The student news site of Sacramento State University

The State Hornet

Student news without fear or favor
The student news site of Sacramento State University

The State Hornet

The student news site of Sacramento State University

The State Hornet

Student news without fear or favor

Alex Grotewohl, Author

All content by Alex Grotewohl
File photo

Hornet football showcases talent at preseason scrimmage

Alex Grotewohl
August 17, 2013

The opening day roster for Sacramento State football continued to take shape Saturday as the Hornets donned their helmets and pads for the preseason’s first scrimmage.The day was split into six individual...

Sacramento state incoming freshman quarterback, No. 6, Jihad Vercher makes a pass during practice on Sunday at Hornet Stadium.

Football resumes, players look to secure open spots

Alex Grotewohl
August 5, 2013

Football season officially got underway at Sacramento State Sunday as the Hornets took the field for their first team practice. With it began a battle for playing time on a team with a strong freshman...

Giants third baseman Pablo Sandoval took Justin Verlander deep twice in Game 1 of the World Series. Sandoval had three total homers on the day, becoming only the fourth player in World Series history to hit three home runs in one game.

Giants stun media-types with Game 1 victory

Alex Grotewohl
October 25, 2012

World Series legend and Baseball Tonight commentator Curt Schilling better go see a doctor today, because pigs are flying out of his butt. Last night, Justin Verlander, Detroit Tigers ace and media darling,...

A’s jump gun with champagne-soaked party

Alex Grotewohl
October 2, 2012

Every fan of major league baseball should have the opportunity to see his or her favorite player give a post-game interview covered in champagne. These rowdy, raucous locker room celebrations punctuate...

Brandon Crawford in 2012 is a double threat: He cant hit, and he cant field.

Giants need a new look on defense

Alex Grotewohl
May 9, 2012

In case you were still wondering, the Giants’ 2-1 victory over the rival Los Angeles Dodgers Tuesday might have confirmed a long-standing suspicion: San Francisco just can’t hit much. The Giants managed...

San Francisco Giants starting shortstop Brandon Crawford was supposed to provide solid defense, but has committed six errors this season.

OFF THE WOHL: Giants need to shake things up with big bat out

Alex Grotewohl
May 9, 2012

After the season San Francisco Giants first baseman Aubrey Huff had in 2011, many fans were wishing never to see his face again.   The versatile lefty, who was in many ways the engine of the Giants’...

San Jose Sharks star Joe Thornton may be the target of trade talks this offseason. Getting rid of him, though, would be a huge mistake for San Jose both in terms of business and play on the ice.

Sharks face upstream swim back to Conference series

Alex Grotewohl
April 23, 2012

When this season started, someone uninitiated to the wonders of NHL hockey could have been forgiven for thinking the San Jose Sharks had already run away with the Western Conference title. This was a team...

OFF THE WOHL: Brian Wilson out for season, but Giants OK

Alex Grotewohl
April 18, 2012

San Francisco Giants closer Brian Wilson, known almost as much for his larger-than-life whiskers and Taco Bell commercials as for his performance on the mound, has fallen victim to structural damage in...

Lincecum off to a rocky start; what gives?

Alex Grotewohl
April 16, 2012

Giants fans have been subjected to a lot of uncertainty in recent months.  Their cleanup-hitting catcher is recovering from a season-ending injury suffered last year. Can the team find enough offense...

OFF THE WOHL: MLB begins season with big shockers

Alex Grotewohl
April 11, 2012

It’s official. Forget Christmas, the most wonderful time of the year is upon us now. Baseball is truly underway. For fans who were raised on the game, no time fills them with more hope than opening day....

Barry Zito stuns the world with his competence in Denver

Alex Grotewohl
April 9, 2012

As an any-weather fan of the San Francisco Giants, I admit I looked at the probable pitchers for today’s game in Colorado and groaned. It was the same groan you make when you get called into work on...

OFF THE WOHL: Posey needs to stay behind the plate for Giants

Alex Grotewohl
April 4, 2012

Giants’ fans are well aware of how important catcher Buster Posey’s bat is to the San Francisco lineup. Without his presence in the cleanup spot, the team looked shakier than Rick Santorum’s grip...

Cain gets paid; is Lincecum next?

Alex Grotewohl
April 2, 2012

I just turned off the news. The weatherman is reporting a massive front sweeping across the nation today as millions of northern California residents breath a sigh of relief at the reports of Giants' pitcher...

