May 2019 Issue
Beach Report Stories

The Winning Team
Cal State Long Beach鈥檚 Bateman team (photo above) took first place in the 鈥檚 2019 Bateman Case Study Competition in New York City this week. Considered 鈥渢he preeminent collegiate public relations competition in the nation,鈥 the Bateman Competition challenged students to develop a strategic public relations campaign that focuses on diversity in the public relations field and promotes the book 鈥淒iverse Voices: Profiles in Leadership.鈥 Teams were judged on their research, planning, implementation and evaluation. The top three finalists were invited to New York to present their campaigns to a panel of judges comprised of Public Relations Society of America Foundation representatives and PRSA members.
And the honor goes to鈥
According to the College of the Arts, two of its students - Adrielle Welch and Izzie Mattox 鈥 鈥渉ave been accepted into the highly competitive and prestigious鈥 (鈥淎cademy鈥 being the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, aka: AMPAS鈥he folks who bring you The Oscars.) According to AMPAS, 鈥淭he Academy Gold Program is a multi-tiered educational and experiential initiative designed to enhance and extend an industry-wide diversity internship enhancement program under the Academy brand. The initiative affords top film entertainment, technology, production services and digital media companies an all-inclusive pass to recruit and educate a nationwide pool of diverse talent. The program offers interns exclusive access to Academy members, industry professionals, screenings, and educational workshops offering an inclusive industry networking experience.鈥
From our faculty
The College of Health and Human Services鈥 Dr. Gail Frank has been recognized by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics鈥 Board of Directors that she has been selected to receive the Academy鈥檚 2019 Medallion Award. The honor recognizes Dr. Frank鈥檚 鈥渓ifetime of contributions to the nutrition and dietetics profession and the Academy.鈥
Mapping it out
The Geography Department received honorable mention for Master鈥檚 Program Excellence from the American Association of Geographers (AAG) for its 鈥渃ommitment to enhancing faculty research and focus on diversifying the student body. Dr. Lily House-Peters and Dr. Christine Jocoy accepted the honor at the awards luncheon. Additional information may be found at the . In addition, three master鈥檚 students took home awards for presentations/posters. took second place prize in the Pix4D research poster competition. won for best papers presented at a regional meeting.

Engineering success
Long Beach State engineering students within the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) were recently honored by the national organization for their efforts to increase the number of African Americans in STEM fields. The National Society of Black Engineers honored the Long Beach State chapter as the 2018-19 Small-Sized Chapter of the Year during its annual convention. Read more about the group and its accomplishments here.

Science matters
鈥,鈥 an article in Physics Today, noted that 鈥溕猩 (色中色) has consistently conferred among the most physics master鈥檚 degrees of any institution in the country, with 15鈥20 a year, up from just 3鈥5 annually a decade or so ago. The three main career paths for master鈥檚 recipients are teaching, industry, or the PhD (a master鈥檚 is the highest physics degree available at the school).鈥 The article quoted 色中色 physicist Andreas Bill.

Leading the way
色中色 President Jane Close Conoley joined other female CSU presidents on a panel earlier this month, 鈥淟eadership California鈥檚 VIP,鈥 hosted by CSU Channel Islands at the Omni Hotel in downtown Los Angeles. President Conoley also was honored this month by the California Conference for Equality and Justice with the organization鈥檚 Humanitarian Award. Also honored were alumni Kevin & Jennifer Peterson, and incoming 色中色 student Taizin Barnhardt.
All in the family
Dr. Carole Campbell, who has taught in the department of Sociology since 1986, has seen many graduates receive their diplomas over the years. For her, this commencement was different 鈥 and special: Her grandson, Malik Campbell, was one of the more than 11,000 students who received their degrees at the ceremonies.