monitor 2016-4-7

8
APRIL 7, 2016 Vol. LI No. 6 FREMONT, CA OHLONEMONITOR.COM THURSDAY Hundreds attend High School eatre Festival. See photos on Page 4. Ohlone table tennis team members, from left: Coach Yong Gao and players Weida Guan, Ying Wang and Chang Chen. Wang won the women’s singles title at the National Collegiate Table Tennis Association national championships March 25-27. NATIONAL CHAMP IVAN VARGAS / MONITOR ASOC ELECTIONS NEXT WEEK STEP Up walk, dialogue raise awareness Audit rips UC system Coffee with Khanna BRIANNE O’SULLIVAN News editor A recently released state audit revealed that the University of California system lowers admission standards for out-of-state applicants as a way to pad the institution’s budget. Out-of-state students pay almost three times more than in-state students do for tuition and other basic fees. The audit and critics of the UC argue that California stu- dents are losing spots to nonresidents who BRIANNE O’SULLIVAN News editor I recently sat down with Congressional candidate Ro Khanna to discuss the issues in the race for the 17th Congres- sional District, and the nation at large. This is not Khanna’s first time running for the seat. In 2014, Khanna lost by a four-point mar- gin – fewer than 5,000 votes – to Congressman Mike Honda, who has represented the area in Congress since 2001. Khanna, a longtime resident of Fremont and intellectual prop- Continued on Page 3 Continued on Page 7 Continued on Page 2 is is the rst of ve proles of the candidates for the 17th Congressional District, which includes the Ohlone campus. RISHABH SINGHAL Stawriter The Newark campus will host STEP Up Ohlone’s Day of Dialogue and Out of the Darkness Walk on Tuesday and Wednesday. Both events aim to promote mental health awareness and raise money for suicide preven- tion. The third annual Day of Dialogue will include games, screenings, prizes, and photo booths. Its goal is to create a safe, open forum for the cam- pus community to discuss mental health issues. “We advocate for mental LAURA GONSALVES / MONITOR FILE PHOTO Health Center Director Sally Bratton, right, embraces Christiana Dawson during last year’s STEP Up Ohlone Out of the Darkness Walk. MONITOR STAFF The Associated Students of Ohlone College will hold elections next week for executive officers and the student member of the Board of Trustees. Candidates include Mira Chandra and Kimberly Quinto for president; Samir Panjwani and Catherine Tran for legislative representative; and Miguel Fuentes, Sabrina Listek and Rahul Patel for the student member of the board. Students can vote online at www.ohlone.edu/asoc or on-site at both campuses from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday. The on-campus locations are the first floor of Hy- man Hall on the Fremont campus and the first-floor lobby on the Newark campus. In addition to the candidates on the ballot, students can vote for write-in candidates who are current stu- dents at the college. A write-in candidate must get at least 50 certified votes. CRISTIAN MEDINA Sports editor The Ohlone Table Tennis team members spent their Spring Break the best way they probably could: in Round Rock, Texas, at the National Collegiate Table Tennis National Championships. The team placed third overall and first in women’s singles, competing against colleges and universities from all over the United States and Canada. Team founder and president, Ying Wang, took the women’s singles title after defeating Anastasia Rybka from Texas Wesleyan University three sets to two. Despite a dominant performance throughout the tournament, Wang was humble to have gotten as far as she did and win first place. “It’s so exciting,” Wang said. “I didn’t expect to get first place. … There are so many good players.” Wang founded the team last fall with the goal of simply practicing her skills and being able to play Continued on Page 7 pingpong with other students on campus. “I want to promote table tennis in America, especially in community colleges,” Wang added. Ohlone was the only community college in the country represented at the tournament. The team’s immediate success was mostly unex- pected by everyone on the team. But one person knew that the team had the talent to go as far as it did. “I had a lot of confidence in the ability and hard training,” said Yong Gao, the team’s coach. “I know these people. These players are very good. … I knew we’d be very successful.” Gao, who is also a computer science professor at Ohlone, has been playing and coaching table tennis for many years. He had tried to form clubs on campus in the past but had been unsuccessful. The team hopes that this success will put Ohlone See photos and candidate statements on Pages 6 and 7. Ro Khanna

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APRIL 7, 2016

Vol. LI No. 6

FREMONT, CAOHLONEMONITOR.COM

THURSDAY

Hundreds attend High School Theatre Festival.See photos on Page 4.

Ohlone table tennis team members, from left: Coach Yong Gao and players Weida Guan, Ying Wang and Chang Chen. Wang won the women’s singles title at the National Collegiate Table Tennis Association national championships March 25-27.

NATIONAL CHAMP

IVAN VARGAS / MONITOR

ASOC ELECTIONS NEXT WEEK STEP Up walk, dialogue raise awareness

Audit rips UC system

Coffee with Khanna

BRIANNE O’SULLIVANNews editor

A recently released state audit revealed that the University of California system lowers admission standards for out-of-state applicants as a way to pad the institution’s budget.