NFL commissioner Goodell makes latest attempt to soften toughness of football

Alex Grotewohl
March 26, 2012

America and NFL football are quite fond of one another. As citizens of the global superpower, we like our sports to be a dirty and violent battle for territory. And as much as we wag our fingers and shake...

The Giants’ bench takes shape as the spring comes to a close

Alex Grotewohl
March 22, 2012

In a couple of major ways, the San Francisco Giants are in an unenviable position heading into 2012. Their offense remains a huge stack of question marks and their rotation, while still among the best...

The park currently known as the O.Co Coliseum is infamously outdated and beat down. The Oakland Athletics are currently locked in a heated battle with the San Francisco Giants over a potential move to San Jose and the promise of a new facility.

A’s-Giants territory feud coming to a head

Alex Grotewohl
March 12, 2012

It’s only the second week in March. The Giants and A’s aren’t even in Northern California yet. But already there is enough headlines to keep your humble blogger busier than Brian Wilson’s barber....

San Francisco needs Manning at the helm

Alex Grotewohl
March 7, 2012

San Francisco 49ers fans know who head coach Jim Harbaugh is at this point. His no-nonsense attitude extends all the way from the field to the press conference table. He expects the most from his whole...

New wild card spot bad news for baseball, true fans

Alex Grotewohl
March 5, 2012

I consider myself the truest of baseball purists. Whenever the media buzz starts about an impending change to the rules of the national pastime, the only conservative bone in my body gets as riled up and...

San Jose Sharks goalie Antti Niemi was taken out in the first period Saturday at Nashville after giving up three quick goals. San Jose needs him to stand on his head the rest of the way if they hope to sniff postseason glory. (Josie Lepe/San Jose Mercury News/MCT)

Sharks improve at trade deadline, still have long way to go

Alex Grotewohl
February 27, 2012

Heading into 2011-12, the new-look San Jose Sharks looked for all the world like the team to beat. The additions of all-star Martin Havlat, as well as center Michal Handzus and defenseman Brent Burns appeared...

The outcome of the NL West race could depend largely on the
ability of San Francisco Giants second baseman Freddy Sanchez and
teammate Buster Posey to stay healthy. (Nhat V. Meyer/San Jose
Mercury News/MCT)

Wide open NL West should look familiar in 2012

Alex Grotewohl
February 21, 2012

Spring training has officially begun, and for fans of the National Pastime, this is the season of perpetual hope. And unlike virtually every other division in baseball this spring, the National League...

Cespedes signs with Oakland, has big shoes to fill as Cuban-born big-leaguer

Alex Grotewohl
February 14, 2012

In an unexpected display of affluence Monday, the Oakland Athletics signed Cuban star Yoenis Cespedes to a four-year, $36 million deal. The contract appears to be a departure from General Manager Billy...

Off the Wohl: Free agency strips fans of loyal players

Alex Grotewohl
February 8, 2012

Major League Baseball is a business. Except when it's not. San Francisco Giants pitcher Matt Cain was faced with this duality at a press conference Friday. When asked about his potential free agency being...

Quarterback Tom Brady (12) of the New England Patriots leaves
the field at the end of Super Bowl XLVI February 5 at Lucas Oil
Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Giants defeated the Patriots,
21-17. (Mark Cornelison/Lexington Herald-Leader/MCT)

Welker’s drop spells a long offseason for Brady, Pats

Alex Grotewohl
February 6, 2012

Boy, were the last five minutes of Super Bowl XLVI tough to watch. It seemed like Patriots' quarterback Tom Brady had the Giants backed into a corner, with New England up 17-15 and just more than four...

Freshman Dylan Garrity inbounds a pass during practice Monday at
the Nest. Garrity had 11 points and eight assists Saturday in Sac
States win over Northern Arizona.

Can a losing season still be a victory for men’s basketball?

Alex Grotewohl
January 30, 2012

Rejoice all ye faithful. The Sacramento State men's basketball squad won a conference game, and it's been a long time coming. Saturday's 77-43 whooping of Northern Arizona was the first Big Sky victory...


The Sacramento State baseball team tours the new athletic
offices in the old Health Center on Jan. 20. 

Athletic offices move to new location on Sac State campus

Alex Grotewohl
January 25, 2012

In perhaps one of the biggest housing upgrades since "The Jeffersons" moved into their deluxe apartment in the sky, the Sacramento State athletic department last month relocated its offices. The switch...

Off the Wohl: Giants aim to rebound after woeful 2011

Alex Grotewohl
January 25, 2012

A wise man once said baseball is a simple game. You throw the ball, you hit the ball, you catch the ball. Any team worth its weight in pine tar and fungo bats does all three things well. Some "help" from...

