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  • Despite Obstacles, Cal State Northridge Students Realize Dreams,Grad

    Despite Obstacles, Cal State Northridge Students Realize Dreams, Graduate

    AScribe
    May 26 2004

    NORTHRIDGE, Calif., May 26 (AScribe Newswire) -- As more than
    8,600 Cal State Northridge students walk across the stage next month
    to receive their diplomas, university officials will recognize more
    than academic achievement. They will also honor the tenacity and
    dedication of people determined not to let anything -- from war to
    cancer -- stop them from achieving their goals.

    "Getting a university education is not easy, even in the best
    of circumstances," said CSUN President Jolene Koester. "Many of our
    students are the first in their families to go to college. Some have
    juggled two jobs and a full course load. Others have dealt with
    family obligations -- often as single parents -- cultural barriers or
    physical challenges such as battling cancer. Some of our students
    have had to interrupt their studies to serve their country."

    "But regardless of what has happened, these students have been
    determined to complete their education. They are truly what Cal State
    Northridge is all about -- providing an opportunity for individuals,
    even under the most adverse circumstances, to achieve their dreams.
    We are proud to celebrate all they've accomplished."

    Here is a short list of some of these extraordinary graduates:


    -- Jasmine Altounian, M.A., Mathematics Education

    As immigrants, Armenian refugees, Altounian's parents were
    stunned when a social worker showed up one day at their home in
    London to tell them that their seven-year-old daughter was supposed
    to be in school.

    "All I remember is crying and wanting my mother," said
    Altounian, now 41 and living in Sunland. "I did not speak a word of
    English and I had never even heard the language. I was
    unceremoniously dumped in the back of the class and left to cope. I
    think I wet myself from fright and everyone laughed at me. I was
    immediately ostracized. School was a very cruel place."

    Altounian said she realized that the only way to get out of
    such a miserable place was to do her best and get ahead. She studied
    every chance she got and graduated from high school at age 12. When
    her parents moved to Southern California in 1983, she immediately
    enrolled at Cal State Northridge, and made the university a second
    home.

    Altounian has earned bachelor's degrees in biology and
    psychology as well as a master's in experimental psychology, a
    teaching credential in biological sciences and a supplemental
    credential in mathematics from Northridge.

    Two years ago, Altounian, a teacher at Garvey Intermediate
    School in Rosemead, decided to get her master's in mathematics
    education. About that same time, doctors discovered she had breast
    cancer. Despite having to lose a semester at CSUN because of
    chemotherapy, Altounian kept teaching.

    "I had my good days and my bad days, but the kids in my
    classes kept me going. When I lost my hair, they brought me hats and
    scarves, and would visit me when I was in the hospital. If I felt
    down, they'd bring me up," she said. Altounian's cancer has
    metastasized. A year ago, her doctor's gave her six months to live.
    They now say she's got two years.

    Altounian thinks they are wrong. She's making plans for
    getting a doctorate and is fighting a decision by a new principal at
    her school to dock her pay, retroactively, for missing after-school
    meetings because she had to get to class at CSUN. Regardless, she
    plans to keep teaching.

    -- Calvin Barnes, B.A., Sociology

    While most of his classmates at Cal State Northridge spent
    last summer at school or work, Barnes, 34, of West Hills, was in
    Kuwait. As a member of the U.S. Naval Reserves, he was working as a
    mechanic on field service trucks headed into battle in Iraq.

    Despite the pressures of war all around him, Barnes wanted to
    be sure that he kept his mind sharp. He read books, many sent by CSUN
    professors. And when he got a chance, Barnes used his time on a
    computer, provided for soldiers to keep in touch with loved ones
    while away from home, to register for classes.

    "I was already missing the spring semester and I wanted to
    make sure that I was registered for the fall semester," he said.

    Barnes said he treasures his education. He admitted he was not
    a good student while growing up in Miami, Fla. He had a severe
    stutter then, and did not find school easy. When he graduated from
    high school, he immediately joined the Marines. He served with the
    Marines for six years and was part of Operation Desert Storm in 1991.


