Beach! building kickoff on Sunday. COURTESY OF THE QUEEN MARY A competitor takes on the final heavy-athletic event of the day, the Caber toss at the 2014 ScotsFestival.

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Page 1: Daily 49er Feb. 16, 2015

Vol. LIX, Issue 817 www.daily49er.com Monday, February 16, 2015

News 2 OpiNiONs 6DiversiONs 4 spOrts 8

DAILY 49ERCalifornia State University, Long Beach

The Associated Student Inc. Grow Beach! community garden is under way.

The manpower of about 70 vol-unteers consisting of ASI represen-

tatives, Grow Beach! members and plot owners began to build and raise garden plots behind the Isabel Pat-terson Child Development Center on Sunday.

“I have this vision that’s coming into play, and I’ve been working on this for almost two years now,” ASI Vice President Nayiri Baghdassarian said. “ So seeing something tangible, its great.”

Baghdassarian said that volunteers had been working since about 10 a.m. and planned to finish as much as pos-sible Sunday so that soil can be laid out and students can be planting by

next week. The Board Chair of Grow Beach!

Elizabeth Flores said that once they are finished building the garden box-es, the physical planning and facili-ties management department can set up fencing and gates for security and build ADA regulated cement path-ways and ramps.

As she was lending a hand to the building process, freshman theater major Megan Benetta said she would be renting a plot this semester. She said she plans to plant tomatoes, green beans and carrots once the plots are ready for gardeners.

“My mom used to grow a lot of vegetables and I always liked doing it with her,” Benetta said. “And I’ve been looking for something to keep me occupied.”

Baghdassarian said that all gar-dening would be organic. She said that Grow Beach! Plans to host work-shops to teach organic gardening. Grow Beach! Holds meetings every other week.

Flores said that three quarters of the 88 plots have already been claimed. Applications to rent a plot for the semester are open until all slots are full.

Grow Beach! hosted a build-it day for the community garden this weekend.

By Amy PattonNews Editor

By Brooke BecherDiversions Editor

BUILDING AT THE BEACH

Mustangs break 49ers’ hearts

Clan culture bydand!

A trio of injuries derailed the women’s basketball team in an overtime thriller on Valentine’s Day.

Scotsfestival attendees represented their ancestral ties with traditional festivities and tartans at the Queen Mary.

The Long Beach State women’s basketball team lost three key players to injury in a heartbreak-ing 58-57 loss in overtime to Cal Poly Saturday in the Walter Pyra-mid.

Three pivotal 49er players went down with injuries: Junior center Devin Hudson, sophomore guard Raven Benton and sophomore guard Jewelyn Sawyer.

Hudson left in the first half af-ter coming down awkwardly on a rebound attempt. LBSU carted off Benton, the team’s leading scorer, on a wheelchair and took her to the hospital after getting hit hard on a layup attempt. The team has not released and update on her status.

Cal Poly’s Taryn Garza fouled Sawyer hard over the back and knocked her out of the game. Sawyer and Benton were having big games before they exited. Ben-ton had 13 points while Sawyer crashed the boards and collected nine rebounds.

Hudson returned in the second half, but her injury limited her playing time and role in the game. Head coach Jody Wynn said the three injured players are doubtful for the upcoming games.

“I’m not counting on any of them to play,” Wynn said. “Not to be a Debbie-downer, but they’re in pretty excruciating pain.”

Sophomore guard Anna Kim drained a jump shot with 13.2 seconds left on the game-clock to give LBSU a one-point lead in overtime. The 49ers defense needed to make one more stop to secure a win.

Cal Poly (12-11, 7-4) senior guard Ariana Elegado beat the 49ers with a game-winning layup in the final seconds of overtime.

“Just coming off that last play I knew I wanted to take it to the hole,” Elegado said.

Elegado’s game-winning field goal was the ninth lead change of the game. The Cal Poly bucket capped off an up-and-down game for both sides.

“It was pretty crazy,” Elegado said. “[I had] chills almost the whole game. I felt like it was a championship game. So many people were into it. We had pas-sion for it.”

The 49ers offensive drought

See INJURIES, page 8 See SCOTS, page 4

By William HernandezAssistant Sports Editor

Women’s BasketBall

Diversions

Afloat the iconic 1936 ocean-liner-turned-hotel moored in Long Beach might be the last place one would expect to find a plaid sea of kilt-clad clans tapping their ghillies to blaring bagpipes and tossing 20-foot cabers.

Queen Mary traded her sun-bathing seals for sheep-herding demonstrations on Saturday at the 22nd annual Scotsfestival, the longest running annual event, ac-

cording to Steve Sheldon, director of events at the Queen Mary.

“The music, the whiskey and the craic—the friendliness—are what bring us out today,” Michael O’Donoghue, a festival-goer, said while spectating the sheaf toss competition, head-to-toe in Celtic garb with traditional, evergreen Irish tartan. “Everyone feels open enough to walk up and talk to you about what you’re wearing; you can’t come here and just be closed off.”

Traditional wool-woven skirts and their cross-hatched designs have extended beyond the post-

romantic era of Highland-dress code into the modern age of liber-ty-spiked punk rockers and on the racks of stores like Forever 21 and Hot Topic.

