February 8, 2023
  • 12:08 pm Fall Convocation 2022: “The State of this University is Strong”
  • 9:37 pm Ogrin Brings the Thunder in Toros 12-3 rout; team plays for playoff championship tomorrow
  • 7:00 am Outstanding Professor Award Recipient’s Mic Drop Moment at Last Month’s Virtual Ceremony
  • 9:10 am Bookworms of the World Unite!
  • 7:46 pm Breaking News: All Students Living in Campus Housing Required to Receive COVID-19 Vaccine
  • 9:00 am CSUDH Esports Creates International Competition
  • 9:35 am Spring Commencement Ceremonies Get Brighter
  • 3:46 pm Breaking News: Spring Commencement Ceremonies Recieve Stadium Upgrade
  • 8:00 am Testing the Teachers (and All the Educators)
  • 9:30 am CSUDH Educators and School Employees, Vaccinated Next
  • 10:30 am For White People Only: Anti-Racism Workshop Addresses Racial Bias and Unity
  • 2:43 pm Greatness Personified: Remembering Kobe Bryant
  • 10:02 am Straight Down the Chimney and Into Your (Digital) Hands: Special Holiday Edition of The Bulletin!
  • 2:44 pm Did You Wake up Looking this Beautiful?
  • 11:43 am A Long History for University’s Newest Major
  • 5:15 pm Issue 5 of Bulletin Live! Collector’s Item! Worth its Weight in Digital Paper!
  • 4:06 pm Special Election Issue
  • 4:03 pm Three best Latinx Halloween & Horror Short Films available now on HBO Max
  • 9:49 am Issue 3 of CSUDH Bulletin Live if You Want It
  • 3:24 pm Hispanic Heritage Month Update
  • 2:00 pm South Bay Economic Forecast Goes Virtual
  • 3:52 pm BREAKING NEWS: Classes for Spring to be Online, CSU Chancellor Announces
  • 9:39 am “Strikes” and Solidarity
  • 8:30 am March Into History: Just 5 in 1970, CSUDH Growth Shaped by Historic Event
  • 8:30 am Will the Bulletin Make Today Tomorrow?
  • 9:04 am Different Neighborhoods Warrant Rubber Bullets or Traffic Control For Protesters
  • 5:07 pm STAFF EDITORIAL: Even Socially Distant, We All Have to Work Together
  • 5:47 pm Transcript of CSUDH President Parham’s Coronavirus Announcement
  • 10:46 am Cal State Long Beach Suspends Face-to-Face Classes; CSUDH Discussing Contingency Plans
  • 5:26 pm Things Black People Should be Able to Get Away with This Month
  • 10:25 am Latinx Students Need a Place to Call Home
  • 2:35 pm Will Time Run Out Before Funds for PEGS? [UPDATED]
  • 8:41 am Year of the Rat? What’s That?
  • 6:20 am Artist Who Gave Life to Death and Inspired Countless Others Gets His Due at Dominguez Hills
  • 5:16 pm Why I’m Rooting for Dr. Cornel West
  • 5:00 pm Under Fire from the Feds, Vaping’s Future is Cloudy
  • 3:28 pm We’re Going to Need a Bigger Boat; Tsunami 3.0 Hits Campus, Enrollment Swells
  • 1:22 pm THE FIRST ISSUE OF THE BULLETIN IS HERE
  • 4:48 pm University Weathering a Wave of New Students
  • 9:21 pm The Bulletin’s Public Records Request Offers Springboard to Launch Gender Equity Discussion at CSUDH
  • 4:27 pm Black is the New Black: Raising the Capital on the “B” Word
  • 10:53 am Guns Up for Arrest: Student advocacy group pushes for CSU No Gun Zones–Including the Police
  • 4:09 pm Staff Editorial: Words on the First
  • 8:42 pm Carson Mayor Blasts Media, Landmark Libel Case in Keynote Address
  • 9:27 am Free Speech Week Calendar of Events Update
  • 6:02 am Food for Thought: 40% of Students are Food Insecure
  • 3:12 pm Academic Senate Rejects CSU GE Task Force & Report
  • 3:06 pm Work To Be Done
  • 5:56 pm ASI Elections: What You Need to Know
  • 8:02 pm CSUDH President Parham Announces Cancer Diagnosis
  • 9:47 am CSUDH Art Professor’s 20-Year Journey Results in First Local Showing of Film
  • 9:13 pm Free Speech or Free Hate area?
  • 9:08 pm CSUDH’s Best & Brightest Shine at Student Research Day
  • 9:05 pm Academic Senate Approves Gender Equity Task Force
  • 12:37 pm When Dr. Davis speaks, Toros Pay Close Attention
  • 3:38 pm Investing in the Future: Dr. Thomas A. Parham Reflects on the Past Eight Months and Contemplates​ the University’s Future
  • 3:24 pm Green Olive to Open By End of Feb; Starbucks Not Until Fall
  • 3:20 pm Gov. Newsom’s Proposed Budget Hailed for Extensive Funding Increases
  • 3:08 pm Out of the Classroom: Labor and Community Organizing Course Aims to Teach Students How to Organize for Social Justice
  • 2:54 pm The Other Route in Professional Sports
  • 9:02 am Hail to the New Chief, CSUDH President Thomas Parham
  • 3:36 pm Career Center Holds Major/Minor Fair
  • 5:34 pm After Unexpected Delay, Undocumented Becomes More Intimate Theatrical Production
  • 1:30 pm What to Expect When You’re Expecting New Buildings
  • 4:00 pm The Struggles and Highlights of a Small Business Owner
  • 4:00 pm All In and Ballin’
  • 4:00 pm Toros Coming Down To The Wire On 22-23 Season
  • 4:00 pm Wright and The Boys Are Gearing Up For Their Shot At The CCAA Crown
  • 4:00 pm The NFL’s top two teams face off in the Super Bowl
1