New York Giants outside linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka (94) grabs San Francisco 49ers quarterback Alex Smith (11) in the fourth quarter of their NFC Championship game at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. (Hector Amezcua/Sacramento Bee/MCT)

Playoff run ends with an emphatic question mark for Smith, 49ers

Alex Grotewohl
January 23, 2012

Sports fans are a fickle bunch. Beat a favored opponent in a playoff game and next thing you know they want to put your name on the building. Lose a nail-biter, and you better hope stadium security ate...

Mens basketball cant stop Grizzlies attack, lose big in Missoula

Men’s basketball can’t stop Grizzlies attack, lose big in Missoula

Alex Grotewohl
January 22, 2012

Sacramento State's men's basketball team will be happy to leave the state of Montana in the rear-view mirror after a tough 85-56 loss to the Montana Grizzlies Saturday night, as Sacramento State falls...

Basketball graphic

Men storm back, fall short against Montana State

Alex Grotewohl
January 20, 2012

Despite a strong outing by point guard Dylan Garrity, including a game-leading 18 points, Sacramento State dropped their sixth consecutive Big Sky game, losing 65-72 to Montana State in Bozeman Thursday...

Hornets drop heart breaker, now 0-4 in Big Sky

Hornets drop heart breaker, now 0-4 in Big Sky

Alex Grotewohl
January 12, 2012

Eastern Washington guard Collin Chiverton notched 21 points and four boards Thursday night, as the Eagles bested Sacramento State 65-60 at the Nest. Despite leading for most of the game, the Hornets slowed...

Hornets lose fourth straight, now 0-3 in conf.

Hornets lose fourth straight, now 0-3 in conf.

Alex Grotewohl
January 8, 2012

Defending Big Sky champion Northern Colorado outlasted Sacramento State Saturday night, earning a hard-fought 61-53 victory. The Hornets held their own in the first half, led by Josh McCarver's eight defensive...

Intro and Wild Card Weekend preview!

Alex Grotewohl
January 3, 2012

Hello, reader. You've demonstrated excellent judgment by wandering into my corner of the internet. Welcome to Outta Left Field. Despite the name, my blog is not a baseball-only zone. This is the spot for...

Hornets fall short at Weber State

Hornets fall short at Weber State

Alex Grotewohl
December 31, 2011

Turnovers proved costly Saturday as the men's basketball team lost its second straight conference game, falling 63-74 at Weber State. John Dickson led the Hornets with 20 points, but also had three of...

Basketball graphic

Basketball drops Big Sky opener to NAU

Alex Grotewohl
December 29, 2011

The men's basketball team dropped its Big Sky Conference opener Thursday night, falling to Northern Arizona 73-64. After trailing by 13 at the half, Sacramento State came storming back quickly after the...

PR society trusted with conference

Alex Grotewohl
November 16, 2011

Sacramento State's chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America has been selected to host the group's October 2012 national convention in San Francisco. The conference, which will be held...

Consumnes River College business major Linda Kitenza protests
the Sacramento State-hosted speaker President Paul Kagames
presence on campus. Its so painful to see that Sac State
continues to host this man. Its madness. How many more people must
die? How many more women must be raped, before they realize it is a
mistake to sponsor him, Kitenza said.

Protesters gather to oppose Rwandan president

Alex Grotewohl
November 3, 2011

A small group of protesters gathered in Serna Plaza today to oppose the scheduled visit of Rwandan President Paul Kagame. The demonstrators, most of whom were native to Rwanda's neighboring nation of Democratic...

Comedy Central On Campus brings out underground giggles

Alex Grotewohl
August 31, 2011

Sacramento State will play host to a trio of young comedians when the Comedy Central on Campus tour rolls through Thursday night. The de facto troupe features names perhaps known to faithful viewers of...

Scenic places in California make for cheap vacations

Alex Grotewohl
June 1, 2011

It can be easy to associate a great vacation with spending a staggering sum of money. Unless one is already equipped with the necessary tools, even camping can add up quicker than expected. But there are...

Burger King is testing a value menu in some Southern California stores, including this one in Irvine, California. (Michael Kitada/Orange County Register/KRT)

Panda Express and Mother India offer healthy choices

Alex Grotewohl
June 1, 2011

It might come as a surprise to some Sacramento State students, but there are actually healthy options when eating on campus. Even when dining at places like Panda Express, where the most popular items...