Although they originally served as a military insignia to earmark troops, tartans eventu-ally became the unifying crest for Scottish clans of the early 19th century.

“[Tartans] are very uniquely related to Scottish culture—funny thing is, they’re not even from [Scotland],” Edward Grant Ries of Clan Wallace said, explaining that the fabric predates the time of Christ and was transferred over—along with bagpipes—by the Ro-mans to the British Isles.

Ries cited clan-culture as a pos-sible explanation for the overbear-ing Celtic importance of ancestry.

Under clanship, genes didn’t decree authority. Instead, leader-ship transposed to a clan member best suited to protect the family’s interest, juxtaposing the widely practiced system of monarchy at the time.

“The problem with [clanship] is that it led to a lot of divisiveness and separation; the Scots could never pull together—which is still true—because of this “clan-

Amy PAtton | DAily 49er

Senior accounting major Chris Dinh (left) and junior communications major David Kling (right) screw together side panels for the garden planters at the Grow Beach! building kickoff on Sunday.

Courtesy of the Queen mAry

A competitor takes on the final heavy-athletic event of the day, the Caber toss at the 2014 ScotsFestival.

Page 2: Daily 49er Feb. 16, 2015

[email protected]

2moNday, February 16, 2015

News iN brief

CSULB student charged with 5 accounts of burglary

California Democrats push for vaccinations

By Amy PattonNews Editor

The CSU chancellor said he has a plan to improve the education level of California’s workforce.

Graduation drought

Water isn’t the only thing Califor-nia is running out of, according to California State University Chancel-lor Timothy White in a virtual press conference Friday afternoon.

“California is also facing an equal-ly devastating drought, and that is the number of people in California who have a bachelor’s degree,” White said.

In ten years, the state of California will be 1 million degrees short of sus-taining its economy, White said. This includes degrees given by any univer-sity statewide, as well as by the CSU system.

White announced an initiative to raise graduation rates 9 percent by the year 2025 during an initiative at the annual state of the CSU talk in January.

He said in order to implement this goal the CSU system needs to acquire another $100 million from somewhere, whether it’s from the government, a philanthropist or the students.

Though tuition will not be raised next year, students will most likely see a series of 2 percent increases in the years to come, White said.

“[I plan to have] that conversa-tion as I read the tea leaves of our re-source needs in the demand,” White said.

Public CSU system statistics in-dicate that raising graduation rates by 9 percent is actually a simple goal.

In the last ten years, the number of undergraduate degrees that CSU awarded raised by 27.6 percent, from 65,741 in 2003-2004 to 85,191 in 2013-2014. To get money by other means,

White said he urges students to knock on office doors in Sacramento or to write letters to legislators to convince the state government to give CSU the additional $100 million in recurring funds needed to improve graduation rates.

“It’s not to be greedy,” White said. “It’s money [for] CSU to create op-portunities for our students by way of more faculty, academic advisors and mentors, undergraduate research op-portunities and all of the things that engage a student in a really meaning-ful education.”

Additionally, White said he would like to use technology to make the transfer process more clear for the ap-proximately 50,000 students coming from high schools and 50,000 coming from community colleges.

White said that oftentimes stu-dents end up taking community col-lege classes that are nontransferable due to confusing information and policies, leading to the current 4.7-year average graduation time.

At California State University, Long Beach, tuition is currently $3,226 per semester, including a stu-dent excellence fee of $173, which may increase by another $165 per semes-ter ($124 in the summer) depending on the results of the USU referendum vote Feb. 25 and 26.

After the three 2 percent increases mentioned by Chancellor White, tu-ition at CSULB would be $3,423.

By Ariana SawyerOpinions Editor

Los Angeles Airport Police Crime Task Force investigators arrested CSULB student Ryan Green, 23, for commercial burglary last week.

Sgt. Joseph Belinda indicated in the crime report that the LAX task force positively identified Green for baggage thefts in LAX baggage claim areas on Feb. 8. Last weekend, CTF investigators conducted surveil-lance of baggage claim locations in response to an increase of baggage thefts in south side terminals.

During the surveillance, inves-tigators watched Terminal 5 for Green, whom they believed to be re-sponsible for previous baggage thefts at LAX. The police report indicated that investigators saw Green pick up a bag from the carousel in baggage claim and exit the area. Investiga-tors then followed Green to a nearby terminal, where he then picked up

another bag from the carousel that did not belong to him.

Investigators then followed Green to a men’s restroom, where he entered a handicap stall. The report indicates that the investigators heard him pil-fering through the bags. When Green left the restroom. Investigators saw him throw one of the small pieces of luggage into a trashcan. He then re-portedly walked to a shuttle stop out-side the terminal and “appeared to be leaving the airport.”

Investigators then detained and ultimately arrested Green with the assistance of uniformed airport po-lice officers. During a later interview with the police, Green admitted to taking the luggage. Green said in the interview that he used his mother’s “buddy pass” to fly into LAX from San Jose earlier that day. Green was charged with five felony accounts of commercial burglary.

Sen. Barbara Boxer and Sen. Di-anne Feinstein asked state officials to reconsider vaccination exemp-tion regulations in a letter to Human Services Secretary Diana Dooley last week.