In October, Parham and Nguyen discussed the various grievances of the API community. Photo by Daniel Rivera.

By Daniel Rivera, Web Editor

Since coverage began back last spring, the Asian Pacific Cultural Center (APCC) has gained a director, but still no physical space on campus. After months of negotiations with the Asian Pacific Islander (API) community, the administration has announced that a new room in Welch Hall has been selected. 

This has come after a commitment by Parham in a meeting promising to have a place selected for a center following protests headed by numerous student groups in October.

 Ongoing negotiations were starting with a place selected initially in the Loker Student Union (LSU) building, meeting room 13, which was deemed too small and was rejected. 

Eventually, a new room was selected, Welch Hall room 250 for the center, according to an announcement by the AAPI Cultural Center on Instagram on Nov. 22. Welch Hall 250 is located on level 2 or the ground level for the rest of the campus and it’s also near the welcome center instead of deeper inside the building. 

“Currently, there are two people in that space that they need to move out, and then the space would have to get a cleaning and some temporary furniture brought in… my goal is to have that space accessible to students by the first week of the spring semester,” AAPI director Nathan Nguyen explained.

One of the people who need to be moved from this room is from enrollment services and the other person is from the presidential scholars. 

Nguyen said that perhaps in the next 2-5 years, another room might be sought out for the APCC. He has the desire to have a center in the LSU due to the proximity to other cultural centers but says the Welch Hall is adequate for the time being. 

Among the various API demands made over a month ago, the principal one, the center with some exceptions, has been filled. In the meantime, Nguyen has been promised that several of the other demands are being worked on. 

One of the remaining demands is to “hire an API therapist/counselor,” to have a counselor who can speak to API struggles and needs in a more culturally sensitive way. As of now, a committee is being assembled to start deliberating on who to fill that position. Nguyen hopes to have that person selected and hired before they open access to the various students, most likely in a room adjacent to the center itself. 

Some of the demands are promised to be fulfilled according to Nguyen, one of which was raising API enrollment rates to 10% by fall 2024, and have a report on how that will be done around the end of this semester. Another demand was to document the gap in achievement and opportunity and to redefine the API community as an underrepresented community. 

Parham’s commitment to API demands started after a protest back in October, bringing to light that the API had gone without a center since last spring. Nguyen said that he will continue to advocate for the various communities on campus. 

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