    Barnes moved to Southern California in 1996, got a job with
    Sports Chalet in loss prevention, joined the naval reserves, and
    enrolled in classes at Pierce College. While taking a general
    sociology class at Pierce, Barnes said a light went off in his head.

    "I just found the subject so interesting I knew it's what I
    wanted to do," he said.

    Barnes transferred to CSUN in spring 2002. He was supposed to
    graduate last spring, but his time in the Persian Gulf postponed his
    commencement date.

    "I really missed CSUN while I was over there, and I was
    determined not to miss any more classes," he said. "I got back from
    the Gulf on Aug. 25 and went right back to school on Sept. 6. A lot
    of people told me to take some time off because I had just gone
    through this traumatic experience. But I couldn't do that. At first
    it was hard, but I adjusted and it was worth it."

    Barnes is considering a career in law enforcement, but is also
    thinking about getting a master's degree and teaching.

    -- Joe Cedillo, B.A., English

    After a 10-hour operation, Cedillo, 30, of Santa Clarita,
    recalls lying in a hospital bed last fall thinking, "I am just trying
    to get a degree."

    Getting a college education has not been easy for Cedillo.

    One year after obtaining associate of arts degrees in history
    and botany from the College of the Canyons, Cedillo enrolled at CSUN
    in 1995. But he soon lost interest in his studies and was placed on
    academic probation for two semesters. Ultimately, he was academically
    disqualified in 1998.

    Cedillo re-enroll at CSUN in 1999 as an English major. "I had
    always wanted to be a writer," Cedillo said, "but I never tried it."

    Over the next couple of years he developed a passion for
    theater. He performed in and produced several university productions.


    But last fall, Cedillo's health began to deteriorate; he was
    coughing up blood and was misdiagnosed with walking pneumonia. During
    a performance, he lost the ability to speak.

    As his health continued to decline, Cedillo's body started
    shutting down. "I was literally in the phases of dying," he said.

    He was eventually diagnosed with testicular cancer, which can
    be fatal.

    Cedillo underwent surgery and chemotherapy from November 2003
    to April 2004. He lost 50 pounds and had to relearn how to walk. He
    still cannot run. He takes blood thinners and undergoes regular
    testing.

    "I am living on borrowed time," he said.

    As Cedillo recuperated, he wrote "Three Bulls," based on his
    experiences, which will be performed in June at Tia Chucha's Cafe
    Cultural in Sylmar.

    Depending on his health, Cedillo would like to get a master's
    in English at CSUN.

    "If I want stuff to happen, I have to do it now. I don't know
    if I have another five years," he said. "If you're not busy you're
    dead."

    -- Carolyn Copps, M.S., School Counseling

    Born with a hearing disability, Copps was mislabeled as
    learning disabled while going to school in Stevens Point, Wis. The
    diagnosis confounded her parents, who kept insisting that their
    little girl was bright.

    "My dad told me several times that they had tested me as a
    little girl and that I had a high I.Q. But at school, I was
    constantly struggling and often answered the wrong questions," she
    said. "It was very hard."

    Things turned around when her parents divorced and she moved
    with her mother to Tucson, Ariz., just before her 14th birthday. The
    teachers and the school counselors there understood her problem and
    helped her to catch up. She had entered high school reading at a
    fourth-grade level, and by the time she graduated she was reading at
    a college level. She was even encouraged to try out for drama so she
    could learn to express herself better and be more assertive.

    Copps graduated from the University of Arizona with a
    bachelor's degree in psychology in 2002. She said she chose to get
    her master's at Northridge because of the university's reputation for
    serving deaf and hard-of-hearing students.

    The past two years have not been easy. She's been going to
    school full time while working three jobs -- counselor at Granada
    Hills High and CHIME Charter Elementary schools and tutor for a deaf
    student -- and battling several illnesses that often sent her to the
    emergency room.