The letter is in response to the mea-sles outbreak that swept through 14 states in the past few months, a press release on Boxer’s website stated.

“While a small number of chil-dren cannot be vaccinated due to an underlying medical condition, we believe there should be no such thing as a philosophical or personal belief exemption, since everyone uses public spaces,” Senators Boxer and Feinstein wrote in the letter. “As we have learned in the past month, parents who refuse to vaccinate their children not only put their own fam-ily at risk, but they also endanger other families who choose to vac-cinate.”

Under current law, parents may opt out of required vaccinations by either claiming religious objectifica-tions or stating that they decided not to vaccinate with the help of advice from a health professional.

Health experts indicate that public schools should have a minimum of a 92 percent vaccination rate to effec-tively prevent outbreaks from rapidly spreading. Some preschools in Los Angeles have rates as low as 36 per-cent, according to a recent Los Ange-les Times analysis.

“We think both options are flawed, and oppose even the notion of a medical professional assisting to waive a vaccine requirement unless there is a medical reason, such as an immune deficiency,” Boxer and Fein-stein stated in the letter.

According to the press release on Boxer’s website, only a small number of children cannot receive vaccina-tions due to medical conditions. The recent measles outbreak indicates dangers of opting out of vaccina-tions in mass amounts, the press re-lease states.

The letter also asked that Dooley review state policy in regards to vac-cination exemption due to the “grow-ing trend” of parents not following vaccination schedules and schools not tracking the progress of vaccina-tion completion.

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In the middle of a memorial illu-minated by flickering candlelight, a placard displayed the names and hand-drawn silhouettes of three friends who were murdered in Chapel Hill, North Carolina on Tuesday, Feb. 10.

The CSULB Muslim Student As-sociation arranged roses and candles in concentric hearts on Maxson Plaza late Thursday afternoon for a candlelit vigil in honor of Deah Barakat, Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha and Razan Mo-hammad Abu-Salha, the three victims of last week’s shooting.

“It is an injustice upon us if we do not reflect upon what we were taught to reflect upon,” Bilal Zaheen, the MSA president, said. “As Muslims we always engage in the fact that before we’re Muslim we’re human. Muslim and hu-man go hand in hand, just as human and Christian go hand in hand, just as human and Jew go hand in hand.”

When those in attendance observed the moment of silence, a poignant mood cast over the crowd. Only the dribbling sound of the fountain could be heard in the background. Then, when vigil attendees chanted a Muslim prayer, open hands rose to chest level in the soft candlelight.

“Even though the tragedy occurred 2,520 miles away, students on campus felt compelled to speak out,” Fatima Abdelhafeez, the vice president of MSA said. “I relate to them as a female Mus-lim wearing a scarf, on a college cam-pus, commuting. It’s emotionally trau-matizing in certain ways.”

MSA opened the floor for mourners to express their personal feelings about the events. The prevailing sentiment was one of tolerance and harmony.

The CSULB alumni and Communi-cations Coordinator from the Council of American-Islamic Relations, Ojaala Ahmad, also spoke to the crowd of mostly students.

“Unfortunately a lot of the times Muslims in general are painted with the paintbrush that we are all extremists, we are all terrorists, we hate America, and the rhetoric just goes on,” Ahmad said.

A poll conducted by ABC news showed that in the month following the

terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 47 percent of Americans had a favorable view of Muslims. By 2010, that number had dropped to 37 percent.

“Even though it’s been almost 15 years since 9/11, these things are still happening to us,” Abdelhafeez said in reference to violence against Muslims.

During the vigil, Zaheen asked the crowd to gather and try to understand the victims’ perspective.

“[The shooting victims’] situa-tion was not so different than ours,” Zaheen said. “Their lives were not so much different than the lives we live here today.”

The Muslim Student Association members said they tried to spread a message of compassion in order to assuage some of the suffering and hate caused by the shoot-ing.

Vigil held for Chapel Hill shooting victims

By Kevin FloresContributing Writer

Kevin Flores | Daily 49er

Muslim Students Association members light candles at Maxson Plaza on Feb. 12. in honor of the victims of the Chapel Hill shooting.

Last day to enroll in Open University

2:30 p.m. — 4:30 p.m. African Student Union Study Jam USU 205

International Pancake day

End of Marine Corps aircraft training out of the Long Beach Airport

7 p.m.Long Beach City Council meeting City Hall

6 p.m. — 7:30 p.m. Human Sex Trafficking Panel USU Beach Auditorium

4 p.m. — 6 p.m. Living Mentally Well Anatol Center

3:30 p.m. — 4:30 p.m. Daily 49er USU Referendum Panel Hall of Science

11 a.m. — 2 p.m. Chinese New Year Festival Friendship Walk West Room

1 p.m. — 2:30 p.m. Free Friday Self-Defense Student Recreation an Wellness Center fitness room B

10 a.m. — 3 p.m. Long Beach Downtown Farmers Market Parking Lot at 212 W. 3rd St.