Thursday night the Sacramento River Cats hosted a Sac State night with $5.00 lawn tickets and $10.00 delta box tickets for. Sacramento students and alumni mostly filled out the law section to watch the River Cats beat the Salt Lake City Bees 7-1.

Hornets head out to Sacramento State Night at Raley Field

Alex Grotewohl
May 11, 2011

When the River Cats earned a lopsided win with the help of their star players Thursday night, the Raley Field faithful welcomed Sacramento State students and alumni as honored guests. The special event...

Album review: New music from Explosions in the Sky

Album review: New music from Explosions in the Sky

Alex Grotewohl
May 11, 2011

Those lucky enough to have discovered Explosions in the Sky at some point over the last 12 years know what to expect when the band puts out a new album. The instrumental quartet’s signature sound is...

Club brings Disney magic to the Sac State community

Alex Grotewohl
May 11, 2011

Anyone who has ever been to Disneyland will probably mention the theme park’s ability to not only create exciting rides, but also to develop stories and engrossing environments to go along with them....

Forty Love is a brand-new band making its debut at the event.

Battle of the Bands returns to rock it out

Alex Grotewohl
May 4, 2011

Sacramento State will show off the proverbial “creme de la creme” of its student music scene Thursday night at the Battle of the Bands. The show will pit 10 musical acts of various styles and genres...

Baseball: Hornets split doubleheader with San Jose State

Alex Grotewohl
April 30, 2011

Despite a big seventh inning that almost brought the Hornets back from a four-run deficit, the No. 16-ranked San Jose State Spartans knocked them off 5-4 to secure a split of Saturday's doubleheader. The...

Students encourage people to take their image seriously

Alex Grotewohl
April 27, 2011

Stacy Saelee said although the Student Fashion Association is concerned primarily with looks, the group is not “superficial.” “There is nothing wrong with that,” she said. “You should think of...

Dance students perform among sculptures in a reception for Gong Yuebin’s art exhibit “Crossroads” outside of the Else gallery in Kadema Hall on Wednesday, April 13. The exhibit will run until April 22.

Art exhibit on campus features abstract, large-scale installations

Alex Grotewohl
April 21, 2011

Yuebin Gong's art makes sense in a weird way. The baby in the glowing pond represents man's innocence. The translucent white drapes dangling from the ceiling create a maze, abstractly portraying life's trials and tribulations, obscuring the hapless babe. Or, Gong explained, it could mean something completely different to each person.

The piece described above, titled "Black Hole," was on display at a reception in the University Ballroom Wednesday night. More of Gong's work is being shown in the Else Gallery on campus until Friday.

Gong, who relocated to Sacramento from China in 2002, specializes in what he calls "installations," which are large-scale sculptures and constructions that can take up entire rooms. As a college student, Gong's major was ink painting, but he said he began building installations when he realized he could not complete his "visions" on a single sheet of paper.

With "Black Hole," Gong tries to convey the idea of loss of innocence brought about by human nature itself. With each step the viewer takes from the baby in the center, it becomes more obscured by the hanging draperies.

"(Our goodness is blocked) by greed, aggression, and a boundless desire to waste our natural world," he explained. "This is a black hole we ourselves created."

Another of Gong's installations is up right now in the Else Gallery.

Called "Life's Crossroads," it features part of the burnt trunks of trees, standing upright, arranged over the ground. The artist said he was inspired to make this piece when he saw charred tree bark during a 2007 ski trip in the Sierra Nevada with his family.

"It is not burnt trunk," he said. "That is (a) human body standing there wanting to talk with us. That is the perfect material to explain what I want."

Senior business management major Mike Archibald works for the University Union and volunteered to assist Gong in setting up "Black Hole" for the reception. Archibald said it took two days for him and Gong to assemble. On the first day, they measured the room to make sure everything would fit and hung the wires from which the curtains were suspended. Then they were in the Ballroom from 11 p.m. Sunday until 5 a.m. Monday putting everything in place and building the wooden pond in the middle.

Archibald said Gong clearly knew exactly how he wanted the finished product to look, but he was also great at thinking on his toes. When they hit a bump, he was quick to solve it.

"Besides having only have 30 minutes of sleep that day," Archibald said, "it was a really cool experience, so I'm glad I did it."

Although some students said they could not understand what Gong meant to say with "Black Hole," its significance was not lost on all. Julieta Lopez, a student from Cosumnes River College, stopped by the exhibit after leaving another event in the Union. She said she did not hear Gong explain the installation, but she got a definite impression from it.