Out-of-state students pay almost three times more than in-state students do for tuition and other basic fees. The audit and critics of the UC argue that California stu-dents are losing spots to nonresidents who

BRIANNE O’SULLIVANNews editor

I recently sat down with Congressional candidate Ro Khanna to discuss the issues in the race for the 17th Congres-sional District, and the nation at large. This is not Khanna’s first time running for the seat. In 2014, Khanna lost by a four-point mar-gin – fewer than 5,000 votes – to Congressman Mike Honda, who has represented the area in Congress since 2001.

Khanna, a longtime resident of Fremont and intellectual prop-

Continued on Page 3

Continued on Page 7

Continued on Page 2

This is the first of five profiles of the candidates for the 17th Congressional District, which includes the Ohlone campus.

RISHABH SINGHALStaff writer

The Newark campus will host STEP Up Ohlone’s Day of Dialogue and Out of the Darkness Walk on Tuesday and Wednesday. Both events aim to promote mental health awareness and raise money for suicide preven-tion.

The third annual Day of Dialogue will include games, screenings, prizes, and photo booths. Its goal is to create a safe, open forum for the cam-pus community to discuss mental health issues.

“We advocate for mental LAURA GONSALVES / MONITOR FILE PHOTOHealth Center Director Sally Bratton, right, embraces Christiana Dawson during last year’s STEP Up Ohlone Out of the Darkness Walk.

MONITOR STAFF

The Associated Students of Ohlone College will hold elections next week for executive officers and the student member of the Board of Trustees.

Candidates include Mira Chandra and Kimberly Quinto for president; Samir Panjwani and Catherine Tran for legislative representative; and Miguel Fuentes, Sabrina Listek and Rahul Patel for the student member of the board.

Students can vote online at www.ohlone.edu/asoc or on-site at both campuses from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday.

The on-campus locations are the first floor of Hy-man Hall on the Fremont campus and the first-floor lobby on the Newark campus.

In addition to the candidates on the ballot, students can vote for write-in candidates who are current stu-dents at the college. A write-in candidate must get at least 50 certified votes.

CRISTIAN MEDINASports editor

The Ohlone Table Tennis team members spent their Spring Break the best way they probably could: in Round Rock, Texas, at the National Collegiate Table Tennis National Championships.

The team placed third overall and first in women’s singles, competing against colleges and universities from all over the United States and Canada.

Team founder and president, Ying Wang, took the women’s singles title after defeating Anastasia Rybka from Texas Wesleyan University three sets to two.

Despite a dominant performance throughout the tournament, Wang was humble to have gotten as far as she did and win first place.

“It’s so exciting,” Wang said. “I didn’t expect to get first place. … There are so many good players.”

Wang founded the team last fall with the goal of simply practicing her skills and being able to play Continued on Page 7

pingpong with other students on campus.“I want to promote table tennis in America,

especially in community colleges,” Wang added. Ohlone was the only community college in the country represented at the tournament.

The team’s immediate success was mostly unex-pected by everyone on the team. But one person knew that the team had the talent to go as far as it did.

“I had a lot of confidence in the ability and hard training,” said Yong Gao, the team’s coach. “I know these people. These players are very good. … I knew we’d be very successful.”

Gao, who is also a computer science professor at Ohlone, has been playing and coaching table tennis for many years. He had tried to form clubs on campus in the past but had been unsuccessful.

The team hopes that this success will put Ohlone

See photos and candidate statements on Pages 6 and 7.

Ro Khanna

M O N I T O R NEWSAPRIL 7, 20162NEWS BITESMake Ohlone

beautifulVolunteers are needed

for a “Make Ohlone Beau-tiful” event on April 21 on the Fremont campus, in celebration of Earth Week.

Volunteers will meet from 8:30 to 9 a.m. in the Quad in front of Building 5 to get work assignments. Coffee and doughnuts will be provided.

Cleanup work will be from 9 a.m. to noon, al-though volunteers don’t need to commit to all three hours. Trash bags, “picker uppers” and disposable gloves will be provided. Volunteers should wear sturdy shoes and bring their own work gloves.

To RSVP, go to www.sur-veymonkey.com/r/PPRP-W5V.

Deadline nears for nominations

Nominations are due Friday for Employee of the Year awards.

There are four catego-ries: staff of the year, fac-ulty of the year, adjunct faculty of the year and manager of the year.

For guidelines and a nomination form, go to www.ohlone.edu/org/profdev/employeeofyear.

Submit electronic cop-ies of the application to [email protected]. Submit printed copies to the HR mailbox, Fremont campus.

Selections will be made by the Faculty and Staff Professional Develop-ment Committees.

Awards will be given at the Pre-Graduation Din-ner on May 20.

– Compiled by Monitor staff

Gerardo Noriega will speak Friday about the process of creating a novel medical device in “Bioen-gineering: Call to Action - A Novel Treatment for Blood Clot Removal.”

The free speech, the last Friday Science Seminar of the Spring Semester, will be from noon to 1 p.m. in Room 3201 on the Fre-mont campus.

Noriega is the manag-ing director of GVMED; founder of ReVascular Therapeutics; and fac-ulty member of the Santa Clara University School of Bioengineering.