M T W Th FFeb. 16 Feb. 17 Feb. 18 Feb. 19 Feb. 20

Page 4: Daily 49er Feb. 16, 2015

4 [email protected] February 16, 2015

continued from page 1SCOTS

Courtesy of the Queen Mary

The 2014 ScotsFestival celebration opens up with a bag pipe band marching through the Queen Mary.

nishnes,”” Ries said. “And yet the “clannishnes” is what has enabled them to preserve their culture because of all the stories and jealous prerogatives that they had.”

In fact, through genealogy, Ries dis-covered that his wife, Elaine, to whom he had already been happily married for several decades, was his seventh cousin. They shared a grandmother in Clan Wallace.

“Willy Wallace was really the in-spiration for freedom in Scotland and around the world,” Ries said, citing Wallace’s revolt against English oppres-sion in the 13th century and the post-mortem rebellion that ensued after he was slain by the English.

“We’re not fighting for glory or honor or riches—only for freedom; it’s the one thing that an honest man should not

give up except at the peril of his own life,” Ries paraphrased from the 1320 Declaration of Abroath. The document was penned after England’s attempt to establish authority over the land, trig-gering the first war of independence in Scotland.

“Those words ring uncannily fa-miliar to us [as Americans],” Ries said.

Scots experienced a century of forced displacement beginning in the 1700s known as the Highland Clear-ances. Host countries adopted the uprooted culture of the deported and displaced Scots, with especial influ-ence on Canada, Russia, New Zealand, Australia and America, according to the BBC.

“The context of the effect of Scot-tish culture on America is huge,” kilt-maker Susan Rose of the Gordon Clan said. “All but four of the presidents of the United States come from Scottish heritage.”

Rose explained how the English

sent military commanders to divvy up the Highlanders, shipping the burli-est men to Australia while those with exceptional whit landed in the United States. Some of these refugees included Alexander Graham Bell, Allan Pinker-ton of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency and John Muir.

“When you look back in Scottish-American history—literally all of the engineering has been done by displaced Scots. The American Revolution was won by displaced Scots,” Rose said. “They didn’t want to lose this country too, so they had an axe to grind.”

Her scarlet locks brushed the top of an intricately woven sash, plush in polychrome and synched at the top by a bejeweled broach.

“Most tartans when you look at them are very male looking; it’s a military uniform. It’s not for females,” Rose said. “So when you come across one that’s for the ladies. If they could dress their women, that means they had money.”

Her lineage traces back to Clan Gor-don, a sect best known for its affluence and domination of the north.

“The chief of Clan Gordon would be called the cock of the north in ev-ery term that you can imagine,” Rose said. “He had his own 3,000 standing-man army when the king did not have a 3,000 standing-man army. He was one of those guys.”

Rose described her job as a kilt-maker of 26 years as an honor in car-rying on Scottish-American traditions, having designed most of the attending bands’ kilts.

“What [the festival] does is tie ev-erybody together; we’re called a di-aspora,” Rose said. “We are a people without a country. We’re Americans, but we didn’t come from America. This is our way of collectively coming to-gether.”

Scotsfestival at the Queen Mary is the first of the season, acting as the kick-off to the larger expo called the Seaside Highland Games held in Octo-

ber. The autumn fair is about five-times larger with almost 100,000 attendees, according to John Lowry, chief of the Seaside Highland Games of Clan Gor-don descent.

Lowry carries on his Scottish heri-tage through heavy involvement in various organizations and boards with a shared mission of progressing Celtic tradition. Although he said he enjoys the athletics and Whiskey deluge, he is partial to the music.

Sitting by a quintet of stringed-in-strument musicians, Gina Thornburg, an attendee from Woodland Hills, couldn’t agree more.

“My great grandparents still kept the Irish culture going [by] still singing, playing the music and dancing,” Thorn-burg said above the sweet songs of the violins, contrasting the faint nasal-noted bagpipes droning in the distance. “For me, it’s about getting together as a community to forget your troubles and to celebrate life with all of its imperfec-tions and all of its beauty.”

Page 5: Daily 49er Feb. 16, 2015

Diversions [email protected] www.Daily49er.com

5monDay, February 16, 2015

Megan gilbreath | Daily 49er

The Harlem Globetrotters play against the Washington Generals at the Honda Center on Saturday.

Globetrotters’ fadeawayDoes the legacy of the charismatic exhibition team still slam dunk for the college-aged crowd?

For nearly a century, the Harlem Globetrotters have entertained mil-lions of international basketball fans with their unbelievable ball-handling skills and basketball stunts. On Sat-urday, an audience chuckled and smiled, enjoying the sweet game of basketball at the Honda Center.

“College students probably don’t think too much about them, but if there ever was a game at the pyramid, I think it would sell out,” Josh Barajas, a senior journalism major at CSULB, said. “Watching the Globetrotters play live is probably on a lot of bas-ketball fan’s, of all ages, bucket lists. I know it’s on mine.”

But the half-filled arena hinted that the teams’ days of sold-out seats are over.

Families with children dominated the crowd, from mothers cradling newborns to hyperactive middle-schoolers. Young adults were scarce.

Owner and coach Abe Saperstein established the Globetrotters in 1926, originally calling the team the “Savory Big Five,” according to the

NBA. The all African-American team couldn’t play professional ball due to the association’s “whites only” ban, so they entered the Negro American Le-gion League. The ban was later lifted in 1950.