    "I missed a lot of days of school, but I knew I could make it
    up and I didn't want to give up," she said. Copps hopes to get a job
    as a school counselor.

    -- Bettymae McKenney, B.A., Religious Studies

    It takes a certain toughness of mind for a student of any age
    to earn a university degree, but Bettymae McKenney's 82 years are
    testament to a special kind of determination. "You have to be
    committed to do this," said McKenney.

    "Some mornings it was hard to get up and keep going," said the
    Van Nuys resident. "Your eyes, your whole body gets tired."

    But McKenney has never been one to back down from a challenge.
    She dropped out of college in 1960 to take a secretarial position in
    Edwards Air Force Base's space program. There, she dealt with
    sensitive correspondence between rocket scientist Werner Von Braun
    and her bosses.

    After her retirement, she took her son's advice to go back to
    school. As Valley College's oldest graduate in 2001, McKenney earned
    her liberal studies degree and a congratulatory letter from U.S.
    Senator Barbara Boxer.

    Student life at Cal State Northridge was challenging but
    rewarding. "All the teachers were very polite to me, and respected
    me. When I asked, 'Am I really supposed to be here?' they said
    'Absolutely.'"

    McKenney's memory, she said, was "not what it was when I had
    to memorize everything working on the moon project at Edwards." Her
    heavy CSUN class and study schedule required every ounce of her
    concentration, she added. "I worked myself around the clock doing
    theses."

    But for McKenney, it was worth it. "The learning process
    itself is what I love most," she said.

    -- Doris Rosales, B.A., Chicano Studies

    Rosales, 33, of San Fernando, died unexpectedly last month of
    an erupted ulcer. Rosales is remembered by her family and friends as
    a single mother determined to make a difference in the lives of women
    in circumstances similar to her own.

    Rosales, who was raised by a single mother, worked full-time
    as a social worker with victims of domestic violence and part-time at
    a YMCA shelter. She also volunteered at Casa Esparzena, where she
    helped troubled teen-aged girls get back on track.

    "She would do anything to make the kids laugh," said Norma
    Martinez, Rosales' sister. "She would dress up like a clown if it
    would help them have a better life."

    Despite financial hardship, balancing two jobs and
    volunteering, Rosales attended Cal State Northridge full time to set
    an example and to provide a better life for her 8-year-old son
    Emmanuel.

    "She had it hard," said Celina Sanchez, Rosales' friend and
    co-worker, "but she managed to go to school, rain or shine. It was a
    matter of getting her education."

    Rosales' wanted to open a shelter for victims of domestic
    violence.

    "For my sister to almost make it to graduation is a great
    achievement," Martinez said.

    -- Cindy Trigg, B.A., Liberal Studies

    Trigg, 48, of Simi Valley, credits her success to her
    grandmother and other relatives who raised her. Her stepmother was
    abusive and her own mother's substance abuse led to large absences
    from Trigg's life.

    "As a child I would daydream about being an adult and making a
    difference in people's lives," she said.

    After a failed marriage, Trigg, then a single mother of three,
    had to work three jobs at times to support her children and to pay
    for their education.

    "I wanted the best for them," Trigg said. "I wouldn't let my
    kids end up in the street."

    One of those jobs was at Cal State Northridge, where she has
    worked for 29 years, the past 13 years she has worked in the
    Department of Marketing as an administrative support coordinator.

    Trigg initially enrolled as a student at CSUN in 1993 to set
    an example for her children. Her 19-year-old daughter is now a
    freshman at CSUN while her two older sons are in the military.

    After more than 11 years of steadily attending school
    part-time while working full time, Trigg will be graduating magna cum
    laude. She hopes to teach third and fourth grade at a private school.


    "I wasn't going to let the people who hurt me ruin my life,"
    she said. "I ultimately won."

    CONTACT: Carmen Ramos Chandler, CSUN Public Relations,
    818-677-2130, [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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