Friday Science Semi-nars are sponsored by the Math/Science/Engineer-ing Division and ASOC.

Sign-in sheets will be provided for extra credit or makeup-credit.

Science seminar coming Friday

Convention chaosDonald Trump’s loss in

Wisconsin’s GOP primary Tuesday will make it even more difficult for him to win the nomination out-right. Many expect chaos at a contested convention. In order to win the Republican

nomination, a candidate has to secure 1,237 delegates. If one candidate does not have 1,237 delegates, the Repub-lican nominee is decided by delegates at the Republican National Convention, which is scheduled to take place in July in Cleveland.

It should be pointed out that the convention rules committee – made up of party leaders and insiders – makes and breaks the rules. The GOP establishment’s dislike of Trump is no secret, and many have speculated they may plan to “rig the game.” So just that theory is reason enough to follow the convention. But there may be more to add to the political

theater. When people vote in primaries and caucuses, they are not voting for the candi-date directly. They are voting for delegates who then go on to represent and vote for the candidate at the convention.

Each state has their own rules on how their delegates must vote. Most states re-quire the delegate to vote for the candidate they are assigned for at least the first bid, and some states bind them until the second bid.

However, after the first vote, many delegates are free to vote for whomever they wish, regardless of whom the people in their state voted for.

Some states, like Penn-sylvania, don’t even require

the delegates to vote for any specific candidate. And other states require that delegates stick with their candidates until they drop out of the race or the delegation votes by a supermajority to leave their candidate.

It is expected that, should Trump lose the first bid, a good number of delegates would be ready to break from him and go to the candidate of their own choosing. The rules delegates have to fol-low vary state by state, but if Trump does not win the nomination outright – even if he does go in with a lead – it is anyone’s guess as to who would come out on top as the Republican nominee.

RISHABH SINGHALStaff writer

The Newark campus will host the Tri-Cities Annual Spring Career Expo on April 29. More than 50 employ-ers will attend, hiring for part-time and full-time po-sitions. There will be open-ings in industries like man-ufacturing, biotech, retail, healthcare, and logistics.

Students are asked to attend in casual business attire and bring their re-sumes.

The Tri-Cities One-Stop Career Center will offer a number of Power Prep Se-ries to help with Career Expo readiness. The work-shops will be from 2 to 4 p.m. Wednesday and April 19, 20, 21 and 26 at the Ca-reer Center, Room 1211 on the Newark campus.

The Career Expo will be from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. April 29. To learn more or pre-register, go to www.tricitiesonestop.com.

Newark to host Career Expo April 29

are willing to shell out more money to attend the presti-gious public university.

California’s Master Plan for Higher Education outlines that the UC should only admit out-of-state students who are comparable to the “upper half of residents who are eligible for admission,” California State Auditor Elaine Howle’s report says.

However, according to the 116-page audit, UC for the past five years has changed the standards so that out-of-state applicants only have to “compare favorably” with in-state applicants.

State legislators have called for a change to this practice and have talked about intro-ducing legislation that would do just that. However, unlike the CSU system, the UC is autonomous and so state legislators may not have the

authority to compel them. Funding gives state officials some leverage, but they have no direct control over the UCs.

The UC released a response to the audit in the form of their own report, “Straight Talk on Hot-Button Issues: UC Admissions, Finances, and Transparency 2016.” The report argues that “UC policies overwhelmingly favor California residents.”

Many other states have made their residents’ admis-sion and education a priority; the standards tend to be high-er for nonresident applicants.

Depending on who you ask, the UC system’s financial crisis is caused primarily by the slashes in state funding or the exorbitant salaries for university administrators, and unwillingness to cut costs.

“If anything has con-strained the enrollment of California students, it has been reductions in state fund-ing. Nonresidents pay the full cost of their education – and more,” Janet Napolitano, the President of the UC System, argues in a rebuttal at the end of the report.

The Chancellor of UC Berkeley, Nicholas Dirks, is paid $516,446 annually. That is more than Gov. Jerry Brown and President Barack Obama’s annual salaries. Other chan-cellors and executives at the UCs make about the same. Some argue that while their pay scale may seem excessive, it is actually below the com-petitive market price amongst prestigious universities that UC Berkeley typically ranks.

California state officials

are likely to blame the UC’s unwillingness to cut costs for their financial woes, whereas UC officials blame cuts to state funding.

“Over the past several years, the university has failed to put the needs of residents first,” according to the audit.

The costs of pursuing high-er education nationwide continues to rise. Seven in 10 seniors who graduated from public and nonprofit colleges in 2014 had student loan debt, with an average of $28,950 per borrower, according to the In-stitute for College Access and Success. From 2004 to 2014, the share of graduates with debt rose modestly (from 65 percent to 69 percent) while average debt at graduation rose at more than twice the rate of inflation.

Continued from Page 1

Audit: UC changed application standards

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erty lawyer, is an adjunct professor at Santa Clara University and an econom-ics lecturer at Stanford Uni-versity. He served with the Department of Commerce under President Obama and used this experience to write his book “Entrepreneurial Nation: Why Manufactur-ing is Still Key to America’s Future.”