In 1939, during a leading game of 112-5, the Globetrotters attempted to keep the audience entertained with basketball tricks, according to the NBA. The team’s clowning around and talented ball handling soon be-came the Globetrotters’ trademark.

“They were a huge component to my basketball experience when I was young and are still revered to this day,” said Dan Monson, head coach for CSULB men’s basketball. “They combined basketball skills, winning and entertaining like no one else; I know my own children are Globetrot-ter fans. I have made sure of that.”

The Globetrotters own a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, awarded in 1982 for the team’s entertainment value. In 2002, the team also earned a spot in the Basketball Hall of Fame, according to their website.

“I think more people from our age group understand more of the jokes,” said audience member Melissa Valdovinos, a student at Fullerton Community College. “[The game] is family-based, but we older people un-derstand everything because we are closer to [the team’s] age group.”

“This is good entertainment for me, I’m really into sports so that’s why I came,” said audience member Angel Rodriguez, a student at Carter High School.

After almost a century, the Globe-trotters are still breaking records and creating history. This past January, the Guiness World Record Associa-tion awarded Globetrotter player Big Easy Lofton for the farthest basketball hook shot, a whopping 61 feet and 4 inches, according to harlemglobetrot-ters.com.

Buckets Blakes now holds the Gui-ness World Record for the most bas-

ketball underhanded half-court shots in one minute, making six baskets. Both players created these new re-cords during an event at the U.S. Air-ways Center in Phoenix, home of the Phoenix Suns.

Despite the Globetrotters’ record-racking talent, the overwhelming popularity of the NBA swoons stu-dents like junior biology major at CSULB Kristian Tian in the opposite

direction. “I think the Globetrotters aren’t re-

ally relevant anymore because they’re more of just a comedy act as opposed to competitive play … they do things we’ve already seen,” Tian said. “The popularity of the NBA and its repu-tation gives the precedent for what basketball should be, out matching the comedic tricks the Globetrotters offer.”

By Megan gilBreathDesign Assistant

Woofing for roofing

Sean gallagher | Daily 49er

A cat sits in a cage during the “Great Escape” event at Moorpark Park in Studio City on Sunday.

Popular entertainment promoters teamed up with animal shelters to host a pet adoption drive on Sunday.

On the corner of a busy Los An-geles intersection, dogs barked, tugged at leashes, nuzzled against potential adopters or just lazily languished in the warm sun. The lush greenery at Moorpark in Stu-dio City served as the backdrop for the Great Escape, a pet adoption drive, held on Sunday.

Animals came from various Los Angeles area shelters run by two dif-ferent organizations: the privately owned nonprofit Los Angeles Animal Rescue and the city-run Los Angeles Animal Services.

“Some people feel like animal shel-ters are too depressing to go into and avoid them, which prevents a lot of good connections from being made,” Sue Roos, executive director at the LA Animal Rescue, said. “Events such as the Great Escape are important because they also give the animals a chance to relax and get out of the shelter.”

Entertainment companies Gold-envoice and FYF hosted the event. The entities are most known for booking and promoting shows at venues such as the Fonda Theater, their involvement with Coachella and collaborating to produce FYF fest.

FYF Festival is an annual two-day indie-rock festival that sees line-up full both headliners and artists outside of the mainstream.

The festival has sold out for the past two years, drawing in about 40,000 fans. Starting independent-ly in 2004 as a one-night concert in Echo Park, it has since teamed up with Goldenvoice and now is held at Exposition Park to accommodate its growth.

Staffs at the adoption drives are completely made up of volunteers, Roos said. Friends of Moorpark Los Angeles Animal Services Mobile Pet Adoption, a supplementary adoption organization, hosts drives at Moor-park Park twice a month, on the first and third Sunday.

A passion for dogs drove PJ Ac-erno, an employee at Goldenvoice, to start-up the non-profit organization Goldiepup in order to raise money for LA Animal Rescue.

“We’ve only had three events so far,” Acerno said. “But we’re trying to make it a biannual thing.”

The first event that Goldiepup hosted was a two-day benefit show in the parking lot of the Fonda Theater, headlined by Best Coast, the Death

Valley Girls and Baby Alpaca in Oc-tober 2013.

“Events like this are really cool because they help bring in a dif-ferent demographic than the adop-tion drives usually attract,” Acerno said. “Not a lot of people follow the LA Animal Rescue or Animal Ser-vices, but [Goldenvoice] and FYF have a pretty big and younger audi-ence; by promoting these events we can help raise awareness for adop-tion.”

Outside of puppy-love, Bennett Kogon, a supervisor at FYF, men-tioned that the entertainment compa-nies are given the chance to promote their own events and expand their fan base in addition to finding strays a place to stay.

“Animal homelessness is always an issue, especially in a place like LA,” Kogon said. “FYF cares a lot about dogs – we all own dogs – and feel like it is something important to pay at-tention to, plus by coming out to these events we can broaden our fan base as well.”

By Sean gallagherContributing Writer The Daily 49er is

hosting a panel discussion on

Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in the hall of

science.