"I thought it was kind of symbolic of life," Lopez said. "Like you are born into the world, and it is kind of like a maze to get out."

Alex Grotewohl can be reached at [email protected]

Alumnus wants skating simplicity

Alex Grotewohl
April 20, 2011

William Ivy does not believe in all the bells and whistles of big skateboard shops. As a skateboarder for most of his life, he respects simplicity in a store, and believes his peers do not want to have things sold to them. He makes sure his own shop, Nine16, is a place where honest skaters can get exactly what they need and nothing else.

The deliberate barebones design is immediately apparent right through the front door. There is no sign of the grungy, cluttered atmosphere one might find at a similar place in the mall. Instead of punk or metal music blasting from above, a single television over the counter plays a skate video. This background noise never makes casual conversation difficult.

Whereas a skate shop in the mall might also carry snowboards or bikinis, Ivy does not have them. He wants his customers to be able to find what they want and get back out to the skatepark.

"A lot of those big-box stores are kind of like the Wal-Marts of skateboarding," Ivy said. "If you need to ask some questions or something you may be dealing with somebody that does not skateboard. If you go into Zumiez, for example, you are going to see some hot girls. And that is tight. I like looking at pretty girls, but at the same time if I have a question, she cannot answer it."

This is also why Ivy said he does not carry bikinis or snowboards. Since he is not familiar with these things, he feels he should not sell them.

Known as "Billy" to his friends and frequent customers, Sacramento State graduate Ivy has skated off and on since he was 8 years old. As a youth, he was also a frequent baseball and basketball player, but when he really fell in love with skating as a high school junior, he quit those other activities. Now 30, he said he still skates at least five times a week and tries to make it out every day.

When Ivy graduated from Sac State's ethnic studies program in 2006, his ambition was to go into the Peace Corps in Africa or Eastern Europe. He said this desire to volunteer his time comes from his father, who was a B-52 bomber pilot in the U.S. Air Force. He died in early 1984 when his plane crashed during a training mission in Arizona. Ivy's sister is a nurse in the Air Force. His sister was 10 when their father died, and he said she wanted to join the military her entire life.

After an arduous application and interview process, Ivy skipped the Peace Corps because no spots were available for teachers in his desired destinations.

Throughout his time at Sac State and afterward, Ivy worked in the skateboard industry in various capacities. In the summer of 2009, longtime friend Bobby Ingle offered Ivy a position at the newly-opened Nine16 shop, and he accepted.

Just months after coming onboard at Nine16, part-owner Tom Sorci died after he was hit by a car while riding his bike to the local Taco Bell, and Ingle said he had a decision to make. Ultimately, Ingle gave 30 percent of the ownership in the store to Ivy, and Ingle said it was a great choice. Now, Ivy operates the shop essentially on his own, and Ingle said he is the "backbone of the store."

It is always clear Ivy respects his customers, and they identify with him. On a busy but not overwhelming Sunday afternoon, a teenager comes in to have a piece tightened on his board. Ivy, who is applying the grip tape to a board another customer has just purchased, directs the kid to just go behind the counter and grab the necessary tool.

Customer Matt Dunlap came into Nine16 because he has skated with Ivy for years at the Mather Field skate park. He said he likes skating because of the sense of "brotherhood" shared by those involved, and he found that same feel at Ivy's store.

"It is just your classic awesome shop, pretty much," Dunlap said. "This vibe here is the same comfort level you get when you are skating."

Dunlap said when he goes to other shops, he often feels like the employees are trying to sell him things he does not need, and so he appreciates Ivy's simple take on the business.

Ivy just wants to sell skateboards. As for bikinis, he said he will leave that to people who wear them.

"I am a skateboarder," he said. "And that is what I know."

Alex Grotewohl can be reached [email protected]

Comedian ANT performs at Sacramento State

Alex Grotewohl
April 17, 2011

With finals rapidly approaching, opportunities for Sacramento State students to laugh may become increasingly scarce in the weeks ahead. Many students jumped at the chance to see stand-up comic ANT perform in the University Union Ballroom Thursday night.

The comedian, whose full name is Anthony Kalloniatis, is perhaps best known for his several seasons on the popular television show "Last Comic Standing," and as host of VH1's "Celebrity Fit Club." He was at Sac State as part of Pride Week, which is happening this week on campus.