“My inspiration for poli-tics comes from my grand-father,” Khanna said. “He spent four years in jail alongside Gandhi in India’s independence movement, fighting for human rights and social justice in the 1940s.”

Khanna’s grandfather would share with him stories that gave him “the sense that politics can really make a difference in people’s lives.” This passion for social jus-tice encouraged him to get into politics.

Honda is currently facing a House Ethics investiga-tion, and Khanna has made this an issue in the race. Honda and his staff were accused of offering favors to those who would donate to his campaign, according to a House Ethics Committee report.

“We need a Congressman who will help everyone and not just a couple donors,” commented Khanna.

Getting super PAC money out of politics has become a much talked about issue this election year. Khanna has sworn not to take money from lobbyists or PACS for his campaign. In the last elec-tion, tech powerhouses like Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer and Facebook’s first presi-dent Sean Parker – neither of whom are constituents of the 17th Congressional

District – made significant contributions to Khanna’s campaign. Many argued that Khanna accepting these funds was no different than accepting money from a super PAC or lobbyist.

When asked why he thinks such wealthy and well-connected people in the tech industry support him, Khanna put it down to his “understanding of Silicon Valley issues and the nu-ances of those issues,” and his policies on women in the workplace and coding in classrooms.

Traffic congestion in the 17th district is a huge issue that most likely affects every Ohlone student. During peak traffic times, it can take about 20 minutes to get from the entrance of Fremont campus to the Interstate 680 ramp, which is about a mile-long journey.

Khanna opposes the $68 billion bullet train that is proposed to run through California. Instead, he pro-poses that money be redis-tributed amongst congres-sional districts so that the funds can be invested in more local means of trans-portation.

Khanna has his own plan for solving the traffic di-lemma in the 17th district: By expanding BART to serve San Jose and Santa Clara, adding lanes at the inter-section of Interstate 880 and Route 237, encourag-ing ridesharing plans or programs, and building up bus routes.

“I want a massively con-nected grid of public trans-portation,” he said. On top of building on public transpor-tation, our current transpor-tation infrastructure needs to be “upgraded, modern-ized, and made safer.”

Khanna emphasized he

would do everything he could to meet the needs of the people of District 17.

“I’m doing a Town Hall in every city [in the district] in April,” he said. “I think one of the biggest things about constituent services is being accessible.”

When asked about edu-cation, Khanna said he is “really passionate about education.” Throughout the interview, he emphasized that reforming education was one of his top priorities.

Khanna believes more funding and support needs to be provided to K-12 schools and public univer-sities. While he may have a lot of support from the tech community because of his STEM policy proposals, Khanna would like to ensure that art education plays a key role in schools. Khanna is for prioritizing California students over nonresident students for admission to the UC system; an issue that has recently garnered a lot of at-tention. He supports making public higher education free. He’s also proposed that the federal government place a greater tax on tech compa-nies that are shielding their money by doing business with foreign banks.

“Cisco pays an almost zero percent tax or a very low tax,” Khanna said, using the tech company that has its headquarters in San Jose as an example. “They need to pay more in taxes in the United States.”

His vision for free public college education, which he compared to Bernie Sanders’ and Robert Reich’s plans, is that students would

go to school for free and pay back 10 percent of their income once they become employed for the first 10 years of their employment.

Student loans and interest rates are a critical aspect in making college more afford-able, and Khanna spoke en-thusiastically about creating reform that would benefit students. Khanna supports Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s proposal that would let students borrow at the same low rates large banks pay for short-term borrowing. Federal student loan inter-est rates, which are set every year by Congress, are about 3 percent. Big banks pay .75 percent for short-term bor-rowing.

We also discussed pri-vate student loans, which tend to be the most harm-ful to borrowers because of high, predatory interest rates. Khanna explained that he was in support of allowing private loan borrowers to consolidate their private loans into federal loans, which would provide those students with more protections.

Khanna explained that he fully understands the challenges facing those who wish to pursue higher edu-cation, as he is still paying off student loan debt himself. He said he hopes that young people will become more involved in the political processes that impact their lives, communities, and the world around them.

“That’s why we need new people who are going to inspire people to believe,” he said. “People who are going to be ethical and hard-working and honest.”

Continued from Page 1

Khanna outlines positions on issues

M O N I T O R FEATURESAPRIL 7, 20164

Breaking a legMore than 850 students gathered on the Fremont campus March 18 and 19 for the 22nd annual High School Theatre Festival.

Students competed for 100 awards in 35 cat-egories in performance, improvisation, dance, technical theater, and design in dramatic, musi-cal, contemporary or classical theater. Theater professionals from around the Bay Area served as judges. The festival is the largest of its kind in Northern California.

Here are some of the performers at the two-day festival.

PHOTOS BY LAURA GONSALVES

FEATURES M O N I T O RAPRIL 7, 20165

pacificoaks.edu/sanjose 877.314.2380

She is eager to learn.Be ready to teach.

E xplore our Education and Teacher Credentialing programs at our new San Jose campus.