The topic of discussion is the upcoming USU

Referendum, which is up for a vote on Feb. 25-26.

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Page 6: Daily 49er Feb. 16, 2015

6

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[email protected], February 16, 2015

E-cigarettes blow

Ariana SawyerOpinions Editor

Paige PelonisEditor in Chief

In the moments before today becomes tomorrow, the air is damp along Pine Street, sloping down to the packed Irish pub. Through the gated patio, across the dance floor, all the way at the back of the bar, Mark orders a round of shots for his new friends.

Mark wears his baseball cap backwards. Mark speaks with his eyebrows, which are difficult to distinguish from one another. Mark spends his late nights buying rounds of cheap shots from his brother who works behind the bar. Mark is very single.

He buys short glasses filled with a light turquoise drink – a splash of red drops into the middle of each and spirals to the bottom.

A woman with long, tangled hair picks one up, and Mark grabs another.

They link arms, and on the count of three, the drinks are dropped to the back of their throats. High fives all around.

“Single! Single! Single! Single! …” Mark chants as he puts his glass down. No one joins him. Mark makes his way to the dance floor where “A Devil Went Down to Georgia” is spinning the crowd of men and women in jeans and dresses and sandals and heels and hats and hairdos.

A Guinness. A Kilkenny. A shot of Jameson. The sign above the bar says 113 days, two hours and 14 minutes left until Saint Patrick’s Day.

In the moments before today becomes tomorrow, the buzz is a high

that paves the streets of Long Beach from just after dinner, until last call.

You’re reading Last Call in Long Beach, a column that documents the hours between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m., in the city that surrounds our campus. Obviously, this column focuses specifically on the bars of our town and the people who frequent them from the post-happy hour until last call. This piece highlights The Auld Dubliner; it was written at the end of the falls semester. Check back soon for a new piece, and keep an eye out for The Daily 49er at your favorite late-night stops!

Long after yesterday became today, the line outside the women’s restroom disappears while the round man with the patchy, red facial hair kicks people out for the night. He piles them just outside the front patio while Dale and the rest of the bartenders stack chairs on top of tables and mop the night’s sweat from the hardwood floor. It’s 2 a. m., and the short-skirted ladies and the flat-shoed hipster women of Long Beach are smoking and mingling on Pine Street.

Last call has come and gone, but outside of the Auld Dubliner, music is still hanging in the air and the dancing hasn’t stopped. A few feet away from the pack of couples and singles, the long-bearded drummer stands packed and ready to leave, waiting on the curb for a ride home.

LAST CALL I N L O N G B E A C H

Purple, black, blue, shimmery orange and hot pink – you can choose the most fashionable style of e-ciga-rette at any of the 10 different local shops here in Long Beach or some 200 shops nation-wide.

You can choose, but you really shouldn’t because new scientific studies indicate that these “cancer-free cigarettes” aren’t free of cancer at all.

“E-cigarettes represent a new public health challenge and threaten to undo and reverse the progress we’ve made by renormalizing smoking behavior,” said Dr. Ron Chapman, health officer and director of the California Public Health Department, according to the SF Gate. He said they also contain another 10 chemicals known to cause cancer, birth defects or other repro-ductive problems.

The aerosol produced by vaporizers can have up to 15-times more carcino-genic formaldehyde than regular ciga-rettes, according to a peer-reviewed study in the New England Journal of Medicine last month.

The Department of Public Health has said that young people and teenag-ers are particularly vulnerable to the e-cigarettes, the ads for which often falsely claim that they are safe, that they help people quit smoking and that they do not cause cancer.

At least 10 percent of U.S. high school students use a vaporizer, ac-cording to a report by the CDC in 2012.

The e-cigarettes are colorfully at-tractive and technologically forward with their USB cord chargers that hook up to any laptop computer. The Food and Drug Administration should never have allowed these cigarette al-ternatives to flood our markets without

regulations.The assortment of available flavors

sound like candy instead of cancer. “Java jolt,” “piña colada,” “magnificent menthol,” “cherry crush” and “vivid vanilla” are just a few of the flavor choices that Blu, a popular e-cigarette company, offers.

If the consumer is under the age of 18, he or she can still order anything from the Blu website simply by click-ing the button that says the user is 18 or older, as no additional proof is required.

According to the CDC in April 2014, most states do not regulate the sale of e-cigarette products, and if they do not claim to be therapeutic, the FDA doesn’t regulate them at all.

Rather than help people quit, vapor-izers spawn a new generation of smok-ers who – like young people in the ‘60s – are unaware of the damages they are doing to their bodies.

Two weeks ago, the California

Department of Public Health issued a public health warning to residents and urged legislators to start regulating the e-cigarette industry.

California residents should help the Department of Public Health convince the government to impose the long-overdue regulations, since thus far, officials have been so slow to act.

For CSULB students who want to know exactly what they are putting into their bodies, and who want to stop their children or little brothers and sisters from making bad decisions, at least until their brains are fully formed, be sure to let your government know.

Contact Assembly member Patrick O’Donnell on his web-site: https://lcmspubcontact.lc.ca.gov/PublicLCMS/ContactPopup.php?district=AD70.

