Eduardo Ochoa is the only SJSU presidential candidate out of the three finalists with experience in the California State University system. He currently serves as provost and vice president of academic affairs at Sonoma State University. (0) comments
The third and final presidential candidate to speak at an open forum, Eduardo Ochoa, spoke on Thursday to an audience made up mostly of faculty. There was standing room only in the Engineering Auditorium for the forum with the provost and vice president of academic affairs of Sonoma State University. (0) comments
For the second day in a row, the Engineering Auditorium was filled to its back walls for the introduction of an SJSU presidential candidate, Jon Whitmore. His speech was the second of three that have occurred this week, already having Elizabeth Grobsmith on campus Tuesday. (0) comments
Jon Whitmore, an SJSU presidential candidate sported the university's colors on his tie and stood in the middle of the stage ready for questions during a public forum in the Engineering Auditorium on Wednesday. Whitmore separated himself from another candidate, Elizabeth Grobsmith, in his stance on SJSU President Kassing's suspension of blood drives on campus. (0) comments
It's rib-tickling that SJSU's presidential race is so reminiscent of the one going on at the national level: two men (one man being a minority), one woman - and no shining star. I am not quite certain what I expected, but I am pretty sure it was a whole lot more. (0) comments
"You know I took acting, then I dropped it?" one student asked her friends as she walked past Hugh Gillis Hall, Room 226, the home of a beginning acting class taught by Laura Long. "I couldn't do it. I couldn't do it." Faisal Omar, a sophomore aviation major, said he took the class because he knew it was going to be fun. (0) comments
SJSU's biology department was granted $1.3 million from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, according to a news release. The institute is giving a total of $60 million to 48 schools nationwide to help them create changes in science education. (0) comments
Out of SJSU's 251 registered student organizations and clubs, two were recognized for their accomplishments at SJSU's second annual Student Organization Recognition Banquet on Wednesday, April 30. SJSU's Student Advocates for Higher Education and Gulf Coast Civic Works Project were both named Student Organization of the Year. (0) comments