A modern-day radio legend

Ryan Seacrest delivers entertaining radio shows that are fun for the entire family to listen to, because he doesn’t deliver offensive content.

Instead, Seacrest spins Top 40 hits, helps listeners try to end their troubled rela-tionships, and provides the latest entertainment news.

In 2004, Ryan began host-ing the “On Air with Ryan Seacrest” morning show at KIIS-FM, which he still does today. His regular segments include “Ryan’s Roses,” where listeners try to end their troubled relationships, and the entertainment gos-sip report, “The Celebrity Sleaze.”

The syndicated version of “On Air with Ryan Seacrest” is aired locally on San Fran-cisco station Star 101.3, from 3 to 7 p.m. weekday afternoons.

Seacrest also began host-ing the weekly radio staple “American Top 40” in 2004. He replaced longtime host Casey Kasem, who had retired from the top-rated chart hits countdown show. Kasem, along with longtime “American Bandstand” host Dick Clark, had been one of Seacrest’s radio idols when he was growing up. AT40 is aired every weekend on hundreds of radio stations worldwide.

Seacrest’s media career did not begin on American Idol, but rather at Top 40 radio station WSTR-FM in Atlanta, where he started out as an un-paid intern during his junior year in high school in 1991.

After graduating from Dunwoody High in 1993, Seacrest stayed at the station and began taking journal-ism classes at the University of Georgia until he was 19, when he resigned from the Atlanta radio station. He gathered his belongings and moved to Los Angeles.

In 1999, his show became the highest-rated afternoon drive radio show in the Los Angeles Market. His popularity really took off in 2002, when he was hired to become host of a new TV music reality series called “American Idol,” a spin-off of the British television series “Pop Idol.”

“They asked if I thought

I could handle live TV,” Seacrest told the New York Times Magazine in 2004. “I said, ‘Of course,’ even though I had no idea.”

After Seacrest got the “American Idol” gig, he called one of his own idols, Dick Clark, for his advice. Clark told him it’s important to have ownership in a proj-ect, something that’s much more difficult now than in Clark’s day. The conversa-tion encouraged Seacrest to “establish a brand name that could live forever.”

“So maybe in 20 years it will still be called ‘On Air,’ with someone else host-ing the show, but I can still produce it,” Seacrest told the New York Times. “Because, let’s be honest, you don’t know how long people are going to let you into their homes.”

Mass layoffs at San Francisco stations

Last week, KGO (810 AM) laid off up to 30 of its news staff, and longtime mid-day host Ronn Owens an-nounced that he would be transferred to sister station KSFO (560 AM). However, owner Cumulus Media re-versed itself on Owens’ move in response to listener anger, and Owens remains part of the new KGO lineup, which

began Tuesday.Syndicated talk show

hosts Armstrong and Getty have climbed aboard for mornings from crosstown rival KKSF (910 AM), Owens anchors the early midday shift from 10 a.m. to noon, weekend host Eathan Bear-man will host a noon to 2 p.m. show, Brian Copeland will stay on-board to host an early afternoon (2 to 4 p.m.) show, and then Chip Frank-lin (4 to 7 p.m.) and one-time Chicago morning show host Kevin “Drex” Buchar (7 to 10 p.m.) will round up the daily lineup.

“We couldn’t be more excited about the new di-rection KGO 810 is taking, and we believe our listeners will love what they hear,” Program Director Mike An-thony said in a statement. “Ronn’s audience made it very clear to us that he belongs at KGO – so we listened.”

Meanwhile, at Cumulus sister station KFOG (104.5 FM), four of the station’s six full-time DJs were laid off last week in advance of a new format to begin April 20, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

The news came after Cumulus announced it had hired Bryan Schock as KFOG’s new program direc-tor. He most recently served as interim PD/MD of AAA

102.1 KPRI San Diego, which was sold last year. He has also programmed two leg-endary San Diego stations: alternative “91X” and classic rock KGB. Schock was the first on-air host and music director at AAA 101.9 WRXP New York when it launched in 2009.

Turning to sports

The Oakland Raiders didn’t move to Los Angeles after last season as they had hoped, so the NFL team has signed a contract exten-sion with Entercom’s 95.7 The Game to continue as the team’s flagship station. Included in the deal are si-mulcasts on sister stations 98.5 KFOX and 102.9 KBLX. “The Raiders will be front and center every Monday,” Program Director Don Kol-lins told the radio industry website All Access. “The return of Raiders Monday and the addition of several new programming features will build on the best Raiders coverage.”

Monitor radio columnist Henry Ochs has spent many years working in radio and keeps track on all the latest trends in the radio busi-ness. He can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter @DJHam-merinhank.

M O N I T O R OPINIONSAPRIL 7, 20166

ASOC CANDIDATE STATEMENTSStudent Representative, Board of Trustees

ANDY KREISSCommunications adviser,STEP Up Ohlone

Perhaps you’ve received one of our encouraging emails offering a chance at free movie tickets. Or noticed the colorful “step and repeat” banner in the hallways of the main build-ing on the Newark campus.