Contact Senator Ricardo Lara at his office by calling 916-651-4033.

Travis Long | raLeigh news & observer | MCTE-Cigarettes - A man who did not want to be identified inhales vapor from an electronic cigwwarette, March 12, 2014, while socializing with friends outside Big Boss Brewery in Raleigh, N.C.

“Vaping” is not a good alternative to smoking cigarettes.

Page 7: Daily 49er Feb. 16, 2015

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8 SportS [email protected], February 16, 2015

ultimately cost them the game. Leading 34-28 at half-time, The Beach completed four of 25 from the field in the second half.

“There was a lid on the rim,” Wynn said. “I mean, we only made six baskets in the last 25 minutes of basketball.”

The 49ers offensive strug-gles lingered into overtime as they went just one of seven in the extra period until Kim’s late game jumper.

“When I made that shot, I was like ‘we’re not losing, we worked too hard and it’s our home floor,’” Kim said. “The main thing was getting a stop, and we just slipped as a team.”

Cal Poly head coach Faith Mimnaugh praised LBSU’s defensive effort for keeping the game close with its con-fusing defensive schemes.

“You have to credit [LBSU],” Mimnaugh said. “They’re tenacious and they throw different stuff at you. [They’re] always trying to create havoc on the court.”

The 49ers struggled all game from beyond the arc, shooting just three of 21 from deep. Kim said it was just one of those days where nothing goes in the basket.

“Sometimes you just have an off-day,” Kim said. “A lot of these girls work on their shot on their own time. It just wasn’t our day.”

The 49ers travel to UC Da-vis to take on the Aggies next Thursday night at 7 p.m.

Inside a quiet and nearly empty arena, the Long Beach State women’s basketball team blasted winless UC Santa Barbara 68-38 on Thursday night in the Walter Pyramid.

Despite playing in front of a small crowd, the 49ers (20-4, 7-3) enjoyed the silence, limiting UCSB (0-22, 0-9) to a combined 38 points en route to its 20th win of the season.

“As long as we have our loyal fans, we’re ok,” junior center Devin Hudson said. “We’re just going to keep winning and prov-ing to people who we are.”

The Beach had a terrific defensive effort after giving up 80 points against UC River-side by surrendering its lowest point total of the season. Head coach Jody Wynn said she was really proud of the team’s defensive performance

LBSU’s offense got off to a slow start in the first half, turning the ball over 12 times. Hudson said team captain Hallie Meneses helped the team stay poised during a time-out when the team was struggling.

“Hallie brings a lot of composure,” Hud-son said. “So when she slows down, it slows us down. At the first timeout, she was telling us ‘slow down, slow down.’”

The Beach’s defensive scheme stymied the Gauchos’ offense, keeping them without a field goal for the first four minutes of the game. Hudson said the shutdown perfor-mance helps the 49ers retool going into its next conference matchup against Cal Poly.

“The last couple of games we kind of got away from our defense and what we do,” Hudson said. “Playing against a team like [UCSB] and forcing them into 23 turnovers helps us going into Saturday’s game because we know what we have to do.”

Wynn said good team defense and com-munication helped the 49ers breeze to a

30-point blowout. “[We’re] playing as a unit,” Wynn said.

“I’m talking about direction, action and de-fensive rebounding. And that propelled us to some pretty good offense.”

LBSU catapulted to a 37-16 lead at half-time, after senior guard Lauren Spargo drained a three pointer. Spargo said the 49ers’ unselfishness and ball movement helped reestablish their offensive approach.

“We played really good team ball today,” Spargo said. “We weren’t selfish and moved the ball around to get the best shot for who-ever was open. We’re trying to get back to playing as hard as we did in the preseason.”

The 49ers will hit the road for their next matchup on Thursday night at UC Davis at 7 pm.

INJURIESContinued from page 1

A stifling defensive performance propelled the women’s basketball team past a winless UCSB squad.

Two more double-digit losses on the road ex-tend LBSU’s men’s bas-ketball losing streak to three games.

The Dirtbags used Blair Field to take the week-end series against visiting Michigan.

LBSU dominates UCSB in the Pyramid

Lossespiling up

DIRTBAGS FALL SHORT OF SWEEP

By William HernandezAssistant Sports Editor

By Oscar Terrones Sports Editor

By Eddie RiveraContributing Writer

Back-to-back road losses at UC Santa Barbara Thursday night and Cal Poly Satur-day night have the Long Beach State men’s basketball team back under .500 for the first time since Jan. 17.

The 49ers (13-14, 7-4) lost both games by double digits: 70-55 at the Gauchos (13-11, 6-4) and 71-58 at the Mustangs (12-11, 5-6). They have now lost their last three games af-ter a season-high six-game winning streak was snapped on Feb. 7 against UC Irvine.

“I thought we fought hard,” head coach Dan Monson said, according to the official LBSU website. “I just thought we didn’t re-spond well enough. I didn’t think we came out as the aggressor, and we’re letting teams get comfortable. We’re not dictating things until it’s too late.”

This game was a rematch of a Jan. 17 matchup in the Walter Pyramid. The 49ers blew out the Gauchos 69-53, with senior point guard Mike Caffey scoring 22 points and senior forward David Samuels notch-ing a double-double with 15 points and 12 boards.

