The Cal State San Bernardino Palm Desert Campus recently celebrated the release of the student-led literary magazine, The Concrete Desert Review, and paid tribute to the late Julie Paegle.
The community on and off campus are remembered those lost in the Dec. 15, 2015, mass shooting at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino. Of the 14 people who died that day, five were graduates of Cal State San Bernardino.
Fourteen people died in a mass shooting in San Bernardino on Dec. 2, 2015 – five of them CSUSB alumni – and all will be remembered during a memorial service at the university’s Peace Garden on Thursday, Dec. 2.
The Community Service Officer Program at CSUSB’s University Police Department has served as a pipeline to careers in criminal justice, both as sworn and unsworn personnel. Former community service officers have also pursued careers working closely with law enforcement agencies or have gone on to practice law.
The annual conference – which attracts 700-900 students of all disciplines: science, technology, engineering, math, health, social sciences, business, arts, humanities and performing arts – will take place virtually beginning at 8 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 20.
The five-year grant, “Proactive Approaches for Training Hispanics (PATHS) in STEM,” will help increase graduation rates and prepare students for graduate and professional schools.
Coyote pride will be on full display during Homecoming Week, Oct. 11-16, which will culminate with the annual Homecoming Bash and the women’s volleyball match versus rival Cal Poly Pomona.
CSUSB’s laptop computer lending program, which expanded at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, has resulted in giving more than 1,100 students access to computers and connectivity to the internet.
“The way we operate as a university will not look entirely the same as during our pre-pandemic days. However, the fact we will once again be able to interact face-to-face this fall, without a screen in between us, is a cause for celebration,” said CSUSB President Tomás D. Morales.