Maybe one of your pro-fessors directed your at-tention to a “We’ve Got Your Back” public service video during the presenta-tion of their syllabus. Some of you may have seen our “Let’s Talk” postcards full of cute and goofy veggies promoting open discus-sion about mental health on display at the Student Health Center.

No matter how, or even if, you’ve noticed the STEP Up Ohlone initiative here on campus, for the past four years, our goals have been simple: to promote mental health as a key element in the academic success of Ohlone students, and to strengthen Ohlone’s infrastructure to create a safe space where students feel supported and socially connected.

While the goals may be straightforward, the real-ity of achieving them is less so. Research shows that college can be a time of high stress for many young adults. This transi-

tional period where many students are forced to dis-cover, possibly for the first time, who they are, choose career goals, and ma-neuver new friendships/relationships can be very challenging. Research also shows that when students are healthy, emotionally supported, and socially connected to a network of caring people, they per-form better in the class-room. That’s what STEP Up Ohlone is all about.

The seeds of the STEP Up Ohlone initiative can be traced back to a tragedy that rocked Ohlone’s cam-pus. In 2010, beloved cam-pus safety officer Stewart Dawson died by suicide. The heartbreaking event brought the campus to-gether to grieve, ques-tion, heal and ultimately mobilize, turning this in-conceivably sad event into something positive.

In 2012, through the dedication and vision of our director, Sally Brat-ton, and STEP Up Ohlone Program Director, Dr. Sang Leng Trieu, the Student Health Center secured a two-year $439,000 grant from Alameda County Be-havioral Health Services. Then, in 2014, through a provision of the Affordable Care Act, Ohlone was able to secure federal funding to continue the work of addressing the issue of

campus suicide prevention here at Ohlone College.

Trieu remarked, “This is one of the most meaning-ful projects I have worked on in my 18-year career here at Ohlone. The issues of suicide prevention and mental health de-stigmati-zation cut across all bound-aries – gender, ethnicity, race, and class. Working to reduce stigma gives us all hope and a chance that one day mental health can be seen as an issue that we can talk about openly without judgment.”

Over the four years the program has been in exis-tence, STEP Up Ohlone has been the galvanizing force behind events such as the annual Out of the Darkness walks – bringing healing and hope to those who have lost loved ones to suicide – and Day of Dialogue, an annual campus-wide event meant to get folks talking

about mental and emo-tional health.

It has promoted online Kognito training for stu-dents, faculty and staff, created public service an-nouncements, organized stress-reduction events during finals weeks, par-ticipated in a national student health survey to better understand the health status of Ohlone students, taken the lead in the development, publica-tion and dissemination of the college’s “Crisis Inter-vention Handbook,” and established meaningful partnerships across mul-tiple departments on the Ohlone campus, including Veterans Affairs and Hu-man Resources. The list goes on.

Bratton summed it up this way: “It comes down to this: what kind of Ohlone campus do we want to create? One that prides

itself on the well-being of our students? One that thrives on a culture of inclusivity and empathy, or not? Through partner-ships and funding STEP Up Ohlone has been able and will continue to pro-mote this simple truth: We all struggle. Every one of us. But here’s the thing, we don’t need to struggle alone.”

Students, here’s your chance to get involved and become a part of this move-ment. Next week, STEP Up Ohlone will spearhead another Day of Dialogue on the Newark campus ( Tuesday) and an Out of the Darkness 3K walk across the Newark campus (Wednesday), along with Text, Talk, Act activities across both Fremont and Newark campuses (Mon-day through Thursday). For more information, go to www.stepupohlone.org.

JOY MOON / MONITOR

THREE FLAGSSTEP Up works to make Ohlone more connected

RAHUL PATEL

To me, “Student Trustee” means trusted student: someone who is depend-able, diligent, and believes in what Ohlone can be for all of us. Yes, we’re all here to ultimately transfer, but for the time ahead, I want to build a sense of a communi-ty. As the cur-rent Student Trustee, I assist students with a variety of issues and dilemmas – I love it. I want to continue working with all of you. As your devoted Student Trustee, I want to serve as your voice, your rep-resentative, and your friend. So vote for me, Rahul Patel, for your 2016-2017 Student Trustee!

MIGUEL FUENTES

I would like to be a stu-dent trustee because I want to learn more about my college and leadership. I have been part of ASOC for almost a year. I have l e a r n e d s o many things there. For ex-ample, I have learned how to work in a team, which I have never done. Another thing I learned in ASOC is leader-ship, which I didn’t know how to work it well until now. But my main goal for the Board of Trustees is to learn more and be able to share my opinion as a stu-dent, because I believe that students should be heard.

SABRINA LISTEK

In most cases students are found to be underrepresent-ed, even though they play an essential role in the educa-tion system here at Ohlone. Boardroom decisions di-rectly affect students and I want to be student trust-ee to ensure that common objectives are achieved. Due to my self-motivation and great desire to serve, I believe I could perform great duties as student trustee. I also have the responsibility it takes for this role and a keen interest in giving students a voice to be heard. My ambitions are to represent Ohlone Com-munity College as a whole, yet uphold diverse interests.

