The Orfalea College of Business is looking to hire the public relations firm Dan Klores Communications (DKC) to help build its reputation. The business school will join a client list that includes Ashlee Simpson, Microsoft and J. Crew.
BREAKING NEWS: Poly student found dead
The body of landscape architecture student Charles Tamae was found on Madonna Mountain today by four fellow students.
A look into ASI president’s progress
Kelly Grigss was elected last spring as ASI president on a 5-point platform including affordability, statewide representation, sustainability, diversity, and student access to services. She has made strides this year by addressing each of these points.
BREAKING NEWS: Cal Poly student missing since Monday
Landscape architecture junior Charles Tamae was last seen by friends on Mon., Nov. 30. at Cal Poly.
Cal Poly ups out-of-state recruitment effort
After a mandated cut of in-state students, Cal Poly tries to attract out-of-state students to fill empty spaces.
Summer quarter tuition change looks to graduate seniors and decrease student population
Summer classes will have to pay for themselves 100 percent in order to be offered this year, a change from previous summers. To support this, Cal Poly and 21 of the 23 California State University (CSU) campuses will shift to a self-support tuition plan.
A lack of concentration
Four of the 155 students graduating from the Orfalea College of Business will do so with a double concentration this fall. But starting winter quarter, Orfalea will only note one concentration on a student’s transcript.
Busted Boarders: Skateboarders ticketed on campus
The University Police Department enforces the law for safety reasons, but not everyone agrees with the ban on skateboards.
Professor talks sports at the White House
Cal Poly assistant professor Brian Greenwood met with White House staff to discuss the current state of youth sports in America.
One year after Starkey’s death, criminal and civil cases ongoing
“You were handed a bag of alcohol and you were supposed to finish it all together. Some bags had hard alcohol, mine just had beer … We were drinking for like an hour,” Sauer said.
The library’s winged friends
You can find birds, bees, bats and owls in the pages of books at the Robert E. Kennedy Library. Sometimes, you can also see them flapping or buzzing in the stacks.