Sunday, April 22, 2007

Shooting at VA Tech is Worst in U.S. History


On Monday, April 16, Cho Seung-Hui, a senior at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, arrived on that school's campus and fired shots into various classrooms and dormitories killing a total of 32 students and faculty before taking his own life in what has now come to be known as the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.


The massacre at Virginia Tech has left many college students around the country questioning the safety and security of their own campuses. CSULB President F. King Alexander issued a statement via e-mail to all Long Beach State students addressing some of these concerns in the wake of the tragedy.

"I want to assure you that the university has policies and procedures in place should we need to respond to a situation on our own campus which involve various university groups and committees who meet regularly to discuss and train in order to prepare for possible emergencies.

In addition to the University Police Department and its regular training and planning, our university has a standing Student Crisis Management Committee which regularly meets to discuss emergency policies and protocols. Also, administrators and employees across the campus are part of the university’s Emergency Operations Plan that addresses an entire spectrum of contingencies, ranging from relatively minor incidents to large-scale disasters. Finally, the university has an emergency Website page that can be activated and updated on a moment’s notice in an effort to alert both the campus community and those outside the campus of any emergency situation as it arises."


The events that unfolded in Blacksburg, Virginia proved to be a sobering reminder of how vulnerable college students really are. Even at Virginia Tech itself, the geographic layout of the campus (much like that of the geographic layout of Long Beach State) was designed to feel open and as much a part of the neighboring community as possible. Some say that this is what afforded Cho the ability to attack the campus so swiftly and with a two hour gap between shootings.

Among those who died in Monday's massacre was a professor named Liviu Librescu, a Holocaust survivor. Flags across the country have been ordered to fly at half-mast in memoriam of those killed.

Photos courtesy of the New York Times and CSULB

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Long Beach State Hires New Men's Basketball Coach



At a press conference held Saturday morning, President F. King Alexander and Athletic Director Vic Cegles announced that Dan Monson would be the new head coach of the Long Beach State men's basketball team.

Monson, 45, was the former head coach for Gonzaga University before moving to the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis in 1999. He ended his coaching job in Minneapolis in November 2006. Monson is expected to sign a six year contract with CSULB and receive $250,000 annual salary.

The selection of Monson as the new men's basketball coach came after what some say was the controversial by the University to not extend the contract of former head coach Larry Reynolds

Photo courtesy of Press-Telegram

Sunday, April 8, 2007

CFA and CSU Reach Agreement, Strike Averted




On Wednesday, April 4, the California Faculty Association reached an agreement in the labor dispute with the office of CSU Chancellor Charles Reed that provided for raises for faculty of 24.87 percent over the next four years.

The base salary increases will raise the average salary for a tenure track faculty member from $74,000 to $90,749 and the average salary for a full time, full professor with tenure from $86,000 to $105,465 by the end of the contract period.

In addition to these increases, $28 million will be provided in the form of merit and equity increases that will provide raises for senior faculty who have reached the top of the pay scale, as well as boost junior faculty compensation. The CSU will seek an additional one percent increase for all employees’ compensation in state budget funds in each of the next three years.

The total package will cost the CSU $400 million over the next four years. The terms of the agreement were based largely on the information ascertained by the independent fact-finding panel that was brought in to assess the claims made by both sides. CSULB students were notified of the agreement through a mass email sent by President Alexander on the same day the deal was reached.

Photos courtesy of CFA and CSU.