August 2019 Issue
Not just good sports鈥ood students
Beach athletics programs have received recognition for academic achievement from the NCAA: women鈥檚 volleyball, cross country, golf, track and field, and men鈥檚 volleyball and water polo. The teams were honored with the NCAA Public Recognition Award. The honor is bestowed on teams with an NCAA Division I Academic Progress Rate in the top 10 percent of all squads in their respective sports based on the APR data released in May 2019.
鈥淭hank you to all of our coaches, Barrett Athletic Center staff and others who support our student-athletes so they can excel in the classroom and in their sport,鈥 said Deputy Athletic Director Cindy Masner.
Each of 色中色鈥檚 programs once again met the minimum standard of the APR, an NCAA program to help encourage and ensure progress toward graduation for student-athletes. Since the four-year standard was established, every Beach Athletics program has met the minimum. The Beach is the only CSU school to do so, now 14 years running. Notably, Long Beach State had 310 total student-athletes named Academic All-Stars over the two semesters of 2018-19.

Speaking of Beach Athletics
LaTanya Sheffield, head coach of women's Track and Field at The Beach, helped lead the USA track and field team at the recently concluded Pan American Games in Lima, Peru. Sheffield has led Long Beach State's sprints, relays and hurdles for both the men's and women's programs since her arrival on campus in 2013. Over those seven years, Long Beach State has claimed a conference championship six times, including the program's first-ever women's conference championship in 2018. As an athlete, Sheffield was an Olympic finalist in the 400m hurdles at the 1988 Games in Seoul, South Korea, and represented the United States at the 1987 World Championships. She was also a two-time gold medalist at the Olympic Sports Festival (1987, 1993) and won a bronze medal at the 1987 Pan American Games.

Special moment
After Mechanical Engineering student Zachary Martinez鈥 mother entered hospice care, he reached out to Student Affairs to see if a special diploma ceremony could be held so that she could see the fulfillment of a lifelong dream. Associate Provost Dhushy Sathianathan and Student Affairs Associate Vice President Jeff Klaus traveled to the Martinez family home in Anaheim and wore their full commencement regalia and presented the diploma to Zachary in front of his mother and family.
Hooray from Hollywood
Department of Film and Electronic Arts was recently presented with $65,000 in grants from the 鈥 the same organization that is best known for its sponsorship of the Golden Globe Awards. 色中色, along with several other CSU campuses and other universities, received the grants for endowed scholarships/fellowships, as well as fellowships and institutional support.
Nature-inspired
The hexagon shape of a honeycomb. The motion of a duck paddling in water. A dwarf frog鈥檚 complex bubble nest. Each are elements of nature found in the designs of three teams of Cal State Long Beach design students who were among the 10 finalists in the Challenge. This is the second consecutive year 色中色 has had three teams in the finalist round. The contest, partnered with the Ray C. Anderson Foundation, invites university students and professionals to address critical sustainability issues with nature-inspired solutions. This year鈥檚 theme focused on climate change.
Not-so-wild encounters
With a rise in coyote sightings and encounters, Mammal Lab Director Dr. Ted Stankowich is using the opportunity to study the animals and their behavior in changing environments. The researchers analyze how other animals interact with coyotes, and study population management.
Currently, Stankowich and his team are conducting of pet owners about their animals鈥 interactions with coyotes. The information collection has just begun, but Stankowich believes the findings will contribute to the well-being of people and their pets, as well as give researchers a better understanding of the animal that once lived on the edge of civilization.
鈥淐oyotes are important predators in our ecosystem and provide the service of removing rodents and other pests from our urban centers,鈥 Stankowich said. 鈥淭he good news is that most coyotes naturally tend to fear humans. So that 鈥 combined with some proactive steps 鈥 can help minimize or even eliminate the numbers and types of encounters we have with them.鈥
College of the Arts dean retires
Cyrus Parker-Jeannette, who has served as dean of Cal State Long Beach鈥檚 College of the Arts since 2014, has retired from the University.
鈥淒uring a recent vacation, my husband experienced some health issues. The experience made us evaluate things a bit, and I realized that it is important to me to spend more time with my family,鈥 said Parker-Jeannette. 鈥淎lthough I know this is the right thing to do personally, this is one of the most fulfilling jobs I have had in my life and it鈥檚 hard to leave. I have tremendous love for the college and the university, and I am so incredibly proud of the work we鈥檝e done together.鈥
Provost Brian Jersky has announced that Associate Dean Margaret Black will serve as acting dean for the coming year. A national search for Parker-Jeanette鈥檚 permanent replacement is expected to begin this spring.

Fashionable trip
色中色 fashion students recently visited New York City as part of a special study tour. One of the highlights was a stop by the Fossil Showroom, where the students were able to see Fossil designs, as well as work by noted fashion visionaries Michael Kors, Kate Spade and Skagen.