Neither Caffey nor Samuels had nearly the same impact in the rematch. Samuels had nine points and seven rebounds while Caffey had 11 points. Senior guard McKay LaSalle had a career-high 18 points in the loss, shooting four of five from beyond the arc and seven of eight overall.

“I thought our toughness was pretty evi-dent,” UCSB head coach Bob Williams told the Daily Nexus. “We were physical, and I thought it was probably our best defensive effort that we’ve had this year in terms of start to finish and our commitment to de-fending.”

The Gauchos were without reigning Big West Player of the Year Alan Williams. Williams was still recovering from a shoul-der injury that has sidelined him for seven games. UCSB freshman guard scored 13 points while grabbing three rebounds and handing out four assists.

“We were flat out tougher,” Vincent told the Daily Nexus. “We were the more physi-cal team. [Junior guard Michael Bryson] had a big game. That definitely helped. We controlled [Caffey] this game.”

Bryson finished with a game-high 21 points and nine rebounds. Monson said before the game he didn’t expect the team to shut out Bryson, but that they did have to disrupt him.

“We’re not worried about Bryson,” Mon-son said. “We’re not worried about Al. We’re worried about Santa Barbara. If [last Satur-day against Irvine] showed us anything it’s about the team.”

The 49ers didn’t fare much better in their second meeting with Cal Poly. The Mus-tangs had four players score in double-fig-ures, including junior forward Joel Awich, who scored a game-high 19 points on seven of 11 shooting.

Junior guard Reese Morgan came off the bench and scored 18 points. Morgan killed the 49ers with his three-point shooting, go-ing four of eight from beyond the arc.

The 49ers again struggled with rebound-ing, getting dominated on the boards 40-23 against the Mustangs. Branford Jones was the lone bright spot for LBSU, scoring a team-best 11 points while collecting five rebounds and six assists.

The 49ers return home for their short road trip to host Big West Conference lead-ing UC Davis inside the Walter Pyramid Thursday night at 7 p.m.

Women’s BasketBall

men’s BasketBall BaseBall

The Long Beach State baseball team took two out of three against Michigan in a successful opening-season series at Blair Field.

On Friday night, the Dirtbags (2-1) of-fense got off to a slow start while Michigan (1-2) took an early lead 2-0 with a couple doubles at the top of the first. The Dirtbags patience play paid off in the fifth inning.

Michigan left-hander Brett Adcock un-raveled in the fifth and walked five Dirt-bags, who took advantage with a pair of runs and tied the game at two.

Senior right-hander Kyle Friedrichs led the Dirtbags pitching effort with a career-best 10 strikeouts through the first six in-nings. Friedrichs said he thinks he is the leader and the guy his team can trust.

“Honestly I wasn’t thinking about [the strikeouts] until I came in and I was done,” Friedrichs said. “They’re like, ‘dude do you see all these strikeouts?’”

Freshman outfielder Tristan Merc-adel tripled down the right field line and brought in Zack Rivera to take the lead 3-2 in the sixth inning.

The Wolverines offense clicked in the eighth and had runners on third and sec-ond with no outs. Junior right-hander Ty Provencher was called to the mound and picked up the save for The Dirtbags.

“That’s my job,” Provencher. “I come in with the runners there, and that’s what I

have to do.”Assistant coach Jesse Zepeda, filling

in for suspended head coach Troy Buck-ley, said he thought the key to the team’s offense was being able to take advantage

of Michigan’s mistakes.“They gave us free opportunities,

and we were able to capitalize on them,” Zepeda said.

Saturday’s game featured junior Tanner Brown on the mound. He picked up where Friedrichs left off with eight strikeouts in the contest. The Dirtbags’ early offense supported Brown’s pitching effort. Gar-rett Hampson drove in three RBIs and the Dirtbags beat the Wolverines 7-2.

In Sunday’s finale, Long Beach State gave up more runs than they had all week-end.

The Dirtbags gave up three hits and three runs in the fourth inning. They also gave up two runs in the 10th inning. The Dirtbags offense struggled early, but after a Zack Rivera RBI single in the sixth inning, they only trailed 3-2.

In the bottom of the ninth, junior in-fielder Zack Domingues picked up his first hit of the season to tie the game at 3-3. In extra innings, the Dirtbags brought in Provencher, who hit Michigan’s Jake Biv-ens, then gave up a two-RBI single to first basemen Jacob Cronenworth.

“Obviously, it’s tough to sweep a team,” Zepeda “This is a good Michigan team.”

The Dirtbags host Pepperdine Tuesday at 6 p.m. and NC Dinos Wednesday at 6 p.m. at Blair Field.

BoBBy yagake | Daily 49er

LBSU pitcher Tanner Brown went six innings in the Dirtbag’s 7-2 win over Michigan on Saturday at Blair Field. Brown allowed just two hits and struck out eight batters.

Priscilla Bullock | Daily 49er

LBSU forward Madison Montgomery is challenged on a shot from UCSB center Clair Watkins in the Walter Pyramid on Thursday. Montgomery contributed six points off the bench in the Beach’s 68-38 route against the Gauchos.