
Highlighting the events for the month will be the art exhibit, “What Were You Wearing?” which will be on display April 21-25 at the Santos Manuel Student Union North.

Many of the students who attended submitted their intent to become Coyotes in the next academic year.

The CSUSB Faculty and Staff Giving Campaign, set for April 7-18, provides faculty and staff the opportunity to donate to a fundraising effort that supports the success of students. In celebration of its 20th anniversary, CSUSB is launching the Senior Class Gift, a new initiative to foster a culture of giving among graduating seniors.

It was another great turnout at Choose CSUSB Day on March 22, attracting more than 600 students and approximately 1,200 family members and guests. Students admitted to Cal State San Bernardino for the fall 2025 semester visited campus, where they attended workshops, resource and academic fairs, and were offered a chance to officially commit to joining CSUSB in the fall.

Leonard Transportation Center faculty Kimberly Collins, Yunfei Hou and Raffi Der Wartanian, with graduate students Sai Kalyan Ayyagari and Bhavik Pankaj Khatri, published a study for the journal Data in Brief; Mike Stull (entrepreneurship) discussed the opening of the Palm Desert Entrepreneur Resource Center; and Michael Karp (history) coordinated the 20th annual Academic WorldQuest competition.

Super Sunday, the statewide outreach by the California State University, took place on Feb. 23 when the university system that includes CSUSB joined with Black and African American churches to talk about the transformational power of a college degree.

The California State University’s Super Sunday, set for Feb. 23, is an initiative that focuses on the importance of higher education. Black and African American congregations across California will receive presentations from CSU officials.

The 12th annual Pioneer Breakfast will take place on Friday, Feb. 28, from 9-11 a.m., celebrating the remarkable contributions of African Americans who have profoundly impacted CSUSB.

A column by Kaitlyn Creasy (philosophy) was included in the top writings in the APA’s 2024 Public Philosophy Op-Ed Contest, Paloma Villegas (sociology) was interviewed for a segment about CSUSB students seeking to make San Bernardino a sanctuary city, and Daisy Ocampo Diaz (history) helped curate an upcoming exhibit, “Fire Kinship: Southern California Native Ecology and Art,” at the UCLA Fowler Museum.