Much of his material Thursday focused on two different and sometimes conflicting aspects of his life &- his homosexuality and his Greek heritage. His parents were born and married in Greece, and he said they both have very conservative mindsets. Even though he said they were accepting of his lifestyle, they did not always understand it. Hilarity ensued. One story involved his father giving him a Playboy magazine in an attempt to change his mind.

Senior sociology major Lauren Haley said she saw Kalloniatis when he came to Sac State four years ago. She said after that show, she immediately went out and bought his comedy CD. She was sure to make time to see him Thursday when she heard he was coming back, and although she said she recognized some of his current material from his show four years ago, she was not disappointed.

Kalloniatis was joined Thursday by Sacramento comic Cheryl Anderson, who goes by stage name "Cheryl the Soccer Mom." Anderson was a contestant on TV Land's "Search for the Funniest Mom in America," and hosts an open-mic night every Monday at Po' Boyz Bar and Grill in Folsom. Anderson said she and some other local comedians sent videos of their material to Kalloniatis, and he picked her to open for him.

"I am a really big fan of his, so I was really excited when I got the opportunity," Anderson said.

In her act, Anderson touched on her status as a "cougar," an older woman who hits on younger men. After interacting with a fellow "cougar" in the audience, she presented a pair of what she called "big girl panties" &- a comically huge undergarment she said she bought at Wal-Mart. She then tossed them to a man in the crowd and told him to hang them on his wall "like a fish trophy."

The recipient of the unmentionables, Foothill High School senior Josh Romero, said "of course" he would pin them up as she suggested. He said he would display them so everyone can see where Anderson scrawled "Thanks for last night!" on the side. Also visible was where Kalloniatis wrote "ANT was here" with an arrow pointing to the crotch.

To most, the comedic stylings of ANT and Anderson were a welcome diversion from the rigors of study and the everyday grind. Both brought uncommon perspectives and takes on everyday life that may have otherwise gone unconsidered by most students.

Alex Grotewohl can be reached at [email protected]

Star Ginger?s menu: scant, pricey, yummy

Alex Grotewohl
April 13, 2011

Asian street food. What comes to mind? Bustling urban sidewalks buzzing with chatter? Roadside booths with steaming woks, all specializing in one masterfully prepared dish? Or perhaps is it people with...

Discovering Java?s musical side

Alex Grotewohl
April 13, 2011

Most people probably could not point to Java on a map, much less identify Gamelan music, a style native to the Indonesian island. San Jose-based band Pusaka Sunda brought the ancient genre to Sacramento...

Sac State students learn proper etiquette for job interviews while dining

Alex Grotewohl
April 10, 2011

Put your napkin in your lap. Do not use the salad fork to skewer your steak. Shake hands firmly, but for God's sake, not too firmly. And whatever you do, do not discuss politics or religion. The rules...

Celebrating St. Patrick?s Day

Alex Grotewohl
March 16, 2011

It is almost that time again, Sacramento State. That special day when everyone is supposed to love corned beef and cabbage and soda bread, but just ends up drinking too much Guinness instead. Like other...

Sac State photography club aims to foster a community

Alex Grotewohl
March 16, 2011

The job market can be tough for those with a bachelor of arts degree. It all comes down to knowing as many people as possible and gaining experience wherever the opportunity arises. That is why photography...

Grammy-winning classical group performs at CSUS

Alex Grotewohl
March 7, 2011

Perhaps it is no surprise that the Emerson String Quartet sold out the Capistrano concert hall Friday night &- they are kind of a big deal. And they have the statues to prove it. The group, which has been...

iPad, Kindle or Nook: Testing out e-readers

Alex Grotewohl
February 23, 2011

In an era when technology seems to be moving too fast for the average person to keep up, the book is the latest relic rendered obsolete by computers. And like the iPod dominated the post-compact disc music...

Native American stand-up troupe to perform at CSUS

Alex Grotewohl
February 9, 2011

Comedian Marc Yaffee wants students to take a break from their studies on Thursday to come out and have a laugh. He will be among the performers when Sacramento State hosts a stand-up comedy show in the...

World-renowned piano virtuoso dazzles Sac State audience

Alex Grotewohl
February 8, 2011

International piano celebrity Evelyn Chen took a break from playing concert halls in New York and Austria to wow Sacramento State on Saturday night. Chen, an adjunct professor of piano at Colombia University,...

Guest Column: Defending higher education

Alex Grotewohl
March 24, 2010

Congratulations.If you're reading this, you have a copy of The State Hornet, which more than likely means you're a current student or faculty member at Sacramento State. Either way, it took a lot of work...

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