Vice President

KIMBERLY QUINTO

Hello everyone! In Fall 2014, I served as ASOC sena-tor in which I grew accus-tomed to the basics of ASOC. I now currently serve as your ASOC Vice President/In-ter-Club Coun-cil chair and through this experience, I’ve learned to love working with the Ohlone community. Serv-ing the many diverse students has brought me complete joy and satisfaction. It has also taught me lessons that I hope to use as ASOC President. I believe that I am the quali-fied candidate because of my experience, passion, and ambition. You can trust that ASOC and Ohlone College will be safe in my hands :)

MIRA CHANDRA

Why I want to run:1. Be c a u s e I l ov e

Ohlone College and believe it’s not only a commuter school but a haven of op-portunity.

2. Because I believe there are multiple ways to make t h i s g r e a t school even better.

3. Because this school and our students’ needs relate and are important to me.

President

NEWS M O N I T O RAPRIL 7, 2016 7

Ohlone table tennis player Ying Wang won the women’s singles title at the NCTTA national championships.

SUDOKU SOLUTION

Solution for the puzzle on Page 3.PUZZLE BY OHLONE STUDENT NADIA BUDIMAN

ASOC CANDIDATE STATEMENTS

CATHERINE TRAN

Greetings students! My name is Catherine. I am running for ASOC Legisla-tive Representative. With my enthusiasm and dedica-tion toward Ohlone, I will put forth all my ef-fort into i m p l e -menting laws that will ben-efit stu-dents and O h l o n e C o l l e g e at large. Through adhering to the Constitution, I will work toward improving the school. I possess qualities of Legislative Representative because I am outgoing, mo-tivated, and do not hesitate to extend a helping hand. My main priority will be to ensure the well-being of stu-dents; therefore I will work my hardest to see everyone succeed academically, and leave Ohlone with a positive experience.

SAMIR PANJWANI

My name is Samir Pan-jwani and I am running to be your next Legislative Representative. As a Sena-tor this past year at Ohlone, I loved working to make our College a place ev-erybody c o u l d e n j o y . As your Legis la-tive Rep-resenta-tive, I will highlight and give voice to the prob-lems that affect students the most. I have previous experience not only with owning my own busi-nesses, but also working at my current employer, Microsoft. My previous year’s experience on ASOC, as well as my work expe-rience and passion for leadership, will enable me to create ground-breaking changes and make next year incredible.

Legislative RepresentativeKYLE SANDHU

My name is Kyle Sandhu and I am currently an ASOC Senator and the ICC Secre-tary. As an ASOC Senator I have worked with stronger leaders, learned to lead from t h e m , and even-tually led my own e v e n t s . The Vice p r e s i -d e n t ’ s main role is head of ICC. As ICC Secretary I have learned the ins and outs of how ICC works and will bring that knowledge to the table. I know that I will be a smart leader when it comes to ASOC and ICC. I will be a strong Vice President and will help make Ohlone an even better school.

Vice President TreasurerJARNA PATEL

Hi my name is Jarna Patel and I am running for Treasurer of the Associated Students of Ohlone College! I am well qualified for this position since I’ve served as a Sena-tor on the Budget-ing Com-m i t t e e a s we l l as shad-owed the c u r r e n t Treasurer this past year. My interests lie in the business world, as my major is Business Administration. I have explored the world of Finance by interning at the Finance department at Nimble Storage. As Trea-surer, I will work with the rest of the Executive Team to represent and address the student body. Vote Jarna Patel for Treasurer!

EMILY TINACO

Emily Tinaco was an APASA club officer for two semesters, an ASOC senator for five se-mesters, and is now striving to become your next ASOC Secretary. She has gained valuable e x p e r i -ence in account-a b i l i t y, reliability, r e c o r d -keeping, and flex-i b i l i t y through the aforementioned Ohlone-related roles as well as through external volunteer or employ-ment opportunities such as library worker, shift leader, and administrative assis-tant. As ASOC Secretary, she will work to amplify student voices to the college. She will accomplish this goal by pro-viding the ASOC council with the organization and detail to streamline processes and create a productive working environment.

Secretary

on the map in the world of collegiate table tennis.

“Before this tourna-ment, nobody knew who Ohlone College was,” team member Weida Guan said. “We were the dark horse, the strangers.”

Guan, along with Wang,

health awareness in a fun, festive atmosphere,” said Rosemary O’Neill, Ohlone’s mental health counselor.

The Day of Dialogue will be from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday in Treadway Court and the lobby of the Newark campus. The next day, walkers will make their way around the Newark campus in the annual Out of the Darkness Walk, held to raise money and awareness for suicide preven-tion. Registration will be at 11 a.m. and the walk will begin at noon.

“With Out of the Dark-ness, the Ohlone community comes together to walk the 3K course in support of those who have lost loved ones to suicide,” O’Neill said. Pro-ceeds from the walk will be used for research in suicide prevention.

There also will be a variety of Text, Talk, Act activities centered around mental and emotional health in classes on the Fremont and Newark campuses from Monday through Thursday. The ac-tivities will be facilitated by a member of the Student Health Center or a trained student.

