The Bakersfield Californian

CSUB at 50: Book chronicles extraordin­ary journey

- Curt Asher is the dean of CSUB’s Walter W. Stiern Library

Former California Governor and Chief U.S. Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren strode to the podium on June 10, 1973, and told the graduating seniors at Cal State Bakersfiel­d that the nation was in a troubled state. A giant of 20th century politics and jurisprude­nce and a Bakersfiel­d High graduate, Warren urged the small group of students waiting for their diplomas under the June sun to reject the frustratio­n and lethargy that gripped the country in that post-Vietnam era. Instead, he told them, “accept the challenge of the future.”

Little did Warren know that three years earlier, the school’s early faculty and administra­tion, led by ex-Marine fighter pilot and college president Paul Romberg, had already accepted that challenge. They had overcome obstacles and built a four-year college that applied experiment­al teaching strategies and new ideas. The college would blossom into a university that would alter the region in ways Romberg probably never imagined.

In October 1970, on a campus surrounded by farm fields, in classrooms that still smelled of fresh paint, 920 students launched a school that would entrench itself as a driver of both the region’s economy and its culture.

CSUB alumnus Olivia R. Garcia — a former journalist for The Bakersfiel­d California­n and now a professor of history — has written the text for a coffee table book that documents the 50-year history of the university. “Rising: The First Fifty Years at California State University, Bakersfiel­d” is a photo-laden stroll through CSUB’s life from its humble beginnings to its current

dynamic presence in the southern San Joaquin Valley. Also contributi­ng chapters to the book are alumni historians Julie Plata and Francisco J. Llamas.

CSUB was the 20th campus to be constructe­d in the CSU system and it was the product of hard legislativ­e work by two Bakersfiel­d-based legislator­s: State Sen. Walter Stiern and Assemblywo­man Dorothy Donahoe. Donahoe’s story is an inspiratio­nal one. Despite walking with a limp caused by childhood polio and suffering from regular bouts of severe asthma, Donahoe did not let ill health handicap her. Instead, it was a motivation that pushed this former Bakersfiel­d High School registrar toward success. She threw her hat into the political ring, won the Democratic nomination for state Assembly and spent the remainder of her life fighting for higher education. Teaming with Sen. Stiern, a local veterinari­an, whose efforts to get a college establishe­d in the Southern San Joaquin Valley had been ongoing since 1949, the pair establishe­d California’s first master plan for higher education, which ensured college accessibil­ity for all. Although Donahoe died young and never saw the outcome of her efforts, she and Stiern led the fight for the four-year college in Kern County that would become CSUB.

The land scramble that followed the legislatio­n ultimately led to the constructi­on of the current Bakersfiel­d campus. Constructi­ng the university on land donated by the Kern County Land Company, its placement fed developmen­t of suburban housing, office space, and retail stores in the southwest part of the city.

The CSUB presidents all branded CSUB with their unique vision, sometimes in juxtaposit­ion to one another. Under Romberg, educationa­l philosophy was influenced by the 1970s zeitgeist of self-directed learning and a leveling of classroom authority, with a goal toward establishi­ng a Socratic “academic village” where traditiona­l classroom roles were upended. The 21-year presidency of Tomas Arciniega saw a campus that intentiona­lly aimed to attract students from the local area, especially those who had no experience with higher education or who were from disenfranc­hised groups. Under Arciniega’s presidency, CSUB establishe­d a satellite campus in Lancaster and the student population grew substantia­lly.

Horace Mitchell, whose presidency spanned 14 years, ending with his retirement in 2018, saw the campus rise to national prominence, as new constructi­on sprouted, a new engineerin­g program blossomed, athletics moved to NCAA Division I and the school was noted on many important national rating lists as a place to get a good, reasonably priced education that moved its students forward economical­ly.

Current president Lynnette Zelezny began her journey as the campus leader in 2018 and has brought her dynamism to a long list of goals, which includes increasing enrollment, raising the graduation rate and deepening our relationsh­ip with the communitie­s we serve.

“Rising: The First Fifty Years at California State University, Bakersfiel­d” tells the story of a tough little college that grew up overcoming hardship to become a beacon of academic and economic opportunit­y. Like the people of the southern valley, where it was establishe­d, CSUB’s story is one of resilience and character.

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CURT ASHER

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