STEP Up events next week

played professional table tennis in China prior to com-ing to Ohlone.

Coach Gao added that the team went into the tournament as unknowns, but by the end were receiv-ing compliments and hope to become regulars at the National Championships after doing so well in their

first ever appearance.“Definitely these guys

will go next year and will achieve better,” Gao said.

Now that Ohlone has made its presence known, they’ll look to improve and rely on the many returning players to get them back to the tourna-ment next year.

Continued from Page 1

LAURA GONSALVES / MONITOR

Continued from Page 1

Table tennis third in nation

M O N I T O R SPORTSAPRIL 7, 20168

TAM DUONG JR. / MONITOR

For the winWhat. A. Finish. Just

when you thought March Madness couldn’t get any more, well, mad, the Villanova Wildcats took a page out of a fairytale to end one of the greatest National Championship games in history.

With the final sec-onds of the clock ticking away, their opponent, perennial powerhouse North Carolina Tar Heels, hit an impos-sible, off-balanced, clutch three tying the game at 74 all.

Villanova, a team that had enjoyed so much success in recent years but just couldn’t get over the hump, could only watch as the mira-cle shot that seemingly saved North Carolina’s season only extended theirs.

The game was almost guaranteed to go into overtime as Villanova had one possession left and just 4.7 seconds to make it down the court and get the final shot off. Impossible, right? Wrong.

Wildcat senior Ryan Arcidiacono took the ball down the court with time winding down and dished it back to Kris Jenkins who had an open shot for the win.

As the last tenths of a second disappeared from the clock, the arena held its breath as Jenkins let a three go that would win it all or send the game to over-time. The ball was in the air for what seemed like an eternity.

Then, within a split second, swish. Game over. It was straight out of a movie. Over a month of nonstop col-lege basketball that started with 64 teams ended with one shot and one champion.

The buzzer-beater three lifted Villanova to a 77-74 win that secured them their first Cham-pionship since 1985.

The Wildcats are the kings of college basket-ball. The Arcidiacono pass, the Jenkins shot, and the last-second win have given them bas-ketball immortality.

This will be a hard tournament to beat and one that won’t ever be forgotten.

CRISTIAN MEDINASports editor

Another strong pitch-ing performance helped the Ohlone baseball team secure its fifth conference win and 18th overall win of the season. The Renegades beat Cabrillo College 4-2 in the second game of the two-game series.

Ohlone’s first two runs came via errors by Cabrillo in the first and second in-nings. The rest of the of-fense came later in the bot-tom of the sixth inning, in the form of a Naeem Knox double that scored two, giv-ing them a 4-1 lead.

Knox’s double earned him his 16th RBI of the season, tying him for first on the team. So far, the freshman is hitting .329 and having a very impressive season.

LAURA GONSALVES / MONITORAbove: Grant Goff pitches in the Ohlone baseball team’s 4-2 win over Monterey Peninsula College at James Logan High School in Union City on March 29. Below: Max Diaz stretches for first base.

Goff deals, Knox rakes in Renegades win

Above-left: Ohlone’s softball team celebrates a 3-run home run in the game against Chabot College in Hayward on March 31. Above-right: Renegades player Kassondra Kocha, left, prepares to throw from second to first for a double play.

Also having a noteworthy season is starting pitcher Grant Goff. Goff threw sev-en innings of five-hit base-ball, holding Cabrillo to two runs.

Goff has posted a 2.01 ERA with 33 strikeouts in seven starts this season.

Josh Calmerin came on in relief in the eighth inning and closed out the game, not giving up a hit and keep-ing his ERA at 0.86 through 13 appearances this season. It was also his fifth save.

Ohlone has a tough task ahead as they match up against first-place Cañada College today and Saturday. The Renegades are right be-hind in second place, and will try to gain some ground in the standings and im-prove their record as they make a strong push for the playoffs.

Renegades player Pablo Artero tags out a West Hills College player at Logan High on March 19. Ohlone won 6-5.

BASEBALL

Today, 2:30 p.m. at Cañada College in Red-wood City.

Saturday, 1 p.m. at Cañada College in Red-wood City.

Wednesday, 2:30 p.m. vs. Hartnell College in Salinas.

April 14, 2:30 p.m. vs.

Hartnell College in Sali-nas.

April 16, 1 p.m. vs. Sky-line College at James Lo-gan High School in Union City.

April 21, 2:30 p.m. at Gavilan College in Gilroy.

April 23, 1 p.m. vs. Mon-terey Peninsula College at James Logan High School in Union City.

Upcoming gamesApril 22, 2:30 p.m. at

Cabrillo College in Aptos.

SOFTBALL

Saturday, noon and 2 p.m. at Monterey Penin-sula College.

April 14, 3 p.m. at De Anza College in Cuper-tino.

April 16, 1 and 3 p.m. vs. College of the Redwoods

and Cabrillo College in Aptos.

April 23, 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. vs. Gavilan College and Chabot College in Hayward.

SWIMMING

April 14-16, all day, Coast Conference Championships in Cu-pertino.

LAURA GONSALVES / MONITOR